at her--my hair's bleachin'."
"She's got the pip all right," stuttered Jowett as he plunged along; "but
she's foreign, and they've all got the pip, foreign men and women both--
but the women go crazy."
"She keeps pretty cool for a crazy loon, that girl. If I owned her, I'd--"
Jowett interrupted impatiently. "You'd do what old man Druse
does--you'd let her be, Osterhaut. What's the good of havin' your own
way with one that's the apple of your eye, if it turns her agin you? You
want her to kiss you on the high cheek-bone, but if you go to play the
cat-o'-nine- tails round her, the high cheek-bone gets froze. Gol blast it,
look at her, son! What are the wild waves saying? They're sayin', 'This
is a surprise, Miss Druse. Not quite ready for ye, Miss Druse.' My, ain't
she got the luck of the old devil!"
It seemed so. More than once the canoe half jammed between the rocks,
and the stern lifted up by the force of the wild current, but again the
paddle made swift play, and again the cockle-shell swung clear. But
now Fleda Druse was no longer on her feet. She knelt, her strong, slim
brown arms bared to the shoulder, her hair blown about her forehead,
her daring eyes flashing to left and right, memory of her course at work
under such a strain as few can endure without chaos of mind in the end.
A hundred times since the day she had run these Rapids with Tekewani,
she had gone over the course in her mind, asleep and awake, forcing
her brain to see again every yard of that watery way; because she knew
that the day must come when she would make the journey alone. Why
she would make it she did not know; she only knew that she would do
it some day; and the day had come. For long it had been an obsession
with her--as though some spirit whispered in her ear--"Do you hear the
bells ringing at Carillon? Do you hear the river singing towards
Carillon? Do you see the wild birds flying towards Carillon? Do you
hear the Rapids calling--the Rapids of Carillon?"
Night and day since she had braved death with Tekewani, giving him a
gun, a meerschaum pipe, and ten pounds of beautiful brown "plug"
tobacco as a token of her gratitude--night and day she had heard this
spirit murmuring in her ear, and always the refrain was, "Down the
stream to Carillon! Shoot the Rapids of Carillon!"
Why? How should she know? Wherefore should she know? This was
of the things beyond the why of the human mind. Sometimes all our
lives, if we keep our souls young, and see the world as we first saw it
with eyes and heart unsoiled, we hear the murmuring of the Other Self,
that Self from which we separated when we entered this mortal sphere,
but which followed us, invisible yet whispering inspiration to us. But
sometimes we only hear It, our own soul's oracle, while yet our years
are few, and we have not passed that frontier between innocence and
experience, reality and pretence. Pretence it is which drives the Other
Self away with wailing on its lips. Then we hear It cry in the night
when, because of the trouble of life, we cannot sleep; or at the play
when we are caught away from ourselves into another air than ours;
when music pours around us like a soft wind from a garden of
pomegranates; or when a child asks a question which brings us back to
the land where everything is so true that it can be shouted from the
tree-tops.
Why was Fleda Druse tempting death in the Carillon Rapids?
She had heard a whisper as she wandered among the pine-trees there at
Manitou, and it said simply the one word, "Now!" She knew that she
must do it; she had driven her canoe out into the resistless current to
ride the Rapids of Carillon. Her Other Self had whispered to her.
Yonder, thousands of miles away in Syria, there were the Hills of
Lebanon; and there was one phrase which made every Syrian heart beat
faster, if he were on the march. It was, "The Druses are up!" When that
wild tribe took to the saddle to war upon the Caravans and against
authority, from Lebanon to Palmyra, from Jerusalem to Damascus men
looked anxiously about them and rode hard to refuge.
And here also in the Far North where the River Sagalac ran a wild race
to Carillon, leaving behind the new towns of Lebanon and Manitou,
"the Druses were up."
The daughter of Gabriel Druse, the giant, was riding the Rapids of the
Sagalac. The suspense to her and
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