Bog-Myrtle and Peat eBook

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Bog-Myrtle and Peat.

Bog-Myrtle and Peat eBook

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Bog-Myrtle and Peat.

I looked out on the lake and the mountains from the window of my room before I turned in.  They did not look encouraging.

Hardly, it seemed, had my head touched the pillow, when “clang, clang” went some one on my door.  “It is half-past twelve, Herr, and time to get up!”

I saw the frost-flowers on the window-pane, and shivered.  Yet there was the laughter of Henry and the Count to be faced; and, above all, I had passed my word to Lucia.

“Well, I suppose I may as well get up and take a look at the thing, any way.  Perhaps it may be snowing,” I said, with a devout hope that the blinds of mist or storm might be drawn down close about the mountains.

But, pushing aside the green window-blind, I saw all the stars twinkling; and the broad moon, a little worm-eaten about the upper edge, was flinging a pale light over the Forno glacier and the thick pines that hide Lake Cavaloccia.

“Ah, it is cold!” I flung open the hot-air register, but the fires were out and the engineer asleep, for a draft of icy wind came up—­direct from the snowfields.  I slammed it down, for the mercury in my thermometer was falling so rapidly that I seemed to hear it tap-tapping on the bottom of the scale.

Below there was a sleepy porter, who with the utmost gruffness produced some lukewarm coffee, with stale, dry slices of over-night bread, and flavoured the whole with an evil-smelling lamp.

“Shriekingly cold, Herr; yes, it is so in here!” he said in answer to my complaints.  “Yes—­but, it is warm to what it will be up there outside.”

The pack was donned.  The double stockings, the fingerless woollen gloves were put on, and the earflaps of the cap were drawn down.  The door was opened quietly, and the chill outer air met us like a wall.

“A good journey, my Herr!” said the porter, a mocking accent in his voice—­the rascal.

I strode from under the dark shadow of the hotel, wondering if Lucia was asleep behind her curtains over the porch.

CHAPTER IX

THE PIZ LANGREV

Past the waterfall and over the bridge—­our bridge—­ran the path.  As I turned my face to the mountain, there was a strange constricted feeling about one corner of my mouth, to which I put up a mittened hand.  A small icicle fell tinkling down.  My feet were now beginning to get a little warm, but I felt uncertain whether my ears were hot or cold.  There was a strange unattached feeling about them.  Had I not been reading somewhere of a mountaineer who had some such feeling?  He put his hand to his ear and broke off a piece as one breaks a bit of biscuit.  A horrid thought, but one which assuredly stimulates attention.

Then I took off one glove and rubbed the ear vigorously with the warm palm of my hand.  There was a tingling glow, as though some one were striking lucifer matches all along the rim; soon there was no doubt that the circulation was effectually restored. En avant! Ears are useless things at the best.

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Bog-Myrtle and Peat from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.