The house that Prosper Gael had built for himself and for the woman

whom Joan came to think of as the "tall child," stood in a cañon, a

deep, secret fold of the hills, where a cliff stood behind it, and

where the pine-needled ground descended before its door, under the

far-flung, greenish-brown shade of fir boughs, to the lip of a green

lake. Here the highest snow-peak toppled giddily down and reared

giddily up from the crystal green to the ether blue, firs massed into

the center of the double image. In January, the lake was a glare of

snow, in which the big firs stood deep, their branches heavily

weighted. Prosper had dug a tunnel from his door through a big drift

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which touched his eaves. It was curious to see Wen Ho come pattering

out of this Northern cave, his yellow, Oriental face and slant eyes

peering past the stalactite icicles as though they felt their own

incongruity almost with a sort of terror. The interior of the

five-room house gave just such an effect of bizarre and extravagant

contrast; an effect, too, of luxury, though in truth it was furnished

for the most part with stuffs and objects picked up at no very great

expense in San Francisco shops. Nevertheless, there was nothing tawdry

and, here and there, something really precious. Draperies on the

walls, furniture made by Wen Ho and Prosper, lacquered in black and

red, brass and copper, bright pewter, gay china, some fur rugs, a

gorgeous Oriental lamp, bookcases with volumes of a sober richness, in

fact the costliest and most laborious of imports to this wilderness,

small-paned, horizontal windows curtained in some heavy green-gold

stuff which slipped along the black lacquered pole on rings of jade;

all these and a hundred other points of softly brilliant color gave to

the living-room a rare and striking look, while the bedrooms were

matted, daintily furnished, carefully appointed as for a bride. Much

thought and trouble, much detailed labor, had gone to the making of

this odd nest in a Wyoming cañon. Whatever one must think of Prosper

Gael, it is difficult to shirk heartache on his account. A man of his

temperament does not lightly undertake even a companioned isolation in

a winter land. To picture what place of torment this well-appointed

cabin was to him before he brought to it Joan, as a lonely man brings

in a wounded bird to nurse and cherish, stretches the fancy on a rack

of varied painfulness.

On that night, snow was pouring itself down the narrow cañon in a

crowded whirl of dry, clean flakes. Wen Ho, watchful, for his master

was already a day or so beyond the promised date of his return, had

started a fire on the hearth and spread a single cover on the table.

He had drawn the green-and-gold curtains as though there had been

anything but whirling whiteness to look in and stood warming himself

with a rubbing of thin, dry hands before the open blaze. The real heat

of the house, and it was almost unbearably hot, came from the stoves

in kitchen and bedrooms, but this fire gave its quota of warmth and

more than its quota of that beauty so necessary to Prosper Gael.




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