Maud Upper was the first girl of her own age that Joan had ever seen.

Joan went in terror of her and Maud knew this and enjoyed her

ascendancy over an untamed creature twice her size. There was the

crack of a lion-tamer's whip in the tone of her instructions. That was

after a day or two. At first Maud had been horribly afraid of Joan. "A

wild thing like her, livin' off there in the hills with that man, why,

ma, there's no tellin' what she might be doin' to me."

"She won't hurt ye," laughed Mrs. Upper, who had lived in the wilds

herself, having been a frontierman's wife before the days even of this

frontier town and having married the hotel-keeper as a second venture.

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She knew that civilization--this rude place being civilization to

Joan--would cow the girl and she knew that Maud's self-assertive

buoyancy would frighten the soul of her. Maud was large-hipped,

high-bosomed, with a small, round waist much compressed. She carried

her head, with its waved brown hair, very high, and shot blue glances

down along a short, broad nose. Her mouth was thin and determined, her

color high. She had a curiously shallow, weak voice that sounded

breathless. She taught Joan impatiently and laughed loudly but not

unkindly at her ways.

"Gee, she's awkward, ain't she?" she would say to the men; "trail like

a bull moose!"

The men grinned, but their eyes followed Joan's movements. As a matter

of fact, she was not awkward. Through her clumsy clothes, the

heaviness of her early youth, in spite of all the fetters of her

ignorance, her wonderful long bones and her wonderful strength

asserted themselves. And she never hurried. At first this apparent

sluggishness infuriated Maud. "Get a gait on ye, Joan Carver!" she

would scream above the din of the rough meals, but soon she found that

Joan's slow movements accomplished a tremendous amount of work in an

amazingly short time. There was no pause in the girl's activity. She

poured out her strength as a python pours his, noiselessly, evenly,

steadily, no haste, no waste. And the men's eyes brooded upon her.

If Joan had stayed long at Mrs. Upper's, she would have begun

inevitably to model herself on Maud, who was, in her eyes, a marvelous

thing of beauty. But, just a week after her arrival, there came to the

inn Pierre Landis and for Joan began the strange and terrible history

of love.

In the lives of most women, of the vast majority, the clatter and

clash of housewifery prelude and postlude the spring song of their

years. And the rattle of dishes, of busy knives and forks, the quick

tapping of Maud's attendant feet, the sound of young and ravenous jaws

at work: these sounds were in Joan's bewildered ears, and the sights

which they accompanied in her bewildered eyes, just before she heard

Pierre's voice, just before she saw his face.




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