Erskine Dale—Pioneer. John Fox
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“He is a Dale – and blood does tell.”
Nobody, not even she, guessed how the lad’s heart was thumping with the effort to conceal his embarrassment, but when a tinge of color spread on each side of his set mouth and his eyes began to waver uncertainly, Mrs. Willoughby’s intuition was quick and kind.
“Barbara,” she asked, “have you shown your cousin your ponies?”
The little girl saw her motive and laughed merrily:
“Why, I haven’t had time to show him anything. Come on, cousin.”
The boy followed her down the steps in his noiseless moccasins, along a grass path between hedges of ancient box, around an ell, and past the kitchen and toward the stables. In and behind the kitchen negroes of all ages and both sexes were hurrying or lazing around, and each turned to stare wonderingly after the strange woodland figure of the little hunter. Negroes were coming in from the fields with horses and mules, negroes were chopping and carrying wood, there were negroes everywhere, and the lad had never seen one before, but he showed no surprise. At a gate the little girl called imperiously:
“Ephraim, bring out my ponies!”
And in a moment out came a sturdy little slave whose head was all black skin, black wool, and white teeth, leading two creamy-white little horses that shook the lad’s composure at last, for he knew ponies as far back as he could remember, but he had never seen the like of them. His hand almost trembled when he ran it over their sleek coats, and unconsciously he dropped into his Indian speech and did not know it until the girl asked laughingly:
“Why, what are you saying to my ponies?”
And he blushed, for the little girl’s artless prattling and friendliness were already beginning to make him quite human.
“That’s Injun talk.”
“Can you talk Indian – but, of course, you can.”
“Better than English,” he smiled.
Hugh had followed them.
“Barbara, your mother wants you,” he said, and the little girl turned toward the house. The stranger was ill at ease with Hugh and the latter knew it.
“It must be very exciting where you live.”
“How?”
“Oh, fighting Indians and shooting deer and turkeys and buffalo. It must be great fun.”
“Nobody does it for fun – it’s mighty hard work.”
“My uncle – your father – used to tell us about his wonderful adventures out there.”
“He had no chance to tell me.”
“But yours must have been more wonderful than his.”
The boy gave the little grunt that was a survival of his Indian life and turned to go back to the house.
“But all this, I suppose, is as strange to you.”
“More.”
Hugh was polite and apparently sincere in interest, but the lad was vaguely disturbed and he quickened his step. The porch was empty when they turned the corner of the house, but young Harry Dale came running down the steps, his honest face alight, and caught the little Kentuckian by the arm.
“Get ready for supper, Hugh – come on, cousin,” he said, and led the stranger to his room and pointed to the clothes on the bed.
“Don’t they fit?” he asked smiling.
“I don’t know – I don’t know how to git into ’em.”
Young Harry laughed joyously.
“Of course not. I wouldn’t know how to put yours on either. You just wait,” he cried, and disappeared to return quickly with an armful of clothes.
“Take off your war-dress,” he said, “and I’ll show you.”
With heart warming to such kindness, and helpless against it, the lad obeyed like a child and was dressed like a child.
“Now, I’ve got to hurry,” said Harry. “I’ll come back for you. Just look at yourself,” he called at the door.
And the stranger did look at the wonderful vision that a great mirror as tall as himself gave back. His eyes began to sting, and he rubbed them with the back of his hand and looked at the hand curiously. It was moist. He had seen tears in a woman’s eyes, but he did not know that they could come to a man, and he felt ashamed.
V
The boy stood at a window looking out into the gathering dusk. His eye could catch the last red glow on the yellow river. Above that a purplish light rested on the green expanse stretching westward – stretching on and on through savage wilds to his own wilds beyond the lonely Cumberlands. Outside the window the multitude of flowers was drinking in the dew and drooping restfully to sleep. A multitude of strange birds called and twittered from the trees. The neighing of horses, the lowing of cattle, the piping of roosting turkeys and motherly clutter of roosting hens, the weird songs of negroes, the sounds of busy preparation through the house and from the kitchen – all were sounds of peace and plenty, security and service. And over in his own wilds at that hour they were driving cows and horses into the stockade. They were cooking their rude supper in the open. A man had gone to each of the watch-towers. From the blackening woods came the curdling cry of a panther and the hooting of owls. Away on over the still westward wilds were the wigwams of squaws, pappooses, braves, the red men – red in skin, in blood, in heart, and red with hate against the whites.
Perhaps they were circling a fire at that moment in a frenzied war-dance – perhaps the hooting at that moment, from the woods around the fort was not the hooting of owls at all. There all was hardship – danger; here all was comfort and peace. If they could see him now! See his room, his fire, his bed, his clothes! They had told him to come, and yet he felt now the shame of desertion. He had come, but he would not stay long away. The door opened, he turned, and Harry Dale came eagerly in.
“Mother wants to see you.”
The two boys paused in the hall and Harry pointed to a pair of crossed rapiers over the mantelpiece.
“Those were your father’s,” he said; “he was a wonderful fencer.”
The lad shook his head in ignorance, and Harry smiled.
“I’ll show you to-morrow.”
At a door in the other ell Harry knocked gently, and a voice that was low and sweet but vibrant with imperiousness called:
“Come in!”
“Here