"I"ve been s"picioned."
"You were turned out of church once, weren"t you, for shooting up a meeting?"
"Yes," was the indignant defense, "but I proved to "em that I was drunk, an" they tuk me back." The girl had to laugh.
"And yet you think dancing wrong?"
"Yes"m."
The girl gave it up--so perfunctory and final was is reply. Indeed, he seemed to have lost interest. Twice he had looked back, and now he turned again. She saw the fulfilment of some prophecy in his face as he grunted and frowned.
"Thar comes Ham Cage," he said. Turning, the girl saw an awkward youth stepping into the road from the same ravine whence Polly and young King had come, but she did not, as did Pleasant, see Ham shifting a revolver from his hip to an inside pocket.
"Those two boys worry the life out of me," she said, and again Pleasant grunted. They were the two biggest boys in the school, and in running, jumping, lifting weights, shooting at marks, and even in working--in everything, indeed, except in books--they were tireless rivals. And now they were bitter contestants for the favor of Polly Sizemore--a fact that Pleasant knew better than the Mission girl.
Flirts are rare in the hills. "If two boys meets at the same house,"
Pleasant once had told her, "they jes makes the gal say which one she likes best, and t"other one gits!" But with the growth of the Mission school had come a certain tolerance which Polly had used to the limit.
Indeed, St. Hilda had discovered a queer reason for a sudden quickening of interest on Polly"s part in her studies. Polly had to have the letters she got read for her, and the letters she sent written for her, and thus St. Hilda found that at least three young men, who had gone into the army and had learned to write, thought--each of them--that he was first in her heart. Polly now wanted to learn to read and write so that she could keep such secrets to herself. She had been "settin" up" with Ham Cage for a long time, and now she was "talkin" to" young King Camp. King was taking her to the dance, and it was plain to Pleasant that trouble was near.
He looked worried.
"Well," he said, "I reckon thar hain"t so much harm the way you school folks run sets because you don"t "low drinkin" or totin" pistols, an"
you make "em go home early. I heerd Miss Hildy is away--do you think you can manage the bad uns?"
"I think so," smiled Miss Mary.
"Well, mebbe I will come around to-night."
"Come right along now," said the girl heartily, but Pleasant had left his own gun at home, so he shook his head and started up the mountain.
II
Happy Valley was darkening now. The evening star shone white in the last rosy western flush, and already lanterns glowed on the porch of the "big house" where the dancing was to be. From high in the shadows a voice came down to the girl:
"I hain"t got a gun an" I hain"t had a drink to-day. Hit"s a shame when Miss Hildy"s always a-tryin" to give us a good time she has to _beg_ us to behave."
The young folks were gathering in. On the porch she saw Polly Sizemore in a chair and young King Camp slipping into the darkness on the other side of the house. A few minutes later Ham Cage strolled into sight, saw Polly, and sullenly dropped on the stone steps as far away from her as possible. The little teacher planned a course of action.
"Ham," she said, as she pa.s.sed, "I want you to run the first set with me."
Ham stared and she was rather startled by his flush.
"Yes"m," he stammered. A moment later young King reappeared at the other end of the porch.
"King," she said, "I want you to run the second set with me," and King too stared, flushed, and stammered a.s.sent, while Polly flashed indignation at the little teacher"s back. It had been Miss Mary"s plan to break up the hill custom of one boy and one girl dancing together all the time--and she had another idea as well.
Pleasant Trouble swung into the circle of light from the porch just as the first set started, and he sat down on the stone steps to look on. It was a jolly dance. Some elderly folks were there to look on, and a few married couples who, in spite of Miss Mary"s persuasions, yet refused to take part. It was soon plain that Polly Sizemore and the little teacher were the belles of the ball, though of the two Polly alone seemed to realize it. Pleasant could hardly keep his eyes off the Mission girl.
She was light as a feather, her eyes sparkled, her cheeks grew rosy, her laugh rang out, and the flaming spirit of her was kindling fires of which she never dreamed. Pleasant saw her dance first with Ham and then with King, and he grinned with swift recognition of her purpose.
And he grinned the more when he saw that she was succeeding beyond her realization--saw it by the rage in Polly"s black eyes, which burned now at Ham and now at King, for Miss Mary had no further need to ask either of them to dance--one or the other was always at her side. Indeed the Marquise, without knowing it, was making a pretty triangular mess of things, and Pleasant chuckled unholily--chuckled until he saw things were getting serious, and then his inner laughing ceased and his sharp eyes got wary and watchful. For first Ham and then King would disappear in the darkness, and each time they came back their faces were more flushed and their dancing was more furious.
Now, Polly was winging arrows of anger at the little teacher, and presently Pleasant rose lightly and with incredible swiftness swung across the floor just as the climax came. From the other side Polly too darted forward. Ham and King were glaring at each other over the teacher"s pretty head--each claiming the next dance. Miss Mary was opening her mouth for a mild rebuke when the two boys sprang back, the right hand of each flashing to his hip. King drew first, and Pleasant"s crutch swished down on his wrist, striking his pistol to the floor. Polly had caught Ham"s hand with both her own, and Ham felt the muzzle of Pleasant"s forty-four against his stomach.
"Stop it!" said Pleasant sternly. "Miss Mary don"t like sech doin"s."
So quickly was it on and over that the teacher hardly realized that it had come on and was over. Her bewildered face paled, but the color came back with a rush, and when her indignant eyes began their deadly work Pleasant knew there was no further need of him, and he stepped back as though to escape penalty even for playing peacemaker in a way so rude.
"You--you--you two!" breathed Miss Mary helplessly, but only for a moment.
"Give me that gun, Ham. Pick that one up, King." Both she handed to Pleasant, and then--no torrent came. She turned with a wave of her hand.
"You can all go home now." There had been a moment of deadly quiet, but in the mountains even boys and girls do not take such events very seriously; the hubbub and t.i.ttering that had started again ceased again, and all left quickly and quietly--all but the teacher, Pleasant, and the two boys, for Polly too was moving away. King turned to go after her.
"Wait a moment, King," said Miss Mary, and Polly cried fiercely: "He can stay till doomsday fer all o" me. I hain"t goin" with ary one uv "em."
And she flirted away.
"I am not going to talk to you two boys until to-morrow," said Miss Mary firmly, "and then I"m going to put a stop to all this. I want both of you to be here when school closes. I want you too, Pleasant, and I want you to bring Lum Chapman."
Pleasant Trouble was as bewildered as the two shamefaced boys--did she mean to have him hold a gun on the two boys while Lum, the blacksmith, whaled them?
"Me?--Lum?--why, whut----"
"Never mind--wait till to-morrow. Will you all be here?"
"Yes"m," said all.
"Go with them up the river, Pleasant. Don"t let them quarrel, and see that each one goes up his own creek."
The two boys moved away like yoked oxen. At the bottom step Pleasant turned to look back. Very rigid and straight the little teacher stood under the lantern, and the pallor and distress of her face had given way to a look of stern determination.
"Whew!" he breathed, and he turned a half-circle on his crutch into the dark.
III
Miss Mary Holden was a daughter of the Old Dominion, on the other side of the c.u.mberland Range, and she came, of course, from fighting stock.
She had gone North to school and had come home horrified by--to put it mildly--the Southern tendency to an occasional homicide. There had been a great change, to be sure, within her young lifetime. Except under circ.u.mstances that were peculiarly aggravating, gentlemen no longer peppered each other on sight. The duel was quite gone. Indeed, the last one at the old university was in her father"s time, and had been, he told her, a fake. A Texan had challenged another student, and the seconds had loaded the pistols with blank cartridges. After firing three times at his enemy the Texan threw his weapon down, swore that he could hit a quarter every time at that distance, pulled forth two guns of his own and demanded that they be used; and they had a terrible time appeasing the Westerner, who, failing in humor, challenged then and there every member of his enemy"s fraternity and every member of his own. Thereafter it became the custom there and at other inst.i.tutions of learning in the State to settle all disputes fist and skull; and of this Miss Holden, who was no pacifist, thoroughly approved. Now she was in a community where the tendency to kill seemed well-nigh universal.
St. Hilda was a gentle soul, who would never even whip a pupil. She might not approve--but Miss Holden had the spirit of the pioneer and she must lead these people into the light. So she told her plan next day to Pleasant Trouble and Lum Chapman, who were first to come. Stolid Lum would have shown no surprise had she proposed that the two boys dive from a cliff, and if one survived he won; but the wonder and the succeeding joy in Pleasant"s face disturbed Miss Holden. And when Pleasant swung his hat from his head and let out a fox-hunting yelp of pure ecstasy she rebuked him severely, whereat the man with the crutch lapsed into solemnity.
"Will they fight this way?" she asked.
"Them two boys will fight a bee-gum o" sucklin" wildcats--tooth and toe-nail."
"They aren"t going to fight that way," protested Miss Holden. "They will fight by the Marquis of--er--Somebody"s rules." She explained the best she could the intervals of action and of rest, and her hearers were vastly interested.
"They can"t kick?" asked Pleasant.
"No."
"Ner bite?"