<h2>IX</h2>
<p class="epigram"><br/>
I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba and cry, "'Tis all<br/>
barren."<br/>
<br/>
<span class="smcap">Sterne.</span><br/></p>
<p> <span class="pagenum">[pg. 128]</span></p>
<p> <span class="pagenum">[pg. 129]</span></p>
<p>They traveled a due west course, crossing the two ranges, wending
their way through dim defiles and along precipitous ca�ons, until they
saw the sea. Here its mood was summer-like. Even in the short time
that had elapsed it had worn itself a broad, smooth beach, and wide
tracts of land between the sand and the base of the mountains proved
that the earth had been thrown up, or that the water had receded. They
had not looked upon the ocean before for many months.</p>
<p>They picketed the burros on the rank, salt grass, and built their
camp-fire early, and while Robin set the potatoes baking, and began
her supper preparations, Adam went scouting
along <span class="pagenum">[pg. 130]</span>the coast. In less than
half an hour he came back with a quantity of clams which he threw down
before her as proudly as if they had been foreign battle-flags. She
gave a little feminine shriek of delight.</p>
<p>"Now I know why we brought that inconvenient iron pot," she said;
"bring it here, please."</p>
<p>Adam brought it, and watched her slice up onions and potatoes and
stir in the various ingredients.</p>
<p>"It is going to be the best chowder you ever tasted," she said,
"even if we haven't any bacon. When you write the veracious tale of
our adventures, Adam, don't put in how many things we ate."</p>
<p>"They might think it a voracious tale if I did," he answered,
dropping some more butter into his mealy potato. "Do you remember how
the <span class="pagenum">[pg. 131]</span>Swiss Family were always
worrying for fear they wouldn't have enough to eat?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and how they went out and killed an elephant for breakfast,
and a herd of wild pigs for dinner, and had a buffalo apiece for
supper. And don't you remember how, when the boa constrictor killed
one of their zebras, little Fritz asked pathetically if boas were good
to eat?"</p>
<p>They laughed over their supper, and then having made sure that they
were out of reach of the tide, and the fire would keep, and the rifle
was close at Adam's elbow, they spread their blankets and said "good
night." It had been an exciting day.</p>
<p>It was past midnight, and the moon was waning when Adam was wakened
by Lassie's cold muzzle against his face. He sat up and called to
Robin. <span class="pagenum">[pg. 132]</span>There was no answer, and
her blankets lay tossed on the other side of the fire. He started up
and listened. At first he heard only the sound of the sea; then there
came mingled with it the clear notes of her glorious voice. Holding
Lassie in check he went down to the beach.</p>
<p>Robin stood well out on the shimmering sand, the waves lapping
softly almost at her feet, and he heard the plaintive music, and
caught the words,—</p>
<p>"Oh, for the wings, for the wings of a dove,<br/>
Far away, far away, would I fly, and be, and be at rest."<br/></p>
<p>Her voice quivered when she came to the words, "In the wilderness
build me a nest," but she sang on, and Adam recalled the words of hymn
after hymn, anthem after anthem, for <span class="pagenum">[pg.
133]</span>she sang nothing else. He heard the bitter cry of the De
Profundis, Handel's triumphant "I know that my Redeemer liveth," and
then she began, "He watching over Israel slumbers not nor sleeps."</p>
<p>His eyes filled, and he saw the tents of his regiment. She had
written by every mail, and across her letters, at the top or bottom,
she had put those five bars from "Elijah." Though he did not believe
it, for he had not the early Hebrew ability to see Israel in his own
race, and the to be spoiled Philistine in every Filipino, it had
comforted him in that sickening campaign. Surely, surely if he, an
American "non-com," had spared a Filipino now and then, He watching
over Israel had not been less merciful.</p>
<p>Her voice died away; it was the first time she had sung that year,
<span class="pagenum">[pg. 134]</span>though she was a very perfectly
trained musician. Indeed in the old days, Adam had first sought her
acquaintance because of her music.</p>
<p>Adam returned to the camp; he knew instinctively that she preferred
to keep this to herself. He was lying quite still when she came back,
and controlled every muscle when she bent over him. She regarded him
intently for a moment, then went to her blankets with a heavy sigh
that Adam knew was for him. She had sung out her own sorrows.</p>
<p>Their vigils seemed to do them both good, for they shook off their
melancholy tendencies, and before the end of the first week their tour
was beginning to be thoroughly enjoyable. They did not find cocoanuts
and bananas, but they did find plenty of strawberries, and long,
prickly vines <span class="pagenum">[pg. 135]</span>that would be
covered with raspberries, and wild grapes and choke-cherries and
currants, which they planned to transplant, for though the Western
coast was more beautiful, and in some respects more convenient than
their hedged in valley, they preferred the valley. Already it had come
to mean home.</p>
<p>They traveled about fifty miles southward, to the end of the
island, making desultory trips up into the mountains to see if
anywhere, on land or sea, there was a friendly wreath of smoke, and
every night their watch-fire glowed from the highest peak in their
vicinity. The island narrowed to a single range, detached peaks rising
here and there from the sea. As they rounded the southernmost point,
Adam said, "We ought to name it; that remarkable Swiss family always
named places."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[pg. 136]</span>Robin looked at the bare,
stone walls rising sheer above the waves three hundred feet, and her
lip curled.</p>
<p>"Let us call it the Cape of Good Hope," she said.</p>
<p>"In the name of wonder, why?" asked Adam, and she answered,
"Because we are past it," and then would have given anything to have
recalled the bitter words.</p>
<p>The Eastern coast was wilder and more picturesque, but the
traveling was correspondingly slower. Something in the formation of
the coast caused a terrific surf, and at many places there was
scarcely any beach, and they found themselves compelled to climb along
trails that made even the burros dizzy.</p>
<p>When they had been absent ten days, Robin said, "I begin to feel
like a grandmother; no, I don't mean that <span class="pagenum">[pg.
137]</span>I feel so old, but that I begin to long to see the chicken
and cat-children, and the new calf, and—everything."</p>
<p>Adam laughed, "I have been thinking we ought to hurry; that place
of ours is growing so entrancingly lovely in memory that last night I
dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls!"</p>
<p>They were not to reach home without at least one adventure,
however. A day or so later, as they toiled up a painfully steep
ascent, Lassie sounded the note of alarm, and catching up the rifle,
Adam ran ahead. As he rounded a point in the rocks, he came upon a
Rocky Mountain goat engaged in combat with a cinnamon bear. The bear
was hardly more than a cub, and was carrying off one of the kids. The
goat, horns down, was fighting viciously, though weak from loss of
blood.</p>
<p>It would be interesting to know <span class="pagenum">[pg.
138]</span>what one wild animal thinks when another wild animal, from
its point of view, comes to the rescue. Adam carried a lariat over one
arm. In an instant it flew through the air, dropping over Bruin's
shoulders. He released the kid, and tumbled backward over the cliff,
as much with surprise as by the force of the jerk on the rope, taking
that treasured article with him.</p>
<p>It took some time to capture the wounded animals, bind up their
hurts, and get them down the pathway leading to the beach. For there
was a beach, the best one they had found on the Eastern coast, and as
they put the goat and her kids down in the grass, Adam said
tentatively, "If you are not afraid, I can go home and get the horses
and the sleds. It isn't a great way, and I believe I
can <span class="pagenum">[pg. 139]</span>be back in three
hours,—I'm sure I can if the beach goes as close to our park as
I think."</p>
<p>Robin acquiesced, and as soon as he was gone began gathering
driftwood. When she had quite a little heap she made a fire with the
coals they carried in the pot. It is doubtless more romantic to build
a fire by striking flint rocks together, but a pot of coals has its
uses in a matchless universe. Then she found a long, stout club, and
put one end in the fire, where it smouldered sullenly.</p>
<p>"There now," she said conclusively, "if my bear acquaintance calls,
I will present him with 'the red flower.' I didn't learn the 'Jungle
Books' by heart for nothing."</p>
<p>Meanwhile Adam was striding over the beach at a rate that brought
him to the little cove and the high wall of <span class="pagenum">[pg.
140]</span>rocks that shut them in on the south in a little over an
hour. Two of the pups had gone with him, and they raced on ahead, as
he came in sight of the house. Everything seemed to have an air of
welcome, and the horses whinnied joyfully when he called them from the
gateway.</p>
<p>The pathetic placard was still there, and he crumpled it in his
hand, and went in and opened the windows. He milked one of the cows,
and gathering some green stuff in the garden started back with the
team and the sleds. Once down the steep decline, and over the rocks at
the south, they went on rapidly.</p>
<p>Although he had wasted no time, it was past one o'clock when he saw
her familiar figure afar off. She hurried to meet him. They had not
been separated so long before that year,
and <span class="pagenum">[pg. 141]</span>realized the unconscious
strain in the sudden revulsion. They said nothing of this, however,
though they clasped hands for a moment. Then Robin spoke to the
horses, and stroked their necks, as they bent their heads and rubbed
against her affectionately.</p>
<p>She had spread their table on a broad, flat rock, but before they
had their own meal, she warmed some of the milk, and they gave the
kids their first lesson in drinking out of a bucket. Afterward it took
but a few moments to strike camp. The burros were already packed, and
the goat with her kids, all hobbled, were placed in the sled, and the
cavalcade started on its way.</p>
<p> <span class="pagenum">[pg. 142]</span></p>
<p> <span class="pagenum">[pg. 143]</span></p>
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