Close to the serried backbone of the Cumberland ridge through a sky of

mountain clarity, the sun seemed hesitating before its descent to the

horizon. The sugar-loaf cone that towered above a creek called Misery

was pointed and edged with emerald tracery where the loftiest timber

thrust up its crest plumes into the sun. On the hillsides it would be

light for more than an hour yet, but below, where the waters tossed

themselves along in a chorus of tiny cascades, the light was already

thickening into a cathedral gloom. Down there the "furriner" would have

seen only the rough course of the creek between moss-velveted and

shaded bowlders of titanic proportions. The native would have

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recognized the country road in these tortuous twistings. Now there were

no travelers, foreign or native, and no sounds from living throats

except at intervals the clear "Bob White" of a nesting partridge, and

the silver confidence of the red cardinal flitting among the pines.

Occasionally, too, a stray whisper of breeze stole along the creek-bed

and rustled the beeches, or stirred in the broad, fanlike leaves of the

"cucumber trees." A great block of sandstone, to whose summit a man

standing in his saddle could scarcely reach his fingertips, towered

above the stream, with a gnarled scrub oak clinging tenaciously to its

apex. Loftily on both sides climbed the mountains cloaked in laurel and

timber.

Suddenly the leafage was thrust aside from above by a cautious hand,

and a shy, half-wild girl appeared in the opening. For an instant she

halted, with her brown fingers holding back the brushwood, and raised

her face as though listening. Across the slope drifted the call of the

partridge, and with perfect imitation she whistled back an answer. It

would have seemed appropriate to anyone who had seen her that she

should talk bird language to the birds. She was herself as much a wood

creature as they, and very young. That she was beautiful was not

strange. The women of the mountains have a morning-glory bloom--until

hardship and drudgery have taken toll of their youth--and she could not

have been more than sixteen.

It was June, and the hills, which would be bleakly forbidding barriers

in winter, were now as blithely young as though they had never known

the scourging of sleet or the blight of wind. The world was abloom, and

the girl, too, was in her early June, and sentiently alive with the

strength of its full pulse-tide. She was slim and lithely resilient of

step. Her listening attitude was as eloquent of pausing elasticity as

that of the gray squirrel. Her breathing was soft, though she had come

down a steep mountainside, and as fragrant as the breath of the elder

bushes that dashed the banks with white sprays of blossom. She brought

with her to the greens and grays and browns of the woodland's heart a

new note of color, for her calico dress was like the red cornucopias of

the trumpet-flower, and her eyes were blue like little scraps of sky.

Her heavy, brown-red hair fell down over her shoulders in loose

profusion. The coarse dress was freshly briar-torn, and in many places

patched; and it hung to the lithe curves of her body in a fashion which

told that she wore little else. She had no hat, but the same spirit of

childlike whimsey that caused her eyes to dance as she answered the

partridge's call had led her to fashion for her own crowning a headgear

of laurel leaves and wild roses. As she stood with the toes of one bare

foot twisting in the gratefully cool moss, she laughed with the sheer

exhilaration of life and youth, and started out on the table top of the

huge rock. But there she halted suddenly with a startled exclamation,

and drew instinctively back. What she saw might well have astonished

her, for it was a thing she had never seen before and of which she had

never heard. Now she paused in indecision between going forward toward

exploration and retreating from new and unexplained phenomena. In her

quick instinctive movements was something like the irresolution of the

fawn whose nostrils have dilated to a sense of possible danger.

Finally, reassured by the silence, she slipped across the broad face of

the flat rock for a distance of twenty-five feet, and paused again to

listen.




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