The Hidden Places eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about The Hidden Places.

The Hidden Places eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about The Hidden Places.

A week passed.  Once more the blustery god of storms asserted his dominion, leaving the land, when he passed, a foot deeper in snow.  If he had elected to stay there from choice, Hollister now kept close to his cabin from necessity, for passage with his goods to the steamer landing would have been a journey of more hardships than he cared to undertake.  The river was a sheet of ice except over the shallow rapids.  Cold winds whistled up and down the Toba.  Once or twice on clear days he climbed laboriously to a great height and felt the cold pressure of the northwest wind as he stood in the open; and through his field glasses he could see the Inlet and the highroads of the sea past the Inlet’s mouth all torn by surging waves that reared and broke in flashing crests of foam.  So he sat in the cabin and read Doris Cleveland’s books one after another—­verse, philosophy, fiction—­and when physical inaction troubled him he cut and split and piled firewood far beyond his immediate need.  He could not sit passive too long.  Enforced leisure made too wide a breach in his defenses, and through that breach the demons of brooding and despondency were quick to enter.  When neither books nor self-imposed tasks about the cabin served, he would take his rifle in hand, hook on the snowshoes, and trudge far afield in the surrounding forest.

On one of these journeys he came out upon the rim of the great cliff which rose like a wall of masonry along the southern edge of the flats in the Big Bend.  It was a clear day.  Hollister had a pair of very powerful binoculars.  He gazed from this height down on the settlement, on the reeking chimneys of those distant houses, on the tiny black objects that were men moving against a field of white.  He could hear a faint whirring which he took to be the machinery of a sawmill.  He could see on the river bank and at another point in the nearby woods the feathery puff of steam.  He often wondered about these people, buried, like himself, in this snow-blanketed and mountain-ringed remoteness.  Who were they?  What manner of folk were they?  He trifled with this curiosity.  But it did not seriously occur to him that by two or three hours’ tramping he could answer these idle speculations at first hand.  Or if it did occur to him he shrank from the undertaking as one shrinks from a dubious experiment which has proved a failure in former trials.

But this day, under a frosty sky in which a February sun hung listless, Hollister turned his glasses on the cabin of the settler near his camp.  He was on the edge of the cliff, so close that when he dislodged a fragment of rock it rolled over the brink, bounded once from the cliff’s face, and after a lapse that grew to seconds struck with a distant thud among the timber at the foot of the precipice.  Looking down through the binoculars it was as if he sat on the topmost bough of a tall tree in the immediate neighborhood of the cabin, although he was fully half a mile distant.  He could see each garment of a row on a line.  He could distinguish colors—­a blue skirt, the deep green of salal and second-growth cedar, the weathered hue of the walls.

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Project Gutenberg
The Hidden Places from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.