While the tempest still is nigh.
   Hide me, O my Saviour, hide,
   Till the storm of life is past;
   Safe into the haven guide
   And receive my soul at last."
   Billy leaned against the ancient wall and loved her with his
   eyes, and, when she had finished, he murmured, almost in a
   whisper:
   "That was beautiful--just beautiful. An' you ought to a-seen your
   face when you sang. It was as beautiful as your voice. Ain't it
   funny?--I never think of religion except when I think of you."
   They camped in the willow bottom, cooked dinner, and spent the
   afternoon on the point of low rocks north of the mouth of the
   river. They had not intended to spend the afternoon, but found
   themselves too fascinated to turn away from the breakers bursting
   upon the rocks and from the many kinds of colorful sea life
   starfish, crabs, mussels, sea anemones, and, once, in a
   rock-pool, a small devilfish that chilled their blood when it
   cast the hooded net of its body around the small crabs they
   tossed to it. As the tide grew lower, they gathered a mess of
   mussels--huge fellows, five and six inches long and bearded like
   patriarchs. Then, while Billy wandered in a vain search for
   abalones, Saxon lay and dabbled in the crystal-clear water of a
   roak-pool, dipping up handfuls of glistening jewels--ground bits
   of shell and pebble of flashing rose and blue and green and
   violet. Billy came back and lay beside her, lazying in the
   sea-cool sunshine, and together they watched the sun sink into
   the horizon where the ocean was deepest peacock-blue.
   She reached out her hand to Billy's and sighed with sheer
   repletion of content. It seemed she had never lived such a
   wonderful day. It was as if all old dreams were coming true. Such
   beauty of the world she had never guessed in her fondest
   imagining. Billy pressed her hand tenderly.
   "What was you thinkin' of?" he asked, as they arose finally to
   go.
   "Oh, I don't know, Billy. Perhaps that it was better, one day
   like this, than ten thousand years in Oakland."
   CHAPTER VII
   They left Carmel River and Carmel Valley behind, and with a
   rising sun went south across the hills between the mountains and
   the sea. The road was badly washed and gullied and showed little
   sign of travel.
   "It peters out altogether farther down," Billy said. "From there
   on it's only horse trails. But I don't see much signs of timber,
   an' this soil's none so good. It's only used for pasture--no
   farmin' to speak of."
   The hills were bare and grassy. Only the canyons were wooded,
   while the higher and more distant hills were furry with
   chaparral. Once they saw a coyote slide into the brush, and
   once Billy wished for a gun when a large wildcat stared at
   them malignantly and declined to run until routed by a clod of
   earth that burst about its ears like shrapnel.
   Several miles along Saxon complained of thirst. Where the road
   dipped nearly at sea level to cross a small gulch Billy looked
   for water. The bed of the gulch was damp with hill-drip, and he
   left her to rest while he sought a spring.
   "Say," he hailed a few minutes afterward. "Come on down. You just
   gotta see this. It'll 'most take your breath away."
   Saxon followed the faint path that led steeply down through the
   thicket. Midway along, where a barbed wire fence was strung high
   across the mouth of the gulch and weighted down with big rocks,
   she caught her first glimpse of the tiny beach. Only from the sea
   could one guess its existence, so completely was it tucked away
   on three precipitous sides by the land, and screened by the
   thicket. Furthermore, the beach was the head of a narrow rock
   cove, a quarter of a mile long, up which pent way the sea roared
   and was subdued at the last to a gentle pulse of surf. Beyond the
   mouth many detached rocks, meeting the full force of the
   breakers, spouted foam and spray high in the air. The knees of
   these rocks, seen between the surges, were black with mussels. On
   their tops sprawled huge sea-lions tawny-wet and roaring in the
   sun, while overhead, uttering shrill cries, darted and wheeled a
   multitude of sea birds.
   The last of the descent, from the barbed wire fence, was a
   sliding fall of a dozen feet, and Saxon arrived on the soft dry
   sand in a sitting posture.
   "Oh, I tell you it's just great," Billy bubbled. "Look at it for
   a camping spot. In among the trees there is the prettiest spring
   you ever saw. An' look at all the good firewood, an'. .." He
   gazed about and seaward with eyes that saw what no rush of words
   could compass. ". . . An', an' everything. We could live here.
   Look at the mussels out there. An' I bet you we could catch fish.
   What d'ye say we stop a few days?--It's vacation anyway--an' I
   could go back to Carmel for hooks an' lines."
   Saxon, keenly appraising his glowing face, realized that he was
   indeed being won from the city.
   "An' there ain't no wind here," he was recommending. "Not a
   breath. An' look how wild it is. Just as if we was a thousand
   miles from anywhere."
   The wind, which had been fresh and raw across the bare hills,
   gained no entrance to the cove; and the beach was warm and balmy,
   the air sweetly pungent with the thicket odors. Here and there,
   in the midst of the thicket, severe small oak trees and other
   small trees of which Saxon did not know the names. Her enthusiasm
   now vied with Billy's, and, hand in hand, they started to
   explore.
   "Here's where we can play real Robinson Crusoe," Billy
   cried, as they crossed the hard sand from highwater mark to the
   edge of the water. "Come on, Robinson. Let's stop over. Of
   course, I'm your Man Friday, an' what you say goes."
   "But what shall we do with Man Saturday!" She pointed in mock
   consternation to a fresh footprint in the sand. "He may be a
   savage cannibal, you know."
   "No chance. It's not a bare foot but a tennis shoe."
   "But a savage could get a tennis shoe from a drowned or eaten
   sailor, couldn't hey" she contended.
   "But sailors don't wear tennis shoes," was Billy's prompt
   refutation.
   "You know too much for Man Friday," she chided; "but, just the
   same; if you'll fetch the packs we'll make camp. Besides, it
   mightn't have been a sailor that was eaten. It might have been a
   passenger."
   By the end of an hour a snug camp was completed. The blankets
   were spread, a supply of firewood was chopped from the seasoned
   driftwood, and over a fire the coffee pot had begun to sing.
   Saxon called to Billy, who was improvising a table from a
   wave-washed plank. She pointed seaward. On the far point of
   rocks, naked except for swimming trunks, stood a man. He was
   gazing toward them, and they could see his long mop of dark hair
   blown by the wind. As he started to climb the rocks landward
   Billy called Saxon's attention to the fact that the stranger wore
   tennis shoes. In a few minutes he dropped down 
					     					 			 from the rock to
   the beach and walked up to them.
   "Gosh!" Billy whispered to Saxon. "He's lean enough, but look at
   his muscles. Everybody down here seems to go in for physical
   culture."
   As the newcomer approached, Saxon glimpsed sufficient of his face
   to be reminded of the old pioneers and of a certain type of face
   seen frequently among the old soldiers: Young though he was--not
   more than thirty, she decided--this man had the same long and
   narrow face, with the high cheekbones, high and slender forehead,
   and nose high, lean, and almost beaked. The lips were thin and
   sensitive; but the eyes were different from any she had ever seen
   in pioneer or veteran or any man. They were so dark a gray that
   they seemed brown, and there were a farness and alertness of
   vision in them as of bright questing through profounds of space.
   In a misty way Saxon felt that she had seen him before.
   "Hello," he greeted. "You ought to be comfortable here." He threw
   down a partly filled sack. "Mussels. All I could get. The tide's
   not low enough yet."
   Saxon heard Billy muffle an ejaculation, and saw painted on his
   face the extremest astonishment.
   "Well, honest to God, it does me proud to meet you," he blurted
   out. "Shake hands. I always said if I laid eyes on you I'd
   shake.--Say!"
   But Billy's feelings mastered him, and, beginning with a choking
   giggle, he roared into helpless mirth.
   The stranger looked at him curiously across their clasped hands,
   and glanced inquiringly to Saxon.
   "You gotta excuse me," Billy gurgled, pumping the other's hand up
   and down. "But I just gotta laugh. Why, honest to God, I've woke
   up nights an' laughed an' gone to sleep again. Don't you
   recognize 'm, Saxon? He's the same identical dude say, friend,
   you're some punkins at a hundred yards dash, ain't you?"
   And then, in a sudden rush, Saxon placed him. He it was who had
   stood with Roy Blanchard alongside the automobile on the day she
   had wandered, sick and unwitting, into strange neighborhoods. Nor
   had that day been the first time she had seen him.
   "Remember the Bricklayers' Picnic at Weasel Park?" Billy was
   asking. "An' the foot race? Why, I'd know that nose of yours
   anywhere among a million. You was the guy that stuck your cane
   between Timothy McManus's legs an' started the grandest
   roughhouse Weasel Park or any other park ever seen."
   The visitor now commenced to laugh. He stood on one leg as he
   laughed harder, then stood on the other leg. Finally he sat down
   on a log of driftwood.
   "And you were there," he managed to gasp to Billy at last. "You
   saw it. You saw it." He turned to Saxon. "--And you?"
   She nodded.
   "Say," Billy began again, as their laughter eased down, "what I
   wants know is what'd you wanta do it for. Say, what'd you wants
   do it for? I've been askin' that to myself ever since."
   "So have I," was the answer.
   "You didn't know Timothy McManus, did you?"
   "No; I'd never seen him before, and I've never seen him since."
   "But what'd you wanta do it for?" Billy persisted.
   The young man laughed, then controlled himself.
   "To save my life, I don't know. I have one friend, a most
   intelligent chap that writes sober, scientific books, and he's
   always aching to throw an egg into an electric fan to see what
   will happen. Perhaps that's the way it was with me, except that
   there was no aching. When I saw those legs flying past, I merely
   stuck my stick in between. I didn't know I was going to do it. I
   just did it. Timothy McManus was no more surprised than I was."
   "Did they catch you?" Billy asked.
   "Do I look as if they did? I was never so scared in my life.
   Timothy McManus himself couldn't have caught me that day. But
   what happened afterward? I heard they had a fearful roughhouse,
   but I couldn't stop to see."
   It was not until a quarter of an hour had passed, during which
   Billy described the fight, that introductions took place. Mark
   Hall was their visitor's name, and he lived in a bungalow among
   the Carmel pines.
   "But how did you ever find your way to Bierce's Cove?" he was
   curious to know. "Nobody ever dreams of it from the road."
   "So that's its name?" Saxon said.
   "It's the name we gave it. One of our crowd camped here one
   summer, and we named it after him. I'll take a cup of that
   coffee, if you don't mind."--This to Saxon. "And then I'll show
   your husband around. We're pretty proud of this cove. Nobody ever
   comes here but ourselves."
   "You didn't get all that muscle from bein' chased by McManus,"
   Billy observed over the coffee.
   "Massage under tension," was the cryptic reply.
   "Yes," Billy said, pondering vacantly. "Do you eat it with a
   spoon?"
   Hall laughed.
   "I'll show you. Take any muscle you want, tense it, then
   manipulate it with your fingers, so, and so."
   "An' that done all that'" Billy asked skeptically.
   "All that!" the other scorned proudly. "For one muscle you see,
   there's five tucked away but under command. Touch your finger to
   any part of me and see."
   Billy complied, touching the right breast.
   "You know something about anatomy, picking a muscleless spot,"
   scolded Hall.
   Billy grinned triumphantly, then, to his amazement, saw a muscle
   grow up under his finger. He prodded it, and found it hard and
   honest.
   "Massage under tension!" Hall exulted. "Go on--anywhere you
   want."
   And anywhere and everywhere Billy touched, muscles large and
   small rose up, quivered, and sank down, till the whole body was a
   ripple of willed quick.
   "Never saw anything like it," Billy marveled at the end; "an'
   I've seen some few good men stripped in my time. Why, you're all
   living silk."
   "Massage under tension did it, my friend. The doctors gave me up.
   My friends called me the sick rat, and the mangy poet, and all
   that. Then I quit the city, came down to Carmel, and went in for
   the open air--and massage under tension."
   "Jim Hazard didn't get his muscles that way," Billy challenged.
   "Certainly not, the lucky skunk; he was born with them. Mine's
   made. That's the difference. I'm a work of art. He's a cave bear.
   Come along. I'll show you around now. You'd better get your
   clothes off. Keep on only your shoes and pants, unless you've got
   a pair of trunks."
   "My mother was a poet," Saxon said, while Billy was getting
   himself ready in the thicket. She had noted Hall's reference to
   himself.
   He seemed incurious, and she ventured further.
   "Some of it was printed."
   "What was her name?" he asked idly.
   "Dayelle Wiley Brown. She wrote: 'The Viking's Quest';
   'Days of Gold'; 'Constancy'; 'The Caballero'; 'Graves at
   Little Meadow'; and a lot more. Ten of them are in 'The
   Story of the Files.'"
   "I've the book at home," he remarked, for the first time showing
   real interes 
					     					 			t. "She was a pioneer, of course--before my time.
   I'll look her up when I get back to the house. My people were
   pioneers. They came by Panama, in the Fifties, from Long Island.
   My father was a doctor, but he went into business in San
   Francisco and robbed his fellow men out of enough to keep me and
   the rest of a large family going ever since.--Say, where are you
   and your husband bound?"
   When Saxon had told him of their attempt to get away from Oakland
   and of their quest for land, he sympathized with the first and
   shook his head over the second.
   "It's beautiful down beyond the Sur," he told her. "I've been all
   over those redwood canyons, and the place is alive with game. The
   government land is there, too. But you'd be foolish to settle.
   It's too remote. And it isn't good farming land, except in
   patches in the canyons. I know a Mexican there who is wild to
   sell his five hundred acres for fifteen hundred dollars. Three
   dollars an acre! And what does that mean? That it isn't worth
   more. That it isn't worth so much; because he can find no takers.
   Land, you know, is worth what they buy and sell it for."
   Billy, emerging from the thicket, only in shoes and in pants
   rolled to the knees, put an end to the conversation; and Saxon
   watched the two men, physically so dissimilar, climb the rocks
   and start out the south side of the cove. At first her eyes
   followed them lazily, but soon she grew interested and
   worried. Hall was leading Billy up what seemed a perpendicular
   wall in order to gain the backbone of the rock. Billy went
   slowly, displaying extreme caution; but twice she saw him slip,
   the weather-eaten stone crumbling away in his hand and rattling
   beneath him into the cove. When Hall reached the top, a hundred
   feet above the sea, she saw him stand upright and sway easily on
   the knife-edge which she knew fell away as abruptly on the other
   side. Billy, once on top, contented himself with crouching on
   hands and knees. The leader went on, upright, walking as easily
   as on a level floor. Billy abandoned the hands and knees
   position, but crouched closely and often helped himself with his
   hands.
   The knife-edge backbone was deeply serrated, and into one of the
   notches both men disappeared. Saxon could not keep down her
   anxiety, and climbed out on the north side of the cove, which was
   less rugged and far less difficult to travel. Even so, the
   unaccustomed height, the crumbling surface, and the fierce
   buffets of the wind tried her nerve. Soon she was opposite the
   men. They had leaped a narrow chasm and were scaling another
   tooth. Already Billy was going more nimbly, but his leader often
   paused and waited for him. The way grew severer, and several
   times the clefts they essayed extended down to the ocean level
   and spouted spray from the growling breakers that burst through.
   At other times, standing erect, they would fall forward across
   deep and narrow clefts until their palms met the opposing side;
   then, clinging with their fingers, their bodies would be drawn
   across and up.
   Near the end, Hall and Billy went out of sight over the south
   side of the backbone, and when Saxon saw them again they were
   rounding the extreme point of rock and coming back on the cove
   side. Here the way seemed barred. A wide fissure, with hopelessly
   vertical sides, yawned skywards from a foam-white vortex where
   the mad waters shot their level a dozen feet upward and dropped
   it as abruptly to the black depths of battered rock and
   writhing weed.
   Clinging precariously, the men descended their side till the
   spray was flying about them. Here they paused. Saxon could see
   Hall pointing down across the fissure and imagined he was showing
   some curious thing to Billy. She was not prepared for what
   followed. The surf-level sucked and sank away, and across and
   down Hall jumped to a narrow foothold where the wash had roared
   yards deep the moment before. Without pause, as the returning sea