The Fighting Chance. Chambers Robert William

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The Fighting Chance - Chambers Robert William


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you.... Might I sit here a moment to watch it?”

      She seated herself soundlessly among the dead leaves; he sank into place beside her, laying his gun aside.

      “Rather rough on the dog,” he said with a grimace.

      “I know. It is very good of you, Mr. Siward to do this for my pleasure. Oh—h! Do you see! Oh, the little beauty!”

      The woodcock had risen, plumage puffed out, strutting with wings bowed and tail spread, facing the dog. The sudden pigmy defiance thrilled her. “Brave! Brave!” she exclaimed, enraptured; but at the sound of her voice the bird crouched like a flash, large dark liquid eyes shining, long bill pointed straight toward them.

      “He’ll fly the way his bill points,” said Siward. “Watch!”

      He rose; she sprang lightly to her feet; there came a whirring flutter, a twittering shower of sweet notes, soft wings beating almost in their very faces, a distant shadow against the sky, and the woodcock was gone.

      Quieting the astounded dog, gun cradled in the hollow of his left arm, he turned to the girl beside him: “That sort of thing wins no cups,” he said.

      “It wins something else, Mr. Siward,—my very warm regard for you.”

      “There is no choice between that and the Shotover Cup,” he admitted, considering her.

      “I—do you mean it?”

      “Of course I do, vigorously!”

      “Then you are much nicer than I thought you.... And after all, if the price of a cup is the life of that brave little bird, I had rather shoot clay pigeons. Now you will scorn me I suppose. Begin!”

      “My ideal woman has never been a life-taker,” he said coolly. “Once, when I was a boy, there was a girl—very lovely—my first sweetheart. I saw her at the traps once, just after she had killed her seventh pigeon straight, ‘pulling it down’ from overhead, you know—very clever—the little thing was breathing on the grass, and it made sounds—” He shrugged and walked on. “She killed her twenty-first bird straight; it was a handsome cup, too.”

      And after a silence, “So you didn’t love her any more, Mr. Siward?”—mockingly sweet.

      They laughed, and at the sound of laughter the tall-stemmed alders echoed with the rushing roar of a cock-grouse thundering skyward. Crack! Crack! Whirling over and over through a cloud of floating feathers, a heavy weight struck the springy earth. There lay the big mottled bird, splendid silky ruffs spread, dead eyes closing, a single tiny crimson bead twinkling like a ruby on the gaping beak.

      “Dead!” said Siward to the dog who had dropped to shot; “Fetch!” And, signalling the boy behind, he relieved the dog of his burden and tossed the dead weight of ruffled plumage toward him. Then he broke his gun, and, as the empty shells flew rattling backward, slipped in fresh cartridges, locked the barrels, and walked forward, the flush of excitement still staining his sunburnt face.

      “You deal death mercifully,” said the girl in a low voice. “I wonder what your ci-devant sweetheart would think of you.”

      “A bungler had better stick to the traps,” he assented, ignoring the badinage.

      “I am wondering,” she said thoughtfully, “what I think of men who kill.”

      He turned sharply, hesitated, shrugged. “Wild things’ lives are brief at best—fox or flying-tick, wet nests or mink, owl, hawk, weasel or man. But the death man deals is the most merciful. Besides,” he added, laughing, “ours is not a case of sweethearts.”

      “My argument is purely in the abstract, Mr. Siward. I am asking you whether the death men deal is more justifiable than a woman’s gift of death?”

      “Oh, well, life-taking, the giving of life—there can be only one answer to the mystery; and I don’t know it,” he replied smiling.

      “I do.”

      “Tell me then,” he said, still amused.

      They had passed swale after swale of silver birches waist deep in perfumed fern and brake; the big timber lay before them. She moved forward, light gun swung easily across her leather-padded shoulder; and on the wood’s sunny edge she seated herself, straight young back against a giant pine, gun balanced across her flattened knees.

      “You are feeling the pace a little,” he said, coming up and standing in front of her.

      “The pace? No, Mr. Siward.”

      “Are you a trifle—bored?” She considered him in silence, then leaned back luxuriously, rounded arms raised, wrists crossed to pillow her head.

      “This is charmingly new to me,” she said simply.

      “What? Not the open?”

      “No; I have camped and done the usual roughing it with only three guides apiece and the champagne inadequately chilled. I have endured that sort of hardship several times, Mr. Siward.... What is that furry hunch up there in that tall thin tree?”

      “A raccoon,” he said presently. “Can you see the foxy head peeping so slyly down at us? Look at Sagamore nosing the air in that droll blind mole-like way. He knows there’s something furry up aloft somewhere; and he knows it’s none of his business.”

      They watched the motionless ball of fur in the crotch of a slim forest elm. Presently it uncurled, cautiously; a fluffy ringed tail unfolded; the rounded furry back humped up, and the animal, moving slowly into the tangent foliage of an enormous oak, vanished amid bronzing leafy depths.

      In the silence the birds began to reappear. A jay screamed somewhere deep in the yellowing woods; black-capped chickadees dropped from twig to twig, cheeping inquiringly.

      She sat listening, bright head pillowed in her arms, idly attentive to his low running comment on beast and bird and tree, on forest stillness and forest sounds, on life and the wild laws of life and death governing the great out-world ‘twixt sky and earth. Sunlight and shadows moving, speech and silence, waxed and waned. A listless contentment lay warm upon her, weighting the heavy white lids. The blue of her eyes was very dark now—almost purple like the colour of the sea when the wind-flaws turn the blue to violet.

      “Did you ever hear of the ‘Lesser Children’?” she asked. “Listen then:

           “‘Multitudes, multitudes, under the moon they stirred!

           The weakerbrothers of our earthly breed;

           All came about my head and at my feet

           A thousand thousand sweet,

           With starry eyes not even raised to plead:

           Bewildered, driven, hiding, fluttering, mute!

           And I beheld and saw them one by one

           Pass, and become as nothing in the night.’

      “Do you know what it means?

           “‘Winged mysteries of song that from the sky

           Once dashed long music down—’

      “Do you understand?” she asked, smiling.

           “‘Who has not seen in the high gulf of light

           What, lower, was a bird!’”

      She ceased, and, raising her eyes to his: “Do you know that plea for mercy on the lesser children who die all day to-day because the season opens for your pleasure, Mr. Siward?”

      “Is it a woodland sermon?” he inquired, too politely.

      “The poem? No; it is the case for the prosecution. The prisoner may defend himself if he can.”

      “The defence rests,” he said. “The prisoner moves that he be discharged.”

      “Motion denied,” she interrupted promptly.

      Somewhere


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