We had come exactly where I wanted. In our minds we were both looking at those miserable scenes on the 'Fulvia', when Madras sought to adjust the accounts of life and sorely muddled them.
"But," said I, "you are not the same woman that you were."
"Indeed, Sir Oracle," she answered: "and by what necromancy do you know?"
"By none. I think you are sorry now--I hope you are--for what--"
She interrupted me indignantly. "You go too far. You are almost--unbearable. You said once that the matter should be buried, and yet here you work for an opportunity, Heaven knows why, to place me at a disadvantage!"
"Pardon me," I answered; "I said that I would never bring up those wretched scenes unless there was cause. There is cause."
She got to her feet. "What cause--what possible cause can there be?"
I met her eye firmly. "I am bound to stand by my friend," I said. "I can and I will stand by him."
"If it is a game of drawn swords, beware!" she retorted. "You speak to me as if I were a common adventuress. You mistake me, and forget that you--of all men--have little margin of high morality on which to speculate."
"No, I do not forget that," I said, "nor do I think of you as an adventuress. But I am sure you hold a power over my friend, and--"
She stopped me. "Not one word more on the subject. You are not to suppose this or that. Be wise do not irritate and annoy a woman like me.
It were better to please me than to preach to me."
"Mrs. Falchion," I said firmly, "I wish to please you--so well that some day you will feel that I have been a good friend to you as well as to him--"
Again she interrupted me. "You talk in foolish riddles. No good can come of this."
"I cannot believe that," I urged; "for when once your heart is moved by the love of a man, you will be just, and then the memory of another man who loved you and sinned for you--"
"Oh, you coward!" she broke out scornfully--"you coward to persist in this!"
I made a little motion of apology with my hand, and was silent. I was satisfied. I felt that I had touched her as no words of mine had ever touched her before. If she became emotional, was vulnerable in her feelings, I knew that Roscoe's peace might be a.s.sured. That she loved Roscoe now I was quite certain. Through the mists I could see a way, even if I failed to find Madras and arrange another surprising situation. She was breathing hard with excitement.
Presently she said with incredible quietness, "Do not force me to do hard things. I have a secret."
"I have a secret too," I answered. "Let us compromise."
"I do not fear your secret," she answered. She thought I was referring to her husband's death. "Well," I replied, "I honestly hope you never will. That would be a good day for you."
"Let us go," she said; then, presently: "No, let us sit here and forget that we have been talking."
I was satisfied. We sat down. She watched the scene silently, and I watched her. I felt that it would be my lot to see stranger things happen to her than I had seen before; but all in a different fashion. I had more hope for my friend, for Ruth Devlin, for--!
I then became silent even to myself. The weltering river, the fishers and their labour and their songs, the tall dark hills, the deep gloomy pastures, the flaring lights, were then in a dream before me; but I was thinking, planning.
As we sat there, we heard noises, not very harmonious, interrupting the song of the salmon-fishers. We got up to see. A score of river-drivers were marching down through the village, mocking the fishers and making wild mirth. The Indians took little notice, but the half-breeds and white fishers were restless.
"There will be trouble here one day," said Mrs. Falchion.
"A free fight which will clear the air," I said.
"I should like to see it--it would be picturesque, at least," she added cheerfully; "for I suppose no lives would be lost."
"One cannot tell," I answered; "lives do not count so much in new lands."
"Killing is hateful, but I like to see courage."
And she did see it.
CHAPTER XVII. RIDING THE REEFS
The next afternoon Roscoe was sitting on the coping deep in thought, when Ruth rode up with her father, dismounted, and came upon him so quietly that he did not hear her. I was standing in the trees a little distance away.
She spoke to him once, but he did not seem to hear. She touched his arm.
He got to his feet.
"You were so engaged that you did not hear me," she said.
"The noise of the rapids!" he answered, after a strange pause, "and your footstep is very light."
She leaned her chin on her hand, rested against the rail of the coping, looked meditatively into the torrent below, and replied: "Is it so light?" Then after a pause: "You have not asked me how I came, who came with me, or why I am here."
"It was first necessary for me to conceive the delightful fact that you are here," he said in a dazed, and, therefore, not convincing tone.
She looked him full in the eyes. "Please do not pay me the ill compliment of a compliment," she said. "Was it the sailor who spoke then or the--or yourself? It is not like you."
"I did not mean it as a compliment," he replied. "I was thinking about critical and important things."
"'Critical and important' sounds large," she returned.
"And the awakening was sudden," he continued. "You must make allowance, please, for--"
"For the brusque appearance of a very unimaginative, substantial, and undreamlike person? I do. And now, since you will not put me quite at my ease by a.s.suming, in words, that I have been properly 'chaperoned' here, I must inform you that my father waits hard by--is, as my riotous young brother says, 'without on the mat.'"
"I am very glad," he replied with more politeness than exactness.
"That I was duly escorted, or that my father is 'without on the mat'?
... However, you do not appear glad one way or the other. And now I must explain our business. It is to ask your company at dinner (do consider yourself honoured--actually a formal dinner party in the Rockies!) to meet the lieutenant-governor, who is coming to see our famous Viking and Sunburst.... But you are expected to go out where my father feeds his--there, see--his horse on your 'trim parterre.' And now that I have done my duty as page and messenger without a word of a.s.sistance, Mr.
Roscoe, will you go and encourage my father to hope that you will be vis-a-vis to his excellency?" She lightly beat the air with her whip, while I took a good look at the charming scene.
Roscoe looked seriously at the girl for an instant. He understood too well the source of such gay social banter. He knew it covered a hurt. He said to her: "Is this Ruth Devlin or another?"
And she replied very gravely: "It is Ruth Devlin and another too," and she looked down to the chasm beneath with a peculiar smile; and her eyes were troubled.
He left her and went and spoke to her father whom I had joined, but, after a moment, returned to Ruth. Ruth turned slightly to meet him as he came. "And is the prestige of the house of Devlin to be supported?"
she said; "and the governor to be entertained with tales of flood and field?"