Thus she set her feet in the path of her future. It led her into dense,
tangled woods, clambering over outcropping ledges and boulders. By
the flare of the west she guided her progress straight to the east till she
reached the banks of Headlong Creek on its tumultuous course down
the mountainside. In her hasty enterprise she had not counted on
crossing it, but Meddlesome rarely turned back. She was strong and
active, and after a moment's hesitation, she was springing from one to
another of the great, half-submerged boulders amidst the whirl of the
transparent crystal-brown water, with its fleck and fringe of white foam.
More than once, to evade the dizzying effect of the sinuous motion and
the continuous roar, she stood still in midstream and gazed upward or
at the opposite bank. The woods were dense on the slope. All in red and
yellow and variant russet and brown tints, the canopy of the forest
foliage was impenetrable. The great, dark boles of oak and gum and
spruce contrasted sharply with the white and greenish-gray trunks of
beeches and sycamore and poplar, and, thus breaking the monotony,
gave long, almost illimitable avenues of sylvan vistas. She noted amidst
a growth of willows on the opposite bank, at the waters-edge, a spring,
a circular, rock-bound reservoir; in the marshy margin she could see the
imprints of the cleft hoofs of deer, and thence ran the indefinite trail
known as a deer-path. The dense covert along the steep slope was a
famous "deer-stand," and there many a fine buck had been killed. All at
once she was reminded of the storied tree hard by, the tragedy of which
she had often bewept.
There it stood, dead itself, weird, phantasmal, as befitted the housing of
so drear a fate. Its branches now bore no leaves. The lightnings of a
last-year's storm had scorched out its vital force and riven the fibre of
the wood. Here and there, too, the tooth of decay had gnawed fissures
that the bark had not earlier known; and from one of these--she thought
herself in a dream--a ghastly, white face looked out suddenly, and as
suddenly vanished!
Her heart gave one wild plunge, then it seemed to cease to beat She
wondered afterward that she did not collapse, and sink into the
plunging rapids to drown, beaten and bruised against the rocks. It was a
muscular instinct that sustained her rather than a conscious impulse of
self-preservation. Motionless, horrified, amazed, she could only gaze at
the empty fissure of the tree on the slope. She could not then
discriminate the wild, spectral imaginations that assailed her untutored
mind. She could not remember these fantasies later. It was a relief so
great that the anguish of the physical reaction was scarcely less
poignant than the original shock when she realized that this face was
not the grisly skeleton lineaments that had looked out thence heretofore,
but was clothed with flesh, though gaunt, pallid, furtive. Once more, as
she gazed, it appeared in a mere glimpse at the fissure, and in that
instant a glance was interchanged. The next moment a hand
appeared,--beckoning her to approach.
It was a gruesome mandate. She had scant choice. She did not doubt
that this was the fugitive, the "wolf's head," and should she turn to flee,
he could stop her progress with a pistol-ball, for doubtless he would
fancy her alert to disclose the discovery and share in the reward.
Perhaps feminine curiosity aided fear; perhaps only her proclivity to
find an employ in the management of others influenced her decision;
though trembling in every fibre, she crossed the interval of water, and
made her way up the slope. But when she reached the fateful tree it was
she who spoke first. He cast so ravenous a glance at the basket on her
arm that all his story of want and woe was revealed. Starvation had
induced his disclosure of his identity.
"It's empty," she said, inverting the basket. She watched him flinch, and
asked wonderingly, "Is game skeerce?"
His eyes were at once forlorn and fierce. "Oh, yes, powerful skeerce,"
he replied with a bitter laugh.
There was an enigma in the rejoinder; she did not stay to read the riddle,
but went on to possess the situation, according to her wont. "Ye hev tuk
a powerful pore place ter hide," she admonished him. "This tree is a
plumb cur'osity. Gran'dad Kettison war tellin' some camp-hunters
'bout'n it jes this evenin'. Like ez not they'll kem ter view it."
His eyes dilated with a sudden accession of terror that seemed always
a-smoulder. "Lawd, Lawd, Lawd!" he moaned wretchedly.
Meddlesome was true to her name and tradition. "Ye oughter hev
remembered the Lawd 'fore ye done it," she said, with a
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