Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 283 pages of information about Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories.

Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 283 pages of information about Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories.

Advised that Folsom had passed almost within hailing distance of her, she pressed her lips together and took up her problem of living.  The prospect of another lonely Alaskan winter frightened her, and yet because of the Lulu she could not return by the ship she had come on.  Now that Folsom was a Croesus she could not follow him too closely—­he might misunderstand.  After all, she reflected, it mattered little to her where she lived.

Guth called at her cabin, but she managed to avoid seeing him, and somehow continued to avoid a meeting.

Late in December some travelers from Candle Creek, while breaking a short cut to the head of Crooked River, came upon an abandoned sled and its impedimenta.  Snow and rain and summer sun had bleached its wood, its runners were red streaks of rust, its rawhide lashings had been eaten off, but snugly rolled inside the tarpaulin was a sack of mail.  This mail the travelers brought in with them, and the Nome newspapers, in commenting upon the find, reprinted the story of that tragic fight for life in the Arctic hurricane, now almost forgotten.

Folsom’s three letters reached their destination on Christmas Day.  They were stained and yellow and blurred in places, for they were three years old, but the woman read them with eyes wide and wondering, and with heart-beats pounding, for it seemed that dead lips spoke to her.  Ten minutes later she was standing at Guth’s door, and when he let her in she behaved like one demented.  She had the letters hidden in her bosom, and she would not let him see them, but she managed to make known the meaning of her coming.

“You know him,” she cried, hysterically.  “You made him rich.  You’ve lived alongside of him.  Tell me then, has he—­has he—­changed?  These letters are old.  Does he still care, or—­does he hate me, as he should?”

Guth smiled; he took her shaking hands in his, his voice was gentle.  “No, no!  He doesn’t hate you.  He has never mentioned your name to me, or to any one else, so far as I know, but his money hasn’t satisfied him.  He is sad, and he wants you.  That is what took him to the States, I’m sure.”

Lois sank into a chair, her face was white, her twisting fingers strained at each other.  “I can’t understand.  I can’t make head or tail of it,” she moaned.  “It seems that I wronged him, but see what ruin he has made for me!  Why?  Why—?”

“Who can understand the ‘why’ of anything?” inquired the little Hebrew.  “I’ve heard him curse the perversity of little things, and rave at what he called the ‘malice of the north wind.’  I didn’t dare to ask him what he meant, but I knew he was thinking of the evil which had come between you two.  Who was to blame, or what separated you, he never told me.  Well, his bad luck has changed, and yours, too; and I’m happy.  Now then, the wireless.  You can talk to him.  Let us go.”

An hour later a crackling message was hurled into the empty Christmas sky, a message that pulsed through the voids, was relayed over ice and brine and drifted forests to a lonely, brooding man three thousand miles away.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.