<SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>
<h3> Chapter 2 </h3>
<h3> "Wet year! Wet year!" prophesied the Cardinal </h3>
<p>The sumac seemed to fill his idea of a perfect location from the very
first. He perched on a limb, and between dressing his plumage and
pecking at last year's sour dried berries, he sent abroad his
prediction. Old Mother Nature verified his wisdom by sending a dashing
shower, but he cared not at all for a wetting. He knew how to turn his
crimson suit into the most perfect of water-proof coats; so he
flattened his crest, sleeked his feathers, and breasting the April
downpour, kept on calling for rain. He knew he would appear brighter
when it was past, and he seemed to know, too, that every day of
sunshine and shower would bring nearer his heart's desire.</p>
<p>He was a very Beau Brummel while he waited. From morning until night
he bathed, dressed his feathers, sunned himself, fluffed and flirted.
He strutted and "chipped" incessantly. He claimed that sumac for his
very own, and stoutly battled for possession with many intruders. It
grew on a densely wooded slope, and the shining river went singing
between grassy banks, whitened with spring beauties, below it. Crowded
around it were thickets of papaw, wild grape-vines, thorn, dogwood, and
red haw, that attracted bug and insect; and just across the old snake
fence was a field of mellow mould sloping to the river, that soon would
be plowed for corn, turning out numberless big fat grubs.</p>
<p>He was compelled almost hourly to wage battles for his location, for
there was something fine about the old stag sumac that attracted
homestead seekers. A sober pair of robins began laying their
foundations there the morning the Cardinal arrived, and a couple of
blackbirds tried to take possession before the day had passed. He had
little trouble with the robins. They were easily conquered, and with
small protest settled a rod up the bank in a wild-plum tree; but the
air was thick with "chips," chatter, and red and black feathers, before
the blackbirds acknowledged defeat. They were old-timers, and knew
about the grubs and the young corn; but they also knew when they were
beaten, so they moved down stream to a scrub oak, trying to assure each
other that it was the place they really had wanted from the first.</p>
<p>The Cardinal was left boasting and strutting in the sumac, but in his
heart he found it lonesome business. Being the son of a king, he was
much too dignified to beg for a mate, and besides, it took all his time
to guard the sumac; but his eyes were wide open to all that went on
around him, and he envied the blackbird his glossy, devoted little
sweetheart, with all his might. He almost strained his voice trying to
rival the love-song of a skylark that hung among the clouds above a
meadow across the river, and poured down to his mate a story of adoring
love and sympathy. He screamed a "Chip" of such savage jealousy at a
pair of killdeer lovers that he sent them scampering down the river
bank without knowing that the crime of which they stood convicted was
that of being mated when he was not. As for the doves that were
already brooding on the line fence beneath the maples, the Cardinal was
torn between two opinions.</p>
<p>He was alone, he was love-sick, and he was holding the finest building
location beside the shining river for his mate, and her slowness in
coming made their devotion difficult to endure when he coveted a true
love; but it seemed to the Cardinal that he never could so forget
himself as to emulate the example of that dove lover. The dove had no
dignity; he was so effusive he was a nuisance. He kept his dignified
Quaker mate stuffed to discomfort; he clung to the side of the nest
trying to help brood until he almost crowded her from the eggs. He
pestered her with caresses and cooed over his love-song until every
chipmunk on the line fence was familiar with his story. The Cardinal's
temper was worn to such a fine edge that he darted at the dove one day
and pulled a big tuft of feathers from his back. When he had returned
to the sumac, he was compelled to admit that his anger lay quite as
much in that he had no one to love as because the dove was disgustingly
devoted.</p>
<p>Every morning brought new arrivals—trim young females fresh from their
long holiday, and big boastful males appearing their brightest and
bravest, each singer almost splitting his throat in the effort to
captivate the mate he coveted. They came flashing down the river bank,
like rockets of scarlet, gold, blue, and black; rocking on the willows,
splashing in the water, bursting into jets of melody, making every
possible display of their beauty and music; and at times fighting
fiercely when they discovered that the females they were wooing
favoured their rivals and desired only to be friendly with them.</p>
<p>The heart of the Cardinal sank as he watched. There was not a member
of his immediate family among them. He pitied himself as he wondered
if fate had in store for him the trials he saw others suffering. Those
dreadful feathered females! How they coquetted! How they flirted! How
they sleeked and flattened their plumage, and with half-open beaks and
sparkling eyes, hopped closer and closer as if charmed. The eager
singers, with swelling throats, sang and sang in a very frenzy of
extravagant pleading, but just when they felt sure their little loves
were on the point of surrender, a rod distant above the bushes would go
streaks of feathers, and there was nothing left but to endure the
bitter disappointment, follow them, and begin all over. For the last
three days the Cardinal had been watching his cousin, rose-breasted
Grosbeak, make violent love to the most exquisite little female, who
apparently encouraged his advances, only to see him left sitting as
blue and disconsolate as any human lover, when he discovers that the
maid who has coquetted with him for a season belongs to another man.</p>
<p>The Cardinal flew to the very top of the highest sycamore and looked
across country toward the Limberlost. Should he go there seeking a
swamp mate among his kindred? It was not an endurable thought. To be
sure, matters were becoming serious. No bird beside the shining river
had plumed, paraded, or made more music than he. Was it all to be
wasted? By this time he confidently had expected results. Only that
morning he had swelled with pride as he heard Mrs. Jay tell her
quarrelsome husband that she wished she could exchange him for the
Cardinal. Did not the gentle dove pause by the sumac, when she left
brooding to take her morning dip in the dust, and gaze at him with
unconcealed admiration? No doubt she devoutly wished her plain pudgy
husband wore a scarlet coat. But it is praise from one's own sex that
is praise indeed, and only an hour ago the lark had reported that from
his lookout above cloud he saw no other singer anywhere so splendid as
the Cardinal of the sumac. Because of these things he held fast to his
conviction that he was a prince indeed; and he decided to remain in his
chosen location and with his physical and vocal attractions compel the
finest little cardinal in the fields to seek him.</p>
<p>He planned it all very carefully: how she would hear his splendid music
and come to take a peep at him; how she would be captivated by his size
and beauty; how she would come timidly, but come, of course, for his
approval; how he would condescend to accept her if she pleased him in
all particulars; how she would be devoted to him; and how she would
approve his choice of a home, for the sumac was in a lovely spot for
scenery, as well as nest-building.</p>
<p>For several days he had boasted, he had bantered, he had challenged, he
had on this last day almost condescended to coaxing, but not one little
bright-eyed cardinal female had come to offer herself.</p>
<p>The performance of a brown thrush drove him wild with envy. The thrush
came gliding up the river bank, a rusty-coated, sneaking thing of the
underbrush, and taking possession of a thorn bush just opposite the
sumac, he sang for an hour in the open. There was no way to improve
that music. It was woven fresh from the warp and woof of his fancy.
It was a song so filled with the joy and gladness of spring, notes so
thrilled with love's pleading and passion's tender pulsing pain, that
at its close there were a half-dozen admiring thrush females gathered
around. With care and deliberation the brown thrush selected the most
attractive, and she followed him to the thicket as if charmed.</p>
<p>It was the Cardinal's dream materialized for another before his very
eyes, and it filled him with envy. If that plain brown bird that
slinked as if he had a theft to account for, could, by showing himself
and singing for an hour, win a mate, why should not he, the most
gorgeous bird of the woods, openly flaunting his charms and discoursing
his music, have at least equal success? Should he, the proudest, most
magnificent of cardinals, be compelled to go seeking a mate like any
common bird? Perish the thought!</p>
<p>He went to the river to bathe. After finding a spot where the water
flowed crystal-clear over a bed of white limestone, he washed until he
felt that he could be no cleaner. Then the Cardinal went to his
favourite sun-parlour, and stretching on a limb, he stood his feathers
on end, and sunned, fluffed and prinked until he was immaculate.</p>
<p>On the tip-top antler of the old stag sumac, he perched and strained
until his jetty whiskers appeared stubby. He poured out a tumultuous
cry vibrant with every passion raging in him. He caught up his own
rolling echoes and changed and varied them. He improvised, and set the
shining river ringing, "Wet year! Wet year!"</p>
<p>He whistled and whistled until all birdland and even mankind heard, for
the farmer paused at his kitchen door, with his pails of foaming milk,
and called to his wife:</p>
<p>"Hear that, Maria! Jest hear it! I swanny, if that bird doesn't stop
predictin' wet weather, I'll get so scared I won't durst put in my corn
afore June. They's some birds like killdeers an' bobwhites 'at can
make things pretty plain, but I never heard a bird 'at could jest speak
words out clear an' distinct like that fellow. Seems to come from the
river bottom. B'lieve I'll jest step down that way an' see if the
lower field is ready for the plow yet."</p>
<p>"Abram Johnson," said his wife, "bein's you set up for an honest man,
if you want to trapse through slush an' drizzle a half-mile to see a
bird, why say so, but don't for land's sake lay it on to plowin' 'at
you know in all conscience won't be ready for a week yet 'thout
pretendin' to look."</p>
<p>Abram grinned sheepishly. "I'm willin' to call it the bird if you are,
Maria. I've been hearin' him from the barn all day, an' there's
somethin' kind o' human in his notes 'at takes me jest a little
diffrunt from any other bird I ever noticed. I'm really curious to set
eyes on him. Seemed to me from his singin' out to the barn, it 'ud be
mighty near like meetin' folks."</p>
<p>"Bosh!" exclaimed Maria. "I don't s'pose he sings a mite better 'an
any other bird. It's jest the old Wabash rollin' up the echoes. A
bird singin' beside the river always sounds twicet as fine as one on
the hills. I've knowed that for forty year. Chances are 'at he'll be
gone 'fore you get there."</p>
<p>As Abram opened the door, "Wet year! Wet year!" pealed the flaming
prophet.</p>
<p>He went out, closing the door softly, and with an utter disregard for
the corn field, made a bee line for the musician.</p>
<p>"I don't know as this is the best for twinges o' rheumatiz," he
muttered, as he turned up his collar and drew his old hat lower to keep
the splashing drops from his face. "I don't jest rightly s'pose I
should go; but I'm free to admit I'd as lief be dead as not to answer
when I get a call, an' the fact is, I'm CALLED down beside the river."</p>
<p>"Wet year! Wet year!" rolled the Cardinal's prediction.</p>
<p>"Thanky, old fellow! Glad to hear you! Didn't jest need the
information, but I got my bearin's rightly from it! I can about pick
out your bush, an' it's well along towards evenin', too, an' must be
mighty near your bedtime. Looks as if you might be stayin' round these
parts! I'd like it powerful well if you'd settle right here, say 'bout
where you are. An' where are you, anyway?"</p>
<p>Abram went peering and dodging beside the fence, peeping into the
bushes, searching for the bird. Suddenly there was a whir of wings and
a streak of crimson.</p>
<p>"Scared you into the next county, I s'pose," he muttered.</p>
<p>But it came nearer being a scared man than a frightened bird, for the
Cardinal flashed straight toward him until only a few yards away, and
then, swaying on a bush, it chipped, cheered, peeked, whistled broken
notes, and manifested perfect delight at the sight of the white-haired
old man. Abram stared in astonishment.</p>
<p>"Lord A'mighty!" he gasped. "Big as a blackbird, red as a live coal,
an' a-comin' right at me. You are somebody's pet, that's what you are!
An' no, you ain't either. Settin' on a sawed stick in a little wire
house takes all the ginger out of any bird, an' their feathers are
always mussy. Inside o' a cage never saw you, for they ain't a feather
out o' place on you. You are finer'n a piece o' red satin. An' you
got that way o' swingin' an' dancin' an' high-steppin' right out in God
A'mighty's big woods, a teeterin' in the wind, an' a dartin' 'crost the
water. Cage never touched you! But you are somebody's pet jest the
same. An' I look like the man, an' you are tryin' to tell me so, by
gum!"</p>
<p>Leaning toward Abram, the Cardinal turned his head from side to side,
and peered, "chipped," and waited for an answering "Chip" from a little
golden-haired child, but there was no way for the man to know that.</p>
<p>"It's jest as sure as fate," he said. "You think you know me, an' you
are tryin' to tell me somethin'. Wish to land I knowed what you want!
Are you tryin' to tell me `Howdy'? Well, I don't 'low nobody to be
politer 'an I am, so far as I know."</p>
<p>Abram lifted his old hat, and the raindrops glistened on his white
hair. He squared his shoulders and stood very erect.</p>
<p>"Howdy, Mr. Redbird! How d'ye find yerself this evenin'? I don't
jest riccolict ever seein' you before, but I'll never meet you agin
'thout knowin' you. When d'you arrive? Come through by the special
midnight flyer, did you? Well, you never was more welcome any place in
your life. I'd give a right smart sum this minnit if you'd say you
came to settle on this river bank. How do you like it? To my mind
it's jest as near Paradise as you'll strike on earth.</p>
<p>"Old Wabash is a twister for curvin' and windin' round, an' it's
limestone bed half the way, an' the water's as pretty an' clear as in
Maria's springhouse. An' as for trimmin', why say, Mr. Redbird, I'll
jest leave it to you if she ain't all trimmed up like a woman's spring
bunnit. Look at the grass a-creepin' right down till it's a trailin'
in the water! Did you ever see jest quite such fine fringy willers?
An' you wait a little, an' the flowerin' mallows 'at grows long the
shinin' old river are fine as garden hollyhocks. Maria says 'at thy'd
be purtier 'an hers if they were only double; but, Lord, Mr. Redbird,
they are! See 'em once on the bank, an' agin in the water! An' back a
little an' there's jest thickets of papaw, an' thorns, an' wild
grape-vines, an' crab, an' red an' black haw, an' dogwood, an' sumac,
an' spicebush, an' trees! Lord! Mr. Redbird, the sycamores, an' maples,
an' tulip, an' ash, an' elm trees are so bustin' fine 'long the old
Wabash they put 'em into poetry books an' sing songs about 'em. What
do you think o' that? Jest back o' you a little there's a sycamore
split into five trunks, any one o' them a famous big tree, tops up
'mong the clouds, an' roots diggin' under the old river; an' over a
little farther's a maple 'at's eight big trees in one. Most anything
you can name, you can find it 'long this ole Wabash, if you only know
where to hunt for it.</p>
<p>"They's mighty few white men takes the trouble to look, but the Indians
used to know. They'd come canoein' an' fishin' down the river an' camp
under these very trees, an' Ma 'ud git so mad at the old squaws.
Settlers wasn't so thick then, an' you had to be mighty careful not to
rile 'em, an' they'd come a-trapesin' with their wild berries. Woods
full o' berries! Anybody could get 'em by the bushel for the pickin',
an' we hadn't got on to raisin' much wheat, an' had to carry it on
horses over into Ohio to get it milled. Took Pa five days to make the
trip; an' then the blame old squaws 'ud come, an' Ma 'ud be compelled
to hand over to 'em her big white loaves. Jest about set her plumb
crazy. Used to get up in the night, an' fix her yeast, an' bake, an'
let the oven cool, an' hide the bread out in the wheat bin, an' get the
smell of it all out o' the house by good daylight, so's 'at she could
say there wasn't a loaf in the cabin. Oh! if it's good pickin' you're
after, they's berries for all creation 'long the river yet; an' jest
wait a few days till old April gets done showerin' an' I plow this corn
field!"</p>
<p>Abram set a foot on the third rail and leaned his elbows on the top.
The Cardinal chipped delightedly and hopped and tilted closer.</p>
<p>"I hadn't jest 'lowed all winter I'd tackle this field again. I've
turned it every spring for forty year. Bought it when I was a young
fellow, jest married to Maria. Shouldered a big debt on it; but I
always loved these slopin' fields, an' my share of this old Wabash
hasn't been for sale nor tradin' any time this past forty year. I've
hung on to it like grim death, for it's jest that much o' Paradise I'm
plumb sure of. First time I plowed this field, Mr. Redbird, I only hit
the high places. Jest married Maria, an' I didn't touch earth any too
frequent all that summer. I've plowed it every year since, an' I've
been 'lowin' all this winter, when the rheumatiz was gettin' in its
work, 'at I'd give it up this spring an' turn it to medder; but I don't
know. Once I got started, b'lieve I could go it all right an' not feel
it so much, if you'd stay to cheer me up a little an' post me on the
weather. Hate the doggondest to own I'm worsted, an' if you say it's
stay, b'lieve I'll try it. Very sight o' you kinder warms the cockles
o' my heart all up, an' every skip you take sets me a-wantin' to be
jumpin', too.</p>
<p>"What on earth are you lookin' for? Man! I b'lieve it's grub!
Somebody's been feedin' you! An' you want me to keep it up? Well, you
struck it all right, Mr. Redbird. Feed you? You bet I will! You
needn't even 'rastle for grubs if you don't want to. Like as not
you're feelin' hungry right now, pickin' bein' so slim these airly
days. Land's sake! I hope you don't feel you've come too soon. I'll
fetch you everything on the place it's likely a redbird ever teched,
airly in the mornin' if you'll say you'll stay an' wave your torch
'long my river bank this summer. I haven't a scrap about me now. Yes,
I have, too! Here's a handful o' corn I was takin' to the banty
rooster; but shucks! he's fat as a young shoat now. Corn's a leetle
big an' hard for you. Mebby I can split it up a mite."</p>
<p>Abram took out his jack-knife, and dotting a row of grains along the
top rail, he split and shaved them down as fine as possible; and as he
reached one end of the rail, the Cardinal, with a spasmodic "Chip!"
dashed down and snatched a particle from the other, and flashed back to
the bush, tested, approved, and chipped his thanks.</p>
<p>"Pshaw now!" said Abram, staring wide-eyed. "Doesn't that beat you?
So you really are a pet? Best kind of a pet in the whole world, too!
Makin' everybody, at sees you happy, an' havin' some chance to be happy
yourself. An' I look like your friend? Well! Well! I'm monstrous
willin' to adopt you if you'll take me; an', as for feedin', from
to-morrow on I'll find time to set your little table 'long this same
rail every day. I s'pose Maria 'ull say 'at I'm gone plumb crazy; but,
for that matter, if I ever get her down to see you jest once, the
trick's done with her, too, for you're the prettiest thing God ever
made in the shape of a bird, 'at I ever saw. Look at that topknot a
wavin' in the wind! Maybe praise to the face is open disgrace; but
I'll take your share an' mine, too, an' tell you right here an' now 'at
you're the blamedest prettiest thing 'at I ever saw.</p>
<p>"But Lord! You ortn't be so careless! Don't you know you ain't
nothin' but jest a target? Why don't you keep out o' sight a little?
You come a-shinneyin' up to nine out o' ten men 'long the river like
this, an' your purty, coaxin', palaverin' way won't save a feather on
you. You'll get the little red heart shot plumb outen your little red
body, an' that's what you'll get. It's a dratted shame! An' there's
law to protect you, too. They's a good big fine for killin' such as
you, but nobody seems to push it. Every fool wants to test his aim,
an' you're the brightest thing on the river bank for a mark.</p>
<p>"Well, if you'll stay right where you are, it 'ull be a sorry day for
any cuss 'at teches you; 'at I'll promise you, Mr. Redbird. This
land's mine, an' if you locate on it, you're mine till time to go back
to that other old fellow 'at looks like me. Wonder if he's any
willinger to feed you an' stand up for you 'an I am?"</p>
<p>"Here! Here! Here!" whistled the Cardinal.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm mighty glad if you're sayin' you'll stay! Guess it will be
all right if you don't meet some o' them Limberlost hens an' tole off
to the swamp. Lord! the Limberlost ain't to be compared with the
river, Mr. Redbird. You're foolish if you go! Talkin' 'bout goin', I
must be goin' myself, or Maria will be comin' down the line fence with
the lantern; an', come to think of it, I'm a little moist, not to say
downright damp. But then you WARNED me, didn't you, old fellow? Well,
I told Maria seein' you 'ud be like meetin' folks, an' it has been.
Good deal more'n I counted on, an' I've talked more'n I have in a whole
year. Hardly think now 'at I've the reputation o' being a mighty quiet
fellow, would you?"</p>
<p>Abram straightened and touched his hat brim in a trim half military
salute. "Well, good-bye, Mr. Redbird. Never had more pleasure meetin'
anybody in my life 'cept first time I met Maria. You think about the
plowin', an', if you say `stay,' it's a go! Good-bye; an' do be a
little more careful o' yourself. See you in the mornin', right after
breakfast, no count taken o' the weather."</p>
<p>"Wet year! Wet year!" called the Cardinal after his retreating figure.</p>
<p>Abram turned and gravely saluted the second time. The Cardinal went to
the top rail and feasted on the sweet grains of corn until his craw was
full, and then nestled in the sumac and went to sleep. Early next
morning he was abroad and in fine toilet, and with a full voice from
the top of the sumac greeted the day—"Wet year! Wet year!"</p>
<p>Far down the river echoed his voice until it so closely resembled some
member of his family replying that he followed, searching the banks
mile after mile on either side, until finally he heard voices of his
kind. He located them, but it was only several staid old couples, a
long time mated, and busy with their nest-building. The Cardinal
returned to the sumac, feeling a degree lonelier than ever.</p>
<p>He decided to prospect in the opposite direction, and taking wing, he
started up the river. Following the channel, he winged his flight for
miles over the cool sparkling water, between the tangle of foliage
bordering the banks. When he came to the long cumbrous structures of
wood with which men had bridged the river, where the shuffling feet of
tired farm horses raised clouds of dust and set the echoes rolling with
their thunderous hoof beats, he was afraid; and rising high, he sailed
over them in short broken curves of flight. But where giant maple and
ash, leaning, locked branches across the channel in one of old Mother
Nature's bridges for the squirrels, he knew no fear, and dipped so low
beneath them that his image trailed a wavering shadow on the silver
path he followed.</p>
<p>He rounded curve after curve, and frequently stopping on a conspicuous
perch, flung a ringing challenge in the face of the morning. With
every mile the way he followed grew more beautiful. The river bed was
limestone, and the swiftly flowing water, clear and limpid. The banks
were precipitate in some places, gently sloping in others, and always
crowded with a tangle of foliage.</p>
<p>At an abrupt curve in the river he mounted to the summit of a big ash
and made boastful prophecy, "Wet year! Wet year!" and on all sides
there sprang up the voices of his kind. Startled, the Cardinal took
wing. He followed the river in a circling flight until he remembered
that here might be the opportunity to win the coveted river mate, and
going slower to select the highest branch on which to display his
charms, he discovered that he was only a few yards from the ash from
which he had made his prediction. The Cardinal flew over the narrow
neck and sent another call, then without awaiting a reply, again he
flashed up the river and circled Horseshoe Bend. When he came to the
same ash for the third time, he understood.</p>
<p>The river circled in one great curve. The Cardinal mounted to the
tip-top limb of the ash and looked around him. There was never a
fairer sight for the eye of man or bird. The mist and shimmer of early
spring were in the air. The Wabash rounded Horseshoe Bend in a silver
circle, rimmed by a tangle of foliage bordering both its banks; and
inside lay a low open space covered with waving marsh grass and the
blue bloom of sweet calamus. Scattered around were mighty trees, but
conspicuous above any, in the very center, was a giant sycamore, split
at its base into three large trees, whose waving branches seemed to
sweep the face of heaven, and whose roots, like miserly fingers,
clutched deep into the black muck of Rainbow Bottom.</p>
<p>It was in this lovely spot that the rainbow at last materialized, and
at its base, free to all humanity who cared to seek, the Great
Alchemist had left His rarest treasures—the gold of sunshine, diamond
water-drops, emerald foliage, and sapphire sky.</p>
<p>For good measure, there were added seeds, berries, and insects for the
birds; and wild flowers, fruit, and nuts for the children. Above all,
the sycamore waved its majestic head.</p>
<p>It made a throne that seemed suitable for the son of the king; and
mounting to its topmost branch, for miles the river carried his
challenge: "Ho, cardinals! Look this way! Behold me! Have you seen any
other of so great size? Have you any to equal my grace? Who can
whistle so loud, so clear, so compelling a note? Who will fly to me for
protection? Who will come and be my mate?"</p>
<p>He flared his crest high, swelled his throat with rolling notes, and
appeared so big and brilliant that among the many cardinals that had
gathered to hear, there was not one to compare with him.</p>
<p>Black envy filled their hearts. Who was this flaming dashing stranger,
flaunting himself in the faces of their females? There were many
unmated cardinals in Rainbow Bottom, and many jealous males. A second
time the Cardinal, rocking and flashing, proclaimed himself; and there
was a note of feminine approval so strong that he caught it. Tilting
on a twig, his crest flared to full height, his throat swelled to
bursting, his heart too big for his body, the Cardinal shouted his
challenge for the third time; when clear and sharp arose a cry in
answer, "Here! Here! Here!" It came from a female that had accepted
the caresses of the brightest cardinal in Rainbow Bottom only the day
before, and had spent the morning carrying twigs to a thicket of red
haws.</p>
<p>The Cardinal, with a royal flourish, sprang in air to seek her; but her
outraged mate was ahead of him, and with a scream she fled, leaving a
tuft of feathers in her mate's beak. In turn the Cardinal struck him
like a flashing rocket, and then red war waged in Rainbow Bottom. The
females scattered for cover with all their might. The Cardinal worked
in a kiss on one poor little bird, too frightened to escape him; then
the males closed in, and serious business began. The Cardinal would
have enjoyed a fight vastly with two or three opponents; but a
half-dozen made discretion better than valour. He darted among them,
scattering them right and left, and made for the sycamore. With all
his remaining breath, he insolently repeated his challenge; and then
headed down stream for the sumac with what grace he could command.</p>
<p>There was an hour of angry recrimination before sweet peace brooded
again in Rainbow Bottom. The newly mated pair finally made up; the
females speedily resumed their coquetting, and forgot the captivating
stranger—all save the poor little one that had been kissed by
accident. She never had been kissed before, and never had expected
that she would be, for she was a creature of many misfortunes of every
nature.</p>
<p>She had been hatched from a fifth egg to begin with; and every one
knows the disadvantage of beginning life with four sturdy older birds
on top of one. It was a meager egg, and a feeble baby that pipped its
shell. The remainder of the family stood and took nearly all the food
so that she almost starved in the nest, and she never really knew the
luxury of a hearty meal until her elders had flown. That lasted only a
few days; for the others went then, and their parents followed them so
far afield that the poor little soul, clamouring alone in the nest,
almost perished. Hunger-driven, she climbed to the edge and exercised
her wings until she managed some sort of flight to a neighbouring bush.
She missed the twig and fell to the ground, where she lay cold and
shivering.</p>
<p>She cried pitifully, and was almost dead when a brown-faced, barefoot
boy, with a fishing-pole on his shoulder, passed and heard her.</p>
<p>"Poor little thing, you are almost dead," he said. "I know what I'll
do with you. I'll take you over and set you in the bushes where I
heard those other redbirds, and then your ma will feed you."</p>
<p>The boy turned back and carefully set her on a limb close to one of her
brothers, and there she got just enough food to keep her alive.</p>
<p>So her troubles continued. Once a squirrel chased her, and she saved
herself by crowding into a hole so small her pursuer could not follow.
The only reason she escaped a big blue racer when she went to take her
first bath, was that a hawk had his eye on the snake and snapped it up
at just the proper moment to save the poor, quivering little bird. She
was left so badly frightened that she could not move for a long time.</p>
<p>All the tribulations of birdland fell to her lot. She was so frail and
weak she lost her family in migration, and followed with some strangers
that were none too kind. Life in the South had been full of trouble.
Once a bullet grazed her so closely she lost two of her wing quills,
and that made her more timid than ever. Coming North, she had given
out again and finally had wandered into Rainbow Bottom, lost and alone.</p>
<p>She was such a shy, fearsome little body, the females all flouted her;
and the males never seemed to notice that there was material in her for
a very fine mate. Every other female cardinal in Rainbow Bottom had
several males courting her, but this poor, frightened, lonely one had
never a suitor; and she needed love so badly! Now she had been kissed
by this magnificent stranger!</p>
<p>Of course, she knew it really was not her kiss. He had intended it for
the bold creature that had answered his challenge, but since it came to
her, it was hers, in a way, after all. She hid in the underbrush for
the remainder of the day, and was never so frightened in all her life.
She brooded over it constantly, and morning found her at the down curve
of the horseshoe, straining her ears for the rarest note she ever had
heard. All day she hid and waited, and the following days were filled
with longing, but he never came again.</p>
<p>So one morning, possessed with courage she did not understand, and
filled with longing that drove her against her will, she started down
the river. For miles she sneaked through the underbrush, and watched
and listened; until at last night came, and she returned to Rainbow
Bottom. The next morning she set out early and flew to the spot from
which she had turned back the night before. From there she glided
through the bushes and underbrush, trembling and quaking, yet pushing
stoutly onward, straining her ears for some note of the brilliant
stranger's.</p>
<p>It was mid-forenoon when she reached the region of the sumac, and as
she hopped warily along, only a short distance from her, full and
splendid, there burst the voice of the singer for whom she was
searching. She sprang into air, and fled a mile before she realized
that she was flying. Then she stopped and listened, and rolling with
the river, she heard those bold true tones. Close to earth, she went
back again, to see if, unobserved, she could find a spot where she
might watch the stranger that had kissed her. When at last she reached
a place where she could see him plainly, his beauty was so bewildering,
and his song so enticing that she gradually hopped closer and closer
without knowing she was moving.</p>
<p>High in the sumac the Cardinal had sung until his throat was parched,
and the fountain of hope was almost dry. There was nothing save defeat
from overwhelming numbers in Rainbow Bottom. He had paraded, and made
all the music he ever had been taught, and improvised much more. Yet
no one had come to seek him. Was it of necessity to be the Limberlost
then? This one day more he would retain his dignity and his location.
He tipped, tilted, and flirted. He whistled, and sang, and trilled.
Over the lowland and up and down the shining river, ringing in every
change he could invent, he sent for the last time his prophetic
message, "Wet year! Wet year!"</p>
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