"I do wish you could raise a mustache," she said, looking wistfully into his face.
Involuntarily his hand went to his lip.
"I could try," he said.
"I can"t bear to see you look so terribly young; you get worse and worse every time I see you," she scolded plaintively. "I want you to be a regular man right quick."
He wondered what he ought to say and presently stammered: "I--I--intend to. I guess I"m more of a man than anybody would think to look at me."
"You"re too young to ever fall in love I reckon."
"No I"m not," he answered with decision.
"Have you got a razor?" she asked.
"No."
"I reckon it would be a powerful help. You put soap on your lip and mow it off with a razor. My father says it makes the gra.s.s grow."
There was a moment of silence during which she brushed the mane of her pony. Then she asked timidly: "Do you play on the flute?"
"No, why?"
"I think it would break my heart. My Uncle Henry plays all day and it makes him look crazy. Do you like yellow hair?"
"Yes, if it looks like yours."
"If you don"t mind I"ll put a mustache on you just--just to look at every time I think of you."
"When I think of you I put violets in your hair," he said.
He took a step toward her as he spoke and as he did so she started her pony. A little way off she checked him and said:
"I"m sorry. There are no violets now."
She rode away slowly waving her hand and singing with the joy of a bird in the springtime:
"My sweetheart, come along Don"t you hear the glad song As the notes of the nightingale flow?
Don"t you hear the fond tale Of the sweet nightingale As she sings in the valleys below-- As she sings in the valleys below?"
He stood looking and listening. The song came to him as clear and sweet as the notes of a vesper bell wandering in miles of silence.
When it had ceased he felt his lip and said: "How slow the time pa.s.ses!
I"m going to get some shaving soap and a razor."
That evening when Harry was helping Samson with the horses he said:
"I"m going to tell you a secret. I wish you wouldn"t say anything about it."
Samson stood pulling the hair out of his card and looking very stern as he listened while Harry told of the a.s.sault upon him and how Bim had arrived and driven the rowdies away with her gun but he said not a word of her demonstration of tender sympathy. To him that had clothed the whole adventure with a kind of sanct.i.ty so that he could not bear to have it talked about.
Samson"s eyes glowed with anger. They searched the face of the boy. His voice was deep and solemn when he said:
"This is a serious matter. Why do you wish to keep it a secret?"
The boy blushed. For a moment he knew not what to say. Then he spoke: "It ain"t me so much--it"s her," he managed to say. "She wouldn"t want it to be talked about and I don"t either."
Samson began to understand. "She"s quite a girl I guess," he said thoughtfully. "She must have the nerve of a man--I declare she must."
"Yes-sir-ee! They"d "a" got hurt if they hadn"t gone away, that"s sure,"
said Harry.
"We"ll look out for them after this," Samson rejoined. "The first time I meet that man McNoll he"ll have to settle with me and he"ll pay cash on the nail."
Bim having heard of Harry"s part in Abe"s fight and of the fact that he was to be working alone all day at the new house had ridden out through the woods to the open prairie and hunted in sight of the new cabin that afternoon. Unwilling to confess her extreme interest in the boy she had said not a word of her brave act. It was not shame; it was partly a kind of rebellion against the tyranny of youthful ardor; it was partly the fear of ridicule.
So it happened that the adventure of Harry Needles made scarcely a ripple on the sensitive surface of the village life. It will be seen, however, that it had started strong undercurrents likely, in time, to make themselves felt.
The house and barn were finished whereupon Samson and Harry drove to Springfield--a muddy, crude and growing village with thick woods on its north side--and bought furniture. Their wagon was loaded and they were ready to start for home. They were walking on the main street when Harry touched Samson"s arm and whispered:
"There"s McNoll and Callyhan."
The pair were walking a few steps ahead of Samson and Harry. In a second Samson"s big hand was on McNoll"s shoulder.
"This is Mr. McNoll, I believe," said Samson.
The other turned with a scared look.
"What do ye want o" me?" he demanded.
Samson threw him to the ground with a jerk so strong and violent that it rent the sleeve from his shoulder. McNoll"s companion who had felt the weight of Samson"s hand and had had enough of it turned and ran.
"What do ye want o" me?" McNoll asked again as he struggled to free himself.
"What do I want o" you--you puny little coward," said Samson, as he lifted the bully to his feet and gave him a toss and swung him in the air and continued to address him. "I"m just goin" to muss you up proper. If you don"t say you"re sorry and mean it I"ll put a tow string on your neck and give you to some one that wants a dog."
"I"m sorry," said McNoll. "Honest I am! I was drunk when I done it."
Samson released his prisoner. A number in the crowd which had gathered around them clapped their hands and shouted, "Hurrah for the stranger!"
A constable took Samson"s hand and said: "You deserve a vote of thanks.
That man and his friends have made me more trouble than all the rest of the drinking men put together."
"And I am making trouble for myself," said Samson. "I have made myself ashamed. I am no fighting man, I was never in such a muss on a public street before and with G.o.d"s help it will never happen again."
"Where do you live?" the officer asked.
"In New Salem."