Royall might, as she phrased it, make her "pay for it." How,
she did not know; and her fear was the greater because it was
undefinable. If she had been accepting the attentions of one of the
village youths she would have been less apprehensive: Mr. Royall
could not prevent her marrying when she chose to. But everybody
knew that "going with a city fellow" was a different and less
straightforward affair: almost every village could show a victim of
the perilous venture. And her dread of Mr. Royall's intervention
gave a sharpened joy to the hours she spent with young Harney, and
made her, at the same time, shy of being too generally seen with
him.
As he approached she rose to her knees, stretching her arms
above her head with the indolent gesture that was her way of
expressing a profound well-being.
"I'm going to take you to that house up under Porcupine," she
announced.
"What house? Oh, yes; that ramshackle place near the swamp, with
the gipsy-looking people hanging about. It's curious that a house
with traces of real architecture should have been built in such a
place. But the people were a sulky-looking lot—do you suppose
they'll let us in?"
"They'll do whatever I tell them," she said with assurance.
He threw himself down beside her. "Will they?" he rejoined with
a smile. "Well, I should like to see what's left inside the house.
And I should like to have a talk with the people. Who was it who
was telling me the other day that they had come down from the
Mountain?"
Charity shot a sideward look at him. It was the first time he
had spoken of the Mountain except as a feature of the landscape.
What else did he know about it, and about her relation to it? Her
heart began to beat with the fierce impulse of resistance which she
instinctively opposed to every imagined slight.
"The Mountain? I ain't afraid of the Mountain!"
Her tone of defiance seemed to escape him. He lay breast-down on
the grass, breaking off sprigs of thyme and pressing them against
his lips. Far off, above the folds of the nearer hills, the
Mountain thrust itself up menacingly against a yellow sunset.
"I must go up there some day: I want to see it," he
continued.
Her heart-beats slackened and she turned again to examine his
profile. It was innocent of all unfriendly intention.
"What'd you want to go up the Mountain for?"
"Why, it must be rather a curious place. There's a queer colony
up there, you know: sort of out-laws, a little independent kingdom.
Of course you've heard them spoken of; but I'm told they have
nothing to do with the people in the valleys—rather look down on
them, in fact. I suppose they're rough customers; but they must
have a good deal of character."
She did not quite know what he meant by having a good deal of
character; but his tone was expressive of admiration, and deepened
her dawning curiosity. It struck her now as strange that she knew
so little about the Mountain. She had never asked, and no one had
ever offered to enlighten her. North Dormer took the Mountain for
granted, and implied its disparagement by an intonation rather than
by explicit criticism.
"It's queer, you know," he continued, "that, just over there, on
top of that hill, there should be a handful of people who don't
give a damn for anybody."
The words thrilled her. They seemed the clue to her own revolts
and defiances, and she longed to have him tell her more.
"I don't know much about them. Have they always been there?"
"Nobody seems to know exactly how long. Down at Creston they
told me that the first colonists are supposed to have been men who
worked on the railway that was built forty or fifty years ago
between Springfield and Nettleton. Some of them took to drink, or
got into trouble with the police, and went off—disappeared into the
woods. A year or two later there was a report that they were living
up on the Mountain. Then I suppose others joined them—and children
were born. Now they say there are over a hundred people up there.
They seem to be quite outside the jurisdiction of the valleys. No
school, no church—and no sheriff ever goes up to see what they're
about. But don't people ever talk of them at North Dormer?"
"I don't know. They say they're bad."
He laughed.
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