Produced by Al Haines
[Frontispiece: "Cautiously Cynthia stepped close and looked in . . . Sandy was painting at his easel"]
A SON OF THE HILLS
BY
HARRIET T. COMSTOCK
AUTHOR OF
JOYCE OF THE NORTH WOODS,
JANET OF THE DUNES, ETC.
GROSSET & DUNLAP
PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK
Copyright, 1913, by
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
_All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign languages, including the Scandinavian_
A Son of the Hills
CHAPTER I
Lost Hollow lies close at the foot of the mountain which gives it its name. The height of neither is great, geographically considered; the peak is perhaps eighteen hundred feet above sea level: The Hollow, a thousand, and from that down to The Forge there is a gradual descent by several trails and one road, a very deplorable one, known as The Appointed Way, but abbreviated into--The Way.
There are a few wretched cabins in Lost Hollow, detached and dreary; between The Hollow and The Forge are some farms showing more or less cultivation, and there is the Walden Place, known before the war--they still speak of that event among the southern hills as if Sheridan had ridden through in the morning and might be expected back at night--as the Great House.
Among the crevasses of the mountains there are Blind Tigers, or Speak Easies--as the stills are called--and, although there is little trading done with the whiskey outside the country side, there is much mischief achieved among the natives who have no pleasure of relaxation except such as is evolved from the delirium brought about by intoxication.
The time of this story is not to-day nor is it very many yesterdays ago; it was just before young Sandy Morley had his final "call" and obeyed it; just after the Cup-of-Cold-Water Lady came to Trouble Neck--three miles from The Hollow--and while she was still distrusted and feared.
Away back in the days of the Revolution the people of the hills were of the best. All of them who could serve their country then, did it nobly and well. Some of them signed the Declaration of Independence and then returned to their homes with the dignity and courage of men in whose veins flowed aristocratic blood as well as that of adventurous freemen. There they waited for the recognition they expected and deserved. But the new-born republic was too busy and breathless to seek them out or pause to listen to their voices, which were softer, less insistent than others nearer by. In those far past times the Morleys and the Hertfords were equals and the Walden Place deserved its name of the Great House. The Appointed Way was the Big Road, and was kept in good order by well-fed and contented slaves who had not then dreamed of freedom.
The final acceptance of the hill people's fate came like a deadening shock to the men and women of the Lost Mountain district--they were forgotten in the new dispensation; in the readjustment they were overlooked! The Hertfords left the hills with uplifted and indignant heads--they had the courage of their convictions and meant to take what little was left to them and demand recognition elsewhere--they had always been rovers. Besides, just at that time Lansing Hertford and Sandford Morley, sworn friends and close comrades, had had that secret misunderstanding that was only whispered about then, and it made it easier for Hertford to turn his back upon his home lands and leave them to the gradual decay to which they were already doomed. The Waldens had retained enough of this world's goods to enable them to descend the social scale slower than their neighbours. Inch by inch they debated the ground, and it was only after the Civil War that Fate gripped them noticeably. Up to that time they had been able to hide, from the none too discriminating natives, the true state of affairs.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Son of the Hills by Harriet T. Comstock
- 2: Get away farther than The Forge far
- 3: Dark trees the dogwood bushes were in full bloom
- 4: Ann Walden grew more interested
- 5: Then it was that Cynthia Walden
- 6: Sandy had had an awakening and a warning
- 7: Greeley pulled himself together
- 8: Miss Ann Walden is quality from way back
- 9: I reckon Smith Crothers owns it
- 10: Tansey Moore ventured after a while
- 11: Tansey Moore nodded significantly
- 12: Norman Teale confided to Tansey Moore
- 13: She had waited for Miss Walden to call
- 14: Ann Walden sank back in her stiff armchair
- 15: For Marcia Lowe had risen also
- 16: Theodore Starr had not been honest with her
- 17: Ann Walden looked quickly toward the chimney place
- 18: Ann Walden is one to call forth fear
- 19: Ann Walden gripped the closely written sheets
- 20: Sandy Morley strove to understand
- 21: Having no legitimate business at the back door of Stoneledge
- 22: Sandy started up and dashed with one bound into the open
- 23: He stepped to Cynthia and knelt beside her
- 24: Greeley to change the pennies for bills
- 25: Cynthia had Sandy by the shoulders now in frank
- 26: Poor Sandy was beyond suffering now
- 27: Him and that that Cynthia Walden
- 28: As Morley drawled the ancient wrong to light
- 29: In them days us all and the Hertfords was equals
- 30: Her that was called Queenie and looked it
- 31: Yo' great grandfather's name was Sandford Morley
- 32: And then Morley lifted his head
- 33: Ann Walden in the sitting room
- 34: Cynthia wanted to think about Sandy
- 35: Thin Cynthia Walden that she saw
- 36: Ann Walden had thought it all out
- 37: And we Waldens cannot be bought
- 38: If the stranger were what Liza suggested
- 39: And with instinctive fear and caution Ann Walden
- 40: Cynthia shrank from Ann Walden
- 41: The two plodded down The Appointed Way with firmer tread
- 42: As Sandy and his dog approached
- 43: Levi Markham liked all animals
- 44: Matilda Markham could not bear the sight
- 45: Levi looked at Matilda and Matilda looked at Levi
- 46: Keep your clutches off that lad
- 47: Flabby as his father before him
- 48: Markham had written home to his lawyer
- 49: Markham was learning to watch for that look
- 50: Markham had business in the city and was often absorbed
- 51: She wanted him and the Markham money
- 52: Prepared and coached by his aunt Treadwell
- 53: For the life of him Lansing could not prevent a stare
- 54: When he spoke he addressed a Hertford only
- 55: Lansing Hertford got upon his feet
- 56: So distant in thought from the Bretherton study
- 57: Olive Treadwell and her adopted son
- 58: Tod finished his careful weighing
- 59: Ann Walden laughed a great deal
- 60: But Crothers met it with a laugh
- 61: When he had gone Cynthia drew a long breath
- 62: At that moment Marcia Lowe jumped from her horse
- 63: She ought not to be alone there with Miss Walden
- 64: Martin was depressed and forlorn
- 65: I've been thinking about Molly
- 66: Morley tried to control himself before he spoke
- 67: If I let any petticoat Saw Bones tamper with them
- 68: After a time Marcia Lowe came back and
- 69: CHAPTER XIIMartin Morley slept
- 70: Marcia Lowe was bending forward now
- 71: Morley did not attempt an answer
- 72: This wrung Marcia Lowe's heart
- 73: Greeley tiptoed from the house
- 74: But Marcia Lowe did not see Cynthia pass
- 75: And Crothers seemed her only chance
- 76: Cynthia struggled to control herself
- 77: But Crothers was upon his feet also
- 78: Crothers got up suddenly and fell
- 79: CHAPTER XIVAnd there Marcia Lowe found her
- 80: After each question Marcia waited
- 81: But Miss Lowe little Miss Cyn ain't come home
- 82: The girl's face struck Marcia strangely
- 83: They always said I was so like Uncle Theodore
- 84: Lans Treadwell can't get anything but good out of Sandy
- 85: Olive Treadwell was handsomer than ever
- 86: Treadwell leaped to a safer footing
- 87: I appreciate your good will toward me and Lans
- 88: Olive Treadwell got up and paced the room
- 89: Markham smiled not unkindly and put out his hand
- 90: Oddly enough Lansing Treadwell became his tutor
- 91: Even with his reverence for Markham
- 92: You and I have earned a vacation
- 93: And now Levi sought and found the thin
- 94: Levi did not rest well that night
- 95: Marcia Lowe confided to Tod Greeley
- 96: If she wants to pick 'long o' the hearthstone
- 97: It was a right techersome dream
- 98: I reckon you don't know Smith Crothers
- 99: I reckon you are Miss Cynthia Walden
- 100: As he had seen it a few moments ago under the dogwoods
- 101: She done 'splain as how the chillens
- 102: Then Markham wrote a characteristic command
- 103: Kindly Sandy was decidedly successful
- 104: The greatest change on the Morley place
- 105: Sandy was not orderly by instinct
- 106: And shame not joy claimed Cynthia Walden
- 107: If you forget I am still lil' Cyn
- 108: A cold horror overcame Cynthia
- 109: Cynthia sang the words tenderly
- 110: Yo' pa was allas fur lettin' yo' off
- 111: We'll fix the old house of Stoneledge up in great shape
- 112: Aunt Olive made me consult Doctor Travers
- 113: Lansing Hertford is my real name
- 114: Take your chances and squeal not
- 115: And the rooms occupied by Lans would be needed
- 116: Not comprehending what Lans knew or misunderstood
- 117: Treadwell looked hard at the fine
- 118: To get her away from Spaulding
- 119: He saw that Treadwell probably was right there
- 120: At this Treadwell made himself evident
- 121: The girl told Treadwell of the fire
- 122: Treadwell scanned the face near him
- 123: Just then Smith Crothers crossed The Way
- 124: They all sound upperty and look upperty
- 125: Smith Crothers got his inspiration
- 126: Crothers landed upon Lans Treadwell
- 127: This sounded very fine to Lans Treadwell
- 128: While he stood by Crothers he saw
- 129: Amused and uplifted by Lans Treadwell
- 130: At the end of the third week Crothers
- 131: But Smith Crothers knows and Sandy Morley
- 132: Which they both felt confident Crothers had instigated
- 133: Sandy asked after greeting him cordially
- 134: She had followed Lans and but no
- 135: This was unfortunate and Sandy saw his mistake
- 136: Treadwell had things been open and fair
- 137: What emotions and thoughts swayed Lans Treadwell
- 138: Markham put his hand out frankly
- 139: I reckon Greeley and I know why
- 140: Levi was again bending over the blue print
- 141: Markham bore down upon Smith Crothers in his factory
- 142: The boy was up against it with Crothers
- 143: Levi Markham got up and stood with his back to the fire
- 144: Lans was always erratic and poetic
- 145: Matilda yearned to show him Olive Treadwell's letter
- 146: I've meant to be kind to Matilda
- 147: The knowledge came to her that poor Lans
- 148: Breathed Matilda Markham devoutly
- 149: But instead she said brokenly You will come to Bretherton
- 150: For Lans quite frankly and naturally had told his story
- 151: Treadwell next remarked apropos of nothing
- 152: Black robed girl You are Marian Spaulding
- 153: Lans found words at last to say
- 154: Fiercely Lans proclaimed this as if
- 155: And then Lans laughed a mirthless
- 156: Rose stiffly and came to Crothers
- 157: To the trail leading up to Stoneledge
- 158: Beyond that Cynthia could not see
- 159: Not the Cynthia Lans Treadwell had claimed
- 160: Doesn't that poor girl belong to Lans more than I do
- 161: Daringly Do you love me Sandy
