When he was come within view of Joines’ mill and store on Roaring River, Zeke halted again for a final look back toward the wild home land, which he was now leaving for the first time. The blackness of his mood after parting with the girl had passed, though melancholy still made him its own. The resilience of youth was turning his spirits again toward the hopes that had inspired this going forth from his own familiar little wilderness into the vast and unknown wilderness of the world beyond. As he stared out at the scattered peaks, reared like conning towers over the sprawling medley of ridge and valley, a throb of fondness shook his heart. It was not sprung from esthetic appreciation of the wild and romantic landscape, though this had been sufficient to justify the stir of feeling. His sensibility was aroused by the dear friendliness of all the scene, where hollows and heights had been his constant haunts through all the days of childhood and adolescence until this hour. Of a sudden, he realized as never before a profound tenderness for this country of beetling crags Opportunity had come to Zeke Higgins, and he had not hesitated to seize it. His desire for a larger life than that of the tiny, scrabbly mountain farm had been early excited; it had persisted; Somehow, long afterward, report had it that the man was alive. Rumor implicated Zeke as having Then, Richard Sutton came into the mountains of the Blue Ridge. He chanced on Zeke, made use of the lad as a guide. Soon mutual liking and respect developed. Sutton was a manufacturer of tree-nails—the wooden pins used in ships’ timbers. Here in the ranges was an abundance of locust timber, the best for his need. And there was much talk of a branch railway to come. His alert business imagination saw that a factory located at the source of supply would be advantageous. He saw, too, the capacity for development in his young friend. Zeke’s familiarity with the region might be valuable—more valuable still his popularity and the respect accorded him in the community. Sutton suggested to the young man that he should come to New York The halt here was a necessary feature in Zeke’s itinerary. On a previous visit to the store, he had purchased a pair of serviceable, if rather ungainly, shoes. Since he would have no occasion for their use at home, he had saved himself the trouble of carrying them to and fro. “I reckon I’ll take them-thar shoes o’ mine,” he said to the grizzled proprietor, after an exchange of friendly greetings with the few loungers present. “Ye hain’t a-goin’ to put ’em on yit, be ye?” the storekeeper inquired, solicitously. “Not till I git to North Wilkesboro’,” Zeke answered, to the obvious relief of the assembly, as he opened the bag. While he was busy stowing the shoes, the onlookers commented cynically on the follies of fashion. “An’ I’ve hearn tell,” one concluded, “that durn-nigh everybody done war shoes in the city, all year roun’.” Perhaps the young man felt a pleasant glow of superiority in reflecting on the fact that such following of city fashion would soon distinguish him. But his innocent vanity was not to be unduly flattered. “Ca’late to stay away till ye’ve made yer fortin, in course, sonny?” one of the older men suggested. He enjoyed some local reputation as a wag, the maintenance of which so absorbed his energies that his wife, who had lost whatever sense of humor she might once have had, toiled both indoors and out. “Why, yes, o’ course,” Zeke replied unsuspectingly. “Better kiss we-uns good-by, sonny,” was the retort. “You-all ’ll be gone quite some time.” The sally was welcomed with titters and guffaws. Zeke was red to the ears with mortification and “I want pleasant things to remember hyarabouts, all thet-thar long time I got to be away,” he said, with a quizzical drawl; “so I kain’t be a-kissin’ o’ ye none. My stomick hain’t none so strong nohow,” he added, with the coarseness that usually flavored the humor of the countryside. Then, abruptly, the smile left his lips; the lines of his face hardened; the hazel eyes brightened and widened a little. His low, slow voice came firmly, with a note of tense earnestness. It was as if he spoke to himself, rather than to the slouching men, who regarded him curiously. “I hain’t leavin’ all this-hyar ’cause I don’t love hit,” he declared. “I do love hit, an’ I aim to come back by-an-bye—I shore do!” Forthwith, embarrassed anew by this unmeditated outburst, he hurried off, amid an astonished silence which was broken at last by the storekeeper. “Thet-thar Zeke Higgins,” he ventured, somewhat indistinctly through his matting of whiskers, “I swow if he hain’t got right feelin’s, fer all he’s so durn peart.” And his cronies nodded assent. As he pressed onward, the adventurer quickly regained his poise. The novelty of the situation thrilled him agreeably. His thoughts were crowded with imaginings of the strange things to come. Ambitious vision of himself successful among the city’s throngs made his pulses beat faster. He felt that he had within him the power to achieve something worth while in the world. Certainly, he would not fail for lack of striving. But no triumph elsewhere could ever wean him from his love for the Blue Ridge—for his home country. Yes, it was as he had said there in the store: He would come back. He would come back to the cabin in the “cove” under the shadows of Stone Mountain—back to the old mother, back to Plutina. A warmth of exquisite tenderness vibrated through him, as his hope leaped to that homecoming, to the time when once again the girl should rest clinging on his bosom. And a great peace lay under all his joy of anticipation. His love knew no doubt. She had given her heart to him. Through his every wandering, whatever might betide, her love would be with him, to comfort him in sorrow, to crown him in happiness. A bird’s song recalled the lilt of her laughter. He saw again the tremulous curving of her mouth, red against the fine warm pallor of her face at parting. Passion welled in him. He halted yet once again, and stood with face suffused, gazing back. It was Zeke’s eyes fastened anew on the rounded bulk of Stone Mountain’s cliffs. The immutability of them, and the majesty, relieved the tenseness of his mood. He resumed his way serenely.... But Plutina wept on, unassuaged. When he drew near to North Wilkesboro’, where he proposed to make a first essay in railway journeying, Zeke seated himself under the shade of a grove of persimmon-trees by the wayside, there painfully to encumber his feet with the new shoes. As he laced these, he indulged in soliloquy, after a fashion bred of his lonely life, on a subject born of his immediate surroundings. “I hain’t noways superstitious,” he mused complacently, “but this grove ain’t no nice place, bein’ as it must be a nigger cemetery. Uncle Dick Siddon says they’s always niggers buried whar they’s persimmon-trees, an’ he says the niggers come first. An’ Uncle Dick, he ought to know, bein’ he’s eighty-odd-year old. Anyhow, it seems reasonable, ’cause niggers do swaller the stuns when they eats persimmons, an’ so, o’ course, jest nacher’ly the trees ’ll He fell silent, recalling old wives’ tales of fearsome things seen and heard of nights. The shoes adjusted, he took from the black bag a holster, which sheltered a formidable-appearing Colt’s revolver. Having made sure that the weapon was loaded and in perfect order, Zeke returned it to the holster, which he put on snugly under the left arm-pit. These final preparations complete, he got up, and hastened into the town. One bit more of his musings he spoke aloud, just before he entered the main street: “No, I hain’t superstitious. But, by crickey! I’m plumb tickled I giv Plutiny thet fairy cross. They say them stones is shore lucky.” At the railway station, Zeke asked for a ticket to Norfolk. “Want a return-trip ticket?” the friendly station-agent suggested. He supposed the young mountaineer was taking a pleasure excursion to the city. But Zeke shook his head defiantly, and spoke with utter forgetfulness of his experience in Joines’ store. “No,” he declared stoutly, “I hain’t a-comin’ back till I’ve made my fortin.” “You’ll be a long time gone from this-here State o’ Wilkes,” the agent vouchsafed dryly. He would have said more, but his shrewd eyes saw in this young man’s expression something that bade him pause, less sceptical. The handsome and wholesome face showed a strength of its own in the resolute curving nose and the firmly-set lips and the grave, yet kindly, eyes, with a light of purposeful intelligence glowing within their clear deeps. The tall form, broad of shoulder, deep of chest, narrow of hip, though not yet come to the fulness of maturity, was of the evident strength fitted to toil hugely at the beck of its owner’s will. The agent, conscious of a puny frame that had served him ill in life’s struggle, experienced a half-resentment against this youth’s physical excellence. He wondered, if, after all, the boast might be justified by the event. “Train in ten minutes,” he said curtly, as he pushed out the ticket. So, presently, Zeke, found himself seated for the first time on the red plush seat of a railway carriage. The initial stage of his journey was ended; the second was begun. |