Prologue
All week The Sierra Lumber Company’s best axmen had
swung their double-bitted axes, chopping little by little into the spongy
red bark and then the bright, fragrant heartwood of the ancient Sequoia
tree. It had seemed impossible, like two ants taking tiny bites out of a
tall man’s ankle. How could something so small as a man with an axe conquer
something so huge as a giant Sequoia? But it had been done before. The sound
of the chopping was sharp and steady in the clear mountain air.
As soon as the axemen had made a huge, seven foot high
notch in the trunk, the sawyers had gone to work on the other side of the
tree. They’d already welded two crosscut saws together to make one long
saw about twenty-five feet long. Two men each took one end of the saw. Its
sharp teeth looked like a monstrous giant’s grin.
From where the sawyers stood they couldn’t even see
the notch, a dark and weeping wound on the other side of the tree. Back
and forth they drew the saw, and it slowly slid into the bark. The sawyers
made it seem easy, but it was clear from the sweat running down their faces
that it was much harder than it looked. Deeper and deeper the saw sank into
the tree until it had almost reached the notch. And then the sawyers stopped.
The felling of the first Sequoia in Connor’s Basin was
going to be an event for the whole town to celebrate. Thomas Connor would
see to that. The top of his carriage was visible over the crowd as he led
the townspeople to the grove--they came in buggies, in wagons and on foot.
Nobody wanted to miss it.
A small platform had been hastily built not far from
the dying giant. Thomas Connor gestured, and his driver pulled the carriage
up beside the platform. Connor stepped from the carriage, straightened the
coat of his neat black suit, and then turned to help his wife and his daughter,
seating them on the chairs waiting for them on the platform. Mrs. Connor’s
face was hidden by the dark veil of her wide brimmed hat. Her fancy dress,
with its full skirts and puffed sleeves, would have been out of place here
in the woods on a regular day, but today was as special as Fourth of July.
Thomas Connor raised his arms over his head, and the
noisy chatter of the crowd died away. The woods were empty for once of the
pounding of axes, the crash of trees falling, the screeching of the logs as
they were dragged along in the wooden chutes to the mill, and the shouts and
curses of the lumbermen. It was so silent the people could actually hear the
birds calling and twittering in the branches of the trees hundreds of feet
overhead.
“We are gathered here today to celebrate the beginning
of the Sierra Lumber Company’s most daring venture.” Connor’s loud voice
was a bit muffled among the great trees, as if their fibrous bark was absorbing
the sound. “I am here to put the rumors to rest. Far from being on the edge
of bankruptcy as some have claimed, we are now stronger than ever.” He gestured
around him. “Here you see the latest in technology, engineering, and the
genius of mankind. Yes, bringing all this together in one place has been
expensive. And I am proud of all the loyal lumbermen who were willing, even
eager, to give up their weekly paycheck to make this possible.”
Some of the loggers nodded, their faces glowing. But
others frowned. Sometimes when the paychecks were withheld, there were near
riots in the lumber camp. But not many quit; with the depression on, jobs
were few and far between.
“Eager, my foot,” grumbled old Ben. He took his unlighted
cigar from his mouth and spit onto the ground. He’d been one of the finest
axmen of his time, everyone said, but now his fingers were so knotted with
rheumatism he could barely hold an axe. This year he’d been hired on as
foreman of the crew; his hands didn’t work any more, but there was nothing
wrong with his voice.
“Now all our efforts have come to fruition.” Connor
raised his voice a notch over the grumbles. “Each tree in this grove will
yield as much as six hundred thousand board feet of lumber--enough to build
forty complete houses.” He turned, surveyed the grove, and looked again at
his audience. “All the houses in the great state of California could come
from this very grove. Citizens of Connorsville, your future looks bright.
And to prove it to you, I’m going to raise every salary fifteen cents a day,
starting today!”
Cheers and whistles erupted from the crowd, and some
of the men threw their caps in the air. Fifteen cents!
“Huh!” Old Ben grumbled again. “Easy enough to owe a
dollar and fifteen cents a day as to owe a dollar,” he growled.
“Now, if you people will be so good as to stand back,”
Connor was saying, “we’ll bring this old giant down and start earning our
fifteen cent raise.” He offered his hand first to his wife and then to his
daughter, helping them into the waiting carriage. He and his son stepped
in and the carriage moved away, followed by the townspeople--a human river
flowing down the hill and up to a rise about two hundred feet away.
Throughout the week, as the giant saw had been moving
closer and closer to the notch, other men had been hammering huge steel
wedges into the slice made by the blade. This kept the enormous weight of
the tree from trapping the saw forever in the middle of the giant trunk.
Now, at Connor’s signal, more wedges were hammered into the ever-widening
crack, forcing the tree to lean in the proper direction. The minutes crawled
by and the ringing of axe on steel continued, filling the air with the tuneless
pounding. Then, majestically, the ancient tree began to topple. At first
it seemed as if a slight breeze was ruffling the leaves, which were almost
out of sight at the top of the tree. The trunk began to sway and creak, and
then to lean, slowly at first and then faster and faster. Popping and cracking
louder than gunshots, the enormous trunk hurtled toward the earth. It hit
the forest floor with the force of an explosion, as if they’d blasted half
the mountainside away with a ton of gunpowder. The woods were suddenly engulfed
in a thick brown cloud, and then dust and debris began to shower down like
rain.
On the rise where the crowd had gathered to watch the
show, men began cheering and whistling. But as the dust slowly cleared,
the cheers died and silence settled on the forest. The bulk of the tree
could be seen stretched out on the ground. The giant trunk, once as wide
as many of the houses in Connorsville were tall, had shattered into thousands
of useless pieces.
Deep within the stump, a shudder was vibrating
the wood, as if in reaction to sudden emptiness after centuries of carrying
the weight of the giant tree. “It’s shaking,” someone cried out. “The stump
is shaking.”
“Clear these people away!” Connor’s voice was urgent
and angry, and the lumbermen began directing the townspeople back to Connorsville.
So began the logging of Connor’s Basin.
Chapter One
Francie Cavanaugh lay flat on her stomach on the top
of the old Sequoia stump. A slight breeze billowed her skirt out around her
legs and the toes of her old high-buttoned shoes pointed straight into the
wood. She kept her finger firmly pressed against the two thousand five hundredth
ring while she lay her head down, resting her neck. She could feel the heat
of the rough sun-warmed wood against her cheek and smell the tangy-sweet
scent of resin. “Twenty-five hundred years,” she whispered. And she wasn’t
to the center yet--there were probably at least five hundred rings left to
count.
That meant the tree had been growing for three thousand
years when Connor and his men had cut it down six years ago. She sat up,
but kept her finger on the tree ring. “What was happening three thousand
years ago?” she asked a robin who had come to perch on the upright pole of
the ladder leaning against the giant stump. He seemed totally unafraid of
her; he cocked his head and examined her with one bright black eye as if
to say, “Well, out with it!”
She answered slowly, thinking it out as if she were
in school. “This is the year of our Lord One Thousand Eight Hundred and
Ninety-four. It was almost two thousand years ago that Jesus was born.”
She sucked in her breath. The tree had been over a thousand years old at
the time of Christ! Maybe it had sprouted around the time Moses was leading
the Hebrews through the wilderness. It was almost too much to imagine. With
her free hand she stroked the wood gently as if the stump could feel her
touch. But she knew it couldn’t feel her. She closed her eyes. It was dead
now. Like Carrie. She shook that thought away before the lump could form
in her throat and leaned down to resume counting.
“Francie!” It was her mother’s voice. She was coming
up the path. Francie looked around, realizing too late that the sun was close
to setting. She’d lost track of the time again! She grabbed the sharp stone
near her hand and scratched two lines across the two thousand five hundredth
ring to mark her place. Then she stood and looked down, past the swelling
buttresses around the bottom of the stump, to the ground. The loggers had
started their cut about twenty feet up where the trunk was thinner so she
was way too high up to jump. She sighed and swung herself onto the ladder.
She had to place her feet carefully to avoid the broken
rungs as she climbed down. “No wonder the loggers left it here when they
moved,” she grumbled, hoping her mother wouldn’t notice how rickety it was.
Even if a rung looked solid, she tested it before she
stepped on it. She took another step, and just as she’d decided it was safe
to put her whole weight on the rung, it snapped with a loud cracking sound.
The ladder started to teeter, but Francie’s fingers found a hole in the
bark of the old stump. She gripped hard at the hole and kept the ladder
upright.
Blessing the animal who’d made the hole, Francie shifted
her weight until the ladder leaned solidly against the stump once again.
“Maybe it was an owl,” she said, slowly uncurling her fingers, ready to grab
again if the ladder moved.
The ladder held firm, but as Francie let go of the edge
of the hole she felt something brush her fingertips. She fought the urge
to jerk her hand away. Maybe it was a baby bird, she thought. A baby owl.
Slowly she took a step up so she could get a glimpse into the hole.
Sunlight shone obligingly into the blackness, but what
Francie saw was not an animal, but a small cloth bag.
Francie could hear her mother’s voice getting louder.
In a moment she would reach the clearing. Quickly Francie drew the bag out
of the hole. It was made of oiled cloth to make it waterproof and was so
light, Francie thought there couldn’t be anything inside. She wiggled her
fingers into the opening and pulled it wide.
There was something inside after all, a folded piece
of paper. She hooked her arm around the ladder, took the paper out of the
bag, and unfolded it.
Meet me at Turkey Fork
Half past four on Sunday
Don’t tell anyone--the only safety is in secrecy.
The handwriting was almost illegible. Francie’s heart gave an unexpected
lurch that made her momentarily dizzy. She didn’t understand the meaning
of the words, but she knew very well who had written the message. The barely
readable handwriting had to be her sister Carrie’s.