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Five The Heir of Carnaby

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The sun was dipping towards the black ridge of firs on the shoulder of a hill when Deringham and his daughter rode down the winding trail into the Somasco valley. The girl gazed about her with eager curiosity, but the man who rode in silence apparently saw nothing, and it was only when his horse stumbled into a rut that he glanced round for a moment abstractedly. Deringham had much to occupy his mind just then, for while it was generally understood that he had made the journey at a physician’s recommendation, he had reasons for choosing British Columbia to recuperate in.

He still retained control of the finances of Carnaby with the concurrence of the trustees, who were country gentlemen of no business capacity, and as it suited the family lawyer to remain on good terms with him nothing more than a very perfunctory account of his stewardship had been demanded. The late owner of Carnaby had been a man of simple tastes and unbending pride, who had a faint contempt for his kinsman, and refrained from inquiries respecting finances while there was no stoppage of supplies. There were one or two men who suspected that Deringham had profited by his relative’s supineness, but it was only a vague surmise, and they did not know that the legacy bequeathed him had little more than an apparent value. Deringham had been unfortunate in his latest ventures, and could foresee considerable difficulty in extricating himself from a distinctly unpleasant position if the new heir decided to take immediate possession of his property. The latter had, however, shown no great desire to do so, and Deringham had accepted a commission from the trustees to ascertain his intentions.

A company of which he was one of the promoters had also invested somewhat unhappily in Western mines, and Deringham, who purposed to see what could be done with the depreciated securities, intended that the expenses of his sojourn in the mountain province should be borne by the shareholders. He had acquired considerable facility in the art of managing them, but the owner of Carnaby was an unknown quantity and Deringham was anxious.

Presently his daughter reined in her pony. “Stop a moment, father. That must be the ranch,” she said.

The man drew bridle, and for a moment forgot his perplexities as he gazed at the scene before him. Far down in the valley lay a still blue lake with a great white peak shining ethereally at its northern end. Dark pines rolled about it, growing smaller and smaller up the hillside until they dwindled with spires clean cut against the azure into a gossamer filigree. Between them and the water stupendous forest shrouded all the valley, save where an oblong of pale verdure ran back from the fringe of boulders and was traversed by the frothing streak of a river whose roar came up hoarsely across the pines in long pulsations.

That was all Deringham saw at first sight, but he realized that it was very beautiful, and then commenced to note details with observant eyes. There was a sawmill beside the river, for he could faintly hear a strident scream and see the blue smoke drifting in gauzy wisps across the hill. The square log-house which stood some little distance from the lake looked well built and substantial, and the road that wound through the green oblong had been skilfully laid with rounded strips sawn off the great fir-trunks. Sleek cattle stood apparently ready for dispatch in a corral, the yellowing oats beyond them were railed off by a six-foot fence, and behind the rows of sawn-off stumps which ringed about the clearing great trunks and branches lay piled in the confusion of the slashing. Deringham was not a farmer, but he was a man of affairs, and all he saw spoke to him of prosperity that sprang from strenuous energy and administrative ability.

“You are very silent,” said his daughter. “What are you thinking?”

Deringham laughed a little, somewhat mirthlessly. “It occurs to me that whatever our unknown relative may be he is a good rancher, if this is his handiwork,” he said. “Well, we shall see him very shortly.”

The girl’s fingers tightened a little on the switch she held. “We know what we shall find,” she said with a gesture of cold disdain. “It would be so much easier if he had only been an educated Englishman!”

“Still,” said Deringham dryly, “since we are ousted from Carnaby I do not see that it makes any great difference.”

Miss Deringham’s eyes sparkled, and a spot of colour tinged her cheeks. Her mother had been one of the Altons who had long been proud of Carnaby, and the instincts of the landholding race were strong within her.

“No?” she said, with a little scornful inflection. “And you could look on while a cattle-driving boor made himself a laughing-stock at Carnaby?”

Deringham smiled again. “I am,” he said, “inclined to feel sorry for the Canadian, but you will at least be civil to him.”

Miss Deringham made a little gesture of impatience. “You do not suppose I should be openly resentful?” she said.

Her father still appeared ironically amused. “I do not know that it would be necessary, but I fancy the Canadian will have cause to regret he is an Alton,” he said. “No doubt it would be some solace to you to make him realize his offences, but I scarcely think it would be advisable.”

Then they rode down into the valley, through oatfields, and between the tall fir-stumps that rose amidst the fern, under the boughs of an orchard, and up to the square log-house. Nobody came out to receive them, or answered their call, and Deringham, dismounting, helped his daughter down, and tethering the horses passed through the verandah into the house. The long table in the big log-walled room they entered was littered with unwashed plates. Torn over-alls and old knee-boots lay amidst the axes and big saws in one corner, the dust was heavy everywhere, and rifles and salmon-spears hung upon the walls. There was no sign of taste or comfort. Everything suggested grim utility, and the house was very still. The girl, who was tired, sat down with a little gesture of dismay.

“This is worse and worse,” she said.

Deringham, who was fond of his daughter, laid a hand upon her shoulder reassuringly. “You can go on to Vancouver when you wish,” said he. “Sit still and rest, while I see if there is anybody about.”

He strolled round the homestead, and noticed that log barns and stables were all well built, while presently he found a man plucking fowls in a galvanized shed. There was a row of them before him, all without heads, while an ensanguined axe close by indicated the fashion of their execution. He glanced at Deringham a moment, and then fell to work again.

“Oh, yes, this is Somasco, and the finest ranch this side of the Fraser,” he said. “Can you see Mr. Alton? Well, I figure he’s busy, and you had better wait a little. Get hold of this. It’s your supper.”

Deringham recoiled a pace when a somewhat gory fowl struck him on the knee, and then sat down on a pile of cedar-wood staring at the speaker. “I wish to see Mr. Alton as soon as possible,” he said.

The other man looked up again, and grinned. “You’d better not,” said he. “Harry Alton’s a bit short in temper when he’s busy, and if you’re peddling anything it would be better if you saw him after supper. Then if you can’t make a deal you can go on to-morrow. There’s plenty good straw in the barn.”

Deringham was not especially flattered at being mistaken for a peddler, nor had the prospect of sleeping on straw any great attraction for him, but he had a sense of humour, and, being desirous of acquiring information, took up the fowl.

“Do you put up every stranger who calls here, and give him a fowl for supper? What am I to do with this one?” he said.

“Now, where did you come from?” said the other. “That’s just what we do. A fowl’s not much for a man, anyway, and Harry will eat two of them when he’s hungry. What are you going to do with it? Well, you can, pull the feathers off it, and fix it for cooking, unless you like them better with their insides in.”

Deringham gravely pulled out four or five feathers, and then, finding it more difficult than he had expected, desisted. “Mr. Alton is apparently not married,” he said.

The man grinned. “No, Harry knows when he’s well off, and it would take a woman with a mighty firm grip to manage him,” said he. “Still, there’s one or two of them quite ready to see what they could make of him, but Mrs. Margery scares them off when they come round bringing him little things, and Harry’s a bit pernicketty. His father was a duke or something in the old country.”

“Mrs. Margery?” said Deringham inquiringly.

“Yes,” said the other. “She’s not here just now, but she keeps the house for him. I help round and do the cooking.”

Deringham, who could adapt himself to his surroundings, nodded. “That is what you would consider a soft job in this country?”

“Well,” said the man grimly, as he pointed to the deformation of one lower limb, “I am not fond of it, but it’s about all I’m good for now. That’s where the axe went in, and anybody but Harry Alton might have fired me. It was my own blame foolishness, too, but when the doctor told him Harry comes to me. ‘You needn’t worry about one thing, anyway. There’ll be a job for you just so long as you’re wanting it,’” says he.

“He does that kind of thing sometimes?” said Deringham curiously.

“No, sir,” said the other dryly. “He does it every time, but the devil himself wouldn’t squeeze ten cents out of Harry if he didn’t want to give it him. But how long are you going to be stripping that fowl?”

“As I’m afraid it would take me all night, I would prefer to give you a half-a-dollar to do it for me,” said Deringham.

The man straightened himself a little, and Deringham received another surprise.

“Patent medicines and hair-growers are up?” said he.

“I don’t quite understand,” said Deringham quietly.

“No?” said the other. “Well, you will do presently unless you get right out of this shanty. I’m fit to make my wages yet, if I’ve only got one handy leg, and I can put my mark on any blame peddler who talks that way to me.”

“I’m sorry,” said Deringham gravely. “I have, you see, just come from England, where folks are not always so well paid as you seem to be. I think I will look for Mr. Alton. Can you tell me where he is?”

The man, who appeared a trifle mollified, pointed to the bush. “He’s yonder, but if he scares you, you needn’t blame me,” he said.

Deringham picked his way amidst the six-foot fir-stumps girdled with tall fern, over a breadth of white ashes and charcoal where the newly-won land lay waiting for the plough, in and out amidst the chaos of trunks that lay piled athwart each other all round the clearing, and stopped close by three men who were making an onslaught on a majestic tree. Its topmost sprays towered two hundred feet above them, and the great trunk ran a stupendous column to the vault of dusky green above. It was, however, the men who most attracted Deringham’s attention, and he stood for a moment watching them.

Two were poised on narrow boards notched into the tree a man’s height from the ground, and one was huge and swarthy, so that the heavy axe he held seemed a toy in his great gnarled hand. The other, whose figure seemed in some respects familiar, stooped a little with the bright axe blade laid flat in one palm as though he were examining it, and Deringham, who could not see his face, turned towards another who sat at the foot of the tree sharpening a big saw. His overalls were in tolerable repair, while from an indefinite something in his face and the way he wore them Deringham set him down as an Englishman. Still, he did not think he was an Alton.

“Can you tell me where Mr. Henry Alton is?” he said. The young man nodded. “Harry!” he said.

Then the man on the plank above turned round, and Deringham felt inclined to gasp as he stood face to face with the new heir to Carnaby. The man was grimed with dust and ashes. His blue shirt rolled back to the shoulders left uncovered arms that were corded like a smith’s, and was rent at the neck so that Deringham could see the finely-arched chest. The overalls, tight-belted round the waist, set off the solidity of his shoulders and the leanness of the flank, while with the first glance at his face Deringham recognized the teamster who had driven them through the bush.

He stood poised on the few inches of springy redwood looking down upon him with a grimly humorous twinkle in his eyes, but through the smears of perspiration and the charcoal grime Deringham now recognized the expression of quiet forcefulness and the directness of gaze which was his birthright.

“Mr. Henry Alton?” he said.

“Yes,” said the other quietly.

There was a moment’s embarrassing silence, for Alton said nothing further, and Deringham gazed at the man he had journeyed three thousand miles to see.

“I should like a little talk with you,” he said presently.

“Can’t oblige you,” said the other. “I couldn’t spare more than a minute now for a railroad director. You can tell me anything you want after supper.”

Deringham lost a little of his usual serenity. “My business is of some importance,” he said.

Alton smiled grimly. “I can’t help that. So is mine,” said he. “A lawyer, by the stamp of you. Well, you’re trailing the wrong man, because I don’t owe anybody money. We’ll put you up to-night, and you can look for him to-morrow.”

“I have come from Carnaby, England,” said Deringham, watching the effect upon the man. “You are, I presume the grandson of its late owner.”

This shot got home, but the effect was not altogether what Deringham had anticipated, for Alton’s big hands tightened on the axe and his face grew very stern. “I’m not proud of the connection, anyway,” he said. “Alton of Somasco is good enough for me.”

“But,” said Deringham quietly, “I have come to talk things over with you. Tristan Alton left you Carnaby.”

Alton straightened himself a little and flung out an arm, while Deringham recognized the Alton pride as with a sweeping gesture he pointed to wide lake, forest-shrouded hillside, and the clearing in the valley.

“He turned out my father because he knew his mind, and now when there is no one else leaves me the played-out property. Thank God, I don’t want it, while that’s all mine,” he said. “What brings you here to talk of Carnaby?”

Deringham smiled a little. “The executor sent me, and I have come a long way,” said he. “When I tell you that I am Ralph Deringham you should know me.”

Alton nodded gravely. “Then you can tell me all about it after supper, and we’ll have plenty time for talking, because you’ll stay a while with me,” he said. “If you’ll go back to the house you’ll find some cigars that might please you in the bureau. Sorry I can’t come with you, but I’m busy. Are you ready, Tom?”

He turned, and swung up the axe while the big bushman swept his blade aloft, and Deringham watched them curiously. Alton swayed with a steely suppleness from the waist, and the broad wedge of steel flashed about his head before it came down ringing. The man had a few inches of springy wood which bent and heaved beneath him to stand upon, but the great blade descended exactly where the last chip had lain, and when it hissed aloft again that of the silent axeman dropped into the notch it made. Deringham knew a little about a good many things, including sword-play, and he realized as he watched the whirl and flash of blades, precision of effort, and exactitude of time, that this was an example of man’s mastery over the trenchant steel.

Presently the man with the saw rose and touched his shoulder. “I fancy we had better draw aside a little,” he said. “She will come down in another minute just here.”

Now Deringham had seen trees wedged over and drawn down by ropes in England, and wondered a little when the man pointed to the spot where he was standing.

“If you don’t resent the question, how do you know?” he said.

The other man laughed a little. “Harry told me, and he’s seldom more than a foot out,” he said.

There was a groaning of fibres as Deringham drew aside, but the two figures on the springy planks still smote and swung, until simultaneously they flung the axes down and, sprang. Then the great fir quivered a little, toppled, lurched, and fell, and the hillside resounded to the thud it made. It also smote the trembling soil just where the man with the saw had indicated. Then Alton signed to his assistant, and strode away with the axe on his shoulder towards another tree. The saw-sharpener laughed a little as he sat down again.

“Now you have had your say it would be better if you waited until after supper,” he said. “You see, one thing at one time is quite enough for Harry, and he really isn’t in the least uncivil when you understand him. Still, it’s no use trying to make him listen when he doesn’t want to.”

“That,” said Deringham dryly, “was always one of the characteristics of his family. You are presumably an Englishman?”

The other man laughed a little. “Yes,” he said, “I’m Charles Seaforth, better known to the boys here as the Honourable Charley, though I have no especial right to the title, and am fortunate in holding a small share in the Somasco ranch, which I owe to my partner’s generosity.”

“Do I understand that he gave it you?” said Deringham.

Seaforth nodded. “You would be near the mark if you came to that conclusion.”

“And is Mr. Alton in the habit of making similar presents?” said Deringham.

Seaforth glanced towards the sinewy figure with the glinting axe, and smiled again. “That,” he said quietly, “is one of the most generous men in the Dominion of Canada, but I should not care to be the man who attempted to take advantage of him.”

Deringham said nothing further, though he was sensible of a slight uneasiness, and presently went back to the house to rejoin his daughter, while the dusk was creeping across the valley when the men from the sawmill and clearing came home, and Deringham led his daughter out when he heard Alton’s voice in the verandah. The latter and his partner were together, and the girl at first felt a slight sense of relief as her glance fell upon Seaforth, who stood with his wide hat in his hand. He was, for that country, somewhat fastidious in dress, his eyes were mildly humorous, and his face was pleasant, while he had not as yet wholly lost the stamp of the graceful idler he had brought with him from England.

“This,” said Deringham with the faintest trace of irony, “is our kinsman, Mr. Henry Alton of Carnaby. You have seen him already. My daughter Alice, Mr. Alton!”

The girl stood still a moment, and glanced at Seaforth, whom she could not recollect having seen before, with something that suggested not altogether unpleased surprise in her face. His appearance and attitude disarmed her, but as she was about to speak to him the other man moved so that the fading light fell full upon him. He stood, tall and almost statuesque in his torn overalls, with the misty pines rolling up the hillside behind him, and a big axe in his hand—a type, it seemed to her, of Western barbarity—and a red spot, faint but perceptible, rose into her cheeks as he bent his head. Then she came near forgetting what was due to both of them in her astonishment and anger.

“You!” she said.

“Yes,” said the axeman gravely. “Still, your father made a little mistake. I’m Alton of Somasco.”

Then he turned and moved forward with a gesture that was almost courtly. “You are very welcome to this poor house of mine,” he said.

Alton of Somasco

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