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Fanny Herself
CHAPTER 19
Edna Ferber
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       _ Heyl's place. Fanny stood before it, key in hand (she had
       found it in the mail box, tied to a string), and she had a
       curious and restful feeling, as if she had come home, after
       long wanderings. She smiled, whimsically, and repeated her
       lesson to herself:
       "The fire's laid in the fireplace with fat pine knots that
       will blaze up at the touch of a match. My books are there,
       along the wall. The bedding's in the cedar chest, and the
       lamps are filled. There's tinned stuff in the pantry. And
       the mountains are there, girl, to make you clean and whole
       again. . . ."
       She stepped up to the little log-pillared porch and turned
       the key in the lock. She opened the door wide, and walked
       in. And then she shut her eyes for a moment. Because, if
       it shouldn't be true----
       But there was a fire laid with fat pine knots. She walked
       straight over to it, and took her box of matches from her
       bag, struck one, and held it to the wood. They blazed like
       a torch. Books! Along the four walls, books. Fat,
       comfortable, used-looking books. Hundreds of them. A lamp
       on the table, and beside it a pipe, blackened from much use.
       Fanny picked it up, smiling. She held it a moment in her
       hand, as though she expected to find it still warm.
       "It's like one of the fairy tales," she thought, "the kind
       that repeats and repeats. The kind that says, `and she went
       into the next room, and it was as the good fairy had said.'"
       There's tinned stuff in the pantry. She went into the tiny
       kitchen and opened the pantry door cautiously,
       being wary of mice. But it met her eye in spotless
       array. Orderly rows of tins. Orderly rows of bottles.
       Coffee. Condensed milk. Beans. Spaghetti. Flour.
       Peaches. Pears.
       Off the bedroom there was an absurdly adequate little
       bathroom, with a zinc tub and an elaborate water-heating
       arrangement.
       Fanny threw back her head and laughed as she hadn't laughed
       in months. "Wild life in the Rockies," she said aloud. She
       went back to the book-lined living room. The fire was
       crackling gloriously. It was a many-windowed room, and each
       window framed an enchanting glimpse of mountain, flaming
       with aspens up to timber-line, and snow-capped at the top.
       Fanny decided to wait until the fire had died down to a
       coal-bed. Then she banked it carefully, put on a heavy
       sweater and a cap, and made for the outdoors. She struck
       out briskly, tenderfoot that she was. In five minutes she
       was panting. Her heart was hammering suffocatingly. Her
       lungs ached. She stopped, trembling. Then she remembered.
       The altitude, of course. Heyl had boasted that his cabin
       stood at an altitude of over nine thousand feet. Well, she
       would have to get used to it. But she was soon striding
       forward as briskly as before. She was a natural mountain
       dweller. The air, the altitude, speeded up her heart, her
       lungs, sent the blood dancing through her veins.
       Figuratively, she was on tip-toe.
       They had warned her, at the Inn, to take it slowly for the
       first few days. They had asked no questions. Fanny learned
       to heed their advice. She learned many more things in the
       next few days. She learned how to entice the chipmunks that
       crossed her path, streak o' sunshine, streak o' shadow. She
       learned to broil bacon over a fire, with a forked stick.
       She learned to ride trail ponies, and to bask in a sun-
       warmed spot on a wind-swept hill, and to tell time by the
       sun, and to give thanks for the beauty of the world
       about her, and to leave the wild flowers unpicked, to put
       out her campfire with scrupulous care, and to destroy all
       rubbish (your true woodsman and mountaineer is as
       painstakingly neat as a French housewife).
       She was out of doors all day. At night she read for a while
       before the fire, but by nine her eyelids were heavy. She
       walked down to the Inn sometimes, but not often. One
       memorable night she went, with half a dozen others from the
       Inn, to the tiny one-room cabin of Oscar, the handy man
       about the Inn, and there she listened to one of Oscar's far-
       famed phonograph concerts. Oscar's phonograph had cost
       twenty-five dollars in Denver. It stood in one corner of
       his cabin, and its base was a tree stump just five hundred
       years old, as you could tell for yourself by counting its
       rings. His cabin walls were gorgeous with pictures of
       Maxine Elliott in her palmy days, and blonde and
       sophisticated little girls on vinegar calendars, posing
       bare-legged and self-conscious in blue calico and
       sunbonnets. You sat in the warm yellow glow of Oscar's lamp
       and were regaled with everything from the Swedish National
       Anthem to Mischa Elman's tenderest crooning. And Oscar sat
       rapt, his weather-beaten face a rich deep mahogany, his eyes
       bluer than any eyes could ever be except in contrast with
       that ruddy countenance, his teeth so white that you found
       yourself watching for his smile that was so gently sweet and
       childlike. Oh, when Oscar put on his black pants and issued
       invitations for a musical evening one was sure to find his
       cabin packed. Eight did it, with squeezing.
       This, then, was the atmosphere in which Fanny Brandeis found
       herself. As far from Haynes-Cooper as anything could be.
       At the end of the first week she found herself able to think
       clearly and unemotionally about Theodore, and about Fenger.
       She had even evolved a certain rather crude philosophy out
       of the ruins that had tumbled about her ears. It was
       so crude, so unformed in her mind that it can hardly be set
       down. To justify one's own existence. That was all that
       life held or meant. But that included all the lives that
       touched on yours. It had nothing to do with success, as she
       had counted success heretofore. It was service, really. It
       was living as--well, as Molly Brandeis had lived, helpfully,
       self-effacingly, magnificently. Fanny gave up trying to
       form the thing that was growing in her mind. Perhaps, after
       all, it was too soon to expect a complete understanding of
       that which had worked this change in her from that afternoon
       in Fenger's library.
       After the first few days she found less and less difficulty
       in climbing. Her astonished heart and lungs ceased to
       object so strenuously to the unaccustomed work. The Cabin
       Rock trail, for example, whose summit found her panting and
       exhausted at first, now seemed a mere stroll. She grew more
       daring and ambitious. One day she climbed the Long's Peak
       trail to timberline, and had tea at Timberline Cabin with
       Albert Edward Cobbins. Albert Edward Cobbins, Englishman,
       erstwhile sailor, adventurer and gentleman, was the keeper
       of Timberline Cabin, and the loneliest man in the Rockies.
       It was his duty to house overnight climbers bound for the
       Peak, sunrise parties and sunset parties, all too few now in
       the chill October season-end. Fanny was his first visitor
       in three days. He was pathetically glad to see her.
       "I'll have tea for you," he said, "in a jiffy. And I baked
       a pan of French rolls ten minutes ago. I had a feeling."
       A magnificent specimen of a man, over six feet tall slim,
       broad-shouldered, long-headed, and scrubbed-looking as only
       an Englishman can be, there was something almost pathetic in
       the sight of him bustling about the rickety little kitchen
       stove.
       "To-morrow," said Fanny, over her tea, "I'm going to get an
       early start, reach here by noon, and go on to Boulder Field
       and maybe Keyhole."
       "Better not, Miss. Not in October, when there's likely to
       be a snowstorm up there in a minute's notice."
       "You'd come and find me, wouldn't you? They always do, in
       the books."
       "Books are all very well, Miss. But I'm not a mountain man.
       The truth is I don't know my way fifty feet from this cabin.
       I got the job because I'm used to loneliness, and don't mind
       it, and because I can cook, d'you see, having shipped as
       cook for years. But I'm a seafaring man, Miss. I wouldn't
       advise it, Miss. Another cup of tea?"
       But Long's Peak, king of the range, had fascinated her from
       the first. She knew that the climb to the summit would be
       impossible for her now, but she had an overwhelming desire
       to see the terrifying bulk of it from a point midway of the
       range. It beckoned her and intrigued her, as the difficult
       always did.
       By noon of the following day she had left Albert Edward's
       cabin (he stood looking after her in the doorway until she
       disappeared around the bend) and was jauntily following the
       trail that led to Boulder Field, that sea of jagged rock a
       mile across. Soon she had left the tortured, wind-twisted
       timberline trees far behind. How pitiful Cabin Rock and
       Twin Sisters looked compared to this. She climbed easily
       and steadily, stopping for brief rests. Early in the week
       she had ridden down to the village, where she had bought
       climbing breeches and stout leggings. She laughed at Albert
       Edward and his fears. By one o'clock she had reached
       Boulder Field. She found the rocks glazed with ice. Just
       over Keyhole, that freakish vent in a wall of rock, the blue
       of the sky had changed to the gray of snow-clouds.
       Tenderfoot though she was, she knew that the climb over
       Boulder Field would be perilous, if not impossible.
       She went on, from rock to rock, for half an hour, then
       decided to turn back. A clap of thunder, that roared and
       crashed, and cracked up and down the canyons and over the
       peaks, hastened her decision. She looked about her. Peak
       on peak. Purple and black and yellow masses, fantastic in
       their hugeness. Chasms. Canyons. Pyramids and minarets.
       And so near. So grim. So ghastly desolate. And yet so
       threatening. And then Fanny Brandeis was seized with
       mountain terror. It is a disease recognized by mountain men
       everywhere, and it is panic, pure and simple. It is fear
       brought on by the immensity and the silence of the
       mountains. A great horror of the vastness and ruggedness
       came upon her. It was colossal, it was crushing, it was
       nauseating.
       She began to run. A mistake, that, when one is following a
       mountain trail, at best an elusive thing. In five minutes
       she had lost the trail. She stopped, and scolded herself
       sternly, and looked about her. She saw the faint trail line
       again, or thought she saw it, and made toward it, and found
       it to be no trail at all. She knew that she must be not
       more than an hour's walk from Timberline Cabin, and Albert
       Edward, and his biscuits and tea. Why be frightened? It
       was absurd. But she was frightened, horribly, harrowingly.
       The great, grim rock masses seemed to be shaking with silent
       laughter. She began to run again. She was very cold, and a
       piercing wind had sprung up. She kept on walking, doggedly,
       reasoning with herself quite calmly, and proud of her
       calmness. Which proves how terrified she really was. Then
       the snow came, not slowly, not gradually, but a blanket of
       it, as it does come in the mountains, shutting off
       everything. And suddenly Fanny's terror vanished. She felt
       quite free from weariness. She was alive and tingling to
       her fingertips. The psychology of fear is a fascinating
       thing. Fanny had reached the second stage. She was
       quite taken out of herself. She forgot her stone-
       bruised feet. She was no longer conscious of cold. She ran
       now, fleetly, lightly, the ground seeming to spur her on.
       She had given up the trail completely now. She told herself
       that if she ran on, down, down, down, she must come to the
       valley sometime. Unless she was turned about, and headed in
       the direction of one of those hideous chasms. She stopped a
       moment, peering through the snow curtain, but she could see
       nothing. She ran on lightly, laughing a little. Then her
       feet met a projection, she stumbled, and fell flat over a
       slab of wood that jutted out of the ground. She lay there a
       moment, dazed. Then she sat up, and bent down to look at
       this thing that had tripped her. Probably a tree trunk.
       Then she must be near timberline. She bent closer. It was
       a rough wooden slab. Closer still. There were words carved
       on it. She lay flat and managed to make them out painfully.
       "Here lies Sarah Cannon. Lay to rest, and died alone, April
       26, 1893."
       Fanny had heard the story of Sarah Cannon, a stern spinster
       who had achieved the climb to the Peak, and who had met with
       mishap on the down trail. Her guide had left her to go for
       help. When the relief party returned, hours later, they had
       found her dead.
       Fanny sprang up, filled with a furious energy. She felt
       strangely light and clear-headed. She ran on, stopped, ran
       again. Now she was making little short runs here and there.
       It was snowing furiously, vindictively. It seemed to her
       that she had been running for hours. It probably was
       minutes. Suddenly she sank down, got to her feet again,
       stumbled on perhaps a dozen paces, and sank down again. It
       was as though her knees had turned liquid. She lay there,
       with her eyes shut.
       "I'm just resting," she told herself. "In a minute I'll go
       on. In a minute. After I've rested."
       "Hallo-o-o-o!" from somewhere on the other side of the snow
       blanket. "Hallo-o-o-o!"
       Fanny sat up, helloing shrilly, hysterically. She got to
       her feet, staggeringly. And Clarence Heyl walked toward
       her.
       "You ought to be spanked for this," he said.
       Fanny began to cry weakly. She felt no curiosity as to his
       being there. She wasn't at all sure that he actually was
       there, for that matter. At that thought she dug a frantic
       hand into his arm. He seemed to understand, for he said,
       "It's all right. I'm real enough. Can you walk?"
       "Yes." But she tried it and found she could not. She
       decided she was too tired to care. "I stumbled over a
       thing--a horrible thing--a gravestone. And I must have hurt
       my leg. I didn't know----"
       She leaned against him, a dead weight. "Tell you what,"
       said Heyl, cheerfully. "You wait here. I'll go on down to
       Timberline Cabin for help, and come back."
       "You couldn't manage it--alone? If I tried? If I tried to
       walk?"
       "Oh, impossible." His tone was brisk. "Now you sit right
       down here." She sank down obediently. She felt a little
       sorry for herself, and glad, too, and queer, and not at all
       cold. She looked up at him dumbly. He was smiling. "All
       right?"
       She nodded. He turned abruptly. The snow hid him from
       sight at once.
       "Here lies Sarah Cannon. Lay to rest and died alone, April
       26, 1893."
       She sank down, and pillowed her head on her arms. She knew
       that this was the end. She was very drowsy, and not at all
       sad. Happy, if anything.
       "You didn't really think I'd leave you, did you, Fan?"
       She opened her eyes. Heyl was there. He reached down, and
       lifted her lightly to her feet. "Timberline Cabin's
       not a hundred yards away. I just did it to try you."
       She had spirit enough left to say, "Beast."
       Then he swung her up, and carried her down the trail. He
       carried her, not in his arms, as they do it in books and in
       the movies. He could not have gone a hundred feet that way.
       He carried her over his shoulder, like a sack of meal, by
       one arm and one leg, I regret to say. Any boy scout knows
       that trick, and will tell you what I mean. It is the most
       effectual carrying method known, though unromantic.
       And so they came to Timberline Cabin, and Albert Edward
       Cobbins was in the doorway. Heyl put her down gently on the
       bench that ran alongside the table. The hospitable table
       that bore two smoking cups of tea. Fanny's lips were
       cracked, and the skin was peeled from her nose, and her hair
       was straggling and her eyes red-rimmed. She drank the tea
       in great gulps. And then she went into the tiny bunkroom,
       and tumbled into one of the shelf-bunks, and slept.
       When she awoke she sat up in terror, and bumped her head
       against the bunk above, and called, "Clancy!"
       "Yep!" from the next room. He came to the door. The acrid
       smell of their pipes was incense in her nostrils. "Rested?"
       "What time is it?"
       "Seven o'clock. Dinner time. Ham and eggs."
       She got up stiffly, and bathed her roughened face, and
       produced a powder pad (they carry them in the face of
       danger, death, and dissolution) and dusted it over her scaly
       nose. She did her hair--her vigorous, abundant hair that
       shone in the lamplight, pulled down her blouse, surveyed her
       torn shoes ruefully, donned the khaki skirt that Albert
       Edward had magically produced from somewhere to take the
       place of her breeches. She dusted her shoes with a bit of
       rag, regarded herself steadily in the wavering mirror, and
       went in.
       The two men were talking quietly. Albert Edward was moving
       deftly from stove to table. They both looked up as she came
       in, and she looked at Heyl. Their eyes held.
       Albert Edward was as sporting a gentleman as the late dear
       king whose name he bore. He went out to tend Heyl's horse,
       he said. It was little he knew of horses, and he rather
       feared them, as does a sailing man. But he went,
       nevertheless.
       Heyl still looked at Fanny, and Fanny at him.
       "It's absurd," said Fanny. "It's the kind of thing that
       doesn't happen."
       "It's simple enough, really," he answered. "I saw Ella
       Monahan in Chicago, and she told me all she knew, and
       something of what she had guessed. I waited a few days and
       came back. I had to." He smiled. "A pretty job you've
       made of trying to be selfish."
       At that she smiled, too, pitifully enough, for her lower lip
       trembled. She caught it between her teeth in a last sharp
       effort at self-control. "Don't!" she quavered. And then,
       in a panic, her two hands came up in a vain effort to hide
       the tears. She sank down on the rough bench by the table,
       and the proud head came down on her arms so that there was a
       little clatter and tinkle among the supper things spread on
       the table. Then quiet.
       Clarence Heyl stared. He stared, helplessly, as does a man
       who has never, in all his life, been called upon to comfort
       a woman in tears. Then instinct came to his rescue. He
       made her side of the table in two strides (your favorite
       film star couldn't have done it better), put his two hands
       on her shoulders and neatly shifted the bowed head from the
       cold, hard surface of the table top to the warm, rough,
       tobacco-scented comfort of his coat. It rested there quite
       naturally. Just as naturally Fanny's arm crept up, and
       about his neck. So they remained for a moment, until he
       bent so that his lips touched her hair. Her head came
       up at that, sharply, so that it bumped his chin. They both
       laughed, looking into each other's eyes, but at what they
       saw there they stopped laughing and were serious.
       "Dear," said Heyl. "Dearest." The lids drooped over
       Fanny's eyes. "Look at me," said Heyl. So she tried to
       lift them again, bravely, and could not. At that he bent
       his head and kissed Fanny Brandeis in the way a woman wants
       to be kissed for the first time by the man she loves. It
       hurt her lips, that kiss, and her teeth, and the back of her
       neck, and it left her breathless, and set things whirling.
       When she opened her eyes (they shut them at such times) he
       kissed her again, very tenderly, this time, and lightly, and
       reassuringly. She returned that kiss, and, strangely
       enough, it was the one that stayed in her memory long, long
       after the other had faded.
       "Oh, Clancy, I've made such a mess of it all. Such a
       miserable mess. The little girl in the red tam was worth
       ten of me. I don't see how you can--care for me."
       "You're the most wonderful woman in the world," said Heyl,
       "and the most beautiful and splendid."
       He must have meant it, for he was looking down at her as he
       said it, and we know that the skin had been peeled off her
       nose by the mountain winds and sun, that her lips were
       cracked and her cheeks rough, and that she was red-eyed and
       worn-looking. And she must have believed him, for she
       brought his cheek down to hers with such a sigh of content,
       though she said, "But are we at all suited to each other?"
       "Probably not," Heyl answered, briskly. "That's why we're
       going to be so terrifically happy. Some day I'll be passing
       the Singer building, and I'll glance up at it and think how
       pitiful it would look next to Long's Peak. And then I'll be
       off, probably, to these mountains "
       "Or some day," Fanny returned, "we'll be up here, and I'll
       remember, suddenly, how Fifth Avenue looks on a bright
       afternoon between four and five. And I'll be off, probably,
       to the Grand Central station."
       And then began one of those beautiful and foolish
       conversations which all lovers have whose love has been a
       sure and steady growth. Thus: "When did you first begin to
       care," etc. And, "That day we spent at the dunes, and you
       said so and so, did you mean this and that?"
       Albert Edward Cobbins announced his approach by terrific
       stampings and scufflings, ostensibly for the purpose of
       ridding his boots of snow. He entered looking casual, and
       very nipped.
       "You're here for the night," he said. "A regular blizzard.
       The greatest piece of luck I've had in a month." He busied
       himself with the ham and eggs and the teapot. "Hungry?"
       "Not a bit," said Fanny and Heyl, together.
       "H'm," said Albert Edward, and broke six eggs into the
       frying pan just the same.
       After supper they aided Albert Edward in the process of
       washing up. When everything was tidy he lighted his most
       malignant pipe and told them seafaring yarns not necessarily
       true. Then he knocked the ashes out of his pipe and fell
       asleep there by the fire, effacing himself as effectually as
       one of three people can in a single room. They talked; low-
       toned murmurings that they seemed to find exquisitely
       meaningful or witty, by turn. Fanny, rubbing a forefinger
       (his) along her weather-roughened nose, would say, "At least
       you've seen me at my worst."
       Or he, mock serious: "I think I ought to tell you that I'm
       the kind of man who throws wet towels into the laundry
       hamper."
       But there was no mirth in Fanny's voice when she said,
       "Dear, do you think Lasker will give me that job? You
       know he said, `When you want a job, come back.' Do you
       think he meant it?"
       "Lasker always means it."
       "But," fearfully, and shyly, too, "you don't think I may
       have lost my drawing hand and my seeing eye, do you? As
       punishment?"
       "I do not. I think you've just found them, for keeps.
       There wasn't a woman cartoonist in the country--or man,
       either, for that matter--could touch you two years ago. In
       two more I'll be just Fanny Brandeis' husband, that's all."
       They laughed together at that, so that Albert Edward Cobbins
       awoke with a start and tried to look as if he had not been
       asleep, and failing, smiled benignly and drowsily upon them.
        
       THE END.
       "Fanny Herself", by Edna Ferber. _