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How We Went To The Wedding
by
Kate again removed her shoes and stockings and puddled about that creek until she found a safe fording place. I am afraid I must admit that I laughed most heartlessly at the spectacle she presented while so employed.
“Oh, for a camera, Kate!” I said, between spasms.
Kate grinned. “I don’t care what I look like,” she said, “but I feel wretchedly unpleasant. This water is simply swarming with wigglers.”
“Goodness, what are they?” I exclaimed.
“Oh, they’re tiny little things like leeches,” responded Kate. “I believe they develop into mosquitoes later on, bad ‘cess to them. What Mr. Nash would call my pedal extremities are simply being devoured by the brutes. Ugh! I believe the bottom of this creek is all soft mud. We may have to drive–no, as I’m a living, wiggler-haunted human being, here’s firm bottom. Hurrah, Phil, we’re all right!”
In a few minutes we were past the creek and bowling merrily on our way. We had a beautiful camping ground that night–a fairylike little slope of white poplars with a blue lake at its foot. When the sun went down a milk-white mist hung over the prairie, with a young moon kissing it. We boiled some slices of our jumping deer and ate them in the open around a cheery camp-fire. Then we sought our humble couches, where we slept the sleep of just people who had been driving over the prairie all day. Once in the night I wakened. It was very dark. The unearthly stillness of a great prairie was all around me. In that vast silence Kate’s soft breathing at my side seemed an intrusion of sound where no sound should be.
“Philippa Blair, can you believe it’s yourself?” I said mentally. “Here you are, lying on a brush bed on a western prairie in the middle of the night, at least twenty miles from any human being except another frail creature of your own sex. Yet you’re not even frightened. You are very comfy and composed, and you’re going right to sleep again.”
And right to sleep again I went.
* * * * *
Our fifth day began ominously. We had made an early start and had driven about six miles when the calamity occurred. Kate turned a corner too sharply, to avoid a big boulder; there was a heart-breaking sound.
“The tongue of the wagon is broken,” cried Kate in dismay. All too surely it was. We looked at each other blankly.
“What can we do?” I said.
“I’m sure I don’t know,” said Kate helplessly. When Kate felt helpless I thought things must be desperate indeed. We got out and investigated the damage.
“It’s not a clean break,” said Kate. “It’s a long, slanting break. If we had a piece of rope I believe I could fix it.”
“Mr. Lonsdale’s piece of rope!” I cried.
“The very thing,” said Kate, brightening up.
The rope was found and we set to work. With the aid of some willow withes and that providential rope we contrived to splice the tongue together in some shape.
Although the trail was good we made only twelve miles the rest of the day, so slowly did we have to drive. Besides, we were continually expecting that tongue to give way again, and the strain was bad for our nerves. When we came at sunset to the junction of the Black River trail with ours, Kate resolutely turned the shaganappies down it.
“We’ll go and spend the night with the Brewsters,” she said. “They live only ten miles down this trail. I went to school in Regina with Hannah Brewster, and though I haven’t seen her for ten years I know she’ll be glad to see us. She’s a lovely person, and her husband is a very nice man. I visited them once after they were married.”
We soon arrived at the Brewster place. It was a trim, white-washed little log house in a grove of poplars. But all the blinds were down and we discovered the door was locked. Evidently the Brewsters were not at home.