Big Timber eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 322 pages of information about Big Timber.

Big Timber eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 322 pages of information about Big Timber.
exclusion of everything else.  Her work had been to play.  She could scarce conceive of any one entirely excluding pleasure and diversion from his or her life.  She wondered if Charlie had done so.  And if not, what ameliorating circumstances, what social outlet, might be found to offset, for her, continued existence in this isolated region of towering woods.  So far as her first impressions went, Roaring Lake appeared to be mostly frequented by lumberjacks addicted to rude speech and strong drink.

“Are there many people living around this lake?” she inquired.  “It is surely a beautiful spot.  If we had this at home, there would be a summer cottage on every hundred yards of shore.”

“Be a long time before we get to that stage here,” Benton returned.  “And scenery in B.C. is a drug on the market; we’ve got Europe backed off the map for tourist attractions, if they only knew it.  No, about the only summer home in this locality is the Abbey place at Cottonwood Point.  They come up here every summer for two or three months.  Otherwise I don’t know of any lilies of the field, barring the hotel people, and they, being purely transient, don’t count.  There’s the Abbey-Monohan outfit with two big logging camps, my outfit, Jack Fyfe’s, some hand loggers on the east shore, and the R.A.T. at the head of the lake.  That’s the population—­and Roaring Lake is forty-two miles long and eight wide.”

“Are there any nice girls around?” she asked.

Benton grinned widely.

“Girls?” said he.  “Not so you could notice.  Outside the Springs and the hatchery over the way, there isn’t a white woman on the lake except Lefty Howe’s wife,—­Lefty’s Jack Fyfe’s foreman,—­and she’s fat and past forty.  I told you it was a God-forsaken hole as far as society is concerned, Stell.”

“I know,” she said thoughtfully.  “But one can scarcely realize such a—­such a social blankness, until one actually experiences it.  Anyway, I don’t know but I’ll appreciate utter quiet for awhile.  But what do you do with yourself when you’re not working?”

“There’s seldom any such time,” he answered.  “I tell you, Stella, I’ve got a big job on my hands.  I’ve got a definite mark to shoot at, and I’m going to make a bull’s-eye in spite of hell and high water.  I have no time to play, and there’s no place to play if I had.  I don’t intend to muddle along making a pittance like a hand logger.  I want a stake; and then it’ll be time to make a splurge in a country where a man can get a run for his money.”

“If that’s the case,” she observed, “I’m likely to be a handicap to you, am I not?”

“Lord, no,” he smiled.  “I’ll put you to work too, when you get rested up from your trip.  You stick with me, Sis, and you’ll wear diamonds.”

She laughed with him at this, and leaving the shady maple they walked up to the hotel, where Benton proposed that they get a canoe and paddle to where Roaring River flowed out of the lake half a mile westward, to kill the time that must elapse before the three-thirty train.

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Big Timber from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.