THEY came over the Pass one day in one big wagon—all ten of them—man and woman and hired girl and seven big boy children, from the nine-year-old who walked by the team to the baby in arms. Or
so the story runs—it was in the early days of settlement and the town had never heard of the Sobbin’ Women then. But it opened its eyes one day, and there were the Pontipees. They were there
but they didn’t stay long—just time enough to buy meal and get a new shoe for the lead horse. You couldn’t call them unsociable, exactly—they seemed to be sociable enough among themselves. But
you could tell, somehow, from the look of them, that they weren’t going to settle on ground other people had cleared. They were all high-colored and dark-haired—handsome with a wilderness
handsomeness—and when you got them all together, they looked more like a tribe or a nation than an ordinary family. I don’t know how they gave folks that feeling, but they did. Yes, even the
baby, when the town women tried to handle him. He was a fine, healthy baby, but they said it was like trying to pet a young raccoon. Well, that was all there was to it, at the start. They paid
for what they bought in good money and drove on up into Sobbin’ Women Valley—only it wasn’t called Sobbin’ Women Valley then. And pretty soon, there was smoke from a chimney there that hadn’t
been there before. But you know what town gossip is when it gets started. The Pontipees were willing enough to let other folks alone—in fact, that was what they wanted. But, because it was what
they wanted, the town couldn’t see why they wanted it. Towns get that way, sometimes.