<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X<br/><br/> SUMMER</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>“Daddy,” says she, “Hugh has changed a lot since he come to us,
ain’t he?”</p>
</div>
<p class="nind"><span class="letra">T</span>HE weeks of the spring passed. The gleaming snow fields vanished from
the dark pine heights of Mount Lemmon. The creek, which ran through the
Cañon of Gold with such boisterous strength that day when the stranger
came and Marta talked with Saint Jimmy under the old cedar on the
mountain side, crept lazily now, with scarce a murmur, pausing often to
rest in the shady quiet of an overhanging rock or to sleep, half hidden,
among the roots of a giant sycamore.</p>
<p>The Sonora pigeon, his mission accomplished, had long since ceased to
give his mating call. The nest in the mesquite thicket had been filled
and was empty again. The partridge was leading her half-grown covey far
from the mescal plant where they were born. The vermilion flycatcher was
too busy, with his exacting parental duties, even to think of indulging
in those fantastic exhibitions which ultimately had placed the burdens
of fatherhood upon his shoulders.</p>
<p>There was not a day of those passing months that the Pardners and their
girl did not in some way<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_91" id="page_91">{91}</SPAN></span> come in touch with their neighbor. Sometimes
Edwards would go to counsel with the two old prospectors as they worked
in their little mine. Again, they would go over to his place to advise
him, with their years of experience, in his small operations. Often he
would spend the evening with them on the porch in neighborly fashion, or
they would go to smoke with him before the door of his tiny cabin.
Occasionally, it was no more than a shout of greeting across the three
hundred or more yards that separated the two places; but always the
contact that had been established that day when the Lizard brought the
stranger to the Pardners’ door was maintained.</p>
<p>Hugh Edwards might have gone from the place where he labored to the
Pardners’ mine, along the creek under the high bank, without passing
their house at all, but he never did. That is, he never both went and
returned by the creek route. Either going or coming, he would always
climb out of the deep cut made by the stream to the level of the main
floor of the cañon where the house stood—except, of course, when Marta
had gone to the store at Oracle or to see Saint Jimmy and Mother Burton.</p>
<p>The girl was always included, too, in those evenings on the porch or
before his cabin door. Always, on her way to the store, she stopped to
see if she could bring anything for him. And often, with the freedom of
the rude environment she had known since she could remember, and with
the frank innocence of her boyish nature, Marta would run over to give
him a lesson in the arts of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_92" id="page_92">{92}</SPAN></span> kitchen; or, perhaps, to contribute
something of her own cooking—a pie or cake or pudding—that would be
quite beyond the range of his poor culinary skill. It was indeed all
very natural—perhaps, as Thad had said that first day, it was too
darned natural.</p>
<p>To the Pardners, Hugh Edwards was an object of continued speculative
interest, a subject of endless and somewhat violent arguments; and, it
must be added, a never-failing source of amusement and delight. The
genuineness and depth of this friendship for their young neighbor was
evidenced at last by their telling him the story of their partnership
daughter as they had told it to Saint Jimmy and Mother Burton. It was
not long after this mark of their confidence that the old prospectors
were led into a characteristic discussion of their observations.</p>
<p>Hugh had gone to them at their mine with a bit of quartz which he had
picked up in the bed of the creek. The consultation was over and the two
old prospectors were sitting in the shade of the tunnel opening watching
the younger man as he climbed up the steep bank toward the house. Old
Bob was grinning.</p>
<p>“He sure thought he had found somethin’ good this time, didn’t he? The
boy’s all right, don’t never show a sign of bein’ sore when his rich
rocks turn out to be jest nothin’ but rock—jest keeps right on tryin’.
Don’t seem to care a cuss how many blanks he draws.”</p>
<p>Thad chuckled:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_93" id="page_93">{93}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“If hard work will get him anything, he’s sure due to strike it rich.
Hits it up from crack of day ’til plumb dark an’ acts like he hated even
to think of sleepin’ or eatin’.”</p>
<p>“It’s funny, too,” said Bob, “<span class="lftspc">’</span>cause you remember at first he didn’t
’pear to take no interest a-tall. Jest poked along in a come-day,
go-day, God-send-Sunday sort of a gait, as if all he wanted was to git
his powder back with what frijoles, bacon, and coffee he had to have.
He’s sure come alive, though. I wonder——“</p>
<p>Thad was rubbing his bald head with a slow, speculative movement.</p>
<p>“Had you took notice how he allus goes up to the house when he brings
them pieces of fool rock to us? My gal, she says to me the other
evenin’——“</p>
<p>“Your gal! Your gal!” Marta’s father shouted. “This here’s my week, and
you know it blamed well, you old love pirate, you. Can’t you never be
satisfied with your share? Have you got to be allus tryin’ to euchre me
out of my rights?”</p>
<p>“I apologize, Pardner, I forgot, I apologize plenty,” said Thad
hurriedly. “As I was meanin’ to say, that gal of yourn, she says to me,
‘Daddy’—last Saturday it was, so she had a right to call me
daddy—‘Daddy,’ says she, ‘Hugh has changed a lot since he come to us,
ain’t he?’<span class="lftspc">”</span></p>
<p>“Well,” returned Bob, “what if my daughter did make such a remark,
it——“</p>
<p>“She was my daughter then,” interrupted Thad sternly.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_94" id="page_94">{94}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“She’s mine right now,” retorted Bob with equal force. “What if she did
say it? I maintain it only goes to show what a smart, observin’ gal
she’s growed up to be.”</p>
<p>Thad grunted disgustedly.</p>
<p>“It’s almighty plain that she didn’t inherit none of her observin’
powers from you.”</p>
<p>Bob glared at him.</p>
<p>“Wal, what are you seein’ that I ain’t?” he demanded. “Somethin’ that’s
wrong, I’ll bet—By smoke! Thad, if you was to happen to get into Heaven
by any hook or crook so ever, you’d set yourself first off to
suspicionin’ them there angels of high gradin’ the gold they say the
streets up there is paved with.”</p>
<p>The other returned with withering contempt:</p>
<p>“You’ve said it! But don’t it signify nothin’ to you when your gal—when
any gal takes notice of how a feller is lookin’ different from what he
did when she first met up with him? Ain’t it got no meanin’ for you when
she says, ‘Since he come to us’? <i>Come to us—to us</i>—can’t you see
nothin’? If I was as dumb as you be, I’d set off a stick of powder under
myself to see if I couldn’t get some sort of, what I heard Doctor Jimmy
once call, a re-action.”</p>
<p>Bob laughed.</p>
<p>“I figger on gettin’ all the reactions I need from you, without wastin’
any powder. Hugh did come to us, didn’t he? Even if that measly Lizard
did fetch him far as the gate.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_95" id="page_95">{95}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>“Oh, sure,” grumbled the other with fine sarcasm. “Hugh, he didn’t come
to this here Cañada del Oro—not a-tall—he jest come to <i>us</i>.”</p>
<p>Bob continued as if the other had not spoken:</p>
<p>“As far as his not bein’ the same as when he come, well, he
ain’t—anybody can see that. ’Tain’t only that he’s started in to
workin’, all at once, like he jest naterally <i>had</i> to get rich. He’s
different in a lot of ways. Take his looks, for instance—he used to be
kind of white like—you remember, and now he’s tanned as black as any of
us old desert rats. He’s sturdier and heavier like, every way. Hard work
agrees with him, ’pears like.”</p>
<p>“<span class="lftspc">’</span>Tain’t only that,” said Thad.</p>
<p>“Sure—his hair ain’t so short no more.”</p>
<p>“There’s more than hair an’ bein’ tanned,” said Thad.</p>
<p>“Yep, there is,” agreed Bob. “Do you mind how, when he first come, he
acted sort of scared like—right at the very first, I mean.”</p>
<p>“That’s it,” returned Thad, “his eyes was like he was expectin’ one or
t’other, or both of us, to throw down a gun on him. An’ yet I sensed
somehow, after the first minute, that it wasn’t us he was afraid of. He
sure walks up to a man now, though, like he could jump down his throat
if he had to.”</p>
<p>“I’ll bet my pile he would, too, if he was called,” chuckled Bob. “And
have you noticed how easy he laughs, an’ the way he sings and whistles
over there when he’s fussin’ ’round his shack of a mornin’ or evenin’?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_96" id="page_96">{96}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>“He sure seems contented enough,” said Thad, “an’ that’s another thing
I’ve noticed, too,” he added slowly. “The boy ain’t been out of the
cañon since he come.”</p>
<p>“Ain’t no reason for him to go,” said Bob. “We take out what little gold
he pans with ourn, don’t we? An’ it’s easy for Marta to buy his supplies
for him while she’s buyin’ for us. There ain’t nobody at Oracle that
he’d be wantin’ to see.”</p>
<p>“Mebby that’s it,” said Thad.</p>
<p>“Mebby what’s it?” demanded Bob.</p>
<p>“That there ain’t nobody at Oracle that he wants to see—or that he
don’t want to see him—whichever way you like to say it.”</p>
<p>“There you go again,” said Bob. “Can’t talk more’n a minute on any
subject without hintin’ that somethin’ is wrong. The boy is all right, I
tell you.”</p>
<p>“Well, Holy Cats! who said he wasn’t?” cried Thad. “I wouldn’t hold it
against him much if he never went to Oracle or nowhere else; jest stuck
in this here cañon ’til he died, hidin’ out in the brush somewhere every
time anybody strange showed up nearer than George Wheeler’s. You an’ me
has both suffered from the same sort of sickness more’n once, or I’m
a-losin’ my memory. You’re allus makin’ out that I’m thinkin’ evil when
I’m only jest tryin’ to look at things as they actually are. If I’d
intimated that the boy was a hoss-thief or a claim-jumper or somethin’
like that, you’d have reason to climb on to me, but I’m likin’ him an<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_97" id="page_97">{97}</SPAN></span>’
believin’ in him as much as ever you or anybody else ever dared to.”</p>
<p>Bob grinned.</p>
<p>“It’s funny how we’re all agreed on that, ain’t it? He is sure a likable
cuss. I was a-warnin’ him the other day about handlin’ his powder. ‘You
don’t want to forgit, son,’ says I, ‘that there’s enough in one of them
sticks to blow you so high that you’d think you was one of them heavenly
bodies up yonder.’ He laughed an’ says, says he, ‘That bein’ the case,
it would be mighty comfortin’ to know there was no one to dock me for
the time I was up in the air, wouldn’t it?’<span class="lftspc">”</span></p>
<p>“Huh!” grunted Thad, “that’s an old one.”</p>
<p>“Sure it’s an old one,” retorted Bob, “but nobody can’t say it ain’t a
good one; and I’m here to maintain that you can tell a heap more about a
man by the jokes he laughs at than you can by the religions he claims to
believe in.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” retorted Thad grimly, “I’ve allus took notice, too, that them
that’s all the time seein’ evil in whatever anybody does is dead
immortal certain to be havin’ a lot of their own doin’s that need to be
kept in the dark. As for this game of lookin’ for some sort of
insinuations in everything a body says, it’s like a lookin’ glass—what
you see is mostly yourself. That’s what I’m meanin’.”</p>
<p>“Hugh is a good boy all right,” said Bob.</p>
<p>“He’s all of that and then some,” said Thad.</p>
<p>The truth of the matter is, Hugh Edwards had found, in the Cañada del
Oro, something more than<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_98" id="page_98">{98}</SPAN></span> the gold for which he worked so laboriously
through the long days, and which he had come to hoard with such miserly
care. In the Cañon of Gold, he had found more than rugged health; more
than a sanctuary from whatever it was that had driven him from the world
to which he belonged into the lonely seclusion of that wild country.
Into his loneliness had come a sweet companionship that had grown every
day more dear. In this new joy and gladness, bitterness and pain had
ceased to darken his hours with hatred and with useless and vengeful
longings. Crushed and beaten, humiliated and shamed, his every hour an
hour of dread, he had found inspiration and spirit to plan his life
anew. Out of his hopelessness, a glorious new hope had come. He had
learned again to dream; and he had gained strength to labor for his
dreams.</p>
<p>But he had not told Marta what it was that he had found. He could not
tell her yet. Before he could tell her, he must have gold. And he must
have, not merely an amount that would satisfy the bare necessities of
life—he must have much more than that. He was not so foolish as to feel
that he must be in a position to offer this girl the extravagant
luxuries of life. But his need was born of a dire necessity—a necessity
as vital as the need of food. Without gold, the realization of his dream
was an impossibility. His only hope of happiness was in the possibility
of his success in finding a quantity of the yellow metal for which,
through the centuries, so many men had labored, as he was laboring now,
in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_99" id="page_99">{99}</SPAN></span> the Cañon del Oro. He could not explain to Marta—he could only
dream and hope and work, as those others before him had dreamed and
hoped and worked in the Cañon of Gold. And so, with a strength that was
like the strength of Saint Jimmy, this man was resolutely hiding the
love that had re-created him. Marta must not know—not now.</p>
<p>But Marta knew—knew and yet did not know. The girl, whose womanhood had
developed in the peculiarly sexless environment that had been hers since
she could remember, had formed no habit of self-analysis. She was wholly
inexperienced in those innocent but emotionally instructive friendships
which girls and young women normally have with boys and men of their own
age. Except for her fathers and Saint Jimmy, she had had no contact with
men. In her childlike ignorance she asked of herself no questions. She
gave no more thought to the meaning of her interest in Hugh Edwards than
a wild bird gives to its mating instinct. But as their friendship grew
and ripened, this girl of the desert and mountains knew that she was
happy as she had never been happy before. She felt a kinship with the
wild life about her that thrilled her with its poignant mystery. The
flowers had never before bloomed in such passionate profusion. The birds
had never voiced such melodies. The very winds were freighted with
perfumes that filled her with strange delight. The days, indeed, flew by
on wings of sunshine—the nights were haunted with shadowy promises as
vague and intangible as they were sweet.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_100" id="page_100">{100}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Natachee, as the weeks passed, seemed to develop a strange interest in
the man who was so obviously from a world that is far indeed from the
haunts of the lonely red man. Frequently the Indian called at the little
cabin to spend an hour or more. Always he appeared suddenly, at the most
unexpected moments, as if he were a spirit materialized that instant
from an invisible world, and always he disappeared in the same startling
fashion.</p>
<p>Sometimes, when he was with Edwards and the Pardners, he would discuss
matters of general interest with the speech and manner of any well-bred
college man. Save for his savage costume, his dusky countenance, and a
certain touch of poetic feeling in his choice of words and figures of
speech, there would be nothing, on these occasions, to mark him as
different, in any way, from his white companions. But on other
occasions, when Natachee and Edwards were alone, the red man would, for
the moment, cast aside every mark of his training in the schools, and,
with the voice, words, and gestures peculiar to his race, express
thoughts and emotions that were purely Indian. Much of the time,
however, he would sit silently watching the white man at his work. Often
he would come and go without a word. He would sometimes appear, too,
when Marta and Edwards were together, and on these occasions, save for a
courteous greeting, he was rarely more than a silent observer.</p>
<p>The Lizard had at first endeavored to cultivate the stranger’s
friendship, but, receiving no encouragement,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_101" id="page_101">{101}</SPAN></span> had soon limited his
attentions to a sullen “Howdy” when he passed on his way to or from
Oracle.</p>
<p>But Saint Jimmy had not yet met the man who was living next door to
Marta. Often the girl begged her teacher to go with her to call on the
new neighbor. Mother Burton frequently scolded him, gently, for his
discourtesy to the stranger. And Saint Jimmy promised many times that he
would call, but he invariably postponed the date of his visit. He would
set out on his social mission in all good faith, but invariably, when he
came within sight of the cabin so near to Marta’s home, he would stop
and, instead of going on, would spend the hours alone on the mountain
side looking out over the desert. Had Saint Jimmy been other than the
gentle spirit he was, he might have said that he heard quite enough
about Hugh Edwards from Marta without going to visit him.</p>
<p>Many times, too, Saint Jimmy thought to tell Marta the story her fathers
had intrusted to him, but for some reason he always found it as
difficult to talk to his pupil about the mystery of her early childhood
as he found it hard to call on this man in whom she was so interested.</p>
<p>Often he said to his mother that he would delay no longer—that he would
tell the girl the next time she came to see them; but each time he put
it off. The girl was always so radiantly happy, so overflowing with the
joy of life. Perhaps, Saint Jimmy told himself, perhaps, it might never
be necessary for her to know.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_102" id="page_102">{102}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The dry season of the summer passed—the summer rains came; and again
the desert, the foothills and mountain sides were bright with blossoms.
It was during this “Little Spring,” as the Indians call this second
blossoming time of the year, that Saint Jimmy finally called on Hugh
Edwards.</p>
<p>And—it was the Lizard who brought it about.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_103" id="page_103">{103}</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />