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The Forge In The Valley
by
“Have I been ill?” he asked.
“You have been very ill, Francis.”
“Has it been long?”
Her fingers passed tenderly through his grizzled hair. “Too long, too long, my husband,” she replied.
“Is it summer now?”
“Yes, Francis, it is summer.”
“Was it in the spring, Samantha?–Yes, I think it was in the spring,” he added, musing.
“It was in a spring.”
“There was snow still on the mountain-top, the river was running high, and wild fowl were gathered on the island in the lake–yes, I remember, I think.”
“And the men were working at the mine,” she whispered, her voice shaking a little, and her eyes eagerly questioning his face.
“Ah, the mine–it was the mine, Samantha!” he said abruptly, his eyes flashing up. “I was working at the forge to make a great bolt for the machinery, and some one forgot and set the engine in motion. I ran out; but it was too late… and then…”
“And then you tried to save them, Francis, and you were hurt.”
“What month is this, my wife?”
“It is December.”
“And that was in October?”
“Yes, in October.”
“I have been ill since? What happened?”
“Many were killed, Francis, and you and I came away.”
“Where are we now? I do not know the place.”
“This is Megalon Valley. You and I live alone here.”
“Why did you bring me here?”
“I did not bring you, Francis; you wished me to come. One day you said to me: ‘There is a place in Megalon Valley where, long ago, an old man lived, who had become a stranger among men–a place where the blackbird stays, and the wolf-dog troops and hides, and the damson grows as thick as blossoms on the acacia. We will go there.’ And I came with you.”
“I do not remember. What of the mine? Was I a coward and left the mine? There was no one understood the ways of the wheel, and rod, and steam, save me.
“The mine is closed, Francis,” she answered gently. “You were no coward, but–but you had strange fancies.
“When did the mine close?” he said, with a kind of sorrow; “I put hard work and good years into it.” At that moment, when her face drew close to his, the vision of her as she stood at the anvil came to him with a new impression, and he said again in a half-frightened way: “When did it close, Samantha?”
“The mine was closed–twelve years ago, my own dear husband.”
He got to his feet and clasped her to his breast. A strength came to him which had eluded him twelve years, and she, womanlike, delighted in that strength, and, with a great gladness, changed eyes and hands with him; keeping her soul still her own, brooding and lofty, as is the soul of every true woman, though, like this one, she labours at a forge, and in a far, untenanted country is faithful friend, ceaseless apothecary to a comrade with a disordered mind; living on savage meats, clothing herself and the other in skins, and, with a divine persistence, keeping a cheerful heart, certain that the intelligence which was frightened from its home would come back one day. It should be hers to watch for the great moment, and give the wanderer loving welcome, lest it should hurry madly away again into the desert, never to return.
She had her reward, yet she wept. She had carried herself before him with the bright ways of an unvexed girl these twelve years past; she had earned the salt of her tears. He was dazed still, but, the doublet of his mind no longer unbraced, he understood what she had been to him, and how she had tended him in absolute loneliness, her companions the wild things of the valley–these and God.
He drew her into the workshop, and put his hand upon the bellows and churned them, so that the fire roared joyously up, and the place was red with the light. In this light he turned her to him and looked at her. The look was as that of one who had come back from the dead–that naked, profound, unconditional gaze which is as deep and honest as the primeval sense. His eyes fell upon her rich, firm, stately body; it lingered for a moment on the brown fulness of her hair; then her look was gathered to his, and they fell into each other’s arms.