<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<h3> Wherein a Feather Falls and a Soul Is Born </h3>
<p>So Freckles fared through the bitter winter. He was very happy. He had
hungered for freedom, love, and appreciation so long! He had been
unspeakably lonely at the Home; and the utter loneliness of a great desert
or forest is not so difficult to endure as the loneliness of being
constantly surrounded by crowds of people who do not care in the least
whether one is living or dead.</p>
<p>All through the winter Freckles' entire energy was given to keeping up his
lines and his "chickens" from freezing or starving. When the first breath
of spring touched the Limberlost, and the snow receded before it; when the
catkins began to bloom; when there came a hint of green to the trees,
bushes, and swale; when the rushes lifted their heads, and the pulse of
the newly resurrected season beat strongly in the heart of nature,
something new stirred in the breast of the boy.</p>
<p>Nature always levies her tribute. Now she laid a powerful hand on the soul
of Freckles, to which the boy's whole being responded, though he had not
the least idea what was troubling him. Duncan accepted his wife's theory
that it was a touch of spring fever, but Freckles knew better. He never
had been so well. Clean, hot, and steady the blood pulsed in his veins. He
was always hungry, and his most difficult work tired him not at all. For
long months, without a single intermission, he had tramped those seven
miles of trail twice each day, through every conceivable state of weather.
With the heavy club he gave his wires a sure test, and between sections,
first in play, afterward to keep his circulation going, he had acquired
the skill of an expert drum major. In his work there was exercise for
every muscle of his body each hour of the day, at night a bath, wholesome
food, and sound sleep in a room that never knew fire. He had gained flesh
and color, and developed a greater strength and endurance than anyone ever
could have guessed.</p>
<p>Nor did the Limberlost contain last year's terrors. He had been with her
in her hour of desolation, when stripped bare and deserted, she had stood
shivering, as if herself afraid. He had made excursions into the interior
until he was familiar with every path and road that ever had been cut. He
had sounded the depths of her deepest pools, and had learned why the trees
grew so magnificently. He had found that places of swamp and swale were
few compared with miles of solid timber-land, concealed by summer's
luxuriant undergrowth.</p>
<p>The sounds that at first had struck cold fear into his soul he now knew
had left on wing and silent foot at the approach of winter. As flock after
flock of the birds returned and he recognized the old echoes reawakening,
he found to his surprise that he had been lonely for them and was hailing
their return with great joy. All his fears were forgotten. Instead, he was
possessed of an overpowering desire to know what they were, to learn where
they had been, and whether they would make friends with him as the winter
birds had done; and if they did, would they be as fickle? For, with the
running sap, creeping worm, and winging bug, most of Freckles' "chickens"
had deserted him, entered the swamp, and feasted to such a state of
plethora on its store that they cared little for his supply, so that in
the strenuous days of mating and nest-building the boy was deserted.</p>
<p>He chafed at the birds' ingratitude, but he found speedy consolation in
watching and befriending the newcomers. He surely would have been proud
and highly pleased if he had known that many of the former inhabitants of
the interior swamp now grouped their nests beside the timber-line solely
for the sake of his protection and company.</p>
<p>The yearly resurrection of the Limberlost is a mighty revival. Freckles
stood back and watched with awe and envy the gradual reclothing and
repopulation of the swamp. Keen-eyed and alert through danger and
loneliness, he noted every stage of development, from the first piping
frog and unsheathing bud, to full leafage and the return of the last
migrant.</p>
<p>The knowledge of his complete loneliness and utter insignificance was
hourly thrust upon him. He brooded and fretted until he was in a fever;
yet he never guessed the cause. He was filled with a vast impatience, a
longing that he scarcely could endure.</p>
<p>It was June by the zodiac, June by the Limberlost, and by every delight of
a newly resurrected season it should have been June in the hearts of all
men. Yet Freckles scowled darkly as he came down the trail, and the
running TAP, TAP that tested the sagging wire and telegraphed word of his
coming to his furred and feathered friends of the swamp, this morning
carried the story of his discontent a mile ahead of him.</p>
<p>Freckles' special pet, a dainty, yellow-coated, black-sleeved, cock
goldfinch, had remained on the wire for several days past the bravest of
all; and Freckles, absorbed with the cunning and beauty of the tiny
fellow, never guessed that he was being duped. For the goldfinch was
skipping, flirting, and swinging for the express purpose of so holding his
attention that he would not look up and see a small cradle of thistledown
and wool perilously near his head. In the beginning of brooding, the
spunky little homesteader had clung heroically to the wire when he was
almost paralyzed with fright. When day after day passed and brought only
softly whistled repetitions of his call, a handful of crumbs on the top of
a locust line-post, and gently worded coaxings, he grew in confidence. Of
late he had sung and swung during the passing of Freckles, who, not
dreaming of the nest and the solemn-eyed little hen so close above,
thought himself unusually gifted in his power to attract the birds. This
morning the goldfinch scarcely could believe his ears, and clung to the
wire until an unusually vicious rap sent him spinning a foot in air, and
his "PTSEET" came with a squall of utter panic.</p>
<p>The wires were ringing with a story the birds could not translate, and
Freckles was quite as ignorant of the trouble as they.</p>
<p>A peculiar movement beneath a small walnut tree caught his attention. He
stopped to investigate. There was an unusually large Luna cocoon, and the
moth was bursting the upper end in its struggles to reach light and air.
Freckles stood and stared.</p>
<p>"There's something in there trying to get out," he muttered. "Wonder if I
could help it? Guess I best not be trying. If I hadn't happened along,
there wouldn't have been anyone to do anything, and maybe I'd only be
hurting it. It's—it's——Oh, skaggany! It's just being
born!"</p>
<p>Freckles gasped with surprise. The moth cleared the opening, and with many
wabblings and contortions climbed up the tree. He stared speechless with
amazement as the moth crept around a limb and clung to the under side.
There was a big pursy body, almost as large as his thumb, and of the very
snowiest white that Freckles ever had seen. There was a band of delicate
lavender across its forehead, and its feet were of the same colour; there
were antlers, like tiny, straw-colored ferns, on its head, and from its
shoulders hung the crumpled wet wings. As Freckles gazed, tense with
astonishment, he saw that these were expanding, drooping, taking on color,
and small, oval markings were beginning to show.</p>
<p>The minutes passed. Freckles' steady gaze never wavered. Without realizing
it, he was trembling with eagerness and anxiety. As he saw what was taking
place, "It's going to fly," he breathed in hushed wonder. The morning sun
fell on the moth and dried its velvet down, while the warm air made it
fluffy. The rapidly growing wings began to show the most delicate green,
with lavender fore-ribs, transparent, eye-shaped markings, edged with
lines of red, tan, and black, and long, crisp trailers.</p>
<p>Freckles was whispering to himself for fear of disturbing the moth. It
began a systematic exercise of raising and lowering its exquisite wings to
dry them and to establish circulation. The boy realized that soon it would
be able to spread them and sail away. His long-coming soul sent up its
first shivering cry.</p>
<p>"I don't know what it is! Oh, I wish I knew! How I wish I knew! It must be
something grand! It can't be a butterfly! It's away too big. Oh, I wish
there was someone to tell me what it is!"</p>
<p>He climbed on the locust post, and balancing himself with the wire, held a
finger in the line of the moth's advance up the twig. It unhesitatingly
climbed on, so he stepped to the path, holding it to the light and
examining it closely. Then he held it in the shade and turned it, gloating
over its markings and beautiful coloring. When he held the moth to the
limb, it climbed on, still waving those magnificent wings.</p>
<p>"My, but I'd like to be staying with you!" he said. "But if I was to stand
here all day you couldn't grow any prettier than you are right now, and I
wouldn't grow smart enough to tell what you are. I suppose there's someone
who knows. Of course there is! Mr. McLean said there were people who knew
every leaf, bird, and flower in the Limberlost. Oh Lord! How I wish You'd
be telling me just this one thing!"</p>
<p>The goldfinch had ventured back to the wire, for there was his mate, only
a few inches above the man-creature's head; and indeed, he simply must not
be allowed to look up, so the brave little fellow rocked on the wire and
piped, as he had done every day for a week: "SEE ME? SEE ME?"</p>
<p>"See you! Of course I see you," growled Freckles. "I see you day after
day, and what good is it doing me? I might see you every morning for a
year, and then not be able to be telling anyone about it. 'Seen a bird
with black silk wings—little, and yellow as any canary.' That's as
far as I'd get. What you doing here, anyway? Have you a mate? What's your
name? 'See you?' I reckon I see you; but I might as well be blind, for any
good it's doing me!"</p>
<p>Freckles impatiently struck the wire. With a screech of fear, the
goldfinch fled precipitately. His mate arose from the nest with a whirr—Freckles
looked up and saw it.</p>
<p>"O—ho!" he cried. "So THAT'S what you are doing here! You have a
wife. And so close my head I have been mighty near wearing a bird on my
bonnet, and never knew it!"</p>
<p>Freckles laughed at his own jest, while in better humor he climbed to
examine the neat, tiny cradle and its contents. The hen darted at him in a
frenzy. "Now, where do you come in?" he demanded, when he saw that she was
not similar to the goldfinch.</p>
<p>"You be clearing out of here! This is none of your fry. This is the nest
of me little, yellow friend of the wire, and you shan't be touching it.
Don't blame you for wanting to see, though. My, but it's a fine nest and
beauties of eggs. Will you be keeping away, or will I fire this stick at
you?"</p>
<p>Freckles dropped to the trail. The hen darted to the nest and settled on
it with a tender, coddling movement. He of the yellow coat flew to the
edge to make sure that everything was right. It would have been plain to
the veriest novice that they were partners in that cradle.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll be switched!" muttered Freckles. "If that ain't both their
nest! And he's yellow and she's green, or she's yellow and he's green. Of
course, I don't know, and I haven't any way to find out, but it's plain as
the nose on your face that they are both ready to be fighting for that
nest, so, of course, they belong. Doesn't that beat you? Say, that's
what's been sticking me all of this week on that grass nest in the thorn
tree down the line. One day a blue bird is setting, so I think it is hers.
The next day a brown bird is on, and I chase it off because the nest is
blue's. Next day the brown bird is on again, and I let her be, because I
think it must be hers. Next day, be golly, blue's on, and off I send her
because it's brown's; and now, I bet my hat, it's both their nest and I've
only been bothering them and making a big fool of mesilf. Pretty specimen
I am, pretending to be a friend to the birds, and so blamed ignorant I
don't know which ones go in pairs, and blue and brown are a pair, of
course, if yellow and green are—and there's the red birds! I never
thought of them! He's red and she's gray—and now I want to be
knowing, are they all different? Why no! Of course, they ain't! There's
the jays all blue, and the crows all black."</p>
<p>The tide of Freckles' discontent welled until he almost choked with anger
and chagrin. He plodded down the trail, scowling blackly and viciously
spanging the wire. At the finches' nest he left the line and peered into
the thorn tree. There was no bird brooding. He pressed closer to take a
peep at the snowy, spotless little eggs he had found so beautiful, when at
the slight noise up raised four tiny baby heads with wide-open mouths,
uttering hunger cries. Freckles stepped back. The brown bird alighted on
the edge and closed one cavity with a wiggling green worm, while not two
minutes later the blue filled another with a white. That settled it. The
blue and brown were mates. Once again Freckles repeated his "How I wish I
knew!"</p>
<p>Around the bridge spanning Sleepy Snake Creek the swale spread widely, the
timber was scattering, and willows, rushes, marsh-grass, and splendid wild
flowers grew abundantly. Here lazy, big, black water snakes, for which the
creek was named, sunned on the bushes, wild ducks and grebe chattered,
cranes and herons fished, and muskrats plowed the bank in queer, rolling
furrows. It was always a place full of interest, so Freckles loved to
linger on the bridge, watching the marsh and water people. He also
transacted affairs of importance with the wild flowers and sweet
marsh-grass. He enjoyed splashing through the shallow pools on either side
of the bridge.</p>
<p>Then, too, where the creek entered the swamp was a place of unusual
beauty. The water spread in darksome, mossy, green pools. Water-plants and
lilies grew luxuriantly, throwing up large, rank, green leaves. Nowhere
else in the Limberlost could be found frog-music to equal that of the
mouth of the creek. The drumming and piping rolled in never-ending
orchestral effect, while the full chorus rang to its accompaniment
throughout the season.</p>
<p>Freckles slowly followed the path leading from the bridge to the line. It
was the one spot at which he might relax his vigilance. The boldest timber
thief the swamp ever had known would not have attempted to enter it by the
mouth of the creek, on account of the water and because there was no
protection from surrounding trees. He was bending the rank grass with his
cudgel, and thinking of the shade the denser swamp afforded, when he
suddenly dodged sidewise; the cudgel whistled sharply through the air and
Freckles sprang back.</p>
<p>From the clear sky above him, first level with his face, then skimming,
dipping, tilting, whirling until it struck, quill down, in the path in
front of him, came a glossy, iridescent, big black feather. As it touched
the ground, Freckles snatched it up with almost a continuous movement
facing the sky. There was not a tree of any size in a large open space.
There was no wind to carry it. From the clear sky it had fallen, and
Freckles, gazing eagerly into the arch of June blue with a few lazy clouds
floating high in the sea of ether, had neither mind nor knowledge to dream
of a bird hanging as if frozen there. He turned the big quill
questioningly, and again his awed eyes swept the sky.</p>
<p>"A feather dropped from Heaven!" he breathed reverently. "Are the holy
angels moulting? But no; if they were, it would be white. Maybe all the
angels are not for being white. What if the angels of God are white and
those of the devil are black? But a black one has no business up there.
Maybe some poor black angel is so tired of being punished it's for
slipping to the gates, beating its wings trying to make the Master hear!"</p>
<p>Again and again Freckles searched the sky, but there was no answering
gleam of golden gates, no form of sailing bird; then he went slowly on his
way, turning the feather and wondering about it. It was a wing quill,
eighteen inches in length, with a heavy spine, gray at the base, shading
to jet black at the tip, and it caught the play of the sun's rays in
slanting gleams of green and bronze. Again Freckles' "old man of the sea"
sat sullen and heavy on his shoulders and weighted him down until his step
lagged and his heart ached.</p>
<p>"Where did it come from? What is it? Oh, how I wish I knew!" he kept
repeating as he turned and studied the feather, with almost unseeing eyes,
so intently was he thinking.</p>
<p>Before him spread a large, green pool, filled with rotting logs and
leaves, bordered with delicate ferns and grasses among which lifted the
creamy spikes of the arrow-head, the blue of water-hyacinth, and the
delicate yellow of the jewel-flower. As Freckles leaned, handling the
feather and staring at it, then into the depths of the pool, he once more
gave voice to his old query: "I wonder what it is!"</p>
<p>Straight across from him, couched in the mosses of a soggy old log, a big
green bullfrog, with palpitant throat and batting eyes, lifted his head
and bellowed in answer. "FIN' DOUT! FIN' DOUT!"</p>
<p>"Wha—what's that?" stammered Freckles, almost too much bewildered to
speak. "I—I know you are only a bullfrog, but, be jabbers, that
sounded mightily like speech. Wouldn't you please to be saying it over?"</p>
<p>The bullfrog cuddled contentedly in the ooze. Then suddenly he lifted his
voice, and, as an imperative drumbeat, rolled it again: "FIN' DOUT! FIN'
DOUT! FIN DOUT!"</p>
<p>Freckles had the answer. Something seemed to snap in his brain. There was
a wavering flame before his eyes. Then his mind cleared. His head lifted
in a new poise, his shoulders squared, while his spine straightened. The
agony was over. His soul floated free. Freckles came into his birthright.</p>
<p>"Before God, I will!" He uttered the oath so impressively that the
recording angel never winced as he posted it in the prayer column.</p>
<p>Freckles set his hat over the top of one of the locust posts used between
trees to hold up the wire while he fastened the feather securely in the
band. Then he started down the line, talking to himself as men who have
worked long alone always fall into the habit of doing.</p>
<p>"What a fool I have been!" he muttered. "Of course that's what I have to
do! There wouldn't likely anybody be doing it for me. Of course I can!
What am I a man for? If I was a four-footed thing of the swamp, maybe I
couldn't; but a man can do anything if he's the grit to work hard enough
and stick at it, Mr. McLean is always saying, and here's the way I am to
do it. He said, too, that there were people that knew everything in the
swamp. Of course they have written books! The thing for me to be doing is
to quit moping and be buying some. Never bought a book in me life, or
anything else of much account, for that matter. Oh, ain't I glad I didn't
waste me money! I'll surely be having enough to get a few. Let me see."</p>
<p>Freckles sat on a log, took his pencil and account-book, and figured on a
back page. He had walked the timber-line ten months. His pay was thirty
dollars a month, and his board cost him eight. That left twenty-two
dollars a month, and his clothing had cost him very little. At the least
he had two hundred dollars in the bank. He drew a deep breath and smiled
at the sky with satisfaction.</p>
<p>"I'll be having a book about all the birds, trees, flowers, butterflies,
and——Yes, by gummy! I'll be having one about the frogs—if
it takes every cent I have," he promised himself.</p>
<p>He put away the account-book, that was his most cherished possession,
caught up his stick, and started down the line. The even tap, tap, and the
cheery, gladsome whistle carried far ahead of him the message that
Freckles was himself again.</p>
<p>He fell into a rapid pace, for he had lost time that morning; when he
rounded the last curve he was almost running. There was a chance that the
Boss might be there for his weekly report.</p>
<p>Then, wavering, flickering, darting here and there over the sweet
marsh-grass, came a large black shadow, sweeping so closely before him
that for the second time that morning Freckles dodged and sprang back. He
had seen some owls and hawks of the swamp that he thought might be classed
as large birds, but never anything like this, for six feet it spread its
big, shining wings. Its strong feet could be seen drawn among its
feathers. The sun glinted on its sharp, hooked beak. Its eyes glowed,
caught the light, and seemed able to pierce the ground at his feet. It
cared no more for Freckles than if he had not been there; for it perched
on a low tree, while a second later it awkwardly hopped to the trunk of a
lightning-riven elm, turned its back, and began searching the blue.</p>
<p>Freckles looked just in time to see a second shadow sweep the grass; and
another bird, a trifle smaller and not quite so brilliant in the light,
slowly sailed down to perch beside the first. Evidently they were mates,
for with a queer, rolling hop the first-comer shivered his bronze wings,
sidled to the new arrival, and gave her a silly little peck on her wing.
Then he coquettishly drew away and ogled her. He lifted his head, waddled
from her a few steps, awkwardly ambled back, and gave her such a simple
sort of kiss on her beak that Freckles burst into a laugh, but clapped his
hand over his mouth to stifle the sound.</p>
<p>The lover ducked and side-stepped a few feet. He spread his wings and
slowly and softly waved them precisely as if he were fanning his charmer,
which was indeed the result he accomplished. Then a wave of uncontrollable
tenderness moved him so he hobbled to his bombardment once more. He faced
her squarely this time, and turned his head from side to side with queer
little jerks and indiscriminate peckings at her wings and head, and
smirkings that really should have been irresistible. She yawned and
shuffled away indifferently. Freckles reached up, pulled the quill from
his hat, and looking from it to the birds, nodded in settled conviction.</p>
<p>"So you're me black angels, ye spalpeens! No wonder you didn't get in! But
I'll back you to come closer it than any other birds ever did. You fly
higher than I can see. Have you picked the Limberlost for a good thing and
come to try it? Well, you can be me chickens if you want to, but I'm blest
if you ain't cool for new ones. Why don't you take this stick for a gun
and go skinning a mile?"</p>
<p>Freckles broke into an unrestrained laugh, for the bird-lover was keen
about his courting, while evidently his mate was diffident. When he
approached too boisterously, she relieved him of a goodly tuft of feathers
and sent him backward in a series of squirmy little jumps that gave the
boy an idea of what had happened up-sky to send the falling feather across
his pathway.</p>
<p>"Score one for the lady! I'll be umpiring this," volunteered Freckles.</p>
<p>With a ravishing swagger, half-lifted wings, and deep, guttural hissing,
the lover approached again. He suddenly lifted his body, but she coolly
rocked forward on the limb, glided gracefully beneath him, and slowly
sailed into the Limberlost. He recovered himself and gazed after her in
astonishment.</p>
<p>Freckles hurried down the trail, shaking with laughter. When he neared the
path to the clearing and saw the Boss sitting motionless on the mare that
was the pride of his heart, the boy broke into a run.</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. McLean!" he cried. "I hope I haven't kept you waiting very long!
And the sun is getting hot! I have been so slow this morning! I could have
gone faster, only there were that many things to keep me, and I didn't
know you would be here. I'll hurry after this. I've never had to be giving
excuses before. The line wasn't down, and there wasn't a sign of trouble;
it was other things that were making me late."</p>
<p>McLean, smiling on the boy, immediately noticed the difference in him.
This flushed, panting, talkative lad was not the same creature who had
sought him in despair and bitterness. He watched in wonder as Freckles
mopped the perspiration from his forehead and began to laugh. Then,
forgetting all his customary reserve with the Boss, the pent-up boyishness
in the lad broke forth. With an eloquence of which he never dreamed he
told his story. He talked with such enthusiasm that McLean never took his
eyes from his face or shifted in the saddle until he described the strange
bird-lover, and then the Boss suddenly bent over the pommel and laughed
with the boy.</p>
<p>Freckles decorated his story with keen appreciation and rare touches of
Irish wit and drollery that made it most interesting as well as very
funny. It was a first attempt at descriptive narration. With an inborn
gift for striking the vital point, a naturalist's dawning enthusiasm for
the wonders of the Limberlost, and the welling joy of his newly found
happiness, he made McLean see the struggles of the moth and its freshly
painted wings, the dainty, brilliant bird-mates of different colors, the
feather sliding through the clear air, the palpitant throat and batting
eyes of the frog; while his version of the big bird's courtship won for
the Boss the best laugh he had enjoyed for years.</p>
<p>"They're in the middle of a swamp now" said Freckles. "Do you suppose
there is any chance of them staying with me chickens? If they do, they'll
be about the queerest I have; but I tell you, sir, I am finding some plum
good ones. There's a new kind over at the mouth of the creek that uses its
wings like feet and walks on all fours. It travels like a thrashing
machine. There's another, tall as me waist, with a bill a foot long, a
neck near two, not the thickness of me wrist and an elegant color. He's
some blue and gray, touched up with black, white, and brown. The voice of
him is such that if he'd be going up and standing beside a tree and crying
at it a few times he could be sawing it square off. I don't know but it
would be a good idea to try him on the gang, sir."</p>
<p>McLean laughed. "Those must be blue herons, Freckles," he said. "And it
doesn't seem possible, but your description of the big black birds sounds
like genuine black vultures. They are common enough in the South. I've
seen them numerous around the lumber camps of Georgia, but I never before
heard of any this far north. They must be strays. You have described
perfectly our nearest equivalent to a branch of these birds called in
Europe Pharaoh's Chickens, but if they are coming to the Limberlost they
will have to drop Pharaoh and become Freckles' Chickens, like the
remainder of the birds; won't they? Or are they too odd and ugly to
interest you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, not at all, at all!" cried Freckles, bursting into pure brogue in his
haste. "I don't know as I'd be calling them exactly pretty, and they do
move like a rocking-horse loping, but they are so big and fearless. They
have a fine color for black birds, and their feet and beaks seem so
strong. You never saw anything so keen as their eyes! And fly? Why, just
think, sir, they must be flying miles straight up, for they were out of
sight completely when the feather fell. I don't suppose I've a chicken in
the swamp that can go as close heaven as those big, black fellows, and
then——"</p>
<p>Freckles' voice dragged and he hesitated.</p>
<p>"Then what?" interestedly urged McLean.</p>
<p>"He was loving her so," answered Freckles in a hushed voice. "I know it
looked awful funny, and I laughed and told on him, but if I'd taken time
to think I don't believe I'd have done it. You see, I've seen such a
little bit of loving in me life. You easily can be understanding that at
the Home it was every day the old story of neglect and desertion. Always
people that didn't even care enough for their children to keep them, so
you see, sir, I had to like him for trying so hard to make her know how he
loved her. Of course, they're only birds, but if they are caring for each
other like that, why, it's just the same as people, ain't it?"</p>
<p>Freckles lifted his brave, steady eyes to the Boss.</p>
<p>"If anybody loved me like that, Mr. McLean, I wouldn't be spending any
time on how they looked or moved. All I'd be thinking of would be how they
felt toward me. If they will stay, I'll be caring as much for them as any
chickens I have. If I did laugh at them I thought he was just fine!"</p>
<p>The face of McLean was a study; but the honest eyes of the boy were so
compelling that he found himself answering: "You are right, Freckles. He's
a gentleman, isn't he? And the only real chicken you have. Of course he'll
remain! The Limberlost will be paradise for his family. And now, Freckles,
what has been the trouble all spring? You have done your work as
faithfully as anyone could ask, but I can't help seeing that there is
something wrong. Are you tired of your job?"</p>
<p>"I love it," answered Freckles. "It will almost break me heart when the
gang comes and begins tearing up the swamp and scaring away me chickens."</p>
<p>"Then what is the trouble?" insisted McLean.</p>
<p>"I think, sir, it's been books," answered Freckles. "You see, I didn't
realize it meself until the bullfrog told me this morning. I hadn't ever
even heard about a place like this. Anyway, I wasn't understanding how it
would be, if I had. Being among these beautiful things every day, I got so
anxious like to be knowing and naming them, that it got to eating into me
and went and made me near sick, when I was well as I could be. Of course,
I learned to read, write, and figure some at school, but there was nothing
there, or in any of the city that I ever got to see, that would make a
fellow even be dreaming of such interesting things as there are here. I've
seen the parks—but good Lord, they ain't even beginning to be in it
with the Limberlost! It's all new and strange to me. I don't know a thing
about any of it. The bullfrog told me to 'find out,' plain as day, and
books are the only way; ain't they?"</p>
<p>"Of course," said McLean, astonished at himself for his heartfelt relief.
He had not guessed until that minute what it would have meant to him to
have Freckles give up. "You know enough to study out what you want
yourself, if you have the books; don't you?"</p>
<p>"I am pretty sure I do," said Freckles. "I learned all I'd the chance at
in the Home, and me schooling was good as far as it went. Wouldn't let you
go past fourteen, you know. I always did me sums perfect, and loved me
history books. I had them almost by heart. I never could get me grammar to
suit them. They said it was just born in me to go wrong talking, and if it
hadn't been I suppose I would have picked it up from the other children;
but I'd the best voice of any of them in the Home or at school. I could
knock them all out singing. I was always leader in the Home, and once one
of the superintendents gave me carfare and let me go into the city and
sing in a boys' choir. The master said I'd the swatest voice of them all
until it got rough like, and then he made me quit for awhile, but he said
it would be coming back by now, and I'm railly thinking it is, sir, for
I've tried on the line a bit of late and it seems to go smooth again and
lots stronger. That and me chickens have been all the company I've been
having, and it will be all I'll want if I can have some books and learn
the real names of things, where they come from, and why they do such
interesting things. It's been fretting me more than I knew to be shut up
here among all these wonders and not knowing a thing. I wanted to ask you
what some books would cost me, and if you'd be having the goodness to get
me the right ones. I think I have enough money."</p>
<p>Freckles offered his account-book and the Boss studied it gravely.</p>
<p>"You needn't touch your account, Freckles," he said. "Ten dollars from
this month's pay will provide you everything you need to start on. I will
write a friend in Grand Rapids today to select you the very best and send
them at once."</p>
<p>Freckles' eyes were shining.</p>
<p>"Never owned a book in me life!" he said. "Even me schoolbooks were never
mine. Lord! How I used to wish I could have just one of them for me very
own! Won't it be fun to see me sawbird and me little yellow fellow looking
at me from the pages of a book, and their real names and all about them
printed alongside? How long will it be taking, sir?"</p>
<p>"Ten days should do it nicely," said McLean. Then, seeing Freckles'
lengthening face, he added: "I'll have Duncan bring you a ten-bushel
store-box the next time he goes to town. He can haul it to the west
entrance and set it up wherever you want it. You can put in your spare
time filling it with the specimens you find until the books come, and then
you can study out what you have. I suspect you could collect specimens
that I could send to naturalists in the city and sell for you; things like
that winged creature, this morning. I don't know much in that line, but it
must have been a moth, and it might have been rare. I've seen them by the
thousand in museums, and in all nature I don't remember rarer coloring
than their wings. I'll order you a butterfly-net and box and show you how
scientists pin specimens. Possibly you can make a fine collection of these
swamp beauties. It will be all right for you to take a pair of different
moths and butterflies, but I don't want to hear of your killing any birds.
They are protected by heavy fines."</p>
<p>McLean rode away leaving Freckles staring aghast. Then he saw the point
and smiled. Standing on the trail, he twirled the feather and thought over
the morning.</p>
<p>"Well, if life ain't getting to be worth living!" he said wonderingly.
"Biggest streak of luck I ever had! 'Bout time something was coming my
way, but I wouldn't ever thought anybody could strike such magnificent
prospects through only a falling feather."</p>
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