"Oh! I knew his lungs had been weakened by gas. But he never told me

about having hemorrhages."

"Well, he shore had them. The last one I'll never forget. Every time

he'd cough it would fetch the blood. I could tell!... Oh, it was awful.

I begged him not to cough. He smiled--like a ghost smiling--and he

whispered, 'I'll quit.'... And he did. The doctor came from Flagstaff

and packed him in ice. Glenn sat propped up all night and never moved a

muscle. Never coughed again! And the bleeding stopped. After that we

put him out on the porch where he could breathe fresh air all the time.

There's something wonderfully healing in Arizona air. It's from the dry

desert and here it's full of cedar and pine. Anyway Glenn got well. And

I think the West has cured his mind, too."

"Of what?" queried Carley, in an intense curiosity she could scarcely

hide.

"Oh, God only knows!" exclaimed Flo, throwing up her gloved hands. "I

never could understand. But I hated what the war did to him."

Carley leaned back against the log, quite spent. Flo was unwittingly

torturing her. Carley wanted passionately to give in to jealousy of this

Western girl, but she could not do it. Flo Hutter deserved better than

that. And Carley's baser nature seemed in conflict with all that was

noble in her. The victory did not yet go to either side. This was a bad

hour for Carley. Her strength had about played out, and her spirit was

at low ebb.

"Carley, you're all in," declared Flo. "You needn't deny it. I'm shore

you've made good with me as a tenderfoot who stayed the limit. But

there's no sense in your killing yourself, nor in me letting you. So I'm

going to tell dad we want to go home."

She left Carley there. The word home had struck strangely into Carley's

mind and remained there. Suddenly she realized what it was to be

homesick. The comfort, the ease, the luxury, the rest, the sweetness,

the pleasure, the cleanliness, the gratification to eye and ear--to all

the senses--how these thoughts came to haunt her! All of Carley's will

power had been needed to sustain her on this trip to keep her from

miserably failing. She had not failed. But contact with the West had

affronted, disgusted, shocked, and alienated her. In that moment she

could not be fair minded; she knew it; she did not care.

Carley gazed around her. Only one of the cabins was in sight from this

position. Evidently it was a home for some of these men. On one side the

peaked rough roof had been built out beyond the wall, evidently to serve

as a kind of porch. On that wall hung the motliest assortment of things

Carley had ever seen--utensils, sheep and cow hides, saddles, harness,

leather clothes, ropes, old sombreros, shovels, stove pipe, and many

other articles for which she could find no name. The most striking

characteristic manifest in this collection was that of service. How

they had been used! They had enabled people to live under primitive

conditions. Somehow this fact inhibited Carley's sense of repulsion at

their rude and uncouth appearance. Had any of her forefathers ever been

pioneers? Carley did not know, but the thought was disturbing. It was

thought-provoking. Many times at home, when she was dressing for dinner,

she had gazed into the mirror at the graceful lines of her throat and

arms, at the proud poise of her head, at the alabaster whiteness of her

skin, and wonderingly she had asked of her image: "Can it be possible

that I am a descendant of cavemen?" She had never been able to realize

it, yet she knew it was true. Perhaps somewhere not far back along her

line there had been a great-great-grandmother who had lived some kind of

a primitive life, using such implements and necessaries as hung on this

cabin wall, and thereby helped some man to conquer the wilderness, to

live in it, and reproduce his kind. Like flashes Glenn's words came back

to Carley--"Work and children!"




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