The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales Part 45
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"When was that?"
"At half past eleven. I remember looking at my watch."
"Humph!--when did you meet her first?"
"At half past eight. Come, doctor, you have made a mistake here at least," said the young man with an a.s.sumption of ease he was far from feeling. "Give M'liss the benefit of the doubt."
Dr. d.u.c.h.esne replied by opening a drawer of his desk. After rummaging among the powders and mysterious looking instruments with which it was stored, he finally brought forth a longitudinal slip of folded white paper. It was appropriately labeled "_Poison._"
"Look here," said the doctor, opening the paper. It contained two or three black coa.r.s.e hairs. "Do you know them?"
"No."
"Look again!"
"It looks something like Melissa's hair," said the master, with a fathomless sinking of the heart.
"When I was called to look at the body," continued the doctor with the deliberate cautiousness of a professional diagnosis, "my suspicions were aroused by the circ.u.mstance I told you of. I managed to get possession of the pistol, and found these hairs twisted around the lock as though they had been accidentally caught and violently disentangled. I don't think that any one else saw them. I removed them without observation, and--they are at your service."
The master sank back in his seat and pressed his hand to his forehead.
The image of M'liss rose before him with flas.h.i.+ng eye and long black hair, and seemed to beat down and resist defiantly the suspicion that crept slowly over his heart.
"I forbore to tell you this, my friend," continued the doctor slowly and gravely, "because when I learned that you had taken this strange child under your protection I did not wish to tell you that which--though I contend does not alter her claims to man's sympathy and kindness--still might have prejudiced her in your eyes. Her improvement under your care has proven my position correct. I have, as you know, peculiar ideas of the extent to which humanity is responsible. I find in my heart--looking back over that child's career--no sentiment but pity. I am mistaken in you if I thought this circ.u.mstance aroused any other feeling in yours."
Still the figure of M'liss stood before the master as he bent before the doctor's words, in the same defiant att.i.tude, with something of scorn in the great dark eyes, that made the blood tingle in his cheeks, and seemed to make the reasoning of the speaker but meaningless and empty words. At length he rose. As he stood with his hand on the latch he turned to Dr. d.u.c.h.esne, who was watching him with careful solicitude.
"I don't know but that you have done well to keep this from me. At all events it has not--cannot, and should not alter my opinion toward M'liss. You will of course keep it a secret. In the mean time you must not blame me if I cling to my instincts in preference to your judgment.
I still believe that you are mistaken in regard to her."
"Stay, one moment," said the doctor; "promise me you will not say anything of this, nor attempt to prosecute the matter further till you have consulted with me."
"I promise. Good-night."
"Good-night;" and so they parted.
True to that promise and his own instinctive promptings the master endeavored to atone for his momentary disloyalty by greater solicitude for M'liss. But the child had noticed some change in the master's thoughtful manner, and in one of their long post-prandial walks she stopped suddenly, and mounting a stump, looked full in his face with big searching eyes.
"You ain't mad?" said she, with an interrogative shake of the black braids.
"No."
"Nor bothered?"
"No."
"Nor hungry?" (Hunger was to M'liss a sickness that might attack a person at any moment.)
"No."
"Nor thinking of her?"
"Of whom, Lissy?"
"That white girl." (This was the latest epithet invented by M'liss, who was a very dark brunette, to express Clytemnestra.)
"No."
"Upon your word?" (A subst.i.tute for "Hope you 'll die!" proposed by the master.)
"Yes."
"And sacred honor?"
"Yes."
Then M'liss gave him a fierce little kiss, and hopping down, fluttered off. For two or three days after that she condescended to appear like other children and be, as she expressed it, "good."
When the summer was about spent, and the last harvest had been gathered in the valleys, the master bethought him of gathering in a few ripened shoots of the young idea, and of having his Harvest Home, or Examination. So the savans and professionals of Smith's Pocket were gathered to witness that time-honored custom of placing timid children in a constrained position, and bullying them as in a witness-box. As usual in such cases, the most audacious and self-possessed were the lucky recipients of the honors. The reader will imagine that in the present instance M'liss and Clytie were preeminent and divided public attention: M'liss with her clearness of material perception and self-reliance, and Clytie with her placid self-esteem and saintlike correctness of deportment. The other little ones were timid and blundering. M'liss's readiness and brilliancy, of course, captivated the greatest number, and provoked the greatest applause, and M'liss's antecedents had unconsciously awakened the strongest sympathies of the miners, whose athletic forms were ranged against the walls, or whose handsome bearded faces looked in at the window. But M'liss's popularity was overthrown by an unexpected circ.u.mstance.
McSnagley had invited himself, and had been going through the pleasing entertainment of frightening the more timid pupils by the vaguest and most ambiguous questions, delivered in an impressive, funereal tone; and M'liss had soared into astronomy, and was tracking the course of our "spotted ball" through s.p.a.ce, and defining the "tethered orbits" of the planets, when McSnagley deliberately arose.
"Meelissy, ye were speaking of the revolutions of this yer yearth, and its movements with regard to the sun, and I think you said it had been a-doin' of it since the creation, eh?"
M'liss nodded a scornful affirmative.
"Well, was that the truth?" said McSnagley, folding his arms.
"Yes," said M'liss, shutting up her little red lips tightly.
The handsome outlines at the windows peered further into the schoolroom, and a saintly, Raphael-like face, with blond beard and soft blue eyes, belonging to the biggest scamp in the diggings, turned toward the child and whispered:--
"Stick to it, M'liss! It's only a big bluff of the parson."
The reverend gentleman heaved a deep sigh, and cast a compa.s.sionate glance at the master, then at the children, and then rested his eye on Clytemnestra. That young woman softly elevated her round, white arm.
Its seductive curves were enhanced by a gorgeous and ma.s.sive specimen bracelet, the gift of one of her humblest wors.h.i.+pers, worn in honor of the occasion. There was a momentary pause. Clytie's round cheeks were very pink and soft. Clytie's big eyes were very bright and blue.
Clytie's low-necked white book-muslin rested softly on Clytie's white, plump shoulders. Clytie looked at the master, and the master nodded.
Then Clytie spoke softly:
"Joshua commanded the sun to stand still, and it obeyed him."
There was a low hum of applause in the schoolroom, a triumphant expression on McSnagley's face, a grave shadow on the master's, and a comical look of disappointment reflected from the windows. M'liss skimmed rapidly over her astronomy, and then shut the book with a loud snap. A groan burst from McSnagley, an expression of astonishment from the schoolroom, and a yell from the windows, as M'liss brought her red fist down on the desk, with the emphatic declaration:--
"It's a d--n lie. I don't believe it!"
CHAPTER V
The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales Part 45
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The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Tales Part 45 summary
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