<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<h1>
SELECTED STORIES OF BRET HARTE
</h1>
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<hr />
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="toc">
<big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION </SPAN>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE LUCK OF ROARING CAMP </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> MIGGLES </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> TENNESSEE'S PARTNER </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE IDYL OF RED GULCH </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> BROWN OF CALAVERAS </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> HIGH-WATER MARK </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> A LONELY RIDE </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE MAN OF NO ACCOUNT </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> MLISS </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE RIGHT EYE OF THE COMMANDER </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_NOTE"> NOTES BY FLOOD AND FIELD </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> AN EPISODE OF FIDDLETOWN </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> BARKER'S LUCK </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> A YELLOW DOG </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> A MOTHER OF FIVE </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> BULGER'S REPUTATION </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> IN THE TULES </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> A CONVERT OF THE MISSION </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> THE INDISCRETION OF ELSBETH </SPAN>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> THE DEVOTION OF ENRIQUEZ </SPAN>
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<hr />
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN> <br /> <br />
</p>
<h2>
INTRODUCTION
</h2>
<p>
The life of Bret Harte divides itself, without adventitious forcing, into
four quite distinct parts. First, we have the precocious boyhood, with its
eager response to the intellectual stimulation of cultured parents; young
Bret Harte assimilated Greek with amazing facility; devoured voraciously
the works of Shakespeare, Dickens, Irving, Froissart, Cervantes, Fielding;
and, with creditable success, attempted various forms of composition.
Then, compelled by economic necessity, he left school at thirteen, and for
three years worked first in a lawyer's office, and then in a merchant's
counting house.
</p>
<p>
The second period, that of his migration to California, includes all that
is permanently valuable of Harte's literary output. Arriving in California
in 1854, he was, successively, a school-teacher, drug-store clerk, express
messenger, typesetter, and itinerant journalist. He worked for a while on
the NORTHERN CALIFORNIA (from which he was dismissed for objecting
editorially to the contemporary California sport of murdering Indians),
then on the GOLDEN ERA, 1857, where he achieved his first moderate
acclaim. In this latter year he married Anne Griswold of New York. In 1864
he was given the secretaryship of the California mint, a virtual sinecure,
and he was enabled do a great deal of writing. The first volume of his
poems, THE LOST GALLEON AND OTHER TALES, CONDENSED NOVELS (much underrated
parodies), and THE BOHEMIAN PAPERS were published in 1867. One year later,
THE OVERLAND MONTHLY, which had aspirations of becoming "the ATLANTIC
MONTHLY of the West," was established, and Harte was appointed its first
editor. For it, he wrote most of what still remains valid as literature—THE
LUCK OF ROARING CAMP, THE OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT, PLAIN LANGUAGE FROM
TRUTHFUL JAMES, among others. The combination of Irvingesque romantic
glamor and Dickensian bitter-sweet humor, applied to picturesquely novel
material, with the addition of a trick ending, was fantastically popular.
Editors began to clamor for his stories; the University of California
appointed him Professor of recent literature; and the ATLANTIC MONTHLY
offered him the practically unprecedented sum of $10,000 for exclusive
rights to one year's literary output. Harte's star was, briefly, in the
ascendant.
</p>
<p>
However, Harte had accumulated a number of debts, and his editorial
policies, excellent in themselves, but undiplomatically executed, were the
cause of a series of arguments with the publisher of the OVERLAND MONTHLY.
Fairly assured of profitable pickings in the East, he left California
(permanently, as it proved). The East, however, was financially
unappreciative. Harte wrote an unsuccessful novel and collaborated with
Mark Twain on an unremunerative play. His attempts to increase his income
by lecturing were even less rewarding. From his departure from California
in 1872 to his death thirty years later, Harte's struggles to regain
financial stability were unremitting: and to these efforts is due the
relinquishment of his early ideal of "a peculiarly characteristic Western
American literature." Henceforth Harte accepted, as Prof. Hicks remarks,
"the role of entertainer, and as an entertainer he survived for thirty
years his death as an artist."
</p>
<p>
The final period extends from 1878, when he managed to get himself
appointed consul to Crefeld in Germany, to 1902, when he died of a throat
cancer. He left for Crefeld without his wife or son—perhaps
intending, as his letters indicate, to call them to him when circumstances
allowed; but save for a few years prior to his death, the separation, for
whatever complex of reasons, remained permanent. Harte, however, continued
to provide for them as liberally as he was able. In Crefeld Harte wrote A
LEGEND OF SAMMERSTANDT, VIEWS FROM A GERMAN SPION, and UNSER KARL. In 1880
he transferred to the more lucrative consulship of Glasgow, and ROBIN
GRAY, a tale of Scottish life, is the product of his stay there. In 1885
he was dismissed from his consulship, probably for political reasons,
though neglect of duty was charged against him. He removed to London where
he remained, for most part, until his death.
</p>
<p>
Bret Harte never really knew the life of the mining camp. His mining
experiences were too fragmentary, and consequently his portraits of mining
life are wholly impressionistic. "No one," Mark Twain wrote, "can talk the
quartz dialect correctly without learning it with pick and shovel and
drill and fuse." Yet, Twain added elsewhere, "Bret Harte got his
California and his Californians by unconscious absorption, and put both of
them into his tales alive." That is, perhaps, the final comment. Much
could be urged against Harte's stories: the glamor they throw over the
life they depict is largely fictitious; their pathetic endings are
obviously stylized; their technique is overwhelmingly derivative.
Nevertheless, so excellent a critic as Chesterton maintained that "There
are more than nine hundred and ninety-nine excellent reasons which we
could all have for admiring the work of Bret Harte." The figure is perhaps
exaggerated, but there are many reasons for admiration. First, Harte
originated a new and incalculably influential type of story: the
romantically picturesque "human-interest" story. "He created the local
color story," Prof. Blankenship remarks, "or at least popularized it, and
he gave new form and intent to the short story." Character motivating
action is central to this type of story, rather than mood dominating
incident. Again Harte's style is really an eminently skilful one,
admirably suited to his subjects. He can manage the humorous or the
pathetic excellently, and his restraint in each is more remarkable than
his excesses. His sentences have both force and flow; his backgrounds are
crisply but carefully sketched; his characters and caricatures have their
own logical consistency. Finally, granted the desirability of the theatric
finale, it is necessary to admit that Harte always rings down his curtain
dramatically and effectively.
</p>
<p>
ARTHUR ZEIGER, M.A. <SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
THE LUCK OF ROARING CAMP
</h2>
<p>
There was commotion in Roaring Camp. It could not have been a fight, for
in 1850 that was not novel enough to have called together the entire
settlement. The ditches and claims were not only deserted, but "Tuttle's
grocery" had contributed its gamblers, who, it will be remembered, calmly
continued their game the day that French Pete and Kanaka Joe shot each
other to death over the bar in the front room. The whole camp was
collected before a rude cabin on the outer edge of the clearing.
Conversation was carried on in a low tone, but the name of a woman was
frequently repeated. It was a name familiar enough in the camp,—"Cherokee
Sal."
</p>
<p>
Perhaps the less said of her the better. She was a coarse and, it is to be
feared, a very sinful woman. But at that time she was the only woman in
Roaring Camp, and was just then lying in sore extremity, when she most
needed the ministration of her own sex. Dissolute, abandoned, and
irreclaimable, she was yet suffering a martyrdom hard enough to bear even
when veiled by sympathizing womanhood, but now terrible in her loneliness.
The primal curse had come to her in that original isolation which must
have made the punishment of the first transgression so dreadful. It was,
perhaps, part of the expiation of her sin that, at a moment when she most
lacked her sex's intuitive tenderness and care, she met only the
half-contemptuous faces of her masculine associates. Yet a few of the
spectators were, I think, touched by her sufferings. Sandy Tipton thought
it was "rough on Sal," and, in the contemplation of her condition, for a
moment rose superior to the fact that he had an ace and two bowers in his
sleeve.
</p>
<p>
It will be seen also that the situation was novel. Deaths were by no means
uncommon in Roaring Camp, but a birth was a new thing. People had been
dismissed the camp effectively, finally, and with no possibility of
return; but this was the first time that anybody had been introduced AB
INITIO. Hence the excitement.
</p>
<p>
"You go in there, Stumpy," said a prominent citizen known as "Kentuck,"
addressing one of the loungers. "Go in there, and see what you kin do.
You've had experience in them things."
</p>
<p>
Perhaps there was a fitness in the selection. Stumpy, in other climes, had
been the putative head of two families; in fact, it was owing to some
legal informality in these proceedings that Roaring Camp—a city of
refuge—was indebted to his company. The crowd approved the choice,
and Stumpy was wise enough to bow to the majority. The door closed on the
extempore surgeon and midwife, and Roaring Camp sat down outside, smoked
its pipe, and awaited the issue.
</p>
<p>
The assemblage numbered about a hundred men. One or two of these were
actual fugitives from justice, some were criminal, and all were reckless.
Physically they exhibited no indication of their past lives and character.
The greatest scamp had a Raphael face, with a profusion of blonde hair;
Oakhurst, a gambler, had the melancholy air and intellectual abstraction
of a Hamlet; the coolest and most courageous man was scarcely over five
feet in height, with a soft voice and an embarrassed, timid manner. The
term "roughs" applied to them was a distinction rather than a definition.
Perhaps in the minor details of fingers, toes, ears, etc., the camp may
have been deficient, but these slight omissions did not detract from their
aggregate force. The strongest man had but three fingers on his right
hand; the best shot had but one eye.
</p>
<p>
Such was the physical aspect of the men that were dispersed around the
cabin. The camp lay in a triangular valley between two hills and a river.
The only outlet was a steep trail over the summit of a hill that faced the
cabin, now illuminated by the rising moon. The suffering woman might have
seen it from the rude bunk whereon she lay,—seen it winding like a
silver thread until it was lost in the stars above.
</p>
<p>
A fire of withered pine boughs added sociability to the gathering. By
degrees the natural levity of Roaring Camp returned. Bets were freely
offered and taken regarding the result. Three to five that "Sal would get
through with it;" even that the child would survive; side bets as to the
sex and complexion of the coming stranger. In the midst of an excited
discussion an exclamation came from those nearest the door, and the camp
stopped to listen. Above the swaying and moaning of the pines, the swift
rush of the river, and the crackling of the fire rose a sharp, querulous
cry,—a cry unlike anything heard before in the camp. The pines
stopped moaning, the river ceased to rush, and the fire to crackle. It
seemed as if Nature had stopped to listen too.
</p>
<p>
The camp rose to its feet as one man! It was proposed to explode a barrel
of gunpowder; but in consideration of the situation of the mother, better
counsels prevailed, and only a few revolvers were discharged; for whether
owing to the rude surgery of the camp, or some other reason, Cherokee Sal
was sinking fast. Within an hour she had climbed, as it were, that rugged
road that led to the stars, and so passed out of Roaring Camp, its sin and
shame, forever. I do not think that the announcement disturbed them much,
except in speculation as to the fate of the child. "Can he live now?" was
asked of Stumpy. The answer was doubtful. The only other being of Cherokee
Sal's sex and maternal condition in the settlement was an ass. There was
some conjecture as to fitness, but the experiment was tried. It was less
problematical than the ancient treatment of Romulus and Remus, and
apparently as successful.
</p>
<p>
When these details were completed, which exhausted another hour, the door
was opened, and the anxious crowd of men, who had already formed
themselves into a queue, entered in single file. Beside the low bunk or
shelf, on which the figure of the mother was starkly outlined below the
blankets, stood a pine table. On this a candle-box was placed, and within
it, swathed in staring red flannel, lay the last arrival at Roaring Camp.
Beside the candle-box was placed a hat. Its use was soon indicated.
"Gentlemen," said Stumpy, with a singular mixture of authority and EX
OFFICIO complacency,—"gentlemen will please pass in at the front
door, round the table, and out at the back door. Them as wishes to
contribute anything toward the orphan will find a hat handy." The first
man entered with his hat on; he uncovered, however, as he looked about
him, and so unconsciously set an example to the next. In such communities
good and bad actions are catching. As the procession filed in comments
were audible,—criticisms addressed perhaps rather to Stumpy in the
character of showman; "Is that him?" "Mighty small specimen;" "Has n't
more 'n got the color;" "Ain't bigger nor a derringer." The contributions
were as characteristic: A silver tobacco box; a doubloon; a navy revolver,
silver mounted; a gold specimen; a very beautifully embroidered lady's
handkerchief (from Oakhurst the gambler); a diamond breastpin; a diamond
ring (suggested by the pin, with the remark from the giver that he "saw
that pin and went two diamonds better"); a slung-shot; a Bible
(contributor not detected); a golden spur; a silver teaspoon (the
initials, I regret to say, were not the giver's); a pair of surgeon's
shears; a lancet; a Bank of England note for 5 pounds; and about $200 in
loose gold and silver coin. During these proceedings Stumpy maintained a
silence as impassive as the dead on his left, a gravity as inscrutable as
that of the newly born on his right. Only one incident occurred to break
the monotony of the curious procession. As Kentuck bent over the
candle-box half curiously, the child turned, and, in a spasm of pain,
caught at his groping finger, and held it fast for a moment. Kentuck
looked foolish and embarrassed. Something like a blush tried to assert
itself in his weather-beaten cheek. "The damned little cuss!" he said, as
he extricated his finger, with perhaps more tenderness and care than he
might have been deemed capable of showing. He held that finger a little
apart from its fellows as he went out, and examined it curiously. The
examination provoked the same original remark in regard to the child. In
fact, he seemed to enjoy repeating it. "He rastled with my finger," he
remarked to Tipton, holding up the member, "the damned little cuss!"
</p>
<p>
It was four o'clock before the camp sought repose. A light burnt in the
cabin where the watchers sat, for Stumpy did not go to bed that night. Nor
did Kentuck. He drank quite freely, and related with great gusto his
experience, invariably ending with his characteristic condemnation of the
newcomer. It seemed to relieve him of any unjust implication of sentiment,
and Kentuck had the weaknesses of the nobler sex. When everybody else had
gone to bed, he walked down to the river and whistled reflectingly. Then
he walked up the gulch past the cabin, still whistling with demonstrative
unconcern. At a large redwood-tree he paused and retraced his steps, and
again passed the cabin. Halfway down to the river's bank he again paused,
and then returned and knocked at the door. It was opened by Stumpy. "How
goes it?" said Kentuck, looking past Stumpy toward the candle-box. "All
serene!" replied Stumpy. "Anything up?" "Nothing." There was a pause—an
embarrassing one—Stumpy still holding the door. Then Kentuck had
recourse to his finger, which he held up to Stumpy. "Rastled with it,—the
damned little cuss," he said, and retired.
</p>
<p>
The next day Cherokee Sal had such rude sepulture as Roaring Camp
afforded. After her body had been committed to the hillside, there was a
formal meeting of the camp to discuss what should be done with her infant.
A resolution to adopt it was unanimous and enthusiastic. But an animated
discussion in regard to the manner and feasibility of providing for its
wants at once sprang up. It was remarkable that the argument partook of
none of those fierce personalities with which discussions were usually
conducted at Roaring Camp. Tipton proposed that they should send the child
to Red Dog,—a distance of forty miles,—where female attention
could be procured. But the unlucky suggestion met with fierce and
unanimous opposition. It was evident that no plan which entailed parting
from their new acquisition would for a moment be entertained. "Besides,"
said Tom Ryder, "them fellows at Red Dog would swap it, and ring in
somebody else on us." A disbelief in the honesty of other camps prevailed
at Roaring Camp, as in other places.
</p>
<p>
The introduction of a female nurse in the camp also met with objection. It
was argued that no decent woman could be prevailed to accept Roaring Camp
as her home, and the speaker urged that "they didn't want any more of the
other kind." This unkind allusion to the defunct mother, harsh as it may
seem, was the first spasm of propriety,—the first symptom of the
camp's regeneration. Stumpy advanced nothing. Perhaps he felt a certain
delicacy in interfering with the selection of a possible successor in
office. But when questioned, he averred stoutly that he and "Jinny"—the
mammal before alluded to—could manage to rear the child. There was
something original, independent, and heroic about the plan that pleased
the camp. Stumpy was retained. Certain articles were sent for to
Sacramento. "Mind," said the treasurer, as he pressed a bag of gold-dust
into the expressman's hand, "the best that can be got,—lace, you
know, and filigree-work and frills,—damn the cost!"
</p>
<p>
Strange to say, the child thrived. Perhaps the invigorating climate of the
mountain camp was compensation for material deficiencies. Nature took the
foundling to her broader breast. In that rare atmosphere of the Sierra
foothills,—that air pungent with balsamic odor, that ethereal
cordial at once bracing and exhilarating,—he may have found food and
nourishment, or a subtle chemistry that transmuted ass's milk to lime and
phosphorus. Stumpy inclined to the belief that it was the latter and good
nursing. "Me and that ass," he would say, "has been father and mother to
him! Don't you," he would add, apostrophizing the helpless bundle before
him, "never go back on us."
</p>
<p>
By the time he was a month old the necessity of giving him a name became
apparent. He had generally been known as "The Kid," "Stumpy's Boy," "The
Coyote" (an allusion to his vocal powers), and even by Kentuck's endearing
diminutive of "The damned little cuss." But these were felt to be vague
and unsatisfactory, and were at last dismissed under another influence.
Gamblers and adventurers are generally superstitious, and Oakhurst one day
declared that the baby had brought "the luck" to Roaring Camp. It was
certain that of late they had been successful. "Luck" was the name agreed
upon, with the prefix of Tommy for greater convenience. No allusion was
made to the mother, and the father was unknown. "It's better," said the
philosophical Oakhurst, "to take a fresh deal all round. Call him Luck,
and start him fair." A day was accordingly set apart for the christening.
What was meant by this ceremony the reader may imagine who has already
gathered some idea of the reckless irreverence of Roaring Camp. The master
of ceremonies was one "Boston," a noted wag, and the occasion seemed to
promise the greatest facetiousness. This ingenious satirist had spent two
days in preparing a burlesque of the Church service, with pointed local
allusions. The choir was properly trained, and Sandy Tipton was to stand
godfather. But after the procession had marched to the grove with music
and banners, and the child had been deposited before a mock altar, Stumpy
stepped before the expectant crowd. "It ain't my style to spoil fun,
boys," said the little man, stoutly eyeing the faces around him, "but it
strikes me that this thing ain't exactly on the squar. It's playing it
pretty low down on this yer baby to ring in fun on him that he ain't goin'
to understand. And ef there's goin' to be any godfathers round, I'd like
to see who's got any better rights than me." A silence followed Stumpy's
speech. To the credit of all humorists be it said that the first man to
acknowledge its justice was the satirist thus stopped of his fun. "But,"
said Stumpy, quickly following up his advantage, "we're here for a
christening, and we'll have it. I proclaim you Thomas Luck, according to
the laws of the United States and the State of California, so help me
God." It was the first time that the name of the Deity had been otherwise
uttered than profanely in the camp. The form of christening was perhaps
even more ludicrous than the satirist had conceived; but strangely enough,
nobody saw it and nobody laughed. "Tommy" was christened as seriously as
he would have been under a Christian roof and cried and was comforted in
as orthodox fashion.
</p>
<p>
And so the work of regeneration began in Roaring Camp. Almost
imperceptibly a change came over the settlement. The cabin assigned to
"Tommy Luck"—or "The Luck," as he was more frequently called—first
showed signs of improvement. It was kept scrupulously clean and
whitewashed. Then it was boarded, clothed, and papered. The rose wood
cradle, packed eighty miles by mule, had, in Stumpy's way of putting it,
"sorter killed the rest of the furniture." So the rehabilitation of the
cabin became a necessity. The men who were in the habit of lounging in at
Stumpy's to see "how 'The Luck' got on" seemed to appreciate the change,
and in self-defense the rival establishment of "Tuttle's grocery"
bestirred itself and imported a carpet and mirrors. The reflections of the
latter on the appearance of Roaring Camp tended to produce stricter habits
of personal cleanliness. Again Stumpy imposed a kind of quarantine upon
those who aspired to the honor and privilege of holding The Luck. It was a
cruel mortification to Kentuck—who, in the carelessness of a large
nature and the habits of frontier life, had begun to regard all garments
as a second cuticle, which, like a snake's, only sloughed off through
decay—to be debarred this privilege from certain prudential reasons.
Yet such was the subtle influence of innovation that he thereafter
appeared regularly every afternoon in a clean shirt and face still shining
from his ablutions. Nor were moral and social sanitary laws neglected.
"Tommy," who was supposed to spend his whole existence in a persistent
attempt to repose, must not be disturbed by noise. The shouting and
yelling, which had gained the camp its infelicitous title, were not
permitted within hearing distance of Stumpy's. The men conversed in
whispers or smoked with Indian gravity. Profanity was tacitly given up in
these sacred precincts, and throughout the camp a popular form of
expletive, known as "D—n the luck!" and "Curse the luck!" was
abandoned, as having a new personal bearing. Vocal music was not
interdicted, being supposed to have a soothing, tranquilizing quality; and
one song, sung by "Man-o'-War Jack," an English sailor from her Majesty's
Australian colonies, was quite popular as a lullaby. It was a lugubrious
recital of the exploits of "the Arethusa, Seventy-four," in a muffled
minor, ending with a prolonged dying fall at the burden of each verse, "On
b-oo-o-ard of the Arethusa." It was a fine sight to see Jack holding The
Luck, rocking from side to side as if with the motion of a ship, and
crooning forth this naval ditty. Either through the peculiar rocking of
Jack or the length of his song,—it contained ninety stanzas, and was
continued with conscientious deliberation to the bitter end,—the
lullaby generally had the desired effect. At such times the men would lie
at full length under the trees in the soft summer twilight, smoking their
pipes and drinking in the melodious utterances. An indistinct idea that
this was pastoral happiness pervaded the camp. "This 'ere kind o' think,"
said the Cockney Simmons, meditatively reclining on his elbow, "is
'evingly." It reminded him of Greenwich.
</p>
<p>
On the long summer days The Luck was usually carried to the gulch from
whence the golden store of Roaring Camp was taken. There, on a blanket
spread over pine boughs, he would lie while the men were working in the
ditches below. Latterly there was a rude attempt to decorate this bower
with flowers and sweet-smelling shrubs, and generally some one would bring
him a cluster of wild honeysuckles, azaleas, or the painted blossoms of
Las Mariposas. The men had suddenly awakened to the fact that there were
beauty and significance in these trifles, which they had so long trodden
carelessly beneath their feet. A flake of glittering mica, a fragment of
variegated quartz, a bright pebble from the bed of the creek, became
beautiful to eyes thus cleared and strengthened, and were invariably pat
aside for The Luck. It was wonderful how many treasures the woods and
hillsides yielded that "would do for Tommy." Surrounded by playthings such
as never child out of fairyland had before, it is to be hoped that Tommy
was content. He appeared to be serenely happy, albeit there was an
infantine gravity about him, a contemplative light in his round gray eyes,
that sometimes worried Stumpy. He was always tractable and quiet, and it
is recorded that once, having crept beyond his "corral,"—a hedge of
tessellated pine boughs, which surrounded his bed,—he dropped over
the bank on his head in the soft earth, and remained with his mottled legs
in the air in that position for at least five minutes with unflinching
gravity. He was extricated without a murmur. I hesitate to record the many
other instances of his sagacity, which rest, unfortunately, upon the
statements of prejudiced friends. Some of them were not without a tinge of
superstition. "I crep' up the bank just now," said Kentuck one day, in a
breathless state of excitement "and dern my skin if he was a-talking to a
jay bird as was a-sittin' on his lap. There they was, just as free and
sociable as anything you please, a-jawin' at each other just like two
cherrybums." Howbeit, whether creeping over the pine boughs or lying
lazily on his back blinking at the leaves above him, to him the birds
sang, the squirrels chattered, and the flowers bloomed. Nature was his
nurse and playfellow. For him she would let slip between the leaves golden
shafts of sunlight that fell just within his grasp; she would send
wandering breezes to visit him with the balm of bay and resinous gum; to
him the tall redwoods nodded familiarly and sleepily, the bumblebees
buzzed, and the rooks cawed a slumbrous accompaniment.
</p>
<p>
Such was the golden summer of Roaring Camp. They were "flush times," and
the luck was with them. The claims had yielded enormously. The camp was
jealous of its privileges and looked suspiciously on strangers. No
encouragement was given to immigration, and, to make their seclusion more
perfect, the land on either side of the mountain wall that surrounded the
camp they duly preempted. This, and a reputation for singular proficiency
with the revolver, kept the reserve of Roaring Camp inviolate. The
expressman—their only connecting link with the surrounding world—sometimes
told wonderful stories of the camp. He would say, "They've a street up
there in 'Roaring' that would lay over any street in Red Dog. They've got
vines and flowers round their houses, and they wash themselves twice a
day. But they're mighty rough on strangers, and they worship an Ingin
baby."
</p>
<p>
With the prosperity of the camp came a desire for further improvement. It
was proposed to build a hotel in the following spring, and to invite one
or two decent families to reside there for the sake of The Luck, who might
perhaps profit by female companionship. The sacrifice that this concession
to the sex cost these men, who were fiercely skeptical in regard to its
general virtue and usefulness, can only be accounted for by their
affection for Tommy. A few still held out. But the resolve could not be
carried into effect for three months, and the minority meekly yielded in
the hope that something might turn up to prevent it. And it did.
</p>
<p>
The winter of 1851 will long be remembered in the foothills. The snow lay
deep on the Sierras, and every mountain creek became a river, and every
river a lake. Each gorge and gulch was transformed into a tumultuous
watercourse that descended the hillsides, tearing down giant trees and
scattering its drift and debris along the plain. Red Dog had been twice
under water, and Roaring Camp had been forewarned. "Water put the gold
into them gulches," said Stumpy. "It been here once and will be here
again!" And that night the North Fork suddenly leaped over its banks and
swept up the triangular valley of Roaring Camp.
</p>
<p>
In the confusion of rushing water, crashing trees, and crackling timber,
and the darkness which seemed to flow with the water and blot out the fair
valley, but little could be done to collect the scattered camp. When the
morning broke, the cabin of Stumpy, nearest the river-bank, was gone.
Higher up the gulch they found the body of its unlucky owner; but the
pride, the hope, the joy, The Luck, of Roaring Camp had disappeared. They
were returning with sad hearts when a shout from the bank recalled them.
</p>
<p>
It was a relief-boat from down the river. They had picked up, they said, a
man and an infant, nearly exhausted, about two miles below. Did anybody
know them, and did they belong here?
</p>
<p>
It needed but a glance to show them Kentuck lying there, cruelly crushed
and bruised, but still holding The Luck of Roaring Camp in his arms. As
they bent over the strangely assorted pair, they saw that the child was
cold and pulseless. "He is dead," said one. Kentuck opened his eyes.
"Dead?" he repeated feebly. "Yes, my man, and you are dying too." A smile
lit the eyes of the expiring Kentuck. "Dying!" he repeated; "he's a-taking
me with him. Tell the boys I've got The Luck with me now;" and the strong
man, clinging to the frail babe as a drowning man is said to cling to a
straw, drifted away into the shadowy river that flows forever to the
unknown sea.
</p>
<p>
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<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
THE OUTCASTS OF POKER FLAT
</h2>
<p>
As Mr. John Oakhurst, gambler, stepped into the main street of Poker Flat
on the morning of the twenty-third of November, 1850, he was conscious of
a change in its moral atmosphere since the preceding night. Two or three
men, conversing earnestly together, ceased as he approached, and exchanged
significant glances. There was a Sabbath lull in the air which, in a
settlement unused to Sabbath influences, looked ominous.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Oakhurst's calm, handsome face betrayed small concern in these
indications. Whether he was conscious of any predisposing cause was
another question. "I reckon they're after somebody," he reflected; "likely
it's me." He returned to his pocket the handkerchief with which he had
been whipping away the red dust of Poker Flat from his neat boots, and
quietly discharged his mind of any further conjecture.
</p>
<p>
In point of fact, Poker Flat was "after somebody." It had lately suffered
the loss of several thousand dollars, two valuable horses, and a prominent
citizen. It was experiencing a spasm of virtuous reaction, quite as
lawless and ungovernable as any of the acts that had provoked it. A secret
committee had determined to rid the town of all improper persons. This was
done permanently in regard of two men who were then hanging from the
boughs of a sycamore in the gulch, and temporarily in the banishment of
certain other objectionable characters. I regret to say that some of these
were ladies. It is but due to the sex, however, to state that their
impropriety was professional, and it was only in such easily established
standards of evil that Poker Flat ventured to sit in judgment.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Oakhurst was right in supposing that he was included in this category.
A few of the committee had urged hanging him as a possible example, and a
sure method of reimbursing themselves from his pockets of the sums he had
won from them. "It's agin justice," said Jim Wheeler, "to let this yer
young man from Roaring Camp—an entire stranger—carry away our
money." But a crude sentiment of equity residing in the breasts of those
who had been fortunate enough to win from Mr. Oakhurst overruled this
narrower local prejudice.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Oakhurst received his sentence with philosophic calmness, none the
less coolly that he was aware of the hesitation of his judges. He was too
much of a gambler not to accept Fate. With him life was at best an
uncertain game, and he recognized the usual percentage in favor of the
dealer.
</p>
<p>
A body of armed men accompanied the deported wickedness of Poker Flat to
the outskirts of the settlement. Besides Mr. Oakhurst, who was known to be
a coolly desperate man, and for whose intimidation the armed escort was
intended, the expatriated party consisted of a young woman familiarly
known as the "Duchess"; another, who had won the title of "Mother
Shipton"; and "Uncle Billy," a suspected sluice-robber and confirmed
drunkard. The cavalcade provoked no comments from the spectators, nor was
any word uttered by the escort. Only, when the gulch which marked the
uttermost limit of Poker Flat was reached, the leader spoke briefly and to
the point. The exiles were forbidden to return at the peril of their
lives.
</p>
<p>
As the escort disappeared, their pent-up feelings found vent in a few
hysterical tears from the Duchess, some bad language from Mother Shipton,
and a Parthian volley of expletives from Uncle Billy. The philosophic
Oakhurst alone remained silent. He listened calmly to Mother Shipton's
desire to cut somebody's heart out, to the repeated statements of the
Duchess that she would die in the road, and to the alarming oaths that
seemed to be bumped out of Uncle Billy as he rode forward. With the easy
good humor characteristic of his class, he insisted upon exchanging his
own riding horse, "Five Spot," for the sorry mule which the Duchess rode.
But even this act did not draw the party into any closer sympathy. The
young woman readjusted her somewhat draggled plumes with a feeble, faded
coquetry; Mother Shipton eyed the possessor of "Five Spot" with
malevolence, and Uncle Billy included the whole party in one sweeping
anathema.
</p>
<p>
The road to Sandy Bar—a camp that, not having as yet experienced the
regenerating influences of Poker Flat, consequently seemed to offer some
invitation to the emigrants—lay over a steep mountain range. It was
distant a day's severe travel. In that advanced season, the party soon
passed out of the moist, temperate regions of the foothills into the dry,
cold, bracing air of the Sierras. The trail was narrow and difficult. At
noon the Duchess, rolling out of her saddle upon the ground, declared her
intention of going no farther, and the party halted.
</p>
<p>
The spot was singularly wild and impressive. A wooded amphitheater,
surrounded on three sides by precipitous cliffs of naked granite, sloped
gently toward the crest of another precipice that overlooked the valley.
It was, undoubtedly, the most suitable spot for a camp, had camping been
advisable. But Mr. Oakhurst knew that scarcely half the journey to Sandy
Bar was accomplished, and the party were not equipped or provisioned for
delay. This fact he pointed out to his companions curtly, with a
philosophic commentary on the folly of "throwing up their hand before the
game was played out." But they were furnished with liquor, which in this
emergency stood them in place of food, fuel, rest, and prescience. In
spite of his remonstrances, it was not long before they were more or less
under its influence. Uncle Billy passed rapidly from a bellicose state
into one of stupor, the Duchess became maudlin, and Mother Shipton snored.
Mr. Oakhurst alone remained erect, leaning against a rock, calmly
surveying them.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Oakhurst did not drink. It interfered with a profession which required
coolness, impassiveness, and presence of mind, and, in his own language,
he "couldn't afford it." As he gazed at his recumbent fellow exiles, the
loneliness begotten of his pariah trade, his habits of life, his very
vices, for the first time seriously oppressed him. He bestirred himself in
dusting his black clothes, washing his hands and face, and other acts
characteristic of his studiously neat habits, and for a moment forgot his
annoyance. The thought of deserting his weaker and more pitiable
companions never perhaps occurred to him. Yet he could not help feeling
the want of that excitement which, singularly enough, was most conducive
to that calm equanimity for which he was notorious. He looked at the
gloomy walls that rose a thousand feet sheer above the circling pines
around him; at the sky, ominously clouded; at the valley below, already
deepening into shadow. And, doing so, suddenly he heard his own name
called.
</p>
<p>
A horseman slowly ascended the trail. In the fresh, open face of the
newcomer Mr. Oakhurst recognized Tom Simson, otherwise known as the
"Innocent" of Sandy Bar. He had met him some months before over a "little
game," and had, with perfect equanimity, won the entire fortune—amounting
to some forty dollars—of that guileless youth. After the game was
finished, Mr. Oakhurst drew the youthful speculator behind the door and
thus addressed him: "Tommy, you're a good little man, but you can't gamble
worth a cent. Don't try it over again." He then handed him his money back,
pushed him gently from the room, and so made a devoted slave of Tom
Simson.
</p>
<p>
There was a remembrance of this in his boyish and enthusiastic greeting of
Mr. Oakhurst. He had started, he said, to go to Poker Flat to seek his
fortune. "Alone?" No, not exactly alone; in fact (a giggle), he had run
away with Piney Woods. Didn't Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney? She that used
to wait on the table at the Temperance House? They had been engaged a long
time, but old Jake Woods had objected, and so they had run away, and were
going to Poker Flat to be married, and here they were. And they were tired
out, and how lucky it was they had found a place to camp and company. All
this the Innocent delivered rapidly, while Piney, a stout, comely damsel
of fifteen, emerged from behind the pine tree, where she had been blushing
unseen, and rode to the side of her lover.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Oakhurst seldom troubled himself with sentiment, still less with
propriety; but he had a vague idea that the situation was not fortunate.
He retained, however, his presence of mind sufficiently to kick Uncle
Billy, who was about to say something, and Uncle Billy was sober enough to
recognize in Mr. Oakhurst's kick a superior power that would not bear
trifling. He then endeavored to dissuade Tom Simson from delaying further,
but in vain. He even pointed out the fact that there was no provision, nor
means of making a camp. But, unluckily, the Innocent met this objection by
assuring the party that he was provided with an extra mule loaded with
provisions and by the discovery of a rude attempt at a log house near the
trail. "Piney can stay with Mrs. Oakhurst," said the Innocent, pointing to
the Duchess, "and I can shift for myself."
</p>
<p>
Nothing but Mr. Oakhurst's admonishing foot saved Uncle Billy from
bursting into a roar of laughter. As it was, he felt compelled to retire
up the canyon until he could recover his gravity. There he confided the
joke to the tall pine trees, with many slaps of his leg, contortions of
his face, and the usual profanity. But when he returned to the party, he
found them seated by a fire—for the air had grown strangely chill
and the sky overcast—in apparently amicable conversation. Piney was
actually talking in an impulsive, girlish fashion to the Duchess, who was
listening with an interest and animation she had not shown for many days.
The Innocent was holding forth, apparently with equal effect, to Mr.
Oakhurst and Mother Shipton, who was actually relaxing into amiability.
"Is this yer a damned picnic?" said Uncle Billy with inward scorn as he
surveyed the sylvan group, the glancing firelight, and the tethered
animals in the foreground. Suddenly an idea mingled with the alcoholic
fumes that disturbed his brain. It was apparently of a jocular nature, for
he felt impelled to slap his leg again and cram his fist into his mouth.
</p>
<p>
As the shadows crept slowly up the mountain, a slight breeze rocked the
tops of the pine trees, and moaned through their long and gloomy aisles.
The ruined cabin, patched and covered with pine boughs, was set apart for
the ladies. As the lovers parted, they unaffectedly exchanged a kiss, so
honest and sincere that it might have been heard above the swaying pines.
The frail Duchess and the malevolent Mother Shipton were probably too
stunned to remark upon this last evidence of simplicity, and so turned
without a word to the hut. The fire was replenished, the men lay down
before the door, and in a few minutes were asleep.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Oakhurst was a light sleeper. Toward morning he awoke benumbed and
cold. As he stirred the dying fire, the wind, which was now blowing
strongly, brought to his cheek that which caused the blood to leave it—snow!
</p>
<p>
He started to his feet with the intention of awakening the sleepers, for
there was no time to lose. But turning to where Uncle Billy had been
lying, he found him gone. A suspicion leaped to his brain and a curse to
his lips. He ran to the spot where the mules had been tethered; they were
no longer there. The tracks were already rapidly disappearing in the snow.
</p>
<p>
The momentary excitement brought Mr. Oakhurst back to the fire with his
usual calm. He did not waken the sleepers. The Innocent slumbered
peacefully, with a smile on his good-humored, freckled face; the virgin
Piney slept beside her frailer sisters as sweetly as though attended by
celestial guardians; and Mr. Oakhurst, drawing his blanket over his
shoulders, stroked his mustaches and waited for the dawn. It came slowly
in a whirling mist of snowflakes that dazzled and confused the eye. What
could be seen of the landscape appeared magically changed. He looked over
the valley, and summed up the present and future in two words—"snowed
in!"
</p>
<p>
A careful inventory of the provisions, which, fortunately for the party,
had been stored within the hut and so escaped the felonious fingers of
Uncle Billy, disclosed the fact that with care and prudence they might
last ten days longer. "That is," said Mr. Oakhurst, sotto voce to the
Innocent, "if you're willing to board us. If you ain't—and perhaps
you'd better not—you can wait till Uncle Billy gets back with
provisions." For some occult reason, Mr. Oakhurst could not bring himself
to disclose Uncle Billy's rascality, and so offered the hypothesis that he
had wandered from the camp and had accidentally stampeded the animals. He
dropped a warning to the Duchess and Mother Shipton, who of course knew
the facts of their associate's defection. "They'll find out the truth
about us all when they find out anything," he added, significantly, "and
there's no good frightening them now."
</p>
<p>
Tom Simson not only put all his worldly store at the disposal of Mr.
Oakhurst, but seemed to enjoy the prospect of their enforced seclusion.
"We'll have a good camp for a week, and then the snow'll melt, and we'll
all go back together." The cheerful gaiety of the young man, and Mr.
Oakhurst's calm, infected the others. The Innocent with the aid of pine
boughs extemporized a thatch for the roofless cabin, and the Duchess
directed Piney in the rearrangement of the interior with a taste and tact
that opened the blue eyes of that provincial maiden to their fullest
extent. "I reckon now you're used to fine things at Poker Flat," said
Piney. The Duchess turned away sharply to conceal something that reddened
her cheeks through its professional tint, and Mother Shipton requested
Piney not to "chatter." But when Mr. Oakhurst returned from a weary search
for the trail, he heard the sound of happy laughter echoed from the rocks.
He stopped in some alarm, and his thoughts first naturally reverted to the
whisky, which he had prudently cached. "And yet it don't somehow sound
like whisky," said the gambler. It was not until he caught sight of the
blazing fire through the still-blinding storm and the group around it that
he settled to the conviction that it was "square fun."
</p>
<p>
Whether Mr. Oakhurst had cached his cards with the whisky as something
debarred the free access of the community, I cannot say. It was certain
that, in Mother Shipton's words, he "didn't say cards once" during that
evening. Haply the time was beguiled by an accordion, produced somewhat
ostentatiously by Tom Simson from his pack. Notwithstanding some
difficulties attending the manipulation of this instrument, Piney Woods
managed to pluck several reluctant melodies from its keys, to an
accompaniment by the Innocent on a pair of bone castanets. But the
crowning festivity of the evening was reached in a rude camp-meeting hymn,
which the lovers, joining hands, sang with great earnestness and
vociferation. I fear that a certain defiant tone and Covenanter's swing to
its chorus, rather than any devotional quality, caused it speedily to
infect the others, who at last joined in the refrain:
</p>
<p>
"I'm proud to live in the service of the Lord,
</p>
<p>
And I'm bound to die in His army."
</p>
<p>
The pines rocked, the storm eddied and whirled above the miserable group,
and the flames of their altar leaped heavenward as if in token of the vow.
</p>
<p>
At midnight the storm abated, the rolling clouds parted, and the stars
glittered keenly above the sleeping camp. Mr. Oakhurst, whose professional
habits had enabled him to live on the smallest possible amount of sleep,
in dividing the watch with Tom Simson somehow managed to take upon himself
the greater part of that duty. He excused himself to the Innocent by
saying that he had "often been a week without sleep." "Doing what?" asked
Tom. "Poker!" replied Oakhurst, sententiously; "when a man gets a streak
of luck,—nigger luck—he don't get tired. The luck gives in
first. Luck," continued the gambler, reflectively, "is a mighty queer
thing. All you know about it for certain is that it's bound to change. And
it's finding out when it's going to change that makes you. We've had a
streak of bad luck since we left Poker Flat—you come along, and slap
you get into it, too. If you can hold your cards right along you're all
right. For," added the gambler, with cheerful irrelevance,
</p>
<p>
"'I'm proud to live in the service of the Lord,
</p>
<p>
And I'm bound to die in His army.'"
</p>
<p>
The third day came, and the sun, looking through the white-curtained
valley, saw the outcasts divide their slowly decreasing store of
provisions for the morning meal. It was one of the peculiarities of that
mountain climate that its rays diffused a kindly warmth over the wintry
landscape, as if in regretful commiseration of the past. But it revealed
drift on drift of snow piled high around the hut—a hopeless,
uncharted, trackless sea of white lying below the rocky shores to which
the castaways still clung. Through the marvelously clear air the smoke of
the pastoral village of Poker Flat rose miles away. Mother Shipton saw it,
and from a remote pinnacle of her rocky fastness hurled in that direction
a final malediction. It was her last vituperative attempt, and perhaps for
that reason was invested with a certain degree of sublimity. It did her
good, she privately informed the Duchess. "Just you go out there and cuss,
and see." She then set herself to the task of amusing "the child," as she
and the Duchess were pleased to call Piney. Piney was no chicken, but it
was a soothing and original theory of the pair thus to account for the
fact that she didn't swear and wasn't improper.
</p>
<p>
When night crept up again through the gorges, the reedy notes of the
accordion rose and fell in fitful spasms and long-drawn gasps by the
flickering campfire. But music failed to fill entirely the aching void
left by insufficient food, and a new diversion was proposed by Piney—storytelling.
Neither Mr. Oakhurst nor his female companions caring to relate their
personal experiences, this plan would have failed too but for the
Innocent. Some months before he had chanced upon a stray copy of Mr.
Pope's ingenious translation of the ILIAD. He now proposed to narrate the
principal incidents of that poem—having thoroughly mastered the
argument and fairly forgotten the words—in the current vernacular of
Sandy Bar. And so for the rest of that night the Homeric demigods again
walked the earth. Trojan bully and wily Greek wrestled in the winds, and
the great pines in the canyon seemed to bow to the wrath of the son of
Peleus. Mr. Oakhurst listened with quiet satisfaction. Most especially was
he interested in the fate of "Ash-heels," as the Innocent persisted in
denominating the "swift-footed Achilles."
</p>
<p>
So with small food and much of Homer and the accordion, a week passed over
the heads of the outcasts. The sun again forsook them, and again from
leaden skies the snowflakes were sifted over the land. Day by day closer
around them drew the snowy circle, until at last they looked from their
prison over drifted walls of dazzling white that towered twenty feet above
their heads. It became more and more difficult to replenish their fires,
even from the fallen trees beside them, now half-hidden in the drifts. And
yet no one complained. The lovers turned from the dreary prospect and
looked into each other's eyes, and were happy. Mr. Oakhurst settled
himself coolly to the losing game before him. The Duchess, more cheerful
than she had been, assumed the care of Piney. Only Mother Shipton—once
the strongest of the party—seemed to sicken and fade. At midnight on
the tenth day she called Oakhurst to her side. "I'm going," she said, in a
voice of querulous weakness, "but don't say anything about it. Don't waken
the kids. Take the bundle from under my head and open it." Mr. Oakhurst
did so. It contained Mother Shipton's rations for the last week,
untouched. "Give 'em to the child," she said, pointing to the sleeping
Piney. "You've starved yourself," said the gambler. "That's what they call
it," said the woman, querulously, as she lay down again and, turning her
face to the wall, passed quietly away.
</p>
<p>
The accordion and the bones were put aside that day, and Homer was
forgotten. When the body of Mother Shipton had been committed to the snow,
Mr. Oakhurst took the Innocent aside, and showed him a pair of snowshoes,
which he had fashioned from the old pack saddle. "There's one chance in a
hundred to save her yet," he said, pointing to Piney; "but it's there," he
added, pointing toward Poker Flat. "If you can reach there in two days
she's safe." "And you?" asked Tom Simson. "I'll stay here," was the curt
reply.
</p>
<p>
The lovers parted with a long embrace. "You are not going, too?" said the
Duchess as she saw Mr. Oakhurst apparently waiting to accompany him. "As
far as the canyon," he replied. He turned suddenly, and kissed the
Duchess, leaving her pallid face aflame and her trembling limbs rigid with
amazement.
</p>
<p>
Night came, but not Mr. Oakhurst. It brought the storm again and the
whirling snow. Then the Duchess, feeding the fire, found that someone had
quietly piled beside the hut enough fuel to last a few days longer. The
tears rose to her eyes, but she hid them from Piney.
</p>
<p>
The women slept but little. In the morning, looking into each other's
faces, they read their fate. Neither spoke; but Piney, accepting the
position of the stronger, drew near and placed her arm around the
Duchess's waist. They kept this attitude for the rest of the day. That
night the storm reached its greatest fury, and, rending asunder the
protecting pines, invaded the very hut.
</p>
<p>
Toward morning they found themselves unable to feed the fire, which
gradually died away. As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept
closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours: "Piney, can you
pray?" "No, dear," said Piney, simply. The Duchess, without knowing
exactly why, felt relieved, and, putting her head upon Piney's shoulder,
spoke no more. And so reclining, the younger and purer pillowing the head
of her soiled sister upon her virgin breast, they fell asleep.
</p>
<p>
The wind lulled as if it feared to waken them. Feathery drifts of snow,
shaken from the long pine boughs, flew like white-winged birds, and
settled about them as they slept. The moon through the rifted clouds
looked down upon what had been the camp. But all human stain, all trace of
earthly travail, was hidden beneath the spotless mantle mercifully flung
from above.
</p>
<p>
They slept all that day and the next, nor did they waken when voices and
footsteps broke the silence of the camp. And when pitying fingers brushed
the snow from their wan faces, you could scarcely have told from the equal
peace that dwelt upon them which was she that had sinned. Even the law of
Poker Flat recognized this, and turned away, leaving them still locked in
each other's arms.
</p>
<p>
But at the head of the gulch, on one of the largest pine trees, they found
the deuce of clubs pinned to the bark with a bowie knife. It bore the
following, written in pencil, in a firm hand:
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
BENEATH THIS TREE
LIES THE BODY
OF
JOHN OAKHURST,
WHO STRUCK A STREAK OF BAD LUCK
ON THE 23D OF NOVEMBER, 1850,
AND
HANDED IN HIS CHECKS
ON THE 7TH DECEMBER, 1850.
</pre>
<p>
And pulseless and cold, with a Derringer by his side and a bullet in his
heart, though still calm as in life, beneath the snow lay he who was at
once the strongest and yet the weakest of the outcasts of Poker Flat.
</p>
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<h2>
MIGGLES
</h2>
<p>
We were eight, including the driver. We had not spoken during the passage
of the last six miles, since the jolting of the heavy vehicle over the
roughening road had spoiled the Judge's last poetical quotation. The tall
man beside the Judge was asleep, his arm passed through the swaying strap
and his head resting upon it—altogether a limp, helpless-looking
object, as if he had hanged himself and been cut down too late. The French
lady on the back seat was asleep, too, yet in a half-conscious propriety
of attitude, shown even in the disposition of the handkerchief which she
held to her forehead and which partially veiled her face. The lady from
Virginia City, traveling with her husband, had long since lost all
individuality in a wild confusion of ribbons, veils, furs, and shawls.
There was no sound but the rattling of wheels and the dash of rain upon
the roof. Suddenly the stage stopped and we became dimly aware of voices.
The driver was evidently in the midst of an exciting colloquy with someone
in the road—a colloquy of which such fragments as "bridge gone,"
"twenty feet of water," "can't pass," were occasionally distinguishable
above the storm. Then came a lull, and a mysterious voice from the road
shouted the parting adjuration:
</p>
<p>
"Try Miggles's."
</p>
<p>
We caught a glimpse of our leaders as the vehicle slowly turned, of a
horseman vanishing through the rain, and we were evidently on our way to
Miggles's.
</p>
<p>
Who and where was Miggles? The Judge, our authority, did not remember the
name, and he knew the country thoroughly. The Washoe traveler thought
Miggles must keep a hotel. We only knew that we were stopped by high water
in front and rear, and that Miggles was our rock of refuge. A ten minutes
splashing through a tangled by-road, scarcely wide enough for the stage,
and we drew up before a barred and boarded gate in a wide stone wall or
fence about eight feet high. Evidently Miggles's, and evidently Miggles
did not keep a hotel.
</p>
<p>
The driver got down and tried the gate. It was securely locked. "Miggles!
O Miggles!"
</p>
<p>
No answer.
</p>
<p>
"Migg-ells! You Miggles!" continued the driver, with rising wrath.
</p>
<p>
"Migglesy!" joined the expressman, persuasively. "O Miggy! Mig!"
</p>
<p>
But no reply came from the apparently insensate Miggles. The Judge, who
had finally got the window down, put his head out and propounded a series
of questions, which if answered categorically would have undoubtedly
elucidated the whole mystery, but which the driver evaded by replying that
"if we didn't want to sit in the coach all night, we had better rise up
and sing out for Miggles."
</p>
<p>
So we rose up and called on Miggles in chorus; then separately. And when
we had finished, a Hibernian fellow-passenger from the roof called for
"Maygells!" whereat we all laughed. While we were laughing, the driver
cried "Shoo!"
</p>
<p>
We listened. To our infinite amazement the chorus of "Miggles" was
repeated from the other side of the wall, even to the final and
supplemental "Maygells."
</p>
<p>
"Extraordinary echo," said the Judge.
</p>
<p>
"Extraordinary damned skunk!" roared the driver, contemptuously. "Come out
of that, Miggles, and show yourself! Be a man, Miggles! Don't hide in the
dark; I wouldn't if I were you, Miggles," continued Yuba Bill, now dancing
about in an excess of fury.
</p>
<p>
"Miggles!" continued the voice. "O Miggles!"
</p>
<p>
"My good man! Mr. Myghail!" said the Judge, softening the asperities of
the name as much as possible. "Consider the inhospitality of refusing
shelter from the inclemency of the weather to helpless females. Really, my
dear sir—" But a succession of "Miggles," ending in a burst of
laughter, drowned his voice.
</p>
<p>
Yuba Bill hesitated no longer. Taking a heavy stone from the road, he
battered down the gate, and with the expressman entered the enclosure. We
followed. Nobody was to be seen. In the gathering darkness all that we
could distinguish was that we were in a garden—from the rosebushes
that scattered over us a minute spray from their dripping leaves—and
before a long, rambling wooden building.
</p>
<p>
"Do you know this Miggles?" asked the Judge of Yuba Bill.
</p>
<p>
"No, nor, don't want to," said Bill, shortly, who felt the Pioneer Stage
Company insulted in his person by the contumacious Miggles.
</p>
<p>
"But, my dear sir," expostulated the Judge as he thought of the barred
gate.
</p>
<p>
"Lookee here," said Yuba Bill, with fine irony, "hadn't you better go back
and sit in the coach till yer introduced? I'm going in," and he pushed
open the door of the building.
</p>
<p>
A long room lighted only by the embers of a fire that was dying on the
large hearth at its farther extremity; the walls curiously papered, and
the flickering firelight bringing out its grotesque pattern; somebody
sitting in a large armchair by the fireplace. All this we saw as we
crowded together into the room, after the driver and expressman.
</p>
<p>
"Hello, be you Miggles?" said Yuba Bill to the solitary occupant.
</p>
<p>
The figure neither spoke nor stirred. Yuba Bill walked wrathfully toward
it, and turned the eye of his coach lantern upon its face. It was a man's
face, prematurely old and wrinkled, with very large eyes, in which there
was that expression of perfectly gratuitous solemnity which I had
sometimes seen in an owl's. The large eyes wandered from Bill's face to
the lantern, and finally fixed their gaze on that luminous object, without
further recognition.
</p>
<p>
Bill restrained himself with an effort.
</p>
<p>
"Miggles! Be you deaf? You ain't dumb anyhow, you know"; and Yuba Bill
shook the insensate figure by the shoulder.
</p>
<p>
To our great dismay, as Bill removed his hand, the venerable stranger
apparently collapsed—sinking into half his size and an
undistinguishable heap of clothing.
</p>
<p>
"Well, dern my skin," said Bill, looking appealingly at us, and hopelessly
retiring from the contest.
</p>
<p>
The Judge now stepped forward, and we lifted the mysterious invertebrate
back into his original position. Bill was dismissed with the lantern to
reconnoiter outside, for it was evident that from the helplessness of this
solitary man there must be attendants near at hand, and we all drew around
the fire. The Judge, who had regained his authority, and had never lost
his conversational amiability—standing before us with his back to
the hearth—charged us, as an imaginary jury, as follows:
</p>
<p>
"It is evident that either our distinguished friend here has reached that
condition described by Shakespeare as 'the sere and yellow leaf,' or has
suffered some premature abatement of his mental and physical faculties.
Whether he is really the Miggles—"
</p>
<p>
Here he was interrupted by "Miggles! O Miggles! Migglesy! Mig!" and, in
fact, the whole chorus of Miggles in very much the same key as it had once
before been delivered unto us.
</p>
<p>
We gazed at each other for a moment in some alarm. The Judge, in
particular, vacated his position quickly, as the voice seemed to come
directly over his shoulder. The cause, however, was soon discovered in a
large magpie who was perched upon a shelf over the fireplace, and who
immediately relapsed into a sepulchral silence which contrasted singularly
with his previous volubility. It was, undoubtedly, his voice which we had
heard in the road, and our friend in the chair was not responsible for the
discourtesy. Yuba Bill, who re-entered the room after an unsuccessful
search, was loath to accept the explanation, and still eyed the helpless
sitter with suspicion. He had found a shed in which he had put up his
horses, but he came back dripping and skeptical. "Thar ain't nobody but
him within ten mile of the shanty, and that 'ar damned old skeesicks knows
it."
</p>
<p>
But the faith of the majority proved to be securely based. Bill had
scarcely ceased growling before we heard a quick step upon the porch, the
trailing of a wet skirt, the door was flung open, and with flash of white
teeth, a sparkle of dark eyes, and an utter absence of ceremony or
diffidence, a young woman entered, shut the door, and, panting, leaned
back against it.
</p>
<p>
"Oh, if you please, I'm Miggles!"
</p>
<p>
And this was Miggles! this bright-eyed, full-throated young woman, whose
wet gown of coarse blue stuff could not hide the beauty of the feminine
curves to which it clung; from the chestnut crown of whose head, topped by
a man's oilskin sou'wester, to the little feet and ankles, hidden
somewhere in the recesses of her boy's brogans, all was grace—this
was Miggles, laughing at us, too, in the most airy, frank, offhand manner
imaginable.
</p>
<p>
"You see, boys," said she, quite out of breath, and holding one little
hand against her side, quite unheeding the speechless discomfiture of our
party, or the complete demoralization of Yuba Bill, whose features had
relaxed into an expression of gratuitous and imbecile cheerfulness—"you
see, boys, I was mor'n two miles away when you passed down the road. I
thought you might pull up here, and so I ran the whole way, knowing nobody
was home but Jim,—and—and—I'm out of breath—and—that
lets me out."
</p>
<p>
And here Miggles caught her dripping oilskin hat from her head, with a
mischievous swirl that scattered a shower of raindrops over us; attempted
to put back her hair; dropped two hairpins in the attempt; laughed and sat
down beside Yuba Bill, with her hands crossed lightly on her lap.
</p>
<p>
The Judge recovered himself first, and essayed an extravagant compliment.
</p>
<p>
"I'll trouble you for that thar harpin," said Miggles, gravely. Half a
dozen hands were eagerly stretched forward; the missing hairpin was
restored to its fair owner; and Miggles, crossing the room, looked keenly
in the face of the invalid. The solemn eyes looked back at hers with an
expression we had never seen before. Life and intelligence seemed to
struggle back into the rugged face. Miggles laughed again—it was a
singularly eloquent laugh—and turned her black eyes and white teeth
once more toward us.
</p>
<p>
"This afflicted person is—" hesitated the Judge.
</p>
<p>
"Jim," said Miggles.
</p>
<p>
"Your father?"
</p>
<p>
"No."
</p>
<p>
"Brother?"
</p>
<p>
"No."
</p>
<p>
"Husband?"
</p>
<p>
Miggles darted a quick, half-defiant glance at the two lady passengers who
I had noticed did not participate in the general masculine admiration of
Miggles, and said gravely, "No; it's Jim."
</p>
<p>
There was an awkward pause. The lady passengers moved closer to each
other; the Washoe husband looked abstractedly at the fire; and the tall
man apparently turned his eyes inward for self-support at this emergency.
But Miggles's laugh, which was very infectious, broke the silence. "Come,"
she said briskly, "you must be hungry. Who'll bear a hand to help me get
tea?"
</p>
<p>
She had no lack of volunteers. In a few moments Yuba Bill was engaged like
Caliban in bearing logs for this Miranda; the expressman was grinding
coffee on the veranda; to myself the arduous duty of slicing bacon was
assigned; and the Judge lent each man his good-humored and voluble
counsel. And when Miggles, assisted by the Judge and our Hibernian "deck
passenger," set the table with all the available crockery, we had become
quite joyous, in spite of the rain that beat against windows, the wind
that whirled down the chimney, the two ladies who whispered together in
the corner, or the magpie who uttered a satirical and croaking commentary
on their conversation from his perch above. In the now bright, blazing
fire we could see that the walls were papered with illustrated journals,
arranged with feminine taste and discrimination. The furniture was
extemporized, and adapted from candle boxes and packing-cases, and covered
with gay calico, or the skin of some animal. The armchair of the helpless
Jim was an ingenious variation of a flour barrel. There was neatness, and
even a taste for the picturesque, to be seen in the few details of the
long low room.
</p>
<p>
The meal was a culinary success. But more, it was a social triumph—chiefly,
I think, owing to the rare tact of Miggles in guiding the conversation,
asking all the questions herself, yet bearing throughout a frankness that
rejected the idea of any concealment on her own part, so that we talked of
ourselves, of our prospects, of the journey, of the weather, of each other—of
everything but our host and hostess. It must be confessed that Miggles's
conversation was never elegant, rarely grammatical, and that at times she
employed expletives the use of which had generally been yielded to our
sex. But they were delivered with such a lighting-up of teeth and eyes,
and were usually followed by a laugh—a laugh peculiar to Miggles—so
frank and honest that it seemed to clear the moral atmosphere.
</p>
<p>
Once during the meal we heard a noise like the rubbing of a heavy body
against the outer walls of the house. This was shortly followed by a
scratching and sniffling at the door. "That's Joaquin," said Miggles, in
reply to our questioning glances; "would you like to see him?" Before we
could answer she had opened the door, and disclosed a half-grown grizzly,
who instantly raised himself on his haunches, with his forepaws hanging
down in the popular attitude of mendicancy, and looked admiringly at
Miggles, with a very singular resemblance in his manner to Yuba Bill.
"That's my watch dog," said Miggles, in explanation. "Oh, he don't bite,"
she added, as the two lady passengers fluttered into a corner. "Does he,
old Toppy?" (the latter remark being addressed directly to the sagacious
Joaquin). "I tell you what, boys," continued Miggles after she had fed and
closed the door on URSA MINOR, "you were in big luck that Joaquin wasn't
hanging round when you dropped in tonight." "Where was he?" asked the
Judge. "With me," said Miggles. "Lord love you; he trots round with me
nights like as if he was a man."
</p>
<p>
We were silent for a few moments, and listened to the wind. Perhaps we all
had the same picture before us—of Miggles walking through the rainy
woods, with her savage guardian at her side. The Judge, I remember, said
something about Una and her lion; but Miggles received it as she did other
compliments, with quiet gravity. Whether she was altogether unconscious of
the admiration she excited—she could hardly have been oblivious of
Yuba Bill's adoration—I know not; but her very frankness suggested a
perfect sexual equality that was cruelly humiliating to the younger
members of our party.
</p>
<p>
The incident of the bear did not add anything in Miggles's favor to the
opinions of those of her own sex who were present. In fact, the repast
over, a chillness radiated from the two lady passengers that no pine
boughs brought in by Yuba Bill and cast as a sacrifice upon the hearth
could wholly overcome. Miggles felt it; and, suddenly declaring that it
was time to "turn in," offered to show the ladies to their bed in an
adjoining room. "You boys will have to camp out here by the fire as well
as you can," she added, "for thar ain't but the one room."
</p>
<p>
Our sex—by which, my dear sir, I allude of course to the stronger
portion of humanity—has been generally relieved from the imputation
of curiosity, or a fondness for gossip. Yet I am constrained to say that
hardly had the door closed on Miggles than we crowded together,
whispering, snickering, smiling, and exchanging suspicions, surmises, and
a thousand speculations in regard to our pretty hostess and her singular
companion. I fear that we even hustled that imbecile paralytic, who sat
like a voiceless Memnon in our midst, gazing with the serene indifference
of the Past in his passionate eyes upon our wordy counsels. In the midst
of an exciting discussion the door opened again, and Miggles re-entered.
</p>
<p>
But not, apparently, the same Miggles who a few hours before had flashed
upon us. Her eyes were downcast, and as she hesitated for a moment on the
threshold, with a blanket on her arm, she seemed to have left behind her
the frank fearlessness which had charmed us a moment before. Coming into
the room, she drew a low stool beside the paralytic's chair, sat down,
drew the blanket over her shoulders, and saying, "If it's all the same to
you, boys, as we're rather crowded, I'll stop here tonight," took the
invalid's withered hand in her own, and turned her eyes upon the dying
fire. An instinctive feeling that this was only premonitory to more
confidential relations, and perhaps some shame at our previous curiosity,
kept us silent. The rain still beat upon the roof, wandering gusts of wind
stirred the embers into momentary brightness, until, in a lull of the
elements, Miggles suddenly lifted up her head, and, throwing her hair over
her shoulder, turned her face upon the group and asked:
</p>
<p>
"Is there any of you that knows me?"
</p>
<p>
There was no reply.
</p>
<p>
"Think again! I lived at Marysville in '53. Everybody knew me there, and
everybody had the right to know me. I kept the Polka saloon until I came
to live with Jim. That's six years ago. Perhaps I've changed some."
</p>
<p>
The absence of recognition may have disconcerted her. She turned her head
to the fire again, and it was some seconds before she again spoke, and
then more rapidly:
</p>
<p>
"Well, you see I thought some of you must have known me. There's no great
harm done, anyway. What I was going to say was this: Jim here"—she
took his hand in both of hers as she spoke—"used to know me, if you
didn't, and spent a heap of money upon me. I reckon he spent all he had.
And one day—it's six years ago this winter—Jim came into my
back room, sat down on my sofy, like as you see him in that chair, and
never moved again without help. He was struck all of a heap, and never
seemed to know what ailed him. The doctors came and said as how it was
caused all along of his way of life—for Jim was mighty free and
wild-like—and that he would never get better, and couldn't last long
anyway. They advised me to send him to Frisco to the hospital, for he was
no good to anyone and would be a baby all his life. Perhaps it was
something in Jim's eye, perhaps it was that I never had a baby, but I said
'No.' I was rich then, for I was popular with everybody—gentlemen
like yourself, sir, came to see me—and I sold out my business and
bought this yer place, because it was sort of out of the way of travel,
you see, and I brought my baby here."
</p>
<p>
With a woman's intuitive tact and poetry, she had, as she spoke, slowly
shifted her position so as to bring the mute figure of the ruined man
between her and her audience, hiding in the shadow behind it, as if she
offered it as a tacit apology for her actions. Silent and expressionless,
it yet spoke for her; helpless, crushed, and smitten with the Divine
thunderbolt, it still stretched an invisible arm around her.
</p>
<p>
Hidden in the darkness, but still holding his hand, she went on:
</p>
<p>
"It was a long time before I could get the hang of things about yer, for I
was used to company and excitement. I couldn't get any woman to help me,
and a man I dursen't trust; but what with the Indians hereabout, who'd do
odd jobs for me, and having everything sent from the North Fork, Jim and I
managed to worry through. The Doctor would run up from Sacramento once in
a while. He'd ask to see 'Miggles's baby,' as he called Jim, and when he'd
go away, he'd say, 'Miggles; you're a trump—God bless you'; and it
didn't seem so lonely after that. But the last time he was here he said,
as he opened the door to go, 'Do you know, Miggles, your baby will grow up
to be a man yet and an honor to his mother; but not here, Miggles, not
here!' And I thought he went away sad—and—and—" and here
Miggles's voice and head were somehow both lost completely in the shadow.
</p>
<p>
"The folks about here are very kind," said Miggles, after a pause, coming
a little into the light again. "The men from the fork used to hang around
here, until they found they wasn't wanted, and the women are kind—and
don't call. I was pretty lonely until I picked up Joaquin in the woods
yonder one day, when he wasn't so high, and taught him to beg for his
dinner; and then thar's Polly—that's the magpie—she knows no
end of tricks, and makes it quite sociable of evenings with her talk, and
so I don't feel like as I was the only living being about the ranch. And
Jim here," said Miggles, with her old laugh again, and coming out quite
into the firelight, "Jim—why, boys, you would admire to see how much
he knows for a man like him. Sometimes I bring him flowers, and he looks
at 'em just as natural as if he knew 'em; and times, when we're sitting
alone, I read him those things on the wall. Why, Lord!" said Miggles, with
her frank laugh, "I've read him that whole side of the house this winter.
There never was such a man for reading as Jim."
</p>
<p>
"Why," asked the Judge, "do you not marry this man to whom you have
devoted your youthful life?"
</p>
<p>
"Well, you see," said Miggles, "it would be playing it rather low down on
Jim, to take advantage of his being so helpless. And then, too, if we were
man and wife, now, we'd both know that I was bound to do what I do now of
my own accord."
</p>
<p>
"But you are young yet and attractive—"
</p>
<p>
"It's getting late," said Miggles, gravely, "and you'd better all turn in.
Good night, boys"; and, throwing the blanket over her head, Miggles laid
herself down beside Jim's chair, her head pillowed on the low stool that
held his feet, and spoke no more. The fire slowly faded from the hearth;
we each sought our blankets in silence; and presently there was no sound
in the long room but the pattering of the rain upon the roof and the heavy
breathing of the sleepers.
</p>
<p>
It was nearly morning when I awoke from a troubled dream. The storm had
passed, the stars were shining, and through the shutterless window the
full moon, lifting itself over the solemn pines without, looked into the
room. It touched the lonely figure in the chair with an infinite
compassion, and seemed to baptize with a shining flood the lowly head of
the woman whose hair, as in the sweet old story, bathed the feet of him
she loved. It even lent a kindly poetry to the rugged outline of Yuba
Bill, half-reclining on his elbow between them and his passengers, with
savagely patient eyes keeping watch and ward. And then I fell asleep and
only woke at broad day, with Yuba Bill standing over me, and "All aboard"
ringing in my ears.
</p>
<p>
Coffee was waiting for us on the table, but Miggles was gone. We wandered
about the house and lingered long after the horses were harnessed, but she
did not return. It was evident that she wished to avoid a formal
leave-taking, and had so left us to depart as we had come. After we had
helped the ladies into the coach, we returned to the house and solemnly
shook hands with the paralytic Jim, as solemnly settling him back into
position after each handshake. Then we looked for the last time around the
long low room, at the stool where Miggles had sat, and slowly took our
seats in the waiting coach. The whip cracked, and we were off!
</p>
<p>
But as we reached the highroad, Bill's dexterous hand laid the six horses
back on their haunches, and the stage stopped with a jerk. For there, on a
little eminence beside the road, stood Miggles, her hair flying, her eyes
sparkling, her white handkerchief waving, and her white teeth flashing a
last "good-by." We waved our hats in return. And then Yuba Bill, as if
fearful of further fascination, madly lashed his horses forward, and we
sank back in our seats. We exchanged not a word until we reached the North
Fork, and the stage drew up at the Independence House. Then, the Judge
leading, we walked into the barroom and took our places gravely at the
bar.
</p>
<p>
"Are your glasses charged, gentlemen?" said the Judge, solemnly taking off
his white hat.
</p>
<p>
They were.
</p>
<p>
"Well, then, here's to MIGGLES. GOD BLESS HER!"
</p>
<p>
Perhaps He had. Who knows?
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
TENNESSEE'S PARTNER
</h2>
<p>
I do not think that we ever knew his real name. Our ignorance of it
certainly never gave us any social inconvenience, for at Sandy Bar in 1854
most men were christened anew. Sometimes these appellatives were derived
from some distinctiveness of dress, as in the case of "Dungaree Jack"; or
from some peculiarity of habit, as shown in "Saleratus Bill," so called
from an undue proportion of that chemical in his daily bread; or for some
unlucky slip, as exhibited in "The Iron Pirate," a mild, inoffensive man,
who earned that baleful title by his unfortunate mispronunciation of the
term "iron pyrites." Perhaps this may have been the beginning of a rude
heraldry; but I am constrained to think that it was because a man's real
name in that day rested solely upon his own unsupported statement. "Call
yourself Clifford, do you?" said Boston, addressing a timid newcomer with
infinite scorn; "hell is full of such Cliffords!" He then introduced the
unfortunate man, whose name happened to be really Clifford, as "Jay-bird
Charley"—an unhallowed inspiration of the moment that clung to him
ever after.
</p>
<p>
But to return to Tennessee's Partner, whom we never knew by any other than
this relative title; that he had ever existed as a separate and distinct
individuality we only learned later. It seems that in 1853 he left Poker
Flat to go to San Francisco, ostensibly to procure a wife. He never got
any farther than Stockton. At that place he was attracted by a young
person who waited upon the table at the hotel where he took his meals. One
morning he said something to her which caused her to smile not unkindly,
to somewhat coquettishly break a plate of toast over his upturned,
serious, simple face, and to retreat to the kitchen. He followed her, and
emerged a few moments later, covered with more toast and victory. That day
week they were married by a justice of the peace, and returned to Poker
Flat. I am aware that something more might be made of this episode, but I
prefer to tell it as it was current at Sandy Bar—in the gulches and
barrooms—where all sentiment was modified by a strong sense of
humor.
</p>
<p>
Of their married felicity but little is known, perhaps for the reason that
Tennessee, then living with his Partner, one day took occasion to say
something to the bride on his own account, at which, it is said, she
smiled not unkindly and chastely retreated—this time as far as
Marysville, where Tennessee followed her, and where they went to
housekeeping without the aid of a justice of the peace. Tennessee's
Partner took the loss of his wife simply and seriously, as was his
fashion. But to everybody's surprise, when Tennessee one day returned from
Marysville, without his Partner's wife—she having smiled and
retreated with somebody else—Tennessee's Partner was the first man
to shake his hand and greet him with affection. The boys who had gathered
in the canyon to see the shooting were naturally indignant. Their
indignation might have found vent in sarcasm but for a certain look in
Tennessee's Partner's eye that indicated a lack of humorous appreciation.
In fact, he was a grave man, with a steady application to practical detail
which was unpleasant in a difficulty.
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile a popular feeling against Tennessee had grown up on the Bar. He
was known to be a gambler; he was suspected to be a thief. In these
suspicions Tennessee's Partner was equally compromised; his continued
intimacy with Tennessee after the affair above quoted could only be
accounted for on the hypothesis of a copartnership of crime. At last
Tennessee's guilt became flagrant. One day he overtook a stranger on his
way to Red Dog. The stranger afterward related that Tennessee beguiled the
time with interesting anecdote and reminiscence, but illogically concluded
the interview in the following words: "And now, young man, I'll trouble
you for your knife, your pistols, and your money. You see your weppings
might get you into trouble at Red Dog, and your money's a temptation to
the evilly disposed. I think you said your address was San Francisco. I
shall endeavor to call." It may be stated here that Tennessee had a fine
flow of humor, which no business preoccupation could wholly subdue.
</p>
<p>
This exploit was his last. Red Dog and Sandy Bar made common cause against
the highwayman. Tennessee was hunted in very much the same fashion as his
prototype, the grizzly. As the toils closed around him, he made a
desperate dash through the Bar, emptying his revolver at the crowd before
the Arcade Saloon, and so on up Grizzly Canyon; but at its farther
extremity he was stopped by a small man on a gray horse. The men looked at
each other a moment in silence. Both were fearless, both self-possessed
and independent; and both types of a civilization that in the seventeenth
century would have been called heroic, but, in the nineteenth, simply
"reckless." "What have you got there?—I call," said Tennessee,
quietly. "Two bowers and an ace," said the stranger, as quietly, showing
two revolvers and a bowie knife. "That takes me," returned Tennessee; and
with this gamblers' epigram, he threw away his useless pistol, and rode
back with his captor.
</p>
<p>
It was a warm night. The cool breeze which usually sprang up with the
going down of the sun behind the chaparral-crested mountain was that
evening withheld from Sandy Bar. The little canyon was stifling with
heated resinous odors, and the decaying driftwood on the Bar sent forth
faint, sickening exhalations. The feverishness of day, and its fierce
passions, still filled the camp. Lights moved restlessly along the bank of
the river, striking no answering reflection from its tawny current.
Against the blackness of the pines the windows of the old loft above the
express office stood out staringly bright; and through their curtainless
panes the loungers below could see the forms of those who were even then
deciding the fate of Tennessee. And above all this, etched on the dark
firmament, rose the Sierra, remote and passionless, crowned with remoter
passionless stars.
</p>
<p>
The trial of Tennessee was conducted as fairly as was consistent with a
judge and jury who felt themselves to some extent obliged to justify, in
their verdict, the previous irregularities of arrest and indictment. The
law of Sandy Bar was implacable, but not vengeful. The excitement and
personal feeling of the chase were over; with Tennessee safe in their
hands they were ready to listen patiently to any defense, which they were
already satisfied was insufficient. There being no doubt in their own
minds, they were willing to give the prisoner the benefit of any that
might exist. Secure in the hypothesis that he ought to be hanged, on
general principles, they indulged him with more latitude of defense than
his reckless hardihood seemed to ask. The Judge appeared to be more
anxious than the prisoner, who, otherwise unconcerned, evidently took a
grim pleasure in the responsibility he had created. "I don't take any hand
in this yer game," had been his invariable but good-humored reply to all
questions. The Judge—who was also his captor—for a moment
vaguely regretted that he had not shot him "on sight" that morning, but
presently dismissed this human weakness as unworthy of the judicial mind.
Nevertheless, when there was a tap at the door, and it was said that
Tennessee's Partner was there on behalf of the prisoner, he was admitted
at once without question. Perhaps the younger members of the jury, to whom
the proceedings were becoming irksomely thoughtful, hailed him as a
relief.
</p>
<p>
For he was not, certainly, an imposing figure. Short and stout, with a
square face sunburned into a preternatural redness, clad in a loose duck
"jumper" and trousers streaked and splashed with red soil, his aspect
under any circumstances would have been quaint, and was now even
ridiculous. As he stooped to deposit at his feet a heavy carpetbag he was
carrying, it became obvious, from partially developed legends and
inscriptions, that the material with which his trousers had been patched
had been originally intended for a less ambitious covering. Yet he
advanced with great gravity, and after having shaken the hand of each
person in the room with labored cordiality, he wiped his serious,
perplexed face on a red bandanna handkerchief, a shade lighter than his
complexion, laid his powerful hand upon the table to steady himself, and
thus addressed the Judge:
</p>
<p>
"I was passin' by," he began, by way of apology, "and I thought I'd just
step in and see how things was gittin' on with Tennessee thar—my
pardner. It's a hot night. I disremember any sich weather before on the
Bar."
</p>
<p>
He paused a moment, but nobody volunteering any other meteorological
recollection, he again had recourse to his pocket handkerchief, and for
some moments mopped his face diligently.
</p>
<p>
"Have you anything to say in behalf of the prisoner?" said the Judge,
finally.
</p>
<p>
"Thet's it," said Tennessee's Partner, in a tone of relief. "I come yar as
Tennessee's pardner—knowing him nigh on four year, off and on, wet
and dry, in luck and out o' luck. His ways ain't allers my ways, but thar
ain't any p'ints in that young man, thar ain't any liveliness as he's been
up to, as I don't know. And you sez to me, sez you—confidential-like,
and between man and man—sez you, 'Do you know anything in his
behalf?' and I sez to you, sez I—confidential-like, as between man
and man—'What should a man know of his pardner?'"
</p>
<p>
"Is this all you have to say?" asked the Judge impatiently, feeling,
perhaps, that a dangerous sympathy of humor was beginning to humanize the
Court.
</p>
<p>
"Thet's so," continued Tennessee's Partner. "It ain't for me to say
anything agin' him. And now, what's the case? Here's Tennessee wants
money, wants it bad, and doesn't like to ask it of his old pardner. Well,
what does Tennessee do? He lays for a stranger, and he fetches that
stranger. And you lays for HIM, and you fetches HIM; and the honors is
easy. And I put it to you, bein' a far-minded man, and to you, gentlemen,
all, as far-minded men, ef this isn't so."
</p>
<p>
"Prisoner," said the Judge, interrupting, "have you any questions to ask
this man?"
</p>
<p>
"No! no!" continued Tennessee's Partner, hastily. "I play this yer hand
alone. To come down to the bedrock, it's just this: Tennessee, thar, has
played it pretty rough and expensive-like on a stranger, and on this yer
camp. And now, what's the fair thing? Some would say more; some would say
less. Here's seventeen hundred dollars in coarse gold and a watch—it's
about all my pile—and call it square!" And before a hand could be
raised to prevent him, he had emptied the contents of the carpetbag upon
the table.
</p>
<p>
For a moment his life was in jeopardy. One or two men sprang to their
feet, several hands groped for hidden weapons, and a suggestion to "throw
him from the window" was only overridden by a gesture from the Judge.
Tennessee laughed. And apparently oblivious of the excitement, Tennessee's
Partner improved the opportunity to mop his face again with his
handkerchief.
</p>
<p>
When order was restored, and the man was made to understand, by the use of
forcible figures and rhetoric, that Tennessee's offense could not be
condoned by money, his face took a more serious and sanguinary hue, and
those who were nearest to him noticed that his rough hand trembled
slightly on the table. He hesitated a moment as he slowly returned the
gold to the carpetbag, as if he had not yet entirely caught the elevated
sense of justice which swayed the tribunal, and was perplexed with the
belief that he had not offered enough. Then he turned to the Judge, and
saying, "This yer is a lone hand, played alone, and without my pardner,"
he bowed to the jury and was about to withdraw when the Judge called him
back. "If you have anything to say to Tennessee, you had better say it
now." For the first time that evening the eyes of the prisoner and his
strange advocate met. Tennessee smiled, showed his white teeth, and,
saying, "Euchred, old man!" held out his hand. Tennessee's Partner took it
in his own, and saying, "I just dropped in as I was passin' to see how
things was gettin' on," let the hand passively fall, and adding that it
was a warm night, again mopped his face with his handkerchief, and without
another word withdrew.
</p>
<p>
The two men never again met each other alive. For the unparalleled insult
of a bribe offered to Judge Lynch—who, whether bigoted, weak, or
narrow, was at least incorruptible—firmly fixed in the mind of that
mythical personage any wavering determination of Tennessee's fate; and at
the break of day he was marched, closely guarded, to meet it at the top of
Marley's Hill.
</p>
<p>
How he met it, how cool he was, how he refused to say anything, how
perfect were the arrangements of the committee, were all duly reported,
with the addition of a warning moral and example to all future evildoers,
in the RED DOG CLARION, by its editor, who was present, and to whose
vigorous English I cheerfully refer the reader. But the beauty of that
midsummer morning, the blessed amity of earth and air and sky, the
awakened life of the free woods and hills, the joyous renewal and promise
of Nature, and above all, the infinite Serenity that thrilled through
each, was not reported, as not being a part of the social lesson. And yet,
when the weak and foolish deed was done, and a life, with its
possibilities and responsibilities, had passed out of the misshapen thing
that dangled between earth and sky, the birds sang, the flowers bloomed,
the sun shone, as cheerily as before; and possibly the RED DOG CLARION was
right.
</p>
<p>
Tennessee's Partner was not in the group that surrounded the ominous tree.
But as they turned to disperse attention was drawn to the singular
appearance of a motionless donkey cart halted at the side of the road. As
they approached, they at once recognized the venerable "Jenny" and the
two-wheeled cart as the property of Tennessee's Partner—used by him
in carrying dirt from his claim; and a few paces distant the owner of the
equipage himself, sitting under a buckeye tree, wiping the perspiration
from his glowing face. In answer to an inquiry, he said he had come for
the body of the "diseased," "if it was all the same to the committee." He
didn't wish to "hurry anything"; he could "wait." He was not working that
day; and when the gentlemen were done with the "diseased," he would take
him. "Ef thar is any present," he added, in his simple, serious way, "as
would care to jine in the fun'l, they kin come." Perhaps it was from a
sense of humor, which I have already intimated was a feature of Sandy Bar—perhaps
it was from something even better than that; but two-thirds of the
loungers accepted the invitation at once.
</p>
<p>
It was noon when the body of Tennessee was delivered into the hands of his
Partner. As the cart drew up to the fatal tree, we noticed that it
contained a rough, oblong box—apparently made from a section of
sluicing and half-filled with bark and the tassels of pine. The cart was
further decorated with slips of willow, and made fragrant with buckeye
blossoms. When the body was deposited in the box, Tennessee's Partner drew
over it a piece of tarred canvas, and gravely mounting the narrow seat in
front, with his feet upon the shafts, urged the little donkey forward. The
equipage moved slowly on, at that decorous pace which was habitual with
"Jenny" even under less solemn circumstances. The men—half
curiously, half jestingly, but all good-humoredly—strolled along
beside the cart; some in advance, some a little in the rear of the homely
catafalque. But, whether from the narrowing of the road or some present
sense of decorum, as the cart passed on, the company fell to the rear in
couples, keeping step, and otherwise assuming the external show of a
formal procession. Jack Folinsbee, who had at the outset played a funeral
march in dumb show upon an imaginary trombone, desisted, from a lack of
sympathy and appreciation—not having, perhaps, your true humorist's
capacity to be content with the enjoyment of his own fun.
</p>
<p>
The way led through Grizzly Canyon—by this time clothed in funereal
drapery and shadows. The redwoods, burying their moccasined feet in the
red soil, stood in Indian file along the track, trailing an uncouth
benediction from their bending boughs upon the passing bier. A hare,
surprised into helpless inactivity, sat upright and pulsating in the ferns
by the roadside as the cortege went by. Squirrels hastened to gain a
secure outlook from higher boughs; and the bluejays, spreading their
wings, fluttered before them like outriders, until the outskirts of Sandy
Bar were reached, and the solitary cabin of Tennessee's Partner.
</p>
<p>
Viewed under more favorable circumstances, it would not have been a
cheerful place. The unpicturesque site, the rude and unlovely outlines,
the unsavory details, which distinguish the nest-building of the
California miner, were all here, with the dreariness of decay superadded.
A few paces from the cabin there was a rough enclosure, which in the brief
days of Tennessee's Partner's matrimonial felicity had been used as a
garden, but was now overgrown with fern. As we approached it we were
surprised to find that what we had taken for a recent attempt at
cultivation was the broken soil about an open grave.
</p>
<p>
The cart was halted before the enclosure; and rejecting the offers of
assistance with the same air of simple self-reliance he had displayed
throughout, Tennessee's Partner lifted the rough coffin on his back and
deposited it, unaided, within the shallow grave. He then nailed down the
board which served as a lid; and mounting the little mound of earth beside
it, took off his hat, and slowly mopped his face with his handkerchief.
This the crowd felt was a preliminary to speech; and they disposed
themselves variously on stumps and boulders, and sat expectant.
</p>
<p>
"When a man," began Tennessee's Partner, slowly, "has been running free
all day, what's the natural thing for him to do? Why, to come home. And if
he ain't in a condition to go home, what can his best friend do? Why,
bring him home! And here's Tennessee has been running free, and we brings
him home from his wandering." He paused, and picked up a fragment of
quartz, rubbed it thoughtfully on his sleeve, and went on: "It ain't the
first time that I've packed him on my back, as you see'd me now. It ain't
the first time that I brought him to this yer cabin when he couldn't help
himself; it ain't the first time that I and 'Jinny' have waited for him on
yon hill, and picked him up and so fetched him home, when he couldn't
speak, and didn't know me. And now that it's the last time, why"—he
paused and rubbed the quartz gently on his sleeve—"you see it's sort
of rough on his pardner. And now, gentlemen," he added, abruptly, picking
up his long-handled shovel, "the fun'l's over; and my thanks, and
Tennessee's thanks, to you for your trouble."
</p>
<p>
Resisting any proffers of assistance, he began to fill in the grave,
turning his back upon the crowd that after a few moments' hesitation
gradually withdrew. As they crossed the little ridge that hid Sandy Bar
from view, some, looking back, thought they could see Tennessee's Partner,
his work done, sitting upon the grave, his shovel between his knees, and
his face buried in his red bandanna handkerchief. But it was argued by
others that you couldn't tell his face from his handkerchief at that
distance; and this point remained undecided.
</p>
<p>
In the reaction that followed the feverish excitement of that day,
Tennessee's Partner was not forgotten. A secret investigation had cleared
him of any complicity in Tennessee's guilt, and left only a suspicion of
his general sanity. Sandy Bar made a point of calling on him, and
proffering various uncouth, but well-meant kindnesses. But from that day
his rude health and great strength seemed visibly to decline; and when the
rainy season fairly set in, and the tiny grass-blades were beginning to
peep from the rocky mound above Tennessee's grave, he took to his bed. One
night, when the pines beside the cabin were swaying in the storm, and
trailing their slender fingers over the roof, and the roar and rush of the
swollen river were heard below, Tennessee's Partner lifted his head from
the pillow, saying, "It is time to go for Tennessee; I must put 'Jinny' in
the cart"; and would have risen from his bed but for the restraint of his
attendant. Struggling, he still pursued his singular fancy: "There, now,
steady, 'Jinny'—steady, old girl. How dark it is! Look out for the
ruts—and look out for him, too, old gal. Sometimes, you know, when
he's blind-drunk, he drops down right in the trail. Keep on straight up to
the pine on the top of the hill. Thar—I told you so!—thar he
is—coming this way, too—all by himself, sober, and his face
a-shining. Tennessee! Pardner!"
</p>
<p>
And so they met.
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
THE IDYL OF RED GULCH
</h2>
<p>
Sandy was very drunk. He was lying under an azalea bush, in pretty much
the same attitude in which he had fallen some hours before. How long he
had been lying there he could not tell, and didn't care; how long he
should lie there was a matter equally indefinite and unconsidered. A
tranquil philosophy, born of his physical condition, suffused and
saturated his moral being.
</p>
<p>
The spectacle of a drunken man, and of this drunken man in particular, was
not, I grieve to say, of sufficient novelty in Red Gulch to attract
attention. Earlier in the day some local satirist had erected a temporary
tombstone at Sandy's head, bearing the inscription, "Effects of McCorkle's
whisky—kills at forty rods," with a hand pointing to McCorkle's
saloon. But this, I imagine, was, like most local satire, personal; and
was a reflection upon the unfairness of the process rather than a
commentary upon the impropriety of the result. With this facetious
exception, Sandy had been undisturbed. A wandering mule, released from his
pack, had cropped the scant herbage beside him, and sniffed curiously at
the prostrate man; a vagabond dog, with that deep sympathy which the
species have for drunken men, had licked his dusty boots, and curled
himself up at his feet, and lay there, blinking one eye in the sunlight,
with a simulation of dissipation that was ingenious and doglike in its
implied flattery of the unconscious man beside him.
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile the shadows of the pine trees had slowly swung around until they
crossed the road, and their trunks barred the open meadow with gigantic
parallels of black and yellow. Little puffs of red dust, lifted by the
plunging hoofs of passing teams, dispersed in a grimy shower upon the
recumbent man. The sun sank lower and lower; and still Sandy stirred not.
And then the repose of this philosopher was disturbed, as other
philosophers have been, by the intrusion of an unphilosophical sex.
</p>
<p>
"Miss Mary," as she was known to the little flock that she had just
dismissed from the log schoolhouse beyond the pines, was taking her
afternoon walk. Observing an unusually fine cluster of blossoms on the
azalea bush opposite, she crossed the road to pluck it—picking her
way through the red dust, not without certain fierce little shivers of
disgust and some feline circumlocution. And then she came suddenly upon
Sandy!
</p>
<p>
Of course she uttered the little staccato cry of her sex. But when she had
paid that tribute to her physical weakness she became overbold, and halted
for a moment—at least six feet from this prostrate monster—with
her white skirts gathered in her hand, ready for flight. But neither sound
nor motion came from the bush. With one little foot she then overturned
the satirical headboard, and muttered "Beasts!"—an epithet which
probably, at that moment, conveniently classified in her mind the entire
male population of Red Gulch. For Miss Mary, being possessed of certain
rigid notions of her own, had not, perhaps, properly appreciated the
demonstrative gallantry for which the Californian has been so justly
celebrated by his brother Californians, and had, as a newcomer, perhaps
fairly earned the reputation of being "stuck-up."
</p>
<p>
As she stood there she noticed, also, that the slant sunbeams were heating
Sandy's head to what she judged to be an unhealthy temperature, and that
his hat was lying uselessly at his side. To pick it up and to place it
over his face was a work requiring some courage, particularly as his eyes
were open. Yet she did it, and made good her retreat. But she was somewhat
concerned, on looking back, to see that the hat was removed, and that
Sandy was sitting up and saying something.
</p>
<p>
The truth was, that in the calm depths of Sandy's mind he was satisfied
that the rays of the sun were beneficial and healthful; that from
childhood he had objected to lying down in a hat; that no people but
condemned fools, past redemption, ever wore hats; and that his right to
dispense with them when he pleased was inalienable. This was the statement
of his inner consciousness. Unfortunately, its outward expression was
vague, being limited to a repetition of the following formula—"Su'shine
all ri'! Wasser maar, eh? Wass up, su'shine?"
</p>
<p>
Miss Mary stopped, and, taking fresh courage from her vantage of distance,
asked him if there was anything that he wanted.
</p>
<p>
"Wass up? Wasser maar?" continued Sandy, in a very high key.
</p>
<p>
"Get up, you horrid man!" said Miss Mary, now thoroughly incensed; "get
up, and go home."
</p>
<p>
Sandy staggered to his feet. He was six feet high, and Miss Mary trembled.
He started forward a few paces and then stopped.
</p>
<p>
"Wass I go home for?" he suddenly asked, with great gravity.
</p>
<p>
"Go and take a bath," replied Miss Mary, eying his grimy person with great
disfavor.
</p>
<p>
To her infinite dismay, Sandy suddenly pulled off his coat and vest, threw
them on the ground, kicked off his boots, and, plunging wildly forward,
darted headlong over the hill, in the direction of the river.
</p>
<p>
"Goodness heavens!—the man will be drowned!" said Miss Mary; and
then, with feminine inconsistency, she ran back to the schoolhouse and
locked herself in.
</p>
<p>
That night, while seated at supper with her hostess, the blacksmith's
wife, it came to Miss Mary to ask, demurely, if her husband ever got
drunk. "Abner," responded Mrs. Stidger, reflectively, "let's see: Abner
hasn't been tight since last 'lection." Miss Mary would have liked to ask
if he preferred lying in the sun on these occasions, and if a cold bath
would have hurt him; but this would have involved an explanation, which
she did not then care to give. So she contented herself with opening her
gray eyes widely at the red-cheeked Mrs. Stidger—a fine specimen of
Southwestern efflorescence—and then dismissed the subject
altogether. The next day she wrote to her dearest friend, in Boston: "I
think I find the intoxicated portion of this community the least
objectionable. I refer, my dear, to the men, of course. I do not know
anything that could make the women tolerable."
</p>
<p>
In less than a week Miss Mary had forgotten this episode, except that her
afternoon walks took thereafter, almost unconsciously, another direction.
She noticed, however, that every morning a fresh cluster of azalea
blossoms appeared among the flowers on her desk. This was not strange, as
her little flock were aware of her fondness for flowers, and invariably
kept her desk bright with anemones, syringas, and lupines; but, on
questioning them, they one and all professed ignorance of the azaleas. A
few days later, Master Johnny Stidger, whose desk was nearest to the
window, was suddenly taken with spasms of apparently gratuitous laughter
that threatened the discipline of the school. All that Miss Mary could get
from him was, that someone had been "looking in the winder." Irate and
indignant, she sallied from her hive to do battle with the intruder. As
she turned the corner of the schoolhouse she came plump upon the quondam
drunkard—now perfectly sober, and inexpressibly sheepish and
guilty-looking.
</p>
<p>
These facts Miss Mary was not slow to take a feminine advantage of, in her
present humor. But it was somewhat confusing to observe, also, that the
beast, despite some faint signs of past dissipation, was amiable-looking—in
fact, a kind of blond Samson whose corn-colored, silken beard apparently
had never yet known the touch of barber's razor or Delilah's shears. So
that the cutting speech which quivered on her ready tongue died upon her
lips, and she contented herself with receiving his stammering apology with
supercilious eyelids and the gathered skirts of uncontamination. When she
re-entered the schoolroom, her eyes fell upon the azaleas with a new sense
of revelation. And then she laughed, and the little people all laughed,
and they were all unconsciously very happy.
</p>
<p>
It was on a hot day—and not long after this—that two
short-legged boys came to grief on the threshold of the school with a pail
of water, which they had laboriously brought from the spring, and that
Miss Mary compassionately seized the pail and started for the spring
herself. At the foot of the hill a shadow crossed her path, and a
blue-shirted arm dexterously but gently relieved her of her burden. Miss
Mary was both embarrassed and angry. "If you carried more of that for
yourself," she said, spitefully, to the blue arm, without deigning to
raise her lashes to its owner, "you'd do better." In the submissive
silence that followed she regretted the speech, and thanked him so sweetly
at the door that he stumbled. Which caused the children to laugh again—a
laugh in which Miss Mary joined, until the color came faintly into her
pale cheek. The next day a barrel was mysteriously placed beside the door,
and as mysteriously filled with fresh spring water every morning.
</p>
<p>
Nor was this superior young person without other quiet attentions.
"Profane Bill," driver of the Slumgullion Stage, widely known in the
newspapers for his "gallantry" in invariably offering the box seat to the
fair sex, had excepted Miss Mary from this attention, on the ground that
he had a habit of "cussin' on upgrades," and gave her half the coach to
herself. Jack Hamlin, a gambler, having once silently ridden with her in
the same coach, afterward threw a decanter at the head of a confederate
for mentioning her name in a barroom. The overdressed mother of a pupil
whose paternity was doubtful had often lingered near this astute Vestal's
temple, never daring to enter its sacred precincts, but content to worship
the priestess from afar.
</p>
<p>
With such unconscious intervals the monotonous procession of blue skies,
glittering sunshine, brief twilights, and starlit nights passed over Red
Gulch. Miss Mary grew fond of walking in the sedate and proper woods.
Perhaps she believed, with Mrs. Stidger, that the balsamic odors of the
firs "did her chest good," for certainly her slight cough was less
frequent and her step was firmer; perhaps she had learned the unending
lesson which the patient pines are never weary of repeating to heedful or
listless ears. And so, one day, she planned a picnic on Buckeye Hill, and
took the children with her. Away from the dusty road, the straggling
shanties, the yellow ditches, the clamor of restless engines, the cheap
finery of shop windows, the deeper glitter of paint and colored glass, and
the thin veneering which barbarism takes upon itself in such localities—what
infinite relief was theirs! The last heap of ragged rock and clay passed,
the last unsightly chasm crossed—how the waiting woods opened their
long files to receive them! How the children—perhaps because they
had not yet grown quite away from the breast of the bounteous Mother—threw
themselves face downward on her brown bosom with uncouth caresses, filling
the air with their laughter; and how Miss Mary herself—felinely
fastidious and intrenched as she was in the purity of spotless skirts,
collar, and cuffs—forgot all, and ran like a crested quail at the
head of her brood until, romping, laughing, and panting, with a loosened
braid of brown hair, a hat hanging by a knotted ribbon from her throat,
she came suddenly and violently, in the heart of the forest, upon—the
luckless Sandy!
</p>
<p>
The explanations, apologies, and not overwise conversation that ensued
need not be indicated here. It would seem, however, that Miss Mary had
already established some acquaintance with this ex-drunkard. Enough that
he was soon accepted as one of the party; that the children, with that
quick intelligence which Providence gives the helpless, recognized a
friend, and played with his blond beard and long silken mustache, and took
other liberties—as the helpless are apt to do. And when he had built
a fire against a tree, and had shown them other mysteries of woodcraft,
their admiration knew no bounds. At the close of two such foolish, idle,
happy hours he found himself lying at the feet of the schoolmistress,
gazing dreamily in her face, as she sat upon the sloping hillside weaving
wreaths of laurel and syringa, in very much the same attitude as he had
lain when first they met. Nor was the similitude greatly forced. The
weakness of an easy, sensuous nature that had found a dreamy exaltation in
liquor, it is to be feared was now finding an equal intoxication in love.
</p>
<p>
I think that Sandy was dimly conscious of this himself. I know that he
longed to be doing something—slaying a grizzly, scalping a savage,
or sacrificing himself in some way for the sake of this sallow-faced,
gray-eyed schoolmistress. As I should like to present him in a heroic
attitude, I stay my hand with great difficulty at this moment, being only
withheld from introducing such an episode by a strong conviction that it
does not usually occur at such times. And I trust that my fairest reader,
who remembers that, in a real crisis, it is always some uninteresting
stranger or unromantic policeman, and not Adolphus, who rescues, will
forgive the omission.
</p>
<p>
So they sat there, undisturbed—the woodpeckers chattering overhead
and the voices of the children coming pleasantly from the hollow below.
What they said matters little. What they thought—which might have
been interesting—did not transpire. The woodpeckers only learned how
Miss Mary was an orphan; how she left her uncle's house, to come to
California, for the sake of health and independence; how Sandy was an
orphan, too; how he came to California for excitement; how he had lived a
wild life, and how he was trying to reform; and other details, which, from
a woodpecker's viewpoint, undoubtedly must have seemed stupid, and a waste
of time. But even in such trifles was the afternoon spent; and when the
children were again gathered, and Sandy, with a delicacy which the
schoolmistress well understood, took leave of them quietly at the
outskirts of the settlement, it had seemed the shortest day of her weary
life.
</p>
<p>
As the long, dry summer withered to its roots, the school term of Red
Gulch—to use a local euphuism—"dried up" also. In another day
Miss Mary would be free; and for a season, at least, Red Gulch would know
her no more. She was seated alone in the schoolhouse, her cheek resting on
her hand, her eyes half-closed in one of those daydreams in which Miss
Mary—I fear to the danger of school discipline—was lately in
the habit of indulging. Her lap was full of mosses, ferns, and other
woodland memories. She was so preoccupied with these and her own thoughts
that a gentle tapping at the door passed unheard, or translated itself
into the remembrance of far-off woodpeckers. When at last it asserted
itself more distinctly, she started up with a flushed cheek and opened the
door. On the threshold stood a woman the self-assertion and audacity of
whose dress were in singular contrast to her timid, irresolute bearing.
</p>
<p>
Miss Mary recognized at a glance the dubious mother of her anonymous
pupil. Perhaps she was disappointed, perhaps she was only fastidious; but
as she coldly invited her to enter, she half-unconsciously settled her
white cuffs and collar, and gathered closer her own chaste skirts. It was,
perhaps, for this reason that the embarrassed stranger, after a moment's
hesitation, left her gorgeous parasol open and sticking in the dust beside
the door, and then sat down at the farther end of a long bench. Her voice
was husky as she began:
</p>
<p>
"I heerd tell that you were goin' down to the Bay tomorrow, and I couldn't
let you go until I came to thank you for your kindness to my Tommy."
</p>
<p>
Tommy, Miss Mary said, was a good boy, and deserved more than the poor
attention she could give him.
</p>
<p>
"Thank you, miss; thank ye!" cried the stranger, brightening even through
the color which Red Gulch knew facetiously as her "war paint," and
striving, in her embarrassment, to drag the long bench nearer the
schoolmistress. "I thank you, miss, for that! and if I am his mother,
there ain't a sweeter, dearer, better boy lives than him. And if I ain't
much as says it, thar ain't a sweeter, dearer, angeler teacher lives than
he's got."
</p>
<p>
Miss Mary, sitting primly behind her desk, with a ruler over her shoulder,
opened her gray eyes widely at this, but said nothing.
</p>
<p>
"It ain't for you to be complimented by the like of me, I know," she went
on, hurriedly. "It ain't for me to be comin' here, in broad day, to do it,
either; but I come to ask a favor—not for me, miss—not for me,
but for the darling boy."
</p>
<p>
Encouraged by a look in the young schoolmistress's eye, and putting her
lilac-gloved hands together, the fingers downward, between her knees, she
went on, in a low voice:
</p>
<p>
"You see, miss, there's no one the boy has any claim on but me, and I
ain't the proper person to bring him up. I thought some, last year, of
sending him away to Frisco to school, but when they talked of bringing a
schoolma'am here, I waited till I saw you, and then I knew it was all
right, and I could keep my boy a little longer. And O, miss, he loves you
so much; and if you could hear him talk about you, in his pretty way, and
if he could ask you what I ask you now, you couldn't refuse him.
</p>
<p>
"It is natural," she went on, rapidly, in a voice that trembled strangely
between pride and humility—"it's natural that he should take to you,
miss, for his father, when I first knew him, was a gentleman—and the
boy must forget me, sooner or later—and so I ain't goin' to cry
about that. For I come to ask you to take my Tommy—God bless him for
the bestest, sweetest boy that lives—to—to—take him with
you."
</p>
<p>
She had risen and caught the young girl's hand in her own, and had fallen
on her knees beside her.
</p>
<p>
"I've money plenty, and it's all yours and his. Put him in some good
school, where you can go and see him, and help him to—to—to
forget his mother. Do with him what you like. The worst you can do will be
kindness to what he will learn with me. Only take him out of this wicked
life, this cruel place, this home of shame and sorrow. You will; I know
you will—won't you? You will—you must not, you cannot say no!
You will make him as pure, as gentle as yourself; and when he has grown
up, you will tell him his father's name—the name that hasn't passed
my lips for years—the name of Alexander Morton, whom they call here
Sandy! Miss Mary!—do not take your hand away! Miss Mary, speak to
me! You will take my boy? Do not put your face from me. I know it ought
not to look on such as me. Miss Mary!—my God, be merciful!—she
is leaving me!"
</p>
<p>
Miss Mary had risen and, in the gathering twilight, had felt her way to
the open window. She stood there, leaning against the casement, her eyes
fixed on the last rosy tints that were fading from the western sky. There
was still some of its light on her pure young forehead, on her white
collar, on her clasped white hands, but all fading slowly away. The
suppliant had dragged herself, still on her knees, beside her.
</p>
<p>
"I know it takes time to consider. I will wait here all night; but I
cannot go until you speak. Do not deny me now. You will!—I see it in
your sweet face—such a face as I have seen in my dreams. I see it in
your eyes, Miss Mary!—you will take my boy!"
</p>
<p>
The last red beam crept higher, suffused Miss Mary's eyes with something
of its glory, flickered, and faded, and went out. The sun had set on Red
Gulch. In the twilight and silence Miss Mary's voice sounded pleasantly.
</p>
<p>
"I will take the boy. Send him to me tonight."
</p>
<p>
The happy mother raised the hem of Miss Mary's skirts to her lips. She
would have buried her hot face in its virgin folds, but she dared not. She
rose to her feet.
</p>
<p>
"Does—this man—know of your intention?" asked Miss Mary,
suddenly.
</p>
<p>
"No, nor cares. He has never even seen the child to know it."
</p>
<p>
"Go to him at once—tonight—now! Tell him what you have done.
Tell him I have taken his child, and tell him—he must never see—see—the
child again. Wherever it may be, he must not come; wherever I may take it,
he must not follow! There, go now, please—I'm weary, and—have
much yet to do!"
</p>
<p>
They walked together to the door. On the threshold the woman turned.
</p>
<p>
"Good night."
</p>
<p>
She would have fallen at Miss Mary's feet. But at the same moment the
young girl reached out her arms, caught the sinful woman to her own pure
breast for one brief moment, and then closed and locked the door.
</p>
<p>
It was with a sudden sense of great responsibility that Profane Bill took
the reins of the Slumgullion Stage the next morning, for the
schoolmistress was one of his passengers. As he entered the highroad, in
obedience to a pleasant voice from the "inside," he suddenly reined up his
horses and respectfully waited as Tommy hopped out at the command of Miss
Mary. "Not that bush, Tommy—the next."
</p>
<p>
Tommy whipped out his new pocketknife, and, cutting a branch from a tall
azalea bush, returned with it to Miss Mary.
</p>
<p>
"All right now?"
</p>
<p>
"All right."
</p>
<p>
And the stage door closed on the Idyl of Red Gulch.
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
BROWN OF CALAVERAS
</h2>
<p>
A subdued tone of conversation, and the absence of cigar smoke and boot
heels at the windows of the Wingdam stagecoach, made it evident that one
of the inside passengers was a woman. A disposition on the part of
loungers at the stations to congregate before the window, and some concern
in regard to the appearance of coats, hats, and collars, further indicated
that she was lovely. All of which Mr. Jack Hamlin, on the box seat, noted
with the smile of cynical philosophy. Not that he depreciated the sex, but
that he recognized therein a deceitful element, the pursuit of which
sometimes drew mankind away from the equally uncertain blandishments of
poker—of which it may be remarked that Mr. Hamlin was a professional
exponent.
</p>
<p>
So that when he placed his narrow boot on the wheel and leaped down, he
did not even glance at the window from which a green veil was fluttering,
but lounged up and down with that listless and grave indifference of his
class, which was, perhaps, the next thing to good breeding. With his
closely buttoned figure and self-contained air he was a marked contrast to
the other passengers, with their feverish restlessness and boisterous
emotion; and even Bill Masters, a graduate of Harvard, with his slovenly
dress, his overflowing vitality, his intense appreciation of lawlessness
and barbarism, and his mouth filled with crackers and cheese, I fear cut
but an unromantic figure beside this lonely calculator of chances, with
his pale Greek face and Homeric gravity.
</p>
<p>
The driver called "All aboard!" and Mr. Hamlin returned to the coach. His
foot was upon the wheel, and his face raised to the level of the open
window, when, at the same moment, what appeared to him to be the finest
eyes in the world suddenly met his. He quietly dropped down again,
addressed a few words to one of the inside passengers, effected an
exchange of seats, and as quietly took his place inside. Mr. Hamlin never
allowed his philosophy to interfere with decisive and prompt action.
</p>
<p>
I fear that this irruption of Jack cast some restraint upon the other
passengers—particularly those who were making themselves most
agreeable to the lady. One of them leaned forward, and apparently conveyed
to her information regarding Mr. Hamlin's profession in a single epithet.
Whether Mr. Hamlin heard it, or whether he recognized in the informant a
distinguished jurist from whom, but a few evenings before, he had won
several thousand dollars, I cannot say. His colorless face betrayed no
sign; his black eyes, quietly observant, glanced indifferently past the
legal gentleman, and rested on the much more pleasing features of his
neighbor. An Indian stoicism—said to be an inheritance from his
maternal ancestor—stood him in good service, until the rolling
wheels rattled upon the river gravel at Scott's Ferry, and the stage drew
up at the International Hotel for dinner. The legal gentleman and a member
of Congress leaped out, and stood ready to assist the descending goddess,
while Colonel Starbottle, of Siskiyou, took charge of her parasol and
shawl. In this multiplicity of attention there was a momentary confusion
and delay. Jack Hamlin quietly opened the OPPOSITE door of the coach, took
the lady's hand—with that decision and positiveness which a
hesitating and undecided sex know how to admire—and in an instant
had dexterously and gracefully swung her to the ground, and again lifted
her to the platform. An audible chuckle on the box, I fear, came from that
other cynic, "Yuba Bill," the driver. "Look keerfully arter that baggage,
Kernel," said the expressman, with affected concern, as he looked after
Colonel Starbottle, gloomily bringing up the rear of the triumphant
procession to the waiting-room.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Hamlin did not stay for dinner. His horse was already saddled, and
awaiting him. He dashed over the ford, up the gravelly hill, and out into
the dusty perspective of the Wingdam road, like one leaving pleasant fancy
behind him. The inmates of dusty cabins by the roadside shaded their eyes
with their hands and looked after him, recognizing the man by his horse,
and speculating what "was up with Comanche Jack." Yet much of this
interest centered in the horse, in a community where the time made by
"French Pete's" mare in his run from the Sheriff of Calaveras eclipsed all
concern in the ultimate fate of that worthy.
</p>
<p>
The sweating flanks of his gray at length recalled him to himself. He
checked his speed, and, turning into a by-road, sometimes used as a
cutoff, trotted leisurely along, the reins hanging listlessly from his
fingers. As he rode on, the character of the landscape changed and became
more pastoral. Openings in groves of pine and sycamore disclosed some rude
attempts at cultivation—a flowering vine trailed over the porch of
one cabin, and a woman rocked her cradled babe under the roses of another.
A little farther on Mr. Hamlin came upon some barelegged children wading
in the willowy creek, and so wrought upon them with a badinage peculiar to
himself that they were emboldened to climb up his horse's legs and over
his saddle, until he was fain to develop an exaggerated ferocity of
demeanor, and to escape, leaving behind some kisses and coin. And then,
advancing deeper into the woods, where all signs of habitation failed, he
began to sing—uplifting a tenor so singularly sweet, and shaded by a
pathos so subduing and tender, that I wot the robins and linnets stopped
to listen. Mr. Hamlin's voice was not cultivated; the subject of his song
was some sentimental lunacy borrowed from the Negro minstrels; but there
thrilled through all some occult quality of tone and expression that was
unspeakably touching. Indeed, it was a wonderful sight to see this
sentimental blackleg, with a pack of cards in his pocket and a revolver at
his back, sending his voice before him through the dim woods with a plaint
about his "Nelly's grave" in a way that overflowed the eyes of the
listener. A sparrow hawk, fresh from his sixth victim, possibly
recognizing in Mr. Hamlin a kindred spirit, stared at him in surprise, and
was fain to confess the superiority of man. With a superior predatory
capacity, HE couldn't sing.
</p>
<p>
But Mr. Hamlin presently found himself again on the highroad, and at his
former pace. Ditches and banks of gravel, denuded hillsides, stumps, and
decayed trunks of trees, took the place of woodland and ravine, and
indicated his approach to civilization. Then a church steeple came in
sight, and he knew that he had reached home. In a few moments he was
clattering down the single narrow street that lost itself in a chaotic
ruin of races, ditches, and tailings at the foot of the hill, and
dismounted before the gilded windows of the "Magnolia" saloon. Passing
through the long barroom, he pushed open a green-baize door, entered a
dark passage, opened another door with a passkey, and found himself in a
dimly lighted room whose furniture, though elegant and costly for the
locality, showed signs of abuse. The inlaid center table was overlaid with
stained disks that were not contemplated in the original design. The
embroidered armchairs were discolored, and the green velvet lounge, on
which Mr. Hamlin threw himself, was soiled at the foot with the red soil
of Wingdam.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Hamlin did not sing in his cage. He lay still, looking at a highly
colored painting above him representing a young creature of opulent
charms. It occurred to him then, for the first time, that he had never
seen exactly that kind of a woman, and that if he should, he would not,
probably, fall in love with her. Perhaps he was thinking of another style
of beauty. But just then someone knocked at the door. Without rising, he
pulled a cord that apparently shot back a bolt, for the door swung open,
and a man entered.
</p>
<p>
The newcomer was broad-shouldered and robust—a vigor not borne out
in the face, which, though handsome, was singularly weak, and disfigured
by dissipation. He appeared to be also under the influence of liquor, for
he started on seeing Mr. Hamlin, and said, "I thought Kate was here,"
stammered, and seemed confused and embarrassed.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Hamlin smiled the smile which he had before worn on the Wingdam coach,
and sat up, quite refreshed and ready for business.
</p>
<p>
"You didn't come up on the stage," continued the newcomer, "did you?"
</p>
<p>
"No," replied Hamlin; "I left it at Scott's Ferry. It isn't due for half
an hour yet. But how's luck, Brown?"
</p>
<p>
"Damn bad," said Brown, his face suddenly assuming an expression of weak
despair; "I'm cleaned out again, Jack," he continued, in a whining tone
that formed a pitiable contrast to his bulky figure, "can't you help me
with a hundred till tomorrow's cleanup? You see I've got to send money
home to the old woman, and—you've won twenty times that amount from
me."
</p>
<p>
The conclusion was, perhaps, not entirely logical, but Jack overlooked it,
and handed the sum to his visitor. "The old-woman business is about played
out, Brown," he added, by way of commentary; "why don't you say you want
to buck agin' faro? You know you ain't married!"
</p>
<p>
"Fact, sir," said Brown, with a sudden gravity, as if the mere contact of
the gold with the palm of the hand had imparted some dignity to his frame.
"I've got a wife—a damned good one, too, if I do say it—in the
States. It's three year since I've seen her, and a year since I've writ to
her. When things is about straight, and we get down to the lead, I'm going
to send for her."
</p>
<p>
"And Kate?" queried Mr. Hamlin, with his previous smile.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Brown of Calaveras essayed an archness of glance, to cover his
confusion, which his weak face and whisky-muddled intellect but poorly
carried out, and said:
</p>
<p>
"Damn it, Jack, a man must have a little liberty, you know. But come, what
do you say to a little game? Give us a show to double this hundred."
</p>
<p>
Jack Hamlin looked curiously at his fatuous friend. Perhaps he knew that
the man was predestined to lose the money, and preferred that it should
flow back into his own coffers rather than any other. He nodded his head,
and drew his chair toward the table. At the same moment there came a rap
upon the door.
</p>
<p>
"It's Kate," said Mr. Brown.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Hamlin shot back the bolt, and the door opened. But, for the first
time in his life, he staggered to his feet, utterly unnerved and abashed,
and for the first time in his life the hot blood crimsoned his colorless
cheeks to his forehead. For before him stood the lady he had lifted from
the Wingdam coach, whom Brown—dropping his cards with a hysterical
laugh—greeted as:
</p>
<p>
"My old woman, by thunder!"
</p>
<p>
They say that Mrs. Brown burst into tears, and reproaches of her husband.
I saw her, in 1857, at Marysville, and disbelieve the story. And the
WINGDAM CHRONICLE, of the next week, under the head of "Touching Reunion,"
said: "One of those beautiful and touching incidents, peculiar to
California life, occurred last week in our city. The wife of one of
Wingdam's eminent pioneers, tired of the effete civilization of the East
and its inhospitable climate, resolved to join her noble husband upon
these golden shores. Without informing him of her intention, she undertook
the long journey, and arrived last week. The joy of the husband may be
easier imagined than described. The meeting is said to have been
indescribably affecting. We trust her example may be followed."
</p>
<p>
Whether owing to Mrs. Brown's influence, or to some more successful
speculations, Mr. Brown's financial fortune from that day steadily
improved. He bought out his partners in the "Nip and Tuck" lead, with
money which was said to have been won at poker, a week or two after his
wife's arrival, but which rumor, adopting Mrs. Brown's theory that Brown
had forsworn the gaming-table, declared to have been furnished by Mr. Jack
Hamlin. He built and furnished the "Wingdam House," which pretty Mrs.
Brown's great popularity kept overflowing with guests. He was elected to
the Assembly, and gave largess to churches. A street in Wingdam was named
in his honor.
</p>
<p>
Yet it was noted that in proportion as he waxed wealthy and fortunate, he
grew pale, thin, and anxious. As his wife's popularity increased, he
became fretful and impatient. The most uxorious of husbands, he was
absurdly jealous. If he did not interfere with his wife's social liberty,
it was because it was maliciously whispered that his first and only
attempt was met by an outburst from Mrs. Brown that terrified him into
silence. Much of this kind of gossip came from those of her own sex whom
she had supplanted in the chivalrous attentions of Wingdam, which, like
most popular chivalry, was devoted to an admiration of power, whether of
masculine force or feminine beauty. It should be remembered, too, in her
extenuation that since her arrival, she had been the unconscious priestess
of a mythological worship, perhaps not more ennobling to her womanhood
than that which distinguished an older Greek democracy. I think that Brown
was dimly conscious of this. But his only confidant was Jack Hamlin, whose
INFELIX reputation naturally precluded any open intimacy with the family,
and whose visits were infrequent.
</p>
<p>
It was midsummer, and a moonlit night; and Mrs. Brown, very rosy,
large-eyed, and pretty, sat upon the piazza, enjoying the fresh incense of
the mountain breeze, and, it is to be feared, another incense which was
not so fresh, nor quite as innocent. Beside her sat Colonel Starbottle and
Judge Boompointer, and a later addition to her court in the shape of a
foreign tourist. She was in good spirits.
</p>
<p>
"What do you see down the road?" inquired the gallant Colonel, who had
been conscious, for the last few minutes, that Mrs. Brown's attention was
diverted.
</p>
<p>
"Dust," said Mrs. Brown, with a sigh. "Only Sister Anne's 'flock of
sheep.'"
</p>
<p>
The Colonel, whose literary recollections did not extend farther back than
last week's paper, took a more practical view. "It ain't sheep," he
continued; "it's a horseman. Judge, ain't that Jack Hamlin's gray?"
</p>
<p>
But the Judge didn't know; and as Mrs. Brown suggested the air was growing
too cold for further investigations, they retired to the parlor.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Brown was in the stable, where he generally retired after dinner.
Perhaps it was to show his contempt for his wife's companions; perhaps,
like other weak natures, he found pleasure in the exercise of absolute
power over inferior animals. He had a certain gratification in the
training of a chestnut mare, whom he could beat or caress as pleased him,
which he couldn't do with Mrs. Brown. It was here that he recognized a
certain gray horse which had just come in, and, looking a little farther
on, found his rider. Brown's greeting was cordial and hearty, Mr. Hamlin's
somewhat restrained. But at Brown's urgent request, he followed him up the
back stairs to a narrow corridor, and thence to a small room looking out
upon the stable yard. It was plainly furnished with a bed, a table, a few
chairs, and a rack for guns and whips.
</p>
<p>
"This yer's my home, Jack," said Brown, with a sigh, as he threw himself
upon the bed, and motioned his companion to a chair. "Her room's t'other
end of the hall. It's more'n six months since we've lived together, or
met, except at meals. It's mighty rough papers on the head of the house,
ain't it?" he said, with a forced laugh. "But I'm glad to see you, Jack,
damn glad," and he reached from the bed, and again shook the unresponsive
hand of Jack Hamlin.
</p>
<p>
"I brought ye up here, for I didn't want to talk in the stable; though,
for the matter of that, it's all round town. Don't strike a light. We can
talk here in the moonshine. Put up your feet on that winder, and sit here
beside me. Thar's whisky in that jug."
</p>
<p>
Mr. Hamlin did not avail himself of the information. Brown of Calaveras
turned his face to the wall and continued:
</p>
<p>
"If I didn't love the woman, Jack, I wouldn't mind. But it's loving her,
and seeing her, day arter day, goin' on at this rate, and no one to put
down the brake; that's what gits me! But I'm glad to see ye, Jack, damn
glad."
</p>
<p>
In the darkness he groped about until he had found and wrung his
companion's hand again. He would have detained it, but Jack slipped it
into the buttoned breast of his coat, and asked, listlessly, "How long has
this been going on?"
</p>
<p>
"Ever since she came here; ever since the day she walked into the
Magnolia. I was a fool then; Jack, I'm a fool now; but I didn't know how
much I loved her till then. And she hasn't been the same woman since.
</p>
<p>
"But that ain't all, Jack; and it's what I wanted to see you about, and
I'm glad you've come. It ain't that she doesn't love me any more; it ain't
that she fools with every chap that comes along, for, perhaps, I staked
her love and lost it, as I did everything else at the Magnolia; and,
perhaps, foolin' is nateral to some women, and thar ain't no great harm
done, 'cept to the fools. But, Jack, I think—I think she loves
somebody else. Don't move, Jack; don't move; if your pistol hurts ye, take
it off.
</p>
<p>
"It's been more'n six months now that she's seemed unhappy and lonesome,
and kinder nervous and scared-like. And sometimes I've ketched her lookin'
at me sort of timid and pitying. And she writes to somebody. And for the
last week she's been gathering her own things—trinkets, and
furbelows, and jew'lry—and, Jack, I think she's goin' off. I could
stand all but that. To have her steal away like a thief—" He put his
face downward to the pillow, and for a few moments there was no sound but
the ticking of a clock on the mantel. Mr. Hamlin lit a cigar, and moved to
the open window. The moon no longer shone into the room, and the bed and
its occupant were in shadow. "What shall I do, Jack?" said the voice from
the darkness.
</p>
<p>
The answer came promptly and clearly from the window-side: "Spot the man,
and kill him on sight."
</p>
<p>
"But, Jack?"
</p>
<p>
"He's took the risk!"
</p>
<p>
"But will that bring HER back?"
</p>
<p>
Jack did not reply, but moved from the window toward the door.
</p>
<p>
"Don't go yet, Jack; light the candle, and sit by the table. It's a
comfort to see ye, if nothin' else."
</p>
<p>
Jack hesitated, and then complied. He drew a pack of cards from his pocket
and shuffled them, glancing at the bed. But Brown's face was turned to the
wall. When Mr. Hamlin had shuffled the cards, he cut them, and dealt one
card on the opposite side of the table and toward the bed, and another on
his side of the table for himself. The first was a deuce, his own card, a
king. He then shuffled and cut again. This time "dummy" had a queen, and
himself a four-spot. Jack brightened up for the third deal. It brought his
adversary a deuce, and himself a king again. "Two out of three," said
Jack, audibly.
</p>
<p>
"What's that, Jack?" said Brown.
</p>
<p>
"Nothing."
</p>
<p>
Then Jack tried his hand with dice; but he always threw sixes, and his
imaginary opponent aces. The force of habit is sometimes confusing.
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, some magnetic influence in Mr. Hamlin's presence, or the
anodyne of liquor, or both, brought surcease of sorrow, and Brown slept.
Mr. Hamlin moved his chair to the window, and looked out on the town of
Wingdam, now sleeping peacefully—its harsh outlines softened and
subdued, its glaring colors mellowed and sobered in the moonlight that
flowed over all. In the hush he could hear the gurgling of water in the
ditches, and the sighing of the pines beyond the hill. Then he looked up
at the firmament, and as he did so a star shot across the twinkling field.
Presently another, and then another. The phenomenon suggested to Mr.
Hamlin a fresh augury. If in another fifteen minutes another star should
fall—He sat there, watch in hand, for twice that time, but the
phenomenon was not repeated.
</p>
<p>
The clock struck two, and Brown still slept. Mr. Hamlin approached the
table and took from his pocket a letter, which he read by the flickering
candlelight. It contained only a single line, written in pencil, in a
woman's hand:
</p>
<p>
"Be at the corral, with the buggy, at three."
</p>
<p>
The sleeper moved uneasily, and then awoke. "Are you there Jack?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes."
</p>
<p>
"Don't go yet. I dreamed just now, Jack—dreamed of old times. I
thought that Sue and me was being married agin, and that the parson, Jack,
was—who do you think?—you!"
</p>
<p>
The gambler laughed, and seated himself on the bed—the paper still
in his hand.
</p>
<p>
"It's a good sign, ain't it?" queried Brown.
</p>
<p>
"I reckon. Say, old man, hadn't you better get up?"
</p>
<p>
The "old man," thus affectionately appealed to, rose, with the assistance
of Hamlin's outstretched hand.
</p>
<p>
"Smoke?"
</p>
<p>
Brown mechanically took the proffered cigar.
</p>
<p>
"Light?"
</p>
<p>
Jack had twisted the letter into a spiral, lit it, and held it for his
companion. He continued to hold it until it was consumed, and dropped the
fragment—a fiery star—from the open window. He watched it as
it fell, and then returned to his friend.
</p>
<p>
"Old man," he said, placing his hands upon Brown's shoulders, "in ten
minutes I'll be on the road, and gone like that spark. We won't see each
other agin; but, before I go, take a fool's advice: sell out all you've
got, take your wife with you, and quit the country. It ain't no place for
you, nor her. Tell her she must go; make her go, if she won't. Don't whine
because you can't be a saint, and she ain't an angel. Be a man—and
treat her like a woman. Don't be a damn fool. Good-by."
</p>
<p>
He tore himself from Brown's grasp, and leaped down the stairs like a
deer. At the stable door he collared the half-sleeping hostler and backed
him against the wall. "Saddle my horse in two minutes, or I'll—" The
ellipsis was frightfully suggestive.
</p>
<p>
"The missis said you was to have the buggy," stammered the man.
</p>
<p>
"Damn the buggy!"
</p>
<p>
The horse was saddled as fast as the nervous hands of the astounded
hostler could manipulate buckle and strap.
</p>
<p>
"Is anything up, Mr. Hamlin?" said the man, who, like all his class,
admired the elan of his fiery patron, and was really concerned in his
welfare.
</p>
<p>
"Stand aside!"
</p>
<p>
The man fell back. With an oath, a bound, and clatter, Jack was into the
road. In another moment, to the man's half-awakened eyes, he was but a
moving cloud of dust in the distance, toward which a star just loosed from
its brethren was trailing a stream of fire.
</p>
<p>
But early that morning the dwellers by the Wingdam turnpike, miles away,
heard a voice, pure as a skylark's, singing afield. They who were asleep
turned over on their rude couches to dream of youth and love and olden
days. Hard-faced men and anxious gold-seekers, already at work, ceased
their labors and leaned upon their picks, to listen to a romantic vagabond
ambling away against the rosy sunrise.
</p>
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<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
HIGH-WATER MARK
</h2>
<p>
When the tide was out on the Dedlow Marsh, its extended dreariness was
patent. Its spongy, low-lying surface, sluggish, inky pools, and tortuous
sloughs, twisting their slimy way, eel-like, toward the open bay, were all
hard facts. So were the few green tussocks, with their scant blades, their
amphibious flavor and unpleasant dampness. And if you choose to indulge
your fancy—although the flat monotony of the Dedlow Marsh was not
inspiring—the wavy line of scattered drift gave an unpleasant
consciousness of the spent waters, and made the dead certainty of the
returning tide a gloomy reflection which no present sunshine could
dissipate. The greener meadowland seemed oppressed with this idea, and
made no positive attempt at vegetation until the work of reclamation
should be complete. In the bitter fruit of the low cranberry bushes one
might fancy he detected a naturally sweet disposition curdled and soured
by an injudicious course of too much regular cold water.
</p>
<p>
The vocal expression of the Dedlow Marsh was also melancholy and
depressing. The sepulchral boom of the bittern, the shriek of the curlew,
the scream of passing brent, the wrangling of quarrelsome teal, the sharp,
querulous protest of the startled crane, and syllabled complaint of the
"killdeer" plover, were beyond the power of written expression. Nor was
the aspect of these mournful fowls at all cheerful and inspiring.
Certainly not the blue heron standing mid-leg deep in the water, obviously
catching cold in a reckless disregard of wet feet and consequences; nor
the mournful curlew, the dejected plover, or the low-spirited snipe, who
saw fit to join him in his suicidal contemplation; nor the impassive
kingfisher—an ornithological Marius—reviewing the desolate
expanse; nor the black raven that went to and fro over the face of the
marsh continually, but evidently couldn't make up his mind whether the
waters had subsided, and felt low-spirited in the reflection that, after
all this trouble, he wouldn't be able to give a definite answer. On the
contrary, it was evident at a glance that the dreary expanse of Dedlow
Marsh told unpleasantly on the birds, and that the season of migration was
looked forward to with a feeling of relief and satisfaction by the
full-grown, and of extravagant anticipation by the callow, brood. But if
Dedlow Marsh was cheerless at the slack of the low tide, you should have
seen it when the tide was strong and full. When the damp air blew chilly
over the cold, glittering expanse, and came to the faces of those who
looked seaward like another tide; when a steel-like glint marked the low
hollows and the sinuous line of slough; when the great shell-incrusted
trunks of fallen trees arose again, and went forth on their dreary,
purposeless wanderings, drifting hither and thither, but getting no
farther toward any goal at the falling tide or the day's decline than the
cursed Hebrew in the legend; when the glossy ducks swung silently, making
neither ripple nor furrow on the shimmering surface; when the fog came in
with the tide and shut out the blue above, even as the green below had
been obliterated; when boatmen lost in that fog, paddling about in a
hopeless way, started at what seemed the brushing of mermen's fingers on
the boat's keel, or shrank from the tufts of grass spreading around like
the floating hair of a corpse, and knew by these signs that they were lost
upon Dedlow Marsh and must make a night of it, and a gloomy one at that—then
you might know something of Dedlow Marsh at high water.
</p>
<p>
Let me recall a story connected with this latter view which never failed
to recur to my mind in my long gunning excursions upon Dedlow Marsh.
Although the event was briefly recorded in the county paper, I had the
story, in all its eloquent detail, from the lips of the principal actor. I
cannot hope to catch the varying emphasis and peculiar coloring of
feminine delineation, for my narrator was a woman; but I'll try to give at
least its substance.
</p>
<p>
She lived midway of the great slough of Dedlow Marsh and a good-sized
river, which debouched four miles beyond into an estuary formed by the
Pacific Ocean, on the long sandy peninsula which constituted the
southwestern boundary of a noble bay. The house in which she lived was a
small frame cabin raised from the marsh a few feet by stout piles, and was
three miles distant from the settlements upon the river. Her husband was a
logger—a profitable business in a county where the principal
occupation was the manufacture of lumber.
</p>
<p>
It was the season of early spring when her husband left on the ebb of a
high tide, with a raft of logs for the usual transportation to the lower
end of the bay. As she stood by the door of the little cabin when the
voyagers departed she noticed a cold look in the southeastern sky, and she
remembered hearing her husband say to his companions that they must
endeavor to complete their voyage before the coming of the southwesterly
gale which he saw brewing. And that night it began to storm and blow
harder than she had ever before experienced, and some great trees fell in
the forest by the river, and the house rocked like her baby's cradle.
</p>
<p>
But however the storm might roar about the little cabin, she knew that one
she trusted had driven bolt and bar with his own strong hand, and that had
he feared for her he would not have left her. This, and her domestic
duties, and the care of her little sickly baby, helped to keep her mind
from dwelling on the weather, except, of course, to hope that he was
safely harbored with the logs at Utopia in the dreary distance. But she
noticed that day, when she went out to feed the chickens and look after
the cow, that the tide was up to the little fence of their garden-patch,
and the roar of the surf on the south beach, though miles away, she could
hear distinctly. And she began to think that she would like to have
someone to talk with about matters, and she believed that if it had not
been so far and so stormy, and the trail so impassable, she would have
taken the baby and have gone over to Ryckman's, her nearest neighbor. But
then, you see, he might have returned in the storm, all wet, with no one
to see to him; and it was a long exposure for baby, who was croupy and
ailing.
</p>
<p>
But that night, she never could tell why, she didn't feel like sleeping or
even lying down. The storm had somewhat abated, but she still "sat and
sat," and even tried to read. I don't know whether it was a Bible or some
profane magazine that this poor woman read, but most probably the latter,
for the words all ran together and made such sad nonsense that she was
forced at last to put the book down and turn to that dearer volume which
lay before her in the cradle, with its white initial leaf as yet unsoiled,
and try to look forward to its mysterious future. And, rocking the cradle,
she thought of everything and everybody, but still was wide-awake as ever.
</p>
<p>
It was nearly twelve o'clock when she at last lay down in her clothes. How
long she slept she could not remember, but she awoke with a dreadful
choking in her throat, and found herself standing, trembling all over, in
the middle of the room, with her baby clasped to her breast, and she was
"saying something." The baby cried and sobbed, and she walked up and down
trying to hush it when she heard a scratching at the door. She opened it
fearfully, and was glad to see it was only old Pete, their dog, who
crawled, dripping with water, into the room. She would like to have looked
out, not in the faint hope of her husband's coming, but to see how things
looked; but the wind shook the door so savagely that she could hardly hold
it. Then she sat down a little while, and then walked up and down a little
while, and then she lay down again a little while. Lying close by the wall
of the little cabin, she thought she heard once or twice something scrape
slowly against the clapboards, like the scraping of branches. Then there
was a little gurgling sound, "like the baby made when it was swallowing";
then something went "click-click" and "cluck-cluck," so that she sat up in
bed. When she did so she was attracted by something else that seemed
creeping from the back door toward the center of the room. It wasn't much
wider than her little finger, but soon it swelled to the width of her
hand, and began spreading all over the floor. It was water.
</p>
<p>
She ran to the front door and threw it wide open, and saw nothing but
water. She ran to the back door and threw it open, and saw nothing but
water. She ran to the side window, and throwing that open, she saw nothing
but water. Then she remembered hearing her husband once say that there was
no danger in the tide, for that fell regularly, and people could calculate
on it, and that he would rather live near the bay than the river, whose
banks might overflow at any time. But was it the tide? So she ran again to
the back door, and threw out a stick of wood. It drifted away toward the
bay. She scooped up some of the water and put it eagerly to her lips. It
was fresh and sweet. It was the river, and not the tide!
</p>
<p>
It was then—O God be praised for his goodness! she did neither faint
nor fall; it was then—blessed be the Saviour, for it was his
merciful hand that touched and strengthened her in this awful moment—that
fear dropped from her like a garment, and her trembling ceased. It was
then and thereafter that she never lost her self-command, through all the
trials of that gloomy night.
</p>
<p>
She drew the bedstead toward the middle of the room, and placed a table
upon it and on that she put the cradle. The water on the floor was already
over her ankles, and the house once or twice moved so perceptibly, and
seemed to be racked so, that the closet doors all flew open. Then she
heard the same rasping and thumping against the wall, and, looking out,
saw that a large uprooted tree, which had lain near the road at the upper
end of the pasture, had floated down to the house. Luckily its long roots
dragged in the soil and kept it from moving as rapidly as the current, for
had it struck the house in its full career, even the strong nails and
bolts in the piles could not have withstood the shock. The hound had
leaped upon its knotty surface, and crouched near the roots shivering and
whining. A ray of hope flashed across her mind. She drew a heavy blanket
from the bed, and, wrapping it about the babe, waded in the deepening
waters to the door. As the tree swung again, broadside on, making the
little cabin creak and tremble, she leaped on to its trunk. By God's mercy
she succeeded in obtaining a footing on its slippery surface, and, twining
an arm about its roots, she held in the other her moaning child. Then
something cracked near the front porch, and the whole front of the house
she had just quitted fell forward—just as cattle fall on their knees
before they lie down—and at the same moment the great redwood tree
swung round and drifted away with its living cargo into the black night.
</p>
<p>
For all the excitement and danger, for all her soothing of her crying
babe, for all the whistling of the wind, for all the uncertainty of her
situation, she still turned to look at the deserted and water-swept cabin.
She remembered even then, and she wonders how foolish she was to think of
it at that time, that she wished she had put on another dress and the
baby's best clothes; and she kept praying that the house would be spared
so that he, when he returned, would have something to come to, and it
wouldn't be quite so desolate, and—how could he ever know what had
become of her and baby? And at the thought she grew sick and faint. But
she had something else to do besides worrying, for whenever the long roots
of her ark struck an obstacle, the whole trunk made half a revolution, and
twice dipped her in the black water. The hound, who kept distracting her
by running up and down the tree and howling, at last fell off at one of
these collisions. He swam for some time beside her, and she tried to get
the poor beast up on the tree, but he "acted silly" and wild, and at last
she lost sight of him forever. Then she and her baby were left alone. The
light which had burned for a few minutes in the deserted cabin was
quenched suddenly. She could not then tell whither she was drifting. The
outline of the white dunes on the peninsula showed dimly ahead, and she
judged the tree was moving in a line with the river. It must be about
slack water, and she had probably reached the eddy formed by the
confluence of the tide and the overflowing waters of the river. Unless the
tide fell soon, there was present danger of her drifting to its channel,
and being carried out to sea or crushed in the floating drift. That peril
averted, if she were carried out on the ebb toward the bay, she might hope
to strike one of the wooded promontories of the peninsula, and rest till
daylight. Sometimes she thought she heard voices and shouts from the
river, and the bellowing of cattle and bleating of sheep. Then again it
was only the ringing in her ears and throbbing of her heart. She found at
about this time that she was so chilled and stiffened in her cramped
position that she could scarcely move, and the baby cried so when she put
it to her breast that she noticed the milk refused to flow; and she was so
frightened at that, that she put her head under her shawl, and for the
first time cried bitterly.
</p>
<p>
When she raised her head again, the boom of the surf was behind her, and
she knew that her ark had again swung round. She dipped up the water to
cool her parched throat, and found that it was salt as her tears. There
was a relief, though, for by this sign she knew that she was drifting with
the tide. It was then the wind went down, and the great and awful silence
oppressed her. There was scarcely a ripple against the furrowed sides of
the great trunk on which she rested, and around her all was black gloom
and quiet. She spoke to the baby just to hear herself speak, and to know
that she had not lost her voice. She thought then—it was queer, but
she could not help thinking it—how awful must have been the night
when the great ship swung over the Asiatic peak, and the sounds of
creation were blotted out from the world. She thought, too, of mariners
clinging to spars, and of poor women who were lashed to rafts, and beaten
to death by the cruel sea. She tried to thank God that she was thus
spared, and lifted her eyes from the baby, who had fallen into a fretful
sleep. Suddenly, away to the southward, a great light lifted itself out of
the gloom, and flashed and flickered, and flickered and flashed again. Her
heart fluttered quickly against the baby's cold cheek. It was the
lighthouse at the entrance of the bay. As she was yet wondering, the tree
suddenly rolled a little, dragged a little, and then seemed to lie quiet
and still. She put out her hand and the current gurgled against it. The
tree was aground, and, by the position of the light and the noise of the
surf, aground upon the Dedlow Marsh.
</p>
<p>
Had it not been for her baby, who was ailing and croupy, had it not been
for the sudden drying up of that sensitive fountain, she would have felt
safe and relieved. Perhaps it was this which tended to make all her
impressions mournful and gloomy. As the tide rapidly fell, a great flock
of black brent fluttered by her, screaming and crying. Then the plover
flew up and piped mournfully as they wheeled around the trunk, and at last
fearlessly lit upon it like a gray cloud. Then the heron flew over and
around her, shrieking and protesting, and at last dropped its gaunt legs
only a few yards from her. But, strangest of all, a pretty white bird,
larger than a dove—like a pelican, but not a pelican—circled
around and around her. At last it lit upon a rootlet of the tree, quite
over her shoulder. She put out her hand and stroked its beautiful white
neck, and it never appeared to move. It stayed there so long that she
thought she would lift up the baby to see it, and try to attract her
attention. But when she did so, the child was so chilled and cold, and had
such a blue look under the little lashes which it didn't raise at all,
that she screamed aloud, and the bird flew away, and she fainted.
</p>
<p>
Well, that was the worst of it, and perhaps it was not so much, after all,
to any but herself. For when she recovered her senses it was bright
sunlight, and dead low water. There was a confused noise of guttural
voices about her, and an old squaw, singing an Indian "hushaby," and
rocking herself from side to side before a fire built on the marsh, before
which she, the recovered wife and mother, lay weak and weary. Her first
thought was for her baby, and she was about to speak, when a young squaw,
who must have been a mother herself, fathomed her thought and brought her
the "mowitch," pale but living, in such a queer little willow cradle all
bound up, just like the squaw's own young one, that she laughed and cried
together, and the young squaw and the old squaw showed their big white
teeth and glinted their black eyes and said, "Plenty get well, skeena
mowitch," "wagee man come plenty soon," and she could have kissed their
brown faces in her joy. And then she found that they had been gathering
berries on the marsh in their queer, comical baskets, and saw the skirt of
her gown fluttering on the tree from afar, and the old squaw couldn't
resist the temptation of procuring a new garment, and came down and
discovered the "wagee" woman and child. And of course she gave the garment
to the old squaw, as you may imagine, and when HE came at last and rushed
up to her, looking about ten years older in his anxiety, she felt so faint
again that they had to carry her to the canoe. For, you see, he knew
nothing about the flood until he met the Indians at Utopia, and knew by
the signs that the poor woman was his wife. And at the next high tide he
towed the tree away back home, although it wasn't worth the trouble, and
built another house, using the old tree for the foundation and props, and
called it after her, "Mary's Ark!" But you may guess the next house was
built above high-water mark. And that's all.
</p>
<p>
Not much, perhaps, considering the malevolent capacity of the Dedlow
Marsh. But you must tramp over it at low water, or paddle over it at high
tide, or get lost upon it once or twice in the fog, as I have, to
understand properly Mary's adventure, or to appreciate duly the blessings
of living beyond High-Water Mark.
</p>
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<h2>
A LONELY RIDE
</h2>
<p>
As I stepped into the Slumgullion stage I saw that it was a dark night, a
lonely road, and that I was the only passenger. Let me assure the reader
that I have no ulterior design in making this assertion. A long course of
light reading has forewarned me what every experienced intelligence must
confidently look for from such a statement. The storyteller who willfully
tempts Fate by such obvious beginnings; who is to the expectant reader in
danger of being robbed or half-murdered, or frightened by an escaped
lunatic, or introduced to his ladylove for the first time, deserves to be
detected. I am relieved to say that none of these things occurred to me.
The road from Wingdam to Slumgullion knew no other banditti than the
regularly licensed hotelkeepers; lunatics had not yet reached such depth
of imbecility as to ride of their own free will in California stages; and
my Laura, amiable and long-suffering as she always is, could not, I fear,
have borne up against these depressing circumstances long enough to have
made the slightest impression on me.
</p>
<p>
I stood with my shawl and carpetbag in hand, gazing doubtingly on the
vehicle. Even in the darkness the red dust of Wingdam was visible on its
roof and sides, and the red slime of Slumgullion clung tenaciously to its
wheels. I opened the door; the stage creaked easily, and in the gloomy
abyss the swaying straps beckoned me, like ghostly hands, to come in now
and have my sufferings out at once.
</p>
<p>
I must not omit to mention the occurrence of a circumstance which struck
me as appalling and mysterious. A lounger on the steps of the hotel, who I
had reason to suppose was not in any way connected with the stage company,
gravely descended, and walking toward the conveyance, tried the handle of
the door, opened it, expectorated in the carriage, and returned to the
hotel with a serious demeanor. Hardly had he resumed his position when
another individual, equally disinterested, impassively walked down the
steps, proceeded to the back of the stage, lifted it, expectorated
carefully on the axle, and returned slowly and pensively to the hotel. A
third spectator wearily disengaged himself from one of the Ionic columns
of the portico and walked to the box, remained for a moment in serious and
expectorative contemplation of the boot, and then returned to his column.
There was something so weird in this baptism that I grew quite nervous.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps I was out of spirits. A number of infinitesimal annoyances,
winding up with the resolute persistency of the clerk at the stage office
to enter my name misspelt on the waybill, had not predisposed me to
cheerfulness. The inmates of the Eureka House, from a social viewpoint,
were not attractive. There was the prevailing opinion—so common to
many honest people—that a serious style of deportment and conduct
toward a stranger indicates high gentility and elevated station. Obeying
this principle, all hilarity ceased on my entrance to supper, and general
remark merged into the safer and uncompromising chronicle of several bad
cases of diphtheria, then epidemic at Wingdam. When I left the
dining-room, with an odd feeling that I had been supping exclusively on
mustard and tea leaves, I stopped a moment at the parlor door. A piano,
harmoniously related to the dinner bell, tinkled responsive to a diffident
and uncertain touch. On the white wall the shadow of an old and sharp
profile was bending over several symmetrical and shadowy curls. "I sez to
Mariar, Mariar, sez I, 'Praise to the face is open disgrace.'" I heard no
more. Dreading some susceptibility to sincere expression on the subject of
female loveliness, I walked away, checking the compliment that otherwise
might have risen unbidden to my lips, and have brought shame and sorrow to
the household.
</p>
<p>
It was with the memory of these experiences resting heavily upon me that I
stood hesitatingly before the stage door. The driver, about to mount, was
for a moment illuminated by the open door of the hotel. He had the wearied
look which was the distinguishing expression of Wingdam. Satisfied that I
was properly waybilled and receipted for, he took no further notice of me.
I looked longingly at the box seat, but he did not respond to the appeal.
I flung my carpetbag into the chasm, dived recklessly after it, and—before
I was fairly seated—with a great sigh, a creaking of unwilling
springs, complaining bolts, and harshly expostulating axle, we moved away.
Rather the hotel door slipped behind, the sound of the piano sank to rest,
and the night and its shadows moved solemnly upon us.
</p>
<p>
To say it was dark expressed but faintly the pitchy obscurity that
encompassed the vehicle. The roadside trees were scarcely distinguishable
as deeper masses of shadow; I knew them only by the peculiar sodden odor
that from time to time sluggishly flowed in at the open window as we
rolled by. We proceeded slowly; so leisurely that, leaning from the
carriage, I more than once detected the fragrant sigh of some astonished
cow, whose ruminating repose upon the highway we had ruthlessly disturbed.
But in the darkness our progress, more the guidance of some mysterious
instinct than any apparent volition of our own, gave an indefinable charm
of security to our journey that a moment's hesitation or indecision on the
part of the driver would have destroyed.
</p>
<p>
I had indulged a hope that in the empty vehicle I might obtain that rest
so often denied me in its crowded condition. It was a weak delusion. When
I stretched out my limbs it was only to find that the ordinary
conveniences for making several people distinctly uncomfortable were
distributed throughout my individual frame. At last, resting my arms on
the straps, by dint of much gymnastic effort I became sufficiently
composed to be aware of a more refined species of torture. The springs of
the stage, rising and falling regularly, produced a rhythmical beat which
began to absorb my attention painfully. Slowly this thumping merged into a
senseless echo of the mysterious female of the hotel parlor, and shaped
itself into this awful and benumbing axiom—"Praise-to-the-face-is-open-disgrace.
Praise-to-the-face-is-open-disgrace." Inequalities of the road only
quickened its utterance or drawled it to an exasperating length.
</p>
<p>
It was of no use to consider the statement seriously. It was of no use to
except to it indignantly. It was of no use to recall the many instances
where praise to the face had redounded to the everlasting honor of praiser
and bepraised; of no use to dwell sentimentally on modest genius and
courage lifted up and strengthened by open commendation; of no use to
except to the mysterious female, to picture her as rearing a thin-blooded
generation on selfish and mechanically repeated axioms—all this
failed to counteract the monotonous repetition of this sentence. There was
nothing to do but to give in—and I was about to accept it weakly, as
we too often treat other illusions of darkness and necessity, for the time
being, when I became aware of some other annoyance that had been forcing
itself upon me for the last few moments. How quiet the driver was!
</p>
<p>
Was there any driver? Had I any reason to suppose that he was not lying
gagged and bound on the roadside, and the highwayman with blackened face
who did the thing so quietly driving me—whither? The thing is
perfectly feasible. And what is this fancy now being jolted out of me? A
story? It's of no use to keep it back—particularly in this abysmal
vehicle, and here it comes: I am a Marquis—a French Marquis; French,
because the peerage is not so well known, and the country is better
adapted to romantic incident—a Marquis, because the democratic
reader delights in the nobility. My name is something LIGNY. I am coming
from Paris to my country seat at St. Germain. It is a dark night, and I
fall asleep and tell my honest coachman, Andre, not to disturb me, and
dream of an angel. The carriage at last stops at the chateau. It is so
dark that when I alight I do not recognize the face of the footman who
holds the carriage door. But what of that?—PESTE! I am heavy with
sleep. The same obscurity also hides the old familiar indecencies of the
statues on the terrace; but there is a door, and it opens and shuts behind
me smartly. Then I find myself in a trap, in the presence of the brigand
who has quietly gagged poor Andre and conducted the carriage thither.
There is nothing for me to do, as a gallant French Marquis, but to say,
"PARBLEU!" draw my rapier, and die valorously! I am found a week or two
after outside a deserted cabaret near the barrier, with a hole through my
ruffled linen and my pockets stripped. No; on second thoughts, I am
rescued—rescued by the angel I have been dreaming of, who is the
assumed daughter of the brigand but the real daughter of an intimate
friend.
</p>
<p>
Looking from the window again, in the vain hope of distinguishing the
driver, I found my eyes were growing accustomed to the darkness. I could
see the distant horizon, defined by India-inky woods, relieving a lighter
sky. A few stars widely spaced in this picture glimmered sadly. I noticed
again the infinite depth of patient sorrow in their serene faces; and I
hope that the vandal who first applied the flippant "twinkle" to them may
not be driven melancholy-mad by their reproachful eyes. I noticed again
the mystic charm of space that imparts a sense of individual solitude to
each integer of the densest constellation, involving the smallest star
with immeasurable loneliness. Something of this calm and solitude crept
over me, and I dozed in my gloomy cavern. When I awoke the full moon was
rising. Seen from my window, it had an indescribably unreal and theatrical
effect. It was the full moon of NORMA—that remarkable celestial
phenomenon which rises so palpably to a hushed audience and a sublime
andante chorus, until the CASTA DIVA is sung—the "inconstant moon"
that then and thereafter remains fixed in the heavens as though it were a
part of the solar system inaugurated by Joshua. Again the white-robed
Druids filed past me, again I saw that improbable mistletoe cut from that
impossible oak, and again cold chills ran down my back with the first
strain of the recitative. The thumping springs essayed to beat time, and
the private-box-like obscurity of the vehicle lent a cheap enchantment to
the view. But it was a vast improvement upon my past experience, and I
hugged the fond delusion.
</p>
<p>
My fears for the driver were dissipated with the rising moon. A familiar
sound had assured me of his presence in the full possession of at least
one of his most important functions. Frequent and full expectoration
convinced me that his lips were as yet not sealed by the gag of
highwaymen, and soothed my anxious ear. With this load lifted from my
mind, and assisted by the mild presence of Diana, who left, as when she
visited Endymion, much of her splendor outside my cavern—I looked
around the empty vehicle. On the forward seat lay a woman's hairpin. I
picked it up with an interest that, however, soon abated. There was no
scent of the roses to cling to it still, not even of hair oil. No bend or
twist in its rigid angles betrayed any trait of its wearer's character. I
tried to think that it might have been "Mariar's." I tried to imagine
that, confining the symmetrical curls of that girl, it might have heard
the soft compliments whispered in her ears which provoked the wrath of the
aged female. But in vain. It was reticent and unswerving in its upright
fidelity, and at last slipped listlessly through my fingers.
</p>
<p>
I had dozed repeatedly—waked on the threshold of oblivion by contact
with some of the angles of the coach, and feeling that I was unconsciously
assuming, in imitation of a humble insect of my childish recollection,
that spherical shape which could best resist those impressions, when I
perceived that the moon, riding high in the heavens, had begun to separate
the formless masses of the shadowy landscape. Trees isolated, in clumps
and assemblages, changed places before my window. The sharp outlines of
the distant hills came back, as in daylight, but little softened in the
dry, cold, dewless air of a California summer night. I was wondering how
late it was, and thinking that if the horses of the night traveled as
slowly as the team before us, Faustus might have been spared his agonizing
prayer, when a sudden spasm of activity attacked my driver. A succession
of whip-snappings, like a pack of Chinese crackers, broke from the box
before me. The stage leaped forward, and when I could pick myself from
under the seat, a long white building had in some mysterious way rolled
before my window. It must be Slumgullion! As I descended from the stage I
addressed the driver:
</p>
<p>
"I thought you changed horses on the road?"
</p>
<p>
"So we did. Two hours ago."
</p>
<p>
"That's odd. I didn't notice it."
</p>
<p>
"Must have been asleep, sir. Hope you had a pleasant nap. Bully place for
a nice quiet snooze—empty stage, sir!"
</p>
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<h2>
THE MAN OF NO ACCOUNT
</h2>
<p>
His name was Fagg—David Fagg. He came to California in '52 with us,
in the SKYSCRAPER. I don't think he did it in an adventurous way. He
probably had no other place to go to. When a knot of us young fellows
would recite what splendid opportunities we resigned to go, and how sorry
our friends were to have us leave, and show daguerreotypes and locks of
hair, and talk of Mary and Susan, the man of no account used to sit by and
listen with a pained, mortified expression on his plain face, and say
nothing. I think he had nothing to say. He had no associates except when
we patronized him; and, in point of fact, he was a good deal of sport to
us. He was always seasick whenever we had a capful of wind. He never got
his sea legs on, either. And I never shall forget how we all laughed when
Rattler took him the piece of pork on a string, and—But you know
that time-honored joke. And then we had such a splendid lark with him.
Miss Fanny Twinkler couldn't bear the sight of him, and we used to make
Fagg think that she had taken a fancy to him, and send him little
delicacies and books from the cabin. You ought to have witnessed the rich
scene that took place when he came up, stammering and very sick, to thank
her! Didn't she flash up grandly and beautifully and scornfully? So like
"Medora," Rattler said—Rattler knew Byron by heart—and wasn't
old Fagg awfully cut up? But he got over it, and when Rattler fell sick at
Valparaiso, old Fagg used to nurse him. You see he was a good sort of
fellow, but he lacked manliness and spirit.
</p>
<p>
He had absolutely no idea of poetry. I've seen him sit stolidly by,
mending his old clothes, when Rattler delivered that stirring apostrophe
of Byron's to the ocean. He asked Rattler once, quite seriously, if he
thought Byron was ever seasick. I don't remember Rattler's reply, but I
know we all laughed very much, and I have no doubt it was something good
for Rattler was smart.
</p>
<p>
When the SKYSCRAPER arrived at San Francisco we had a grand "feed." We
agreed to meet every year and perpetuate the occasion. Of course we didn't
invite Fagg. Fagg was a steerage passenger, and it was necessary, you see,
now we were ashore, to exercise a little discretion. But Old Fagg, as we
called him—he was only about twenty-five years old, by the way—was
the source of immense amusement to us that day. It appeared that he had
conceived the idea that he could walk to Sacramento, and actually started
off afoot. We had a good time, and shook hands with one another all
around, and so parted. Ah me! only eight years ago, and yet some of those
hands then clasped in amity have been clenched at each other, or have
dipped furtively in one another's pockets. I know that we didn't dine
together the next year, because young Barker swore he wouldn't put his
feet under the same mahogany with such a very contemptible scoundrel as
that Mixer; and Nibbles, who borrowed money at Valparaiso of young Stubbs,
who was then a waiter in a restaurant, didn't like to meet such people.
</p>
<p>
When I bought a number of shares in the Coyote Tunnel at Mugginsville, in
'54, I thought I'd take a run up there and see it. I stopped at the Empire
Hotel, and after dinner I got a horse and rode round the town and out to
the claim. One of those individuals whom newspaper correspondents call
"our intelligent informant," and to whom in all small communities the
right of answering questions is tacitly yielded, was quietly pointed out
to me. Habit had enabled him to work and talk at the same time, and he
never pretermitted either. He gave me a history of the claim, and added:
"You see, stranger," (he addressed the bank before him) "gold is sure to
come out'er that theer claim, (he put in a comma with his pick) but the
old pro-pri-e-tor (he wriggled out the word and the point of his pick)
warn't of much account (a long stroke of the pick for a period). He was
green, and let the boys about here jump him"—and the rest of his
sentence was confided to his hat, which he had removed to wipe his manly
brow with his red bandanna.
</p>
<p>
I asked him who was the original proprietor.
</p>
<p>
"His name war Fagg."
</p>
<p>
I went to see him. He looked a little older and plainer. He had worked
hard, he said, and was getting on "so-so." I took quite a liking to him
and patronized him to some extent. Whether I did so because I was
beginning to have a distrust for such fellows as Rattler and Mixer is not
necessary for me to state.
</p>
<p>
You remember how the Coyote Tunnel went in, and how awfully we
shareholders were done! Well, the next thing I heard was that Rattler, who
was one of the heaviest shareholders, was up at Mugginsville keeping bar
for the proprietor of the Mugginsville Hotel, and that old Fagg had struck
it rich, and didn't know what to do with his money. All this was told me
by Mixer, who had been there, settling up matters, and likewise that Fagg
was sweet upon the daughter of the proprietor of the aforesaid hotel. And
so by hearsay and letter I eventually gathered that old Robins, the hotel
man, was trying to get up a match between Nellie Robins and Fagg. Nellie
was a pretty, plump, and foolish little thing, and would do just as her
father wished. I thought it would be a good thing for Fagg if he should
marry and settle down; that as a married man he might be of some account.
So I ran up to Mugginsville one day to look after things.
</p>
<p>
It did me an immense deal of good to make Rattler mix my drinks for me—Rattler!
the gay, brilliant, and unconquerable Rattler, who had tried to snub me
two years ago. I talked to him about old Fagg and Nellie, particularly as
I thought the subject was distasteful. He never liked Fagg, and he was
sure, he said, that Nellie didn't. Did Nellie like anybody else? He turned
around to the mirror behind the bar and brushed up his hair! I understood
the conceited wretch. I thought I'd put Fagg on his guard and get him to
hurry up matters. I had a long talk with him. You could see by the way the
poor fellow acted that he was badly stuck. He sighed, and promised to
pluck up courage to hurry matters to a crisis. Nellie was a good girl, and
I think had a sort of quiet respect for old Fagg's unobtrusiveness. But
her fancy was already taken captive by Rattler's superficial qualities,
which were obvious and pleasing. I don't think Nellie was any worse than
you or I. We are more apt to take acquaintances at their apparent value
than their intrinsic worth. It's less trouble, and, except when we want to
trust them, quite as convenient. The difficulty with women is that their
feelings are apt to get interested sooner than ours, and then, you know,
reasoning is out of the question. This is what old Fagg would have known
had he been of any account. But he wasn't. So much the worse for him.
</p>
<p>
It was a few months afterward and I was sitting in my office when in
walked old Fagg. I was surprised to see him down, but we talked over the
current topics in that mechanical manner of people who know that they have
something else to say, but are obliged to get at it in that formal way.
After an interval Fagg in his natural manner said:
</p>
<p>
"I'm going home!"
</p>
<p>
"Going home?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes—that is, I think I'll take a trip to the Atlantic States. I
came to see you, as you know I have some little property, and I have
executed a power of attorney for you to manage my affairs. I have some
papers I'd like to leave with you. Will you take charge of them?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes," I said. "But what of Nellie?"
</p>
<p>
His face fell. He tried to smile, and the combination resulted in one of
the most startling and grotesque effects I ever beheld. At length he said:
</p>
<p>
"I shall not marry Nellie—that is"—he seemed to apologize
internally for the positive form of expression—"I think that I had
better not."
</p>
<p>
"David Fagg," I said with sudden severity, "you're of no account!"
</p>
<p>
To my astonishment his face brightened. "Yes," said he, "that's it!—I'm
of no account! But I always knew it. You see I thought Rattler loved that
girl as well as I did, and I knew she liked him better than she did me,
and would be happier I dare say with him. But then I knew that old Robins
would have preferred me to him, as I was better off—and the girl
would do as he said—and, you see, I thought I was kinder in the way—and
so I left. But," he continued, as I was about to interrupt him, "for fear
the old man might object to Rattler, I've lent him enough to set him up in
business for himself in Dogtown. A pushing, active, brilliant fellow, you
know, like Rattler can get along, and will soon be in his old position
again—and you needn't be hard on him, you know, if he doesn't.
Good-by."
</p>
<p>
I was too much disgusted with his treatment of that Rattler to be at all
amiable, but as his business was profitable, I promised to attend to it,
and he left. A few weeks passed. The return steamer arrived, and a
terrible incident occupied the papers for days afterward. People in all
parts of the State conned eagerly the details of an awful shipwreck, and
those who had friends aboard went away by themselves, and read the long
list of the lost under their breath. I read of the gifted, the gallant,
the noble, and loved ones who had perished, and among them I think I was
the first to read the name of David Fagg. For the "man of no account" had
"gone home!"
</p>
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<h2>
MLISS
</h2>
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<h2>
CHAPTER I
</h2>
<p>
Just where the Sierra Nevada begins to subside in gentler undulations, and
the rivers grow less rapid and yellow, on the side of a great red
mountain, stands "Smith's Pocket." Seen from the red road at sunset, in
the red light and the red dust, its white houses look like the
outcroppings of quartz on the mountainside. The red stage topped with
red-shirted passengers is lost to view half a dozen times in the tortuous
descent, turning up unexpectedly in out-of-the-way places, and vanishing
altogether within a hundred yards of the town. It is probably owing to
this sudden twist in the road that the advent of a stranger at Smith's
Pocket is usually attended with a peculiar circumstance. Dismounting from
the vehicle at the stage office, the too-confident traveler is apt to walk
straight out of town under the impression that it lies in quite another
direction. It is related that one of the tunnel men, two miles from town,
met one of these self-reliant passengers with a carpetbag, umbrella,
Harper's Magazine, and other evidences of "Civilization and Refinement,"
plodding along over the road he had just ridden, vainly endeavoring to
find the settlement of Smith's Pocket.
</p>
<p>
An observant traveler might have found some compensation for his
disappointment in the weird aspect of that vicinity. There were huge
fissures on the hillside, and displacements of the red soil, resembling
more the chaos of some primary elemental upheaval than the work of man;
while halfway down, a long flume straddled its narrow body and
disproportionate legs over the chasm, like an enormous fossil of some
forgotten antediluvian. At every step smaller ditches crossed the road,
hiding in their sallow depths unlovely streams that crept away to a
clandestine union with the great yellow torrent below, and here and there
were the ruins of some cabin with the chimney alone left intact and the
hearthstone open to the skies.
</p>
<p>
The settlement of Smith's Pocket owed its origin to the finding of a
"pocket" on its site by a veritable Smith. Five thousand dollars were
taken out of it in one half-hour by Smith. Three thousand dollars were
expended by Smith and others in erecting a flume and in tunneling. And
then Smith's Pocket was found to be only a pocket, and subject like other
pockets to depletion. Although Smith pierced the bowels of the great red
mountain, that five thousand dollars was the first and last return of his
labor. The mountain grew reticent of its golden secrets, and the flume
steadily ebbed away the remainder of Smith's fortune. Then Smith went into
quartz-mining; then into quartz-milling; then into hydraulics and
ditching, and then by easy degrees into saloonkeeping. Presently it was
whispered that Smith was drinking a great deal; then it was known that
Smith was a habitual drunkard, and then people began to think, as they are
apt to, that he had never been anything else. But the settlement of
Smith's Pocket, like that of most discoveries, was happily not dependent
on the fortune of its pioneer, and other parties projected tunnels and
found pockets. So Smith's Pocket became a settlement, with its two fancy
stores, its two hotels, its one express office, and its two first
families. Occasionally its one long straggling street was overawed by the
assumption of the latest San Francisco fashions, imported per express,
exclusively to the first families; making outraged Nature, in the ragged
outline of her furrowed surface, look still more homely, and putting
personal insult on that greater portion of the population to whom the
Sabbath, with a change of linen, brought merely the necessity of
cleanliness without the luxury of adornment. Then there was a Methodist
Church, and hard by a Monte Bank, and a little beyond, on the
mountainside, a graveyard; and then a little schoolhouse.
</p>
<p>
"The Master," as he was known to his little flock, sat alone one night in
the schoolhouse, with some open copybooks before him, carefully making
those bold and full characters which are supposed to combine the extremes
of chirographical and moral excellence, and had got as far as "Riches are
deceitful," and was elaborating the noun with an insincerity of flourish
that was quite in the spirit of his text, when he heard a gentle tapping.
The woodpeckers had been busy about the roof during the day, and the noise
did not disturb his work. But the opening of the door, and the tapping
continuing from the inside, caused him to look up. He was slightly
startled by the figure of a young girl, dirty and shabbily clad. Still,
her great black eyes, her coarse, uncombed, lusterless black hair falling
over her sunburned face, her red arms and feet streaked with the red soil,
were all familiar to him. It was Melissa Smith—Smith's motherless
child.
</p>
<p>
"What can she want here?" thought the master. Everybody knew "Mliss," as
she was called, throughout the length and height of Red Mountain.
Everybody knew her as an incorrigible girl. Her fierce, ungovernable
disposition, her mad freaks and lawless character, were in their way as
proverbial as the story of her father's weaknesses, and as philosophically
accepted by the townsfolk. She wrangled with and fought the schoolboys
with keener invective and quite as powerful arm. She followed the trails
with a woodman's craft, and the master had met her before, miles away,
shoeless, stockingless, and bareheaded on the mountain road. The miners'
camps along the stream supplied her with subsistence during these
voluntary pilgrimages, in freely offered alms. Not but that a larger
protection had been previously extended to Mliss. The Rev. Joshua
McSnagley, "stated" preacher, had placed her in the hotel as servant, by
way of preliminary refinement, and had introduced her to his scholars at
Sunday school. But she threw plates occasionally at the landlord, and
quickly retorted to the cheap witticisms of the guests, and created in the
Sabbath school a sensation that was so inimical to the orthodox dullness
and placidity of that institution that, with a decent regard for the
starched frocks and unblemished morals of the two pink-and-white-faced
children of the first families, the reverend gentleman had her
ignominiously expelled. Such were the antecedents, and such the character
of Mliss as she stood before the master. It was shown in the ragged dress,
the unkempt hair, and bleeding feet, and asked his pity. It flashed from
her black, fearless eyes, and commanded his respect.
</p>
<p>
"I come here tonight," she said rapidly and boldly, keeping her hard
glance on his, "because I knew you was alone. I wouldn't come here when
them gals was here. I hate 'em and they hates me. That's why. You keep
school, don't you? I want to be teached!"
</p>
<p>
If to the shabbiness of her apparel and uncomeliness of her tangled hair
and dirty face she had added the humility of tears, the master would have
extended to her the usual moiety of pity, and nothing more. But with the
natural, though illogical, instincts of his species, her boldness awakened
in him something of that respect which all original natures pay
unconsciously to one another in any grade. And he gazed at her the more
fixedly as she went on still rapidly, her hand on that door latch and her
eyes on his:
</p>
<p>
"My name's Mliss—Mliss Smith! You can bet your life on that. My
father's Old Smith—Old Bummer Smith—that's what's the matter
with him. Mliss Smith—and I'm coming to school!"
</p>
<p>
"Well?" said the master.
</p>
<p>
Accustomed to be thwarted and opposed, often wantonly and cruelly, for no
other purpose than to excite the violent impulses of her nature, the
master's phlegm evidently took her by surprise. She stopped; she began to
twist a lock of her hair between her fingers; and the rigid line of upper
lip, drawn over the wicked little teeth, relaxed and quivered slightly.
Then her eyes dropped, and something like a blush struggled up to her
cheek and tried to assert itself through the splashes of redder soil, and
the sunburn of years. Suddenly she threw herself forward, calling on God
to strike her dead, and fell quite weak and helpless, with her face on the
master's desk, crying and sobbing as if her heart would break.
</p>
<p>
The master lifted her gently and waited for the paroxysm to pass. When,
with face still averted, she was repeating between her sobs the MEA CULPA
of childish penitence—that "she'd be good, she didn't mean to,"
etc., it came to him to ask her why she had left Sabbath school.
</p>
<p>
Why had she left the Sabbath school?—why? Oh, yes. What did he
(McSnagley) want to tell her she was wicked for? What did he tell her that
God hated her for? If God hated her, what did she want to go to Sabbath
school for? SHE didn't want to be "beholden" to anybody who hated her.
</p>
<p>
Had she told McSnagley this?
</p>
<p>
Yes, she had.
</p>
<p>
The master laughed. It was a hearty laugh, and echoed so oddly in the
little schoolhouse, and seemed so inconsistent and discordant with the
sighing of the pines without, that he shortly corrected himself with a
sigh. The sigh was quite as sincere in its way, however, and after a
moment of serious silence he asked about her father.
</p>
<p>
Her father? What father? Whose father? What had he ever done for her? Why
did the girls hate her? Come now! what made the folks say, "Old Bummer
Smith's Mliss!" when she passed? Yes; oh yes. She wished he was dead—she
was dead—everybody was dead; and her sobs broke forth anew.
</p>
<p>
The master then, leaning over her, told her as well as he could what you
or I might have said after hearing such unnatural theories from childish
lips; only bearing in mind perhaps better than you or I the unnatural
facts of her ragged dress, her bleeding feet, and the omnipresent shadow
of her drunken father. Then, raising her to her feet, he wrapped his shawl
around her, and, bidding her come early in the morning, he walked with her
down the road. There he bade her "good night." The moon shone brightly on
the narrow path before them. He stood and watched the bent little figure
as it staggered down the road, and waited until it had passed the little
graveyard and reached the curve of the hill, where it turned and stood for
a moment, a mere atom of suffering outlined against the far-off patient
stars. Then he went back to his work. But the lines of the copybook
thereafter faded into long parallels of never-ending road, over which
childish figures seemed to pass sobbing and crying into the night. Then,
the little schoolhouse seeming lonelier than before, he shut the door and
went home.
</p>
<p>
The next morning Mliss came to school. Her face had been washed, and her
coarse black hair bore evidence of recent struggles with the comb, in
which both had evidently suffered. The old defiant look shone occasionally
in her eyes, but her manner was tamer and more subdued. Then began a
series of little trials and self-sacrifices, in which master and pupil
bore an equal part, and which increased the confidence and sympathy
between them. Although obedient under the master's eye, at times during
recess, if thwarted or stung by a fancied slight, Mliss would rage in
ungovernable fury, and many a palpitating young savage, finding himself
matched with his own weapons of torment, would seek the master with torn
jacket and scratched face and complaints of the dreadful Mliss. There was
a serious division among the townspeople on the subject, some threatening
to withdraw their children from such evil companionship, and others as
warmly upholding the course of the master in his work of reclamation.
Meanwhile, with a steady persistence that seemed quite astonishing to him
on looking back afterward, the master drew Mliss gradually out of the
shadow of her past life, as though it were but her natural progress down
the narrow path on which he had set her feet the moonlit night of their
first meeting. Remembering the experience of the evangelical McSnagley, he
carefully avoided that Rock of Ages on which that unskillful pilot had
shipwrecked her young faith. But if, in the course of her reading, she
chanced to stumble upon those few words which have lifted such as she
above the level of the older, the wiser, and the more prudent—if she
learned something of a faith that is symbolized by suffering, and the old
light softened in her eyes, it did not take the shape of a lesson. A few
of the plainer people had made up a little sum by which the ragged Mliss
was enabled to assume the garments of respect and civilization; and often
a rough shake of the hand, and words of homely commendation from a
red-shirted and burly figure, sent a glow to the cheek of the young
master, and set him to thinking if it was altogether deserved.
</p>
<p>
Three months had passed from the time of their first meeting, and the
master was sitting late one evening over the moral and sententious copies,
when there came a tap at the door and again Mliss stood before him. She
was neatly clad and clean-faced, and there was nothing perhaps but the
long black hair and bright black eyes to remind him of his former
apparition. "Are you busy?" she asked. "Can you come with me?"—and
on his signifying his readiness, in her old willful way she said, "Come,
then, quick!"
</p>
<p>
They passed out of the door together and into the dark road. As they
entered the town the master asked her whither she was going. She replied,
"To see my father."
</p>
<p>
It was the first time he had heard her call him by that filial title, or
indeed anything more than "Old Smith" or the "Old Man." It was the first
time in three months that she had spoken of him at all, and the master
knew she had kept resolutely aloof from him since her great change.
Satisfied from her manner that it was fruitless to question her purpose,
he passively followed. In out-of-the-way places, low groggeries,
restaurants, and saloons; in gambling hells and dance houses, the master,
preceded by Mliss, came and went. In the reeking smoke and blasphemous
outcries of low dens, the child, holding the master's hand, stood and
anxiously gazed, seemingly unconscious of all in the one absorbing nature
of her pursuit. Some of the revelers, recognizing Mliss, called to the
child to sing and dance for them, and would have forced liquor upon her
but for the interference of the master. Others, recognizing him mutely,
made way for them to pass. So an hour slipped by. Then the child whispered
in his ear that there was a cabin on the other side of the creek crossed
by the long flume, where she thought he still might be. Thither they
crossed—a toilsome half-hour's walk—but in vain. They were
returning by the ditch at the abutment of the flume, gazing at the lights
of the town on the opposite bank, when, suddenly, sharply, a quick report
rang out on the clear night air. The echoes caught it, and carried it
round and round Red Mountain, and set the dogs to barking all along the
streams. Lights seemed to dance and move quickly on the outskirts of the
town for a few moments, the stream rippled quite audibly beside them, a
few stones loosened themselves from the hillside and splashed into the
stream, a heavy wind seemed to surge the branches of the funereal pines,
and then the silence seemed to fall thicker, heavier, and deadlier. The
master turned toward Mliss with an unconscious gesture of protection, but
the child had gone. Oppressed by a strange fear, he ran quickly down the
trail to the river's bed, and, jumping from boulder to boulder, reached
the base of Red Mountain and the outskirts of the village. Midway of the
crossing he looked up and held his breath in awe. For high above him on
the narrow flume he saw the fluttering little figure of his late companion
crossing swiftly in the darkness.
</p>
<p>
He climbed the bank, and, guided by a few lights moving about a central
point on the mountain, soon found himself breathless among a crowd of
awe-stricken and sorrowful men. Out from among them the child appeared,
and, taking the master's hand, led him silently before what seemed a
ragged hole in the mountain. Her face was quite white, but her excited
manner gone, and her look that of one to whom some long-expected event had
at last happened—an expression that to the master in his
bewilderment seemed almost like relief. The walls of the cavern were
partly propped by decaying timbers. The child pointed to what appeared to
be some ragged, castoff clothes left in the hole by the late occupant. The
master approached nearer with his flaming dip, and bent over them. It was
Smith, already cold, with a pistol in his hand and a bullet in his heart,
lying beside his empty pocket.
</p>
<p>
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<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER II
</h2>
<p>
The opinion which McSnagley expressed in reference to a "change of heart"
supposed to be experienced by Mliss was more forcibly described in the
gulches and tunnels. It was thought there that Mliss had "struck a good
lead." So when there was a new grave added to the little enclosure, and at
the expense of the master a little board and inscription put above it, the
RED MOUNTAIN BANNER came out quite handsomely, and did the fair thing to
the memory of one of "our oldest Pioneers," alluding gracefully to that
"bane of noble intellects," and otherwise genteelly shelving our dear
brother with the past. "He leaves an only child to mourn his loss," says
the BANNER, "who is now an exemplary scholar, thanks to the efforts of the
Rev. Mr. McSnagley." The Rev. McSnagley, in fact, made a strong point of
Mliss's conversion, and, indirectly attributing to the unfortunate child
the suicide of her father, made affecting allusions in Sunday school to
the beneficial effects of the "silent tomb," and in this cheerful
contemplation drove most of the children into speechless horror, and
caused the pink-and-white scions of the first families to howl dismally
and refuse to be comforted.
</p>
<p>
The long dry summer came. As each fierce day burned itself out in little
whiffs of pearl-gray smoke on the mountain summits, and the upspringing
breeze scattered its red embers over the landscape, the green wave which
in early spring upheaved above Smith's grave grew sere and dry and hard.
In those days the master, strolling in the little churchyard of a Sabbath
afternoon, was sometimes surprised to find a few wild flowers plucked from
the damp pine forests scattered there, and oftener rude wreaths hung upon
the little pine cross. Most of these wreaths were formed of a
sweet-scented grass, which the children loved to keep in their desks,
intertwined with the plumes of the buckeye, the syringa, and the wood
anemone, and here and there the master noticed the dark-blue cowl of the
monkshood, or deadly aconite. There was something in the odd association
of this noxious plant with these memorials which occasioned a painful
sensation to the master deeper than his esthetic sense. One day, during a
long walk, in crossing a wooded ridge he came upon Mliss in the heart of
the forest, perched upon a prostrate pine on a fantastic throne formed by
the hanging plumes of lifeless branches, her lap full of grasses and pine
burrs, and crooning to herself one of the Negro melodies of her younger
life. Recognizing him at a distance, she made room for him on her elevated
throne, and with a grave assumption of hospitality and patronage that
would have been ridiculous had it not been so terribly earnest, she fed
him with pine nuts and crab apples. The master took that opportunity to
point out to her the noxious and deadly qualities of the monkshood, whose
dark blossoms he saw in her lap, and extorted from her a promise not to
meddle with it as long as she remained his pupil. This done—as the
master had tested her integrity before—he rested satisfied, and the
strange feeling which had overcome him on seeing them died away.
</p>
<p>
Of the homes that were offered Mliss when her conversion became known, the
master preferred that of Mrs. Morpher, a womanly and kindhearted specimen
of Southwestern efflorescence, known in her maidenhood as the "Per-rairie
Rose." Being one of those who contend resolutely against their own
natures, Mrs. Morpher, by a long series of self-sacrifices and struggles,
had at last subjugated her naturally careless disposition to principles of
"order," which she considered, in common with Mr. Pope, as "Heaven's first
law." But she could not entirely govern the orbits of her satellites,
however regular her own movements, and even her own "Jeemes" sometimes
collided with her. Again her old nature asserted itself in her children.
Lycurgus dipped into the cupboard "between meals," and Aristides came home
from school without shoes, leaving those important articles on the
threshold, for the delight of a barefooted walk down the ditches. Octavia
and Cassandra were "keerless" of their clothes. So with but one exception,
however much the "Prairie Rose" might have trimmed and pruned and trained
her own matured luxuriance, the little shoots came up defiantly wild and
straggling. That one exception was Clytemnestra Morpher, aged fifteen. She
was the realization of her mother's immaculate conception—neat,
orderly, and dull.
</p>
<p>
It was an amiable weakness of Mrs. Morpher to imagine that "Clytie" was a
consolation and model for Mliss. Following this fallacy, Mrs. Morpher
threw Clytie at the head of Mliss when she was "bad," and set her up
before the child for adoration in her penitential moments. It was not,
therefore, surprising to the master to hear that Clytie was coming to
school, obviously as a favor to the master and as an example for Mliss and
others. For "Clytie" was quite a young lady. Inheriting her mother's
physical peculiarities, and in obedience to the climatic laws of the Red
Mountain region, she was an early bloomer. The youth of Smith's Pocket, to
whom this kind of flower was rare, sighed for her in April and languished
in May. Enamored swains haunted the schoolhouse at the hour of dismissal.
A few were jealous of the master.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps it was this latter circumstance that opened the master's eyes to
another. He could not help noticing that Clytie was romantic; that in
school she required a great deal of attention; that her pens were
uniformly bad and wanted fixing; that she usually accompanied the request
with a certain expectation in her eye that was somewhat disproportionate
to the quality of service she verbally required; that she sometimes
allowed the curves of a round, plump white arm to rest on his when he was
writing her copies; that she always blushed and flung back her blond curls
when she did so. I don't remember whether I have stated that the master
was a young man—it's of little consequence, however; he had been
severely educated in the school in which Clytie was taking her first
lesson, and, on the whole, withstood the flexible curves and factitious
glance like the fine young Spartan that he was. Perhaps an insufficient
quality of food may have tended to this asceticism. He generally avoided
Clytie; but one evening, when she returned to the schoolhouse after
something she had forgotten, and did not find it until the master walked
home with her, I hear that he endeavored to make himself particularly
agreeable—partly from the fact, I imagine, that his conduct was
adding gall and bitterness to the already overcharged hearts of
Clytemnestra's admirers.
</p>
<p>
The morning after this affecting episode Mliss did not come to school.
Noon came, but not Mliss. Questioning Clytie on the subject, it appeared
that they had left the school together, but the willful Mliss had taken
another road. The afternoon brought her not. In the evening he called on
Mrs. Morpher, whose motherly heart was really alarmed. Mr. Morpher had
spent all day in search of her, without discovering a trace that might
lead to her discovery. Aristides was summoned as a probable accomplice,
but that equitable infant succeeded in impressing the household with his
innocence. Mrs. Morpher entertained a vivid impression that the child
would yet be found drowned in a ditch, or, what was almost as terrible,
muddied and soiled beyond the redemption of soap and water. Sick at heart,
the master returned to the schoolhouse. As he lit his lamp and seated
himself at his desk, he found a note lying before him addressed to
himself, in Mliss's handwriting. It seemed to be written on a leaf torn
from some old memorandum book, and, to prevent sacrilegious trifling, had
been sealed with six broken wafers. Opening it almost tenderly, the master
read as follows:
</p>
<p>
RESPECTED SIR—When you read this, I am run away. Never to come back.
NEVER, NEVER, NEVER. You can give my beeds to Mary Jennings, and my
Amerika's Pride [a highly colored lithograph from a tobacco-box] to Sally
Flanders. But don't you give anything to Clytie Morpher. Don't you dare
to. Do you know what my opinion is of her, it is this, she is perfekly
disgustin. That is all and no more at present from
</p>
<p>
Yours respectfully,
</p>
<p>
MELISSA SMITH.
</p>
<p>
The master sat pondering on this strange epistle till the moon lifted its
bright face above the distant hills, and illuminated the trail that led to
the schoolhouse, beaten quite hard with the coming and going of little
feet. Then, more satisfied in mind, he tore the missive into fragments and
scattered them along the road.
</p>
<p>
At sunrise the next morning he was picking his way through the palmlike
fern and thick underbrush of the pine forest, starting the hare from its
form, and awakening a querulous protest from a few dissipated crows, who
had evidently been making a night of it, and so came to the wooded ridge
where he had once found Mliss. There he found the prostrate pine and
tasseled branches, but the throne was vacant. As he drew nearer, what
might have been some frightened animal started through the crackling
limbs. It ran up the tossed arms of the fallen monarch and sheltered
itself in some friendly foliage. The master, reaching the old seat, found
the nest still warm; looking up in the intertwining branches, he met the
black eyes of the errant Mliss. They gazed at each other without speaking.
She was first to break the silence.
</p>
<p>
"What do you want?" she asked curtly.
</p>
<p>
The master had decided on a course of action. "I want some crab apples,"
he said humbly.
</p>
<p>
"Sha'n't have 'em! go away. Why don't you get 'em of Clytemnerestera?" (It
seemed to be a relief to Mliss to express her contempt in additional
syllables to that classical young woman's already long-drawn title.) "O
you wicked thing!"
</p>
<p>
"I am hungry, Lissy. I have eaten nothing since dinner yesterday. I am
famished!" and the young man in a state of remarkable exhaustion leaned
against the tree.
</p>
<p>
Melissa's heart was touched. In the bitter days of her gypsy life she had
known the sensation he so artfully simulated. Overcome by his heartbroken
tone, but not entirely divested of suspicion, she said:
</p>
<p>
"Dig under the tree near the roots, and you'll find lots; but mind you
don't tell," for Mliss had HER hoards as well as the rats and squirrels.
</p>
<p>
But the master, of course, was unable to find them; the effects of hunger
probably blinding his senses. Mliss grew uneasy. At length she peered at
him through the leaves in an elfish way, and questioned:
</p>
<p>
"If I come down and give you some, you'll promise you won't touch me?"
</p>
<p>
The master promised.
</p>
<p>
"Hope you'll die if you do!"
</p>
<p>
The master accepted instant dissolution as a forfeit. Mliss slid down the
tree. For a few moments nothing transpired but the munching of the pine
nuts. "Do you feel better?" she asked, with some solicitude. The master
confessed to a recuperated feeling, and then, gravely thanking her,
proceeded to retrace his steps. As he expected, he had not gone far before
she called him. He turned. She was standing there quite white, with tears
in her widely opened orbs. The master felt that the right moment had come.
Going up to her, he took both her hands, and looking in her tearful eyes,
said, gravely, "Lissy, do you remember the first evening you came to see
me?"
</p>
<p>
Lissy remembered.
</p>
<p>
"You asked me if you might come to school, for you wanted to learn
something and be better, and I said—"
</p>
<p>
"Come," responded the child, promptly.
</p>
<p>
"What would YOU say if the master now came to you and said that he was
lonely without his little scholar, and that he wanted her to come and
teach him to be better?"
</p>
<p>
The child hung her head for a few moments in silence. The master waited
patiently. Tempted by the quiet, a hare ran close to the couple, and
raising her bright eyes and velvet forepaws, sat and gazed at them. A
squirrel ran halfway down the furrowed bark of the fallen tree, and there
stopped.
</p>
<p>
"We are waiting, Lissy," said the master, in a whisper, and the child
smiled. Stirred by a passing breeze, the treetops rocked, and a long
pencil of light stole through their interlaced boughs full on the doubting
face and irresolute little figure. Suddenly she took the master's hand in
her quick way. What she said was scarcely audible, but the master, putting
the black hair back from her forehead, kissed her; and so, hand in hand,
they passed out of the damp aisles and forest odors into the open sunlit
road.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER III
</h2>
<p>
Somewhat less spiteful in her intercourse with other scholars, Mliss still
retained an offensive attitude in regard to Clytemnestra. Perhaps the
jealous element was not entirely lulled in her passionate little breast.
Perhaps it was only that the round curves and plump outline offered more
extended pinching surface. But while such ebullitions were under the
master's control, her enmity occasionally took a new and irrepressible
form.
</p>
<p>
The master in his first estimate of the child's character could not
conceive that she had ever possessed a doll. But the master, like many
other professed readers of character, was safer in a posteriori than a
priori reasoning. Mliss had a doll, but then it was emphatically Mliss's
doll—a smaller copy of herself. Its unhappy existence had been a
secret discovered accidentally by Mrs. Morpher. It had been the old-time
companion of Mliss's wanderings, and bore evident marks of suffering. Its
original complexion was long since washed away by the weather and anointed
by the slime of ditches. It looked very much as Mliss had in days past.
Its one gown of faded stuff was dirty and ragged, as hers had been. Mliss
had never been known to apply to it any childish term of endearment. She
never exhibited it in the presence of other children. It was put severely
to bed in a hollow tree near the schoolhouse, and only allowed exercise
during Mliss's rambles. Fulfilling a stern duty to her doll, as she would
to herself, it knew no luxuries.
</p>
<p>
Now Mrs. Morpher, obeying a commendable impulse, bought another doll and
gave it to Mliss. The child received it gravely and curiously. The master
on looking at it one day fancied he saw a slight resemblance in its round
red cheeks and mild blue eyes to Clytemnestra. It became evident before
long that Mliss had also noticed the same resemblance. Accordingly she
hammered its waxen head on the rocks when she was alone, and sometimes
dragged it with a string round its neck to and from school. At other
times, setting it up on her desk, she made a pincushion of its patient and
inoffensive body. Whether this was done in revenge of what she considered
a second figurative obtrusion of Clytie's excellences upon her, or whether
she had an intuitive appreciation of the rites of certain other heathens,
and, indulging in that "fetish" ceremony, imagined that the original of
her wax model would pine away and finally die, is a metaphysical question
I shall not now consider.
</p>
<p>
In spite of these moral vagaries, the master could not help noticing in
her different tasks the working of a quick, restless, and vigorous
perception. She knew neither the hesitancy nor the doubts of childhood.
Her answers in class were always slightly dashed with audacity. Of course
she was not infallible. But her courage and daring in passing beyond her
own depth and that of the floundering little swimmers around her, in their
minds outweighed all errors of judgment. Children are not better than
grown people in this respect, I fancy; and whenever the little red hand
flashed above her desk, there was a wondering silence, and even the master
was sometimes oppressed with a doubt of his own experience and judgment.
</p>
<p>
Nevertheless, certain attributes which at first amused and entertained his
fancy began to afflict him with grave doubts. He could not but see that
Mliss was revengeful, irreverent, and willful. That there was but one
better quality which pertained to her semisavage disposition—the
faculty of physical fortitude and self-sacrifice, and another, though not
always an attribute of the noble savage—Truth. Mliss was both
fearless and sincere; perhaps in such a character the adjectives were
synonymous.
</p>
<p>
The master had been doing some hard thinking on this subject, and had
arrived at that conclusion quite common to all who think sincerely, that
he was generally the slave of his own prejudices, when he determined to
call on the Rev. McSnagley for advice. This decision was somewhat
humiliating to his pride, as he and McSnagley were not friends. But he
thought of Mliss, and the evening of their first meeting; and perhaps with
a pardonable superstition that it was not chance alone that had guided her
willful feet to the schoolhouse, and perhaps with a complacent
consciousness of the rare magnanimity of the act, he choked back his
dislike and went to McSnagley.
</p>
<p>
The reverend gentleman was glad to see him. Moreover, he observed that the
master was looking "peartish," and hoped he had got over the "neuralgy"
and "rheumatiz." He himself had been troubled with a dumb "ager" since
last conference. But he had learned to "rastle and pray."
</p>
<p>
Pausing a moment to enable the master to write his certain method of
curing the dumb "ager" upon the book and volume of his brain, Mr.
McSnagley proceeded to inquire after Sister Morpher. "She is an adornment
to ChrisTEWanity, and has a likely growin' young family," added Mr.
McSnagley; "and there's that mannerly young gal—so well behaved—Miss
Clytie." In fact, Clytie's perfections seemed to affect him to such an
extent that he dwelt for several minutes upon them. The master was doubly
embarrassed. In the first place, there was an enforced contrast with poor
Mliss in all this praise of Clytie. Secondly, there was something
unpleasantly confidential in his tone of speaking of Mrs. Morpher's
earliest born. So that the master, after a few futile efforts to say
something natural, found it convenient to recall another engagement, and
left without asking the information required, but in his after reflections
somewhat unjustly giving the Rev. Mr. McSnagley the full benefit of having
refused it.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps this rebuff placed the master and pupil once more in the close
communion of old. The child seemed to notice the change in the master's
manner, which had of late been constrained, and in one of their long
postprandial walks she stopped suddenly, and mounting a stump, looked full
in his face with big, searching eyes. "You ain't mad?" said she, with an
interrogative shake of the black braids. "No." "Nor bothered?" "No." "Nor
hungry?" (Hunger was to Mliss a sickness that might attack a person at any
moment.) "No." "Nor thinking of her?" "Of whom, Lissy?" "That white girl."
(This was the latest epithet invented by Mliss, who was a very dark
brunette, to express Clytemnestra.) "No." "Upon your word?" (A substitute
for "Hope you'll die!" proposed by the master.) "Yes." "And sacred honor?"
"Yes." Then Mliss gave him a fierce little kiss, and, hopping down,
fluttered off. For two or three days after that she condescended to appear
more like other children, and be, as she expressed it, "good."
</p>
<p>
Two years had passed since the master's advent at Smith's Pocket, and as
his salary was not large, and the prospects of Smith's Pocket eventually
becoming the capital of the State not entirely definite, he contemplated a
change. He had informed the school trustees privately of his intentions,
but educated young men of unblemished moral character being scarce at that
time, he consented to continue his school term through the winter to early
spring. None else knew of his intention except his one friend, a Dr.
Duchesne, a young Creole physician known to the people of Wingdam as
"Duchesny." He never mentioned it to Mrs. Morpher, Clytie, or any of his
scholars. His reticence was partly the result of a constitutional
indisposition to fuss, partly a desire to be spared the questions and
surmises of vulgar curiosity, and partly that he never really believed he
was going to do anything before it was done.
</p>
<p>
He did not like to think of Mliss. It was a selfish instinct, perhaps,
which made him try to fancy his feeling for the child was foolish,
romantic, and unpractical. He even tried to imagine that she would do
better under the control of an older and sterner teacher. Then she was
nearly eleven, and in a few years, by the rules of Red Mountain, would be
a woman. He had done his duty. After Smith's death he addressed letters to
Smith's relatives, and received one answer from a sister of Melissa's
mother. Thanking the master, she stated her intention of leaving the
Atlantic States for California with her husband in a few months. This was
a slight superstructure for the airy castle which the master pictured for
Mliss's home, but it was easy to fancy that some loving, sympathetic
woman, with the claims of kindred, might better guide her wayward nature.
Yet, when the master had read the letter, Mliss listened to it carelessly,
received it submissively, and afterward cut figures out of it with her
scissors, supposed to represent Clytemnestra, labeled "the white girl," to
prevent mistakes, and impaled them upon the outer walls of the
schoolhouse.
</p>
<p>
When the summer was about spent, and the last harvest had been gathered in
the valleys, the master bethought him of gathering in a few ripened shoots
of the young idea, and of having his Harvest Home, or Examination. So the
savants and professionals of Smith's Pocket were gathered to witness that
time-honored custom of placing timid children in a constrained positions
and bullying them as in a witness box. As usual in such cases, the most
audacious and self-possessed were the lucky recipients of the honors. The
reader will imagine that in the present instance Mliss and Clytie were
preeminent, and divided public attention; Mliss with her clearness of
material perception and self-reliance, Clytie with her placid self-esteem
and saintlike correctness of deportment. The other little ones were timid
and blundering. Mliss's readiness and brilliancy, of course, captivated
the greatest number and provoked the greatest applause. Mliss's
antecedents had unconsciously awakened the strongest sympathies of a class
whose athletic forms were ranged against the walls, or whose handsome
bearded faces looked in at the windows. But Mliss's popularity was
overthrown by an unexpected circumstance.
</p>
<p>
McSnagley had invited himself, and had been going through the pleasing
entertainment of frightening the more timid pupils by the vaguest and most
ambiguous questions delivered in an impressive funereal tone; and Mliss
had soared into astronomy, and was tracking the course of our spotted ball
through space, and keeping time with the music of the spheres, and
defining the tethered orbits of the planets, when McSnagley impressively
arose. "Meelissy! ye were speaking of the revolutions of this yere yearth
and the move-MENTS of the sun, and I think ye said it had been a doing of
it since the creashun, eh?" Mliss nodded a scornful affirmative. "Well,
war that the truth?" said McSnagley, folding his arms. "Yes," said Mliss,
shutting up her little red lips tightly. The handsome outlines at the
windows peered further in the schoolroom, and a saintly Raphael face, with
blond beard and soft blue eyes, belonging to the biggest scamp in the
diggings, turned toward the child and whispered, "Stick to it, Mliss!" The
reverend gentleman heaved a deep sigh, and cast a compassionate glance at
the master, then at the children, and then rested his look on Clytie. That
young woman softly elevated her round, white arm. Its seductive curves
were enhanced by a gorgeous and massive specimen bracelet, the gift of one
of her humblest worshipers, worn in honor of the occasion. There was a
momentary silence. Clytie's round cheeks were very pink and soft. Clytie's
big eyes were very bright and blue. Clytie's low-necked white book muslin
rested softly on Clytie's white, plump shoulders. Clytie looked at the
master, and the master nodded. Then Clytie spoke softly:
</p>
<p>
"Joshua commanded the sun to stand still, and it obeyed him!" There was a
low hum of applause in the schoolroom, a triumphant expression on
McSnagley's face, a grave shadow on the master's, and a comical look of
disappointment reflected from the windows. Mliss skimmed rapidly over her
astronomy, and then shut the book with a loud snap. A groan burst from
McSnagley, an expression of astonishment from the schoolroom, a yell from
the windows, as Mliss brought her red fist down on the desk, with the
emphatic declaration:
</p>
<p>
"It's a damn lie. I don't believe it!"
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER IV
</h2>
<p>
The long wet season had drawn near its close. Signs of spring were visible
in the swelling buds and rushing torrents. The pine forests exhaled the
fresher spicery. The azaleas were already budding, the ceanothus getting
ready its lilac livery for spring. On the green upland which climbed Red
Mountain at its southern aspect the long spike of the monkshood shot up
from its broad-leaved stool, and once more shook its dark-blue bells.
Again the billow above Smith's grave was soft and green, its crest just
tossed with the foam of daisies and buttercups. The little graveyard had
gathered a few new dwellers in the past year, and the mounds were placed
two by two by the little paling until they reached Smith's grave, and
there there was but one. General superstition had shunned it, and the plot
beside Smith was vacant.
</p>
<p>
There had been several placards posted about the town, intimating that, at
a certain period, a celebrated dramatic company would perform, for a few
days, a series of "side-splitting" and "screaming farces"; that,
alternating pleasantly with this, there would be some melodrama and a
grand divertisement which would include singing, dancing, etc. These
announcements occasioned a great fluttering among the little folk, and
were the theme of much excitement and great speculation among the master's
scholars. The master had promised Mliss, to whom this sort of thing was
sacred and rare, that she should go, and on that momentous evening the
master and Mliss "assisted."
</p>
<p>
The performance was the prevalent style of heavy mediocrity; the melodrama
was not bad enough to laugh at nor good enough to excite. But the master,
turning wearily to the child, was astonished and felt something like
self-accusation in noticing the peculiar effect upon her excitable nature.
The red blood flushed in her cheeks at each stroke of her panting little
heart. Her small passionate lips were slightly parted to give vent to her
hurried breath. Her widely opened lids threw up and arched her black
eyebrows. She did not laugh at the dismal comicalities of the funny man,
for Mliss seldom laughed. Nor was she discreetly affected to the delicate
extremes of the corner of a white handkerchief, as was the tender-hearted
"Clytie," who was talking with her "feller" and ogling the master at the
same moment. But when the performance was over, and the green curtain fell
on the little stage, Mliss drew a long deep breath, and turned to the
master's grave face with a half-apologetic smile and wearied gesture. Then
she said, "Now take me home!" and dropped the lids of her black eyes, as
if to dwell once more in fancy on the mimic stage.
</p>
<p>
On their way to Mrs. Morpher's the master thought proper to ridicule the
whole performance. Now he shouldn't wonder if Mliss thought that the young
lady who acted so beautifully was really in earnest, and in love with the
gentleman who wore such fine clothes. Well, if she were in love with him
it was a very unfortunate thing! "Why?" said Mliss, with an upward sweep
of the drooping lid. "Oh! well, he couldn't support his wife at his
present salary, and pay so much a week for his fine clothes, and then they
wouldn't receive as much wages if they were married as if they were merely
lovers—that is," added the master, "if they are not already married
to somebody else; but I think the husband of the pretty young countess
takes the tickets at the door, or pulls up the curtain, or snuffs the
candles, or does something equally refined and elegant. As to the young
man with nice clothes, which are really nice now, and must cost at least
two and a half or three dollars, not to speak of that mantle of red
drugget which I happen to know the price of, for I bought some of it for
my room once—as to this young man, Lissy, he is a pretty good
fellow, and if he does drink occasionally, I don't think people ought to
take advantage of it and give him black eyes and throw him in the mud. Do
you? I am sure he might owe me two dollars and a half a long time, before
I would throw it up in his face, as the fellow did the other night at
Wingdam."
</p>
<p>
Mliss had taken his hand in both of hers and was trying to look in his
eyes, which the young man kept as resolutely averted. Mliss had a faint
idea of irony, indulging herself sometimes in a species of sardonic humor,
which was equally visible in her actions and her speech. But the young man
continued in this strain until they had reached Mrs. Morpher's, and he had
deposited Mliss in her maternal charge. Waiving the invitation of Mrs.
Morpher to refreshment and rest, and shading his eyes with his hand to
keep out the blue-eyed Clytemnestra's siren glances, he excused himself,
and went home.
</p>
<p>
For two or three days after the advent of the dramatic company, Mliss was
late at school, and the master's usual Friday afternoon ramble was for
once omitted, owing to the absence of his trustworthy guide. As he was
putting away his books and preparing to leave the schoolhouse, a small
voice piped at his side, "Please, sir?" The master turned and there stood
Aristides Morpher.
</p>
<p>
"Well, my little man," said the master, impatiently, "what is it? quick!"
</p>
<p>
"Please, sir, me and 'Kerg' thinks that Mliss is going to run away agin."
</p>
<p>
"What's that, sir?" said the master, with that unjust testiness with which
we always receive disagreeable news.
</p>
<p>
"Why, sir, she don't stay home any more, and 'Kerg' and me see her talking
with one of those actor fellers, and she's with him now; and please, sir,
yesterday she told 'Kerg' and me she could make a speech as well as Miss
Cellerstina Montmoressy, and she spouted right off by heart," and the
little fellow paused in a collapsed condition.
</p>
<p>
"What actor?" asked the master.
</p>
<p>
"Him as wears the shiny hat. And hair. And gold pin. And gold chain," said
the just Aristides, putting periods for commas to eke out his breath.
</p>
<p>
The master put on his gloves and hat, feeling an unpleasant tightness in
his chest and thorax, and walked out in the road. Aristides trotted along
by his side, endeavoring to keep pace with his short legs to the master's
strides, when the master stopped suddenly, and Aristides bumped up against
him. "Where were they talking?" asked the master, as if continuing the
conversation.
</p>
<p>
"At the Arcade," said Aristides.
</p>
<p>
When they reached the main street the master paused. "Run down home," said
he to the boy. "If Mliss is there, come to the Arcade and tell me. If she
isn't there, stay home; run!" And off trotted the short-legged Aristides.
</p>
<p>
The Arcade was just across the way—a long, rambling building
containing a barroom, billiard room, and restaurant. As the young man
crossed the plaza he noticed that two or three of the passers-by turned
and looked after him. He looked at his clothes, took out his handkerchief,
and wiped his face before he entered the barroom. It contained the usual
number of loungers, who stared at him as he entered. One of them looked at
him so fixedly and with such a strange expression that the master stopped
and looked again, and then saw it was only his own reflection in a large
mirror. This made the master think that perhaps he was a little excited,
and so he took up a copy of the RED MOUNTAIN BANNER from one of the
tables, and tried to recover his composure by reading the column of
advertisements.
</p>
<p>
He then walked through the barroom, through the restaurant, and into the
billiard room. The child was not there. In the latter apartment a person
was standing by one of the tables with a broad-brimmed glazed hat on his
head. The master recognized him as the agent of the dramatic company; he
had taken a dislike to him at their first meeting, from the peculiar
fashion of wearing his beard and hair. Satisfied that the object of his
search was not there, he turned to the man with a glazed hat. He had
noticed the master, but tried that common trick of unconsciousness in
which vulgar natures always fail. Balancing a billiard cue in his hand, he
pretended to play with a ball in the center of the table. The master stood
opposite to him until he raised his eyes; when their glances met, the
master walked up to him.
</p>
<p>
He had intended to avoid a scene or quarrel, but when he began to speak,
something kept rising in his throat and retarded his utterance, and his
own voice frightened him, it sounded so distant, low, and resonant. "I
understand," he began, "that Melissa Smith, an orphan, and one of my
scholars, has talked with you about adopting your profession. Is that so?"
</p>
<p>
The man with the glazed hat leaned over the table and made an imaginary
shot that sent the ball spinning round the cushions. Then, walking round
the table, he recovered the ball and placed it upon the spot. This duty
discharged, getting ready for another shot, he said:
</p>
<p>
"S'pose she has?"
</p>
<p>
The master choked up again, but, squeezing the cushion of the table in his
gloved hand, he went on:
</p>
<p>
"If you are a gentleman, I have only to tell you that I am her guardian,
and responsible for her career. You know as well as I do the kind of life
you offer her. As you may learn of anyone here, I have already brought her
out of an existence worse than death—out of the streets and the
contamination of vice. I am trying to do so again. Let us talk like men.
She has neither father, mother, sister, or brother. Are you seeking to
give her an equivalent for these?"
</p>
<p>
The man with the glazed hat examined the point of his cue, and then looked
around for somebody to enjoy the joke with him.
</p>
<p>
"I know that she is a strange, willful girl," continued the master, "but
she is better than she was. I believe that I have some influence over her
still. I beg and hope, therefore, that you will take no further steps in
this matter, but as a man, as a gentleman, leave her to me. I am willing—"
But here something rose again in the master's throat, and the sentence
remained unfinished.
</p>
<p>
The man with the glazed hat, mistaking the master's silence, raised his
head with a coarse, brutal laugh, and said in a loud voice:
</p>
<p>
"Want her yourself, do you? That cock won't fight here, young man!"
</p>
<p>
The insult was more in the tone than in the words, more in the glance than
tone, and more in the man's instinctive nature than all these. The best
appreciable rhetoric to this kind of animal is a blow. The master felt
this, and, with his pent-up, nervous energy finding expression in the one
act, he struck the brute full in his grinning face. The blow sent the
glazed hat one way and the cue another, and tore the glove and skin from
the master's hand from knuckle to joint. It opened up the corners of the
fellow's mouth, and spoilt the peculiar shape of his beard for some time
to come.
</p>
<p>
There was a shout, an imprecation, a scuffle, and the trampling of many
feet. Then the crowd parted right and left, and two sharp quick reports
followed each other in rapid succession. Then they closed again about his
opponent, and the master was standing alone. He remembered picking bits of
burning wadding from his coat sleeve with his left hand. Someone was
holding his other hand. Looking at it, he saw it was still bleeding from
the blow, but his fingers were clenched around the handle of a glittering
knife. He could not remember when or how he got it.
</p>
<p>
The man who was holding his hand was Mr. Morpher. He hurried the master to
the door, but the master held back, and tried to tell him as well as he
could with his parched throat about "Mliss." "It's all right, my boy,"
said Mr. Morpher. "She's home!" And they passed out into the street
together. As they walked along Mr. Morpher said that Mliss had come
running into the house a few moments before, and had dragged him out,
saying that somebody was trying to kill the master at the Arcade. Wishing
to be alone, the master promised Mr. Morpher that he would not seek the
agent again that night, and parted from him, taking the road toward the
schoolhouse. He was surprised in nearing it to find the door open—still
more surprised to find Mliss sitting there.
</p>
<p>
The master's nature, as I have hinted before, had, like most sensitive
organizations, a selfish basis. The brutal taunt thrown out by his late
adversary still rankled in his heart. It was possible, he thought, that
such a construction might be put upon his affection for the child, which
at best was foolish and Quixotic. Besides, had she not voluntarily
abnegated his authority and affection? And what had everybody else said
about her? Why should he alone combat the opinion of all, and be at last
obliged tacitly to confess the truth of all they predicted? And he had
been a participant in a low barroom fight with a common boor, and risked
his life, to prove what? What had he proved? Nothing? What would the
people say? What would his friends say? What would McSnagley say?
</p>
<p>
In his self-accusation the last person he should have wished to meet was
Mliss. He entered the door, and going up to his desk, told the child, in a
few cold words, that he was busy, and wished to be alone. As she rose he
took her vacant seat, and, sitting down, buried his head in his hands.
When he looked up again she was still standing there. She was looking at
his face with an anxious expression.
</p>
<p>
"Did you kill him?" she asked.
</p>
<p>
"No!" said the master.
</p>
<p>
"That's what I gave you the knife for!" said the child, quickly.
</p>
<p>
"Gave me the knife?" repeated the master, in bewilderment.
</p>
<p>
"Yes, gave you the knife. I was there under the bar. Saw you hit him. Saw
you both fall. He dropped his old knife. I gave it to you. Why didn't you
stick him?" said Mliss rapidly, with an expressive twinkle of the black
eyes and a gesture of the little red hand.
</p>
<p>
The master could only look his astonishment.
</p>
<p>
"Yes," said Mliss. "If you'd asked me, I'd told you I was off with the
play-actors. Why was I off with the play-actors? Because you wouldn't tell
me you was going away. I knew it. I heard you tell the Doctor so. I wasn't
a goin' to stay here alone with those Morphers. I'd rather die first."
</p>
<p>
With a dramatic gesture which was perfectly consistent with her character,
she drew from her bosom a few limp green leaves, and, holding them out at
arm's length, said in her quick vivid way, and in the queer pronunciation
of her old life, which she fell into when unduly excited:
</p>
<p>
"That's the poison plant you said would kill me. I'll go with the
play-actors, or I'll eat this and die here. I don't care which. I won't
stay here, where they hate and despise me! Neither would you let me, if
you didn't hate and despise me too!"
</p>
<p>
The passionate little breast heaved, and two big tears peeped over the
edge of Mliss's eyelids, but she whisked them away with the corner of her
apron as if they had been wasps.
</p>
<p>
"If you lock me up in jail," said Mliss, fiercely, "to keep me from the
play-actors, I'll poison myself. Father killed himself—why shouldn't
I? You said a mouthful of that root would kill me, and I always carry it
here," and she struck her breast with her clenched fist.
</p>
<p>
The master thought of the vacant plot beside Smith's grave, and of the
passionate little figure before him. Seizing her hands in his and looking
full into her truthful eyes, he said:
</p>
<p>
"Lissy, will you go with ME?"
</p>
<p>
The child put her arms around his neck, and said joyfully, "Yes."
</p>
<p>
"But now—tonight?"
</p>
<p>
"Tonight."
</p>
<p>
And, hand in hand, they passed into the road—the narrow road that
had once brought her weary feet to the master's door, and which it seemed
she should not tread again alone. The stars glittered brightly above them.
For good or ill the lesson had been learned, and behind them the school of
Red Mountain closed upon them forever.
</p>
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<h2>
THE RIGHT EYE OF THE COMMANDER
</h2>
<p>
The year of grace 1797 passed away on the coast of California in a
southwesterly gale. The little bay of San Carlos, albeit sheltered by the
headlands of the blessed Trinity, was rough and turbulent; its foam clung
quivering to the seaward wall of the Mission garden; the air was filled
with flying sand and spume, and as the Senor Commandante, Hermenegildo
Salvatierra, looked from the deep embrasured window of the Presidio
guardroom, he felt the salt breath of the distant sea buffet a color into
his smoke-dried cheeks.
</p>
<p>
The Commander, I have said, was gazing thoughtfully from the window of the
guardroom. He may have been reviewing the events of the year now about to
pass away. But, like the garrison at the Presidio, there was little to
review; the year, like its predecessors, had been uneventful—the
days had slipped by in a delicious monotony of simple duties, unbroken by
incident or interruption. The regularly recurring feasts and saints' days,
the half-yearly courier from San Diego, the rare transport ship and rarer
foreign vessel, were the mere details of his patriarchal life. If there
was no achievement, there was certainly no failure. Abundant harvests and
patient industry amply supplied the wants of Presidio and Mission.
Isolated from the family of nations, the wars which shook the world
concerned them not so much as the last earthquake; the struggle that
emancipated their sister colonies on the other side of the continent to
them had no suggestiveness. In short, it was that glorious Indian summer
of California history around which so much poetical haze still lingers—that
bland, indolent autumn of Spanish rule, so soon to be followed by the
wintry storms of Mexican independence and the reviving spring of American
conquest.
</p>
<p>
The Commander turned from the window and walked toward the fire that
burned brightly on the deep ovenlike hearth. A pile of copybooks, the work
of the Presidio school, lay on the table. As he turned over the leaves
with a paternal interest, and surveyed the fair round Scripture text—the
first pious pothooks of the pupils of San Carlos—an audible
commentary fell from his lips: "'Abimelech took her from Abraham'—ah,
little one, excellent!—'Jacob sent to see his brother'—body of
Christ! that upstroke of thine, Paquita, is marvelous; the Governor shall
see it!" A film of honest pride dimmed the Commander's left eye—the
right, alas! twenty years before had been sealed by an Indian arrow. He
rubbed it softly with the sleeve of his leather jacket, and continued:
"'The Ishmaelites having arrived—'"
</p>
<p>
He stopped, for there was a step in the courtyard, a foot upon the
threshold, and a stranger entered. With the instinct of an old soldier,
the Commander, after one glance at the intruder, turned quickly toward the
wall, where his trusty Toledo hung, or should have been hanging. But it
was not there, and as he recalled that the last time he had seen that
weapon it was being ridden up and down the gallery by Pepito, the infant
son of Bautista, the tortilla-maker, he blushed and then contented himself
with frowning upon the intruder.
</p>
<p>
But the stranger's air, though irreverent, was decidedly peaceful. He was
unarmed, and wore the ordinary cape of tarpaulin and sea boots of a
mariner. Except a villainous smell of codfish, there was little about him
that was peculiar.
</p>
<p>
His name, as he informed the Commander, in Spanish that was more fluent
than elegant or precise—his name was Peleg Scudder. He was master of
the schooner GENERAL COURT, of the port of Salem in Massachusetts, on a
trading voyage to the South Seas, but now driven by stress of weather into
the bay of San Carlos. He begged permission to ride out the gale under the
headlands of the blessed Trinity, and no more. Water he did not need,
having taken in a supply at Bodega. He knew the strict surveillance of the
Spanish port regulations in regard to foreign vessels, and would do
nothing against the severe discipline and good order of the settlement.
There was a slight tinge of sarcasm in his tone as he glanced toward the
desolate parade ground of the Presidio and the open unguarded gate. The
fact was that the sentry, Felipe Gomez, had discreetly retired to shelter
at the beginning of the storm, and was then sound asleep in the corridor.
</p>
<p>
The Commander hesitated. The port regulations were severe, but he was
accustomed to exercise individual authority, and beyond an old order
issued ten years before, regarding the American ship COLUMBIA, there was
no precedent to guide him. The storm was severe, and a sentiment of
humanity urged him to grant the stranger's request. It is but just to the
Commander to say that his inability to enforce a refusal did not weigh
with his decision. He would have denied with equal disregard of
consequences that right to a seventy-four-gun ship which he now yielded so
gracefully to this Yankee trading schooner. He stipulated only that there
should be no communication between the ship and shore. "For yourself,
Senor Captain," he continued, "accept my hospitality. The fort is yours as
long as you shall grace it with your distinguished presence"; and with
old-fashioned courtesy, he made the semblance of withdrawing from the
guardroom.
</p>
<p>
Master Peleg Scudder smiled as he thought of the half-dismantled fort, the
two moldy brass cannon, cast in Manila a century previous, and the
shiftless garrison. A wild thought of accepting the Commander's offer
literally, conceived in the reckless spirit of a man who never let slip an
offer for trade, for a moment filled his brain, but a timely reflection of
the commercial unimportance of the transaction checked him. He only took a
capacious quid of tobacco as the Commander gravely drew a settle before
the fire, and in honor of his guest untied the black-silk handkerchief
that bound his grizzled brows.
</p>
<p>
What passed between Salvatierra and his guest that night it becomes me
not, as a grave chronicler of the salient points of history, to relate. I
have said that Master Peleg Scudder was a fluent talker, and under the
influence of divers strong waters, furnished by his host, he became still
more loquacious. And think of a man with a twenty years' budget of gossip!
The Commander learned, for the first time, how Great Britain lost her
colonies; of the French Revolution; of the great Napoleon, whose
achievements, perhaps, Peleg colored more highly than the Commander's
superiors would have liked. And when Peleg turned questioner, the
Commander was at his mercy. He gradually made himself master of the gossip
of the Mission and Presidio, the "small-beer" chronicles of that pastoral
age, the conversion of the heathen, the Presidio schools, and even asked
the Commander how he had lost his eye! It is said that at this point of
the conversation Master Peleg produced from about his person divers small
trinkets, kickshaws, and newfangled trifles, and even forced some of them
upon his host. It is further alleged that under the malign influence of
Peleg and several glasses of aguardiente, the Commander lost somewhat of
his decorum, and behaved in a manner unseemly for one in his position,
reciting high-flown Spanish poetry, and even piping in a thin, high voice
divers madrigals and heathen canzonets of an amorous complexion; chiefly
in regard to a "little one" who was his, the Commander's, "soul"! These
allegations, perhaps unworthy the notice of a serious chronicler, should
be received with great caution, and are introduced here as simple hearsay.
That the Commander, however, took a handkerchief and attempted to show his
guest the mysteries of the SEMICUACUA, capering in an agile but indecorous
manner about the apartment, has been denied. Enough for the purposes of
this narrative that at midnight Peleg assisted his host to bed with many
protestations of undying friendship, and then, as the gale had abated,
took his leave of the Presidio and hurried aboard the GENERAL COURT. When
the day broke the ship was gone.
</p>
<p>
I know not if Peleg kept his word with his host. It is said that the holy
fathers at the Mission that night heard a loud chanting in the plaza, as
of the heathens singing psalms through their noses; that for many days
after an odor of salt codfish prevailed in the settlement; that a dozen
hard nutmegs, which were unfit for spice or seed, were found in the
possession of the wife of the baker, and that several bushels of shoe
pegs, which bore a pleasing resemblance to oats, but were quite inadequate
to the purposes of provender, were discovered in the stable of the
blacksmith. But when the reader reflects upon the sacredness of a Yankee
trader's word, the stringent discipline of the Spanish port regulations,
and the proverbial indisposition of my countrymen to impose upon the
confidence of a simple people, he will at once reject this part of the
story.
</p>
<p>
A roll of drums, ushering in the year 1798, awoke the Commander. The sun
was shining brightly, and the storm had ceased. He sat up in bed, and
through the force of habit rubbed his left eye. As the remembrance of the
previous night came back to him, he jumped from his couch and ran to the
window. There was no ship in the bay. A sudden thought seemed to strike
him, and he rubbed both of his eyes. Not content with this, he consulted
the metallic mirror which hung beside his crucifix. There was no mistake;
the Commander had a visible second eye—a right one—as good,
save for the purposes of vision, as the left.
</p>
<p>
Whatever might have been the true secret of this transformation, but one
opinion prevailed at San Carlos. It was one of those rare miracles
vouchsafed a pious Catholic community as an evidence to the heathen,
through the intercession of the blessed San Carlos himself. That their
beloved Commander, the temporal defender of the Faith, should be the
recipient of this miraculous manifestation was most fit and seemly. The
Commander himself was reticent; he could not tell a falsehood—he
dared not tell the truth. After all, if the good folk of San Carlos
believed that the powers of his right eye were actually restored, was it
wise and discreet for him to undeceive them? For the first time in his
life the Commander thought of policy—for the first time he quoted
that text which has been the lure of so many well-meaning but easy
Christians, of being "all things to all men." Infeliz Hermenegildo
Salvatierra!
</p>
<p>
For by degrees an ominous whisper crept though the little settlement. The
Right Eye of the Commander, although miraculous, seemed to exercise a
baleful effect upon the beholder. No one could look at it without winking.
It was cold, hard, relentless, and unflinching. More than that, it seemed
to be endowed with a dreadful prescience—a faculty of seeing through
and into the inarticulate thoughts of those it looked upon. The soldiers
of the garrison obeyed the eye rather than the voice of their commander,
and answered his glance rather than his lips in questioning. The servants
could not evade the ever watchful but cold attention that seemed to pursue
them. The children of the Presidio school smirched their copybooks under
the awful supervision, and poor Paquita, the prize pupil, failed utterly
in that marvelous upstroke when her patron stood beside her. Gradually
distrust, suspicion, self-accusation, and timidity took the place of
trust, confidence, and security throughout San Carlos. Whenever the Right
Eye of the Commander fell, a shadow fell with it.
</p>
<p>
Nor was Salvatierra entirely free from the baleful influence of his
miraculous acquisition. Unconscious of its effect upon others, he only saw
in their actions evidence of certain things that the crafty Peleg had
hinted on that eventful New Year's eve. His most trusty retainers
stammered, blushed, and faltered before him. Self-accusations, confessions
of minor faults and delinquencies, or extravagant excuses and apologies
met his mildest inquiries. The very children that he loved—his pet
pupil, Paquita—seemed to be conscious of some hidden sin. The result
of this constant irritation showed itself more plainly. For the first
half-year the Commander's voice and eye were at variance. He was still
kind, tender, and thoughtful in speech. Gradually, however, his voice took
upon itself the hardness of his glance and its skeptical, impassive
quality, and as the year again neared its close it was plain that the
Commander had fitted himself to the eye, and not the eye to the Commander.
</p>
<p>
It may be surmised that these changes did not escape the watchful
solicitude of the Fathers. Indeed, the few who were first to ascribe the
right eye of Salvatierra to miraculous origin and the special grace of the
blessed San Carlos, now talked openly of witchcraft and the agency of
Luzbel, the evil one. It would have fared ill with Hermenegildo
Salvatierra had he been aught but Commander or amenable to local
authority. But the reverend father, Friar Manuel de Cortes, had no power
over the political executive, and all attempts at spiritual advice failed
signally. He retired baffled and confused from his first interview with
the Commander, who seemed now to take a grim satisfaction in the fateful
power of his glance. The holy Father contradicted himself, exposed the
fallacies of his own arguments, and even, it is asserted, committed
himself to several undoubted heresies. When the Commander stood up at
mass, if the officiating priest caught that skeptical and searching eye,
the service was inevitably ruined. Even the power of the Holy Church
seemed to be lost, and the last hold upon the affections of the people and
the good order of the settlement departed from San Carlos.
</p>
<p>
As the long dry summer passed, the low hills that surrounded the white
walls of the Presidio grew more and more to resemble in hue the leathern
jacket of the Commander, and Nature herself seemed to have borrowed his
dry, hard glare. The earth was cracked and seamed with drought; a blight
had fallen upon the orchards and vineyards, and the rain, long-delayed and
ardently prayed for, came not. The sky was as tearless as the right eye of
the Commander. Murmurs of discontent, insubordination, and plotting among
the Indians reached his ears; he only set his teeth the more firmly,
tightened the knot of his black-silk handkerchief, and looked up his
Toledo.
</p>
<p>
The last day of the year 1798 found the Commander sitting, at the hour of
evening prayers, alone in the guardroom. He no longer attended the
services of the Holy Church, but crept away at such times to some solitary
spot, where he spent the interval in silent meditation. The firelight
played upon the low beams and rafters, but left the bowed figure of
Salvatierra in darkness. Sitting thus, he felt a small hand touch his arm,
and looking down, saw the figure of Paquita, his little Indian pupil, at
his knee. "Ah, littlest of all," said the Commander, with something of his
old tenderness, lingering over the endearing diminutives of his native
speech—"sweet one, what doest thou here? Art thou not afraid of him
whom everyone shuns and fears?"
</p>
<p>
"No," said the little Indian, readily, "not in the dark. I hear your voice—the
old voice; I feel your touch—the old touch; but I see not your eye,
Senor Commandante. That only I fear—and that, O senor, O my father,"
said the child, lifting her little arms towards his—"that I know is
not thine own!"
</p>
<p>
The Commander shuddered and turned away. Then, recovering himself, he
kissed Paquita gravely on the forehead and bade her retire. A few hours
later, when silence had fallen upon the Presidio, he sought his own couch
and slept peacefully.
</p>
<p>
At about the middle watch of the night a dusky figure crept through the
low embrasure of the Commander's apartment. Other figures were flitting
through the parade ground, which the Commander might have seen had he not
slept so quietly. The intruder stepped noiselessly to the couch and
listened to the sleeper's deep-drawn inspiration. Something glittered in
the firelight as the savage lifted his arm; another moment and the sore
perplexities of Hermenegildo Salvatierra would have been over, when
suddenly the savage started and fell back in a paroxysm of terror. The
Commander slept peacefully, but his right eye, widely opened, fixed and
unaltered, glared coldly on the would-be assassin. The man fell to the
earth in a fit, and the noise awoke the sleeper.
</p>
<p>
To rise to his feet, grasp his sword, and deal blows thick and fast upon
the mutinous savages who now thronged the room was the work of a moment.
Help opportunely arrived, and the undisciplined Indians were speedily
driven beyond the walls, but in the scuffle the Commander received a blow
upon his right eye, and, lifting his hand to that mysterious organ, it was
gone. Never again was it found, and never again, for bale or bliss, did it
adorn the right orbit of the Commander.
</p>
<p>
With it passed away the spell that had fallen upon San Carlos. The rain
returned to invigorate the languid soil, harmony was restored between
priest and soldier, the green grass presently waved over the sere
hillsides, the children flocked again to the side of their martial
preceptor, a TE DEUM was sung in the Mission Church, and pastoral content
once more smiled upon the gentle valleys of San Carlos. And far southward
crept the GENERAL COURT with its master, Peleg Scudder, trafficking in
beads and peltries with the Indians, and offering glass eyes, wooden legs,
and other Boston notions to the chiefs.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
NOTES BY FLOOD AND FIELD
</h2>
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<h2>
PART I—IN THE FIELD
</h2>
<p>
It was near the close of an October day that I began to be disagreeably
conscious of the Sacramento Valley. I had been riding since sunrise, and
my course through the depressing monotony of the long level landscape
affected me more like a dull dyspeptic dream than a business journey,
performed under that sincerest of natural phenomena—a California
sky. The recurring stretches of brown and baked fields, the gaping
fissures in the dusty trail, the hard outline of the distant hills, and
the herds of slowly moving cattle, seemed like features of some glittering
stereoscopic picture that never changed. Active exercise might have
removed this feeling, but my horse by some subtle instinct had long since
given up all ambitious effort, and had lapsed into a dogged trot.
</p>
<p>
It was autumn, but not the season suggested to the Atlantic reader under
that title. The sharply defined boundaries of the wet and dry seasons were
prefigured in the clear outlines of the distant hills. In the dry
atmosphere the decay of vegetation was too rapid for the slow hectic which
overtakes an Eastern landscape, or else Nature was too practical for such
thin disguises. She merely turned the Hippocratic face to the spectator,
with the old diagnosis of Death in her sharp, contracted features.
</p>
<p>
In the contemplation of such a prospect there was little to excite any but
a morbid fancy. There were no clouds in the flinty blue heavens, and the
setting of the sun was accompanied with as little ostentation as was
consistent with the dryly practical atmosphere. Darkness soon followed,
with a rising wind, which increased as the shadows deepened on the plain.
The fringe of alder by the watercourse began to loom up as I urged my
horse forward. A half-hour's active spurring brought me to a corral, and a
little beyond a house, so low and broad it seemed at first sight to be
half-buried in the earth.
</p>
<p>
My second impression was that it had grown out of the soil, like some
monstrous vegetable, its dreary proportions were so in keeping with the
vast prospect. There were no recesses along its roughly boarded walls for
vagrant and unprofitable shadows to lurk in the daily sunshine. No
projection for the wind by night to grow musical over, to wail, whistle,
or whisper to; only a long wooden shelf containing a chilly-looking tin
basin and a bar of soap. Its uncurtained windows were red with the sinking
sun, as though bloodshot and inflamed from a too-long unlidded existence.
The tracks of cattle led to its front door, firmly closed against the
rattling wind.
</p>
<p>
To avoid being confounded with this familiar element, I walked to the rear
of the house, which was connected with a smaller building by a slight
platform. A grizzled, hard-faced old man was standing there, and met my
salutation with a look of inquiry, and, without speaking, led the way to
the principal room. As I entered, four young men who were reclining by the
fire slightly altered their attitudes of perfect repose, but beyond that
betrayed neither curiosity nor interest. A hound started from a dark
corner with a growl, but was immediately kicked by the old man into
obscurity, and silenced again. I can't tell why, but I instantly received
the impression that for a long time the group by the fire had not uttered
a word or moved a muscle. Taking a seat, I briefly stated my business.
</p>
<p>
Was a United States surveyor. Had come on account of the Espiritu Santo
Rancho. Wanted to correct the exterior boundaries of township lines, so as
to connect with the near exteriors of private grants. There had been some
intervention to the old survey by a Mr. Tryan who had preempted adjacent—"settled
land warrants," interrupted the old man. "Ah, yes! Land warrants—and
then this was Mr. Tryan?"
</p>
<p>
I had spoken mechanically, for I was preoccupied in connecting other
public lines with private surveys as I looked in his face. It was
certainly a hard face, and reminded me of the singular effect of that
mining operation known as "ground sluicing"; the harder lines of
underlying character were exposed, and what were once plastic curves and
soft outlines were obliterated by some powerful agency.
</p>
<p>
There was a dryness in his voice not unlike the prevailing atmosphere of
the valley, as he launched into an EX PARTE statement of the contest, with
a fluency, which, like the wind without, showed frequent and unrestrained
expression. He told me—what I had already learned—that the
boundary line of the old Spanish grant was a creek, described in the loose
phraseology of the DESENO as beginning in the VALDA or skirt of the hill,
its precise location long the subject of litigation. I listened and
answered with little interest, for my mind was still distracted by the
wind which swept violently by the house, as well as by his odd face, which
was again reflected in the resemblance that the silent group by the fire
bore toward him. He was still talking, and the wind was yet blowing, when
my confused attention was aroused by a remark addressed to the recumbent
figures.
</p>
<p>
"Now, then, which on ye'll see the stranger up the creek to Altascar's,
tomorrow?"
</p>
<p>
There was a general movement of opposition in the group, but no decided
answer.
</p>
<p>
"Kin you go, Kerg?"
</p>
<p>
"Who's to look up stock in Strarberry perar-ie?"
</p>
<p>
This seemed to imply a negative, and the old man turned to another
hopeful, who was pulling the fur from a mangy bearskin on which he was
lying, with an expression as though it were somebody's hair.
</p>
<p>
"Well, Tom, wot's to hinder you from goin'?"
</p>
<p>
"Mam's goin' to Brown's store at sunup, and I s'pose I've got to pack her
and the baby agin."
</p>
<p>
I think the expression of scorn this unfortunate youth exhibited for the
filial duty into which he had been evidently beguiled was one of the
finest things I had ever seen.
</p>
<p>
"Wise?"
</p>
<p>
Wise deigned no verbal reply, but figuratively thrust a worn and patched
boot into the discourse. The old man flushed quickly.
</p>
<p>
"I told ye to get Brown to give you a pair the last time you war down the
river."
</p>
<p>
"Said he wouldn't without'en order. Said it was like pulling gum teeth to
get the money from you even then."
</p>
<p>
There was a grim smile at this local hit at the old man's parsimony, and
Wise, who was clearly the privileged wit of the family, sank back in
honorable retirement.
</p>
<p>
"Well, Joe, ef your boots are new, and you aren't pestered with wimmin and
children, p'r'aps you'll go," said Tryan, with a nervous twitching,
intended for a smile, about a mouth not remarkably mirthful.
</p>
<p>
Tom lifted a pair of bushy eyebrows, and said shortly:
</p>
<p>
"Got no saddle."
</p>
<p>
"Wot's gone of your saddle?"
</p>
<p>
"Kerg, there"—indicating his brother with a look such as Cain might
have worn at the sacrifice.
</p>
<p>
"You lie!" returned Kerg, cheerfully.
</p>
<p>
Tryan sprang to his feet, seizing the chair, flourishing it around his
head and gazing furiously in the hard young faces which fearlessly met his
own. But it was only for a moment; his arm soon dropped by his side, and a
look of hopeless fatality crossed his face. He allowed me to take the
chair from his hand, and I was trying to pacify him by the assurance that
I required no guide when the irrepressible Wise again lifted his voice:
</p>
<p>
"Theer's George comin'! why don't ye ask him? He'll go and introduce you
to Don Fernandy's darter, too, ef you ain't pertickler."
</p>
<p>
The laugh which followed this joke, which evidently had some domestic
allusion (the general tendency of rural pleasantry), was followed by a
light step on the platform, and the young man entered. Seeing a stranger
present, he stopped and colored, made a shy salute and colored again, and
then, drawing a box from the corner, sat down, his hands clasped lightly
together and his very handsome bright blue eyes turned frankly on mine.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps I was in a condition to receive the romantic impression he made
upon me, and I took it upon myself to ask his company as guide, and he
cheerfully assented. But some domestic duty called him presently away.
</p>
<p>
The fire gleamed brightly on the hearth, and, no longer resisting the
prevailing influence, I silently watched the spurting flame, listening to
the wind which continually shook the tenement. Besides the one chair which
had acquired a new importance in my eyes, I presently discovered a crazy
table in one corner, with an ink bottle and pen; the latter in that greasy
state of decomposition peculiar to country taverns and farmhouses. A
goodly array of rifles and double-barreled guns stocked the corner; half a
dozen saddles and blankets lay near, with a mild flavor of the horse about
them. Some deer and bear skins completed the inventory. As I sat there,
with the silent group around me, the shadowy gloom within and the dominant
wind without, I found it difficult to believe I had ever known a different
existence. My profession had often led me to wilder scenes, but rarely
among those whose unrestrained habits and easy unconsciousness made me
feel so lonely and uncomfortable I shrank closer to myself, not without
grave doubts—which I think occur naturally to people in like
situations—that this was the general rule of humanity and I was a
solitary and somewhat gratuitous exception. It was a relief when a laconic
announcement of supper by a weak-eyed girl caused a general movement in
the family. We walked across the dark platform, which led to another
low-ceiled room. Its entire length was occupied by a table, at the farther
end of which a weak-eyed woman was already taking her repast as she at the
same time gave nourishment to a weak-eyed baby. As the formalities of
introduction had been dispensed with, and as she took no notice of me, I
was enabled to slip into a seat without discomposing or interrupting her.
Tryan extemporized a grace, and the attention of the family became
absorbed in bacon, potatoes, and dried apples.
</p>
<p>
The meal was a sincere one. Gentle gurglings at the upper end of the table
often betrayed the presence of the "wellspring of pleasure." The
conversation generally referred to the labors of the day, and comparing
notes as to the whereabouts of missing stock. Yet the supper was such a
vast improvement upon the previous intellectual feast that when a chance
allusion of mine to the business of my visit brought out the elder Tryan,
the interest grew quite exciting. I remember he inveighed bitterly against
the system of ranch-holding by the "greasers," as he was pleased to term
the native Californians. As the same ideas have been sometimes advanced
under more pretentious circumstances they may be worthy of record.
</p>
<p>
"Look at 'em holdin' the finest grazin' land that ever lay outer doors.
Whar's the papers for it? Was it grants? Mighty fine grants—most of
'em made arter the 'Merrikans got possession. More fools the 'Merrikans
for lettin' 'em hold 'em. Wat paid for 'em? 'Merrikan and blood money.
</p>
<p>
"Didn't they oughter have suthin' out of their native country? Wot for?
Did they ever improve? Got a lot of yaller-skinned diggers, not so
sensible as niggers to look arter stock, and they a sittin' home and
smokin'. With their gold and silver candlesticks, and missions, and
crucifixens, priests and graven idols, and sich? Them sort things wurent
allowed in Mizzoori."
</p>
<p>
At the mention of improvements, I involuntarily lifted my eyes, and met
the half laughing, half embarrassed look of George. The act did not escape
detection, and I had at once the satisfaction of seeing that the rest of
the family had formed an offensive alliance against us.
</p>
<p>
"It was agin Nater, and agin God," added Tryan. "God never intended gold
in the rocks to be made into heathen candlesticks and crucifixens. That's
why he sent 'Merrikans here. Nater never intended such a climate for lazy
lopers. She never gin six months' sunshine to be slept and smoked away."
</p>
<p>
How long he continued and with what further illustration I could not say,
for I took an early opportunity to escape to the sitting-room. I was soon
followed by George, who called me to an open door leading to a smaller
room, and pointed to a bed.
</p>
<p>
"You'd better sleep there tonight," he said; "you'll be more comfortable,
and I'll call you early."
</p>
<p>
I thanked him, and would have asked him several questions which were then
troubling me, but he shyly slipped to the door and vanished.
</p>
<p>
A shadow seemed to fall on the room when he had gone. The "boys" returned,
one by one, and shuffled to their old places. A larger log was thrown on
the fire, and the huge chimney glowed like a furnace, but it did not seem
to melt or subdue a single line of the hard faces that it lit. In half an
hour later, the furs which had served as chairs by day undertook the
nightly office of mattresses, and each received its owner's full-length
figure. Mr. Tryan had not returned, and I missed George. I sat there
until, wakeful and nervous, I saw the fire fall and shadows mount the
wall. There was no sound but the rushing of the wind and the snoring of
the sleepers. At last, feeling the place insupportable, I seized my hat
and opening the door, ran out briskly into the night.
</p>
<p>
The acceleration of my torpid pulse in the keen fight with the wind, whose
violence was almost equal to that of a tornado, and the familiar faces of
the bright stars above me, I felt as a blessed relief. I ran not knowing
whither, and when I halted, the square outline of the house was lost in
the alder bushes. An uninterrupted plain stretched before me, like a vast
sea beaten flat by the force of the gale. As I kept on I noticed a slight
elevation toward the horizon, and presently my progress was impeded by the
ascent of an Indian mound. It struck me forcibly as resembling an island
in the sea. Its height gave me a better view of the expanding plain. But
even here I found no rest. The ridiculous interpretation Tryan had given
the climate was somehow sung in my ears, and echoed in my throbbing pulse
as, guided by the star, I sought the house again.
</p>
<p>
But I felt fresher and more natural as I stepped upon the platform. The
door of the lower building was open, and the old man was sitting beside
the table, thumbing the leaves of a Bible with a look in his face as
though he were hunting up prophecies against the "Greaser." I turned to
enter, but my attention was attracted by a blanketed figure lying beside
the house, on the platform. The broad chest heaving with healthy slumber,
and the open, honest face were familiar. It was George, who had given up
his bed to the stranger among his people. I was about to wake him, but he
lay so peaceful and quiet, I felt awed and hushed. And I went to bed with
a pleasant impression of his handsome face and tranquil figure soothing me
to sleep.
</p>
<p>
I was awakened the next morning from a sense of lulled repose and grateful
silence by the cheery voice of George, who stood beside my bed,
ostentatiously twirling a riata, as if to recall the duties of the day to
my sleep-bewildered eyes. I looked around me. The wind had been magically
laid, and the sun shone warmly through the windows. A dash of cold water,
with an extra chill on from the tin basin, helped to brighten me. It was
still early, but the family had already breakfasted and dispersed, and a
wagon winding far in the distance showed that the unfortunate Tom had
already "packed" his relatives away. I felt more cheerful—there are
few troubles Youth cannot distance with the start of a good night's rest.
After a substantial breakfast, prepared by George, in a few moments we
were mounted and dashing down the plain.
</p>
<p>
We followed the line of alder that defined the creek, now dry and baked
with summer's heat, but which in winter, George told me, overflowed its
banks. I still retain a vivid impression of that morning's ride, the
far-off mountains, like silhouettes, against the steel-blue sky, the crisp
dry air, and the expanding track before me, animated often by the
well-knit figure of George Tryan, musical with jingling spurs and
picturesque with flying riata. He rode powerful native roan, wild-eyed,
untiring in stride and unbroken in nature. Alas! the curves of beauty were
concealed by the cumbrous MACHILLAS of the Spanish saddle, which levels
all equine distinctions. The single rein lay loosely on the cruel bit that
can gripe, and if need be, crush the jaw it controls.
</p>
<p>
Again the illimitable freedom of the valley rises before me, as we again
bear down into sunlit space. Can this be "Chu Chu," staid and respectable
filly of American pedigree—Chu Chu, forgetful of plank roads and
cobblestones, wild with excitement, twinkling her small white feet beneath
me? George laughs out of a cloud of dust. "Give her her head; don't you
see she likes it?" and Chu Chu seems to like it, and whether bitten by
native tarantula into native barbarism or emulous of the roan, "blood"
asserts itself, and in a moment the peaceful servitude of years is beaten
out in the music of her clattering hoofs. The creek widens to a deep
gully. We dive into it and up on the opposite side, carrying a moving
cloud of impalpable powder with us. Cattle are scattered over the plain,
grazing quietly or banded together in vast restless herds. George makes a
wide, indefinite sweep with the riata, as if to include them all in his
vaquero's loop, and says, "Ours!"
</p>
<p>
"About how many, George?"
</p>
<p>
"Don't know."
</p>
<p>
"How many?"
</p>
<p>
"'Well, p'r'aps three thousand head," says George, reflecting. "We don't
know, takes five men to look 'em up and keep run."
</p>
<p>
"What are they worth?"
</p>
<p>
"About thirty dollars a head."
</p>
<p>
I make a rapid calculation, and look my astonishment at the laughing
George. Perhaps a recollection of the domestic economy of the Tryan
household is expressed in that look, for George averts his eye and says,
apologetically:
</p>
<p>
"I've tried to get the old man to sell and build, but you know he says it
ain't no use to settle down, just yet. We must keep movin'. In fact, he
built the shanty for that purpose, lest titles should fall through, and
we'd have to get up and move stakes further down."
</p>
<p>
Suddenly his quick eye detects some unusual sight in a herd we are
passing, and with an exclamation he puts his roan into the center of the
mass. I follow, or rather Chu Chu darts after the roan, and in a few
moments we are in the midst of apparently inextricable horns and hoofs.
"TORO!" shouts George, with vaquero enthusiasm, and the band opens a way
for the swinging riata. I can feel their steaming breaths, and their spume
is cast on Chu Chu's quivering flank.
</p>
<p>
Wild, devilish-looking beasts are they; not such shapes as Jove might have
chosen to woo a goddess, nor such as peacefully range the downs of Devon,
but lean and hungry Cassius-like bovines, economically got up to meet the
exigencies of a six months' rainless climate, and accustomed to wrestle
with the distracting wind and the blinding dust.
</p>
<p>
"That's not our brand," says George; "they're strange stock," and he
points to what my scientific eye recognizes as the astrological sign of
Venus deeply seared in the brown flanks of the bull he is chasing. But the
herd are closing round us with low mutterings, and George has again
recourse to the authoritative "TORO," and with swinging riata divides the
"bossy bucklers" on either side. When we are free, and breathing somewhat
more easily, I venture to ask George if they ever attack anyone.
</p>
<p>
"Never horsemen—sometimes footmen. Not through rage, you know, but
curiosity. They think a man and his horse are one, and if they meet a chap
afoot, they run him down and trample him under hoof, in the pursuit of
knowledge. But," adds George, "here's the lower bench of the foothills,
and here's Altascar's corral, and that White building you see yonder is
the casa."
</p>
<p>
A whitewashed wall enclosed a court containing another adobe building,
baked with the solar beams of many summers. Leaving our horses in the
charge of a few peons in the courtyard, who were basking lazily in the
sun, we entered a low doorway, where a deep shadow and an agreeable
coolness fell upon us, as sudden and grateful as a plunge in cool water,
from its contrast with the external glare and heat. In the center of a
low-ceiled apartment sat an old man with a black-silk handkerchief tied
about his head, the few gray hairs that escaped from its folds relieving
his gamboge-colored face. The odor of CIGARRITOS was as incense added to
the cathedral gloom of the building.
</p>
<p>
As Senor Altascar rose with well-bred gravity to receive us, George
advanced with such a heightened color, and such a blending of tenderness
and respect in his manner, that I was touched to the heart by so much
devotion in the careless youth. In fact, my eyes were still dazzled by the
effect of the outer sunshine, and at first I did not see the white teeth
and black eyes of Pepita, who slipped into the corridor as we entered.
</p>
<p>
It was no pleasant matter to disclose particulars of business which would
deprive the old senor of the greater part of that land we had just ridden
over, and I did it with great embarrassment. But he listened calmly—not
a muscle of his dark face stirring—and the smoke curling placidly
from his lips showed his regular respiration. When I had finished, he
offered quietly to accompany us to the line of demarcation. George had
meanwhile disappeared, but a suspicious conversation in broken Spanish and
English, in the corridor, betrayed his vicinity. When he returned again, a
little absent-minded, the old man, by far the coolest and most
self-possessed of the party, extinguished his black-silk cap beneath that
stiff, uncomely sombrero which all native Californians affect. A serape
thrown over his shoulders hinted that he was waiting. Horses are always
ready saddled in Spanish ranchos, and in half an hour from the time of our
arrival we were again "loping" in the staring sunlight.
</p>
<p>
But not as cheerfully as before. George and myself were weighed down by
restraint, and Altascar was gravely quiet. To break the silence, and by
way of a consolatory essay, I hinted to him that there might be further
intervention or appeal, but the proffered oil and wine were returned with
a careless shrug of the shoulders and a sententious "QUE BUENO?—Your
courts are always just."
</p>
<p>
The Indian mound of the previous night's discovery was a bearing monument
of the new line, and there we halted. We were surprised to find the old
man Tryan waiting us. For the first time during our interview the old
Spaniard seemed moved, and the blood rose in his yellow cheek. I was
anxious to close the scene, and pointed out the corner boundaries as
clearly as my recollection served.
</p>
<p>
"The deputies will be here tomorrow to run the lines from this initial
point, and there will be no further trouble, I believe, gentlemen."
</p>
<p>
Senor Altascar had dismounted and was gathering a few tufts of dried grass
in his hands. George and I exchanged glances. He presently arose from his
stooping posture, and advancing to within a few paces of Joseph Tryan,
said, in a voice broken with passion:
</p>
<p>
"And I, Fernando Jesus Maria Altascar, put you in possession of my land in
the fashion of my country."
</p>
<p>
He threw a sod to each of the cardinal points.
</p>
<p>
"I don't know your courts, your judges, or your CORREGIDORES. Take the
LLANO!—and take this with it. May the drought seize your cattle till
their tongues hang down as long as those of your lying lawyers! May it be
the curse and torment of your old age, as you and yours have made it of
mine!"
</p>
<p>
We stepped between the principal actors in this scene, which only the
passion of Altascar made tragical, but Tryan, with a humility but ill
concealing his triumph, interrupted:
</p>
<p>
"Let him curse on. He'll find 'em coming home to him sooner than the
cattle he has lost through his sloth and pride. The Lord is on the side of
the just, as well as agin all slanderers and revilers."
</p>
<p>
Altascar but half guessed the meaning of the Missourian, yet sufficiently
to drive from his mind all but the extravagant power of his native
invective.
</p>
<p>
"Stealer of the Sacrament! Open not!—open not, I say, your lying,
Judas lips to me! Ah! half-breed, with the soul of a coyote!—car-r-r-ramba!"
</p>
<p>
With his passion reverberating among the consonants like distant thunder,
he laid his hand upon the mane of his horse as though it had been the gray
locks of his adversary, swung himself into the saddle and galloped away.
</p>
<p>
George turned to me:
</p>
<p>
"Will you go back with us tonight?"
</p>
<p>
I thought of the cheerless walls, the silent figures by the fire, and the
roaring wind, and hesitated.
</p>
<p>
"Well then, goodby."
</p>
<p>
"Goodby, George."
</p>
<p>
Another wring of the hands, and we parted. I had not ridden far when I
turned and looked back. The wind had risen early that afternoon, and was
already sweeping across the plain. A cloud of dust traveled before it, and
a picturesque figure occasionally emerging therefrom was my last
indistinct impression of George Tryan.
</p>
<p>
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</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
PART II—IN THE FLOOD
</h2>
<p>
Three months after the survey of the Espiritu Santo Rancho, I was again in
the valley of the Sacramento. But a general and terrible visitation had
erased the memory of that event as completely as I supposed it had
obliterated the boundary monuments I had planted. The great flood of
1861-62 was at its height when, obeying some indefinite yearning, I took
my carpetbag and embarked for the inundated valley.
</p>
<p>
There was nothing to be seen from the bright cabin windows of the GOLDEN
CITY but night deepening over the water. The only sound was the pattering
rain, and that had grown monotonous for the past two weeks, and did not
disturb the national gravity of my countrymen as they silently sat around
the cabin stove. Some on errands of relief to friends and relatives wore
anxious faces, and conversed soberly on the one absorbing topic. Others,
like myself, attracted by curiosity listened eagerly to newer details. But
with that human disposition to seize upon any circumstance that might give
chance event the exaggerated importance of instinct, I was half-conscious
of something more than curiosity as an impelling motive.
</p>
<p>
The dripping of rain, the low gurgle of water, and a leaden sky greeted us
the next morning as we lay beside the half-submerged levee of Sacramento.
Here, however, the novelty of boats to convey us to the hotels was an
appeal that was irresistible. I resigned myself to a dripping rubber-cased
mariner called "Joe," and, wrapping myself in a shining cloak of the like
material, about as suggestive of warmth as court plaster might have been,
took my seat in the stern sheets of his boat. It was no slight inward
struggle to part from the steamer that to most of the passengers was the
only visible connecting link between us and the dry and habitable earth,
but we pulled away and entered the city, stemming a rapid current as we
shot the levee.
</p>
<p>
We glided up the long level of K Street—once a cheerful, busy
thoroughfare, now distressing in its silent desolation. The turbid water
which seemed to meet the horizon edge before us flowed at right angles in
sluggish rivers through the streets. Nature had revenged herself on the
local taste by disarraying the regular rectangles by huddling houses on
street corners, where they presented abrupt gables to the current, or by
capsizing them in compact ruin. Crafts of all kinds were gliding in and
out of low-arched doorways. The water was over the top of the fences
surrounding well-kept gardens, in the first stories of hotels and private
dwellings, trailing its slime on velvet carpets as well as roughly boarded
floors. And a silence quite as suggestive as the visible desolation was in
the voiceless streets that no longer echoed to carriage wheel or footfall.
The low ripple of water, the occasional splash of oars, or the warning cry
of boatmen were the few signs of life and habitation.
</p>
<p>
With such scenes before my eyes and such sounds in my ears, as I lie
lazily in the boat, is mingled the song of my gondolier who sings to the
music of his oars. It is not quite as romantic as his brother of the Lido
might improvise, but my Yankee "Giuseppe" has the advantage of earnestness
and energy, and gives a graphic description of the terrors of the past
week and of noble deeds of self-sacrifice and devotion, occasionally
pointing out a balcony from which some California Bianca or Laura had been
snatched, half-clothed and famished. Giuseppe is otherwise peculiar, and
refuses the proffered fare, for—am I not a citizen of San Francisco,
which was first to respond to the suffering cry of Sacramento? and is not
he, Giuseppe, a member of the Howard Society? No! Giuseppe is poor, but
cannot take my money. Still, if I must spend it, there is the Howard
Society, and the women and children without food and clothes at the
Agricultural Hall.
</p>
<p>
I thank the generous gondolier, and we go to the Hall—a dismal,
bleak place, ghastly with the memories of last year's opulence and plenty,
and here Giuseppe's fare is swelled by the stranger's mite. But here
Giuseppe tells me of the "Relief Boat" which leaves for the flooded
district in the interior, and here, profiting by the lesson he has taught
me, I make the resolve to turn my curiosity to the account of others, and
am accepted of those who go forth to succor and help the afflicted.
Giuseppe takes charge of my carpetbag, and does not part from me until I
stand on the slippery deck of "Relief Boat No. 3."
</p>
<p>
An hour later I am in the pilothouse, looking down upon what was once the
channel of a peaceful river. But its banks are only defined by tossing
tufts of willow washed by the long swell that breaks over a vast inland
sea. Stretches of "tule" land fertilized by its once regular channel and
dotted by flourishing ranchos are now cleanly erased. The cultivated
profile of the old landscape had faded. Dotted lines in symmetrical
perspective mark orchards that are buried and chilled in the turbid flood.
The roofs of a few farmhouses are visible, and here and there the smoke
curling from chimneys of half-submerged tenements shows an undaunted life
within. Cattle and sheep are gathered on Indian mounds waiting the fate of
their companions whose carcasses drift by us, or swing in eddies with the
wrecks of barns and outhouses. Wagons are stranded everywhere where the
tide could carry them. As I wipe the moistened glass, I see nothing but
water, pattering on the deck from the lowering clouds, dashing against the
window, dripping from the willows, hissing by the wheels, everywhere
washing, coiling, sapping, hurrying in rapids, or swelling at last into
deeper and vaster lakes, awful in their suggestive quiet and concealment.
</p>
<p>
As day fades into night the monotony of this strange prospect grows
oppressive. I seek the engine room, and in the company of some of the few
half-drowned sufferers we have already picked up from temporary rafts, I
forget the general aspect of desolation in their individual misery. Later
we meet the San Francisco packet, and transfer a number of our passengers.
From them we learn how inward-bound vessels report to have struck the
well-defined channel of the Sacramento, fifty miles beyond the bar. There
is a voluntary contribution taken among the generous travelers for the use
of our afflicted, and we part company with a hearty "Godspeed" on either
side. But our signal lights are not far distant before a familiar sound
comes back to us—an indomitable Yankee cheer—which scatters
the gloom.
</p>
<p>
Our course is altered, and we are steaming over the obliterated banks far
in the interior. Once or twice black objects loom up near us—the
wrecks of houses floating by. There is a slight rift in the sky toward the
north, and a few bearing stars to guide us over the waste. As we penetrate
into shallower water, it is deemed advisable to divide our party into
smaller boats, and diverge over the submerged prairie. I borrow a peacoat
of one of the crew, and in that practical disguise am doubtfully permitted
to pass into one of the boats. We give way northerly. It is quite dark
yet, although the rift of cloud has widened.
</p>
<p>
It must have been about three o'clock, and we were lying upon our oars in
an eddy formed by a clump of cottonwood, and the light of the steamer is a
solitary, bright star in the distance, when the silence is broken by the
"bow oar":
</p>
<p>
"Light ahead."
</p>
<p>
All eyes are turned in that direction. In a few seconds a twinkling light
appears, shines steadily, and again disappears as if by the shifting
position of some black object apparently drifting close upon us.
</p>
<p>
"Stern, all; a steamer!"
</p>
<p>
"Hold hard there! Steamer be damned!" is the reply of the coxswain. "It's
a house, and a big one too."
</p>
<p>
It is a big one, looming in the starlight like a huge fragment of the
darkness. The light comes from a single candle, which shines through a
window as the great shape swings by. Some recollection is drifting back to
me with it as I listen with beating heart.
</p>
<p>
"There's someone in it, by heavens! Give way, boys—lay her
alongside. Handsomely, now! The door's fastened; try the window; no!
here's another!"
</p>
<p>
In another moment we are trampling in the water which washes the floor to
the depth of several inches. It is a large room, at the farther end of
which an old man is sitting wrapped in a blanket, holding a candle in one
hand, and apparently absorbed in the book he holds with the other. I
spring toward him with an exclamation:
</p>
<p>
"Joseph Tryan!"
</p>
<p>
He does not move. We gather closer to him, and I lay my hand gently on his
shoulder, and say:
</p>
<p>
"Look up, old man, look up! Your wife and children, where are they? The
boys—George! Are they here? are they safe?"
</p>
<p>
He raises his head slowly, and turns his eyes to mine, and we
involuntarily recoil before his look. It is a calm and quiet glance, free
from fear, anger, or pain; but it somehow sends the blood curdling through
our veins. He bowed his head over his book again, taking no further notice
of us. The men look at me compassionately, and hold their peace. I make
one more effort:
</p>
<p>
"Joseph Tryan, don't you know me? the surveyor who surveyed your ranch—the
Espiritu Santo? Look up, old man!"
</p>
<p>
He shuddered and wrapped himself closer in his blanket. Presently he
repeated to himself "The surveyor who surveyed your ranch—Espiritu
Santo" over and over again, as though it were a lesson he was trying to
fix in his memory.
</p>
<p>
I was turning sadly to the boatmen when he suddenly caught me fearfully by
the hand and said:
</p>
<p>
"Hush!"
</p>
<p>
We were silent.
</p>
<p>
"Listen!" He puts his arm around my neck and whispers in my ear, "I'm a
MOVING OFF!"
</p>
<p>
"Moving off?"
</p>
<p>
"Hush! Don't speak so loud. Moving off. Ah! wot's that? Don't you hear?—there!
listen!"
</p>
<p>
We listen, and hear the water gurgle and click beneath the floor.
</p>
<p>
"It's them wot he sent!—Old Altascar sent. They've been here all
night. I heard 'em first in the creek, when they came to tell the old man
to move farther off. They came nearer and nearer. They whispered under the
door, and I saw their eyes on the step—their cruel, hard eyes. Ah,
why don't they quit?"
</p>
<p>
I tell the men to search the room and see if they can find any further
traces of the family, while Tryan resumes his old attitude. It is so much
like the figure I remember on the breezy night that a superstitious
feeling is fast overcoming me. When they have returned, I tell them
briefly what I know of him, and the old man murmurs again:
</p>
<p>
"Why don't they quit, then? They have the stock—all gone—gone,
gone for the hides and hoofs," and he groans bitterly.
</p>
<p>
"There are other boats below us. The shanty cannot have drifted far, and
perhaps the family are safe by this time," says the coxswain, hopefully.
</p>
<p>
We lift the old man up, for he is quite helpless, and carry him to the
boat. He is still grasping the Bible in his right hand, though its
strengthening grace is blank to his vacant eye, and he cowers in the stern
as we pull slowly to the steamer while a pale gleam in the sky shows the
coming day.
</p>
<p>
I was weary with excitement, and when we reached the steamer, and I had
seen Joseph Tryan comfortably bestowed, I wrapped myself in a blanket near
the boiler and presently fell asleep. But even then the figure of the old
man often started before me, and a sense of uneasiness about George made a
strong undercurrent to my drifting dreams. I was awakened at about eight
o'clock in the morning by the engineer, who told me one of the old man's
sons had been picked up and was now on board.
</p>
<p>
"Is it George Tryan?" I ask quickly.
</p>
<p>
"Don't know; but he's a sweet one, whoever he is," adds the engineer, with
a smile at some luscious remembrance. "You'll find him for'ard."
</p>
<p>
I hurry to the bow of the boat, and find, not George, but the
irrepressible Wise, sitting on a coil of rope, a little dirtier and rather
more dilapidated than I can remember having seen him.
</p>
<p>
He is examining, with apparent admiration, some rough, dry clothes that
have been put out for his disposal. I cannot help thinking that
circumstances have somewhat exalted his usual cheerfulness. He puts me at
my ease by at once addressing me:
</p>
<p>
"These are high old times, ain't they? I say, what do you reckon's become
o' them thar bound'ry moniments you stuck? Ah!"
</p>
<p>
The pause which succeeds this outburst is the effect of a spasm of
admiration at a pair of high boots, which, by great exertion, he has at
last pulled on his feet.
</p>
<p>
"So you've picked up the ole man in the shanty, clean crazy? He must have
been soft to have stuck there instead o' leavin' with the old woman.
Didn't know me from Adam; took me for George!"
</p>
<p>
At this affecting instance of paternal forgetfulness, Wise was evidently
divided between amusement and chagrin. I took advantage of the contending
emotions to ask about George.
</p>
<p>
"Don't know whar he is! If he'd tended stock instead of running about the
prairie, packin' off wimmin and children, he might have saved suthin. He
lost every hoof and hide, I'll bet a cooky! Say you," to a passing
boatman, "when are you goin' to give us some grub? I'm hungry 'nough to
skin and eat a hoss. Reckon I'll turn butcher when things is dried up, and
save hides, horns, and taller."
</p>
<p>
I could not but admire this indomitable energy, which under softer
climatic influences might have borne such goodly fruit.
</p>
<p>
"Have you any idea what you'll do, Wise?" I ask.
</p>
<p>
"Thar ain't much to do now," says the practical young man. "I'll have to
lay over a spell, I reckon, till things comes straight. The land ain't
worth much now, and won't be, I dessay, for some time. Wonder whar the ole
man'll drive stakes next."
</p>
<p>
"I meant as to your father and George, Wise."
</p>
<p>
"Oh, the old man and I'll go on to 'Miles's,' whar Tom packed the old
woman and babies last week. George'll turn up somewhar atween this and
Altascar's ef he ain't thar now."
</p>
<p>
I ask how the Altascars have suffered.
</p>
<p>
"Well, I reckon he ain't lost much in stock. I shouldn't wonder if George
helped him drive 'em up the foothills. And his casa's built too high. Oh,
thar ain't any water thar, you bet. Ah," says Wise, with reflective
admiration, "those greasers ain't the darned fools people thinks 'em. I'll
bet thar ain't one swamped out in all 'er Californy." But the appearance
of "grub" cut this rhapsody short.
</p>
<p>
"I shall keep on a little farther," I say, "and try to find George."
</p>
<p>
Wise stared a moment at this eccentricity until a new light dawned upon
him.
</p>
<p>
"I don't think you'll save much. What's the percentage—workin' on
shares, eh!"
</p>
<p>
I answer that I am only curious, which I feel lessens his opinion of me,
and with a sadder feeling than his assurance of George's safety might
warrant, I walked away.
</p>
<p>
From others whom we picked up from time to time we heard of George's
self-sacrificing devotion, with the praises of the many he had helped and
rescued. But I did not feel disposed to return until I had seen him, and
soon prepared myself to take a boat to the lower VALDA of the foothills,
and visit Altascar. I soon perfected my arrangements, bade farewell to
Wise, and took a last look at the old man, who was sitting by the furnace
fires quite passive and composed. Then our boat head swung round, pulled
by sturdy and willing hands.
</p>
<p>
It was again raining, and a disagreeable wind had risen. Our course lay
nearly west, and we soon knew by the strong current that we were in the
creek of the Espiritu Santo. From time to time the wrecks of barns were
seen, and we passed many half-submerged willows hung with farming
implements.
</p>
<p>
We emerge at last into a broad silent sea. It is the "LLANO DE ESPIRITU
SANTO." As the wind whistles by me, piling the shallower fresh water into
mimic waves, I go back, in fancy, to the long ride of October over that
boundless plain, and recall the sharp outlines of the distant hills, which
are now lost in the lowering clouds. The men are rowing silently, and I
find my mind, released from its tension, growing benumbed and depressed as
then. The water, too, is getting more shallow as we leave the banks of the
creek, and with my hand dipped listlessly over the thwarts, I detect the
tops of chimisal, which shows the tide to have somewhat fallen. There is a
black mound, bearing to the north of the line of alder, making an adverse
current, which, as we sweep to the right to avoid, I recognize. We pull
close alongside and I call to the men to stop.
</p>
<p>
There was a stake driven near its summit with the initials, "L. E. S. I."
Tied halfway down was a curiously worked riata. It was George's. It had
been cut with some sharp instrument, and the loose gravelly soil of the
mound was deeply dented with horses' hoofs. The stake was covered with
horsehairs. It was a record, but no clue.
</p>
<p>
The wind had grown more violent as we still fought our way forward,
resting and rowing by turns, and oftener "poling" the shallower surface,
but the old VALDA, or bench, is still distant. My recollection of the old
survey enables me to guess the relative position of the meanderings of the
creek, and an occasional simple professional experiment to determine the
distance gives my crew the fullest faith in my ability. Night overtakes us
in our impeded progress. Our condition looks more dangerous than it really
is, but I urge the men, many of whom are still new in this mode of
navigation, to greater exertion by assurance of perfect safety and speedy
relief ahead. We go on in this way until about eight o'clock, and ground
by the willows. We have a muddy walk for a few hundred yards before we
strike a dry trail, and simultaneously the white walls of Altascar's
appear like a snowbank before us. Lights are moving in the courtyard; but
otherwise the old tomblike repose characterizes the building.
</p>
<p>
One of the peons recognized me as I entered the court, and Altascar met me
on the corridor.
</p>
<p>
I was too weak to do more than beg his hospitality for the men who had
dragged wearily with me. He looked at my hand, which still unconsciously
held the broken riata. I began, wearily, to tell him about George and my
fears, but with a gentler courtesy than was even his wont, he gravely laid
his hand on my shoulder.
</p>
<p>
"POCO A POCO, senor—not now. You are tired, you have hunger, you
have cold. Necessary it is you should have peace."
</p>
<p>
He took us into a small room and poured out some French cognac, which he
gave to the men that had accompanied me. They drank and threw themselves
before the fire in the larger room. The repose of the building was
intensified that night, and I even fancied that the footsteps on the
corridor were lighter and softer. The old Spaniard's habitual gravity was
deeper; we might have been shut out from the world as well as the
whistling storm, behind those ancient walls with their time-worn
inheritor.
</p>
<p>
Before I could repeat my inquiry he retired. In a few minutes two smoking
dishes of CHUPA with coffee were placed before us, and my men ate
ravenously. I drank the coffee, but my excitement and weariness kept down
the instincts of hunger.
</p>
<p>
I was sitting sadly by the fire when he reentered.
</p>
<p>
"You have eat?"
</p>
<p>
I said, "Yes," to please him.
</p>
<p>
"BUENO, eat when you can—food and appetite are not always."
</p>
<p>
He said this with that Sancho-like simplicity with which most of his
countrymen utter a proverb, as though it were an experience rather than a
legend, and, taking the riata from the floor, held it almost tenderly
before him.
</p>
<p>
"It was made by me, senor."
</p>
<p>
"I kept it as a clue to him, Don Altascar," I said. "If I could find him—"
</p>
<p>
"He is here."
</p>
<p>
"Here! and"—but I could not say "well!" I understood the gravity of
the old man's face, the hushed footfalls, the tomblike repose of the
building, in an electric flash of consciousness; I held the clue to the
broken riata at last. Altascar took my hand, and we crossed the corridor
to a somber apartment. A few tall candles were burning in sconces before
the window.
</p>
<p>
In an alcove there was a deep bed with its counterpane, pillows, and
sheets heavily edged with lace, in all that splendid luxury which the
humblest of these strange people lavish upon this single item of their
household. I stepped beside it and saw George lying, as I had seen him
once before, peacefully at rest. But a greater sacrifice than that he had
known was here, and his generous heart was stilled forever.
</p>
<p>
"He was honest and brave," said the old man, and turned away. There was
another figure in the room; a heavy shawl drawn over her graceful outline,
and her long black hair hiding the hands that buried her downcast face. I
did not seem to notice her, and, retiring presently, left the loving and
loved together.
</p>
<p>
When we were again beside the crackling fire, in the shifting shadows of
the great chamber, Altascar told me how he had that morning met the horse
of George Tryan swimming on the prairie; how that, farther on, he found
him lying, quite cold and dead, with no marks or bruises on his person;
that he had probably become exhausted in fording the creek, and that he
had as probably reached the mound only to die for want of that help he had
so freely given to others; that, as a last act, he had freed his horse.
These incidents were corroborated by many who collected in the great
chamber that evening—women and children—most of them succored
through the devoted energies of him who lay cold and lifeless above.
</p>
<p>
He was buried in the Indian mound—the single spot of strange
perennial greenness which the poor aborigines had raised above the dusty
plain. A little slab of sandstone with the initials "G. T." is his
monument, and one of the bearings of the initial corner of the new survey
of the "Espiritu Santo Rancho."
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
AN EPISODE OF FIDDLETOWN
</h2>
<p>
In 1858 Fiddletown considered her a very pretty woman. She had a quantity
of light chestnut hair, a good figure, a dazzling complexion, and a
certain languid grace which passed easily for gentle-womanliness. She
always dressed becomingly, and in what Fiddletown accepted as the latest
fashion. She had only two blemishes: one of her velvety eyes, when
examined closely, had a slight cast; and her left cheek bore a small scar
left by a single drop of vitriol—happily the only drop of an entire
phial—thrown upon her by one of her own jealous sex, that reached
the pretty face it was intended to mar. But when the observer had studied
the eyes sufficiently to notice this defect, he was generally
incapacitated for criticism; and even the scar on her cheek was thought by
some to add piquancy to her smile. The youthful editor of THE FIDDLETOWN
AVALANCHE had said privately that it was "an exaggerated dimple." Colonel
Starbottle was instantly "reminded of the beautifying patches of the days
of Queen Anne, but more particularly, sir, of the blankest beautiful women
that, blank you, you ever laid your two blank eyes upon—a Creole
woman, sir, in New Orleans. And this woman had a scar—a line
extending, blank me, from her eye to her blank chin. And this woman, sir,
thrilled you, sir; maddened you, sir; absolutely sent your blank soul to
perdition with her blank fascination! And one day I said to her, 'Celeste,
how in blank did you come by that beautiful scar, blank you?' And she said
to me, 'Star, there isn't another white man that I'd confide in but you;
but I made that scar myself, purposely, I did, blank me.' These were her
very words, sir, and perhaps you think it a blank lie, sir; but I'll put
up any blank sum you can name and prove it, blank me."
</p>
<p>
Indeed, most of the male population of Fiddletown were or had been in love
with her. Of this number, about one-half believed that their love was
returned, with the exception, possibly, of her own husband. He alone had
been known to express skepticism.
</p>
<p>
The name of the gentleman who enjoyed this infelicitous distinction was
Tretherick. He had been divorced from an excellent wife to marry this
Fiddletown enchantress. She, also, had been divorced; but it was hinted
that some previous experiences of hers in that legal formality had made it
perhaps less novel, and probably less sacrificial. I would not have it
inferred from this that she was deficient in sentiment, or devoid of its
highest moral expression. Her intimate friend had written (on the occasion
of her second divorce), "The cold world does not understand Clara yet";
and Colonel Starbottle had remarked blankly that with the exception of a
single woman in Opelousas Parish, La., she had more soul than the whole
caboodle of them put together. Few indeed could read those lines entitled
"Infelissimus," commencing "Why waves no cypress o'er this brow?"
originally published in the AVALANCHE, over the signature of "The Lady
Clare," without feeling the tear of sensibility tremble on his eyelids, or
the glow of virtuous indignation mantle his cheek, at the low brutality
and pitiable jocularity of THE DUTCH FLAT INTELLIGENCER, which the next
week had suggested the exotic character of the cypress, and its entire
absence from Fiddletown, as a reasonable answer to the query.
</p>
<p>
Indeed, it was this tendency to elaborate her feelings in a metrical
manner, and deliver them to the cold world through the medium of the
newspapers, that first attracted the attention of Tretherick. Several
poems descriptive of the effects of California scenery upon a
too-sensitive soul, and of the vague yearnings for the infinite which an
enforced study of the heartlessness of California society produced in the
poetic breast, impressed Mr. Tretherick, who was then driving a six-mule
freight wagon between Knight's Ferry and Stockton, to seek out the unknown
poetess. Mr. Tretherick was himself dimly conscious of a certain hidden
sentiment in his own nature; and it is possible that some reflections on
the vanity of his pursuit—he supplied several mining camps with
whisky and tobacco—in conjunction with the dreariness of the dusty
plain on which he habitually drove, may have touched some chord in
sympathy with this sensitive woman. Howbeit, after a brief courtship—as
brief as was consistent with some previous legal formalities—they
were married; and Mr. Tretherick brought his blushing bride to Fiddletown,
or "Fideletown," as Mrs. Tretherick preferred to call it in her poems.
</p>
<p>
The union was not a felicitous one. It was not long before Mr. Tretherick
discovered that the sentiment he had fostered while freighting between
Stockton and Knight's Ferry was different from that which his wife had
evolved from the contemplation of California scenery and her own soul.
Being a man of imperfect logic, this caused him to beat her; and she,
being equally faulty in deduction, was impelled to a certain degree of
unfaithfulness on the same premise. Then Mr. Tretherick began to drink,
and Mrs. Tretherick to contribute regularly to the columns of the
AVALANCHE. It was at this time that Colonel Starbottle discovered a
similarity in Mrs. Tretherick's verse to the genius of Sappho, and pointed
it out to the citizens of Fiddletown in a two-columned criticism, signed
"A. S.," also published in the AVALANCHE, and supported by extensive
quotation. As the AVALANCHE did not possess a font of Greek type, the
editor was obliged to reproduce the Leucadian numbers in the ordinary
Roman letter, to the intense disgust of Colonel Starbottle, and the vast
delight of Fiddletown, who saw fit to accept the text as an excellent
imitation of Choctaw—a language with which the colonel, as a whilom
resident of the Indian Territories, was supposed to be familiar. Indeed,
the next week's INTELLIGENCER contained some vile doggerel supposed to be
an answer to Mrs. Tretherick's poem, ostensibly written by the wife of a
Digger Indian chief, accompanied by a glowing eulogium signed "A. S. S."
</p>
<p>
The result of this jocularity was briefly given in a later copy of the
AVALANCHE. "An unfortunate rencounter took place on Monday last, between
the Hon. Jackson Flash of THE DUTCH FLAT INTELLIGENCER and the well-known
Col. Starbottle of this place, in front of the Eureka Saloon. Two shots
were fired by the parties without injury to either, although it is said
that a passing Chinaman received fifteen buckshot in the calves of his
legs from the colonel's double-barreled shotgun, which were not intended
for him. John will learn to keep out of the way of Melican man's firearms
hereafter. The cause of the affray is not known, although it is hinted
that there is a lady in the case. The rumor that points to a well-known
and beautiful poetess whose lucubrations have often graced our columns
seems to gain credence from those that are posted."
</p>
<p>
Meanwhile the passiveness displayed by Tretherick under these trying
circumstances was fully appreciated in the gulches. "The old man's head is
level," said one long-booted philosopher. "Ef the colonel kills Flash,
Mrs. Tretherick is avenged: if Flash drops the colonel, Tretherick is all
right. Either way, he's got a sure thing." During this delicate condition
of affairs, Mrs. Tretherick one day left her husband's home and took
refuge at the Fiddletown Hotel, with only the clothes she had on her back.
Here she staid for several weeks, during which period it is only justice
to say that she bore herself with the strictest propriety.
</p>
<p>
It was a clear morning in early spring that Mrs. Tretherick, unattended,
left the hotel, and walked down the narrow street toward the fringe of
dark pines which indicated the extreme limits of Fiddletown. The few
loungers at that early hour were preoccupied with the departure of the
Wingdown coach at the other extremity of the street; and Mrs. Tretherick
reached the suburbs of the settlement without discomposing observation.
Here she took a cross street or road, running at right angles with the
main thoroughfare of Fiddletown and passing through a belt of woodland. It
was evidently the exclusive and aristocratic avenue of the town. The
dwellings were few, ambitious, and uninterrupted by shops. And here she
was joined by Colonel Starbottle.
</p>
<p>
The gallant colonel, notwithstanding that he bore the swelling port which
usually distinguished him, that his coat was tightly buttoned and his
boots tightly fitting, and that his cane, hooked over his arm, swung
jauntily, was not entirely at his ease. Mrs. Tretherick, however,
vouchsafed him a gracious smile and a glance of her dangerous eyes; and
the colonel, with an embarrassed cough and a slight strut, took his place
at her side.
</p>
<p>
"The coast is clear," said the colonel, "and Tretherick is over at Dutch
Flat on a spree. There is no one in the house but a Chinaman; and you need
fear no trouble from him. I," he continued, with a slight inflation of the
chest that imperiled the security of his button, "I will see that you are
protected in the removal of your property."
</p>
<p>
"I'm sure it's very kind of you, and so disinterested!" simpered the lady
as they walked along. "It's so pleasant to meet someone who has soul—someone
to sympathize with in a community so hardened and heartless as this." And
Mrs. Tretherick cast down her eyes, but not until they wrought their
perfect and accepted work upon her companion.
</p>
<p>
"Yes, certainly, of course," said the colonel, glancing nervously up and
down the street—"yes, certainly." Perceiving, however, that there
was no one in sight or hearing, he proceeded at once to inform Mrs.
Tretherick that the great trouble of his life, in fact, had been the
possession of too much soul. That many women—as a gentleman she
would excuse him, of course, from mentioning names—but many
beautiful women had often sought his society, but being deficient, madam,
absolutely deficient, in this quality, he could not reciprocate. But when
two natures thoroughly in sympathy, despising alike the sordid trammels of
a low and vulgar community and the conventional restraints of a
hypocritical society—when two souls in perfect accord met and
mingled in poetical union, then—but here the colonel's speech, which
had been remarkable for a certain whisky-and-watery fluency, grew husky,
almost inaudible, and decidedly incoherent. Possibly Mrs. Tretherick may
have heard something like it before, and was enabled to fill the hiatus.
Nevertheless, the cheek that was on the side of the colonel was quite
virginal and bashfully conscious until they reached their destination.
</p>
<p>
It was a pretty little cottage, quite fresh and warm with paint, very
pleasantly relieved against a platoon of pines, some of whose foremost
files had been displaced to give freedom to the fenced enclosure in which
it sat. In the vivid sunlight and perfect silence, it had a new,
uninhabited look, as if the carpenters and painters had just left it. At
the farther end of the lot, a Chinaman was stolidly digging; but there was
no other sign of occupancy. "The coast," as the colonel had said, was
indeed "clear." Mrs. Tretherick paused at the gate. The colonel would have
entered with her, but was stopped by a gesture. "Come for me in a couple
of hours, and I shall have everything packed," she said, as she smiled,
and extended her hand. The colonel seized and pressed it with great
fervor. Perhaps the pressure was slightly returned; for the gallant
colonel was impelled to inflate his chest, and trip away as smartly as his
stubby-toed, high-heeled boots would permit. When he had gone, Mrs.
Tretherick opened the door, listened a moment in the deserted hall, and
then ran quickly upstairs to what had been her bedroom.
</p>
<p>
Everything there was unchanged as on the night she left it. On the
dressing-table stood her bandbox, as she remembered to have left it when
she took out her bonnet. On the mantle lay the other glove she had
forgotten in her flight. The two lower drawers of the bureau were
half-open (she had forgotten to shut them); and on its marble top lay her
shawl pin and a soiled cuff. What other recollections came upon her I know
not; but she suddenly grew quite white, shivered, and listened with a
beating heart, and her hand upon the door. Then she stepped to the mirror,
and half-fearfully, half-curiously, parted with her fingers the braids of
her blond hair above her little pink ear, until she came upon an ugly,
half-healed scar. She gazed at this, moving her pretty head up and down to
get a better light upon it, until the slight cast in her velvety eyes
became very strongly marked indeed. Then she turned away with a light,
reckless, foolish laugh, and ran to the closet where hung her precious
dresses. These she inspected nervously, and missing suddenly a favorite
black silk from its accustomed peg, for a moment, thought she should have
fainted. But discovering it the next instant lying upon a trunk where she
had thrown it, a feeling of thankfulness to a superior Being who protects
the friendless for the first time sincerely thrilled her. Then, albeit she
was hurried for time, she could not resist trying the effect of a certain
lavender neck ribbon upon the dress she was then wearing, before the
mirror. And then suddenly she became aware of a child's voice close beside
her, and she stopped. And then the child's voice repeated, "Is it Mamma?"
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick faced quickly about. Standing in the doorway was a little
girl of six or seven. Her dress had been originally fine, but was torn and
dirty; and her hair, which was a very violent red, was tumbled
seriocomically about her forehead. For all this, she was a picturesque
little thing, even through whose childish timidity there was a certain
self-sustained air which is apt to come upon children who are left much to
themselves. She was holding under her arm a rag doll, apparently of her
own workmanship, and nearly as large as herself—a doll with a
cylindrical head, and features roughly indicated with charcoal. A long
shawl, evidently belonging to a grown person, dropped from her shoulders
and swept the floor.
</p>
<p>
The spectacle did not excite Mrs. Tretherick's delight. Perhaps she had
but a small sense of humor. Certainly, when the child, still standing in
the doorway, again asked, "Is it Mamma?" she answered sharply, "No, it
isn't," and turned a severe look upon the intruder.
</p>
<p>
The child retreated a step, and then, gaining courage with the distance,
said in deliciously imperfect speech:
</p>
<p>
"Dow 'way then! why don't you dow away?"
</p>
<p>
But Mrs. Tretherick was eying the shawl. Suddenly she whipped it off the
child's shoulders, and said angrily:
</p>
<p>
"How dared you take my things, you bad child?"
</p>
<p>
"Is it yours? Then you are my mamma; ain't you? You are Mamma!" she
continued gleefully; and before Mrs. Tretherick could avoid her, she had
dropped her doll, and, catching the woman's skirts with both hands, was
dancing up and down before her.
</p>
<p>
"What's your name, child?" said Mrs. Tretherick coldly, removing the small
and not very white hands from her garments.
</p>
<p>
"Tarry."
</p>
<p>
"Tarry?"
</p>
<p>
"Yeth. Tarry. Tarowline."
</p>
<p>
"Caroline?"
</p>
<p>
"Yeth. Tarowline Tretherick."
</p>
<p>
"Whose child ARE you?" demanded Mrs. Tretherick still more coldly, to keep
down a rising fear.
</p>
<p>
"Why, yours," said the little creature with a laugh. "I'm your little
durl. You're my mamma, my new mamma. Don't you know my ol' mamma's dorn
away, never to turn back any more? I don't live wid my ol' mamma now. I
live wid you and Papa."
</p>
<p>
"How long have you been here?" asked Mrs. Tretherick snappishly.
</p>
<p>
"I fink it's free days," said Carry reflectively.
</p>
<p>
"You think! Don't you know?" sneered Mrs. Tretherick. "Then, where did you
come from?"
</p>
<p>
Carry's lip began to work under this sharp cross-examination. With a great
effort and a small gulp, she got the better of it, and answered:
</p>
<p>
"Papa, Papa fetched me—from Miss Simmons—from Sacramento, last
week."
</p>
<p>
"Last week! You said three days just now," returned Mrs. Tretherick with
severe deliberation.
</p>
<p>
"I mean a monf," said Carry, now utterly adrift in sheer helplessness and
confusion.
</p>
<p>
"Do you know what you are talking about?" demanded Mrs. Tretherick
shrilly, restraining an impulse to shake the little figure before her and
precipitate the truth by specific gravity.
</p>
<p>
But the flaming red head here suddenly disappeared in the folds of Mrs.
Tretherick's dress, as if it were trying to extinguish itself forever.
</p>
<p>
"There now—stop that sniffling," said Mrs. Tretherick, extricating
her dress from the moist embraces of the child and feeling exceedingly
uncomfortable. "Wipe your face now, and run away, and don't bother. Stop,"
she continued, as Carry moved away. "Where's your papa?"
</p>
<p>
"He's dorn away too. He's sick. He's been dorn"—she hesitated—"two,
free, days."
</p>
<p>
"Who takes care of you, child?" said Mrs. Tretherick, eying her curiously.
</p>
<p>
"John, the Chinaman. I tresses myselth. John tooks and makes the beds."
</p>
<p>
"Well, now, run away and behave yourself, and don't bother me any more,"
said Mrs. Tretherick, remembering the object of her visit. "Stop—where
are you going?" she added as the child began to ascend the stairs,
dragging the long doll after her by one helpless leg.
</p>
<p>
"Doin' upstairs to play and be dood, and no bother Mamma."
</p>
<p>
"I ain't your mamma," shouted Mrs. Tretherick, and then she swiftly
re-entered her bedroom and slammed the door.
</p>
<p>
Once inside, she drew forth a large trunk from the closet and set to work
with querulous and fretful haste to pack her wardrobe. She tore her best
dress in taking it from the hook on which it hung: she scratched her soft
hands twice with an ambushed pin. All the while, she kept up an indignant
commentary on the events of the past few moments. She said to herself she
saw it all. Tretherick had sent for this child of his first wife—this
child of whose existence he had never seemed to care—just to insult
her, to fill her place. Doubtless the first wife herself would follow
soon, or perhaps there would be a third. Red hair, not auburn, but RED—of
course the child, this Caroline, looked like its mother, and, if so, she
was anything but pretty. Or the whole thing had been prepared: this
red-haired child, the image of its mother, had been kept at a convenient
distance at Sacramento, ready to be sent for when needed. She remembered
his occasional visits there on—business, as he said. Perhaps the
mother already was there; but no, she had gone East. Nevertheless, Mrs.
Tretherick, in her then state of mind, preferred to dwell upon the fact
that she might be there. She was dimly conscious, also, of a certain
satisfaction in exaggerating her feelings. Surely no woman had ever been
so shamefully abused. In fancy, she sketched a picture of herself sitting
alone and deserted, at sunset, among the fallen columns of a ruined
temple, in a melancholy yet graceful attitude, while her husband drove
rapidly away in a luxurious coach-and-four, with a red-haired woman at his
side. Sitting upon the trunk she had just packed, she partly composed a
lugubrious poem describing her sufferings as, wandering alone and poorly
clad, she came upon her husband and "another" flaunting in silks and
diamonds. She pictured herself dying of consumption, brought on by sorrow—a
beautiful wreck, yet still fascinating, gazed upon adoringly by the editor
of the AVALANCHE and Colonel Starbottle. And where was Colonel Starbottle
all this while? Why didn't he come? He, at least, understood her. He—she
laughed the reckless, light laugh of a few moments before; and then her
face suddenly grew grave, as it had not a few moments before.
</p>
<p>
What was that little red-haired imp doing all this time? Why was she so
quiet? She opened the door noiselessly, and listened. She fancied that she
heard, above the multitudinous small noises and creakings and warpings of
the vacant house, a smaller voice singing on the floor above. This, as she
remembered, was only an open attic that had been used as a storeroom. With
a half-guilty consciousness, she crept softly upstairs and, pushing the
door partly open, looked within.
</p>
<p>
Athwart the long, low-studded attic, a slant sunbeam from a single small
window lay, filled with dancing motes, and only half illuminating the
barren, dreary apartment. In the ray of this sunbeam she saw the child's
glowing hair, as if crowned by a red aureole, as she sat upon the floor
with her exaggerated doll between her knees. She appeared to be talking to
it; and it was not long before Mrs. Tretherick observed that she was
rehearsing the interview of a half-hour before. She catechized the doll
severely, cross-examining it in regard to the duration of its stay there,
and generally on the measure of time. The imitation of Mrs. Tretherick's
manner was exceedingly successful, and the conversation almost a literal
reproduction, with a single exception. After she had informed the doll
that she was not her mother, at the close of the interview she added
pathetically, "that if she was dood, very dood, she might be her mamma,
and love her very much."
</p>
<p>
I have already hinted that Mrs. Tretherick was deficient in a sense of
humor. Perhaps it was for this reason that this whole scene affected her
most unpleasantly; and the conclusion sent the blood tingling to her
cheek. There was something, too, inconceivably lonely in the situation.
The unfurnished vacant room, the half-lights, the monstrous doll, whose
very size seemed to give a pathetic significance to its speechlessness,
the smallness of the one animate, self-centered figure—all these
touched more or less deeply the half-poetic sensibilities of the woman.
She could not help utilizing the impression as she stood there, and
thought what a fine poem might be constructed from this material if the
room were a little darker, the child lonelier—say, sitting beside a
dead mother's bier, and the wind wailing in the turrets. And then she
suddenly heard footsteps at the door below, and recognized the tread of
the colonel's cane.
</p>
<p>
She flew swiftly down the stairs, and encountered the colonel in the hall.
Here she poured into his astonished ear a voluble and exaggerated
statement of her discovery, and indignant recital of her wrongs. "Don't
tell me the whole thing wasn't arranged beforehand; for I know it was!"
she almost screamed. "And think," she added, "of the heartlessness of the
wretch, leaving his own child alone here in that way."
</p>
<p>
"It's a blank shame!" stammered the colonel, without the least idea of
what he was talking about. In fact, utterly unable as he was to comprehend
a reason for the woman's excitement, with his estimate of her character, I
fear he showed it more plainly than he intended. He stammered, expanded
his chest, looked stern, gallant, tender, but all unintelligently. Mrs.
Tretherick, for an instant, experienced a sickening doubt of the existence
of natures in perfect affinity.
</p>
<p>
"It's of no use," said Mrs. Tretherick with sudden vehemence, in answer to
some inaudible remark of the colonel's, and withdrawing her hand from the
fervent grasp of that ardent and sympathetic man. "It's of no use: my mind
is made up. You can send for my trunk as soon as you like; but I shall
stay here, and confront that man with the proof of his vileness. I will
put him face to face with his infamy."
</p>
<p>
I do not know whether Colonel Starbottle thoroughly appreciated the
convincing proof of Tretherick's unfaithfulness and malignity afforded by
the damning evidence of the existence of Tretherick's own child in his own
house. He was dimly aware, however, of some unforeseen obstacle to the
perfect expression of the infinite longing of his own sentimental nature.
But, before he could say anything, Carry appeared on the landing above
them, looking timidly, and yet half-critically, at the pair.
</p>
<p>
"That's her," said Mrs. Tretherick excitedly. In her deepest emotions, in
either verse or prose, she rose above a consideration of grammatical
construction.
</p>
<p>
"Ah!" said the colonel, with a sudden assumption of parental affection and
jocularity that was glaringly unreal and affected. "Ah! pretty little
girl, pretty little girl! How do you do? How are you? You find yourself
pretty well, do you, pretty little girl?" The colonel's impulse also was
to expand his chest and swing his cane, until it occurred to him that this
action might be ineffective with a child of six or seven. Carry, however,
took no immediate notice of this advance, but further discomposed the
chivalrous colonel by running quickly to Mrs. Tretherick and hiding
herself, as if for protection, in the folds of her gown. Nevertheless, the
colonel was not vanquished. Falling back into an attitude of respectful
admiration, he pointed out a marvelous resemblance to the "Madonna and
Child." Mrs. Tretherick simpered, but did not dislodge Carry as before.
There was an awkward pause for a moment; and then Mrs. Tretherick,
motioning significantly to the child, said in a whisper: "Go now. Don't
come here again, but meet me tonight at the hotel." She extended her hand:
the colonel bent over it gallantly and, raising his hat, the next moment
was gone.
</p>
<p>
"Do you think," said Mrs. Tretherick with an embarrassed voice and a
prodigious blush, looking down, and addressing the fiery curls just
visible in the folds of her dress—"do you think you will be 'dood'
if I let you stay in here and sit with me?"
</p>
<p>
"And let me tall you Mamma?" queried Carry, looking up.
</p>
<p>
"And let you call me Mamma!" assented Mrs. Tretherick with an embarrassed
laugh.
</p>
<p>
"Yeth," said Carry promptly.
</p>
<p>
They entered the bedroom together. Carry's eye instantly caught sight of
the trunk.
</p>
<p>
"Are you dowin' away adain, Mamma?" she said with a quick nervous look,
and a clutch at the woman's dress.
</p>
<p>
"No-o," said Mrs. Tretherick, looking out of the window.
</p>
<p>
"Only playing your dowin' away," suggested Carry with a laugh. "Let me
play too."
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick assented. Carry flew into the next room, and presently
reappeared dragging a small trunk, into which she gravely proceeded to
pack her clothes. Mrs. Tretherick noticed that they were not many. A
question or two regarding them brought out some further replies from the
child; and before many minutes had elapsed, Mrs. Tretherick was in
possession of all her earlier history. But, to do this, Mrs. Tretherick
had been obliged to take Carry upon her lap, pending the most confidential
disclosures. They sat thus a long time after Mrs. Tretherick had
apparently ceased to be interested in Carry's disclosures; and when lost
in thought, she allowed the child to rattle on unheeded, and ran her
fingers through the scarlet curls.
</p>
<p>
"You don't hold me right, Mamma," said Carry at last, after one or two
uneasy shiftings of position.
</p>
<p>
"How should I hold you?" asked Mrs. Tretherick with a half-amused,
half-embarrassed laugh.
</p>
<p>
"Dis way," said Carry, curling up into position, with one arm around Mrs.
Tretherick's neck and her cheek resting on her bosom—"dis way—dere."
After a little preparatory nestling, not unlike some small animal, she
closed her eyes, and went to sleep.
</p>
<p>
For a few moments the woman sat silent, scarcely daring to breathe in that
artificial attitude. And then, whether from some occult sympathy in the
touch, or God best knows what, a sudden fancy began to thrill her. She
began by remembering an old pain that she had forgotten, an old horror
that she had resolutely put away all these years. She recalled days of
sickness and distrust—days of an overshadowing fear—days of
preparation for something that was to be prevented, that WAS prevented,
with mortal agony and fear. She thought of a life that might have been—she
dared not say HAD been—and wondered. It was six years ago; if it had
lived, it would have been as old as Carry. The arms which were folded
loosely around the sleeping child began to tremble, and tighten their
clasp. And then the deep potential impulse came, and with a half-sob,
half-sigh, she threw her arms out and drew the body of the sleeping child
down, down, into her breast, down again and again as if she would hide it
in the grave dug there years before. And the gust that shook her passed,
and then, ah me! the rain.
</p>
<p>
A drop or two fell upon the curls of Carry, and she moved uneasily in her
sleep. But the woman soothed her again—it was SO easy to do it now—and
they sat there quiet and undisturbed, so quiet that they might have seemed
incorporate of the lonely silent house, the slowly declining sunbeams, and
the general air of desertion and abandonment, yet a desertion that had in
it nothing of age, decay, or despair.
</p>
<p>
Colonel Starbottle waited at the Fiddletown Hotel all that night in vain.
And the next morning, when Mr. Tretherick returned to his husks, he found
the house vacant and untenanted, except by motes and sunbeams.
</p>
<p>
When it was fairly known that Mrs. Tretherick had run away, taking Mr.
Tretherick's own child with her, there was some excitement and much
diversity of opinion, in Fiddletown. THE DUTCH FLAT INTELLIGENCER openly
alluded to the "forcible abduction" of the child with the same freedom,
and it is to be feared the same prejudice, with which it had criticized
the abductor's poetry. All of Mrs. Tretherick's own sex, and perhaps a few
of the opposite sex, whose distinctive quality was not, however, very
strongly indicated, fully coincided in the views of the INTELLIGENCER. The
majority, however, evaded the moral issue; that Mrs. Tretherick had shaken
the red dust of Fiddletown from her dainty slippers was enough for them to
know. They mourned the loss of the fair abductor more than her offense.
They promptly rejected Tretherick as an injured husband and disconsolate
father, and even went so far as to openly cast discredit on the sincerity
of his grief. They reserved an ironical condolence for Colonel Starbottle,
overbearing that excellent man with untimely and demonstrative sympathy in
barrooms, saloons, and other localities not generally deemed favorable to
the display of sentiment. "She was alliz a skittish thing, Kernel," said
one sympathizer, with a fine affectation of gloomy concern and great
readiness of illustration; "and it's kinder nat'ril thet she'd get away
someday, and stampede that theer colt: but thet she should shake YOU,
Kernel, diet she should jist shake you—is what gits me. And they do
say thet you jist hung around thet hotel all night, and payrolled them
corriders, and histed yourself up and down them stairs, and meandered in
and out o' thet piazzy, and all for nothing?" It was another generous and
tenderly commiserating spirit that poured additional oil and wine on the
colonel's wounds. "The boys yer let on thet Mrs. Tretherick prevailed on
ye to pack her trunk and a baby over from the house to the stage offis,
and that the chap ez did go off with her thanked you, and offered you two
short bits, and sed ez how he liked your looks, and ud employ you agin—and
now you say it ain't so? Well, I'll tell the boys it ain't so, and I'm
glad I met you, for stories DO get round."
</p>
<p>
Happily for Mrs. Tretherick's reputation, however, the Chinaman in
Tretherick's employment, who was the only eyewitness of her flight, stated
that she was unaccompanied, except by the child. He further deposed that,
obeying her orders, he had stopped the Sacramento coach, and secured a
passage for herself and child to San Francisco. It was true that Ah Fe's
testimony was of no legal value. But nobody doubted it. Even those who
were skeptical of the pagan's ability to recognize the sacredness of the
truth admitted his passionless, unprejudiced unconcern. But it would
appear, from a hitherto unrecorded passage of this veracious chronicle,
that herein they were mistaken.
</p>
<p>
It was about six months after the disappearance of Mrs. Tretherick that Ah
Fe, while working in Tretherick's lot, was hailed by two passing Chinamen.
They were the ordinary mining coolies, equipped with long poles and
baskets for their usual pilgrimages. An animated conversation at once
ensued between Ah Fe and his brother Mongolians—a conversation
characterized by that usual shrill volubility and apparent animosity which
was at once the delight and scorn of the intelligent Caucasian who did not
understand a word of it. Such, at least, was the feeling with which Mr.
Tretherick on his veranda and Colonel Starbottle, who was passing,
regarded their heathenish jargon. The gallant colonel simply kicked them
out of his way; the irate Tretherick, with an oath, threw a stone at the
group, and dispersed them, but not before one or two slips of yellow rice
paper, marked with hieroglyphics, were exchanged, and a small parcel put
into Ah Fe's hands. When Ah Fe opened this in the dim solitude of his
kitchen, he found a little girl's apron, freshly washed, ironed, and
folded. On the corner of the hem were the initials "C. T." Ah Fe tucked it
away in a corner of his blouse, and proceeded to wash his dishes in the
sink with a smile of guileless satisfaction.
</p>
<p>
Two days after this, Ah Fe confronted his master. "Me no likee Fiddletown.
Me belly sick. Me go now." Mr. Tretherick violently suggested a profane
locality. Ah Fe gazed at him placidly, and withdrew.
</p>
<p>
Before leaving Fiddletown, however, he accidentally met Colonel
Starbottle, and dropped a few incoherent phrases which apparently
interested that gentleman. When he concluded, the colonel handed him a
letter and a twenty-dollar gold piece. "If you bring me an answer, I'll
double that—sabe, John?" Ah Fe nodded. An interview equally
accidental, with precisely the same result, took place between Ah Fe and
another gentleman, whom I suspect to have been the youthful editor of the
AVALANCHE. Yet I regret to state that, after proceeding some distance on
his journey, Ah Fe calmly broke the seals of both letters, and after
trying to read them upside down and sideways, finally divided them into
accurate squares, and in this condition disposed of them to a brother
Celestial whom he met on the road, for a trifling gratuity. The agony of
Colonel Starbottle on finding his wash bill made out on the unwritten side
of one of these squares, and delivered to him with his weekly clean
clothes, and the subsequent discovery that the remaining portions of his
letter were circulated by the same method from the Chinese laundry of one
Fung Ti of Fiddletown, has been described to me as peculiarly affecting.
Yet I am satisfied that a higher nature, rising above the levity induced
by the mere contemplation of the insignificant details of this breach of
trust, would find ample retributive justice in the difficulties that
subsequently attended Ah Fe's pilgrimage.
</p>
<p>
On the road to Sacramento he was twice playfully thrown from the top of
the stagecoach by an intelligent but deeply intoxicated Caucasian, whose
moral nature was shocked at riding with one addicted to opium-smoking. At
Hangtown he was beaten by a passing stranger—purely an act of
Christian supererogation. At Dutch Flat he was robbed by well-known hands
from unknown motives. At Sacramento he was arrested on suspicion of being
something or other, and discharged with a severe reprimand—possibly
for not being it, and so delaying the course of justice. At San Francisco
he was freely stoned by children of the public schools; but, by carefully
avoiding these monuments of enlightened progress, he at last reached, in
comparative safety, the Chinese quarters, where his abuse was confined to
the police and limited by the strong arm of the law.
</p>
<p>
The next day he entered the washhouse of Chy Fook as an assistant, and on
the following Friday was sent with a basket of clean clothes to Chy Fook's
several clients.
</p>
<p>
It was the usual foggy afternoon as he climbed the long windswept hill of
California Street—one of those bleak, gray intervals that made the
summer a misnomer to any but the liveliest San Franciscan fancy. There was
no warmth or color in earth or sky, no light nor shade within or without,
only one monotonous, universal neutral tint over everything. There was a
fierce unrest in the wind-whipped streets: there was a dreary vacant quiet
in the gray houses. When Ah Fe reached the top of the hill, the Mission
Ridge was already hidden, and the chill sea breeze made him shiver. As he
put down his basket to rest himself, it is possible that, to his defective
intelligence and heathen experience, this "God's own climate," as was
called, seemed to possess but scant tenderness, softness, or mercy. But it
is possible that Ah Fe illogically confounded this season with his old
persecutors, the schoolchildren, who, being released from studious
confinement, at this hour were generally most aggressive. So he hastened
on, and turning a corner, at last stopped before a small house.
</p>
<p>
It was the usual San Franciscan urban cottage. There was the little strip
of cold green shrubbery before it; the chilly, bare veranda, and above
this, again, the grim balcony, on which no one sat. Ah Fe rang the bell. A
servant appeared, glanced at his basket, and reluctantly admitted him, as
if he were some necessary domestic animal. Ah Fe silently mounted the
stairs, and entering the open door of the front chamber, put down the
basket and stood passively on the threshold.
</p>
<p>
A woman, who was sitting in the cold gray light of the window, with a
child in her lap, rose listlessly, and came toward him. Ah Fe instantly
recognized Mrs. Tretherick; but not a muscle of his immobile face changed,
nor did his slant eyes lighten as he met her own placidly. She evidently
did not recognize him as she began to count the clothes. But the child,
curiously examining him, suddenly uttered a short, glad cry.
</p>
<p>
"Why, it's John, Mamma! It's our old John what we had in Fiddletown."
</p>
<p>
For an instant Ah Fe's eyes and teeth electrically lightened. The child
clapped her hands, and caught at his blouse. Then he said shortly: "Me
John—Ah Fe—allee same. Me know you. How do?"
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick dropped the clothes nervously, and looked hard at Ah Fe.
Wanting the quick-witted instinct of affection that sharpened Carry's
perception, she even then could not distinguish him above his fellows.
With a recollection of past pain, and an obscure suspicion of impending
danger, she asked him when he had left Fiddletown.
</p>
<p>
"Longee time. No likee Fiddletown, no likee Tlevelick. Likee San Flisco.
Likee washee. Likee Tally."
</p>
<p>
Ah Fe's laconics pleased Mrs. Tretherick. She did not stop to consider how
much an imperfect knowledge of English added to his curt directness and
sincerity. But she said, "Don't tell anybody you have seen me," and took
out her pocketbook.
</p>
<p>
Ah Fe, without looking at it, saw that it was nearly empty. Ah Fe, without
examining the apartment, saw that it was scantily furnished. Ah Fe,
without removing his eyes from blank vacancy, saw that both Mrs.
Tretherick and Carry were poorly dressed. Yet it is my duty to state that
Ah Fe's long fingers closed promptly and firmly over the half-dollar which
Mrs. Tretherick extended to him.
</p>
<p>
Then he began to fumble in his blouse with a series of extraordinary
contortions. After a few moments, he extracted from apparently no
particular place a child's apron, which he laid upon the basket with the
remark:
</p>
<p>
"One piecee washman flagittee."
</p>
<p>
Then he began anew his fumblings and contortions. At last his efforts were
rewarded by his producing, apparently from his right ear, a many-folded
piece of tissue paper. Unwrapping this carefully, he at last disclosed two
twenty-dollar gold pieces, which he handed to Mrs. Tretherick.
</p>
<p>
"You leavee money topside of blulow, Fiddletown. Me findee money. Me
fetchee money to you. All lightee."
</p>
<p>
"But I left no money on the top of the bureau, John," said Mrs. Tretherick
earnestly. "There must be some mistake. It belongs to some other person.
Take it back, John."
</p>
<p>
Ah Fe's brow darkened. He drew away from Mrs. Tretherick's extended hand,
and began hastily to gather up his basket.
</p>
<p>
"Me no takee it back. No, no! Bimeby pleesman he catchee me. He say, 'God
damn thief!—catchee flowty dollar: come to jailee.' Me no takee
back. You leavee money topside blulow, Fiddletown. Me fetchee money you.
Me no takee back."
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick hesitated. In the confusion of her flight, she MIGHT have
left the money in the manner he had said. In any event, she had no right
to jeopardize this honest Chinaman's safety by refusing it. So she said:
"Very well, John, I will keep it. But you must come again and see me—"
here Mrs. Tretherick hesitated with a new and sudden revelation of the
fact that any man could wish to see any other than herself—"and, and—Carry."
</p>
<p>
Ah Fe's face lightened. He even uttered a short ventriloquistic laugh
without moving his mouth. Then, shouldering his basket, he shut the door
carefully and slid quietly down stairs. In the lower hall he, however,
found an unexpected difficulty in opening the front door, and, after
fumbling vainly at the lock for a moment, looked around for some help or
instruction. But the Irish handmaid who had let him in was contemptuously
oblivious of his needs, and did not appear.
</p>
<p>
There occurred a mysterious and painful incident, which I shall simply
record without attempting to explain. On the hall table a scarf, evidently
the property of the servant before alluded to, was lying. As Ah Fe tried
the lock with one hand, the other rested lightly on the table. Suddenly,
and apparently of its own volition, the scarf began to creep slowly toward
Ah Fe's hand; from Ah Fe's hand it began to creep up his sleeve slowly,
and with an insinuating, snakelike motion; and then disappeared somewhere
in the recesses of his blouse. Without betraying the least interest or
concern in this phenomenon, Ah Fe still repeated his experiments upon the
lock. A moment later the tablecloth of red damask, moved by apparently the
same mysterious impulse, slowly gathered itself under Ah Fe's fingers, and
sinuously disappeared by the same hidden channel. What further mystery
might have followed, I cannot say; for at this moment Ah Fe discovered the
secret of the lock, and was enabled to open the door coincident with the
sound of footsteps upon the kitchen stairs. Ah Fe did not hasten his
movements, but patiently shouldering his basket, closed the door carefully
behind him again, and stepped forth into the thick encompassing fog that
now shrouded earth and sky.
</p>
<p>
From her high casement window, Mrs. Tretherick watched Ah Fe's figure
until it disappeared in the gray cloud. In her present loneliness, she
felt a keen sense of gratitude toward him, and may have ascribed to the
higher emotions and the consciousness of a good deed that certain
expansiveness of the chest, and swelling of the bosom, that was really due
to the hidden presence of the scarf and tablecloth under his blouse. For
Mrs. Tretherick was still poetically sensitive. As the gray fog deepened
into night, she drew Carry closer toward her, and, above the prattle of
the child, pursued a vein of sentimental and egotistic recollection at
once bitter and dangerous. The sudden apparition of Ah Fe linked her again
with her past life at Fiddletown. Over the dreary interval between, she
was now wandering—a journey so piteous, willful, thorny, and useless
that it was no wonder that at last Carry stopped suddenly in the midst of
her voluble confidences to throw her small arms around the woman's neck,
and bid her not to cry.
</p>
<p>
Heaven forefend that I should use a pen that should be ever dedicated to
an exposition of unalterable moral principle to transcribe Mrs.
Tretherick's own theory of this interval and episode, with its feeble
palliations, its illogical deductions, its fond excuses, and weak
apologies. It would seem, however, that her experience had been hard. Her
slender stock of money was soon exhausted. At Sacramento she found that
the composition of verse, although appealing to the highest emotions of
the human heart, and compelling the editorial breast to the noblest
commendation in the editorial pages, was singularly inadequate to defray
the expenses of herself and Carry. Then she tried the stage, but failed
signally. Possibly her conception of the passions was different from that
which obtained with a Sacramento audience; but it was certain that her
charming presence, so effective at short range, was not sufficiently
pronounced for the footlights. She had admirers enough in the greenroom,
but awakened no abiding affection among the audience. In this strait, it
occurred to her that she had a voice—a contralto of no very great
compass or cultivation, but singularly sweet and touching; and she finally
obtained position in a church choir. She held it for three months, greatly
to her pecuniary advantage, and, it is said, much to the satisfaction of
the gentlemen in the back pews, who faced toward her during the singing of
the last hymn.
</p>
<p>
I remember her quite distinctly at this time. The light that slanted
through the oriel of St. Dives's choir was wont to fall very tenderly on
her beautiful head with its stacked masses of deerskin-colored hair, on
the low black arches of her brows, and to deepen the pretty fringes that
shaded her eyes of Genoa velvet. Very pleasant it was to watch the opening
and shutting of that small straight mouth, with its quick revelation of
little white teeth, and to see the foolish blood faintly deepen her satin
cheek as you watched. For Mrs. Tretherick was very sweetly conscious of
admiration and, like most pretty women, gathered herself under your eye
like a racer under the spur.
</p>
<p>
And then, of course, there came trouble. I have it from the soprano—a
little lady who possessed even more than the usual unprejudiced judgment
of her sex—that Mrs. Tretherick's conduct was simply shameful; that
her conceit was unbearable; that, if she considered the rest of the choir
as slaves, she (the soprano) would like to know it; that her conduct on
Easter Sunday with the basso had attracted the attention of the whole
congregation; and that she herself had noticed Dr. Cope twice look up
during the service; that her (the soprano's) friends had objected to her
singing in the choir with a person who had been on the stage, but she had
waived this. Yet she had it from the best authority that Mrs. Tretherick
had run away from her husband, and that this red-haired child who
sometimes came in the choir was not her own. The tenor confided to me
behind the organ that Mrs. Tretherick had a way of sustaining a note at
the end of a line in order that her voice might linger longer with the
congregation—an act that could be attributed only to a defective
moral nature; that as a man (he was a very popular dry goods clerk on
weekdays, and sang a good deal from apparently behind his eyebrows on the
Sabbath)—that as a man, sir, he would put up with it no longer. The
basso alone—a short German with a heavy voice, for which he seemed
reluctantly responsible, and rather grieved at its possession—stood
up for Mrs. Tretherick, and averred that they were jealous of her because
she was "bretty." The climax was at last reached in an open quarrel,
wherein Mrs. Tretherick used her tongue with such precision of statement
and epithet that the soprano burst into hysterical tears, and had to be
supported from the choir by her husband and the tenor. This act was marked
intentionally to the congregation by the omission of the usual soprano
solo. Mrs. Tretherick went home flushed with triumph, but on reaching her
room frantically told Carry that they were beggars henceforward; that she—her
mother—had just taken the very bread out of her darling's mouth, and
ended by bursting into a flood of penitent tears. They did not come so
quickly as in her old poetical days; but when they came they stung deeply.
She was roused by a formal visit from a vestryman—one of the music
committee. Mrs. Tretherick dried her long lashes, put on a new neck
ribbon, and went down to the parlor. She staid there two hours—a
fact that might have occasioned some remark but that the vestryman was
married, and had a family of grownup daughters. When Mrs. Tretherick
returned to her room, she sang to herself in the glass and scolded Carry—but
she retained her place in the choir.
</p>
<p>
It was not long, however. In due course of time, her enemies received a
powerful addition to their forces in the committeeman's wife. That lady
called upon several of the church members and on Dr. Cope's family. The
result was that, at a later meeting of the music committee, Mrs.
Tretherick's voice was declared inadequate to the size of the building and
she was invited to resign. She did so. She had been out of a situation for
two months, and her scant means were almost exhausted, when Ah Fe's
unexpected treasure was tossed into her lap.
</p>
<p>
The gray fog deepened into night, and the street lamps started into
shivering life as, absorbed in these unprofitable memories, Mrs.
Tretherick still sat drearily at her window. Even Carry had slipped away
unnoticed; and her abrupt entrance with the damp evening paper in her hand
roused Mrs. Tretherick, and brought her back to an active realization of
the present. For Mrs. Tretherick was wont to scan the advertisements in
the faint hope of finding some avenue of employment—she knew not
what—open to her needs; and Carry had noted this habit.
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick mechanically closed the shutters, lit the lights, and
opened the paper. Her eye fell instinctively on the following paragraph in
the telegraphic column:
</p>
<p>
FIDDLETOWN, 7th.—Mr. James Tretherick, an old resident of this
place, died last night of delirium tremens. Mr. Tretherick was addicted to
intemperate habits, said to have been induced by domestic trouble.
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick did not start. She quietly turned over another page of the
paper, and glanced at Carry. The child was absorbed in a book. Mrs.
Tretherick uttered no word, but during the remainder of the evening was
unusually silent and cold. When Carry was undressed and in bed, Mrs.
Tretherick suddenly dropped on her knees beside the bed, and, taking
Carry's flaming head between her hands, said:
</p>
<p>
"Should you like to have another papa, Carry, darling?"
</p>
<p>
"No," said Carry, after a moment's thought.
</p>
<p>
"But a papa to help Mamma take care of you, to love you, to give you nice
clothes, to make a lady of you when you grow up?"
</p>
<p>
Carry turned her sleepy eyes toward the questioner. "Should YOU, Mamma?"
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Tretherick suddenly flushed to the roots of her hair. "Go to sleep,"
she said sharply, and turned away.
</p>
<p>
But at midnight the child felt two white arms close tightly around her,
and was drawn down into a bosom that heaved, fluttered, and at last was
broken up by sobs.
</p>
<p>
"Don't ky, Mamma," whispered Carry, with a vague retrospect of their
recent conversation. "Don't ky. I fink I SHOULD like a new papa, if he
loved you very much—very, very much!"
</p>
<p>
A month afterward, to everybody's astonishment, Mrs. Tretherick was
married. The happy bridegroom was one Colonel Starbottle, recently elected
to represent Calaveras County in the legislative councils of the State. As
I cannot record the event in finer language than that used by the
correspondent of THE SACRAMENTO GLOBE, I venture to quote some of his
graceful periods. "The relentless shafts of the sly god have been lately
busy among our gallant Solons. We quote 'one more unfortunate.' The latest
victim is the Hon. C. Starbottle of Calaveras. The fair enchantress in the
case is a beautiful widow, a former votary of Thespis, and lately a
fascinating St. Cecilia of one of the most fashionable churches of San
Francisco, where she commanded a high salary."
</p>
<p>
THE DUTCH FLAT INTELLIGENCER saw fit, however, to comment upon the fact
with that humorous freedom characteristic of an unfettered press. "The new
Democratic war horse from Calaveras has lately advented in the legislature
with a little bill to change the name of Tretherick to Starbottle. They
call it a marriage certificate down there. Mr. Tretherick has been dead
just one month; but we presume the gallant colonel is not afraid of
ghosts." It is but just to Mrs. Tretherick to state that the colonel's
victory was by no means an easy one. To a natural degree of coyness on the
part of the lady was added the impediment of a rival—a prosperous
undertaker from Sacramento, who had first seen and loved Mrs. Tretherick
at the theater and church, his professional habits debarring him from
ordinary social intercourse, and indeed any other than the most formal
public contact with the sex. As this gentleman had made a snug fortune
during the felicitous prevalence of a severe epidemic, the colonel
regarded him as a dangerous rival. Fortunately, however, the undertaker
was called in professionally to lay out a brother senator, who had
unhappily fallen by the colonel's pistol in an affair of honor; and either
deterred by physical consideration from rivalry, or wisely concluding that
the colonel was professionally valuable, he withdrew from the field.
</p>
<p>
The honeymoon was brief, and brought to a close by an untoward incident.
During their bridal trip, Carry had been placed in the charge of Colonel
Starbottle's sister. On their return to the city, immediately on reaching
their lodgings, Mrs. Starbottle announced her intention of at once
proceeding to Mrs. Culpepper's to bring the child home. Colonel
Starbottle, who had been exhibiting for some time a certain uneasiness
which he had endeavored to overcome by repeated stimulation, finally
buttoned his coat tightly across his breast, and after walking unsteadily
once or twice up and down the room, suddenly faced his wife with his most
imposing manner.
</p>
<p>
"I have deferred," said the colonel with an exaggeration of port that
increased with his inward fear, and a growing thickness of speech—"I
have deferr—I may say poshponed statement o' fack thash my duty ter
dishclose ter ye. I did no wish to mar sushine mushal happ'ness, to bligh
bud o' promise, to darken conjuglar sky by unpleasht revelashun. Musht be
done—by God, m'm, musht do it now. The chile is gone!"
</p>
<p>
"Gone!" echoed Mrs. Starbottle.
</p>
<p>
There was something in the tone of her voice, in the sudden
drawing-together of the pupils of her eyes, that for a moment nearly
sobered the colonel, and partly collapsed his chest.
</p>
<p>
"I'll splain all in a minit," he said with a deprecating wave of the hand.
"Everything shall be splained. The-the-the-melencholly event wish
preshipitate our happ'ness—the myster'us prov'nice wish releash you—releash
chile! hunerstan?—releash chile. The mom't Tretherick die—all
claim you have in chile through him—die too. Thash law. Who's chile
b'long to? Tretherick? Tretherick dead. Chile can't b'long dead man. Damn
nonshense b'long dead man. I'sh your chile? no! whose chile then? Chile
b'long to 'ts mother. Unnerstan?"
</p>
<p>
"Where is she?" said Mrs. Starbottle, with a very white face and a very
low voice.
</p>
<p>
"I'll splain all. Chile b'long to 'ts mother. Thash law. I'm lawyer,
leshlator, and American sis'n. Ish my duty as lawyer, as leshlator, and
'merikan sis'n to reshtore chile to suff'rin mother at any coss—any
coss."
</p>
<p>
"Where is she?" repeated Mrs. Starbottle, with her eyes still fixed on the
colonel's face.
</p>
<p>
"Gone to 'ts m'o'r. Gone East on shteamer, yesserday. Waffed by fav'rin
gales to suff'rin p'rent. Thash so!"
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Starbottle did not move. The colonel felt his chest slowly
collapsing, but steadied himself against a chair, and endeavored to beam
with chivalrous gallantry not unmixed with magisterial firmness upon her
as she sat.
</p>
<p>
"Your feelin's, m'm, do honor to yer sex, but conshider situashun.
Conshider m'or's feelings—conshider MY feelin's." The colonel
paused, and flourishing a white handkerchief, placed it negligently in his
breast, and then smiled tenderly above it, as over laces and ruffles, on
the woman before him. "Why should dark shed-der cass bligh on two sholes
with single beat? Chile's fine chile, good chile, but summonelse chile!
Chile's gone, Clar'; but all ish'n't gone, Clar'. Conshider dearesht, you
all's have me!"
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Starbottle started to her feet. "YOU!" she cried, bringing out a
chest note that made the chandeliers ring—"You that I married to
give my darling food and clothes—YOU! a dog that I whistled to my
side to keep the men off me—YOU!"
</p>
<p>
She choked up, and then dashed past him into the inner room, which had
been Carry's; then she swept by him again into her own bedroom, and then
suddenly reappeared before him, erect, menacing, with a burning fire over
her cheekbones, a quick straightening of her arched brows and mouth, a
squaring of jaw, and ophidian flattening of the head.
</p>
<p>
"Listen!" she said in a hoarse, half-grown boy's voice. "Hear me! If you
ever expect to set eyes on me again, you must find the child. If you ever
expect to speak to me again, to touch me, you must bring her back. For
where she goes, I go; you hear me! Where she has gone, look for me."
</p>
<p>
She struck out past him again with a quick feminine throwing-out of her
arms from the elbows down, as if freeing herself from some imaginary
bonds, and dashing into her chamber, slammed and locked the door. Colonel
Starbottle, although no coward, stood in superstitious fear of an angry
woman, and, recoiling as she swept by, lost his unsteady foothold and
rolled helplessly on the sofa. Here, after one or two unsuccessful
attempts to regain his foothold, he remained, uttering from time to time
profane but not entirely coherent or intelligible protests, until at last
he succumbed to the exhausting quality of his emotions, and the narcotic
quantity of his potations.
</p>
<p>
Meantime, within, Mrs. Starbottle was excitedly gathering her valuables
and packing her trunk, even as she had done once before in the course of
this remarkable history. Perhaps some recollection of this was in her
mind; for she stopped to lean her burning cheeks upon her hand, as if she
saw again the figure of the child standing in the doorway, and heard once
more a childish voice asking, "Is it Mamma?" But the epithet now stung her
to the quick, and with a quick, passionate gesture she dashed it away with
a tear that had gathered in her eye. And then it chanced that, in turning
over some clothes, she came upon the child's slipper with a broken sandal
string. She uttered a great cry here—the first she had uttered—and
caught it to her breast, kissing it passionately again and again, and
rocking from side to side with a motion peculiar to her sex. And then she
took it to the window, the better to see it through her now streaming
eyes. Here she was taken with a sudden fit of coughing that she could not
stifle with the handkerchief she put to her feverish lips. And then she
suddenly grew very faint. The window seemed to recede before her, the
floor to sink beneath her feet; and staggering to the bed, she fell prone
upon it with the sandal and handkerchief pressed to her breast. Her face
was quite pale, the orbit of her eyes dark; and there was a spot upon her
lip, another on her handkerchief, and still another on the white
counterpane of the bed.
</p>
<p>
The wind had risen, rattling the window sashes and swaying the white
curtains in a ghostly way. Later, a gray fog stole softly over the roofs,
soothing the wind-roughened surfaces, and in-wrapping all things in an
uncertain light and a measureless peace. She lay there very quiet—for
all her troubles, still a very pretty bride. And on the other side of the
bolted door the gallant bridegroom, from his temporary couch, snored
peacefully.
</p>
<p>
A week before Christmas Day, 1870, the little town of Genoa, in the State
of New York, exhibited, perhaps more strongly than at any other time, the
bitter irony of its founders and sponsors. A driving snowstorm that had
whitened every windward hedge, bush, wall, and telegraph pole, played
around this soft Italian Capital, whirled in and out of the great staring
wooden Doric columns of its post office and hotel, beat upon the cold
green shutters of its best houses, and powdered the angular, stiff, dark
figures in its streets. From the level of the street, the four principal
churches of the town stood out starkly, even while their misshapen spires
were kindly hidden in the low, driving storm. Near the railroad station,
the new Methodist chapel, whose resemblance to an enormous locomotive was
further heightened by the addition of a pyramidal row of front steps, like
a cowcatcher, stood as if waiting for a few more houses to be hitched on
to proceed to a pleasanter location. But the pride of Genoa—the
great Crammer Institute for Young Ladies—stretched its bare brick
length and reared its cupola plainly from the bleak Parnassian hill above
the principal avenue. There was no evasion in the Crammer Institute of the
fact that it was a public institution. A visitor upon its doorsteps, a
pretty face at its window, were clearly visible all over the township.
</p>
<p>
The shriek of the engine of the four-o'clock Northern express brought but
few of the usual loungers to the depot. Only a single passenger alighted,
and was driven away in the solitary waiting sleigh toward the Genoa Hotel.
And then the train sped away again, with that passionless indifference to
human sympathies or curiosity peculiar to express trains; the one baggage
truck was wheeled into the station again; the station door was locked; and
the stationmaster went home.
</p>
<p>
The locomotive whistle, however, awakened the guilty consciousness of
three young ladies of the Crammer Institute, who were even then
surreptitiously regaling themselves in the bakeshop and confectionery
saloon of Mistress Phillips in a by-lane. For even the admirable
regulations of the Institute failed to entirely develop the physical and
moral natures of its pupils. They conformed to the excellent dietary rules
in public, and in private drew upon the luxurious rations of their village
caterer. They attended church with exemplary formality, and flirted
informally during service with the village beaux. They received the best
and most judicious instruction during school hours, and devoured the
trashiest novels during recess. The result of which was an aggregation of
quite healthy, quite human, and very charming young creatures that
reflected infinite credit on the Institute. Even Mistress Phillips, to
whom they owed vast sums, exhilarated by the exuberant spirits and
youthful freshness of her guests, declared that the sight of "them young
things" did her good, and had even been known to shield them by shameless
equivocation.
</p>
<p>
"Four o'clock, girls! and, if we're not back to prayers by five, we'll be
missed," said the tallest of these foolish virgins, with an aquiline nose,
and certain quiet elan that bespoke the leader, as she rose from her seat.
"Have you got the books, Addy?" Addy displayed three dissipated-looking
novels under her waterproof. "And the provisions, Carry?" Carry showed a
suspicious parcel filling the pocket of her sack. "All right, then. Come,
girls, trudge—Charge it," she added, nodding to her host as they
passed toward the door. "I'll pay you when my quarter's allowance comes."
</p>
<p>
"No, Kate," interposed Carry, producing her purse, "let me pay; it's my
turn."
</p>
<p>
"Never!" said Kate, arching her black brows loftily, "even if you do have
rich relatives, and regular remittances from California. Never! Come,
girls, forward, march!"
</p>
<p>
As they opened the door, a gust of wind nearly took them off their feet.
Kindhearted Mrs. Phillips was alarmed. "Sakes alive, galls! ye mussn't go
out in sich weather. Better let me send word to the Institoot, and make ye
up a nice bed tonight in my parlor." But the last sentence was lost in a
chorus of half-suppressed shrieks as the girls, hand in hand, ran down the
steps into the storm, and were at once whirled away.
</p>
<p>
The short December day, unlit by any sunset glow, was failing fast. It was
quite dark already, and the air was thick with driving snow. For some
distance their high spirits, youth, and even inexperience kept them
bravely up; but, in ambitiously attempting a short cut from the highroad
across an open field, their strength gave out, the laugh grew less
frequent, and tears began to stand in Carry's brown eyes. When they
reached the road again, they were utterly exhausted. "Let us go back,"
said Carry.
</p>
<p>
"We'd never get across that field again," said Addy.
</p>
<p>
"Let's stop at the first house, then," said Carry.
</p>
<p>
"The first house," said Addy, peering through the gathering darkness, "is
Squire Robinson's." She darted a mischievous glance at Carry that, even in
her discomfort and fear, brought the quick blood to her cheek.
</p>
<p>
"Oh, yes!" said Kate with gloomy irony, "certainly; stop at the squire's
by all means, and be invited to tea, and be driven home after by your dear
friend Mr. Harry, with a formal apology from Mrs. Robinson, and hopes that
the young ladies may be excused this time. No!" continued Kate with sudden
energy. "That may suit YOU; but I'm going back as I came—by the
window, or not at all" Then she pounced suddenly, like a hawk, on Carry,
who was betraying a tendency to sit down on a snowbank and whimper, and
shook her briskly. "You'll be going to sleep next. Stay, hold your
tongues, all of you—what's that?"
</p>
<p>
It was the sound of sleigh bells. Coming down toward them out of the
darkness was a sleigh with a single occupant. "Hold down your heads,
girls: if it's anybody that knows us, we're lost." But it was not, for a
voice strange to their ears, but withal very kindly and pleasant, asked if
its owner could be of any help to them. As they turned toward him, they
saw it was a man wrapped in a handsome sealskin cloak, wearing a sealskin
cap; his face, half-concealed by a muffler of the same material,
disclosing only a pair of long mustaches, and two keen dark eyes. "It's a
son of old Santa Claus!" whispered Addy. The girls tittered audibly as
they tumbled into the sleigh; they had regained their former spirits.
"Where shall I take you?" said the stranger quietly. There was a hurried
whispering; and then Kate said boldly, "To the Institute." They drove
silently up the hill, until the long, ascetic building loomed up before
them. The stranger reined up suddenly. "You know the way better than I,"
he said. "Where do you go in?" "Through the back window," said Kate with
sudden and appalling frankness. "I see!" responded their strange driver
quietly and, alighting quickly, removed the bells from the horses. "We can
drive as near as you please now," he added by way of explanation. "He
certainly is a son of Santa Claus," whispered Addy. "Hadn't we better ask
after his father?" "Hush!" said Kate decidedly. "He is an angel, I dare
say." She added with a delicious irrelevance, which was, however,
perfectly understood by her feminine auditors, "We are looking like three
frights."
</p>
<p>
Cautiously skirting the fences, they at last pulled up a few feet from a
dark wall. The stranger proceeded to assist them to alight. There was
still some light from the reflected snow; and as he handed his fair
companions to the ground, each was conscious of undergoing an intense
though respectful scrutiny. He assisted them gravely to open the window,
and then discreetly retired to the sleigh until the difficult and somewhat
discomposing ingress was made. He then walked to the window. "Thank you
and good night!" whispered three voices. A single figure still lingered.
The stranger leaned over the window sill. "Will you permit me to light my
cigar here? It might attract attention if I struck a match outside." By
the upspringing light he saw the figure of Kate very charmingly framed in
by the window. The match burnt slowly out in his fingers. Kate smiled
mischievously. The astute young woman had detected the pitiable
subterfuge. For what else did she stand at the head of her class, and had
doting parents paid three years' tuition?
</p>
<p>
The storm had passed, and the sun was shining quite cheerily in the
eastern recitation room the next morning when Miss Kate, whose seat was
nearest the window, placing her hand pathetically upon her heart, affected
to fall in bashful and extreme agitation upon the shoulder of Carry, her
neighbor. "HE has come," she gasped in a thrilling whisper. "Who?" asked
Carry sympathetically, who never clearly understood when Kate was in
earnest. "Who?—Why, the man who rescued us last night! I saw him
drive to the door this moment. Don't speak; I shall be better in a moment—there!"
she said, and the shameless hypocrite passed her hand pathetically across
her forehead with a tragic air.
</p>
<p>
"What can he want?" asked Carry, whose curiosity was excited. "I don't
know," said Kate, suddenly relapsing into gloomy cynicism. "Possibly to
put his five daughters to school; perhaps to finish his young wife, and
warn her against us."
</p>
<p>
"He didn't look old, and he didn't seem like a married man," rejoined Addy
thoughtfully.
</p>
<p>
"That was his art, you poor creature!" returned Kate scornfully. "You can
never tell anything of these men, they are so deceitful. Besides, it's
just my fate!"
</p>
<p>
"Why, Kate," began Carry, in serious concern.
</p>
<p>
"Hush! Miss Walker is saying something," said Kate, laughing.
</p>
<p>
"The young ladies will please give attention," said a slow, perfunctory
voice. "Miss Carry Tretherick is wanted in the parlor."
</p>
<p>
Meantime Mr. Jack Prince, the name given on the card, and various letters
and credentials submitted to the Rev. Mr. Crammer, paced the somewhat
severe apartment known publicly as the "reception parlor" and privately to
the pupils as "purgatory." His keen eyes had taken in the various rigid
details, from the flat steam "radiator," like an enormous japanned soda
cracker, that heated one end of the room to the monumental bust of Dr.
Crammer that hopelessly chilled the other; from the Lord's Prayer,
executed by a former writing master in such gratuitous variety of elegant
calligraphic trifling as to abate considerably the serious value of the
composition, to three views of Genoa from the Institute, which nobody ever
recognized, taken on the spot by the drawing teacher; from two illuminated
texts of Scripture in an English letter, so gratuitously and hideously
remote as to chill all human interest, to a large photograph of the senior
class, in which the prettiest girls were Ethiopian in complexion, and sat,
apparently, on each other's heads and shoulders. His fingers had turned
listlessly the leaves of school-catalogues, the SERMONS of Dr. Crammer,
the POEMS of Henry Kirke White, the LAYS OF THE SANCTUARY and LIVES OF
CELEBRATED WOMEN. His fancy, and it was a nervously active one, had gone
over the partings and greetings that must have taken place here, and
wondered why the apartment had yet caught so little of the flavor of
humanity; indeed, I am afraid he had almost forgotten the object of his
visit when the door opened, and Carry Tretherick stood before him.
</p>
<p>
It was one of those faces he had seen the night before, prettier even than
it had seemed then; and yet I think he was conscious of some
disappointment, without knowing exactly why. Her abundant waving hair was
of a guinea-golden tint, her complexion of a peculiar flowerlike delicacy,
her brown eyes of the color of seaweed in deep water. It certainly was not
her beauty that disappointed him.
</p>
<p>
Without possessing his sensitiveness to impression, Carry was, on her
part, quite as vaguely ill at ease. She saw before her one of those men
whom the sex would vaguely generalize as "nice," that is to say, correct
in all the superficial appointments of style, dress, manners, and feature.
Yet there was a decidedly unconventional quality about him: he was totally
unlike anything or anybody that she could remember; and as the attributes
of originality are often as apt to alarm as to attract people, she was not
entirely prepossessed in his favor.
</p>
<p>
"I can hardly hope," he began pleasantly, "that you remember me. It is
eleven years ago, and you were a very little girl. I am afraid I cannot
even claim to have enjoyed that familiarity that might exist between a
child of six and a young man of twenty-one. I don't think I was fond of
children. But I knew your mother very well. I was editor of the AVALANCHE
in Fiddletown when she took you to San Francisco."
</p>
<p>
"You mean my stepmother; she wasn't my mother, you know," interposed Carry
hastily.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Prince looked at her curiously. "I mean your stepmother," he said
gravely. "I never had the pleasure of meeting your mother."
</p>
<p>
"No; MOTHER hasn't been in California these twelve years."
</p>
<p>
There was an intentional emphasizing of the title and of its distinction
that began to interest coldly Prince after his first astonishment was
past.
</p>
<p>
"As I come from your stepmother now," he went on with a slight laugh, "I
must ask you to go back for a few moments to that point. After your
father's death, your mother—I mean your stepmother—recognized
the fact that your mother, the first Mrs. Tretherick, was legally and
morally your guardian and, although much against her inclination and
affections, placed you again in her charge."
</p>
<p>
"My stepmother married again within a month after father died, and sent me
home," said Carry with great directness, and the faintest toss of her
head.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Prince smiled so sweetly, and apparently so sympathetically, that
Carry began to like him. With no other notice of the interruption he went
on, "After your stepmother had performed this act of simple justice, she
entered into an agreement with your mother to defray the expenses of your
education until your eighteenth year, when you were to elect and choose
which of the two should thereafter be your guardian, and with whom you
would make your home. This agreement, I think, you are already aware of,
and, I believe, knew at the time."
</p>
<p>
"I was a mere child then," said Carry.
</p>
<p>
"Certainly," said Mr. Prince, with the same smile. "Still the conditions,
I think, have never been oppressive to you nor your mother; and the only
time they are likely to give you the least uneasiness will be when you
come to make up your mind in the choice of your guardian. That will be on
your eighteenth birthday—the twentieth, I think, of the present
month."
</p>
<p>
Carry was silent.
</p>
<p>
"Pray do not think that I am here to receive your decision, even if it be
already made. I only came to inform you that your stepmother, Mrs.
Starbottle, will be in town tomorrow, and will pass a few days at the
hotel. If it is your wish to see her before you make up your mind, she
will be glad to meet you. She does not, however, wish to do anything to
influence your judgment.
</p>
<p>
"Does Mother know she is coming?" said Carry hastily.
</p>
<p>
"I do not know," said Prince gravely. "I only know that if you conclude to
see Mrs. Starbottle, it will be with your mother's permission. Mrs.
Starbottle will keep sacredly this part of the agreement, made ten years
ago. But her health is very poor; and the change and country quiet of a
few days may benefit her." Mr. Prince bent his keen, bright eyes upon the
young girl, and almost held his breath until she spoke again.
</p>
<p>
"Mother's coming up today or tomorrow," she said, looking up.
</p>
<p>
"Ah!" said Mr. Prince with a sweet and languid smile.
</p>
<p>
"Is Colonel Starbottle here too?" asked Carry, after a pause.
</p>
<p>
"Colonel Starbottle is dead. Your stepmother is again a widow."
</p>
<p>
"Dead!" repeated Carry.
</p>
<p>
"Yes," replied Mr. Prince. "Your stepmother has been singularly
unfortunate in surviving her affections."
</p>
<p>
Carry did not know what he meant, and looked so. Mr. Prince smiled
reassuringly.
</p>
<p>
Presently Carry began to whimper.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Prince softly stepped beside her chair.
</p>
<p>
"I am afraid," he said with a very peculiar light in his eye, and a
singular dropping of the corners of his mustache—"I am afraid you
are taking this too deeply. It will be some days before you are called
upon to make a decision. Let us talk of something else. I hope you caught
no cold last evening."
</p>
<p>
Carry's face shone out again in dimples.
</p>
<p>
"You must have thought us so queer! It was too bad to give you so much
trouble."
</p>
<p>
"None whatever, I assure you. My sense of propriety," he added demurely,
"which might have been outraged had I been called upon to help three young
ladies out of a schoolroom window at night, was deeply gratified at being
able to assist them in again." The doorbell rang loudly, and Mr. Prince
rose. "Take your own time, and think well before you make your decision."
But Carry's ear and attention were given to the sound of voices in the
hall. At the same moment, the door was thrown open, and a servant
announced, "Mrs. Tretherick and Mr. Robinson."
</p>
<p>
The afternoon train had just shrieked out its usual indignant protest at
stopping at Genoa at all as Mr. Jack Prince entered the outskirts of the
town, and drove toward his hotel. He was wearied and cynical. A drive of a
dozen miles through unpicturesque outlying villages, past small economic
farmhouses, and hideous villas that violated his fastidious taste, had, I
fear, left that gentleman in a captious state of mind. He would have even
avoided his taciturn landlord as he drove up to the door; but that
functionary waylaid him on the steps. "There's a lady in the sittin'-room,
waitin' for ye." Mr. Prince hurried upstairs, and entered the room as Mrs.
Starbottle flew toward him.
</p>
<p>
She had changed sadly in the last ten years. Her figure was wasted to half
its size. The beautiful curves of her bust and shoulders were broken or
inverted. The once full, rounded arm was shrunken in its sleeve; and the
golden hoops that encircled her wan wrists almost slipped from her hands
as her long, scant fingers closed convulsively around Jack's. Her
cheekbones were painted that afternoon with the hectic of fever: somewhere
in the hollows of those cheeks were buried the dimples of long ago, but
their graves were forgotten. Her lustrous eyes were still beautiful,
though the orbits were deeper than before. Her mouth was still sweet,
although the lips parted more easily over the little teeth, even in
breathing, and showed more of them than she was wont to do before. The
glory of her blond hair was still left: it was finer, more silken and
ethereal, yet it failed even in its plenitude to cover the hollows of the
blue-veined temples.
</p>
<p>
"Clara!" said Jack reproachfully.
</p>
<p>
"Oh, forgive me, Jack!" she said, falling into a chair, but still clinging
to his hand—"forgive me, dear; but I could not wait longer. I should
have died, Jack—died before another night. Bear with me a little
longer (it will not be long), but let me stay. I may not see her, I know;
I shall not speak to her: but it's so sweet to feel that I am at last near
her, that I breathe the same air with my darling. I am better already,
Jack, I am indeed. And you have seen her today? How did she look? What did
she say? Tell me all, everything, Jack. Was she beautiful? They say she
is. Has she grown? Would you have known her again? Will she come, Jack?
Perhaps she has been here already; perhaps"—she had risen with
tremulous excitement, and was glancing at the door—"perhaps she is
here now. Why don't you speak, Jack? Tell me all."
</p>
<p>
The keen eyes that looked down into hers were glistening with an infinite
tenderness that none, perhaps, but she would have deemed them capable of.
"Clara," he said gently and cheerily, "try and compose yourself. You are
trembling now with the fatigue and excitement of your journey. I have seen
Carry; she is well and beautiful. Let that suffice you now."
</p>
<p>
His gentle firmness composed and calmed her now, as it had often done
before. Stroking her thin hand, he said, after a pause, "Did Carry ever
write to you?"
</p>
<p>
"Twice, thanking me for some presents. They were only schoolgirl letters,"
she added, nervously answering the interrogation of his eyes.
</p>
<p>
"Did she ever know of your own troubles? of your poverty, of the
sacrifices you made to pay her bills, of your pawning your clothes and
jewels, of your—"
</p>
<p>
"No, no!" interrupted the woman quickly: "no! How could she? I have no
enemy cruel enough to tell her that."
</p>
<p>
"But if she—or if Mrs. Tretherick—had heard of it? If Carry
thought you were poor, and unable to support her properly, it might
influence her decision. Young girls are fond of the position that wealth
can give. She may have rich friends, maybe a lover."
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Starbottle winced at the last sentence. "But," she said eagerly,
grasping Jack's hand, "when you found me sick and helpless at Sacramento,
when you—God bless you for it, Jack!—offered to help me to the
East, you said you knew of something, you had some plan, that would make
me and Carry independent."
</p>
<p>
"Yes," said Jack hastily; "but I want you to get strong and well first.
And, now that you are calmer, you shall listen to my visit to the school."
</p>
<p>
It was then that Mr. Jack Prince proceeded to describe the interview
already recorded, with a singular felicity and discretion that shames my
own account of that proceeding. Without suppressing a single fact, without
omitting a word or detail, he yet managed to throw a poetic veil over that
prosaic episode, to invest the heroine with a romantic roseate atmosphere,
which, though not perhaps entirely imaginary, still, I fear, exhibited
that genius which ten years ago had made the columns of THE FIDDLETOWN
AVALANCHE at once fascinating and instructive. It was not until he saw the
heightening color, and heard the quick breathing, of his eager listener,
that he felt a pang of self-reproach. "God help her and forgive me!" he
muttered between his clinched teeth; "but how can I tell her ALL now!"
</p>
<p>
That night, when Mrs. Starbottle laid her weary head upon her pillow, she
tried to picture to herself Carry at the same moment sleeping peacefully
in the great schoolhouse on the hill; and it was a rare comfort to this
yearning, foolish woman to know that she was so near. But at this moment
Carry was sitting on the edge of her bed, half-undressed, pouting her
pretty lips and twisting her long, leonine locks between her fingers as
Miss Kate Van Corlear—dramatically wrapped in a long white
counterpane, her black eyes sparkling, and her thoroughbred nose thrown
high in air—stood over her like a wrathful and indignant ghost; for
Carry had that evening imparted her woes and her history to Miss Kate, and
that young lady had "proved herself no friend" by falling into a state of
fiery indignation over Carry's "ingratitude," and openly and shamelessly
espousing the claims of Mrs. Starbottle. "Why, if the half you tell me is
true, your mother and those Robinsons are making of you not only a little
coward, but a little snob, miss. Respectability, forsooth! Look you, my
family are centuries before the Trethericks; but if my family had ever
treated me in this way, and then asked me to turn my back on my best
friend, I'd whistle them down the wind;" and here Kate snapped her
fingers, bent her black brows, and glared around the room as if in search
of a recreant Van Corlear.
</p>
<p>
"You just talk this way because you have taken a fancy to that Mr.
Prince," said Carry.
</p>
<p>
In the debasing slang of the period, that had even found its way into the
virgin cloisters of the Crammer Institute, Miss Kate, as she afterward
expressed it, instantly "went for her."
</p>
<p>
First, with a shake of her head, she threw her long black hair over one
shoulder, then, dropping one end of the counterpane from the other like a
vestal tunic, she stepped before Carry with a purposely exaggerated
classic stride. "And what if I have, miss! What if I happen to know a
gentleman when I see him! What if I happen to know that among a thousand
such traditional, conventional, feeble editions of their grandfathers as
Mr. Harry Robinson, you cannot find one original, independent,
individualized gentleman like your Prince! Go to bed, miss, and pray to
Heaven that he may be YOUR Prince indeed. Ask to have a contrite and
grateful heart, and thank the Lord in particular for having sent you such
a friend as Kate Van Corlear." Yet, after an imposing dramatic exit, she
reappeared the next moment as a straight white flash, kissed Carry between
the brows, and was gone.
</p>
<p>
The next day was a weary one to Jack Prince. He was convinced in his mind
that Carry would not come; yet to keep this consciousness from Mrs.
Starbottle, to meet her simple hopefulness with an equal degree of
apparent faith, was a hard and difficult task. He would have tried to
divert her mind by taking her on a long drive; but she was fearful that
Carry might come during her absence; and her strength, he was obliged to
admit, had failed greatly. As he looked into her large and awe-inspiring
clear eyes, a something he tried to keep from his mind—to put off
day by day from contemplation—kept asserting itself directly to his
inner consciousness. He began to doubt the expediency and wisdom of his
management. He recalled every incident of his interview with Carry, and
half-believed that its failure was due to himself. Yet Mrs. Starbottle was
very patient and confident; her very confidence shook his faith in his own
judgment. When her strength was equal to the exertion, she was propped up
in her chair by the window, where she could see the school and the
entrance to the hotel. In the intervals she would elaborate pleasant plans
for the future, and would sketch a country home. She had taken a strange
fancy, as it seemed to Prince, to the present location; but it was notable
that the future, always thus outlined, was one of quiet and repose. She
believed she would get well soon; in fact, she thought she was now much
better than she had been, but it might be long before she should be quite
strong again. She would whisper on in this way until Jack would dash madly
down into the barroom, order liquors that he did not drink, light cigars
that he did not smoke, talk with men that he did not listen to, and behave
generally as our stronger sex is apt to do in periods of delicate trials
and perplexity.
</p>
<p>
The day closed with a clouded sky and a bitter, searching wind. With the
night fell a few wandering flakes of snow. She was still content and
hopeful; and, as Jack wheeled her from the window to the fire, she
explained to him how that, as the school term was drawing near its close,
Carry was probably kept closely at her lessons during the day, and could
only leave the school at night. So she sat up the greater part of the
evening, and combed her silken hair, and as far as her strength would
allow, made an undress toilet to receive her guest. "We must not frighten
the child, Jack," she said apologetically, and with something of her old
coquetry.
</p>
<p>
It was with a feeling of relief that, at ten o'clock, Jack received a
message from the landlord, saying that the doctor would like to see him
for a moment downstairs. As Jack entered the grim, dimly lighted parlor,
he observed the hooded figure of a woman near the fire. He was about to
withdraw again when a voice that he remembered very pleasantly said:
</p>
<p>
"Oh, it's all right! I'm the doctor."
</p>
<p>
The hood was thrown back, and Prince saw the shining black hair and black,
audacious eyes of Kate Van Corlear.
</p>
<p>
"Don't ask any questions. I'm the doctor, and there's my prescription,"
and she pointed to the half-frightened, half-sobbing Carry in the corner—"to
be taken at once."
</p>
<p>
"Then Mrs. Tretherick has given her permission?"
</p>
<p>
"Not much, if I know the sentiments of that lady," replied Kate saucily.
</p>
<p>
"Then how did you get away?" asked Prince gravely.
</p>
<p>
"BY THE WINDOW."
</p>
<p>
When Mr. Prince had left Carry in the arms of her stepmother, he returned
to the parlor.
</p>
<p>
"Well?" demanded Kate.
</p>
<p>
"She will stay—YOU will, I hope, also—tonight."
</p>
<p>
"As I shall not be eighteen, and my own mistress on the twentieth, and as
I haven't a sick stepmother, I won't."
</p>
<p>
"Then you will give me the pleasure of seeing you safely through the
window again?"
</p>
<p>
When Mr. Prince returned an hour later, he found Carry sitting on a low
stool at Mrs. Starbottle's feet. Her head was in her stepmother's lap, and
she had sobbed herself to sleep. Mrs. Starbottle put her finger to her
lip. "I told you she would come. God bless you, Jack! and good night."
</p>
<p>
The next morning Mrs. Tretherick, indignant, the Rev. Asa Crammer,
principal, injured, and Mr. Joel Robinson, Sr., complacently respectable,
called upon Mr. Prince. There was a stormy meeting, ending in a demand for
Carry. "We certainly cannot admit of this interference," said Mrs.
Tretherick, a fashionably dressed, indistinctive-looking woman. "It is
several days before the expiration of our agreement; and we do not feel,
under the circumstances, justified in releasing Mrs. Starbottle from its
conditions." "Until the expiration of the school term, we must consider
Miss Tretherick as complying entirely with its rules and discipline,"
imposed Dr. Crammer. "The whole proceeding is calculated to injure the
prospects, and compromise the position, of Miss Tretherick in society,"
suggested Mr. Robinson.
</p>
<p>
In vain Mr. Prince urged the failing condition of Mrs. Starbottle, her
absolute freedom from complicity with Carry's flight, the pardonable and
natural instincts of the girl, and his own assurance that they were
willing to abide by her decision. And then, with a rising color in his
cheek, a dangerous look in his eye, but a singular calmness in his speech,
he added:
</p>
<p>
"One word more. It becomes my duty to inform you of a circumstance which
would certainly justify me, as an executor of the late Mr. Tretherick, in
fully resisting your demands. A few months after Mr. Tretherick's death,
through the agency of a Chinaman in his employment, it was discovered that
he had made a will, which was subsequently found among his papers. The
insignificant value of his bequest—mostly land, then quite valueless—prevented
his executors from carrying out his wishes, or from even proving the will,
or making it otherwise publicly known, until within the last two or three
years, when the property had enormously increased in value. The provisions
of that bequest are simple, but unmistakable. The property is divided
between Carry and her stepmother, with the explicit condition that Mrs.
Starbottle shall become her legal guardian, provide for her education, and
in all details stand to her IN LOCO PARENTIS."
</p>
<p>
"What is the value of this bequest?" asked Mr. Robinson. "I cannot tell
exactly, but not far from half a million, I should say," returned Prince.
"Certainly, with this knowledge, as a friend of Miss Tretherick I must say
that her conduct is as judicious as it is honorable to her," responded Mr.
Robinson. "I shall not presume to question the wishes, or throw any
obstacles in the way of carrying out the intentions, of my dead husband,"
added Mrs. Tretherick; and the interview was closed.
</p>
<p>
When its result was made known to Mrs. Starbottle, she raised Jack's hand
to her feverish lips. "It cannot add to MY happiness now, Jack; but tell
me, why did you keep it from her?" Jack smiled, but did not reply.
</p>
<p>
Within the next week the necessary legal formalities were concluded, and
Carry was restored to her stepmother. At Mrs. Starbottle's request, a
small house in the outskirts of the town was procured; and thither they
removed to wait the spring, and Mrs. Starbottle's convalescence. Both came
tardily that year.
</p>
<p>
Yet she was happy and patient. She was fond of watching the budding of the
trees beyond her window—a novel sight to her Californian experience—and
of asking Carry their names and seasons. Even at this time she projected
for that summer, which seemed to her so mysteriously withheld, long walks
with Carry through the leafy woods, whose gray, misty ranks she could see
along the hilltop. She even thought she could write poetry about them, and
recalled the fact as evidence of her gaining strength; and there is, I
believe, still treasured by one of the members of this little household a
little carol so joyous, so simple, and so innocent that it might have been
an echo of the robin that called to her from the window, as perhaps it
was.
</p>
<p>
And then, without warning, there dropped from Heaven a day so tender, so
mystically soft, so dreamily beautiful, so throbbing and alive with the
fluttering of invisible wings, so replete and bounteously overflowing with
an awakening and joyous resurrection not taught by man or limited by
creed, that they thought it fit to bring her out and lay her in that
glorious sunshine that sprinkled like the droppings of a bridal torch the
happy lintels and doors. And there she lay beatified and calm.
</p>
<p>
Wearied by watching, Carry had fallen asleep by her side; and Mrs.
Starbottle's thin fingers lay like a benediction on her head. Presently
she called Jack to her side.
</p>
<p>
"Who was that," she whispered, "who just came in?"
</p>
<p>
"Miss Van Corlear," said Jack, answering the look in her great hollow
eyes.
</p>
<p>
"Jack," she said, after a moment's silence, "sit by me a moment; dear
Jack: I've something I must say. If I ever seemed hard, or cold, or
coquettish to you in the old days, it was because I loved you, Jack, too
well to mar your future by linking it with my own. I always loved you,
dear Jack, even when I seemed least worthy of you. That is gone now. But I
had a dream lately, Jack, a foolish woman's dream—that you might
find what I lacked in HER," and she glanced lovingly at the sleeping girl
at her side; "that you might love her as you have loved me. But even that
is not to be, Jack, is it?" and she glanced wistfully in his face. Jack
pressed her hand, but did not speak. After a few moments' silence, she
again said: "Perhaps you are right in your choice. She is a goodhearted
girl, Jack—but a little bold."
</p>
<p>
And with this last flicker of foolish, weak humanity in her struggling
spirit, she spoke no more. When they came to her a moment later, a tiny
bird that had lit upon her breast flew away; and the hand that they lifted
from Carry's head fell lifeless at her side.
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
BARKER'S LUCK
</h2>
<p>
A bird twittered! The morning sun shining through the open window was
apparently more potent than the cool mountain air, which had only caused
the sleeper to curl a little more tightly in his blankets. Barker's eyes
opened instantly upon the light and the bird on the window ledge. Like all
healthy young animals he would have tried to sleep again, but with his
momentary consciousness came the recollection that it was his turn to cook
the breakfast that morning, and he regretfully rolled out of his bunk to
the floor. Without stopping to dress, he opened the door and stepped
outside, secure in the knowledge that he was overlooked only by the
Sierras, and plunged his head and shoulders in the bucket of cold water
that stood by the door. Then he began to clothe himself, partly in the
cabin and partly in the open air, with a lapse between the putting on of
his trousers and coat which he employed in bringing in wood. Raking
together the few embers on the adobe hearth, not without a prudent regard
to the rattlesnake which had once been detected in haunting the warm
ashes, he began to prepare breakfast. By this time the other sleepers, his
partners Stacy and Demorest, young men of about his own age, were awake,
alert, and lazily critical of his progress.
</p>
<p>
"I don't care about my quail on toast being underdone for breakfast," said
Stacy, with a yawn; "and you needn't serve with red wine. I'm not feeling
very peckish this morning."
</p>
<p>
"And I reckon you can knock off the fried oysters after the Spanish
mackerel for ME," said Demorest gravely. "The fact is, that last bottle of
Veuve Clicquot we had for supper wasn't as dry as I am this morning."
</p>
<p>
Accustomed to these regular Barmecide suggestions, Barker made no direct
reply. Presently, looking up from the fire, he said, "There's no more
saleratus, so you mustn't blame me if the biscuit is extra heavy. I told
you we had none when you went to the grocery yesterday."
</p>
<p>
"And I told you we hadn't a red cent to buy any with," said Stacy, who was
also treasurer. "Put these two negatives together and you make the
affirmative—saleratus. Mix freely and bake in a hot oven."
</p>
<p>
Nevertheless, after a toilet as primitive as Barker's they sat down to
what he had prepared with the keen appetite begotten of the mountain air
and the regretful fastidiousness born of the recollection of better
things. Jerked beef, frizzled with salt pork in a frying-pan, boiled
potatoes, biscuit, and coffee composed the repast. The biscuits, however,
proving remarkably heavy after the first mouthful, were used as missiles,
thrown through the open door at an empty bottle which had previously
served as a mark for revolver practice, and a few moments later pipes were
lit to counteract the effects of the meal and take the taste out of their
mouths. Suddenly they heard the sound of horses' hoofs, saw the quick
passage of a rider in the open space before the cabin, and felt the smart
impact upon the table of some small object thrown by him. It was the
regular morning delivery of the county newspaper!
</p>
<p>
"He's getting to be a mighty sure shot," said Demorest approvingly,
looking at his upset can of coffee as he picked up the paper, rolled into
a cylindrical wad as tightly as a cartridge, and began to straighten it
out. This was no easy matter, as the sheet had evidently been rolled while
yet damp from the press; but Demorest eventually opened it and ensconced
himself behind it.
</p>
<p>
"Nary news?" asked Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"No. There never is any," said Demorest scornfully. "We ought to stop the
paper."
</p>
<p>
"You mean the paper man ought to. WE don't pay him," said Barker gently.
</p>
<p>
"Well, that's the same thing, smarty. No news, no pay. Hallo!" he
continued, his eyes suddenly riveted on the paper. Then, after the fashion
of ordinary humanity, he stopped short and read the interesting item to
himself. When he had finished he brought his fist and the paper, together,
violently down upon the table. "Now look at this! Talk of luck, will you?
Just think of it. Here are WE—hard-working men with lots of sabe,
too—grubbin' away on this hillside like niggers, glad to get enough
at the end of the day to pay for our soggy biscuits and horse-bean coffee,
and just look what falls into the lap of some lazy sneakin' greenhorn who
never did a stoke of work in his life! Here are WE, with no foolishness,
no airs nor graces, and yet men who would do credit to twice that amount
of luck—and seem born to it, too—and we're set aside for some
long, lank, pen-wiping scrub who just knows enough to sit down on his
office stool and hold on to a bit of paper."
</p>
<p>
"What's up now?" asked Stacy, with the carelessness begotten of
familiarity with his partner's extravagance.
</p>
<p>
"Listen," said Demorest, reading. "Another unprecedented rise has taken
place in the shares of the 'Yellow Hammer First Extension Mine' since the
sinking of the new shaft. It was quoted yesterday at ten thousand dollars
a foot. When it is remembered that scarcely two years ago the original
shares, issued at fifty dollars per share, had dropped to only fifty cents
a share, it will be seen that those who were able to hold on have got a
good thing."
</p>
<p>
"What mine did you say?" asked Barker, looking up meditatively from the
dishes he was already washing.
</p>
<p>
"The Yellow Hammer First Extension," returned Demorest shortly.
</p>
<p>
"I used to have some shares in that, and I think I have them still," said
Barker musingly.
</p>
<p>
"Yes," said Demorest promptly; "the paper speaks of it here. 'We
understand,'" he continued, reading aloud, "'that our eminent fellow
citizen, George Barker, otherwise known as "Get Left Barker" and
"Chucklehead," is one of these fortunate individuals.'"
</p>
<p>
"No," said Barker, with a slight flush of innocent pleasure, "it can't say
that. How could it know?"
</p>
<p>
Stacy laughed, but Demorest coolly continued: "You didn't hear all.
Listen! 'We say WAS one of them; but having already sold his apparently
useless certificates to our popular druggist, Jones, for corn plasters, at
a reduced rate, he is unable to realize.'"
</p>
<p>
"You may laugh, boys," said Barker, with simple seriousness; "but I really
believe I have got 'em yet. Just wait. I'll see!" He rose and began to
drag out a well-worn valise from under his bunk. "You see," he continued,
"they were given to me by an old chap in return—"
</p>
<p>
"For saving his life by delaying the Stockton boat that afterward blew
up," returned Demorest briefly. "We know it all! His hair was white, and
his hand trembled slightly as he laid these shares in yours, saying, and
you never forgot the words, 'Take 'em, young man—and'—"
</p>
<p>
"For lending him two thousand dollars, then," continued Barker with a
simple ignoring of the interruption, as he quietly brought out the valise.
</p>
<p>
"TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS!" repeated Stacy. "When did YOU have two thousand
dollars?"
</p>
<p>
"When I first left Sacramento—three years ago," said Barker,
unstrapping the valise.
</p>
<p>
"How long did you have it?" said Demorest incredulously.
</p>
<p>
"At least two days, I think," returned Barker quietly. "Then I met that
man. He was hard-up, and I lent him my pile and took those shares. He died
afterward."
</p>
<p>
"Of course he did," said Demorest severely. "They always do. Nothing kills
a man more quickly than an action of that kind." Nevertheless the two
partners regarded Barker rummaging among some loose clothes and papers
with a kind of paternal toleration. "If you can't find them, bring out
your government bonds," suggested Stacy. But the next moment, flushed and
triumphant, Barker rose from his knees, and came toward them carrying some
papers in his hands. Demorest seized them from him, opened them, spread
them on the table, examined hurriedly the date, signatures, and transfers,
glanced again quickly at the newspaper paragraph, looked wildly at Stacy
and then at Barker, and gasped:
</p>
<p>
"By the living hookey! it is SO!"
</p>
<p>
"B'gosh! he HAS got 'em!" echoed Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"Twenty shares," continued Demorest breathlessly, "at ten thousand dollars
a share—even if it's only a foot—is two hundred thousand
dollars! Jerusalem!"
</p>
<p>
"Tell me, fair sir," said Stacy, with sparkling eyes, "hast still left in
yonder casket any rare jewels, rubies, sarcenet, or links of fine gold?
Peradventure a pearl or two may have been overlooked!"
</p>
<p>
"No—that's all," returned Barker simply.
</p>
<p>
"You hear him! Rothschild says 'that's all.' Prince Esterhazy says he
hasn't another red cent—only two hundred thousand dollars."
</p>
<p>
"What ought I to do, boys?" asked Barker, timidly glancing from one to the
other. Yet he remembered with delight all that day, and for many a year
afterward, that he saw in their faces only unselfish joy and affection at
that supreme moment.
</p>
<p>
"Do?" said Demorest promptly. "Stand on your head and yell! No! stop! Come
here!" He seized both Barker and Stacy by the hand, and ran out into the
open air. Here they danced violently with clasped hands around a small
buckeye, in perfect silence, and then returned to the cabin, grave but
perspiring.
</p>
<p>
"Of course," said Barker, wiping his forehead, "we'll just get some money
on these certificates and buy up that next claim which belongs to old
Carter—where you know we thought we saw the indication."
</p>
<p>
"We'll do nothing of the kind," said Demorest decidedly. "WE ain't in it.
That money is yours, old chap—every cent of it—property
acquired before marriage, you know; and the only thing we'll do is to be
damned before we'll see you drop a dime of it into this Godforsaken hole.
No!"
</p>
<p>
"But we're partners," gasped Barker.
</p>
<p>
"Not in THIS! The utmost we can do for you, opulent sir—though it
ill becomes us horny-handed sons of toil to rub shoulders with Dives—is
perchance to dine with you, to take a pasty and a glass of Malvoisie, at
some restaurant in Sacramento—when you've got things fixed, in honor
of your return to affluence. But more would ill become us!"
</p>
<p>
"But what are YOU going to do?" said Barker, with a half-hysteric,
half-frightened smile.
</p>
<p>
"We have not yet looked through our luggage," said Demorest with
invincible gravity, "and there's a secret recess—a double FOND—to
my portmanteau, known only to a trusty page, which has not been disturbed
since I left my ancestral home in Faginia. There may be a few First
Debentures of Erie or what not still there."
</p>
<p>
"I felt some strange, disklike protuberances in my dress suit the other
day, but belike they are but poker chips," said Stacy thoughtfully.
</p>
<p>
An uneasy feeling crept over Barker. The color which had left his fresh
cheek returned to it quickly, and he turned his eyes away. Yet he had seen
nothing in his companions' eyes but affection—with even a certain
kind of tender commiseration that deepened his uneasiness. "I suppose," he
said desperately, after a pause, "I ought to go over to Boomville and make
some inquiries."
</p>
<p>
"At the bank, old chap; at the bank!" said Demorest emphatically. "Take my
advice and don't go ANYWHERE ELSE. Don't breathe a word of your luck to
anybody. And don't, whatever you do, be tempted to sell just now; you
don't know how high that stock's going to jump yet."
</p>
<p>
"I thought," stammered Barker, "that you boys might like to go over with
me."
</p>
<p>
"We can't afford to take another holiday on grub wages, and we're only two
to work today," said Demorest, with a slight increase of color and the
faintest tremor in his voice. "And it won't do, old chap, for us to be
seen bumming round with you on the heels of your good fortune. For
everybody knows we're poor, and sooner or later everybody'll know you WERE
rich even when you first came to us."
</p>
<p>
"Nonsense!" said Barker indignantly.
</p>
<p>
"Gospel, my boy!" said Demorest shortly.
</p>
<p>
"The frozen truth, old man!" said Stacy.
</p>
<p>
Barker took up his hat with some stiffness and moved toward the door. Here
he stopped irresolutely, an irresolution that seemed to communicate itself
to his partners. There was a moment's awkward silence. Then Demorest
suddenly seized him by the shoulders with a grip that was half a caress,
and walked him rapidly to the door. "And now don't stand foolin' with us,
Barker boy; but just trot off like a little man, and get your grip on that
fortune; and when you've got your hooks in it hang on like grim death.
You'll"—he hesitated for an instant only, possibly to find the laugh
that should have accompanied his speech—"you're sure to find US here
when you get back."
</p>
<p>
Hurt to the quick, but restraining his feelings, Barker clapped his hat on
his head and walked quickly away. The two partners stood watching him in
silence until his figure was lost in the underbrush. Then they spoke.
</p>
<p>
"Like him—wasn't it?" said Demorest.
</p>
<p>
"Just him all over," said Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"Think of him having that stock stowed away all these years and never even
bothering his dear old head about it!"
</p>
<p>
"And think of his wanting to put the whole thing into this rotten hillside
with us!"
</p>
<p>
"And he'd have done it, by gosh! and never thought of it again. That's
Barker."
</p>
<p>
"Dear old man!"
</p>
<p>
"Good old chap!"
</p>
<p>
"I've been wondering if one of us oughtn't to have gone with him? He's
just as likely to pour his money into the first lap that opens for it,"
said Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"The more reason why we shouldn't prevent him, or seem to prevent him,"
said Demorest almost fiercely. "There will be knaves and fools enough who
will try and put the idea of our using him into his simple heart without
that. No! Let him do as he likes with it—but let him be himself. I'd
rather have him come back to us even after he's lost the money—his
old self and empty-handed—than try to change the stuff God put into
him and make him more like others."
</p>
<p>
The tone and manner were so different from Demorest's usual levity that
Stacy was silent. After a pause he said: "Well! we shall miss him on the
hillside—won't we?"
</p>
<p>
Demorest did not reply. Reaching out his hand abstractedly, he wrenched
off a small slip from a sapling near him, and began slowly to pull the
leaves off, one by one, until they were all gone. Then he switched it in
the air, struck his bootleg smartly with it, said roughly: "Come, let's
get to work!" and strode away.
</p>
<p>
Meantime Barker on his way to Boomville was no less singular in his
manner. He kept up his slightly affected attitude until he had lost sight
of the cabin. But, being of a simple nature, his emotions were less
complex. If he had not seen the undoubted look of affection in the eyes of
his partners he would have imagined that they were jealous of his good
fortune. Yet why had they refused his offer to share it with him? Why had
they so strangely assumed that their partnership with him had closed? Why
had they declined to go with him? Why had this money—of which he had
thought so little, and for which he had cared so little—changed them
toward him? It had not changed HIM—HE was the same! He remembered
how they had often talked and laughed over a prospective "strike" in
mining and speculated what THEY would do together with the money! And now
that "luck" had occurred to one of them, individually, the effect was only
to alienate them! He could not make it out. He was hurt, wounded—yet
oddly enough he was conscious now of a certain power within him to hurt
and wound in retribution. He was rich: he would let them see HE could do
without them. He was quite free now to think only of himself and Kitty.
</p>
<p>
For it must be recorded that with all this young gentleman's simplicity
and unselfishness, with all his loyal attitude to his partners, his FIRST
thought at the moment he grasped the fact of his wealth was of a young
lady. It was Kitty Carter, the daughter of the hotelkeeper at Boomville,
who owned the claim that the partners had mutually coveted. That a pretty
girl's face should flash upon him with his conviction that he was now a
rich man meant perhaps no disloyalty to his partners, whom he would still
have helped. But it occurred to him now, in his half-hurt, half-vengeful
state, that they had often joked him about Kitty, and perhaps further
confidence with them was debarred. And it was only due to his dignity that
he should now see Kitty at once.
</p>
<p>
This was easy enough, for in the naive simplicity of Boomville and the
economic arrangements of her father, she occasionally waited upon the
hotel table. Half the town was always actively in love with her; the other
half HAD BEEN, and was silent, cynical, but hopeless in defeat. For Kitty
was one of those singularly pretty girls occasionally met with in
Southwestern frontier civilization whose distinct and original refinement
of face and figure were so remarkable and original as to cast a doubt on
the sagacity and prescience of one parent and the morality of the other,
yet no doubt with equal injustice. But the fact remained that she was
slight, graceful, and self-contained, and moved beside her stumpy,
commonplace father, and her faded, commonplace mother in the dining-room
of the Boomville Hotel like some distinguished alien. The three partners,
by virtue, perhaps, of their college education and refined manners, had
been exceptionally noticed by Kitty. And for some occult reason—the
more serious, perhaps, because it had no obvious or logical presumption to
the world generally—Barker was particularly favored.
</p>
<p>
He quickened his pace, and as the flagstaff of the Boomville Hotel rose
before him in the little hollow, he seriously debated whether he had not
better go to the bank first, deposit his shares, and get a small advance
on them to buy a new necktie or a "boiled shirt" in which to present
himself to Miss Kitty; but, remembering that he had partly given his word
to Demorest that he would keep his shares intact for the present, he
abandoned this project, probably from the fact that his projected
confidence with Kitty was already a violation of Demorest's injunctions of
secrecy, and his conscience was sufficiently burdened with that breach of
faith.
</p>
<p>
But when he reached the hotel, a strange trepidation overcame him. The
dining-room was at its slack water, between the ebb of breakfast and
before the flow of the preparation for the midday meal. He could not have
his interview with Kitty in that dreary waste of reversed chairs and bare
trestlelike tables, and she was possibly engaged in her household duties.
But Miss Kitty had already seen him cross the road, and had lounged into
the dining-room with an artfully simulated air of casually examining it.
At the unexpected vision of his hopes, arrayed in the sweetest and
freshest of rosebud-sprigged print, his heart faltered. Then, partly with
the desperation of a timid man, and partly through the working of a
half-formed resolution, he met her bright smile with a simple inquiry for
her father. Miss Kitty bit her pretty lip, smiled slightly, and preceded
him with great formality to the office. Opening the door, without raising
her lashes to either her father or the visitor, she said, with a
mischievous accenting of the professional manner, "Mr. Barker to see you
on business," and tripped sweetly away.
</p>
<p>
And this slight incident precipitated the crisis. For Barker instantly
made up his mind that he must purchase the next claim for his partners of
this man Carter, and that he would be obliged to confide to him the
details of his good fortune, and as a proof of his sincerity and his
ability to pay for it, he did so bluntly. Carter was a shrewd business
man, and the well-known simplicity of Barker was a proof of his
truthfulness, to say nothing of the shares that were shown to him. His
selling price for his claim had been two hundred dollars, but here was a
rich customer who, from a mere foolish sentiment, would be no doubt
willing to pay more. He hesitated with a bland but superior smile. "Ah,
that was my price at my last offer, Mr. Barker," he said suavely; "but,
you see, things are going up since then."
</p>
<p>
The keenest duplicity is apt to fail before absolute simplicity. Barker,
thoroughly believing him, and already a little frightened at his own
presumption—not for the amount of the money involved, but from the
possibility of his partners refusing his gift utterly—quickly took
advantage of this LOCUS PENITENTIAE. "No matter, then," he said hurriedly;
"perhaps I had better consult my partners first; in fact," he added, with
a gratuitous truthfulness all his own, "I hardly know whether they will
take it of me, so I think I'll wait."
</p>
<p>
Carter was staggered; this would clearly not do! He recovered himself with
an insinuating smile. "You pulled me up too short, Mr. Barker; I'm a
business man, but hang it all! what's that among friends? If you reckoned
I GAVE MY WORD at two hundred—why, I'm there! Say no more about it—the
claim's yours. I'll make you out a bill of sale at once."
</p>
<p>
"But," hesitated Barker, "you see I haven't got the money yet, and—"
</p>
<p>
"Money!" echoed Carter bluntly, "what's that among friends? Gimme your
note at thirty days—that's good enough for ME. An' we'll settle the
whole thing now—nothing like finishing a job while you're about it."
And before the bewildered and doubtful visitor could protest, he had
filled up a promissory note for Barker's signature and himself signed a
bill of sale for the property. "And I reckon, Mr. Barker, you'd like to
take your partners by surprise about this little gift of yours," he added
smilingly. "Well, my messenger is starting for the Gulch in five minutes;
he's going by your cabin, and he can just drop this bill o' sale, as a
kind o' settled fact, on 'em afore they can say anything, see! There's
nothing like actin' on the spot in these sort of things. And don't you
hurry 'bout them either! You see, you sorter owe us a friendly call—havin'
always dropped inter the hotel only as a customer—so ye'll stop here
over luncheon, and I reckon, as the old woman is busy, why Kitty will try
to make the time pass till then by playin' for you on her new pianner."
</p>
<p>
Delighted, yet bewildered by the unexpected invitation and opportunity,
Barker mechanically signed the promissory note, and as mechanically
addressed the envelope of the bill of sale to Demorest, which Carter gave
to the messenger. Then he followed his host across the hall to the
apartment known as "Miss Kitty's parlor." He had often heard of it as a
sanctum impervious to the ordinary guest. Whatever functions the young
girl assumed at the hotel and among her father's boarders, it was vaguely
understood that she dropped them on crossing that sacred threshold, and
became "MISS Carter." The county judge had been entertained there, and the
wife of the bank manager. Barker's admission there was consequently an
unprecedented honor.
</p>
<p>
He cast his eyes timidly round the room, redolent and suggestive in
various charming little ways of the young girl's presence. There was the
cottage piano which had been brought up in sections on the backs of mules
from the foot of the mountain; there was a crayon head of Minerva done by
the fair occupant at the age of twelve; there was a profile of herself
done by a traveling artist; there were pretty little china ornaments and
many flowers, notably a faded but still scented woodland shrub which
Barker had presented to her two weeks ago, and over which Miss Kitty had
discreetly thrown her white handkerchief as he entered. A wave of hope
passed over him at the act, but it was quickly spent as Mr. Carter's
roughly playful voice introduced him:
</p>
<p>
"Ye kin give Mr. Barker a tune or two to pass time afore lunch, Kitty. You
kin let him see what you're doing in that line. But you'll have to sit up
now, for this young man's come inter some property, and will be sasheying
round in 'Frisco afore long with a biled shirt and a stovepipe, and be
givin' the go-by to Boomville. Well! you young folks will excuse me for a
while, as I reckon I'll just toddle over and get the recorder to put that
bill o' sale on record. Nothin' like squaring things to onct, Mr. Barker."
</p>
<p>
As he slipped away, Barker felt his heart sink. Carter had not only
bluntly forestalled him with the news and taken away his excuse for a
confidential interview, but had put an ostentatious construction on his
visit. What could she think of him now? He stood ashamed and embarrassed
before her.
</p>
<p>
But Miss Kitty, far from noticing his embarrassment in a sudden concern
regarding the "horrid" untidiness of the room, which made her cheeks quite
pink in one spot and obliged her to take up and set down in exactly the
same place several articles, was exceedingly delighted. In fact, she did
not remember ever having been so pleased before in her life! These things
were always so unexpected! Just like the weather, for instance. It was
quite cool last night—and now it was just stifling. And so dusty!
Had Mr. Barker noticed the heat coming from the Gulch? Or perhaps, being a
rich man, he—with a dazzling smile—was above walking now. It
was so kind of him to come here first and tell her father.
</p>
<p>
"I really wanted to tell only—YOU, Miss Carter," stammered Barker.
"You see—" he hesitated. But Miss Kitty saw perfectly. He wanted to
tell HER, and, seeing her, he asked for HER FATHER! Not that it made the
slightest difference to her, for her father would have been sure to have
told her. It was also kind of her father to invite him to luncheon.
Otherwise she might not have seen him before he left Boomville.
</p>
<p>
But this was more than Barker could stand. With the same desperate
directness and simplicity with which he had approached her father, he now
blurted out his whole heart to her. He told her how he had loved her
hopelessly from the first time that they had spoken together at the church
picnic. Did she remember it? How he had sat and worshiped her, and nothing
else, at church! How her voice in the church choir had sounded like an
angel's; how his poverty and his uncertain future had kept him from seeing
her often, lest he should be tempted to betray his hopeless passion. How
as soon as he realized that he had a position, that his love for her need
not make her ridiculous to the world's eyes, he came to tell her ALL. He
did not even dare to hope! But she would HEAR him at least, would she not?
</p>
<p>
Indeed, there was no getting away from his boyish, simple, outspoken
declaration. In vain Kitty smiled, frowned, glanced at her pink cheeks in
the glass, and stopped to look out of the window. The room was filled with
his love—it was encompassing her—and, despite his shy
attitude, seemed to be almost embracing her. But she managed at last to
turn upon him a face that was now as white and grave as his own was eager
and glowing.
</p>
<p>
"Sit down," she said gently.
</p>
<p>
He did so obediently, but wonderingly. She then opened the piano and took
a seat upon the music stool before it, placed some loose sheets of music
in the rack, and ran her fingers lightly over the keys. Thus intrenched,
she let her hands fall idly in her lap, and for the first time raised her
eyes to his.
</p>
<p>
"Now listen to me—be good and don't interrupt! There!—not so
near; you can hear what I have to say well enough where you are. That will
do."
</p>
<p>
Barker had halted with the chair he was dragging toward her and sat down.
</p>
<p>
"Now," said Miss Kitty, withdrawing her eyes and looking straight before
her, "I believe everything you say; perhaps I oughtn't to—or at
least SAY it—but I do. There! But because I do believe you—it
seems to me all wrong! For the very reasons that you give for not having
spoken to me BEFORE, if you really felt as you say you did, are the same
reasons why you should not speak to me now. You see, all this time you
have let nobody but yourself know how you felt toward me. In everybody's
eyes YOU and your partners have been only the three stuck-up, exclusive,
college-bred men who mined a poor claim in the Gulch, and occasionally
came here to this hotel as customers. In everybody's eyes I have been only
the rich hotel-keeper's popular daughter who sometimes waited upon you—but
nothing more. But at least we were then pretty much alike, and as good as
each other. And now, as soon as you have become suddenly rich, and, of
course, the SUPERIOR, you rush down here to ask me to acknowledge it by
accepting you!"
</p>
<p>
"You know I never meant that, Miss Kitty," burst out Barker vehemently,
but his protest was drowned in a rapid roulade from the young lady's
fingers on the keys. He sank back in his chair.
</p>
<p>
"Of course you never MEANT it," she said with an odd laugh; "but everybody
will take it in that way, and you cannot go round to everybody in
Boomville and make the pretty declaration you have just made to me.
Everybody will say I accepted you for your money; everybody will say it
was a put-up job of my father's. Everybody will say that you threw
yourself away on me. And I don't know but that they would be right. Sit
down, please! or I shall play again.
</p>
<p>
"You see," she went on, without looking at him, "just now you like to
remember that you fell in love with me first as a pretty waiter girl, but
if I became your wife it's just what you would like to FORGET. And I
shouldn't, for I should always like to think of the time when you came
here, whenever you could afford it and sometimes when you couldn't, just
to see me; and how we used to make excuses to speak with each other over
the dishes. You don't know what these things mean to a woman who"—she
hesitated a moment, and then added abruptly, "but what does that matter?
You would not care to be reminded of it. So," she said, rising up with a
grave smile and grasping her hands tightly behind her, "it's a good deal
better that you should begin to forget it now. Be a good boy and take my
advice. Go to San Francisco. You will meet some girl there in a way you
will not afterward regret. You are young, and your riches, to say
nothing," she added in a faltering voice that was somewhat inconsistent
with the mischievous smile that played upon her lips, "of your kind and
simple heart, will secure that which the world would call unselfish
affection from one more equal to you, but would always believe was only
BOUGHT if it came from me."
</p>
<p>
"I suppose you are right," he said simply.
</p>
<p>
She glanced quickly at him, and her eyebrows straightened. He had risen,
his face white and his gray eyes widely opened. "I suppose you are right,"
he went on, "because you are saying to me what my partners said to me this
morning, when I offered to share my wealth with them, God knows as
honestly as I offered to share my heart with you. I suppose that you are
both right; that there must be some curse of pride or selfishness upon the
money that I have got; but I have not felt it yet, and the fault does not
lie with me."
</p>
<p>
She gave her shoulders a slight shrug, and turned impatiently toward the
window. When she turned back again he was gone. The room around her was
empty; this room, which a moment before had seemed to be pulsating with
his boyish passion, was now empty, and empty of HIM. She bit her lips,
rose, and ran eagerly to the window. She saw his straw hat and brown curls
as he crossed the road. She drew her handkerchief sharply away from the
withered shrub over which she had thrown it, and cast the once treasured
remains in the hearth. Then, possibly because she had it ready in her
hand, she clapped the handkerchief to her eyes, and sinking sideways upon
the chair he had risen from, put her elbows on its back, and buried her
face in her hands.
</p>
<p>
It is the characteristic and perhaps cruelty of a simple nature to make no
allowance for complex motives, or to even understand them! So it seemed to
Barker that his simplicity had been met with equal directness. It was the
possession of this wealth that had in some way hopelessly changed his
relations with the world. He did not love Kitty any the less; he did not
even think she had wronged him; they, his partners and his sweetheart,
were cleverer than he; there must be some occult quality in this wealth
that he would understand when he possessed it, and perhaps it might even
make him ashamed of his generosity; not in the way they had said, but in
his tempting them so audaciously to assume a wrong position. It behoved
him to take possession of it at once, and to take also upon himself alone
the knowledge, the trials, and responsibilities it would incur. His cheeks
flushed again as he thought he had tried to tempt an innocent girl with
it, and he was keenly hurt that he had not seen in Kitty's eyes the
tenderness that had softened his partners' refusal. He resolved to wait no
longer, but sell his dreadful stock at once. He walked directly to the
bank.
</p>
<p>
The manager, a shrewd but kindly man, to whom Barker was known already,
received him graciously in recognition of his well-known simple honesty,
and respectfully as a representative of the equally well-known poor but
"superior" partnership of the Gulch. He listened with marked attention to
Barker's hesitating but brief story, only remarking at its close:
</p>
<p>
"You mean, of course, the 'SECOND Extension' when you say 'First'?"
</p>
<p>
"No," said Barker; "I mean the 'First'—and it said First in the
Boomville paper."
</p>
<p>
"Yes, yes!—I saw it—it was a printer's error. The stock of the
'First' was called in two years ago. No! You mean the 'Second,' for, of
course, you've followed the quotations, and are likely to know what stock
you're holding shares of. When you go back, take a look at them, and
you'll see I am right."
</p>
<p>
"But I brought them with me," said Barker, with a slight flushing as he
felt in his pocket, "and I am quite sure they are the 'First'." He brought
them out and laid them on the desk before the manager.
</p>
<p>
The words "First Extension" were plainly visible. The manager glanced
curiously at Barker, and his brow darkened.
</p>
<p>
"Did anybody put this up on you?" he said sternly. "Did your partners send
you here with this stuff?"
</p>
<p>
"No! no!" said Barker eagerly. "No one! It's all MY mistake. I see it now.
I trusted to the newspaper."
</p>
<p>
"And you mean to say you never examined the stock or the quotations, nor
followed it in any way, since you had it?"
</p>
<p>
"Never!" said Barker. "Never thought about IT AT ALL till I saw the
newspaper. So it's not worth anything?" And, to the infinite surprise of
the manager, there was a slight smile on his boyish face.
</p>
<p>
"I am afraid it is not worth the paper it's written on," said the manager
gently.
</p>
<p>
The smile on Barker's face increased to a little laugh, in which his
wondering companion could not help joining. "Thank you," said Barker
suddenly, and rushed away.
</p>
<p>
"He beats everything!" said the manager, gazing after him. "Damned if he
didn't seem even PLEASED."
</p>
<p>
He WAS pleased. The burden of wealth had fallen from his shoulders; the
dreadful incubus that had weighed him down and parted his friends from him
was gone! And he had not got rid of it by spending it foolishly. It had
not ruined anybody yet; it had not altered anybody in HIS eyes. It was
gone; and he was a free and happy man once more. He would go directly back
to his partners; they would laugh at him, of course, but they could not
look at him now with the same sad, commiserating eyes. Perhaps even Kitty—but
here a sudden chill struck him. He had forgotten the bill of sale! He had
forgotten the dreadful promissory note given to her father in the rash
presumption of his wealth! How could it ever be paid? And more than that,
it had been given in a fraud. He had no money when he gave it, and no
prospect of any but what he was to get from those worthless shares. Would
anybody believe him that it was only a stupid blunder of his own? Yes, his
partners might believe him; but, horrible thought, he had already
implicated THEM in his fraud! Even now, while he was standing there
hesitatingly in the road, they were entering upon the new claim he had NOT
PAID FOR—COULD NOT PAY FOR—and in the guise of a benefactor he
was dishonoring them. Yet it was Carter he must meet first; he must
confess all to him. He must go back to the hotel—that hotel where he
had indignantly left her, and tell the father he was a fraud. It was
terrible to think of; perhaps it was part of that money curse that he
could not get rid of, and was now realizing; but it MUST be done. He was
simple, but his very simplicity had that unhesitating directness of
conclusion which is the main factor of what men call "pluck."
</p>
<p>
He turned back to the hotel and entered the office. But Mr. Carter had not
yet returned. What was to be done? He could not wait there; there was no
time to be lost; there was only one other person who knew his
expectations, and to whom he could confide his failure—it was Kitty.
It was to taste the dregs of his humiliation, but it must be done. He ran
up the staircase and knocked timidly at the sitting-room door. There was a
momentary pause, and a weak voice said "Come in." Barker opened the door;
saw the vision of a handkerchief thrown away, of a pair of tearful eyes
that suddenly changed to stony indifference, and a graceful but stiffening
figure. But he was past all insult now.
</p>
<p>
"I would not intrude," he said simply, "but I came only to see your
father. I have made an awful blunder—more than a blunder, I think—a
FRAUD. Believing that I was rich, I purchased your father's claim for my
partners, and gave him my promissory note. I came here to give him back
his claim—for that note can NEVER be paid! I have just been to the
bank; I find I have made a stupid mistake in the name of the shares upon
which I based my belief in my wealth. The ones I own are worthless—am
as poor as ever—I am even poorer, for I owe your father money I can
never pay!"
</p>
<p>
To his amazement he saw a look of pain and scorn come into her troubled
eyes which he had never seen before. "This is a feeble trick," she said
bitterly; "it is unlike you—it is unworthy of you!"
</p>
<p>
"Good God! You must believe me. Listen! it was all a mistake—a
printer's error. I read in the paper that the stock for the First
Extension mine had gone up, when it should have been the Second. I had
some old stock of the First, which I had kept for years, and only thought
of when I read the announcement in the paper this morning. I swear to you—"
</p>
<p>
But it was unnecessary. There was no doubting the truth of that voice—that
manner. The scorn fled from Miss Kitty's eyes to give place to a stare,
and then suddenly changed to two bubbling blue wells of laughter. She went
to the window and laughed. She sat down to the piano and laughed. She
caught up the handkerchief, and hiding half her rosy face in it, laughed.
She finally collapsed into an easy chair, and, burying her brown head in
its cushions, laughed long and confidentially until she brought up
suddenly against a sob. And then was still.
</p>
<p>
Barker was dreadfully alarmed. He had heard of hysterics before. He felt
he ought to do something. He moved toward her timidly, and gently drew
away her handkerchief. Alas! the blue wells were running over now. He took
her cold hands in his; he knelt beside her and passed his arm around her
waist. He drew her head upon his shoulder. He was not sure that any of
these things were effective until she suddenly lifted her eyes to his with
the last ray of mirth in them vanishing in a big teardrop, put her arms
round his neck, and sobbed:
</p>
<p>
"Oh, George! You blessed innocent!"
</p>
<p>
An eloquent silence was broken by a remorseful start from Barker.
</p>
<p>
"But I must go and warn my poor partners, dearest; there yet may be time;
perhaps they have not yet taken possession of your father's claim."
</p>
<p>
"Yes, George dear," said the young girl, with sparkling eyes; "and tell
them to do so AT ONCE!"
</p>
<p>
"What?" gasped Barker.
</p>
<p>
"At once—do you hear?—or it may be too late! Go quick."
</p>
<p>
"But your father—Oh, I see, dearest, you will tell him all yourself,
and spare me."
</p>
<p>
"I shall do nothing so foolish, Georgey. Nor shall you! Don't you see the
note isn't due for a month? Stop! Have you told anybody but Paw and me?"
</p>
<p>
"Only the bank manager."
</p>
<p>
She ran out of the room and returned in a minute tying the most enchanting
of hats by a ribbon under her oval chin. "I'll run over and fix him," she
said.
</p>
<p>
"Fix him?" returned Barker, aghast.
</p>
<p>
"Yes, I'll say your wicked partners have been playing a practical joke on
you, and he mustn't give you away. He'll do anything for me."
</p>
<p>
"But my partners didn't! On the contrary—"
</p>
<p>
"Don't tell me, George," said Miss Kitty severely. "THEY ought never to
have let you come here with that stuff. But come! You must go at once. You
must not meet Paw; you'll blurt out everything to him; I know you! I'll
tell him you could not stay to luncheon. Quick, now; go. What? Well—there!"
</p>
<p>
Whatever it represented, the exclamation was apparently so protracted that
Miss Kitty was obliged to push her lover to the front landing before she
could disappear by the back stairs. But once in the street, Barker no
longer lingered. It was a good three miles back to the Gulch; he might
still reach it by the time his partners were taking their noonday rest,
and he resolved that although the messenger had preceded him, they would
not enter upon the new claim until the afternoon. For Barker, in spite of
his mistress's injunction, had no idea of taking what he couldn't pay for;
he would keep the claim intact until something could be settled. For the
rest, he walked on air! Kitty loved him! The accursed wealth no longer
stood between them. They were both poor now—everything was possible.
</p>
<p>
The sun was beginning to send dwarf shadows toward the east when he
reached the Gulch. Here a new trepidation seized him. How would his
partners receive the news of his utter failure? HE was happy, for he had
gained Kitty through it. But they? For a moment it seemed to him that he
had purchased his happiness through their loss. He stopped, took off his
hat, and ran his fingers remorsefully through his damp curls.
</p>
<p>
Another thing troubled him. He had reached the crest of the Gulch, where
their old working ground was spread before him like a map. They were not
there; neither were they lying under the four pines on the ridge where
they were wont to rest at midday. He turned with some alarm to the new
claim adjoining theirs, but there was no sign of them there either. A
sudden fear that they had, after parting from him, given up the claim in a
fit of disgust and depression, and departed, now overcame him. He clapped
his hand on his head and ran in the direction of the cabin.
</p>
<p>
He had nearly reached it when the rough challenge of "Who's there?" from
the bushes halted him, and Demorest suddenly swung into the trail. But the
singular look of sternness and impatience which he was wearing vanished as
he saw Barker, and with a loud shout of "All right, it's only Barker!
Hooray!" he ran toward him. In an instant he was joined by Stacy from the
cabin, and the two men, catching hold of their returning partner, waltzed
him joyfully and breathlessly into the cabin. But the quick-eyed Demorest
suddenly let go his hold and stared at Barker's face. "Why, Barker, old
boy, what's up?"
</p>
<p>
"Everything's up," gasped the breathless Barker. "It's all up about these
stocks. It's all a mistake; all an infernal lie of that newspaper. I never
had the right kind of shares. The ones I have are worthless rags"; and the
next instant he had blurted out his whole interview with the bank manager.
</p>
<p>
The two partners looked at each other, and then, to Barker's infinite
perplexity, the same extraordinary convulsion that had seized Miss Kitty
fell upon them. They laughed, holding on each other's shoulders; they
laughed, clinging to Barker's struggling figure; they went out and laughed
with their backs against a tree. They laughed separately and in different
corners. And then they came up to Barker with tears in their eyes, dropped
their heads on his shoulder, and murmured exhaustedly:
</p>
<p>
"You blessed ass!"
</p>
<p>
"But," said Stacy suddenly, "how did you manage to buy the claim?"
</p>
<p>
"Ah! that's the most awful thing, boys. I've NEVER PAID FOR IT," groaned
Barker.
</p>
<p>
"But Carter sent us the bill of sale," persisted Demorest, "or we
shouldn't have taken it."
</p>
<p>
"I gave my promissory note at thirty days," said Barker desperately, "and
where's the money to come from now? But," he added wildly, as the men
glanced at each other—"you said 'taken it.' Good heavens! you don't
mean to say that I'm TOO late—that you've—you've touched it?"
</p>
<p>
"I reckon that's pretty much what we HAVE been doing," drawled Demorest.
</p>
<p>
"It looks uncommonly like it," drawled Stacy.
</p>
<p>
Barker glanced blankly from the one to the other. "Shall we pass our young
friend in to see the show?" said Demorest to Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"Yes, if he'll be perfectly quiet and not breathe on the glasses,"
returned Stacy.
</p>
<p>
They each gravely took one of Barker's hands and led him to the corner of
the cabin. There, on an old flour barrel, stood a large tin prospecting
pan, in which the partners also occasionally used to knead their bread. A
dirty towel covered it. Demorest whisked it dexterously aside, and
disclosed three large fragments of decomposed gold and quartz. Barker
started back.
</p>
<p>
"Heft it!" said Demorest grimly.
</p>
<p>
Barker could scarcely lift the pan!
</p>
<p>
"Four thousand dollars' weight if a penny!" said Stacy, in short staccato
sentences. "In a pocket! Brought it out the second stroke of the pick!
We'd been awfully blue after you left. Awfully blue, too, when that bill
of sale came, for we thought you'd been wasting your money on US. Reckoned
we oughtn't to take it, but send it straight back to you. Messenger gone!
Then Demorest reckoned as it was done it couldn't be undone, and we ought
to make just one 'prospect' on the claim, and strike a single stroke for
you. And there it is. And there's more on the hillside."
</p>
<p>
"But it isn't MINE! It isn't YOURS! It's Carter's. I never had the money
to pay for it—and I haven't got it now."
</p>
<p>
"But you gave the note—and it is not due for thirty days."
</p>
<p>
A recollection flashed upon Barker. "Yes," he said with thoughtful
simplicity, "that's what Kitty said."
</p>
<p>
"Oh, Kitty said so," said both partners, gravely.
</p>
<p>
"Yes," stammered Barker, turning away with a heightened color, "and, as I
didn't stay there to luncheon, I think I'd better be getting it ready." He
picked up the coffeepot and turned to the hearth as his two partners
stepped beyond the door.
</p>
<p>
"Wasn't it exactly like him?" said Demorest.
</p>
<p>
"Him all over," said Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"And his worry over that note?" said Demorest.
</p>
<p>
"And 'what Kitty said,'" said Stacy.
</p>
<p>
"Look here! I reckon that wasn't ALL that Kitty said."
</p>
<p>
"Of course not."
</p>
<p>
"What luck!"
</p>
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<h2>
A YELLOW DOG
</h2>
<p>
I never knew why in the Western States of America a yellow dog should be
proverbially considered the acme of canine degradation and incompetency,
nor why the possession of one should seriously affect the social standing
of its possessor. But the fact being established, I think we accepted it
at Rattlers Ridge without question. The matter of ownership was more
difficult to settle; and although the dog I have in my mind at the present
writing attached himself impartially and equally to everyone in camp, no
one ventured to exclusively claim him; while, after the perpetration of
any canine atrocity, everybody repudiated him with indecent haste.
</p>
<p>
"Well, I can swear he hasn't been near our shanty for weeks," or the
retort, "He was last seen comin' out of YOUR cabin," expressed the
eagerness with which Rattlers Ridge washed its hands of any
responsibility. Yet he was by no means a common dog, nor even an
unhandsome dog; and it was a singular fact that his severest critics vied
with each other in narrating instances of his sagacity, insight, and
agility which they themselves had witnessed.
</p>
<p>
He had been seen crossing the "flume" that spanned Grizzly Canyon at a
height of nine hundred feet, on a plank six inches wide. He had tumbled
down the "shoot" to the South Fork, a thousand feet below, and was found
sitting on the riverbank "without a scratch, 'cept that he was lazily
givin' himself with his off hind paw." He had been forgotten in a
snowdrift on a Sierran shelf, and had come home in the early spring with
the conceited complacency of an Alpine traveler and a plumpness alleged to
have been the result of an exclusive diet of buried mail bags and their
contents. He was generally believed to read the advance election posters,
and disappear a day or two before the candidates and the brass band—which
he hated—came to the Ridge. He was suspected of having overlooked
Colonel Johnson's hand at poker, and of having conveyed to the Colonel's
adversary, by a succession of barks, the danger of betting against four
kings.
</p>
<p>
While these statements were supplied by wholly unsupported witnesses, it
was a very human weakness of Rattlers Ridge that the responsibility of
corroboration was passed to the dog himself, and HE was looked upon as a
consummate liar.
</p>
<p>
"Snoopin' round yere, and CALLIN' yourself a poker sharp, are ye! Scoot,
you yaller pizin!" was a common adjuration whenever the unfortunate animal
intruded upon a card party. "Ef thar was a spark, an ATOM of truth in THAT
DOG, I'd believe my own eyes that I saw him sittin' up and trying to
magnetize a jay bird off a tree. But wot are ye goin' to do with a yaller
equivocator like that?"
</p>
<p>
I have said that he was yellow—or, to use the ordinary expression,
"yaller." Indeed, I am inclined to believe that much of the ignominy
attached to the epithet lay in this favorite pronunciation. Men who
habitually spoke of a "YELLOW bird," a "YELLOW-hammer," a "YELLOW leaf,"
always alluded to him as a "YALLER dog."
</p>
<p>
He certainly WAS yellow. After a bath—usually compulsory—he
presented a decided gamboge streak down his back, from the top of his
forehead to the stump of his tail, fading in his sides and flank to a
delicate straw color. His breast, legs, and feet—when not reddened
by "slumgullion," in which he was fond of wading—were white. A few
attempts at ornamental decoration from the India-ink pot of the
storekeeper failed, partly through the yellow dog's excessive agility,
which would never give the paint time to dry on him, and partly through
his success in transferring his markings to the trousers and blankets of
the camp.
</p>
<p>
The size and shape of his tail—which had been cut off before his
introduction to Rattlers Ridge—were favorite sources of speculation
to the miners, as determining both his breed and his moral responsibility
in coming into camp in that defective condition. There was a general
opinion that he couldn't have looked worse with a tail, and its removal
was therefore a gratuitous effrontery.
</p>
<p>
His best feature was his eyes, which were a lustrous Vandyke brown, and
sparkling with intelligence; but here again he suffered from evolution
through environment, and their original trustful openness was marred by
the experience of watching for flying stones, sods, and passing kicks from
the rear, so that the pupils were continually reverting to the outer angle
of the eyelid.
</p>
<p>
Nevertheless, none of these characteristics decided the vexed question of
his BREED. His speed and scent pointed to a "hound," and it is related
that on one occasion he was laid on the trail of a wildcat with such
success that he followed it apparently out of the State, returning at the
end of two weeks footsore, but blandly contented.
</p>
<p>
Attaching himself to a prospecting party, he was sent under the same
belief, "into the brush" to drive off a bear, who was supposed to be
haunting the campfire. He returned in a few minutes WITH the bear, DRIVING
IT INTO the unarmed circle and scattering the whole party. After this the
theory of his being a hunting dog was abandoned. Yet it was said—on
the usual uncorroborated evidence—that he had "put up" a quail; and
his qualities as a retriever were for a long time accepted, until, during
a shooting expedition for wild ducks, it was discovered that the one he
had brought back had never been shot, and the party were obliged to
compound damages with an adjacent settler.
</p>
<p>
His fondness for paddling in the ditches and "slumgullion" at one time
suggested a water spaniel. He could swim, and would occasionally bring out
of the river sticks and pieces of bark that had been thrown in; but as HE
always had to be thrown in with them, and was a good-sized dog, his
aquatic reputation faded also. He remained simply "a yaller dog." What
more could be said? His actual name was "Bones"—given to him, no
doubt, through the provincial custom of confounding the occupation of the
individual with his quality, for which it was pointed out precedent could
be found in some old English family names.
</p>
<p>
But if Bones generally exhibited no preference for any particular
individual in camp, he always made an exception in favor of drunkards.
Even an ordinary roistering bacchanalian party brought him out from under
a tree or a shed in the keenest satisfaction. He would accompany them
through the long straggling street of the settlement, barking his delight
at every step or misstep of the revelers, and exhibiting none of that
mistrust of eye which marked his attendance upon the sane and the
respectable. He accepted even their uncouth play without a snarl or a
yelp, hypocritically pretending even to like it; and I conscientiously
believe would have allowed a tin can to be attached to his tail if the
hand that tied it on were only unsteady, and the voice that bade him "lie
still" were husky with liquor. He would "see" the party cheerfully into a
saloon, wait outside the door—his tongue fairly lolling from his
mouth in enjoyment—until they reappeared, permit them even to tumble
over him with pleasure, and then gambol away before them, heedless of
awkwardly projected stones and epithets. He would afterward accompany them
separately home, or lie with them at crossroads until they were assisted
to their cabins. Then he would trot rakishly to his own haunt by the
saloon stove, with the slightly conscious air of having been a bad dog,
yet of having had a good time.
</p>
<p>
We never could satisfy ourselves whether his enjoyment arose from some
merely selfish conviction that he was more SECURE with the physically and
mentally incompetent, from some active sympathy with active wickedness, or
from a grim sense of his own mental superiority at such moments. But the
general belief leant toward his kindred sympathy as a "yaller dog" with
all that was disreputable. And this was supported by another very singular
canine manifestation—the "sincere flattery" of simulation or
imitation.
</p>
<p>
"Uncle Billy" Riley for a short time enjoyed the position of being the
camp drunkard, and at once became an object of Bones' greatest solicitude.
He not only accompanied him everywhere, curled at his feet or head
according to Uncle Billy's attitude at the moment, but, it was noticed,
began presently to undergo a singular alteration in his own habits and
appearance. From being an active, tireless scout and forager, a bold and
unovertakable marauder, he became lazy and apathetic; allowed gophers to
burrow under him without endeavoring to undermine the settlement in his
frantic endeavors to dig them out, permitted squirrels to flash their
tails at him a hundred yards away, forgot his usual caches, and left his
favorite bones unburied and bleaching in the sun. His eyes grew dull, his
coat lusterless, in proportion as his companion became blear-eyed and
ragged; in running, his usual arrowlike directness began to deviate, and
it was not unusual to meet the pair together, zigzagging up the hill.
Indeed, Uncle Billy's condition could be predetermined by Bones'
appearance at times when his temporary master was invisible. "The old man
must have an awful jag on today," was casually remarked when an extra
fluffiness and imbecility was noticeable in the passing Bones. At first it
was believed that he drank also, but when careful investigation proved
this hypothesis untenable, he was freely called a "derned time-servin',
yaller hypocrite." Not a few advanced the opinion that if Bones did not
actually lead Uncle Billy astray, he at least "slavered him over and
coddled him until the old man got conceited in his wickedness." This
undoubtedly led to a compulsory divorce between them, and Uncle Billy was
happily dispatched to a neighboring town and a doctor.
</p>
<p>
Bones seemed to miss him greatly, ran away for two days, and was supposed
to have visited him, to have been shocked at his convalescence, and to
have been "cut" by Uncle Billy in his reformed character; and he returned
to his old active life again, and buried his past with his forgotten
bones. It was said that he was afterward detected in trying to lead an
intoxicated tramp into camp after the methods employed by a blind man's
dog, but was discovered in time by the—of course—uncorroborated
narrator.
</p>
<p>
I should be tempted to leave him thus in his original and picturesque sin,
but the same veracity which compelled me to transcribe his faults and
iniquities obliges me to describe his ultimate and somewhat monotonous
reformation, which came from no fault of his own.
</p>
<p>
It was a joyous day at Rattlers Ridge that was equally the advent of his
change of heart and the first stagecoach that had been induced to diverge
from the highroad and stop regularly at our settlement. Flags were flying
from the post office and Polka saloon, and Bones was flying before the
brass band that he detested, when the sweetest girl in the county—Pinkey
Preston—daughter of the county judge and hopelessly beloved by all
Rattlers Ridge, stepped from the coach which she had glorified by
occupying as an invited guest.
</p>
<p>
"What makes him run away?" she asked quickly, opening her lovely eyes in a
possibly innocent wonder that anything could be found to run away from
her.
</p>
<p>
"He don't like the brass band," we explained eagerly.
</p>
<p>
"How funny," murmured the girl; "is it as out of tune as all that?"
</p>
<p>
This irresistible witticism alone would have been enough to satisfy us—we
did nothing but repeat it to each other all the next day—but we were
positively transported when we saw her suddenly gather her dainty skirts
in one hand and trip off through the red dust toward Bones, who, with his
eyes over his yellow shoulder, had halted in the road, and half-turned in
mingled disgust and rage at the spectacle of the descending trombone. We
held our breath as she approached him. Would Bones evade her as he did us
at such moments, or would he save our reputation, and consent, for the
moment, to accept her as a new kind of inebriate? She came nearer; he saw
her; he began to slowly quiver with excitement—his stump of a tail
vibrating with such rapidity that the loss of the missing portion was
scarcely noticeable. Suddenly she stopped before him, took his yellow head
between her little hands, lifted it, and looked down in his handsome brown
eyes with her two lovely blue ones. What passed between them in that
magnetic glance no one ever knew. She returned with him; said to him
casually: "We're not afraid of brass bands, are we?" to which he
apparently acquiesced, at least stifling his disgust of them while he was
near her—which was nearly all the time.
</p>
<p>
During the speechmaking her gloved hand and his yellow head were always
near together, and at the crowning ceremony—her public checking of
Yuba Bill's "waybill" on behalf of the township, with a gold pencil
presented to her by the Stage Company—Bones' joy, far from knowing
no bounds, seemed to know nothing but them, and he witnessed it apparently
in the air. No one dared to interfere. For the first time a local pride in
Bones sprang up in our hearts—and we lied to each other in his
praises openly and shamelessly.
</p>
<p>
Then the time came for parting. We were standing by the door of the coach,
hats in hand, as Miss Pinkey was about to step into it; Bones was waiting
by her side, confidently looking into the interior, and apparently
selecting his own seat on the lap of Judge Preston in the corner, when
Miss Pinkey held up the sweetest of admonitory fingers. Then, taking his
head between her two hands, she again looked into his brimming eyes, and
said, simply, "GOOD dog," with the gentlest of emphasis on the adjective,
and popped into the coach.
</p>
<p>
The six bay horses started as one, the gorgeous green and gold vehicle
bounded forward, the red dust rose behind, and the yellow dog danced in
and out of it to the very outskirts of the settlement. And then he soberly
returned.
</p>
<p>
A day or two later he was missed—but the fact was afterward known
that he was at Spring Valley, the county town where Miss Preston lived,
and he was forgiven. A week afterward he was missed again, but this time
for a longer period, and then a pathetic letter arrived from Sacramento
for the storekeeper's wife.
</p>
<p>
"Would you mind," wrote Miss Pinkey Preston, "asking some of your boys to
come over here to Sacramento and bring back Bones? I don't mind having the
dear dog walk out with me at Spring Valley, where everyone knows me; but
here he DOES make one so noticeable, on account of HIS COLOR. I've got
scarcely a frock that he agrees with. He don't go with my pink muslin, and
that lovely buff tint he makes three shades lighter. You know yellow is SO
trying."
</p>
<p>
A consultation was quickly held by the whole settlement, and a deputation
sent to Sacramento to relieve the unfortunate girl. We were all quite
indignant with Bones—but, oddly enough, I think it was greatly
tempered with our new pride in him. While he was with us alone, his
peculiarities had been scarcely appreciated, but the recurrent phrase
"that yellow dog that they keep at the Rattlers" gave us a mysterious
importance along the countryside, as if we had secured a "mascot" in some
zoological curiosity.
</p>
<p>
This was further indicated by a singular occurrence. A new church had been
built at the crossroads, and an eminent divine had come from San Francisco
to preach the opening sermon. After a careful examination of the camp's
wardrobe, and some felicitous exchange of apparel, a few of us were
deputed to represent "Rattlers" at the Sunday service. In our white ducks,
straw hats, and flannel blouses, we were sufficiently picturesque and
distinctive as "honest miners" to be shown off in one of the front pews.
</p>
<p>
Seated near the prettiest girls, who offered us their hymn books—in
the cleanly odor of fresh pine shavings, and ironed muslin, and blown over
by the spices of our own woods through the open windows, a deep sense of
the abiding peace of Christian communion settled upon us. At this supreme
moment someone murmured in an awe-stricken whisper:
</p>
<p>
"WILL you look at Bones?"
</p>
<p>
We looked. Bones had entered the church and gone up in the gallery through
a pardonable ignorance and modesty; but, perceiving his mistake, was now
calmly walking along the gallery rail before the astounded worshipers.
Reaching the end, he paused for a moment, and carelessly looked down. It
was about fifteen feet to the floor below—the simplest jump in the
world for the mountain-bred Bones. Daintily, gingerly, lazily, and yet
with a conceited airiness of manner, as if, humanly speaking, he had one
leg in his pocket and were doing it on three, he cleared the distance,
dropping just in front of the chancel, without a sound, turned himself
around three times, and then lay comfortably down.
</p>
<p>
Three deacons were instantly in the aisle, coming up before the eminent
divine, who, we fancied, wore a restrained smile. We heard the hurried
whispers: "Belongs to them." "Quite a local institution here, you know."
"Don't like to offend sensibilities;" and the minister's prompt "By no
means," as he went on with his service.
</p>
<p>
A short month ago we would have repudiated Bones; today we sat there in
slightly supercilious attitudes, as if to indicate that any affront
offered to Bones would be an insult to ourselves, and followed by our
instantaneous withdrawal in a body.
</p>
<p>
All went well, however, until the minister, lifting the large Bible from
the communion table and holding it in both hands before him, walked toward
a reading stand by the altar rails. Bones uttered a distinct growl. The
minister stopped.
</p>
<p>
We, and we alone, comprehended in a flash the whole situation. The Bible
was nearly the size and shape of one of those soft clods of sod which we
were in the playful habit of launching at Bones when he lay half-asleep in
the sun, in order to see him cleverly evade it.
</p>
<p>
We held our breath. What was to be done? But the opportunity belonged to
our leader, Jeff Briggs—a confoundedly good-looking fellow, with the
golden mustache of a northern viking and the curls of an Apollo. Secure in
his beauty and bland in his self-conceit, he rose from the pew, and
stepped before the chancel rails.
</p>
<p>
"I would wait a moment, if I were you, sir," he said, respectfully, "and
you will see that he will go out quietly."
</p>
<p>
"What is wrong?" whispered the minister in some concern.
</p>
<p>
"He thinks you are going to heave that book at him, sir, without giving
him a fair show, as we do."
</p>
<p>
The minister looked perplexed, but remained motionless, with the book in
his hands. Bones arose, walked halfway down the aisle, and vanished like a
yellow flash!
</p>
<p>
With this justification of his reputation, Bones disappeared for a week.
At the end of that time we received a polite note from Judge Preston,
saying that the dog had become quite domiciled in their house, and begged
that the camp, without yielding up their valuable PROPERTY in him, would
allow him to remain at Spring Valley for an indefinite time; that both the
judge and his daughter—with whom Bones was already an old friend—would
be glad if the members of the camp would visit their old favorite whenever
they desired, to assure themselves that he was well cared for.
</p>
<p>
I am afraid that the bait thus ingenuously thrown out had a good deal to
do with our ultimate yielding. However, the reports of those who visited
Bones were wonderful and marvelous. He was residing there in state, lying
on rugs in the drawing-room, coiled up under the judicial desk in the
judge's study, sleeping regularly on the mat outside Miss Pinkey's bedroom
door, or lazily snapping at flies on the judge's lawn.
</p>
<p>
"He's as yaller as ever," said one of our informants, "but it don't
somehow seem to be the same back that we used to break clods over in the
old time, just to see him scoot out of the dust."
</p>
<p>
And now I must record a fact which I am aware all lovers of dogs will
indignantly deny, and which will be furiously bayed at by every faithful
hound since the days of Ulysses. Bones not only FORGOT, but absolutely CUT
US! Those who called upon the judge in "store clothes" he would perhaps
casually notice, but he would sniff at them as if detecting and resenting
them under their superficial exterior. The rest he simply paid no
attention to. The more familiar term of "Bonesy"—formerly applied to
him, as in our rare moments of endearment—produced no response. This
pained, I think, some of the more youthful of us; but, through some
strange human weakness, it also increased the camp's respect for him.
Nevertheless, we spoke of him familiarly to strangers at the very moment
he ignored us. I am afraid that we also took some pains to point out that
he was getting fat and unwieldy, and losing his elasticity, implying
covertly that his choice was a mistake and his life a failure.
</p>
<p>
A year after, he died, in the odor of sanctity and respectability, being
found one morning coiled up and stiff on the mat outside Miss Pinkey's
door. When the news was conveyed to us, we asked permission, the camp
being in a prosperous condition, to erect a stone over his grave. But when
it came to the inscription we could only think of the two words murmured
to him by Miss Pinkey, which we always believe effected his conversion:
</p>
<p>
"GOOD Dog!"
</p>
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<h2>
A MOTHER OF FIVE
</h2>
<p>
She was a mother—and a rather exemplary one—of five children,
although her own age was barely nine. Two of these children were twins,
and she generally alluded to them as "Mr. Amplach's children," referring
to an exceedingly respectable gentleman in the next settlement who, I have
reason to believe, had never set eyes on her or them. The twins were quite
naturally alike—having been in a previous state of existence two
ninepins—and were still somewhat vague and inchoate below their low
shoulders in their long clothes, but were also firm and globular about the
head, and there were not wanting those who professed to see in this an
unmistakable resemblance to their reputed father. The other children were
dolls of different ages, sex, and condition, but the twins may be said to
have been distinctly her own conception. Yet such was her admirable and
impartial maternity that she never made any difference between them. "The
Amplach's children" was a description rather than a distinction.
</p>
<p>
She was herself the motherless child of Robert Foulkes, a hardworking but
somewhat improvident teamster on the Express Route between Big Bend and
Reno. His daily avocation, when she was not actually with him in the
wagon, led to an occasional dispersion of herself and her progeny along
the road and at wayside stations between those places. But the family was
generally collected together by rough but kindly hands already familiar
with the handling of her children. I have a very vivid recollection of Jim
Carter trampling into a saloon, after a five-mile walk through a
snowdrift, with an Amplach twin in his pocket. "Suthin' ought to be done,"
he growled, "to make Meary a little more careful o' them Amplach children;
I picked up one outer the snow a mile beyond Big Bend." "God bless my
soul!" said a casual passenger, looking up hastily; "I didn't know Mr.
Amplach was married." Jim winked diabolically at us over his glass. "No
more did I," he responded gloomily, "but you can't tell anything about the
ways o' them respectable, psalm-singing jay birds." Having thus disposed
of Amplach's character, later on, when he was alone with Mary, or "Meary,"
as she chose to pronounce it, the rascal worked upon her feelings with an
account of the infant Amplach's sufferings in the snowdrift and its
agonized whisperings for "Meary! Meary!" until real tears stood in Mary's
blue eyes. "Let this be a lesson to you," he concluded, drawing the
ninepin dexterously from his pocket, "for it took nigh a quart of the best
forty-rod whisky to bring that child to." Not only did Mary firmly believe
him, but for weeks afterwards "Julian Amplach"—this unhappy twin—was
kept in a somnolent attitude in the cart, and was believed to have
contracted dissipated habits from the effects of his heroic treatment.
</p>
<p>
Her numerous family was achieved in only two years, and succeeded her
first child, which was brought from Sacramento at considerable expense by
a Mr. William Dodd, also a teamster, on her seventh birthday. This, by one
of those rare inventions known only to a child's vocabulary, she at once
called "Misery"—probably a combination of "Missy," as she herself
was formerly termed by strangers, and "Missouri," her native State. It was
an excessively large doll at first—Mr. Dodd wishing to get the worth
of his money—but time, and perhaps an excess of maternal care,
remedied the defect, and it lost flesh and certain unemployed parts of its
limbs very rapidly. It was further reduced in bulk by falling under the
wagon and having the whole train pass over it, but singularly enough its
greatest attenuation was in the head and shoulders—the complexion
peeling off as a solid layer, followed by the disappearance of distinct
strata of its extraordinary composition. This continued until the head and
shoulders were much too small for even its reduced frame, and all the
devices of childish millinery—a shawl secured with tacks and well
hammered in, and a hat which tilted backward and forward and never
appeared at the same angle—failed to restore symmetry. Until one
dreadful morning, after an imprudent bath, the whole upper structure
disappeared, leaving two hideous iron prongs standing erect from the
spinal column. Even an imaginative child like Mary could not accept this
sort of thing as a head. Later in the day Jack Roper, the blacksmith at
the "Crossing," was concerned at the plaintive appearance before his forge
of a little girl clad in a bright-blue pinafore of the same color as her
eyes, carrying her monstrous offspring in her arms. Jack recognized her
and instantly divined the situation. "You haven't," he suggested kindly,
"got another head at home—suthin' left over," Mary shook her head
sadly; even her prolific maternity was not equal to the creation of
children in detail. "Nor anythin' like a head?" he persisted
sympathetically. Mary's loving eyes filled with tears. "No, nuffen!" "You
couldn't," he continued thoughtfully, "use her the other side up?—we
might get a fine pair o' legs outer them irons," he added, touching the
two prongs with artistic suggestion. "Now look here"—he was about to
tilt the doll over when a small cry of feminine distress and a swift
movement of a matronly little arm arrested the evident indiscretion. "I
see," he said gravely. "Well, you come here tomorrow, and we'll fix up
suthin' to work her." Jack was thoughtful the rest of the day, more than
usually impatient with certain stubborn mules to be shod, and even knocked
off work an hour earlier to walk to Big Bend and a rival shop. But the
next morning when the trustful and anxious mother appeared at the forge
she uttered a scream of delight. Jack had neatly joined a hollow iron
globe, taken from the newel post of some old iron staircase railing, to
the two prongs, and covered it with a coat of red fireproof paint. It was
true that its complexion was rather high, that it was inclined to be
top-heavy, and that in the long run the other dolls suffered considerably
by enforced association with this unyielding and implacable head and
shoulders, but this did not diminish Mary's joy over her restored
first-born. Even its utter absence of features was no defect in a family
where features were as evanescent as in hers, and the most ordinary
student of evolution could see that the "Amplach" ninepins were in
legitimate succession to the globular-headed "Misery." For a time I think
that Mary even preferred her to the others. Howbeit it was a pretty sight
to see her on a summer afternoon sitting upon a wayside stump, her other
children dutifully ranged around her, and the hard, unfeeling head of
Misery pressed deep down into her loving little heart as she swayed from
side to side, crooning her plaintive lullaby. Small wonder that the bees
took up the song and droned a slumberous accompaniment, or that high above
her head the enormous pines, stirred through their depths by the soft
Sierran air—or Heaven knows what—let slip flickering lights
and shadows to play over that cast-iron face, until the child, looking
down upon it with the quick, transforming power of love, thought that it
smiled.
</p>
<p>
The two remaining members of the family were less distinctive. "Gloriana"—pronounced
as two words: "Glory Anna"—being the work of her father, who also
named it, was simply a cylindrical roll of canvas wagon-covering, girt so
as to define a neck and waist, with a rudely inked face—altogether a
weak, pitiable, manlike invention; and "Johnny Dear," alleged to be the
representative of John Doremus, a young storekeeper who occasionally
supplied Mary with gratuitous sweets. Mary never admitted this, and as we
were all gentlemen along that road, we were blind to the suggestion.
"Johnny Dear" was originally a small plaster phrenological cast of a head
and bust, begged from some shop window in the county town, with a body
clearly constructed by Mary herself. It was an ominous fact that it was
always dressed as a BOY, and was distinctly the most HUMAN-looking of all
her progeny. Indeed, in spite of the faculties that were legibly printed
all over its smooth, white, hairless head, it was appallingly lifelike.
Left sometimes by Mary astride of the branch of a wayside tree, horsemen
had been known to dismount hurriedly and examine it, returning with a
mystified smile, and it was on record that Yuba Bill had once pulled up
the Pioneer Coach at the request of curious and imploring passengers, and
then grimly installed "Johnny Dear" beside him on the box seat, publicly
delivering him to Mary at Big Bend, to her wide-eyed confusion and the
first blush we had ever seen on her round, chubby, sunburnt cheeks. It may
seem strange that with her great popularity and her well-known maternal
instincts, she had not been kept fully supplied with proper and more
conventional dolls; but it was soon recognized that she did not care for
them—left their waxen faces, rolling eyes, and abundant hair in
ditches, or stripped them to help clothe the more extravagant creatures of
her fancy. So it came that "Johnny Dear's" strictly classical profile
looked out from under a girl's fashionable straw sailor hat, to the utter
obliteration of his prominent intellectual faculties; the Amplach twins
wore bonnets on their ninepins heads, and even an attempt was made to fit
a flaxen scalp on the iron-headed Misery. But her dolls were always a
creation of her own—her affection for them increasing with the
demand upon her imagination. This may seem somewhat inconsistent with her
habit of occasionally abandoning them in the woods or in the ditches. But
she had an unbounded confidence in the kindly maternity of Nature, and
trusted her children to the breast of the Great Mother as freely as she
did herself in her own motherlessness. And this confidence was rarely
betrayed. Rats, mice, snails, wildcats, panther, and bear never touched
her lost waifs. Even the elements were kindly; an Amplach twin buried
under a snowdrift in high altitudes reappeared smilingly in the spring in
all its wooden and painted integrity. We were all Pantheists then—and
believed this implicitly. It was only when exposed to the milder forces of
civilization that Mary had anything to fear. Yet even then, when Patsy
O'Connor's domestic goat had once tried to "sample" the lost Misery, he
had retreated with the loss of three front teeth, and Thompson's mule came
out of an encounter with that iron-headed prodigy with a sprained hind leg
and a cut and swollen pastern.
</p>
<p>
But these were the simple Arcadian days of the road between Big Bend and
Reno, and progress and prosperity, alas! brought changes in their wake. It
was already whispered that Mary ought to be going to school, and Mr.
Amplach—still happily oblivious of the liberties taken with his name—as
trustee of the public school at Duckville, had intimated that Mary's
bohemian wanderings were a scandal to the county. She was growing up in
ignorance, a dreadful ignorance of everything but the chivalry, the deep
tenderness, the delicacy and unselfishness of the rude men around her, and
obliviousness of faith in anything but the immeasurable bounty of Nature
toward her and her children. Of course there was a fierce discussion
between "the boys" of the road and the few married families of the
settlement on this point, but, of course, progress and "snivelization"—as
the boys chose to call it—triumphed. The projection of a railroad
settled it; Robert Foulkes, promoted to a foremanship of a division of the
line, was made to understand that his daughter must be educated. But the
terrible question of Mary's family remained. No school would open its
doors to that heterogeneous collection, and Mary's little heart would have
broken over the rude dispersal or heroic burning of her children. The
ingenuity of Jack Roper suggested a compromise. She was allowed to select
one to take to school with her; the others were ADOPTED by certain of her
friends, and she was to be permitted to visit them every Saturday
afternoon. The selection was a cruel trial, so cruel that, knowing her
undoubted preference for her firstborn, Misery, we would not have
interfered for worlds, but in her unexpected choice of "Johnny Dear" the
most unworldly of us knew that it was the first glimmering of feminine
tact—her first submission to the world of propriety that she was now
entering. "Johnny Dear" was undoubtedly the most presentable; even more,
there was an educational suggestion in its prominent, mapped-out
phrenological organs. The adopted fathers were loyal to their trust.
Indeed, for years afterward the blacksmith kept the iron-headed Misery on
a rude shelf, like a shrine, near his bunk; nobody but himself and Mary
ever knew the secret, stolen, and thrilling interviews that took place
during the first days of their separation. Certain facts, however,
transpired concerning Mary's equal faithfulness to another of her
children. It is said that one Saturday afternoon, when the road manager of
the new line was seated in his office at Reno in private business
discussion with two directors, a gentle tap was heard at the door. It was
opened to an eager little face, a pair of blue eyes, and a blue pinafore.
To the astonishment of the directors, a change came over the face of the
manager. Taking the child gently by the hand, he walked to his desk, on
which the papers of the new line were scattered, and drew open a drawer
from which he took a large ninepin extraordinarily dressed as a doll. The
astonishment of the two gentlemen was increased at the following quaint
colloquy between the manager and the child.
</p>
<p>
"She's doing remarkably well in spite of the trying weather, but I have
had to keep her very quiet," said the manager, regarding the ninepin
critically.
</p>
<p>
"Ess," said Mary quickly, "It's just the same with Johnny Dear; his cough
is f'ightful at nights. But Misery's all right. I've just been to see
her."
</p>
<p>
"There's a good deal of scarlet fever around," continued the manager with
quiet concern, "and we can't be too careful. But I shall take her for a
little run down the line tomorrow."
</p>
<p>
The eyes of Mary sparkled and overflowed like blue water. Then there was a
kiss, a little laugh, a shy glance at the two curious strangers, the blue
pinafore fluttered away, and the colloquy ended. She was equally attentive
in her care of the others, but the rag baby "Gloriana," who had found a
home in Jim Carter's cabin at the Ridge, living too far for daily visits,
was brought down regularly on Saturday afternoon to Mary's house by Jim,
tucked in asleep in his saddle bags or riding gallantly before him on the
horn of his saddle. On Sunday there was a dress parade of all the dolls,
which kept Mary in heart for the next week's desolation.
</p>
<p>
But there came one Saturday and Sunday when Mary did not appear, and it
was known along the road that she had been called to San Francisco to meet
an aunt who had just arrived from "the States." It was a vacant Sunday to
"the boys," a very hollow, unsanctified Sunday, somehow, without that
little figure. But the next, Sunday, and the next, were still worse, and
then it was known that the dreadful aunt was making much of Mary, and was
sending her to a grand school—a convent at Santa Clara—where
it was rumored girls were turned out so accomplished that their own
parents did not know them. But WE knew that was impossible to our Mary;
and a letter which came from her at the end of the month, and before the
convent had closed upon the blue pinafore, satisfied us, and was balm to
our anxious hearts. It was characteristic of Mary; it was addressed to
nobody in particular, and would—but for the prudence of the aunt—have
been entrusted to the post office open and undirected. It was a single
sheet, handed to us without a word by her father; but as we passed it from
hand to hand, we understood it as if we had heard our lost playfellow's
voice.
</p>
<p>
"Ther's more houses in 'Frisco than you kin shake a stick at and wimmens
till you kant rest, but mules and jakasses ain't got no sho, nor
blacksmiffs shops, wich is not to be seen no wear. Rapits and Skwirls also
bares and panfers is on-noun and unforgotten on account of the streets and
Sunday skoles. Jim Roper you orter be very good to Mizzery on a kount of
my not bein' here, and not harten your hart to her bekos she is top heavy—which
is ontroo and simply an imptient lie—like you allus make. I have a
kinary bird wot sings deliteful—but isn't a yellerhamer sutch as I
know, as you'd think. Dear Mister Montgommery, don't keep Gulan Amplak to
mutch shet up in office drors; it isn't good for his lungs and chest. And
don't you ink his head—nother! youre as bad as the rest. Johnny
Dear, you must be very kind to your attopted father, and you, Glory Anna,
must lov your kind Jimmy Carter verry mutch for taking you hossback so
offen. I has been buggy ridin' with an orficer who has killed injuns real!
I am comin' back soon with grate affeckshun, so luke out and mind."
</p>
<p>
But it was three years before she returned, and this was her last and only
letter. The "adopted fathers" of her children were faithful, however, and
when the new line was opened, and it was understood that she was to be
present with her father at the ceremony, they came, with a common
understanding, to the station to meet their old playmate. They were ranged
along the platform—poor Jack Roper a little overweighted with a
bundle he was carrying on his left arm. And then a young girl in the
freshness of her teens and the spotless purity of a muslin frock that
although brief in skirt was perfect in fit, faultlessly booted and gloved,
tripped from the train, and offered a delicate hand in turn to each of her
old friends. Nothing could be prettier than the smile on the cheeks that
were no longer sunburnt; nothing could be clearer than the blue eyes
lifted frankly to theirs. And yet, as she gracefully turned away with her
father, the faces of the four adopted parents were found to be as red and
embarrassed as her own on the day that Yuba Bill drove up publicly with
"Johnny Dear" on the box seat.
</p>
<p>
"You weren't such a fool," said Jack Montgomery to Roper, "as to bring
Misery here with you?"
</p>
<p>
"I was," said Roper with a constrained laugh—"and you?" He had just
caught sight of the head of a ninepin peeping from the manager's pocket.
The man laughed, and then the four turned silently away.
</p>
<p>
"Mary" had indeed come back to them; but not "The Mother of Five!"
</p>
<p>
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</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
BULGER'S REPUTATION
</h2>
<p>
We all remembered very distinctly Bulger's advent in Rattlesnake Camp. It
was during the rainy season—a season singularly inducive to settled
reflective impressions as we sat and smoked around the stove in Mosby's
grocery. Like older and more civilized communities, we had our periodic
waves of sentiment and opinion, with the exception that they were more
evanescent with us, and as we had just passed through a fortnight of
dissipation and extravagance, owing to a visit from some gamblers and
speculators, we were now undergoing a severe moral revulsion, partly
induced by reduced finances and partly by the arrival of two families with
grownup daughters on the hill. It was raining, with occasional warm
breaths, through the open window, of the southwest trades, redolent of the
saturated spices of the woods and springing grasses, which perhaps were
slightly inconsistent with the hot stove around which we had congregated.
But the stove was only an excuse for our listless, gregarious gathering;
warmth and idleness went well together, and it was currently accepted that
we had caught from the particular reptile which gave its name to our camp
much of its pathetic, lifelong search for warmth, and its habit of
indolently basking in it.
</p>
<p>
A few of us still went through the affectation of attempting to dry our
damp clothes by the stove, and sizzling our wet boots against it; but as
the same individuals calmly permitted the rain to drive in upon them
through the open window without moving, and seemed to take infinite
delight in the amount of steam they generated, even that pretense dropped.
Crotalus himself, with his tail in a muddy ditch, and the sun striking
cold fire from his slit eyes as he basked his head on a warm stone beside
it, could not have typified us better.
</p>
<p>
Percy Briggs took his pipe from his mouth at last and said, with
reflective severity:
</p>
<p>
"Well, gentlemen, if we can't get the wagon road over here, and if we're
going to be left out by the stagecoach company, we can at least straighten
up the camp, and not have it look like a cross between a tenement alley
and a broken-down circus. I declare, I was just sick when these two Baker
girls started to make a short cut through the camp. Darned if they didn't
turn round and take to the woods and the rattlers again afore they got
halfway. And that benighted idiot, Tom Rollins, standin' there in the
ditch, spattered all over with slumgullion 'til he looked like a spotted
tarrypin, wavin' his fins and sashaying backwards and forrards and sayin',
'This way, ladies; this way!'"
</p>
<p>
"I didn't," returned Tom Rollins, quite casually, without looking up from
his steaming boots; "I didn't start in night afore last to dance 'The
Green Corn Dance' outer 'Hiawatha,' with feathers in my hair and a red
blanket on my shoulders, round that family's new potato patch, in order
that it might 'increase and multiply.' I didn't sing 'Sabbath Morning
Bells' with an anvil accompaniment until twelve o'clock at night over at
the Crossing, so that they might dream of their Happy Childhood's Home. It
seems to me that it wasn't me did it. I might be mistaken—it was
late—but I have the impression that it wasn't me."
</p>
<p>
From the silence that followed, this would seem to have been clearly a
recent performance of the previous speaker, who, however, responded quite
cheerfully:
</p>
<p>
"An evenin' o' simple, childish gaiety don't count. We've got to start in
again FAIR. What we want here is to clear up and encourage decent
immigration, and get rid o' gamblers and blatherskites that are makin'
this yer camp their happy hunting-ground. We don't want any more permiskus
shootin'. We don't want any more paintin' the town red. We don't want any
more swaggerin' galoots ridin' up to this grocery and emptyin' their
six-shooters in the air afore they 'light. We want to put a stop to it
peacefully and without a row—and we kin. We ain't got no bullies of
our own to fight back, and they know it, so they know they won't get no
credit bullyin' us; they'll leave, if we're only firm. It's all along of
our cussed fool good-nature; they see it amuses us, and they'll keep it up
as long as the whisky's free. What we want to do is, when the next man
comes waltzin' along—"
</p>
<p>
A distant clatter from the rocky hillside here mingled with the puff of
damp air through the window.
</p>
<p>
"Looks as ef we might hev a show even now," said Tom Rollins, removing his
feet from the stove as we all instinctively faced toward the window.
</p>
<p>
"I reckon you're in with us in this, Mosby?" said Briggs, turning toward
the proprietor of the grocery, who had been leaning listlessly against the
wall behind his bar.
</p>
<p>
"Arter the man's had a fair show," said Mosby, cautiously. He deprecated
the prevailing condition of things, but it was still an open question
whether the families would prove as valuable customers as his present
clients. "Everything in moderation, gentlemen."
</p>
<p>
The sound of galloping hoofs came nearer, now swishing in the soft mud of
the highway, until the unseen rider pulled up before the door. There was
no shouting, however, nor did he announce himself with the usual salvo of
firearms. But when, after a singularly heavy tread and the jingle of spurs
on the platform, the door flew open to the newcomer, he seemed a
realization of our worst expectations. Tall, broad, and muscular, he
carried in one hand a shotgun, while from his hip dangled a heavy navy
revolver. His long hair, unkempt but oiled, swept a greasy circle around
his shoulders; his enormous mustache, dripping with wet, completely
concealed his mouth. His costume of fringed buckskin was wild and outre
even for our frontier camp. But what was more confirmative of our
suspicions was that he was evidently in the habit of making an impression,
and after a distinct pause at the doorway, with only a side glance at us,
he strode toward the bar.
</p>
<p>
"As there don't seem to be no hotel hereabouts, I reckon I kin put up my
mustang here and have a shakedown somewhere behind that counter," he said.
His voice seemed to have added to its natural depth the hoarseness of
frequent overstraining.
</p>
<p>
"Ye ain't got no bunk to spare, you boys, hev ye?" asked Mosby, evasively,
glancing at Percy Briggs without looking at the stranger. We all looked at
Briggs also; it was HIS affair after all—HE had originated this
opposition. To our surprise he said nothing.
</p>
<p>
The stranger leaned heavily on the counter.
</p>
<p>
"I was speaking to YOU," he said, with his eyes on Mosby, and slightly
accenting the pronoun with a tap of his revolver butt on the bar. "Ye
don't seem to catch on."
</p>
<p>
Mosby smiled feebly, and again cast an imploring glance at Briggs. To our
greater astonishment, Briggs said, quietly: "Why don't you answer the
stranger, Mosby?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes, yes," said Mosby, suavely, to the newcomer, while an angry flush
crossed his check as he recognized the position in which Briggs had placed
him. "Of course, you're welcome to what doings I hev here, but I reckoned
these gentlemen over there," with a vicious glance at Briggs, "might fix
ye up suthin' better; they're so pow'ful kind to your sort."
</p>
<p>
The stranger threw down a gold piece on the counter and said: "Fork out
your whisky, then," waited until his glass was filled, took it in his
hand, and then, drawing an empty chair to the stove, sat down beside
Briggs. "Seein' as you're that kind," he said, placing his heavy hand on
Briggs's knee, "mebbe ye kin tell me ef thar's a shanty or a cabin at
Rattlesnake that I kin get for a couple o' weeks. I saw an empty one at
the head o' the hill. You see, gennelmen," he added confidentially as he
swept the drops of whisky from his long mustache with his fingers and
glanced around our group, "I've got some business over at Bigwood," our
nearest town, "but ez a place to stay AT it ain't my style."
</p>
<p>
"What's the matter with Bigwood?" said Briggs, abruptly.
</p>
<p>
"It's too howlin', too festive, too rough; thar's too much yellin' and
shootin' goin' day and night. Thar's too many card sharps and gay
gamboliers cavortin' about the town to please me. Too much permiskus
soakin' at the bar and free jimjams. What I want is a quiet place what a
man kin give his mind and elbow a rest from betwixt grippin' his shootin'
irons and crookin' in his whisky. A sort o' slow, quiet, easy place LIKE
THIS."
</p>
<p>
We all stared at him, Percy Briggs as fixedly as any. But there was not
the slightest trace of irony, sarcasm, or peculiar significance in his
manner. He went on slowly:
</p>
<p>
"When I struck this yer camp a minit ago; when I seed that thar ditch
meanderin' peaceful like through the street, without a hotel or free
saloon or express office on either side; with the smoke just a curlin'
over the chimbley of that log shanty, and the bresh just set fire to and a
smolderin' in that potato patch with a kind o' old-time stingin' in your
eyes and nose, and a few women's duds just a flutterin' on a line by the
fence, I says to myself: 'Bulger—this is peace! This is wot you're
lookin' for, Bulger—this is wot you're wantin'—this is wot
YOU'LL HEV!'"
</p>
<p>
"You say you've business over at Bigwood. What business?" said Briggs.
</p>
<p>
"It's a peculiar business, young fellow," returned the stranger, gravely.
"Thar's different men ez has different opinions about it. Some allows it's
an easy business, some allows it's a rough business; some says it's a sad
business, others says it's gay and festive. Some wonders ez how I've got
into it, and others wonder how I'll ever get out of it. It's a payin'
business—it's a peaceful sort o' business when left to itself. It's
a peculiar business—a business that sort o' b'longs to me, though I
ain't got no patent from Washington for it. It's MY OWN business." He
paused, rose, and saying, "Let's meander over and take a look at that
empty cabin, and ef she suits me, why, I'll plank down a slug for her on
the spot, and move in tomorrow," walked towards the door. "I'll pick up
suthin' in the way o' boxes and blankets from the grocery," he added,
looking at Mosby, "and ef thar's a corner whar I kin stand my gun and a
nail to hang up my revolver—why, I'm all thar!"
</p>
<p>
By this time we were no longer astonished when Briggs rose also, and not
only accompanied the sinister-looking stranger to the empty cabin, but
assisted him in negotiating with its owner for a fortnight's occupancy.
Nevertheless, we eagerly assailed Briggs on his return for some
explanation of this singular change in his attitude toward the stranger.
He coolly reminded us, however, that while his intention of excluding
ruffianly adventurers from the camp remained the same, he had no right to
go back on the stranger's sentiments, which were evidently in accord with
our own, and although Mr. Bulger's appearance was inconsistent with them,
that was only an additional reason why we should substitute a mild
firmness for that violence which we all deprecated, but which might attend
his abrupt dismissal. We were all satisfied except Mosby, who had not yet
recovered from Briggs's change of front, which he was pleased to call
"craw-fishing." "Seemed to me his account of his business was
extraordinary satisfactory! Sorter filled the bill all round—no
mistake thar," he suggested, with a malicious irony. "I like a man that's
outspoken."
</p>
<p>
"I understood him very well," said Briggs, quietly.
</p>
<p>
"In course you did. Only when you've settled in your MIND whether he was
describing horse-stealing or tract-distributing, mebbe you'll let ME
know."
</p>
<p>
It would seem, however, that Briggs did not interrogate the stranger again
regarding it, nor did we, who were quite content to leave matters in
Briggs's hands. Enough that Mr. Bulger moved into the empty cabin the next
day, and, with the aid of a few old boxes from the grocery, which he
quickly extemporized into tables and chairs, and the purchase of some
necessary cooking utensils, soon made himself at home. The rest of the
camp, now thoroughly aroused, made a point of leaving their work in the
ditches, whenever they could, to stroll carelessly around Bulger's
tenement in the vague hope of satisfying a curiosity that had become
tormenting. But they could not find that he was doing anything of a
suspicious character—except, perhaps, from the fact that it was not
OUTWARDLY suspicious, which I grieve to say did not lull them to security.
He seemed to be either fixing up his cabin or smoking in his doorway. On
the second day he checked this itinerant curiosity by taking the
initiative himself, and quietly walking from claim to claim and from cabin
to cabin with a pacific but by no means a satisfying interest. The shadow
of his tall figure carrying his inseparable gun, which had not yet
apparently "stood in the corner," falling upon an excavated bank beside
the delving miners, gave them a sense of uneasiness they could not
explain; a few characteristic yells of boisterous hilarity from their
noontide gathering under a cottonwood somehow ceased when Mr. Bulger was
seen gravely approaching, and his casual stopping before a poker party in
the gulch actually caused one of the most reckless gamblers to weakly
recede from "a bluff" and allow his adversary to sweep the board. After
this it was felt that matters were becoming serious. There was no
subsequent patrolling of the camp before the stranger's cabin. Their
curiosity was singularly abated. A general feeling of repulsion, kept
within bounds partly by the absence of any overt act from Bulger, and
partly by an inconsistent over-consciousness of his shotgun, took its
place. But an unexpected occurrence revived it.
</p>
<p>
One evening, as the usual social circle were drawn around Mosby's stove,
the lazy silence was broken by the familiar sounds of pistol shots and a
series of more familiar shrieks and yells from the rocky hill road. The
circle quickly recognized the voices of their old friends the roisterers
and gamblers from Sawyer's Dam; they as quickly recognized the returning
shouts here and there from a few companions who were welcoming them. I
grieve to say that in spite of their previous attitude of reformation a
smile of gratified expectancy lit up the faces of the younger members, and
even the older ones glanced dubiously at Briggs. Mosby made no attempt to
conceal a sigh of relief as he carefully laid out an extra supply of
glasses in his bar. Suddenly the oncoming yells ceased, the wild gallop of
hoofs slackened into a trot, and finally halted, and even the responsive
shouts of the camp stopped also. We all looked vacantly at each other;
Mosby leaped over his counter and went to the door; Briggs followed with
the rest of us. The night was dark, and it was a few minutes before we
could distinguish a straggling, vague, but silent procession moving
through the moist, heavy air on the hill. But, to our surprise, it was
moving away from us—absolutely LEAVING the camp! We were still
staring in expectancy when out of the darkness slowly emerged a figure
which we recognized at once as Captain Jim, one of the most reckless
members of our camp. Pushing us back into the grocery he entered without a
word, closed the door behind him, and threw himself vacantly into a chair.
We at once pressed around him. He looked up at us dazedly, drew a long
breath, and said slowly:
</p>
<p>
"It's no use, gentlemen! Suthin's GOT to be done with that Bulger; and
mighty quick."
</p>
<p>
"What's the matter?" we asked eagerly.
</p>
<p>
"Matter!" he repeated, passing his hand across his forehead. "Matter! Look
yere! Ye all of you heard them boys from Sawyer's Dam coming over the
hill? Ye heard their music—mebbe ye heard US join in the chorus?
Well, on they came waltzing down the hill, like old times, and we waitin'
for 'em. Then, jest as they passed the old cabin, who do you think they
ran right into—shooting iron, long hair and mustache, and all that—standing
there plump in the road? why, Bulger!"
</p>
<p>
"Well?"
</p>
<p>
"Well!—Whatever it was—don't ask ME—but, dern my skin,
ef after a word or two from HIM—them boys just stopped yellin',
turned round like lambs, and rode away, peaceful-like, along with him. We
ran after them a spell, still yellin', when that thar Bulger faced around,
said to us that he'd 'come down here for quiet,' and ef he couldn't hev it
he'd have to leave with those gentlemen WHO WANTED IT too! And I'm gosh
darned ef those GENTLEMEN—you know 'em all—Patsey Carpenter,
Snapshot Harry, and the others—ever said a darned word, but kinder
nodded 'So long' and went away!"
</p>
<p>
Our astonishment and mystification were complete; and I regret to say, the
indignation of Captain Jim and Mosby equally so. "If we're going to be
bossed by the first newcomer," said the former, gloomily, "I reckon we
might as well take our chances with the Sawyer's Dam boys, whom we know."
</p>
<p>
"Ef we are going to hev the legitimate trade of Rattlesnake interfered
with by the cranks of some hidin' horse thief or retired road agent," said
Mosby, "we might as well invite the hull of Joaquin Murietta's gang here
at once! But I suppose this is part o' Bulger's particular 'business,'" he
added, with a withering glance at Briggs.
</p>
<p>
"I understand it all," said Briggs, quietly. "You know I told you that
bullies couldn't live in the same camp together. That's human nature—and
that's how plain men like you and me manage to scud along without getting
plugged. You see, Bulger wasn't going to hev any of his own kind jumpin'
his claim here. And I reckon he was pow'ful enough to back down Sawyer's
Dam. Anyhow, the bluff told—and here we are in peace and quietness."
</p>
<p>
"Until he lets us know what is his little game," sneered Mosby.
</p>
<p>
Nevertheless, such is the force of mysterious power that although it was
exercised against what we firmly believed was the independence of the
camp, it extorted a certain respect from us. A few thought it was not a
bad thing to have a professional bully, and even took care to relate the
discomfiture of the wicked youth of Sawyer's Dam for the benefit of a
certain adjacent and powerful camp who had looked down upon us. He
himself, returning the same evening from his self-imposed escort,
vouchsafed no other reason than the one he had already given. Preposterous
as it seemed, we were obliged to accept it, and the still more
preposterous inference that he had sought Rattlesnake Camp solely for the
purpose of acquiring and securing its peace and quietness. Certainly he
had no other occupation; the little work he did upon the tailings of the
abandoned claim which went with his little cabin was scarcely a pretense.
He rode over on certain days to Bigwood on account of his business, but no
one had ever seen him there, nor could the description of his manner and
appearance evoke any information from the Bigwoodians. It remained a
mystery.
</p>
<p>
It had also been feared that the advent of Bulger would intensify that
fear and dislike of riotous Rattlesnake which the two families had shown,
and which was the origin of Briggs's futile attempt at reformation. But it
was discovered that since his arrival the young girls had shown less
timidity in entering the camp, and had even exchanged some polite
conversation and good-humoured badinage with its younger and more
impressible members. Perhaps this tended to make these youths more
observant, for a few days later, when the vexed question of Bulger's
business was again under discussion, one of them remarked, gloomily:
</p>
<p>
"I reckon there ain't no doubt WHAT he's here for!"
</p>
<p>
The youthful prophet was instantly sat upon after the fashion of all
elderly critics since Job's. Nevertheless, after a pause he was permitted
to explain.
</p>
<p>
"Only this morning, when Lance Forester and me were chirping with them
gals out on the hill, who should we see hanging around in the bush but
that cussed Bulger! We allowed at first that it might be only a new style
of his interferin', so we took no notice, except to pass a few remarks
about listeners and that sort o' thing, and perhaps to bedevil the girls a
little more than we'd hev done if we'd been alone. Well, they laughed, and
we laughed—and that was the end of it. But this afternoon, as Lance
and me were meandering down by their cabin, we sorter turned into the
woods to wait till they'd come out. Then all of a suddent Lance stopped as
rigid as a pointer that's flushed somethin', and says, 'B'gosh!' And thar,
under a big redwood, sat that slimy hypocrite Bulger, twisting his long
mustaches and smiling like clockwork alongside o' little Meely Baker—you
know her, the pootiest of the two sisters—and she smilin' back on
him. Think of it! that unknown, unwashed, longhaired tramp and bully, who
must be forty if a day, and that innocent gal of sixteen. It was simply
disgustin'!"
</p>
<p>
I need not say that the older cynics and critics already alluded to at
once improved the occasion. 'What more could be expected? Women, the world
over, were noted for this sort of thing! This long-haired, swaggering
bully, with his air of mystery, had captivated them, as he always had done
since the days of Homer. Simple merit, which sat lowly in barrooms, and
conceived projects for the public good around the humble, unostentatious
stove, was nowhere! Youth could not too soon learn this bitter lesson. And
in this case youth too, perhaps, was right in its conjectures, for this
WAS, no doubt, the little game of the perfidious Bulger. We recalled the
fact that his unhallowed appearance in camp was almost coincident with the
arrival of the two families. We glanced at Briggs; to our amazement, for
the first time he looked seriously concerned. But Mosby in the meantime
leaned his elbows lazily over the counter and, in a slow voice, added fuel
to the flame.
</p>
<p>
"I wouldn't hev spoken of it before," he said, with a sidelong glance at
Briggs, "for it might be all in the line o' Bulger's 'business,' but
suthin' happened the other night that, for a minit, got me! I was passin'
the Bakers' shanty, and I heard one of them gals a singing a camp-meeting
hymn. I don't calkilate to run agin you young fellers in any sparkin' or
canoodlin' that's goin' on, but her voice sounded so pow'ful soothin' and
pretty thet I jest stood there and listened. Then the old woman—old
Mother Baker—SHE joined in, and I listened too. And then—dern
my skin!—but a man's voice joined in—jest belching outer that
cabin!—and I sorter lifted myself up and kem away.
</p>
<p>
"That voice, gentlemen," said Mosby, lingering artistically as he took up
a glass and professionally eyed it before wiping it with his towel, "that
voice, cumf'bly fixed thar in thet cabin among them wimen folks, was
Bulger's!"
</p>
<p>
Briggs got up, with his eyes looking the darker for his flushed face.
"Gentlemen," he said huskily, "thar's only one thing to be done. A lot of
us have got to ride over to Sawyer's Dam tomorrow morning and pick up as
many square men as we can muster; there's a big camp meeting goin' on
there, and there won't be no difficulty in that. When we've got a big
enough crowd to show we mean business, we must march back here and ride
Bulger out of this camp! I don't hanker arter Vigilance Committees, as a
rule—it's a rough remedy—it's like drinkin' a quart o' whisky
agin rattlesnake poison but it's got to be done! We don't mind being sold
ourselves but when it comes to our standin' by and seein' the only
innocent people in Rattlesnake given away—we kick! Bulger's got to
be fired outer this camp! And he will be!"
</p>
<p>
But he was not.
</p>
<p>
For when, the next morning, a determined and thoughtful procession of the
best and most characteristic citizens of Rattlesnake Camp filed into
Sawyer's Dam, they found that their mysterious friends had disappeared,
although they met with a fraternal but subdued welcome from the general
camp. But any approach to the subject of their visit, however, was
received with a chilling dissapproval. Did they not know that lawlessness
of any kind, even under the rude mantle of frontier justice, was to be
deprecated and scouted when a "means of salvation, a power of
regeneration," such as was now sweeping over Sawyer's Dam, was at hand?
Could they not induce this man who was to be violently deported to
accompany them willingly to Sawyer's Dam and subject himself to the
powerful influence of the "revival" then in full swing?
</p>
<p>
The Rattlesnake boys laughed bitterly, and described the man of whom they
talked so lightly; but in vain. "It's no use, gentlemen," said a more
worldly bystander, in a lower voice, "the camp meetin's got a strong grip
here, and betwixt you and me there ain't no wonder. For the man that runs
it—the big preacher—has got new ways and methods that fetches
the boys every time. He don't preach no cut-and-dried gospel; he don't
carry around no slop-shop robes and clap 'em on you whether they fit or
not; but he samples and measures the camp afore he wades into it. He
scouts and examines; he ain't no mere Sunday preacher with a comfortable
house and once-a-week church, but he gives up his days and nights to it,
and makes his family work with him, and even sends 'em forward to explore
the field. And he ain't no white-choker shadbelly either, but fits
himself, like his gospel, to the men he works among. Ye ought to hear him
afore you go. His tent is just out your way. I'll go with you."
</p>
<p>
Too dejected to offer any opposition, and perhaps a little curious to see
this man who had unwittingly frustrated their design of lynching Bulger,
they halted at the outer fringe of worshipers who packed the huge
inclosure. They had not time to indulge their cynicisms over this swaying
mass of emotional, half-thinking, and almost irresponsible beings, nor to
detect any similarity between THEIR extreme methods and the scheme of
redemption they themselves were seeking, for in a few moments, apparently
lifted to his feet on a wave of religious exultation, the famous preacher
arose. The men of Rattlesnake gasped for breath.
</p>
<p>
It was Bulger!
</p>
<p>
But Briggs quickly recovered himself. "By what name," said he, turning
passionately towards his guide, "does this man—this impostor—call
himself here?"
</p>
<p>
"Baker."
</p>
<p>
"Baker?" echoed the Rattlesnake contingent.
</p>
<p>
"Baker?" repeated Lance Forester, with a ghastly smile.
</p>
<p>
"Yes," returned their guide. "You oughter know it too! For he sent his
wife and daughters over, after his usual style, to sample your camp, a
week ago! Come, now, what are you givin' us?"
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
IN THE TULES
</h2>
<p>
He had never seen a steamboat in his life. Born and reared in one of the
Western Territories, far from a navigable river, he had only known the
"dugout" or canoe as a means of conveyance across the scant streams whose
fordable waters made even those scarcely a necessity. The long, narrow,
hooded wagon, drawn by swaying oxen, known familiarly as a "prairie
schooner," in which he journeyed across the plains to California in '53,
did not help his conception by that nautical figure. And when at last he
dropped upon the land of promise through one of the Southern mountain
passes he halted all unconsciously upon the low banks of a great yellow
river amidst a tangled brake of strange, reed-like grasses that were
unknown to him. The river, broadening as it debouched through many
channels into a lordly bay, seemed to him the ULTIMA THULE of his
journeyings. Unyoking his oxen on the edge of the luxuriant meadows which
blended with scarcely any line of demarcation into the great stream
itself, he found the prospect "good" according to his lights and prairial
experiences, and, converting his halted wagon into a temporary cabin, he
resolved to rest here and "settle."
</p>
<p>
There was little difficulty in so doing. The cultivated clearings he had
passed were few and far between; the land would be his by discovery and
occupation; his habits of loneliness and self-reliance made him
independent of neighbors. He took his first meal in his new solitude under
a spreading willow, but so near his natural boundary that the waters
gurgled and oozed in the reeds but a few feet from him. The sun sank,
deepening the gold of the river until it might have been the stream of
Pactolus itself. But Martin Morse had no imagination; he was not even a
gold-seeker; he had simply obeyed the roving instincts of the frontiersman
in coming hither. The land was virgin and unoccupied; it was his; he was
alone. These questions settled, he smoked his pipe with less concern over
his three thousand miles' transference of habitation than the man of
cities who had moved into a next street. When the sun sank, he rolled
himself in his blankets in the wagon bed and went quietly to sleep.
</p>
<p>
But he was presently awakened by something which at first he could not
determine to be a noise or an intangible sensation. It was a deep
throbbing through the silence of the night—a pulsation that seemed
even to be communicated to the rude bed whereon he lay. As it came nearer
it separated itself into a labored, monotonous panting, continuous, but
distinct from an equally monotonous but fainter beating of the waters, as
if the whole track of the river were being coursed and trodden by a
multitude of swiftly trampling feet. A strange feeling took possession of
him—half of fear, half of curious expectation. It was coming nearer.
He rose, leaped hurriedly from the wagon, and ran to the bank. The night
was dark; at first he saw nothing before him but the steel-black sky
pierced with far-spaced, irregularly scattered stars. Then there seemed to
be approaching him, from the left, another and more symmetrical
constellation—a few red and blue stars high above the river, with
three compact lines of larger planetary lights flashing towards him and
apparently on his own level. It was almost upon him; he involuntarily drew
back as the strange phenomenon swept abreast of where he stood, and
resolved itself into a dark yet airy bulk, whose vagueness, topped by
enormous towers, was yet illuminated by those open squares of light that
he had taken for stars, but which he saw now were brilliantly lit windows.
</p>
<p>
Their vivid rays shot through the reeds and sent broad bands across the
meadow, the stationary wagon, and the slumbering oxen. But all this was
nothing to the inner life they disclosed through lifted curtains and open
blinds, which was the crowning revelation of this strange and wonderful
spectacle. Elegantly dressed men and women moved through brilliantly lit
and elaborately gilt saloons; in one a banquet seemed to be spread, served
by white-jacketed servants; in another were men playing cards around
marble-topped tables; in another the light flashed back again from the
mirrors and glistening glasses and decanters of a gorgeous refreshment
saloon; in smaller openings there was the shy disclosure of dainty white
curtains and velvet lounges of more intimate apartments.
</p>
<p>
Martin Morse stood enthralled and mystified. It was as if some invisible
Asmodeus had revealed to this simple frontiersman a world of which he had
never dreamed. It was THE world—a world of which he knew nothing in
his simple, rustic habits and profound Western isolation—sweeping by
him with the rush of an unknown planet. In another moment it was gone; a
shower of sparks shot up from one of the towers and fell all around him,
and then vanished, even as he remembered the set piece of "Fourth of July"
fireworks had vanished in his own rural town when he was a boy. The
darkness fell with it too. But such was his utter absorption and
breathless preoccupation that only a cold chill recalled him to himself,
and he found he was standing mid-leg deep in the surge cast over the low
banks by this passage of the first steamboat he had ever seen!
</p>
<p>
He waited for it the next night, when it appeared a little later from the
opposite direction on its return trip. He watched it the next night and
the next. Hereafter he never missed it, coming or going—whatever the
hard and weary preoccupations of his new and lonely life. He felt he could
not have slept without seeing it go by. Oddly enough, his interest and
desire did not go further. Even had he the time and money to spend in a
passage on the boat, and thus actively realize the great world of which he
had only these rare glimpses, a certain proud, rustic shyness kept him
from it. It was not HIS world; he could not affront the snubs that his
ignorance and inexperience would have provoked, and he was dimly
conscious, as so many of us are in our ignorance, that in mingling with it
he would simply lose the easy privileges of alien criticism. For there was
much that he did not understand, and some things that grated upon his
lonely independence.
</p>
<p>
One night, a lighter one than those previous, he lingered a little longer
in the moonlight to watch the phosphorescent wake of the retreating boat.
Suddenly it struck him that there was a certain irregular splashing in the
water, quite different from the regular, diagonally crossing surges that
the boat swept upon the bank. Looking at it more intently, he saw a black
object turning in the water like a porpoise, and then the unmistakable
uplifting of a black arm in an unskillful swimmer's overhand stroke. It
was a struggling man. But it was quickly evident that the current was too
strong and the turbulence of the shallow water too great for his efforts.
Without a moment's hesitation, clad as he was in only his shirt and
trousers, Morse strode into the reeds, and the next moment, with a call of
warning, was swimming toward the now wildly struggling figure. But, from
some unknown reason, as Morse approached him nearer the man uttered some
incoherent protest and desperately turned away, throwing off Morse's
extended arm.
</p>
<p>
Attributing this only to the vague convulsions of a drowning man, Morse, a
skilled swimmer, managed to clutch his shoulder, and propelled him at
arm's length, still struggling, apparently with as much reluctance as
incapacity, toward the bank. As their feet touched the reeds and slimy
bottom the man's resistance ceased, and he lapsed quite listlessly in
Morse's arms. Half lifting, half dragging his burden, he succeeded at last
in gaining the strip of meadow, and deposited the unconscious man beneath
the willow tree. Then he ran to his wagon for whisky.
</p>
<p>
But, to his surprise, on his return the man was already sitting up and
wringing the water from his clothes. He then saw for the first time, by
the clear moonlight, that the stranger was elegantly dressed and of
striking appearance, and was clearly a part of that bright and fascinating
world which Morse had been contemplating in his solitude. He eagerly took
the proffered tin cup and drank the whisky. Then he rose to his feet,
staggered a few steps forward, and glanced curiously around him at the
still motionless wagon, the few felled trees and evidence of "clearing,"
and even at the rude cabin of logs and canvas just beginning to rise from
the ground a few paces distant, and said, impatiently:
</p>
<p>
"Where the devil am I?"
</p>
<p>
Morse hesitated. He was unable to name the locality of his dwelling-place.
He answered briefly:
</p>
<p>
"On the right bank of the Sacramento."
</p>
<p>
The stranger turned upon him a look of suspicion not unmingled with
resentment. "Oh!" he said, with ironical gravity, "and I suppose that this
water you picked me out of was the Sacramento River. Thank you!"
</p>
<p>
Morse, with slow Western patience, explained that he had only settled
there three weeks ago, and the place had no name.
</p>
<p>
"What's your nearest town, then?"
</p>
<p>
"Thar ain't any. Thar's a blacksmith's shop and grocery at the crossroads,
twenty miles further on, but it's got no name as I've heard on."
</p>
<p>
The stranger's look of suspicion passed. "Well," he said, in an imperative
fashion, which, however, seemed as much the result of habit as the
occasion, "I want a horse, and mighty quick, too."
</p>
<p>
"H'ain't got any."
</p>
<p>
"No horse? How did you get to this place?"
</p>
<p>
Morse pointed to the slumbering oxen.
</p>
<p>
The stranger again stared curiously at him. After a pause he said, with a
half-pitying, half-humorous smile: "Pike—aren't you?"
</p>
<p>
Whether Morse did or did not know that this current California slang for a
denizen of the bucolic West implied a certain contempt, he replied simply:
</p>
<p>
"I'm from Pike County, Mizzouri."
</p>
<p>
"Well," said the stranger, resuming his impatient manner, "you must beg or
steal a horse from your neighbors."
</p>
<p>
"Thar ain't any neighbor nearer than fifteen miles."
</p>
<p>
"Then send fifteen miles! Stop." He opened his still clinging shirt and
drew out a belt pouch, which he threw to Morse. "There! there's two
hundred and fifty dollars in that. Now, I want a horse. Sabe?"
</p>
<p>
"Thar ain't anyone to send," said Morse, quietly.
</p>
<p>
"Do you mean to say you are all alone here?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes.
</p>
<p>
"And you fished me out—all by yourself?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes."
</p>
<p>
The stranger again examined him curiously. Then he suddenly stretched out
his hand and grasped his companion's.
</p>
<p>
"All right; if you can't send, I reckon I can manage to walk over there
tomorrow."
</p>
<p>
"I was goin' on to say," said Morse, simply, "that if you'll lie by
tonight, I'll start over sunup, after puttin' out the cattle, and fetch
you back a horse afore noon."
</p>
<p>
"That's enough." He, however, remained looking curiously at Morse. "Did
you never hear," he said, with a singular smile, "that it was about the
meanest kind of luck that could happen to you to save a drowning man?"
</p>
<p>
"No," said Morse, simply. "I reckon it orter be the meanest if you
DIDN'T."
</p>
<p>
"That depends upon the man you save," said the stranger, with the same
ambiguous smile, "and whether the SAVING him is only putting things off.
Look here," he added, with an abrupt return to his imperative style,
"can't you give me some dry clothes?"
</p>
<p>
Morse brought him a pair of overalls and a "hickory shirt," well worn, but
smelling strongly of a recent wash with coarse soap. The stranger put them
on while his companion busied himself in collecting a pile of sticks and
dry leaves.
</p>
<p>
"What's that for?" said the stranger, suddenly.
</p>
<p>
"A fire to dry your clothes."
</p>
<p>
The stranger calmly kicked the pile aside.
</p>
<p>
"Not any fire tonight if I know it," he said, brusquely. Before Morse
could resent his quickly changing moods he continued, in another tone,
dropping to an easy reclining position beneath the tree, "Now, tell me all
about yourself, and what you are doing here."
</p>
<p>
Thus commanded, Morse patiently repeated his story from the time he had
left his backwoods cabin to his selection of the river bank for a
"location." He pointed out the rich quality of this alluvial bottom and
its adaptability for the raising of stock, which he hoped soon to acquire.
The stranger smiled grimly, raised himself to a sitting position, and,
taking a penknife from his damp clothes, began to clean his nails in the
bright moonlight—an occupation which made the simple Morse wander
vaguely in his narration.
</p>
<p>
"And you don't know that this hole will give you chills and fever till
you'll shake yourself out of your boots?"
</p>
<p>
Morse had lived before in aguish districts, and had no fear.
</p>
<p>
"And you never heard that some night the whole river will rise up and walk
over you and your cabin and your stock?"
</p>
<p>
"No. For I reckon to move my shanty farther back."
</p>
<p>
The man shut up his penknife with a click and rose.
</p>
<p>
"If you've got to get up at sunrise, we'd better be turning in. I suppose
you can give me a pair of blankets?"
</p>
<p>
Morse pointed to the wagon. "Thar's a shakedown in the wagon bed; you kin
lie there." Nevertheless he hesitated, and, with the inconsequence and
abruptness of a shy man, continued the previous conversation.
</p>
<p>
"I shouldn't like to move far away, for them steamboats is pow'ful kempany
o' nights. I never seed one afore I kem here," and then, with the
inconsistency of a reserved man, and without a word of further
preliminary, he launched into a confidential disclosure of his late
experiences. The stranger listened with a singular interest and a quietly
searching eye.
</p>
<p>
"Then you were watching the boat very closely just now when you saw me.
What else did you see? Anything before that—before you saw me in the
water?"
</p>
<p>
"No—the boat had got well off before I saw you at all."
</p>
<p>
"Ah," said the stranger. "Well, I'm going to turn in." He walked to the
wagon, mounted it, and by the time that Morse had reached it with his wet
clothes he was already wrapped in the blankets. A moment later he seemed
to be in a profound slumber.
</p>
<p>
It was only then, when his guest was lying helplessly at his mercy, that
he began to realize his strange experiences. The domination of this man
had been so complete that Morse, although by nature independent and
self-reliant, had not permitted himself to question his right or to resent
his rudeness. He had accepted his guest's careless or premeditated silence
regarding the particulars of his accident as a matter of course, and had
never dreamed of questioning him. That it was a natural accident of that
great world so apart from his own experiences he did not doubt, and
thought no more about it. The advent of the man himself was greater to him
than the causes which brought him there. He was as yet quite unconscious
of the complete fascination this mysterious stranger held over him, but he
found himself shyly pleased with even the slight interest he had displayed
in his affairs, and his hand felt yet warm and tingling from his sudden
soft but expressive grasp, as if it had been a woman's. There is a simple
intuition of friendship in some lonely, self-abstracted natures that is
nearly akin to love at first sight. Even the audacities and insolence of
this stranger affected Morse as he might have been touched and captivated
by the coquetries or imperiousness of some bucolic virgin. And this
reserved and shy frontiersman found himself that night sleepless, and
hovering with an abashed timidity and consciousness around the wagon that
sheltered his guest, as if he had been a very Corydon watching the moonlit
couch of some slumbering Amaryllis.
</p>
<p>
He was off by daylight—after having placed a rude breakfast by the
side of the still sleeping guest—and before midday he had returned
with a horse. When he handed the stranger his pouch, less the amount he
had paid for the horse, the man said curtly:
</p>
<p>
"What's that for?"
</p>
<p>
"Your change. I paid only fifty dollars for the horse."
</p>
<p>
The stranger regarded him with his peculiar smile. Then, replacing the
pouch in his belt, he shook Morse's hand again and mounted the horse.
</p>
<p>
"So your name's Martin Morse! Well—goodby, Morsey!"
</p>
<p>
Morse hesitated. A blush rose to his dark check. "You didn't tell me your
name," he said. "In case—"
</p>
<p>
"In case I'm WANTED? Well, you can call me Captain Jack." He smiled, and,
nodding his head, put spurs to his mustang and cantered away.
</p>
<p>
Morse did not do much work that day, falling into abstracted moods and
living over his experiences of the previous night, until he fancied he
could almost see his strange guest again. The narrow strip of meadow was
haunted by him. There was the tree under which he had first placed him,
and that was where he had seen him sitting up in his dripping but
well-fitting clothes. In the rough garments he had worn and returned
lingered a new scent of some delicate soap, overpowering the strong alkali
flavor of his own. He was early by the river side, having a vague hope, he
knew not why, that he should again see him and recognize him among the
passengers. He was wading out among the reeds, in the faint light of the
rising moon, recalling the exact spot where he had first seen the
stranger, when he was suddenly startled by the rolling over in the water
of some black object that had caught against the bank, but had been
dislodged by his movements. To his horror it bore a faint resemblance to
his first vision of the preceding night. But a second glance at the
helplessly floating hair and bloated outline showed him that it was a DEAD
man, and of a type and build far different from his former companion.
There was a bruise upon his matted forehead and an enormous wound in his
throat already washed bloodless, white, and waxen. An inexplicable fear
came upon him, not at the sight of the corpse, for he had been in Indian
massacres and had rescued bodies mutilated beyond recognition; but from
some moral dread that, strangely enough, quickened and deepened with the
far-off pant of the advancing steamboat. Scarcely knowing why, he dragged
the body hurriedly ashore, concealing it in the reeds, as if he were
disposing of the evidence of his own crime. Then, to his preposterous
terror, he noticed that the panting of the steamboat and the beat of its
paddles were "slowing" as the vague bulk came in sight, until a huge wave
from the suddenly arrested wheels sent a surge like an enormous heartbeat
pulsating through the sedge that half submerged him. The flashing of three
or four lanterns on deck and the motionless line of lights abreast of him
dazzled his eyes, but he knew that the low fringe of willows hid his house
and wagon completely from view. A vague murmur of voices from the deck was
suddenly overridden by a sharp order, and to his relief the slowly
revolving wheels again sent a pulsation through the water, and the great
fabric moved solemnly away. A sense of relief came over him, he knew not
why, and he was conscious that for the first time he had not cared to look
at the boat.
</p>
<p>
When the moon arose he again examined the body, and took from its clothing
a few articles of identification and some papers of formality and
precision, which he vaguely conjectured to be some law papers from their
resemblance to the phrasing of sheriffs' and electors' notices which he
had seen in the papers. He then buried the corpse in a shallow trench,
which he dug by the light of the moon. He had no question of
responsibility; his pioneer training had not included coroners' inquests
in its experience; in giving the body a speedy and secure burial from
predatory animals he did what one frontiersman would do for another—what
he hoped might be done for him. If his previous unaccountable feelings
returned occasionally, it was not from that; but rather from some
uneasiness in regard to his late guest's possible feelings, and a regret
that he had not been here at the finding of the body. That it would in
some way have explained his own accident he did not doubt.
</p>
<p>
The boat did not "slow up" the next night, but passed as usual; yet three
or four days elapsed before he could look forward to its coming with his
old extravagant and half-exalted curiosity—which was his nearest
approach to imagination. He was then able to examine it more closely, for
the appearance of the stranger whom he now began to call "his friend" in
his verbal communings with himself—but whom he did not seem destined
to again discover; until one day, to his astonishment, a couple of fine
horses were brought to his clearing by a stock-drover. They had been
"ordered" to be left there. In vain Morse expostulated and questioned.
</p>
<p>
"Your name's Martin Morse, ain't it?" said the drover, with business
brusqueness; "and I reckon there ain't no other man o' that name around
here?"
</p>
<p>
"No," said Morse.
</p>
<p>
"Well, then, they're YOURS."
</p>
<p>
"But who sent them?" insisted Morse. "What was his name, and where does he
live?"
</p>
<p>
"I didn't know ez I was called upon to give the pedigree o' buyers," said
the drover dryly; "but the horses is 'Morgan,' you can bet your life." He
grinned as he rode away.
</p>
<p>
That Captain Jack sent them, and that it was a natural prelude to his
again visiting him, Morse did not doubt, and for a few days he lived in
that dream. But Captain Jack did not come. The animals were of great
service to him in "rounding up" the stock he now easily took in for
pasturage, and saved him the necessity of having a partner or a hired man.
The idea that this superior gentleman in fine clothes might ever appear to
him in the former capacity had even flitted through his brain, but he had
rejected it with a sigh. But the thought that, with luck and industry, he
himself might, in course of time, approximate to Captain Jack's evident
station, DID occur to him, and was an incentive to energy. Yet it was
quite distinct from the ordinary working man's ambition of wealth and
state. It was only that it might make him more worthy of his friend. The
great world was still as it had appeared to him in the passing boat—a
thing to wonder at—to be above—and to criticize.
</p>
<p>
For all that, he prospered in his occupation. But one day he woke with
listless limbs and feet that scarcely carried him through his daily
labors. At night his listlessness changed to active pain and a
feverishness that seemed to impel him toward the fateful river, as if his
one aim in life was to drink up its waters and bathe in its yellow stream.
But whenever he seemed to attempt it, strange dreams assailed him of dead
bodies arising with swollen and distorted lips to touch his own as he
strove to drink, or of his mysterious guest battling with him in its
current, and driving him ashore. Again, when he essayed to bathe his
parched and crackling limbs in its flood, he would be confronted with the
dazzling lights of the motionless steamboat and the glare of stony eyes—until
he fled in aimless terror. How long this lasted he knew not, until one
morning he awoke in his new cabin with a strange man sitting by his bed
and a Negress in the doorway.
</p>
<p>
"You've had a sharp attack of 'tule fever,'" said the stranger, dropping
Morse's listless wrist and answering his questioning eyes, "but you're all
right now, and will pull through."
</p>
<p>
"Who are you?" stammered Morse feebly.
</p>
<p>
"Dr. Duchesne, of Sacramento."
</p>
<p>
"How did you come here?"
</p>
<p>
"I was ordered to come to you and bring a nurse, as you were alone. There
she is." He pointed to the smiling Negress.
</p>
<p>
"WHO ordered you?"
</p>
<p>
The doctor smiled with professional tolerance. "One of your friends, of
course."
</p>
<p>
"But what was his name?"
</p>
<p>
"Really, I don't remember. But don't distress yourself. He has settled for
everything right royally. You have only to get strong now. My duty is
ended, and I can safely leave you with the nurse. Only when you are strong
again, I say—and HE says—keep back farther from the river."
</p>
<p>
And that was all he knew. For even the nurse who attended him through the
first days of his brief convalescence would tell him nothing more. He
quickly got rid of her and resumed his work, for a new and strange phase
of his simple, childish affection for his benefactor, partly superinduced
by his illness, was affecting him. He was beginning to feel the pain of an
unequal friendship; he was dimly conscious that his mysterious guest was
only coldly returning his hospitality and benefits, while holding aloof
from any association with him—and indicating the immeasurable
distance that separated their future intercourse. He had withheld any kind
message or sympathetic greeting; he had kept back even his NAME. The shy,
proud, ignorant heart of the frontiersman swelled beneath the fancied
slight, which left him helpless alike of reproach or resentment. He could
not return the horses, although in a fit of childish indignation he had
resolved not to use them; he could not reimburse him for the doctor's
bill, although he had sent away the nurse.
</p>
<p>
He took a foolish satisfaction in not moving back from the river, with a
faint hope that his ignoring of Captain Jack's advice might mysteriously
be conveyed to him. He even thought of selling out his location and
abandoning it, that he might escape the cold surveillance of his heartless
friend. All this was undoubtedly childish—but there is an
irrepressible simplicity of youth in all deep feeling, and the worldly
inexperience of the frontiersman left him as innocent as a child. In this
phase of his unrequited affection he even went so far as to seek some news
of Captain Jack at Sacramento, and, following out his foolish quest, even
to take the steamboat from thence to Stockton.
</p>
<p>
What happened to him then was perhaps the common experience of such
natures. Once upon the boat the illusion of the great world it contained
for him utterly vanished. He found it noisy, formal, insincere, and—had
he ever understood or used the word in his limited vocabulary—VULGAR.
Rather, perhaps, it seemed to him that the prevailing sentiment and action
of those who frequented it—and for whom it was built—were of a
lower grade than his own. And, strangely enough, this gave him none of his
former sense of critical superiority, but only of his own utter and
complete isolation. He wandered in his rough frontiersman's clothes from
deck to cabin, from airy galleries to long saloons, alone, unchallenged,
unrecognized, as if he were again haunting it only in spirit, as he had so
often done in his dreams.
</p>
<p>
His presence on the fringe of some voluble crowd caused no interruption;
to him their speech was almost foreign in its allusions to things he did
not understand, or, worse, seemed inconsistent with their eagerness and
excitement. How different from all this were his old recollections of
slowly oncoming teams, uplifted above the level horizon of the plains in
his former wanderings; the few sauntering figures that met him as man to
man, and exchanged the chronicle of the road; the record of Indian tracks;
the finding of a spring; the discovery of pasturage, with the lazy,
restful hospitality of the night! And how fierce here this continual
struggle for dominance and existence, even in this lull of passage. For
above all and through all he was conscious of the feverish haste of speed
and exertion.
</p>
<p>
The boat trembled, vibrated, and shook with every stroke of the ponderous
piston. The laughter of the crowd, the exchange of gossip and news, the
banquet at the long table, the newspapers and books in the reading-room,
even the luxurious couches in the staterooms, were all dominated,
thrilled, and pulsating with the perpetual throb of the demon of hurry and
unrest. And when at last a horrible fascination dragged him into the
engine room, and he saw the cruel relentless machinery at work, he seemed
to recognize and understand some intelligent but pitiless Moloch, who was
dragging this feverish world at its heels.
</p>
<p>
Later he was seated in a corner of the hurricane deck, whence he could
view the monotonous banks of the river; yet, perhaps by certain signs
unobservable to others, he knew he was approaching his own locality. He
knew that his cabin and clearing would be undiscernible behind the fringe
of willows on the bank, but he already distinguished the points where a
few cottonwoods struggled into a promontory of lighter foliage beyond
them. Here voices fell upon his ear, and he was suddenly aware that two
men had lazily crossed over from the other side of the boat, and were
standing before him looking upon the bank.
</p>
<p>
"It was about here, I reckon," said one, listlessly, as if continuing a
previous lagging conversation, "that it must have happened. For it was
after we were making for the bend we've just passed that the deputy, goin'
to the stateroom below us, found the door locked and the window open. But
both men—Jack Despard and Seth Hall, the sheriff—weren't to be
found. Not a trace of 'em. The boat was searched, but all for nothing. The
idea is that the sheriff, arter getting his prisoner comf'ble in the
stateroom, took off Jack's handcuffs and locked the door; that Jack, who
was mighty desp'rate, bolted through the window into the river, and the
sheriff, who was no slouch, arter him. Others allow—for the chairs
and things was all tossed about in the stateroom—that the two men
clinched THAR, and Jack choked Hall and chucked him out, and then slipped
cl'ar into the water himself, for the stateroom window was just ahead of
the paddle box, and the cap'n allows that no man or men could fall afore
the paddles and live. Anyhow, that was all they ever knew of it."
</p>
<p>
"And there wasn't no trace of them found?" said the second man, after a
long pause.
</p>
<p>
"No. Cap'n says them paddles would hev' just snatched 'em and slung 'em
round and round and buried 'em way down in the ooze of the river bed, with
all the silt of the current atop of 'em, and they mightn't come up for
ages; or else the wheels might have waltzed 'em way up to Sacramento until
there wasn't enough left of 'em to float, and dropped 'em when the boat
stopped."
</p>
<p>
"It was a mighty fool risk for a man like Despard to take," resumed the
second speaker as he turned away with a slight yawn.
</p>
<p>
"Bet your life! but he was desp'rate, and the sheriff had got him sure!
And they DO say that he was superstitious, like all them gamblers, and
allowed that a man who was fixed to die by a rope or a pistol wasn't to be
washed out of life by water."
</p>
<p>
The two figures drifted lazily away, but Morse sat rigid and motionless.
Yet, strange to say, only one idea came to him clearly out of this awful
revelation—the thought that his friend was still true to him—and
that his strange absence and mysterious silence were fully accounted for
and explained. And with it came the more thrilling fancy that this man was
alive now to HIM alone.
</p>
<p>
HE was the sole custodian of his secret. The morality of the question,
while it profoundly disturbed him, was rather in reference to its effect
upon the chances of Captain Jack and the power it gave his enemies than
his own conscience. He would rather that his friend should have proven the
proscribed outlaw who retained an unselfish interest in him than the
superior gentleman who was coldly wiping out his gratitude. He thought he
understood now the reason of his visitor's strange and varying moods—even
his bitter superstitious warning in regard to the probable curse entailed
upon one who should save a drowning man. Of this he recked little; enough
that he fancied that Captain Jack's concern in his illness was heightened
by that fear, and this assurance of his protecting friendship thrilled him
with pleasure.
</p>
<p>
There was no reason now why he should not at once go back to his farm,
where, at least, Captain Jack would always find him; and he did so,
returning on the same boat. He was now fully recovered from his illness,
and calmer in mind; he redoubled his labors to put himself in a position
to help the mysterious fugitive when the time should come. The remote farm
should always be a haven of refuge for him, and in this hope he forbore to
take any outside help, remaining solitary and alone, that Captain Jack's
retreat should be inviolate. And so the long, dry season passed, the hay
was gathered, the pasturing herds sent home, and the first rains, dimpling
like shot the broadening surface of the river, were all that broke his
unending solitude. In this enforced attitude of waiting and expectancy he
was exalted and strengthened by a new idea. He was not a religious man,
but, dimly remembering the exhortations of some camp meeting of his
boyhood, he conceived the idea that he might have been selected to work
out the regeneration of Captain Jack. What might not come of this meeting
and communing together in this lonely spot? That anything was due to the
memory of the murdered sheriff, whose bones were rotting in the trench
that he daily but unconcernedly passed, did not occur to him. Perhaps his
mind was not large enough for the double consideration. Friendship and
love—and, for the matter of that, religion—are eminently
one-ideaed.
</p>
<p>
But one night he awakened with a start. His hand, which was hanging out of
his bunk, was dabbling idly in water. He had barely time to spring to his
middle in what seemed to be a slowly filling tank before the door fell out
as from that inward pressure, and his whole shanty collapsed like a pack
of cards. But it fell outwards, the roof sliding from over his head like a
withdrawn canopy; and he was swept from his feet against it, and thence
out into what might have been another world! For the rain had ceased, and
the full moon revealed only one vast, illimitable expanse of water! It was
not an overflow, but the whole rushing river magnified and repeated a
thousand times, which, even as he gasped for breath and clung to the roof,
was bearing him away he knew not whither. But it was bearing him away upon
its center, for as he cast one swift glance toward his meadows he saw they
were covered by the same sweeping torrent, dotted with his sailing
hayricks and reaching to the wooded foothills. It was the great flood of
'54. In its awe-inspiring completeness it might have seemed to him the
primeval Deluge.
</p>
<p>
As his frail raft swept under a cottonwood he caught at one of the
overhanging limbs, and, working his way desperately along the bough, at
last reached a secure position in the fork of the tree. Here he was for
the moment safe. But the devastation viewed from this height was only the
more appalling. Every sign of his clearing, all evidence of his past
year's industry, had disappeared. He was now conscious for the first time
of the lowing of the few cattle he had kept as, huddled together on a
slight eminence, they one by one slipped over struggling into the flood.
The shining bodies of his dead horses rolled by him as he gazed. The
lower-lying limbs of the sycamore near him were bending with the burden of
the lighter articles from his overturned wagon and cabin which they had
caught and retained, and a rake was securely lodged in a bough. The
habitual solitude of his locality was now strangely invaded by drifting
sheds, agricultural implements, and fence rails from unknown and remote
neighbors, and he could faintly hear the far-off calling of some unhappy
farmer adrift upon a spar of his wrecked and shattered house. When day
broke he was cold and hungry.
</p>
<p>
Hours passed in hopeless monotony, with no slackening or diminution of the
waters. Even the drifts became less, and a vacant sea at last spread
before him on which nothing moved. An awful silence impressed him. In the
afternoon rain again began to fall on this gray, nebulous expanse, until
the whole world seemed made of aqueous vapor. He had but one idea now—the
coming of the evening boat, and he would reserve his strength to swim to
it. He did not know until later that it could no longer follow the old
channel of the river, and passed far beyond his sight and hearing. With
his disappointment and exposure that night came a return of his old fever.
His limbs were alternately racked with pain or benumbed and lifeless. He
could scarcely retain his position—at times he scarcely cared to—and
speculated upon ending his sufferings by a quick plunge downward. In other
moments of lucid misery he was conscious of having wandered in his mind;
of having seen the dead face of the murdered sheriff, washed out of his
shallow grave by the flood, staring at him from the water; to this was
added the hallucination of noises. He heard voices, his own name called by
a voice he knew—Captain Jack's!
</p>
<p>
Suddenly he started, but in that fatal movement lost his balance and
plunged downward. But before the water closed above his head he had had a
cruel glimpse of help near him; of a flashing light—of the black
hull of a tug not many yards away—of moving figures—the
sensation of a sudden plunge following his own, the grip of a strong hand
upon his collar, and—unconsciousness!
</p>
<p>
When he came to he was being lifted in a boat from the tug and rowed
through the deserted streets of a large city, until he was taken in
through the second-story window of a half-submerged hotel and cared for.
But all his questions yielded only the information that the tug—a
privately procured one, not belonging to the Public Relief Association—had
been dispatched for him with special directions, by a man who acted as one
of the crew, and who was the one who had plunged in for him at the last
moment. The man had left the boat at Stockton. There was nothing more?
Yes!—he had left a letter. Morse seized it feverishly. It contained
only a few lines:
</p>
<p>
We are quits now. You are all right. I have saved YOU from drowning, and
shifted the curse to my own shoulders. Good-by.
</p>
<p>
CAPTAIN JACK.
</p>
<p>
The astounded man attempted to rise—to utter an exclamation—but
fell back, unconscious.
</p>
<p>
Weeks passed before he was able to leave his bed—and then only as an
impoverished and physically shattered man. He had no means to restock the
farm left bare by the subsiding water. A kindly train-packer offered him a
situation as muleteer in a pack train going to the mountains—for he
knew tracks and passes and could ride. The mountains gave him back a
little of the vigor he had lost in the river valley, but none of its
dreams and ambitions. One day, while tracking a lost mule, he stopped to
slake his thirst in a waterhole—all that the summer had left of a
lonely mountain torrent. Enlarging the hole to give drink to his beast
also, he was obliged to dislodge and throw out with the red soil some bits
of honeycomb rock, which were so queer-looking and so heavy as to attract
his attention. Two of the largest he took back to camp with him. They were
gold! From the locality he took out a fortune. Nobody wondered. To the
Californian's superstition it was perfectly natural. It was "nigger luck"—the
luck of the stupid, the ignorant, the inexperienced, the nonseeker—the
irony of the gods!
</p>
<p>
But the simple, bucolic nature that had sustained itself against
temptation with patient industry and lonely self-concentration succumbed
to rapidly acquired wealth. So it chanced that one day, with a crowd of
excitement-loving spendthrifts and companions, he found himself on the
outskirts of a lawless mountain town. An eager, frantic crowd had already
assembled there—a desperado was to be lynched! Pushing his way
through the crowd for a nearer view of the exciting spectacle, the changed
and reckless Morse was stopped by armed men only at the foot of a cart,
which upheld a quiet, determined man, who, with a rope around his neck,
was scornfully surveying the mob, that held the other end of the rope
drawn across the limb of a tree above him. The eyes of the doomed man
caught those of Morse—his expression changed—a kindly smile
lit his face—he bowed his proud head for the first time, with an
easy gesture of farewell.
</p>
<p>
And then, with a cry, Morse threw himself upon the nearest armed guard,
and a fierce struggle began. He had overpowered one adversary and seized
another in his hopeless fight toward the cart when the half-astonished
crowd felt that something must be done. It was done with a sharp report,
the upward curl of smoke and the falling back of the guard as Morse
staggered forward FREE—with a bullet in his heart. Yet even then he
did not fall until he reached the cart, when he lapsed forward, dead, with
his arms outstretched and his head at the doomed man's feet.
</p>
<p>
There was something so supreme and all-powerful in this hopeless act of
devotion that the heart of the multitude thrilled and then recoiled aghast
at its work, and a single word or a gesture from the doomed man himself
would have set him free. But they say—and it is credibly recorded—that
as Captain Jack Despard looked down upon the hopeless sacrifice at his
feet his eyes blazed, and he flung upon the crowd a curse so awful and
sweeping that, hardened as they were, their blood ran cold, and then
leaped furiously to their cheeks.
</p>
<p>
"And now," he said, coolly tightening the rope around his neck with a jerk
of his head—"Go on, and be damned to you! I'm ready."
</p>
<p>
They did not hesitate this time. And Martin Morse and Captain Jack Despard
were buried in the same grave.
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
A CONVERT OF THE MISSION
</h2>
<p>
The largest tent of the Tasajara camp meeting was crowded to its utmost
extent. The excitement of that dense mass was at its highest pitch. The
Reverend Stephen Masterton, the single erect, passionate figure of that
confused medley of kneeling worshipers, had reached the culminating pitch
of his irresistible exhortatory power. Sighs and groans were beginning to
respond to his appeals, when the reverend brother was seen to lurch
heavily forward and fall to the ground.
</p>
<p>
At first the effect was that of a part of his performance; the groans
redoubled, and twenty or thirty brethren threw themselves prostrate in
humble imitation of the preacher. But Sister Deborah Stokes, perhaps
through some special revelation of feminine intuition, grasped the fallen
man, tore loose his black silk necktie, and dragged him free of the
struggling, frantic crowd whose paroxysms he had just evoked. Howbeit he
was pale and unconscious, and unable to continue the service. Even the
next day, when he had slightly recovered, it was found that any attempt to
renew his fervid exhortations produced the same disastrous result.
</p>
<p>
A council was hurriedly held by the elders. In spite of the energetic
protests of Sister Stokes, it was held that the Lord "was wrestlin' with
his sperrit," and he was subjected to the same extraordinary treatment
from the whole congregation that he himself had applied to THEM. Propped
up pale and trembling in the "Mourners' Bench" by two brethren, he was
"striven with," exhorted, prayed over, and admonished, until insensibility
mercifully succeeded convulsions. Spiritual therapeutics having failed, he
was turned over to the weak and carnal nursing of "womenfolk." But after a
month of incapacity he was obliged to yield to "the flesh," and, in the
local dialect, "to use a doctor."
</p>
<p>
It so chanced that the medical practitioner of the district was a man of
large experience, of military training, and plain speech. When, therefore,
he one day found in his surgery a man of rude Western type, strong-limbed
and sunburned, but trembling, hesitating and neurotic in movement, after
listening to his symptoms gravely, he asked, abruptly: "And how much are
you drinking now?"
</p>
<p>
"I am a lifelong abstainer," stammered his patient in quivering
indignation. But this was followed by another question so frankly
appalling to the hearer that he staggered to his feet.
</p>
<p>
"I'm Stephen Masterton—known of men as a circuit preacher, of the
Northern California district," he thundered—"and an enemy of the
flesh in all its forms."
</p>
<p>
"I beg your pardon," responded Dr. Duchesne, grimly, "but as you are
suffering from excessive and repeated excitation of the nervous system,
and the depression following prolonged artificial exaltation—it
makes little difference whether the cause be spiritual, as long as there
is a certain physical effect upon your BODY—which I believe you have
brought to me to cure. Now—as to diet? you look all wrong there.
</p>
<p>
"My food is of the simplest—I have no hankering for fleshpots,"
responded the patient.
</p>
<p>
"I suppose you call saleratus bread and salt pork and flapjacks SIMPLE?"
said the doctor, coolly; "they are COMMON enough, and if you were working
with your muscles instead of your nerves in that frame of yours they might
not hurt you; but you are suffering as much from eating more than you can
digest as the veriest gourmand. You must stop all that. Go down to a quiet
watering-place for two months." . . .
</p>
<p>
"I go to a watering-place?" interrupted Masterton; "to the haunt of the
idle, the frivolous and wanton—never!"
</p>
<p>
"Well, I'm not particular about a 'watering-place,'" said the doctor, with
a shrug, "although a little idleness and frivolity with different food
wouldn't hurt you—but you must go somewhere and change your habits
and mode of life COMPLETELY. I will find you some sleepy old Spanish town
in the southern country where you can rest and diet. If this is
distasteful to you," he continued, grimly, "you can always call it 'a
trial.'"
</p>
<p>
Stephen Masterton may have thought it so when, a week later, he found
himself issuing from a rocky gorge into a rough, badly paved, hilly
street, which seemed to be only a continuation of the mountain road
itself. It broadened suddenly into a square or plaza, flanked on each side
by an irregular row of yellowing adobe houses, with the inevitable
verandaed tienda in each corner, and the solitary, galleried fonda, with a
half-Moorish archway leading into an inner patio or courtyard in the
center.
</p>
<p>
The whole street stopped as usual at the very door of the Mission church,
a few hundred yards farther on, and under the shadow of the two belfry
towers at each angle of the facade, as if this were the ultima thule of
every traveler. But all that the eye rested on was ruined, worn, and
crumbling. The adobe houses were cracked by the incessant sunshine of the
half-year-long summer, or the more intermittent earthquake shock; the
paved courtyard of the fonda was so uneven and sunken in the center that
the lumbering wagon and faded diligencia stood on an incline, and the
mules with difficulty kept their footing while being unladen; the whitened
plaster had fallen from the feet of the two pillars that flanked the
Mission doorway, like bandages from a gouty limb, leaving the reddish core
of adobe visible; there were apparently as many broken tiles in the
streets and alleys as there were on the heavy red roofs that everywhere
asserted themselves—and even seemed to slide down the crumbling
walls to the ground. There were hopeless gaps in grille and grating of
doorways and windows, where the iron bars had dropped helplessly out, or
were bent at different angles. The walls of the peaceful Mission garden
and the warlike presidio were alike lost in the escalading vines or
leveled by the pushing boughs of gnarled pear and olive trees that now
surmounted them. The dust lay thick and impalpable in hollow and gutter,
and rose in little vapory clouds with a soft detonation at every stroke of
his horse's hoofs. Over all this dust and ruin, idleness seemed to reign
supreme. From the velvet-jacketed figures lounging motionless in the
shadows of the open doorways—so motionless that only the lazy drift
of cigarette smoke betokened their breathing—to the reclining peons
in the shade of a catalpa, or the squatting Indians in the arroyo—all
was sloth and dirt.
</p>
<p>
The Rev. Stephen Masterton felt his throat swell with his old exhortative
indignation. A gaudy yellow fan waved languidly in front of a black
rose-crested head at a white-curtained window. He knew he was stifling
with righteous wrath, and clapped his spurs to his horse.
</p>
<p>
Nevertheless, in a few days, by the aid of a letter to the innkeeper, he
was installed in a dilapidated adobe house, not unlike those he had seen,
but situated in the outskirts and overlooking the garden and part of the
refectory of the old Mission. It had even a small garden of its own—if
a strip of hot wall, overburdened with yellow and white roses, a dozen
straggling callas, a bank of heliotrope, and an almond tree could be
called a garden. It had an open doorway, but so heavily recessed in the
thick walls that it preserved seclusion, a sitting-room, and an alcoved
bedroom with deep embrasured windows that however excluded the unwinking
sunlight and kept an even monotone of shade.
</p>
<p>
Strange to say, he found it cool, restful, and, in spite of the dust,
absolutely clean, and, but for the scent of heliotrope, entirely
inodorous. The dry air seemed to dissipate all noxious emanations and
decay—the very dust itself in its fine impalpability was volatile
with a spicelike piquancy, and left no stain.
</p>
<p>
A wrinkled Indian woman, brown and veined like a tobacco leaf, ministered
to his simple wants. But these wants had also been regulated by Dr.
Duchesne. He found himself, with some grave doubts of his effeminacy,
breakfasting on a single cup of chocolate instead of his usual bowl of
molasses-sweetened coffee; crumbling a crisp tortilla instead of the heavy
saleratus bread, greasy flapjack, or the lard-fried steak, and, more
wonderful still, completing his repast with purple grapes from the Mission
wall. He could not deny that it was simple—that it was even
refreshing and consistent with the climate and his surroundings. On the
other hand, it was the frugal diet of the commonest peasant—and were
not those peons slothful idolaters?
</p>
<p>
At the end of the week—his correspondence being also restricted by
his doctor to a few lines to himself regarding his progress—he wrote
to that adviser:
</p>
<p>
"The trembling and unquiet has almost ceased; I have less nightly turmoil
and visions; my carnal appetite seems to be amply mollified and soothed by
these viands, whatever may be their ultimate effect upon the weakness of
our common sinful nature. But I should not be truthful to you if I did not
warn you that I am viewing with the deepest spiritual concern a decided
tendency toward sloth, and a folding of the hands over matters that often,
I fear, are spiritual as well as temporal. I would ask you to consider, in
a spirit of love, if it be not wise to rouse my apathetic flesh, so as to
strive, even with the feeblest exhortations, against this sloth in others—if
only to keep one's self from falling into the pit of easy indulgence."
</p>
<p>
What answer he received is not known, but it is to be presumed that he
kept loyal faith with his physician, and gave himself up to simple walks
and rides and occasional meditation. His solitude was not broken in upon;
curiosity was too active a vice, and induced too much exertion for his
indolent neighbors, and the Americano's basking seclusion, though unlike
the habits of his countrymen, did not affect them. The shopkeeper and
innkeeper saluted him always with a profound courtesy which awakened his
slight resentment, partly because he was conscious that it was grateful to
him, and partly that he felt he ought to have provoked in them a less
satisfied condition.
</p>
<p>
Once, when he had unwittingly passed the confines of his own garden,
through a gap in the Mission orchard, a lissome, black-coated shadow
slipped past him with an obeisance so profound and gentle that he was
startled at first into an awkward imitation of it himself, and then into
an angry self-examination. He knew that he loathed that long-skirted,
womanlike garment, that dangling, ostentatious symbol, that air of secrecy
and mystery, and he inflated his chest above his loosely tied cravat and
unbuttoned waistcoat with a contrasted sense of freedom. But he was
conscious the next day of weakly avoiding a recurrence of this meeting,
and in his self-examination put it down to his self-disciplined observance
of his doctor's orders. But when he was strong again, and fitted for his
Master's work, how strenuously he should improve the occasion this gave
him of attacking the Scarlet Woman among her slaves and worshipers!
</p>
<p>
His afternoon meditations and the perusal of his only book—the Bible—were
regularly broken in upon at about sunset by two or three strokes from the
cracked bell that hung in the open belfry which reared itself beyond the
gnarled pear tees. He could not say that it was aggressive or persistent,
like his own church bells, nor that it even expressed to him any religious
sentiment. Moreover, it was not a "Sabbath" bell, but a DAILY one, and
even then seemed to be only a signal to ears easily responsive, rather
than a stern reminder. And the hour was always a singularly witching one.
</p>
<p>
It was when the sun had slipped from the glaring red roofs, and the
yellowing adobe of the Mission walls and the tall ranks of wild oats on
the hillside were all of the one color of old gold. It was when the
quivering heat of the arroyo and dusty expanse of plaza was blending with
the soft breath of the sea fog that crept through the clefts of the coast
range, until a refreshing balm seemed to fall like a benediction on all
nature. It was when the trade-wind-swept and irritated surfaces of the
rocky gorge beyond were soothed with clinging vapors; when the pines above
no longer rocked monotonously, and the great undulating sea of the
wild-oat plains had gone down and was at rest. It was at this hour, one
afternoon, that, with the released scents of the garden, there came to him
a strange and subtle perfume that was new to his senses. He laid aside his
book, went into the garden, and, half-unconscious of his trespass, passed
through the Mission orchard and thence into the little churchyard beside
the church.
</p>
<p>
Looking at the strange inscriptions in an unfamiliar tongue, he was
singularly touched with the few cheap memorials lying upon the graves—like
childish toys—and for the moment overlooked the papistic emblems
that accompanied them. It struck him vaguely that Death, the common
leveler, had made even the symbols of a faith eternal inferior to those
simple records of undying memory and affection, and he was for a moment
startled into doubt.
</p>
<p>
He walked to the door of the church; to his surprise it was open. Standing
upon the threshold, he glanced inside, and stood for a moment utterly
bewildered. In a man of refined taste and education that bizarre and
highly colored interior would have only provoked a smile or shrug; to
Stephen Masterton's highly emotional nature, but artistic inexperience,
strangely enough it was profoundly impressive. The heavily timbered,
roughly hewn roof, barred with alternate bands of blue and Indian red, the
crimson hangings, the gold and black draperies, affected this religious
backwoodsman exactly as they were designed to affect the heathen and
acolytes for whose conversion the temple had been reared. He could
scarcely take his eyes from the tinsel-crowned Mother of Heaven,
resplendent in white and gold and glittering with jewels; the radiant
shield before the Host, illuminated by tall spectral candles in the
mysterious obscurity of the altar, dazzled him like the rayed disk of the
setting sun.
</p>
<p>
A gentle murmur, as of the distant sea, came from the altar. In his naive
bewilderment he had not seen the few kneeling figures in the shadow of
column and aisle; it was not until a man, whom he recognized as a muleteer
he had seen that afternoon gambling and drinking in the fonda, slipped by
him like a shadow and sank upon his knees in the center of the aisle that
he realized the overpowering truth.
</p>
<p>
HE, Stephen Masterton, was looking upon some rite of Popish idolatry! He
was turning quickly away when the keeper of the tienda—a man of
sloth and sin—gently approached him from the shadow of a column with
a mute gesture, which he took to be one of invitation. A fierce protest of
scorn and indignation swelled to his throat, but died upon his lips. Yet
he had strength enough to erect his gaunt emaciated figure, throwing out
his long arms and extended palms in the attitude of defiant exorcism, and
then rush swiftly from the church. As he did so he thought he saw a faint
smile cross the shopkeeper's face, and a whispered exchange of words with
a neighboring worshiper of more exalted appearance came to his ears. But
it was not intelligible to his comprehension.
</p>
<p>
The next day he wrote to his doctor in that quaint grandiloquence of
written speech with which the half-educated man balances the slips of his
colloquial phrasing:
</p>
<p>
Do not let the purgation of my flesh be unduly protracted. What with the
sloth and idolatries of Baal and Ashteroth, which I see daily around me, I
feel that without a protest not only the flesh but the spirit is
mortified. But my bodily strength is mercifully returning, and I found
myself yesterday able to take a long ride at that hour which they here
keep sacred for an idolatrous rite, under the beautiful name of "The
Angelus." Thus do they bear false witness to Him! Can you tell me the
meaning of the Spanish words "Don Keyhotter"? I am ignorant of these
sensuous Southern languages, and am aware that this is not the correct
spelling, but I have striven to give the phonetic equivalent. It was used,
I am inclined to think, in reference to MYSELF, by an idolater.
</p>
<p>
P.S.—You need not trouble yourself. I have just ascertained that the
words in question were simply the title of an idle novel, and, of course,
could not possibly refer to ME.
</p>
<p>
Howbeit it was as "Don Quixote"—that is, the common Spaniard's
conception of the Knight of La Mancha, merely the simple fanatic and
madman—that Mr. Stephen Masterton ever after rode all unconsciously
through the streets of the Mission, amid the half-pitying, half-smiling
glances of the people.
</p>
<p>
In spite of his meditations, his single volume, and his habit of retiring
early, he found his evenings were growing lonely and tedious. He missed
the prayer meeting, and, above all, the hymns. He had a fine baritone
voice, sympathetic, as may be imagined, but not cultivated. One night, in
the seclusion of his garden, and secure in his distance from other
dwellings, he raised his voice in a familiar camp-meeting hymn with a
strong Covenanter's ring in the chorus. Growing bolder as he went on, he
at last filled the quiet night with the strenuous sweep of his chant.
Surprised at his own fervor, he paused for a moment, listening, half
frightened, half ashamed of his outbreak. But there was only the trilling
of the night wind in the leaves, or the far-off yelp of a coyote.
</p>
<p>
For a moment he thought he heard the metallic twang of a stringed
instrument in the Mission garden beyond his own, and remembered his
contiguity to the church with a stir of defiance. But he was relieved,
nevertheless. His pent-up emotion had found vent, and without the nervous
excitement that had followed his old exaltation. That night he slept
better. He had found the Lord again—with Psalmody!
</p>
<p>
The next evening he chanced upon a softer hymn of the same simplicity, but
with a vein of human tenderness in its aspirations, which his more hopeful
mood gently rendered. At the conclusion of the first verse he was,
however, distinctly conscious of being followed by the same twanging sound
he had heard on the previous night, and which even his untutored ear could
recognize as an attempt to accompany him. But before he had finished the
second verse the unknown player, after an ingenious but ineffectual essay
to grasp the right chord, abandoned it with an impatient and almost
pettish flourish, and a loud bang upon the sounding-board of the unseen
instrument. Masterton finished it alone.
</p>
<p>
With his curiosity excited, however, he tried to discover the locality of
the hidden player. The sound evidently came from the Mission garden; but
in his ignorance of the language he could not even interrogate his Indian
housekeeper. On the third night, however, his hymn was uninterrupted by
any sound from the former musician. A sense of disappointment, he knew not
why, came over him. The kindly overture of the unseen player had been a
relief to his loneliness. Yet he had barely concluded the hymn when the
familiar sound again struck his ears. But this time the musician played
boldly, confidently, and with a singular skill on the instrument.
</p>
<p>
The brilliant prelude over, to his entire surprise and some confusion, a
soprano voice, high, childish, but infinitely quaint and fascinating, was
mischievously uplifted. But alas! even to his ears, ignorant of the
language, it was very clearly a song of levity and wantonness, of freedom
and license, of coquetry and incitement! Yet such was its fascination that
he fancied it was reclaimed by the delightful childlike and innocent
expression of the singer.
</p>
<p>
Enough that this tall, gaunt, broad-shouldered man arose and, overcome by
a curiosity almost as childlike, slipped into the garden and glided with
an Indian softness of tread toward the voice. The moon shone full upon the
ruined Mission wall tipped with clusters of dark foliage. Half hiding,
half mingling with one of them—an indistinct bulk of light-colored
huddled fleeces like an extravagant bird's nest—hung the unknown
musician. So intent was the performer's preoccupation that Masterton
actually reached the base of the wall immediately below the figure without
attracting its attention. But his foot slipped on the crumbling debris
with a snapping of dry twigs. There was a quick little cry from above. He
had barely time to recover his position before the singer, impulsively
leaning over the parapet, had lost hers, and fell outward. But Masterton
was tall, alert, and self-possessed, and threw out his long arms. The next
moment they were full of soft flounces, a struggling figure was against
his breast, and a woman's frightened little hands around his neck. But he
had broken her fall, and almost instantly, yet with infinite gentleness,
he released her unharmed, with hardly her crisp flounces crumpled, in an
upright position against the wall. Even her guitar, still hanging from her
shoulder by a yellow ribbon, had bounded elastic and resounding against
the wall, but lay intact at her satin-slippered feet. She caught it up
with another quick little cry, but this time more of sauciness than fear,
and drew her little hand across its strings, half defiantly.
</p>
<p>
"I hope you are not hurt?" said the circuit preacher, gravely.
</p>
<p>
She broke into a laugh so silvery that he thought it no extravagance to
liken it to the moonbeams that played over her made audible. She was
lithe, yet plump; barred with black and yellow and small-waisted like a
pretty wasp. Her complexion in that light was a sheen of pearl satin that
made her eyes blacker and her little mouth redder than any other color
could. She was small, but, remembering the fourteen-year-old wife of the
shopkeeper, he felt that, for all her childish voice and features, she was
a grown woman, and a sudden shyness took hold of him.
</p>
<p>
But she looked pertly in his face, stood her guitar upright before her,
and put her hands behind her back as she leaned saucily against the wall
and shrugged her shoulders.
</p>
<p>
"It was the fault of you," she said, in a broken English that seemed as
much infantine as foreign. "What for you not remain to yourself in your
own CASA? So it come. You creep so—in the dark—and shake my
wall, and I fall. And she," pointing to the guitar, "is a'most broke! And
for all thees I have only make to you a serenade. Ingrate!"
</p>
<p>
"I beg your pardon," said Masterton quickly, "but I was curious. I thought
I might help you, and—"
</p>
<p>
"Make yourself another cat on the wall, eh? No; one is enough, thank you!"
</p>
<p>
A frown lowered on Masterton's brow. "You don't understand me," he said,
bluntly. "I did not know WHO was here."
</p>
<p>
"Ah, BUENO! Then it is Pepita Ramirez, you see," she said, tapping her
bodice with one little finger, "all the same; the niece from Manuel
Garcia, who keeps the Mission garden and lif there. And you?"
</p>
<p>
"My name is Masterton."
</p>
<p>
"How mooch?"
</p>
<p>
"Masterton," he repeated.
</p>
<p>
She tried to pronounce it once or twice desperately, and then shook her
little head so violently that a yellow rose fastened over her ear fell to
the ground. But she did not heed it, nor the fact that Masterton had
picked it up.
</p>
<p>
"Ah, I cannot!" she said, poutingly. "It is as deefeecult to make go as my
guitar with your serenade."
</p>
<p>
"Can you not say 'Stephen Masterton'?" he asked, more gently, with a
returning and forgiving sense of her childishness.
</p>
<p>
"Es-stefen? Ah, ESTEBAN! Yes; Don Esteban! BUENO! Then, Don Esteban, what
for you sink so melank-olly one night, and one night so fierce? The
melank-olly, he ees not so bad; but the fierce—ah! he is weeked! Ess
it how the Americano make always his serenade?"
</p>
<p>
Masterton's brow again darkened. And his hymn of exultation had been
mistaken by these people—by this—this wanton child!
</p>
<p>
"It was no serenade," he replied, curtly; "it was in the praise of the
Lord!"
</p>
<p>
"Of how mooch?"
</p>
<p>
"Of the Lord of Hosts—of the Almighty in Heaven." He lifted his long
arms reverently on high.
</p>
<p>
"Oh!" she said, with a frightened look, slightly edging away from the
wall. At a secure distance she stopped. "Then you are a soldier, Don
Esteban?"
</p>
<p>
"No!"
</p>
<p>
"Then what for you sink 'I am a soldier of the Lord,' and you will make
die 'in His army'? Oh, yes; you have said." She gathered up her guitar
tightly under her arm, shook her small finger at him gravely, and said,
"You are a hoombog, Don Esteban; good a' night," and began to glide away.
</p>
<p>
"One moment, Miss—Miss Ramirez," called Masterton. "I—that is
you—you have—forgotten your rose," he added, feebly, holding
up the flower. She halted.
</p>
<p>
"Ah, yes; he have drop, you have pick him up, he is yours. I have drop,
you have pick ME up, but I am NOT yours. Good a' night, COMANDANTE Don
Esteban!"
</p>
<p>
With a light laugh she ran along beside the wall for a little distance,
suddenly leaped up and disappeared in one of the largest gaps in its
ruined and helpless structure. Stephen Masterton gazed after her stupidly,
still holding the rose in his hand. Then he threw it away and re-entered
his home.
</p>
<p>
Lighting his candle, he undressed himself, prayed fervently—so
fervently that all remembrance of the idle, foolish incident was wiped
from his mind, and went to bed. He slept well and dreamlessly. The next
morning, when his thoughts recurred to the previous night, this seemed to
him a token that he had not deviated from his spiritual integrity; it did
not occur to him that the thought itself was a tacit suspicion.
</p>
<p>
So his feet quite easily sought the garden again in the early sunshine,
even to the wall where she had stood. But he had not taken into account
the vivifying freshness of the morning, the renewed promise of life and
resurrection in the pulsing air and potent sunlight, and as he stood there
he seemed to see the figure of the young girl again leaning against the
wall in all the charm of her irrepressible and innocent youth. More than
that, he found the whole scene re-enacting itself before him; the nebulous
drapery half hidden in the foliage, the cry and the fall; the momentary
soft contact of the girl's figure against his own, the clinging arms
around his neck, the brush and fragrance of her flounces—all this
came back to him with a strength he had NOT felt when it occurred.
</p>
<p>
He was turning hurriedly away when his eyes fell upon the yellow rose
still lying in the debris where he had thrown it—but still pure,
fresh, and unfaded. He picked it up again, with a singular fancy that it
was the girl herself, and carried it into the house.
</p>
<p>
As he placed it half shyly in a glass on his table a wonderful thought
occurred to him. Was not the episode of last night a special providence?
Was not that young girl, wayward and childlike, a mere neophyte in her
idolatrous religion, as yet unsteeped in sloth and ignorance, presented to
him as a brand to be snatched from the burning? Was not this the
opportunity of conversion he had longed for—this the chance of
exercising his gifts of exhortation that he had been hiding in the napkin
of solitude and seclusion? Nay, was not all this PREDESTINED? His illness,
his consequent exile to this land of false gods—this contiguity to
the Mission—was not all this part of a supremely ordered plan for
the girl's salvation—and was HE not elected and ordained for that
service? Nay, more, was not the girl herself a mere unconscious instrument
in the hands of a higher power; was not her voluntary attempt to accompany
him in his devotional exercise a vague stirring of that predestined force
within her? Was not even that wantonness and frivolity contrasted with her
childishness—which he had at first misunderstood—the stirrings
of the flesh and the spirit, and was he to abandon her in that struggle of
good and evil?
</p>
<p>
He lifted his bowed head, that had been resting on his arm before the
little flower on the table—as if it were a shrine—with a flash
of resolve in his blue eyes. The wrinkled Concepcion coming to her duties
in the morning scarcely recognized her gloomily abstracted master in this
transfigured man. He looked ten years younger.
</p>
<p>
She met his greeting, and the few direct inquiries that his new resolve
enabled him to make more freely, with some information—which a later
talk with the shopkeeper, who had a fuller English vocabulary, confirmed
in detail.
</p>
<p>
"YES! truly this was a niece of the Mission gardener, who lived with her
uncle in the ruined wing of the presidio. She had taken her first
communion four years ago. Ah, yes, she was a great musician, and could
play on the organ. And the guitar, ah, yes—of a certainty. She was
gay, and flirted with the caballeros, young and old, but she cared not for
any."
</p>
<p>
Whatever satisfaction this latter statement gave Masterton, he believed it
was because the absence of any disturbing worldly affection would make her
an easier convert.
</p>
<p>
But how continue this chance acquaintance and effect her conversion? For
the first time Masterton realized the value of expediency; while his whole
nature impelled him to seek her society frankly and publicly and exhort
her openly, he knew that this was impossible; still more, he remembered
her unmistakable fright at his first expression of faith; he must "be wise
as the serpent and harmless as the dove." He must work upon her soul
alone, and secretly. He, who would have shrunk from any clandestine
association with a girl from mere human affection, saw no wrong in a
covert intimacy for the purpose of religious salvation. Ignorant as he was
of the ways of the world, and inexperienced in the usages of society, he
began to plan methods of secretly meeting her with all the intrigue of a
gallant. The perspicacity as well as the intuition of a true lover had
descended upon him in this effort of mere spiritual conquest.
</p>
<p>
Armed with his information and a few Spanish words, he took the yellow
Concepcion aside and gravely suborned her to carry a note to be delivered
secretly to Miss Ramirez. To his great relief and some surprise the old
woman grinned with intelligence, and her withered hand closed with a
certain familiar dexterity over the epistle and the accompanying gratuity.
To a man less naively one-ideaed it might have awakened some suspicion;
but to the more sanguine hopefulness of Masterton it only suggested the
fancy that Concepcion herself might prove to be open to conversion, and
that he should in due season attempt HER salvation also. But that would be
later. For Concepcion was always with him and accessible; the girl was
not.
</p>
<p>
The note, which had cost him some labor of composition, simple and almost
businesslike as was the result, ran as follows:
</p>
<p>
"I wish to see you upon some matter of grave concern to yourself. Will you
oblige me by coming again to the wall of the Mission tonight at early
candlelight? It would avert worldly suspicion if you brought also your
guitar."
</p>
<p>
The afternoon dragged slowly on; Concepcion returned; she had, with great
difficulty, managed to see the senorita, but not alone; she had, however,
slipped the note into her hand, not daring to wait for an answer.
</p>
<p>
In his first hopefulness Masterton did not doubt what the answer would be,
but as evening approached he grew concerned as to the girl's opportunities
of coming, and regretted that he had not given her a choice of time.
</p>
<p>
Before his evening meal was finished he began to fear for her willingness,
and doubt the potency of his note. He was accustomed to exhort ORALLY—perhaps
he ought to have waited for the chance of SPEAKING to her directly without
writing.
</p>
<p>
When the moon rose he was already in the garden. Lingering at first in the
shadow of an olive tree, he waited until the moonbeams fell on the wall
and its crests of foliage. But nothing moved among that ebony tracery; his
ear was strained for the familiar tinkle of the guitar—all was
silent. As the moon rose higher he at last boldly walked to the wall, and
listened for any movement on the other side of it. But nothing stirred.
She was evidently NOT coming—his note had failed.
</p>
<p>
He was turning away sadly, but as he faced his home again he heard a light
laugh beside him. He stopped. A black shadow stepped out from beneath his
own almond tree. He started when, with a gesture that seemed familiar to
him, the upper part of the shadow seemed to fall away with a long black
mantilla and the face of the young girl was revealed.
</p>
<p>
He could see now that she was clad in black lace from head to foot. She
looked taller, older, and he fancied even prettier than before. A sudden
doubt of his ability to impress her, a swift realization of all the
difficulties of the attempt, and, for the first time perhaps, a dim
perception of the incongruity of the situation came over him.
</p>
<p>
"I was looking for you on the wall," he stammered.
</p>
<p>
"MADRE DE DIOS!" she retorted, with a laugh and her old audacity, "you
would that I shall ALWAYS hang there, and drop upon you like a pear when
you shake the tree? No!"
</p>
<p>
"You haven't brought your guitar," he continued, still more awkwardly, as
he noticed that she held only a long black fan in her hand.
</p>
<p>
"For why? You would that I PLAY it, and when my uncle say 'Where go
Pepita? She is loss,' someone shall say, 'Oh! I have hear her tink-a-tink
in the garden of the Americano, who lif alone.' And then—it ess
finish!"
</p>
<p>
Masterton began to feel exceedingly uncomfortable. There was something in
this situation that he had not dreamed of. But with the persistency of an
awkward man he went on.
</p>
<p>
"But you played on the wall the other night, and tried to accompany me."
</p>
<p>
"But that was lass night and on the wall. I had not speak to you, you had
not speak to me. You had not sent me the leetle note by your peon." She
stopped, and suddenly opening her fan before her face, so that only her
mischievous eyes were visible, added: "You had not asked me then to come
to hear you make lof to me, Don Esteban. That is the difference."
</p>
<p>
The circuit preacher felt the blood rush to his face. Anger, shame,
mortification, remorse, and fear alternately strove with him, but above
all and through all he was conscious of a sharp, exquisite pleasure—that
frightened him still more. Yet he managed to exclaim:
</p>
<p>
"No! no! You cannot think me capable of such a cowardly trick?"
</p>
<p>
The girl started, more at the unmistakable sincerity of his utterance than
at the words, whose full meaning she may have only imperfectly caught.
</p>
<p>
"A treek? A treek?" she slowly and wonderingly repeated. Then suddenly, as
if comprehending him, she turned her round black eyes full upon him and
dropped her fan from her face.
</p>
<p>
"And WHAT for you ask me to come here then?"
</p>
<p>
"I wanted to talk with you," he began, "on far more serious matters. I
wished to—" but he stopped. He could not address this quaint
child-woman staring at him in black-eyed wonder, in either the measured or
the impetuous terms with which he would have exhorted a maturer
responsible being. He made a step toward her; she drew back, striking at
his extended hand half impatiently, half mischievously with her fan.
</p>
<p>
He flushed—and then burst out bluntly, "I want to talk with you
about your soul."
</p>
<p>
"My what?"
</p>
<p>
"Your immortal soul, unhappy girl."
</p>
<p>
"What have you to make with that? Are you a devil?" Her eyes grew rounder,
though she faced him boldly.
</p>
<p>
"I am a Minister of the Gospel," he said, in hurried entreaty. "You must
hear me for a moment. I would save your soul."
</p>
<p>
"My immortal soul lif with the Padre at the Mission—you moost seek
her there! My mortal BODY," she added, with a mischievous smile, "say to
you, 'good a' night, Don Esteban.'" She dropped him a little curtsy and—ran
away.
</p>
<p>
"One moment, Miss Ramirez," said Masterton, eagerly; but she had already
slipped beyond his reach. He saw her little black figure passing swiftly
beside the moonlit wall, saw it suddenly slide into a shadowy fissure, and
vanish.
</p>
<p>
In his blank disappointment he could not bear to re-enter the house he had
left so sanguinely a few moments before, but walked moodily in the garden.
His discomfiture was the more complete since he felt that his defeat was
owing to some mistake in his methods, and not the incorrigibility of his
subject.
</p>
<p>
Was it not a spiritual weakness in him to have resented so sharply the
girl's imputation that he wished to make love to her? He should have borne
it as Christians had even before now borne slander and false testimony for
their faith! He might even have ACCEPTED it, and let the triumph of her
conversion in the end prove his innocence. Or was his purpose incompatible
with that sisterly affection he had so often preached to the women of his
flock? He might have taken her hand, and called her "Sister Pepita," even
as he had called Deborah "Sister." He recalled the fact that he had for an
instant held her struggling in his arms: he remembered the thrill that the
recollection had caused him, and somehow it now sent a burning blush
across his face. He hurried back into the house.
</p>
<p>
The next day a thousand wild ideas took the place of his former settled
resolution. He would seek the Padre, this custodian of the young girl's
soul; he would convince HIM of his error, or beseech him to give him an
equal access to her spirit! He would seek the uncle of the girl, and work
upon his feelings.
</p>
<p>
Then for three or four days he resolved to put the young girl from his
mind, trusting after the fashion of his kind for some special revelation
from a supreme source as an indication for his conduct. This revelation
presently occurred, as it is apt to occur when wanted.
</p>
<p>
One evening his heart leaped at the familiar sound of Pepita's guitar in
the distance. Whatever his ultimate intention now, he hurriedly ran into
the garden. The sound came from the former direction, but as he
unhesitatingly approached the Mission wall, he could see that she was not
upon it, and as the notes of her guitar were struck again, he knew that
they came from the other side. But the chords were a prelude to one of his
own hymns, and he stood entranced as her sweet, childlike voice rose with
the very words that he had sung. The few defects were those of purely oral
imitation, the accents, even the slight reiteration of the "s," were
Pepita's own:
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
Cheeldren oof the Heavenly King,
As ye journey essweetly ssing;
Essing your great Redeemer's praise,
Glorioos in Hees works and ways.
</pre>
<p>
He was astounded. Her recollection of the air and words was the more
wonderful, for he remembered now that he had only sung that particular
hymn once. But to his still greater delight and surprise, her voice rose
again in the second verse, with a touch of plaintiveness that swelled his
throat:
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
We are traveling home to God,
In the way our farzers trod,
They are happy now, and we
Soon their happiness shall see.
</pre>
<p>
The simple, almost childish words—so childish that they might have
been the fitting creation of her own childish lips—here died away
with a sweep and crash of the whole strings. Breathless silence followed,
in which Stephen Masterton could feel the beatings of his own heart.
</p>
<p>
"Miss Ramirez," he called, in a voice that scarcely seemed his own. There
was no reply. "Pepita!" he repeated; it was strangely like the accent of a
lover, but he no longer cared. Still the singer's voice was silent.
</p>
<p>
Then he ran swiftly beside the wall, as he had seen her run, until he came
to the fissure. It was overgrown with vines and brambles almost as
impenetrable as an abatis, but if she had pierced it in her delicate crape
dress, so could he! He brushed roughly through, and found himself in a
glimmering aisle of pear trees close by the white wall of the Mission
church.
</p>
<p>
For a moment in that intricate tracing of ebony and ivory made by the
rising moon, he was dazzled, but evidently his irruption into the orchard
had not been as lithe and silent as her own, for a figure in a
parti-colored dress suddenly started into activity, and running from the
wall, began to course through the trees until it became apparently a part
of that involved pattern. Nothing daunted, however, Stephen Masterton
pursued, his speed increased as he recognized the flounces of Pepita's
barred dress, but the young girl had the advantage of knowing the
locality, and could evade her pursuer by unsuspected turns and doubles.
</p>
<p>
For some moments this fanciful sylvan chase was kept up in perfect
silence; it might have been a woodland nymph pursued by a wandering
shepherd. Masterton presently saw that she was making toward a tiled roof
that was now visible as projecting over the presidio wall, and was
evidently her goal of refuge. He redoubled his speed; with skillful
audacity and sheer strength of his broad shoulders he broke through a
dense ceanothus hedge which Pepita was swiftly skirting, and suddenly
appeared between her and her house.
</p>
<p>
With her first cry, the young girl turned and tried to bury herself in the
hedge; but in another stride the circuit preacher was at her side, and
caught her panting figure in his arms.
</p>
<p>
While he had been running he had swiftly formulated what he should do and
what he should say to her. To his simple appeal for her companionship and
willing ear he would add a brotherly tenderness, that should invite her
trustfulness in him; he would confess his wrong and ask her forgiveness of
his abrupt solicitations; he would propose to teach her more hymns, they
would practice psalmody together; even this priest, the custodian of her
soul, could not object to that; but chiefly he would thank her: he would
tell her how she had pleased him, and this would lead to more serious and
thoughtful converse. All this was in his mind while he ran, was upon his
lips as he caught her and for an instant she lapsed, exhausted, in his
arms. But, alas! even in that moment he suddenly drew her toward him, and
kissed her as only a lover could!
</p>
<p>
The wire grass was already yellowing on the Tasajara plains with the dusty
decay of the long, dry summer when Dr. Duchesne returned to Tasajara. He
came to see the wife of Deacon Sanderson, who, having for the twelfth time
added to the population of the settlement, was not "doing as well" as
everybody—except, possibly, Dr. Duchesne—expected. After he
had made this hollow-eyed, over-burdened, undernourished woman as
comfortable as he could in her rude, neglected surroundings, to change the
dreary chronicle of suffering, he turned to the husband, and said, "And
what has become of Mr. Masterton, who used to be in your—vocation?"
A long groan came from the deacon.
</p>
<p>
"Hallo! I hope he has not had a relapse," said the doctor, earnestly. "I
thought I'd knocked all that nonsense out of him—I beg your pardon—I
mean," he added, hurriedly, "he wrote to me only a few weeks ago that he
was picking up his strength again and doing well!"
</p>
<p>
"In his weak, gross, sinful flesh—yes, no doubt," returned the
Deacon, scornfully, "and, perhaps, even in a worldly sense, for those who
value the vanities of life; but he is lost to us, for all time, and lost
to eternal life forever. Not," he continued in sanctimonious
vindictiveness, "but that I often had my doubts of Brother Masterton's
steadfastness. He was too much given to imagery and song."
</p>
<p>
"But what has he done?" persisted Dr. Duchesne.
</p>
<p>
"Done! He has embraced the Scarlet Woman!"
</p>
<p>
"Dear me!" said the doctor, "so soon? Is it anybody you knew here?—not
anybody's wife? Eh?"
</p>
<p>
"He has entered the Church of Rome," said the Deacon, indignantly, "he has
forsaken the God of his fathers for the tents of the idolaters; he is the
consort of Papists and the slave of the Pope!"
</p>
<p>
"But are you SURE?" said Dr. Duchesne, with perhaps less concern than
before.
</p>
<p>
"Sure," returned the Deacon angrily, "didn't Brother Bulkley, on account
of warning reports made by a God-fearing and soul-seeking teamster, make a
special pilgrimage to this land of Sodom to inquire and spy out its
wickedness? Didn't he find Stephen Masterton steeped in the iniquity of
practicing on an organ—he that scorned even a violin or harmonium in
the tents of the Lord—in an idolatrous chapel, with a foreign female
Papist for a teacher? Didn't he find him a guest at the board of a Jesuit
priest, visiting the schools of the Mission where this young Jezebel of a
singer teaches the children to chant in unknown tongues? Didn't he find
him living with a wrinkled Indian witch who called him 'Padrone'—and
speaking her gibberish? Didn't he find him, who left here a man mortified
in flesh and spirit and pale with striving with sinners, fat and rosy from
native wines and fleshpots, and even vain and gaudy in colored apparel?
And last of all, didn't Brother Bulkley hear that a rumor was spread far
and wide that this miserable backslider was to take to himself a wife—in
one of these strange women—that very Jezebel who seduced him? What
do you call that?"
</p>
<p>
"It looks a good deal like human nature," said the doctor, musingly, "but
I call it a cure!"
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
THE INDISCRETION OF ELSBETH
</h2>
<p>
The American paused. He had evidently lost his way. For the last half hour
he had been wandering in a medieval town, in a profound medieval dream.
Only a few days had elapsed since he had left the steamship that carried
him hither; and the accents of his own tongue, the idioms of his own
people, and the sympathetic community of New World tastes and expressions
still filled his mind until he woke up, or rather, as it seemed to him,
was falling asleep in the past of this Old World town which had once held
his ancestors. Although a republican, he had liked to think of them in
quaint distinctive garb, representing state and importance—perhaps
even aristocratic pre-eminence—content to let the responsibility of
such "bad eminence" rest with them entirely, but a habit of
conscientiousness and love for historic truth eventually led him also to
regard an honest BAUER standing beside his cattle in the quaint market
place, or a kindly-faced black-eyed DIENSTMADCHEN in a doorway, with a
timid, respectful interest, as a possible type of his progenitors. For,
unlike some of his traveling countrymen in Europe, he was not a snob, and
it struck him—as an American—that it was, perhaps, better to
think of his race as having improved than as having degenerated. In these
ingenuous meditations he had passed the long rows of quaint, high houses,
whose sagging roofs and unpatched dilapidations were yet far removed from
squalor, until he had reached the road bordered by poplars, all so unlike
his own country's waysides—and knew that he had wandered far from
his hotel.
</p>
<p>
He did not care, however, to retrace his steps and return by the way he
had come. There was, he reasoned, some other street or turning that would
eventually bring him to the market place and his hotel, and yet extend his
experience of the town. He turned at right angles into a narrow grass
lane, which was, however, as neatly kept and apparently as public as the
highway. A few moments' walking convinced him that it was not a
thoroughfare and that it led to the open gates of a park. This had
something of a public look, which suggested that his intrusion might be at
least a pardonable trespass, and he relied, like most strangers, on the
exonerating quality of a stranger's ignorance. The park lay in the
direction he wished to go, and yet it struck him as singular that a park
of such extent should be still allowed to occupy such valuable urban
space. Indeed, its length seemed to be illimitable as he wandered on,
until he became conscious that he must have again lost his way, and he
diverged toward the only boundary, a high, thickset hedge to the right,
whose line he had been following.
</p>
<p>
As he neared it he heard the sound of voices on the other side, speaking
in German, with which he was unfamiliar. Having, as yet, met no one, and
being now impressed with the fact that for a public place the park was
singularly deserted, he was conscious that his position was getting
serious, and he determined to take this only chance of inquiring his way.
The hedge was thinner in some places than in others, and at times he could
see not only the light through it but even the moving figures of the
speakers, and the occasional white flash of a summer gown. At last he
determined to penetrate it, and with little difficulty emerged on the
other side. But here he paused motionless. He found himself behind a
somewhat formal and symmetrical group of figures with their backs toward
him, but all stiffened into attitudes as motionless as his own, and all
gazing with a monotonous intensity in the direction of a handsome
building, which had been invisible above the hedge but which now seemed to
arise suddenly before him. Some of the figures were in uniform.
Immediately before him, but so slightly separated from the others that he
was enabled to see the house between her and her companions, he was
confronted by the pretty back, shoulders, and blond braids of a young girl
of twenty. Convinced that he had unwittingly intruded upon some august
ceremonial, he instantly slipped back into the hedge, but so silently that
his momentary presence was evidently undetected. When he regained the park
side he glanced back through the interstices; there was no movement of the
figures nor break in the silence to indicate that his intrusion had been
observed. With a long breath of relief he hurried from the park.
</p>
<p>
It was late when he finally got back to his hotel. But his little modern
adventure had, I fear, quite outrun his previous medieval reflections, and
almost his first inquiry of the silver-chained porter in the courtyard was
in regard to the park. There was no public park in Alstadt! The Herr
possibly alluded to the Hof Gardens—the Schloss, which was in the
direction he indicated. The Schloss was the residency of the hereditary
Grand Duke. JA WOHL! He was stopping there with several Hoheiten. There
was naturally a party there—a family reunion. But it was a private
enclosure. At times, when the Grand Duke was "not in residence," it was
open to the public. In point of fact, at such times tickets of admission
were to be had at the hotel for fifty pfennige each. There was not, of
truth, much to see except a model farm and dairy—the pretty toy of a
previous Grand Duchess.
</p>
<p>
But he seemed destined to come into closer collision with the modern life
of Alstadt. On entering the hotel, wearied by his long walk, he passed the
landlord and a man in half-military uniform on the landing near his room.
As he entered his apartment he had a vague impression, without exactly
knowing why, that the landlord and the military stranger had just left it.
This feeling was deepened by the evident disarrangement of certain
articles in his unlocked portmanteau and the disorganization of his
writing case. A wave of indignation passed over him. It was followed by a
knock at the door, and the landlord blandly appeared with the stranger.
</p>
<p>
"A thousand pardons," said the former, smilingly, "but Herr Sanderman, the
Ober-Inspector of Police, wishes to speak with you. I hope we are not
intruding?"
</p>
<p>
"Not NOW," said the American, dryly.
</p>
<p>
The two exchanged a vacant and deprecating smile.
</p>
<p>
"I have to ask only a few formal questions," said the Ober-Inspector in
excellent but somewhat precise English, "to supplement the report which,
as a stranger, you may not know is required by the police from the
landlord in regard to the names and quality of his guests who are foreign
to the town. You have a passport?"
</p>
<p>
"I have," said the American still more dryly. "But I do not keep it in an
unlocked portmanteau or an open writing case."
</p>
<p>
"An admirable precaution," said Sanderman, with unmoved politeness. "May I
see it? Thanks," he added, glancing over the document which the American
produced from his pocket. "I see that you are a born American citizen—and
an earlier knowledge of that fact would have prevented this little
contretemps. You are aware, Mr. Hoffman, that your name is German?"
</p>
<p>
"It was borne by my ancestors, who came from this country two centuries
ago," said Hoffman, curtly.
</p>
<p>
"We are indeed honored by your return to it," returned Sanderman suavely,
"but it was the circumstance of your name being a local one, and the
possibility of your still being a German citizen liable to unperformed
military duty, which has caused the trouble." His manner was clearly civil
and courteous, but Hoffman felt that all the time his own face and
features were undergoing a profound scrutiny from the speaker.
</p>
<p>
"And you are making sure that you will know me again?" said Hoffman, with
a smile.
</p>
<p>
"I trust, indeed, both," returned Sanderman, with a bow, "although you
will permit me to say that your description here," pointing to the
passport, "scarcely does you justice. ACH GOTT! it is the same in all
countries; the official eye is not that of the young DAMEN."
</p>
<p>
Hoffman, though not conceited, had not lived twenty years without knowing
that he was very good-looking, yet there was something in the remark that
caused him to color with a new uneasiness.
</p>
<p>
The Ober-Inspector rose with another bow, and moved toward the door. "I
hope you will let me make amends for this intrusion by doing anything I
can to render your visit here a pleasant one. Perhaps," he added, "it is
not for long."
</p>
<p>
But Hoffman evaded the evident question, as he resented what he imagined
was a possible sneer.
</p>
<p>
"I have not yet determined my movements," he said.
</p>
<p>
The Ober-Inspector brought his heels together in a somewhat stiffer
military salute and departed.
</p>
<p>
Nothing, however, could have exceeded the later almost servile urbanity of
the landlord, who seemed to have been proud of the official visit to his
guest. He was profuse in his attentions, and even introduced him to a
singularly artistic-looking man of middle age, wearing an order in his
buttonhole, whom he met casually in the hall.
</p>
<p>
"Our Court photographer," explained the landlord with some fervor, "at
whose studio, only a few houses distant, most of the Hoheiten and
Prinzessinen of Germany have sat for their likenesses."
</p>
<p>
"I should feel honored if the distinguished American Herr would give me a
visit," said the stranger gravely, as he gazed at Hoffman with an
intensity which recalled the previous scrutiny of the Police Inspector,
"and I would be charmed if he would avail himself of my poor skill to
transmit his picturesque features to my unique collection."
</p>
<p>
Hoffman returned a polite evasion to this invitation, although he was
conscious of being struck with this second examination of his face, and
the allusion to his personality.
</p>
<p>
The next morning the porter met him with a mysterious air. The Herr would
still like to see the Schloss? Hoffman, who had quite forgotten his
adventure in the park, looked vacant. JA WOHL—the Hof authorities
had no doubt heard of his visit and had intimated to the hotel proprietor
that he might have permission to visit the model farm and dairy. As the
American still looked indifferent the porter pointed out with some
importance that it was a Ducal courtesy not to be lightly treated; that
few, indeed, of the burghers themselves had ever been admitted to this
eccentric whim of the late Grand Duchess. He would, of course, be silent
about it; the Court would not like it known that they had made an
exception to their rules in favor of a foreigner; he would enter quickly
and boldly alone. There would be a housekeeper or a dairymaid to show him
over the place.
</p>
<p>
More amused at this important mystery over what he, as an American, was
inclined to classify as a "free pass" to a somewhat heavy "side show," he
gravely accepted the permission, and the next morning after breakfast set
out to visit the model farm and dairy. Dismissing his driver, as he had
been instructed, Hoffman entered the gateway with a mingling of expectancy
and a certain amusement over the "boldness" which the porter had suggested
should characterize his entrance. Before him was a beautifully kept lane
bordered by arbored and trellised roses, which seemed to sink into the
distance. He was instinctively following it when he became aware that he
was mysteriously accompanied by a man in the livery of a chasseur, who was
walking among the trees almost abreast of him, keeping pace with his step,
and after the first introductory military salute preserving a ceremonious
silence. There was something so ludicrous in this solemn procession toward
a peaceful, rural industry that by the time they had reached the bottom of
the lane the American had quite recovered his good humor. But here a new
astonishment awaited him. Nestling before him in a green amphitheater lay
a little wooden farm-yard and outbuildings, which irresistibly suggested
that it had been recently unpacked and set up from a box of Nuremberg
toys. The symmetrical trees, the galleried houses with preternaturally
glazed windows, even the spotty, disproportionately sized cows in the
white-fenced barnyards were all unreal, wooden and toylike.
</p>
<p>
Crossing a miniature bridge over a little stream, from which he was quite
prepared to hook metallic fish with a magnet their own size, he looked
about him for some real being to dispel the illusion. The mysterious
chasseur had disappeared. But under the arch of an arbor, which seemed to
be composed of silk ribbons, green glass, and pink tissue paper, stood a
quaint but delightful figure.
</p>
<p>
At first it seemed as if he had only dispelled one illusion for another.
For the figure before him might have been made of Dresden china—so
daintily delicate and unique it was in color and arrangement. It was that
of a young girl dressed in some forgotten medieval peasant garb of velvet
braids, silver-staylaced corsage, lace sleeves, and helmeted metallic
comb. But, after the Dresden method, the pale yellow of her hair was
repeated in her bodice, the pink of her cheeks was in the roses of her
chintz overskirt. The blue of her eyes was the blue of her petticoat; the
dazzling whiteness of her neck shone again in the sleeves and stockings.
Nevertheless she was real and human, for the pink deepened in her cheeks
as Hoffman's hat flew from his head, and she recognized the civility with
a grave little curtsy.
</p>
<p>
"You have come to see the dairy," she said in quaintly accurate English;
"I will show you the way."
</p>
<p>
"If you please," said Hoffman, gaily, "but—"
</p>
<p>
"But what?" she said, facing him suddenly with absolutely astonished eyes.
</p>
<p>
Hoffman looked into them so long that their frank wonder presently
contracted into an ominous mingling of restraint and resentment. Nothing
daunted, however, he went on:
</p>
<p>
"Couldn't we shake all that?"
</p>
<p>
The look of wonder returned. "Shake all that?" she repeated. "I do not
understand."
</p>
<p>
"Well! I'm not positively aching to see cows, and you must be sick of
showing them. I think, too, I've about sized the whole show. Wouldn't it
be better if we sat down in that arbor—supposing it won't fall down—and
you told me all about the lot? It would save you a heap of trouble and
keep your pretty frock cleaner than trapesing round. Of course," he said,
with a quick transition to the gentlest courtesy, "if you're conscientious
about this thing we'll go on and not spare a cow. Consider me in it with
you for the whole morning."
</p>
<p>
She looked at him again, and then suddenly broke into a charming laugh. It
revealed a set of strong white teeth, as well as a certain barbaric trace
in its cadence which civilized restraint had not entirely overlaid.
</p>
<p>
"I suppose she really is a peasant, in spite of that pretty frock," he
said to himself as he laughed too.
</p>
<p>
But her face presently took a shade of reserve, and with a gentle but
singular significance she said:
</p>
<p>
"I think you must see the dairy."
</p>
<p>
Hoffman's hat was in his hand with a vivacity that tumbled the brown curls
on his forehead. "By all means," he said instantly, and began walking by
her side in modest but easy silence. Now that he thought her a
conscientious peasant he was quiet and respectful.
</p>
<p>
Presently she lifted her eyes, which, despite her gravity, had not
entirely lost their previous mirthfulness, and said:
</p>
<p>
"But you Americans—in your rich and prosperous country, with your
large lands and your great harvests—you must know all about
farming."
</p>
<p>
"Never was in a dairy in my life," said Hoffman gravely. "I'm from the
city of New York, where the cows give swill milk, and are kept in
cellars."
</p>
<p>
Her eyebrows contracted prettily in an effort to understand. Then she
apparently gave it up, and said with a slanting glint of mischief in her
eyes:
</p>
<p>
"Then you come here like the other Americans in hope to see the Grand Duke
and Duchess and the Princesses?"
</p>
<p>
"No. The fact is I almost tumbled into a lot of 'em—standing like
wax figures—the other side of the park lodge, the other day—and
got away as soon as I could. I think I prefer the cows."
</p>
<p>
Her head was slightly turned away. He had to content himself with looking
down upon the strong feet in their serviceable but smartly buckled shoes
that uplifted her upright figure as she moved beside him.
</p>
<p>
"Of course," he added with boyish but unmistakable courtesy, "if it's part
of your show to trot out the family, why I'm in that, too. I dare say you
could make them interesting."
</p>
<p>
"But why," she said with her head still slightly turned away toward a
figure—a sturdy-looking woman, which, for the first time, Hoffman
perceived was walking in a line with them as the chasseur had done—"why
did you come here at all?"
</p>
<p>
"The first time was a fool accident," he returned frankly. "I was making a
short cut through what I thought was a public park. The second time was
because I had been rude to a Police Inspector whom I found going through
my things, but who apologized—as I suppose—by getting me an
invitation from the Grand Duke to come here, and I thought it only the
square thing to both of 'em to accept it. But I'm mighty glad I came; I
wouldn't have missed YOU for a thousand dollars. You see I haven't struck
anyone I cared to talk to since." Here he suddenly remarked that she
hadn't looked at him, and that the delicate whiteness of her neck was
quite suffused with pink, and stopped instantly. Presently he said quite
easily:
</p>
<p>
"Who's the chorus?"
</p>
<p>
"The lady?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes. She's watching us as if she didn't quite approve, you know—just
as if she didn't catch on."
</p>
<p>
"She's the head housekeeper of the farm. Perhaps you would prefer to have
her show you the dairy; shall I call her?"
</p>
<p>
The figure in question was very short and stout, with voluminous
petticoats.
</p>
<p>
"Please don't; I'll stay without your setting that paperweight on me. But
here's the dairy. Don't let her come inside among those pans of fresh milk
with that smile, or there'll be trouble."
</p>
<p>
The young girl paused too, made a slight gesture with her hand, and the
figure passed on as they entered the dairy. It was beautifully clean and
fresh. With a persistence that he quickly recognized as mischievous and
ironical, and with his characteristic adaptability accepted with even
greater gravity and assumption of interest, she showed him all the
details. From thence they passed to the farmyard, where he hung with
breathless attention over the names of the cows and made her repeat them.
Although she was evidently familiar with the subject, he could see that
her zeal was fitful and impatient.
</p>
<p>
"Suppose we sit down," he said, pointing to an ostentatious rustic seat in
the center of the green.
</p>
<p>
"Sir down?" she repeated wonderingly. "What for?"
</p>
<p>
"To talk. We'll knock off and call it half a day."
</p>
<p>
"But if you are not looking at the farm you are, of course, going," she
said quickly.
</p>
<p>
"Am I? I don't think these particulars were in my invitation."
</p>
<p>
She again broke into a fit of laughter, and at the same time cast a bright
eye around the field.
</p>
<p>
"Come," he said gently, "there are no other sightseers waiting, and your
conscience is clear," and he moved toward the rustic seat.
</p>
<p>
"Certainly not—there," she added in a low voice.
</p>
<p>
They moved on slowly together to a copse of willows which overhung the
miniature stream.
</p>
<p>
"You are not staying long in Alstadt?" she said.
</p>
<p>
"No; I only came to see the old town that my ancestors came from."
</p>
<p>
They were walking so close together that her skirt brushed his trousers,
but she suddenly drew away from him, and looking him fixedly in the eye
said:
</p>
<p>
"Ah, you have relations here?"
</p>
<p>
"Yes, but they are dead two hundred years."
</p>
<p>
She laughed again with a slight expression of relief. They had entered the
copse and were walking in dense shadow when she suddenly stopped and sat
down upon a rustic bench. To his surprise he found that they were quite
alone.
</p>
<p>
"Tell me about these relatives," she said, slightly drawing aside her
skirt to make room for him on the seat.
</p>
<p>
He did not require a second invitation. He not only told her all about his
ancestral progenitors, but, I fear, even about those more recent and more
nearly related to him; about his own life, his vocation—he was a
clever newspaper correspondent with a roving commission—his
ambitions, his beliefs and his romance.
</p>
<p>
"And then, perhaps, of this visit—you will also make 'copy'?"
</p>
<p>
He smiled at her quick adaptation of his professional slang, but shook his
head.
</p>
<p>
"No," he said gravely. "No—this is YOU. The CHICAGO INTERVIEWER is
big pay and is rich, but it hasn't capital enough to buy you from me."
</p>
<p>
He gently slid his hand toward hers and slipped his fingers softly around
it. She made a slight movement of withdrawal, but even then—as if in
forgetfulness or indifference—permitted her hand to rest
unresponsively in his. It was scarcely an encouragement to gallantry,
neither was it a rejection of an unconscious familiarity.
</p>
<p>
"But you haven't told me about yourself," he said.
</p>
<p>
"Oh, I," she returned, with her first approach to coquetry in a laugh and
a sidelong glance, "of what importance is that to you? It is the Grand
Duchess and Her Highness the Princess that you Americans seek to know. I
am—what I am—as you see."
</p>
<p>
"You bet," said Hoffman with charming decision.
</p>
<p>
"I WHAT?"
</p>
<p>
"You ARE, you know, and that's good enough for me, but I don't even know
your name."
</p>
<p>
She laughed again, and after a pause, said: "Elsbeth."
</p>
<p>
"But I couldn't call you by your first name on our first meeting, you
know."
</p>
<p>
"Then you Americans are really so very formal—eh?" she said slyly,
looking at her imprisoned hand.
</p>
<p>
"Well, yes," returned Hoffman, disengaging it. "I suppose we are
respectful, or mean to be. But whom am I to inquire for? To write to?"
</p>
<p>
"You are neither to write nor inquire."
</p>
<p>
"What?" She had moved in her seat so as to half-face him with eyes in
which curiosity, mischief, and a certain seriousness alternated, but for
the first time seemed conscious of his hand, and accented her words with a
slight pressure.
</p>
<p>
"You are to return to your hotel presently, and say to your landlord:
'Pack up my luggage. I have finished with this old town and my ancestors,
and the Grand Duke, whom I do not care to see, and I shall leave Alstadt
tomorrow!'"
</p>
<p>
"Thank you! I don't catch on."
</p>
<p>
"Of what necessity should you? I have said it. That should be enough for a
chivalrous American like you." She again significantly looked down at her
hand.
</p>
<p>
"If you mean that you know the extent of the favor you ask of me, I can
say no more," he said seriously; "but give me some reason for it."
</p>
<p>
"Ah so!" she said, with a slight shrug of her shoulders. "Then I must tell
you. You say you do not know the Grand Duke and Duchess. Well! THEY KNOW
YOU. The day before yesterday you were wandering in the park, as you
admit. You say, also, you got through the hedge and interrupted some
ceremony. That ceremony was not a Court function, Mr. Hoffman, but
something equally sacred—the photographing of the Ducal family
before the Schloss. You say that you instantly withdrew. But after the
photograph was taken the plate revealed a stranger standing actually by
the side of the Princess Alexandrine, and even taking the PAS of the Grand
Duke himself. That stranger was you!"
</p>
<p>
"And the picture was spoiled," said the American, with a quiet laugh.
</p>
<p>
"I should not say that," returned the lady, with a demure glance at her
companion's handsome face, "and I do not believe that the Princess—who
first saw the photograph—thought so either. But she is very young
and willful, and has the reputation of being very indiscreet, and
unfortunately she begged the photographer not to destroy the plate, but to
give it to her, and to say nothing about it, except that the plate was
defective, and to take another. Still it would have ended there if her
curiosity had not led her to confide a description of the stranger to the
Police Inspector, with the result you know."
</p>
<p>
"Then I am expected to leave town because I accidentally stumbled into a
family group that was being photographed?"
</p>
<p>
"Because a certain Princess was indiscreet enough to show her curiosity
about you," corrected the fair stranger.
</p>
<p>
"But look here! I'll apologize to the Princess, and offer to pay for the
plate."
</p>
<p>
"Then you do want to see the Princess?" said the young girl smiling; "you
are like the others."
</p>
<p>
"Bother the Princess! I want to see YOU. And I don't see how they can
prevent it if I choose to remain."
</p>
<p>
"Very easily. You will find that there is something wrong with your
passport, and you will be sent on to Pumpernickel for examination. You
will unwittingly transgress some of the laws of the town and be ordered to
leave it. You will be shadowed by the police until you quarrel with them—like
a free American—and you are conducted to the frontier. Perhaps you
will strike an officer who has insulted you, and then you are finished on
the spot."
</p>
<p>
The American's crest rose palpably until it cocked his straw hat over his
curls.
</p>
<p>
"Suppose I am content to risk it—having first laid the whole matter
and its trivial cause before the American Minister, so that he could make
it hot for this whole caboodle of a country if they happened to 'down me.'
By Jove! I shouldn't mind being the martyr of an international episode if
they'd spare me long enough to let me get the first 'copy' over to the
other side." His eyes sparkled.
</p>
<p>
"You could expose them, but they would then deny the whole story, and you
have no evidence. They would demand to know your informant, and I should
be disgraced, and the Princess, who is already talked about, made a
subject of scandal. But no matter! It is right that an American's
independence shall not be interfered with."
</p>
<p>
She raised the hem of her handkerchief to her blue eyes and slightly
turned her head aside. Hoffman gently drew the handkerchief away, and in
so doing possessed himself of her other hand.
</p>
<p>
"Look here, Miss—Miss—Elsbeth. You know I wouldn't give you
away, whatever happened. But couldn't I get hold of that photographer—I
saw him, he wanted me to sit to him—and make him tell me?"
</p>
<p>
"He wanted you to sit to him," she said hurriedly, "and did you?"
</p>
<p>
"No," he replied. "He was a little too fresh and previous, though I
thought he fancied some resemblance in me to somebody else."
</p>
<p>
"Ah!" She said something to herself in German which he did not understand,
and then added aloud:
</p>
<p>
"You did well; he is a bad man, this photographer. Promise me you shall
not sit for him."
</p>
<p>
"How can I if I'm fired out of the place like this?" He added ruefully,
"But I'd like to make him give himself away to me somehow."
</p>
<p>
"He will not, and if he did he would deny it afterward. Do not go near him
nor see him. Be careful that he does not photograph you with his
instantaneous instrument when you are passing. Now you must go. I must see
the Princess."
</p>
<p>
"Let me go, too. I will explain it to her," said Hoffman.
</p>
<p>
She stopped, looked at him keenly, and attempted to withdraw her hands.
"Ah, then it IS so. It is the Princess you wish to see. You are curious—you,
too; you wish to see this lady who is interested in you. I ought to have
known it. You are all alike."
</p>
<p>
He met her gaze with laughing frankness, accepting her outburst as a
charming feminine weakness, half jealousy, half coquetry—but
retained her hands.
</p>
<p>
"Nonsense," he said. "I wish to see her that I may have the right to see
you—that you shall not lose your place here through me; that I may
come again."
</p>
<p>
"You must never come here again."
</p>
<p>
"Then you must come where I am. We will meet somewhere when you have an
afternoon off. You shall show me the town—the houses of my ancestors—their
tombs; possibly—if the Grand Duke rampages—the probable site
of my own."
</p>
<p>
She looked into his laughing eyes with her clear, stedfast, gravely
questioning blue ones. "Do not you Americans know that it is not the
fashion here, in Germany, for the young men and the young women to walk
together—unless they are VERLOBT?"
</p>
<p>
"VER—which?"
</p>
<p>
"Engaged." She nodded her head thrice: viciously, decidedly,
mischievously.
</p>
<p>
"So much the better."
</p>
<p>
"ACH GOTT!" She made a gesture of hopelessness at his incorrigibility, and
again attempted to withdraw her hands.
</p>
<p>
"I must go now."
</p>
<p>
"Well then, good-by."
</p>
<p>
It was easy to draw her closer by simply lowering her still captive hands.
Then he suddenly kissed her coldly startled lips, and instantly released
her. She as instantly vanished.
</p>
<p>
"Elsbeth," he called quickly. "Elsbeth!"
</p>
<p>
Her now really frightened face reappeared with a heightened color from the
dense foliage—quite to his astonishment.
</p>
<p>
"Hush," she said, with her finger on her lips. "Are you mad?"
</p>
<p>
"I only wanted to remind you to square me with the Princess," he laughed
as her head disappeared.
</p>
<p>
He strolled back toward the gate. Scarcely had he quitted the shrubbery
before the same chasseur made his appearance with precisely the same
salute; and, keeping exactly the same distance, accompanied him to the
gate. At the corner of the street he hailed a droshky and was driven to
his hotel.
</p>
<p>
The landlord came up smiling. He trusted that the Herr had greatly enjoyed
himself at the Schloss. It was a distinguished honor—in fact, quite
unprecedented. Hoffman, while he determined not to commit himself, nor his
late fair companion, was nevertheless anxious to learn something more of
her relations to the Schloss. So pretty, so characteristic, and marked a
figure must be well known to sightseers. Indeed, once or twice the idea
had crossed his mind with a slightly jealous twinge that left him more
conscious of the impression she had made on him than he had deemed
possible. He asked if the model farm and dairy were always shown by the
same attendants.
</p>
<p>
"ACH GOTT! no doubt, yes; His Royal Highness had quite a retinue when he
was in residence."
</p>
<p>
"And were these attendants in costume?"
</p>
<p>
"There was undoubtedly a livery for the servants."
</p>
<p>
Hoffman felt a slight republican irritation at the epithet—he knew
not why. But this costume was rather a historical one; surely it was not
entrusted to everyday menials—and he briefly described it.
</p>
<p>
His host's blank curiosity suddenly changed to a look of mysterious and
arch intelligence.
</p>
<p>
"ACH GOTT! yes!" He remembered now (with his finger on his nose) that when
there was a fest at the Schloss the farm and dairy were filled with
shepherdesses, in quaint costume worn by the ladies of the Grand Duke's
own theatrical company, who assumed the characters with great vivacity.
Surely it was the same, and the Grand Duke had treated the Herr to this
special courtesy. Yes—there was one pretty, blonde young lady—the
Fraulein Wimpfenbuttel, a most popular soubrette, who would play it to the
life! And the description fitted her to a hair! Ah, there was no doubt of
it; many persons, indeed, had been so deceived.
</p>
<p>
But happily, now that he had given him the wink, the Herr could
corroborate it himself by going to the theater tonight. Ah, it would be a
great joke—quite colossal! if he took a front seat where she could
see him. And the good man rubbed his hands in gleeful anticipation.
</p>
<p>
Hoffman had listened to him with a slow repugnance that was only equal to
his gradual conviction that the explanation was a true one, and that he
himself had been ridiculously deceived. The mystery of his fair
companion's costume, which he had accepted as part of the "show"; the
inconsistency of her manner and her evident occupation; her undeniable
wish to terminate the whole episode with that single interview; her
mingling of worldly aplomb and rustic innocence; her perfect self-control
and experienced acceptance of his gallantry under the simulated attitude
of simplicity—all now struck him as perfectly comprehensible. He
recalled the actress's inimitable touch in certain picturesque realistic
details in the dairy—which she had not spared him; he recognized it
now even in their bowered confidences (how like a pretty ballet scene
their whole interview on the rustic bench was!), and it breathed through
their entire conversation—to their theatrical parting at the close!
And the whole story of the photograph was, no doubt, as pure a dramatic
invention as the rest! The Princess's romantic interest in him—that
Princess who had never appeared (why had he not detected the old,
well-worn, sentimental situation here?)—was all a part of it. The
dark, mysterious hint of his persecution by the police was a necessary
culmination to the little farce. Thank Heaven! he had not "risen" at the
Princess, even if he had given himself away to the clever actress in her
own humble role. Then the humor of the whole situation predominated and he
laughed until the tears came to his eyes, and his forgotten ancestors
might have turned over in their graves without his heeding them. And with
this humanizing influence upon him he went to the theater.
</p>
<p>
It was capacious even for the town, and although the performance was a
special one he had no difficulty in getting a whole box to himself. He
tried to avoid this public isolation by sitting close to the next box,
where there was a solitary occupant—an officer—apparently as
lonely as himself. He had made up his mind that when his fair deceiver
appeared he would let her see by his significant applause that he
recognized her, but bore no malice for the trick she had played on him.
After all, he had kissed her—he had no right to complain. If she
should recognize him, and this recognition led to a withdrawal of her
prohibition, and their better acquaintance, he would be a fool to cavil at
her pleasant artifice. Her vocation was certainly a more independent and
original one than that he had supposed; for its social quality and
inequality he cared nothing. He found himself longing for the glance of
her calm blue eyes, for the pleasant smile that broke the seriousness of
her sweetly restrained lips. There was no doubt that he should know her
even as the heroine of DER CZAR UND DER ZIMMERMANN on the bill before him.
He was becoming impatient. And the performance evidently was waiting. A
stir in the outer gallery, the clatter of sabers, the filing of uniforms
into the royal box, and a triumphant burst from the orchestra showed the
cause. As a few ladies and gentlemen in full evening dress emerged from
the background of uniforms and took their places in the front of the box,
Hoffman looked with some interest for the romantic Princess. Suddenly he
saw a face and shoulders in a glitter of diamonds that startled him, and
then a glance that transfixed him.
</p>
<p>
He leaned over to his neighbor. "Who is the young lady in the box?"
</p>
<p>
"The Princess Alexandrine."
</p>
<p>
"I mean the young lady in blue with blond hair and blue eyes."
</p>
<p>
"It is the Princess Alexandrine Elsbeth Marie Stephanie, the daughter of
the Grand Duke—there is none other there."
</p>
<p>
"Thank you."
</p>
<p>
He sat silently looking at the rising curtain and the stage. Then he rose
quietly, gathered his hat and coat, and left the box. When he reached the
gallery he turned instinctively and looked back at the royal box. Her eyes
had followed him, and as he remained a moment motionless in the doorway
her lips parted in a grateful smile, and she waved her fan with a faint
but unmistakable gesture of farewell.
</p>
<p>
The next morning he left Alstadt. There was some little delay at the Zoll
on the frontier, and when Hoffman received back his trunk it was
accompanied by a little sealed packet which was handed to him by the
Customhouse Inspector. Hoffman did not open it until he was alone.
</p>
<p>
There hangs upon the wall of his modest apartment in New York a narrow,
irregular photograph ingeniously framed, of himself standing side by side
with a young German girl, who, in the estimation of his compatriots, is by
no means stylish and only passably good-looking. When he is joked by his
friends about the post of honor given to this production, and questioned
as to the lady, he remains silent. The Princess Alexandrine Elsbeth Marie
Stephanie von Westphalen-Alstadt, among her other royal qualities, knew
whom to trust.
</p>
<p>
<SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </SPAN>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
THE DEVOTION OF ENRIQUEZ
</h2>
<p>
In another chronicle which dealt with the exploits of "Chu Chu," a
Californian mustang, I gave some space to the accomplishments of Enriquez
Saltillo, who assisted me in training her, and who was also brother to
Consuelo Saitillo, the young lady to whom I had freely given both the
mustang and my youthful affections. I consider it a proof of the
superiority of masculine friendship that neither the subsequent desertion
of the mustang nor that of the young lady ever made the slightest
difference to Enriquez or me in our exalted amity. To a wondering doubt as
to what I ever could possibly have seen in his sister to admire he joined
a tolerant skepticism of the whole sex. This he was wont to express in
that marvelous combination of Spanish precision and California slang for
which he was justly famous. "As to thees women and their little game," he
would say, "believe me, my friend, your old Oncle 'Enry is not in it. No;
he will ever take a back seat when lofe is around. For why? Regard me
here! If she is a horse, you shall say, 'She will buck-jump,' 'She will
ess-shy,' 'She will not arrive,' or 'She will arrive too quick.' But if it
is thees women, where are you? For when you shall say, 'She will ess-shy,'
look you, she will walk straight; or she will remain tranquil when you
think she buck-jump; or else she will arrive and, look you, you will not.
You shall get left. It is ever so. My father and the brother of my father
have both make court to my mother when she was but a senorita. My father
think she have lofe his brother more. So he say to her: 'It is enofe;
tranquillize yourself. I will go. I will efface myself. Adios! Shake
hands! Ta-ta! So long! See you again in the fall.' And what make my
mother? Regard me! She marry my father—on the instant! Of thees
women, believe me, Pancho, you shall know nothing. Not even if they shall
make you the son of your father or his nephew."
</p>
<p>
I have recalled this characteristic speech to show the general tendency of
Enriquez' convictions at the opening of this little story. It is only fair
to say, however, that his usual attitude toward the sex he so cheerfully
maligned exhibited little apprehension or caution in dealing with them.
Among the frivolous and light-minded intermixture of his race he moved
with great freedom and popularity. He danced well; when we went to
fandangos together his agility and the audacity of his figures always
procured him the prettiest partners, his professed sentiments, I presume,
shielding him from subsequent jealousies, heartburnings, or envy. I have a
vivid recollection of him in the mysteries of the SEMICUACUA, a somewhat
corybantic dance which left much to the invention of the performers, and
very little to the imagination of the spectator. In one of the figures a
gaudy handkerchief, waved more or less gracefully by dancer and danseuse
before the dazzled eyes of each other, acted as love's signal, and was
used to express alternate admiration and indifference, shyness and
audacity, fear and transport, coyness and coquetry, as the dance
proceeded. I need not say that Enriquez' pantomimic illustration of these
emotions was peculiarly extravagant; but it was always performed and
accepted with a gravity that was an essential feature of the dance. At
such times sighs would escape him which were supposed to portray the
incipient stages of passion; snorts of jealousy burst from him at the
suggestion of a rival; he was overtaken by a sort of St. Vitus's dance
that expressed his timidity in making the first advances of affection; the
scorn of his ladylove struck him with something like a dumb ague; and a
single gesture of invitation from her produced marked delirium. All this
was very like Enriquez; but on the particular occasion to which I refer, I
think no one was prepared to see him begin the figure with the waving of
FOUR handkerchiefs! Yet this he did, pirouetting, capering, brandishing
his silken signals like a ballerina's scarf in the languishment or fire of
passion, until, in a final figure, where the conquered and submitting fair
one usually sinks into the arms of her partner, need it be said that the
ingenious Enriquez was found in the center of the floor supporting four of
the dancers! Yet he was by no means unduly excited either by the plaudits
of the crowd or by his evident success with the fair. "Ah, believe me, it
is nothing," he said quietly, rolling a fresh cigarette as he leaned
against the doorway. "Possibly, I shall have to offer the chocolate or the
wine to thees girls, or make to them a promenade in the moonlight on the
veranda. It is ever so. Unless, my friend," he said, suddenly turning
toward me in an excess of chivalrous self-abnegation, "unless you shall
yourself take my place. Behold, I gif them to you! I vamos! I vanish! I
make track! I skedaddle!" I think he would have carried his extravagance
to the point of summoning his four gypsy witches of partners, and
committing them to my care, if the crowd had not at that moment parted
before the remaining dancers, and left one of the onlookers, a tall,
slender girl, calmly surveying them through gold-rimmed eyeglasses in
complete critical absorption. I stared in amazement and consternation; for
I recognized in the fair stranger Miss Urania Mannersley, the
Congregational minister's niece!
</p>
<p>
Everybody knew Rainie Mannersley throughout the length and breadth of the
Encinal. She was at once the envy and the goad of the daughters of those
Southwestern and Eastern immigrants who had settled in the valley. She was
correct, she was critical, she was faultless and observant. She was
proper, yet independent; she was highly educated; she was suspected of
knowing Latin and Greek; she even spelled correctly! She could wither the
plainest field nosegay in the hands of other girls by giving the flowers
their botanical names. She never said "Ain't you?" but "Aren't you?" She
looked upon "Did I which?" as an incomplete and imperfect form of "What
did I do?" She quoted from Browning and Tennyson, and was believed to have
read them. She was from Boston. What could she possibly be doing at a
free-and-easy fandango?
</p>
<p>
Even if these facts were not already familiar to everyone there, her
outward appearance would have attracted attention. Contrasted with the
gorgeous red, black, and yellow skirts of the dancers, her plain, tightly
fitting gown and hat, all of one delicate gray, were sufficiently notable
in themselves, even had they not seemed, like the girl herself, a kind of
quiet protest to the glaring flounces before her. Her small, straight
waist and flat back brought into greater relief the corsetless, waistless,
swaying figures of the Mexican girls, and her long, slim, well-booted
feet, peeping from the stiff, white edges of her short skirt, made their
broad, low-quartered slippers, held on by the big toe, appear more
preposterous than ever. Suddenly she seemed to realize that she was
standing there alone, but without fear or embarrassment. She drew back a
little, glancing carelessly behind her as if missing some previous
companion, and then her eyes fell upon mine. She smiled an easy
recognition; then a moment later, her glance rested more curiously upon
Enriquez, who was still by my side. I disengaged myself and instantly
joined her, particularly as I noticed that a few of the other bystanders
were beginning to stare at her with little reserve.
</p>
<p>
"Isn't it the most extraordinary thing you ever saw?" she said quietly.
Then, presently noticing the look of embarrassment on my face, she went
on, more by way of conversation than of explanation:
</p>
<p>
"I just left uncle making a call on a parishioner next door, and was going
home with Jocasta (a peon servant of her uncle's), when I heard the music,
and dropped in. I don't know what has become of her," she added, glancing
round the room again; "she seemed perfectly wild when she saw that
creature over there bounding about with his handkerchiefs. You were
speaking to him just now. Do tell me—is he real?"
</p>
<p>
"I should think there was little doubt of that," I said with a vague
laugh.
</p>
<p>
"You know what I mean," she said simply. "Is he quite sane? Does he do
that because he likes it, or is he paid for it?"
</p>
<p>
This was too much. I pointed out somewhat hurriedly that he was a scion of
one of the oldest Castilian families, that the performance was a national
gypsy dance which he had joined in as a patriot and a patron, and that he
was my dearest friend. At the same time I was conscious that I wished she
hadn't seen his last performance.
</p>
<p>
"You don't mean to say that all that he did was in the dance?" she said.
"I don't believe it. It was only like him." As I hesitated over this
palpable truth, she went on: "I do wish he'd do it again. Don't you think
you could make him?"
</p>
<p>
"Perhaps he might if YOU asked him," I said a little maliciously.
</p>
<p>
"Of course I shouldn't do that," she returned quietly. "All the same, I do
believe he is really going to do it—or something else. Do look!"
</p>
<p>
I looked, and to my horror saw that Enriquez, possibly incited by the
delicate gold eyeglasses of Miss Mannersley, had divested himself of his
coat, and was winding the four handkerchiefs, tied together, picturesquely
around his waist, preparatory to some new performance. I tried furtively
to give him a warning look, but in vain.
</p>
<p>
"Isn't he really too absurd for anything?" said Miss Mannersley, yet with
a certain comfortable anticipation in her voice. "You know, I never saw
anything like this before. I wouldn't have believed such a creature could
have existed."
</p>
<p>
Even had I succeeded in warning him, I doubt if it would have been of any
avail. For, seizing a guitar from one of the musicians, he struck a few
chords, and suddenly began to zigzag into the center of the floor, swaying
his body languishingly from side to side in time with the music and the
pitch of a thin Spanish tenor. It was a gypsy love song. Possibly Miss
Mannersley's lingual accomplishments did not include a knowledge of
Castilian, but she could not fail to see that the gestures and
illustrative pantomime were addressed to her. Passionately assuring her
that she was the most favored daughter of the Virgin, that her eyes were
like votive tapers, and yet in the same breath accusing her of being a
"brigand" and "assassin" in her attitude toward "his heart," he balanced
with quivering timidity toward her, threw an imaginary cloak in front of
her neat boots as a carpet for her to tread on, and with a final
astonishing pirouette and a languishing twang of his guitar, sank on one
knee, and blew, with a rose, a kiss at her feet.
</p>
<p>
If I had been seriously angry with him before for his grotesque
extravagance, I could have pitied him now for the young girl's absolute
unconsciousness of anything but his utter ludicrousness. The applause of
dancers and bystanders was instantaneous and hearty; her only contribution
to it was a slight parting of her thin red lips in a half-incredulous
smile. In the silence that followed the applause, as Enriquez walked
pantingly away, I heard her saying, half to herself, "Certainly a most
extraordinary creature!" In my indignation I could not help turning
suddenly upon her and looking straight into her eyes. They were brown,
with that peculiar velvet opacity common to the pupils of nearsighted
persons, and seemed to defy internal scrutiny. She only repeated
carelessly, "Isn't he?" and added: "Please see if you can find Jocasta. I
suppose we ought to be going now; and I dare say he won't be doing it
again. Ah! there she is. Good gracious, child! what have you got there?"
</p>
<p>
It was Enriquez' rose which Jocasta had picked up, and was timidly holding
out toward her mistress.
</p>
<p>
"Heavens! I don't want it. Keep it yourself."
</p>
<p>
I walked with them to the door, as I did not fancy a certain glitter in
the black eyes of the Senoritas Manuela and Pepita, who were watching her
curiously. But I think she was as oblivious of this as she was of
Enriquez' particular attentions. As we reached the street I felt that I
ought to say something more.
</p>
<p>
"You know," I began casually, "that although those poor people meet here
in this public way, their gathering is really quite a homely pastoral and
a national custom; and these girls are all honest, hardworking peons or
servants enjoying themselves in quite the old idyllic fashion."
</p>
<p>
"Certainly," said the young girl, half-abstractedly. "Of course it's a
Moorish dance, originally brought over, I suppose, by those old Andalusian
immigrants two hundred years ago. It's quite Arabic in its suggestions. I
have got something like it in an old CANCIONERO I picked up at a bookstall
in Boston. But," she added, with a gasp of reminiscent satisfaction,
"that's not like HIM! Oh, no! HE is decidedly original. Heavens! yes."
</p>
<p>
I turned away in some discomfiture to join Enriquez, who was calmly
awaiting me, with a cigarette in his mouth, outside the sala. Yet he
looked so unconscious of any previous absurdity that I hesitated in what I
thought was a necessary warning. He, however, quickly precipitated it.
Glancing after the retreating figures of the two women, he said: "Thees
mees from Boston is return to her house. You do not accompany her? I
shall. Behold me—I am there." But I linked my arm firmly in his.
Then I pointed out, first, that she was already accompanied by a servant;
secondly, that if I, who knew her, had hesitated to offer myself as an
escort, it was hardly proper for him, a perfect stranger, to take that
liberty; that Miss Mannersley was very punctilious of etiquette, which he,
as a Castilian gentleman, ought to appreciate.
</p>
<p>
"But will she not regard lofe—the admiration excessif?" he said,
twirling his thin little mustache meditatively.
</p>
<p>
"No; she will not," I returned sharply; "and you ought to understand that
she is on a different level from your Manuelas and Carmens."
</p>
<p>
"Pardon, my friend," he said gravely; "thees women are ever the same.
There is a proverb in my language. Listen: 'Whether the sharp blade of the
Toledo pierce the satin or the goatskin, it shall find behind it ever the
same heart to wound.' I am that Toledo blade—possibly it is you, my
friend. Wherefore, let us together pursue this girl of Boston on the
instant."
</p>
<p>
But I kept my grasp on Enriquez' arm, and succeeded in restraining his
mercurial impulses for the moment. He halted, and puffed vigorously at his
cigarette; but the next instant he started forward again. "Let us,
however, follow with discretion in the rear; we shall pass her house; we
shall gaze at it; it shall touch her heart."
</p>
<p>
Ridiculous as was this following of the young girl we had only just parted
from, I nevertheless knew that Enriquez was quite capable of attempting it
alone, and I thought it better to humor him by consenting to walk with him
in that direction; but I felt it necessary to say:
</p>
<p>
"I ought to warn you that Miss Mannersley already looks upon your
performances at the sala as something outre and peculiar, and if I were
you I shouldn't do anything to deepen that impression."
</p>
<p>
"You are saying she ees shock?" said Enriquez, gravely.
</p>
<p>
I felt I could not conscientiously say that she was shocked, and he saw my
hesitation. "Then she have jealousy of the senoritas," he observed, with
insufferable complacency. "You observe! I have already said. It is ever
so."
</p>
<p>
I could stand it no longer. "Look here, Harry," I said, "if you must know
it, she looks upon you as an acrobat—a paid performer."
</p>
<p>
"Ah!"—his black eyes sparkled—"the torero, the man who fights
the bull, he is also an acrobat."
</p>
<p>
"Yes; but she thinks you a clown!—a GRACIOSO DE TEATRO—there!"
</p>
<p>
"Then I have make her laugh?" he said coolly.
</p>
<p>
I don't think he had; but I shrugged my shoulders.
</p>
<p>
"BUENO!" he said cheerfully. "Lofe, he begin with a laugh, he make feenish
with a sigh."
</p>
<p>
I turned to look at him in the moonlight. His face presented its habitual
Spanish gravity—a gravity that was almost ironical. His small black
eyes had their characteristic irresponsible audacity—the
irresponsibility of the vivacious young animal. It could not be possible
that he was really touched with the placid frigidities of Miss Mannersley.
I remembered his equally elastic gallantries with Miss Pinkey Smith, a
blonde Western belle, from which both had harmlessly rebounded. As we
walked on slowly I continued more persuasively: "Of course this is only
your nonsense; but don't you see, Miss Mannersley thinks it all in earnest
and really your nature?" I hesitated, for it suddenly struck me that it
WAS really his nature. "And—hang it all!—you don't want her to
believe you a common buffoon., or some intoxicated muchacho."
</p>
<p>
"Intoxicated?" repeated Enriquez, with exasperating languishment. "Yes;
that is the word that shall express itself. My friend, you have made a
shot in the center—you have ring the bell every time! It is
intoxication—but not of aguardiente. Look! I have long time an
ancestor of whom is a pretty story. One day in church he have seen a young
girl—a mere peasant girl—pass to the confessional. He look her
in her eye, he stagger"—here Enriquez wobbled pantomimically into
the road—"he fall!"—he would have suited the action to the
word if I had not firmly held him up. "They have taken him home, where he
have remain without his clothes, and have dance and sing. But it was the
drunkenness of lofe. And, look you, thees village girl was a nothing, not
even pretty. The name of my ancestor was—"
</p>
<p>
"Don Quixote de La Mancha," I suggested maliciously. "I suspected as much.
Come along. That will do."
</p>
<p>
"My ancestor's name," continued Enriquez, gravely, "was Antonio
Hermenegildo de Salvatierra, which is not the same. Thees Don Quixote of
whom you speak exist not at all."
</p>
<p>
"Never mind. Only, for heaven's sake, as we are nearing the house, don't
make a fool of yourself again."
</p>
<p>
It was a wonderful moonlight night. The deep redwood porch of the
Mannersley parsonage, under the shadow of a great oak—the largest in
the Encinal—was diapered in black and silver. As the women stepped
upon the porch their shadows were silhouetted against the door. Miss
Mannersley paused for an instant, and turned to give a last look at the
beauty of the night as Jocasta entered. Her glance fell upon us as we
passed. She nodded carelessly and unaffectedly to me, but as she
recognized Enriquez she looked a little longer at him with her previous
cold and invincible curiosity. To my horror Enriquez began instantly to
affect a slight tremulousness of gait and a difficulty of breathing; but I
gripped his arm savagely, and managed to get him past the house as the
door closed finally on the young lady.
</p>
<p>
"You do not comprehend, friend Pancho," he said gravely, "but those eyes
in their glass are as the ESPEJO USTORIO, the burning mirror. They burn,
they consume me here like paper. Let us affix to ourselves thees tree. She
will, without doubt, appear at her window. We shall salute her for good
night."
</p>
<p>
"We will do nothing of the kind," I said sharply. Finding that I was
determined, he permitted me to lead him away. I was delighted to notice,
however, that he had indicated the window which I knew was the minister's
study, and that as the bedrooms were in the rear of the house, this later
incident was probably not overseen by the young lady or the servant. But I
did not part from Enriquez until I saw him safely back to the sala, where
I left him sipping chocolate, his arm alternating around the waists of his
two previous partners in a delightful Arcadian and childlike simplicity,
and an apparent utter forgetfulness of Miss Mannersley.
</p>
<p>
The fandangos were usually held on Saturday night, and the next day, being
Sunday, I missed Enriquez; but as he was a devout Catholic I remembered
that he was at mass in the morning, and possibly at the bullfight at San
Antonio in the afternoon. But I was somewhat surprised on the Monday
morning following, as I was crossing the plaza, to have my arm taken by
the Rev. Mr. Mannersley in the nearest approach to familiarity that was
consistent with the reserve of this eminent divine. I looked at him
inquiringly. Although scrupulously correct in attire, his features always
had a singular resemblance to the national caricature known as "Uncle
Sam," but with the humorous expression left out. Softly stroking his
goatee with three fingers, he began condescendingly: "You are, I think,
more or less familiar with the characteristics and customs of the Spanish
as exhibited by the settlers here." A thrill of apprehension went through
me. Had he heard of Enriquez' proceedings? Had Miss Mannersley cruelly
betrayed him to her uncle? "I have not given that attention myself to
their language and social peculiarities," he continued, with a large wave
of the hand, "being much occupied with a study of their religious beliefs
and superstitions"—it struck me that this was apt to be a common
fault of people of the Mannersley type—"but I have refrained from a
personal discussion of them; on the contrary, I have held somewhat broad
views on the subject of their remarkable missionary work, and have
suggested a scheme of co-operation with them, quite independent of
doctrinal teaching, to my brethren of other Protestant Christian sects.
These views I first incorporated in a sermon last Sunday week, which I am
told has created considerable attention." He stopped and coughed slightly.
"I have not yet heard from any of the Roman clergy, but I am led to
believe that my remarks were not ungrateful to Catholics generally."
</p>
<p>
I was relieved, although still in some wonder why he should address me on
this topic. I had a vague remembrance of having heard that he had said
something on Sunday which had offended some Puritans of his flock, but
nothing more. He continued: "I have just said that I was unacquainted with
the characteristics of the Spanish-American race. I presume, however, they
have the impulsiveness of their Latin origin. They gesticulate—eh?
They express their gratitude, their joy, their affection, their emotions
generally, by spasmodic movements? They naturally dance—sing—eh?"
A horrible suspicion crossed my mind; I could only stare helplessly at
him. "I see," he said graciously; "perhaps it is a somewhat general
question. I will explain myself. A rather singular occurrence happened to
me the other night. I had returned from visiting a parishioner, and was
alone in my study reviewing my sermon for the next day. It must have been
quite late before I concluded, for I distinctly remember my niece had
returned with her servant fully an hour before. Presently I heard the
sounds of a musical instrument in the road, with the accents of someone
singing or rehearsing some metrical composition in words that, although
couched in a language foreign to me, in expression and modulation gave me
the impression of being distinctly adulatory. For some little time, in the
greater preoccupation of my task, I paid little attention to the
performance; but its persistency at length drew me in no mere idle
curiosity to the window. From thence, standing in my dressing-gown, and
believing myself unperceived, I noticed under the large oak in the
roadside the figure of a young man who, by the imperfect light, appeared
to be of Spanish extraction. But I evidently miscalculated my own
invisibility; for he moved rapidly forward as I came to the window, and in
a series of the most extraordinary pantomimic gestures saluted me. Beyond
my experience of a few Greek plays in earlier days, I confess I am not an
adept in the understanding of gesticulation; but it struck me that the
various phases of gratitude, fervor, reverence, and exaltation were
successively portrayed. He placed his hands upon his head, his heart, and
even clasped them together in this manner." To my consternation the
reverend gentleman here imitated Enriquez' most extravagant pantomime. "I
am willing to confess," he continued, "that I was singularly moved by
them, as well as by the highly creditable and Christian interest that
evidently produced them. At last I opened the window. Leaning out, I told
him that I regretted that the lateness of the hour prevented any further
response from me than a grateful though hurried acknowledgment of his
praiseworthy emotion, but that I should be glad to see him for a few
moments in the vestry before service the next day, or at early
candlelight, before the meeting of the Bible class. I told him that as my
sole purpose had been the creation of an evangelical brotherhood and the
exclusion of merely doctrinal views, nothing could be more gratifying to
me than his spontaneous and unsolicited testimony to my motives. He
appeared for an instant to be deeply affected, and, indeed, quite overcome
with emotion, and then gracefully retired, with some agility and a slight
saltatory movement."
</p>
<p>
He paused. A sudden and overwhelming idea took possession of me, and I
looked impulsively into his face. Was it possible that for once Enriquez'
ironical extravagance had been understood, met, and vanquished by a master
hand? But the Rev. Mr. Mannersley's self-satisfied face betrayed no
ambiguity or lurking humor. He was evidently in earnest; he had
complacently accepted for himself the abandoned Enriquez' serenade to his
niece. I felt a hysterical desire to laugh, but it was checked by my
companion's next words.
</p>
<p>
"I informed my niece of the occurrence in the morning at breakfast. She
had not heard anything of the strange performance, but she agreed with me
as to its undoubted origin in a grateful recognition of my liberal efforts
toward his coreligionists. It was she, in fact, who suggested that your
knowledge of these people might corroborate my impressions."
</p>
<p>
I was dumfounded. Had Miss Mannersley, who must have recognized Enriquez'
hand in this, concealed the fact in a desire to shield him? But this was
so inconsistent with her utter indifference to him, except as a grotesque
study, that she would have been more likely to tell her uncle all about
his previous performance. Nor could it be that she wished to conceal her
visit to the fandango. She was far too independent for that, and it was
even possible that the reverend gentleman, in his desire to know more of
Enriquez' compatriots, would not have objected. In my confusion I meekly
added my conviction to hers, congratulated him upon his evident success,
and slipped away. But I was burning with a desire to see Enriquez and know
all. He was imaginative but not untruthful. Unfortunately, I learned that
he was just then following one of his erratic impulses, and had gone to a
rodeo at his cousin's, in the foothills, where he was alternately
exercising his horsemanship in catching and breaking wild cattle and
delighting his relatives with his incomparable grasp of the American
language and customs, and of the airs of a young man of fashion. Then my
thoughts recurred to Miss Mannersley. Had she really been oblivious that
night to Enriquez' serenade? I resolved to find out, if I could, without
betraying Enriquez. Indeed, it was possible, after all, that it might not
have been he.
</p>
<p>
Chance favored me. The next evening I was at a party where Miss
Mannersley, by reason of her position and quality, was a distinguished—I
had almost written a popular—guest. But, as I have formerly stated,
although the youthful fair of the Encinal were flattered by her casual
attentions, and secretly admired her superior style and aristocratic calm,
they were more or less uneasy under the dominance of her intelligence and
education, and were afraid to attempt either confidence or familiarity.
They were also singularly jealous of her, for although the average young
man was equally afraid of her cleverness and her candor, he was not above
paying a tremulous and timid court to her for its effect upon her humbler
sisters. This evening she was surrounded by her usual satellites,
including, of course, the local notables and special guests of
distinction. She had been discussing, I think, the existence of glaciers
on Mount Shasta with a spectacled geologist, and had participated with
charming frankness in a conversation on anatomy with the local doctor and
a learned professor, when she was asked to take a seat at the piano. She
played with remarkable skill and wonderful precision, but coldly and
brilliantly. As she sat there in her subdued but perfectly fitting evening
dress, her regular profile and short but slender neck firmly set upon her
high shoulders, exhaling an atmosphere of refined puritanism and
provocative intelligence, the utter incongruity of Enriquez' extravagant
attentions if ironical, and their equal hopelessness if not, seemed to me
plainer than ever. What had this well-poised, coldly observant spinster to
do with that quaintly ironic ruffler, that romantic cynic, that rowdy Don
Quixote, that impossible Enriquez? Presently she ceased playing. Her slim,
narrow slipper, revealing her thin ankle, remained upon the pedal; her
delicate fingers were resting idly on the keys; her head was slightly
thrown back, and her narrow eyebrows prettily knit toward the ceiling in
an effort of memory.
</p>
<p>
"Something of Chopin's," suggested the geologist, ardently.
</p>
<p>
"That exquisite sonata!" pleaded the doctor.
</p>
<p>
"Suthin' of Rubinstein. Heard him once," said a gentleman of Siskiyou. "He
just made that pianner get up and howl. Play Rube."
</p>
<p>
She shook her head with parted lips and a slight touch of girlish coquetry
in her manner. Then her fingers suddenly dropped upon the keys with a
glassy tinkle; there were a few quick pizzicato chords, down went the low
pedal with a monotonous strumming, and she presently began to hum to
herself. I started—as well I might—for I recognized one of
Enriquez' favorite and most extravagant guitar solos. It was audacious; it
was barbaric; it was, I fear, vulgar. As I remembered it—as he sang
it—it recounted the adventures of one Don Francisco, a provincial
gallant and roisterer of the most objectionable type. It had one hundred
and four verses, which Enriquez never spared me. I shuddered as in a
pleasant, quiet voice the correct Miss Mannersley warbled in musical
praise of the PELLEJO, or wineskin, and a eulogy of the dicebox came
caressingly from her thin red lips. But the company was far differently
affected: the strange, wild air and wilder accompaniment were evidently
catching; people moved toward the piano; somebody whistled the air from a
distant corner; even the faces of the geologist and doctor brightened.
</p>
<p>
"A tarantella, I presume?" blandly suggested the doctor.
</p>
<p>
Miss Mannersley stopped, and rose carelessly from the piano. "It is a
Moorish gypsy song of the fifteenth century," she said dryly.
</p>
<p>
"It seemed sorter familiar, too," hesitated one of the young men, timidly,
"like as if—don't you know?—you had without knowing it, don't
you know?"—he blushed slightly—"sorter picked it up
somewhere."
</p>
<p>
"I 'picked it up,' as you call it, in the collection of medieval
manuscripts of the Harvard Library, and copied it," returned Miss
Mannersley coldly as she turned away.
</p>
<p>
But I was not inclined to let her off so easily. I presently made my way
to her side. "Your uncle was complimentary enough to consult me as to the
meaning of the appearance of a certain exuberant Spanish visitor at his
house the other night." I looked into her brown eyes, but my own slipped
off her velvety pupils without retaining anything. Then she reinforced her
gaze with a pince-nez, and said carelessly:
</p>
<p>
"Oh, it's you? How are you? Well, could you give him any information?"
</p>
<p>
"Only generally," I returned, still looking into her eyes. "These people
are impulsive. The Spanish blood is a mixture of gold and quicksilver."
</p>
<p>
She smiled slightly. "That reminds me of your volatile friend. He was
mercurial enough, certainly. Is he still dancing?"
</p>
<p>
"And singing sometimes," I responded pointedly. But she only added
casually, "A singular creature," without exhibiting the least
consciousness, and drifted away, leaving me none the wiser. I felt that
Enriquez alone could enlighten me. I must see him.
</p>
<p>
I did, but not in the way I expected. There was a bullfight at San Antonio
the next Saturday afternoon, the usual Sunday performance being changed in
deference to the Sabbatical habits of the Americans. An additional
attraction was offered in the shape of a bull-and-bear fight, also a
concession to American taste, which had voted the bullfight "slow," and
had averred that the bull "did not get a fair show." I am glad that I am
able to spare the reader the usual realistic horrors, for in the
Californian performances there was very little of the brutality that
distinguished this function in the mother country. The horses were not
miserable, worn-out hacks, but young and alert mustangs; and the display
of horsemanship by the picadors was not only wonderful, but secured an
almost absolute safety to horse and rider. I never saw a horse gored;
although unskillful riders were sometimes thrown in wheeling quickly to
avoid the bull's charge, they generally regained their animals without
injury.
</p>
<p>
The Plaza de Toros was reached through the decayed and tile-strewn
outskirts of an old Spanish village. It was a rudely built oval
amphitheater, with crumbling, whitewashed adobe walls, and roofed only
over portions of the gallery reserved for the provincial "notables," but
now occupied by a few shopkeepers and their wives, with a sprinkling of
American travelers and ranchmen. The impalpable adobe dust of the arena
was being whirled into the air by the strong onset of the afternoon trade
winds, which happily, however, helped also to dissipate a reek of garlic,
and the acrid fumes of cheap tobacco rolled in cornhusk cigarettes. I was
leaning over the second barrier, waiting for the meager and circuslike
procession to enter with the keys of the bull pen, when my attention was
attracted to a movement in the reserved gallery. A lady and gentleman of a
quality that was evidently unfamiliar to the rest of the audience were
picking their way along the rickety benches to a front seat. I recognized
the geologist with some surprise, and the lady he was leading with still
greater astonishment. For it was Miss Mannersley, in her precise,
well-fitting walking-costume—a monotone of sober color among the
parti-colored audience.
</p>
<p>
However, I was perhaps less surprised than the audience, for I was not
only becoming as accustomed to the young girl's vagaries as I had been to
Enriquez' extravagance, but I was also satisfied that her uncle might have
given her permission to come, as a recognition of the Sunday concession of
the management, as well as to conciliate his supposed Catholic friends. I
watched her sitting there until the first bull had entered, and, after a
rather brief play with the picadors and banderilleros, was dispatched. At
the moment when the matador approached the bull with his lethal weapon I
was not sorry for an excuse to glance at Miss Mannersley. Her hands were
in her lap, her head slightly bent forward over her knees. I fancied that
she, too, had dropped her eyes before the brutal situation; to my horror,
I saw that she had a drawing-book in her hand and was actually sketching
it. I turned my eyes in preference to the dying bull.
</p>
<p>
The second animal led out for this ingenious slaughter was, however, more
sullen, uncertain, and discomposing to his butchers. He accepted the irony
of a trial with gloomy, suspicious eyes, and he declined the challenge of
whirling and insulting picadors. He bristled with banderillas like a
hedgehog, but remained with his haunches backed against the barrier, at
times almost hidden in the fine dust raised by the monotonous stroke of
his sullenly pawing hoof—his one dull, heavy protest. A vague
uneasiness had infected his adversaries; the picadors held aloof, the
banderilleros skirmished at a safe distance. The audience resented only
the indecision of the bull. Galling epithets were flung at him, followed
by cries of "ESPADA!" and, curving his elbow under his short cloak, the
matador, with his flashing blade in hand, advanced and—stopped. The
bull remained motionless.
</p>
<p>
For at that moment a heavier gust of wind than usual swept down upon the
arena, lifted a suffocating cloud of dust, and whirled it around the tiers
of benches and the balcony, and for a moment seemed to stop the
performance. I heard an exclamation from the geologist, who had risen to
his feet. I fancied I heard even a faint cry from Miss Mannersley; but the
next moment, as the dust was slowly settling, we saw a sheet of paper in
the air, that had been caught up in this brief cyclone, dropping, dipping
from side to side on uncertain wings, until it slowly descended in the
very middle of the arena. It was a leaf from Miss Mannersley's sketchbook,
the one on which she had been sketching.
</p>
<p>
In the pause that followed it seemed to be the one object that at last
excited the bull's growing but tardy ire. He glanced at it with murky,
distended eyes; he snorted at it with vague yet troubled fury. Whether he
detected his own presentment in Miss Mannersley's sketch, or whether he
recognized it as an unknown and unfamiliar treachery in his surroundings,
I could not conjecture; for the next moment the matador, taking advantage
of the bull's concentration, with a complacent leer at the audience,
advanced toward the paper. But at that instant a young man cleared the
barrier into the arena with a single bound, shoved the matador to one
side, caught up the paper, turned toward the balcony and Miss Mannersley
with a gesture of apology, dropped gaily before the bull, knelt down
before him with an exaggerated humility, and held up the drawing as if for
his inspection. A roar of applause broke from the audience, a cry of
warning and exasperation from the attendants, as the goaded bull suddenly
charged the stranger. But he sprang to one side with great dexterity, made
a courteous gesture to the matador as if passing the bull over to him, and
still holding the paper in his hand, re-leaped the barrier, and rejoined
the audience in safety. I did not wait to see the deadly, dominant thrust
with which the matador received the charging bull; my eyes were following
the figure now bounding up the steps to the balcony, where with an
exaggerated salutation he laid the drawing in Miss Mannersley's lap and
vanished. There was no mistaking that thin lithe form, the narrow black
mustache, and gravely dancing eyes. The audacity of conception, the
extravagance of execution, the quaint irony of the sequel, could belong to
no one but Enriquez.
</p>
<p>
I hurried up to her as the six yoked mules dragged the carcass of the bull
away. She was placidly putting up her book, the unmoved focus of a hundred
eager and curious eyes. She smiled slightly as she saw me. "I was just
telling Mr. Briggs what an extraordinary creature it was, and how you knew
him. He must have had great experience to do that sort of thing so
cleverly and safely. Does he do it often? Of course, not just that. But
does he pick up cigars and things that I see they throw to the matador?
Does he belong to the management? Mr. Briggs thinks the whole thing was a
feint to distract the bull," she added, with a wicked glance at the
geologist, who, I fancied, looked disturbed.
</p>
<p>
"I am afraid," I said dryly, "that his act was as unpremeditated and
genuine as it was unusual."
</p>
<p>
"Why afraid?"
</p>
<p>
It was a matter-of-fact question, but I instantly saw my mistake. What
right had I to assume that Enriquez' attentions were any more genuine than
her own easy indifference; and if I suspected that they were, was it fair
in me to give my friend away to this heartless coquette? "You are not very
gallant," she said, with a slight laugh, as I was hesitating, and turned
away with her escort before I could frame a reply. But at least Enriquez
was now accessible, and I should gain some information from him. I knew
where to find him, unless he were still lounging about the building,
intent upon more extravagance; but I waited until I saw Miss Mannersley
and Briggs depart without further interruption.
</p>
<p>
The hacienda of Ramon Saltillo, Enriquez' cousin, was on the outskirts of
the village. When I arrived there I found Enriquez' pinto mustang steaming
in the corral, and although I was momentarily delayed by the servants at
the gateway, I was surprised to find Enriquez himself lying languidly on
his back in a hammock in the patio. His arms were hanging down listlessly
on each side as if in the greatest prostration, yet I could not resist the
impression that the rascal had only just got into the hammock when he
heard of my arrival.
</p>
<p>
"You have arrived, friend Pancho, in time," he said, in accents of
exaggerated weakness. "I am absolutely exhaust. I am bursted, caved in,
kerflummoxed. I have behold you, my friend, at the barrier. I speak not, I
make no sign at the first, because I was on fire; I speak not at the
feenish—for I am exhaust."
</p>
<p>
"I see; the bull made it lively for you."
</p>
<p>
He instantly bounded up in the hammock. "The bull! Caramba! Not a thousand
bulls! And thees one, look you, was a craven. I snap my fingers over his
horn; I roll my cigarette under his nose."
</p>
<p>
"Well, then—what was it?"
</p>
<p>
He instantly lay down again, pulling up the sides of the hammock.
Presently his voice came from its depths, appealing in hollow tones to the
sky. "He asks me—thees friend of my soul, thees brother of my life,
thees Pancho that I lofe—what it was? He would that I should tell
him why I am game in the legs, why I shake in the hand, crack in the
voice, and am generally wipe out! And yet he, my pardner—thees
Francisco—know that I have seen the mees from Boston! That I have
gaze into the eye, touch the hand, and for the instant possess the picture
that hand have drawn! It was a sublime picture, Pancho," he said, sitting
up again suddenly, "and have kill the bull before our friend Pepe's sword
have touch even the bone of hees back and make feenish of him."
</p>
<p>
"Look here, Enriquez," I said bluntly, "have you been serenading that
girl?"
</p>
<p>
He shrugged his shoulders without the least embarrassment, and said: "Ah,
yes. What would you? It is of a necessity."
</p>
<p>
"Well," I retorted, "then you ought to know that her uncle took it all to
himself—thought you some grateful Catholic pleased with his
religious tolerance."
</p>
<p>
He did not even smile. "BUENO," he said gravely. "That make something,
too. In thees affair it is well to begin with the duenna. He is the
duenna."
</p>
<p>
"And," I went on relentlessly, "her escort told her just now that your
exploit in the bull ring was only a trick to divert the bull, suggested by
the management."
</p>
<p>
"Bah! her escort is a geologian. Naturally, she is to him as a stone."
</p>
<p>
I would have continued, but a peon interrupted us at this moment with a
sign to Enriquez, who leaped briskly from the hammock, bidding me wait his
return from a messenger in the gateway.
</p>
<p>
Still unsatisfied of mind, I waited, and sat down in the hammock that
Enriquez had quitted. A scrap of paper was lying in its meshes, which at
first appeared to be of the kind from which Enriquez rolled his
cigarettes; but as I picked it up to throw it away, I found it was of much
firmer and stouter material. Looking at it more closely, I was surprised
to recognize it as a piece of the tinted drawing-paper torn off the
"block" that Miss Mannersley had used. It had been deeply creased at right
angles as if it had been folded; it looked as if it might have been the
outer half of a sheet used for a note.
</p>
<p>
It might have been a trifling circumstance, but it greatly excited my
curiosity. I knew that he had returned the sketch to Miss Mannersley, for
I had seen it in her hand. Had she given him another? And if so, why had
it been folded to the destruction of the drawing? Or was it part of a note
which he had destroyed? In the first impulse of discovery I walked quickly
with it toward the gateway where Enriquez had disappeared, intending to
restore it to him. He was just outside talking with a young girl. I
started, for it was Jocasta—Miss Mannersley's maid.
</p>
<p>
With this added discovery came that sense of uneasiness and indignation
with which we illogically are apt to resent the withholding of a friend's
confidence, even in matters concerning only himself. It was no use for me
to reason that it was no business of mine, that he was right in keeping a
secret that concerned another—and a lady; but I was afraid I was
even more meanly resentful because the discovery quite upset my theory of
his conduct and of Miss Mannersley's attitude toward him. I continued to
walk on to the gateway, where I bade Enriquez a hurried good-by, alleging
the sudden remembrance of another engagement, but without appearing to
recognize the girl, who was moving away when, to my further discomfiture,
the rascal stopped me with an appealing wink, threw his arms around my
neck, whispered hoarsely in my ear, "Ah! you see—you comprehend—but
you are the mirror of discretion!" and returned to Jocasta. But whether
this meant that he had received a message from Miss Mannersley, or that he
was trying to suborn her maid to carry one, was still uncertain. He was
capable of either. During the next two or three weeks I saw him
frequently; but as I had resolved to try the effect of ignoring Miss
Mannersley in our conversation, I gathered little further of their
relations, and, to my surprise, after one or two characteristic
extravagances of allusion, Enriquez dropped the subject, too. Only one
afternoon, as we were parting, he said carelessly: "My friend, you are
going to the casa of Mannersley tonight. I too have the honor of the
invitation. But you will be my Mercury—my Leporello—you will
take of me a message to thees Mees Boston, that I am crushed, desolated,
prostrate, and flabbergasted—that I cannot arrive, for I have of
that night to sit up with the grand-aunt of my brother-in-law, who has a
quinsy to the death. It is sad."
</p>
<p>
This was the first indication I had received of Miss Mannersley's
advances. I was equally surprised at Enriquez' refusal.
</p>
<p>
"Nonsense!" I said bluntly. "Nothing keeps you from going."
</p>
<p>
"My friend," returned Enriquez, with a sudden lapse into languishment that
seemed to make him absolutely infirm, "it is everything that shall
restrain me. I am not strong. I shall become weak of the knee and tremble
under the eye of Mees Boston. I shall precipitate myself to the geologian
by the throat. Ask me another conundrum that shall be easy."
</p>
<p>
He seemed idiotically inflexible, and did not go. But I did. I found Miss
Mannersley exquisitely dressed and looking singularly animated and pretty.
The lambent glow of her inscrutable eye as she turned toward me might have
been flattering but for my uneasiness in regard to Enriquez. I delivered
his excuses as naturally as I could. She stiffened for an instant, and
seemed an inch higher. "I am so sorry," she said at last in a level voice.
"I thought he would have been so amusing. Indeed, I had hoped we might try
an old Moorish dance together which I have found and was practicing."
</p>
<p>
"He would have been delighted, I know. It's a great pity he didn't come
with me," I said quickly; "but," I could not help adding, with emphasis on
her words, "he is such an 'extraordinary creature,' you know."
</p>
<p>
"I see nothing extraordinary in his devotion to an aged relative,"
returned Miss Mannersley quietly as she turned away, "except that it
justifies my respect for his character."
</p>
<p>
I do not know why I did not relate this to him. Possibly I had given up
trying to understand them; perhaps I was beginning to have an idea that he
could take care of himself. But I was somewhat surprised a few days later
when, after asking me to go with him to a rodeo at his uncle's he added
composedly, "You will meet Mees Boston."
</p>
<p>
I stared, and but for his manner would have thought it part of his
extravagance. For the rodeo—a yearly chase of wild cattle for the
purpose of lassoing and branding them—was a rather brutal affair,
and purely a man's function; it was also a family affair—a property
stock-taking of the great Spanish cattle-owners—and strangers,
particularly Americans, found it difficult to gain access to its mysteries
and the fiesta that followed.
</p>
<p>
"But how did she get an invitation?" I asked. "You did not dare to ask—"
I began.
</p>
<p>
"My friend," said Enriquez, with a singular deliberation, "the great and
respectable Boston herself, and her serene, venerable oncle, and other
Boston magnificos, have of a truth done me the inexpressible honor to
solicit of my degraded, papistical oncle that she shall come—that
she shall of her own superior eye behold the barbaric customs of our
race."
</p>
<p>
His tone and manner were so peculiar that I stepped quickly before him,
laid my hands on his shoulders, and looked down into his face. But the
actual devil which I now for the first time saw in his eyes went out of
them suddenly, and he relapsed again in affected languishment in his
chair. "I shall be there, friend Pancho," he said, with a preposterous
gasp. "I shall nerve my arm to lasso the bull, and tumble him before her
at her feet. I shall throw the 'buck-jump' mustang at the same sacred
spot. I shall pluck for her the buried chicken at full speed from the
ground, and present it to her. You shall see it, friend Pancho. I shall be
there."
</p>
<p>
He was as good as his word. When Don Pedro Amador, his uncle, installed
Miss Mannersley, with Spanish courtesy, on a raised platform in the long
valley where the rodeo took place, the gallant Enriquez selected a bull
from the frightened and galloping herd, and, cleverly isolating him from
the band, lassoed his hind legs, and threw him exactly before the platform
where Miss Mannersley was seated. It was Enriquez who caught the unbroken
mustang, sprang from his own saddle to the bare back of his captive, and
with the lasso for a bridle, halted him on rigid haunches at Miss
Mannersley's feet. It was Enriquez who, in the sports that followed,
leaned from his saddle at full speed, caught up the chicken buried to its
head in the sand, without wringing its neck, and tossed it unharmed and
fluttering toward his mistress. As for her, she wore the same look of
animation that I had seen in her face at our previous meeting. Although
she did not bring her sketchbook with her, as at the bullfight, she did
not shrink from the branding of the cattle, which took place under her
very eyes.
</p>
<p>
Yet I had never seen her and Enriquez together; they had never, to my
actual knowledge, even exchanged words. And now, although she was the
guest of his uncle, his duties seemed to keep him in the field, and apart
from her. Nor, as far as I could detect, did either apparently make any
effort to have it otherwise. The peculiar circumstance seemed to attract
no attention from anyone else. But for what I alone knew—or thought
I knew—of their actual relations, I should have thought them
strangers.
</p>
<p>
But I felt certain that the fiesta which took place in the broad patio of
Don Pedro's casa would bring them together. And later in the evening, as
we were all sitting on the veranda watching the dancing of the Mexican
women, whose white-flounced sayas were monotonously rising and falling to
the strains of two melancholy harps, Miss Mannersley rejoined us from the
house. She seemed to be utterly absorbed and abstracted in the barbaric
dances, and scarcely moved as she leaned over the railing with her cheek
resting on her hand. Suddenly she arose with a little cry.
</p>
<p>
"What is it?" asked two or three.
</p>
<p>
"Nothing—only I have lost my fan." She had risen, and was looking
abstractedly on the floor.
</p>
<p>
Half a dozen men jumped to their feet. "Let me fetch it," they said.
</p>
<p>
"No, thank you. I think I know where it is, and will go for it myself."
She was moving away.
</p>
<p>
But Don Pedro interposed with Spanish gravity. Such a thing was not to be
heard of in his casa. If the senorita would not permit HIM—an old
man—to go for it, it must be brought by Enriquez, her cavalier of
the day.
</p>
<p>
But Enriquez was not to be found. I glanced at Miss Mannersley's somewhat
disturbed face, and begged her to let me fetch it. I thought I saw a flush
of relief come into her pale cheek as she said, in a lower voice, "On the
stone seat in the garden."
</p>
<p>
I hurried away, leaving Don Pedro still protesting. I knew the gardens,
and the stone seat at an angle of the wall, not a dozen yards from the
casa. The moon shone full upon it. There, indeed, lay the little
gray-feathered fan. But beside it, also, lay the crumpled black
gold-embroidered riding-gauntlet that Enriquez had worn at the rodeo.
</p>
<p>
I thrust it hurriedly into my pocket, and ran back. As I passed through
the gateway I asked a peon to send Enriquez to me. The man stared. Did I
not know that Don Enriquez had ridden away two minutes ago?
</p>
<p>
When I reached the veranda, I handed the fan to Miss Mannersley without a
word. "BUENO," said Don Pedro, gravely; "it is as well. There shall be no
bones broken over the getting of it, for Enriquez, I hear, has had to
return to the Encinal this very evening."
</p>
<p>
Miss Mannersley retired early. I did not inform her of my discovery, nor
did I seek in any way to penetrate her secret. There was no doubt that she
and Enriquez had been together, perhaps not for the first time; but what
was the result of their interview? From the young girl's demeanor and
Enriquez' hurried departure, I could only fear the worst for him. Had he
been tempted into some further extravagance and been angrily rebuked, or
had he avowed a real passion concealed under his exaggerated mask and been
deliberately rejected? I tossed uneasily half the night, following in my
dreams my poor friend's hurrying hoofbeats, and ever starting from my
sleep at what I thought was the sound of galloping hoofs.
</p>
<p>
I rose early, and lounged into the patio; but others were there before me,
and a small group of Don Pedro's family were excitedly discussing
something, and I fancied they turned away awkwardly and consciously as I
approached. There was an air of indefinite uneasiness everywhere. A
strange fear came over me with the chill of the early morning air. Had
anything happened to Enriquez? I had always looked upon his extravagance
as part of his playful humor. Could it be possible that under the sting of
rejection he had made his grotesque threat of languishing effacement real?
Surely Miss Mannersley would know or suspect something, if it were the
case.
</p>
<p>
I approached one of the Mexican women and asked if the senorita had risen.
The woman started, and looked covertly round before she replied. Did not
Don Pancho know that Miss Mannersley and her maid had not slept in their
beds that night, but had gone, none knew where?
</p>
<p>
For an instant I felt an appalling sense of my own responsibility in this
suddenly serious situation, and hurried after the retreating family group.
But as I entered the corridor a vaquero touched me on the shoulder. He had
evidently just dismounted, and was covered with the dust of the road. He
handed me a note written in pencil on a leaf from Miss Mannersley's
sketchbook. It was in Enriquez' hand, and his signature was followed by
his most extravagant rubric.
</p>
<p>
Friend Pancho: When you read this line you shall of a possibility think I
am no more. That is where you shall slip up, my little brother! I am much
more—I am two times as much, for I have marry Miss Boston. At the
Mission Church, at five of the morning, sharp! No cards shall be left! I
kiss the hand of my venerable uncle-in-law. You shall say to him that we
fly to the South wilderness as the combined evangelical missionary to the
heathen! Miss Boston herself say this. Ta-ta! How are you now?
</p>
<p>
Your own Enriquez.
</p>
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Selected Stories, by Bret Harte