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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other
+Stories, by Bret Harte
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other Stories
+
+Author: Bret Harte
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2006 [EBook #2556]
+Last Updated: March 5, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Donald Lainson and an Anonymous Volunteer
+
+
+
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+
+By Bret Harte
+
+
+
+From: “ARGONAUT EDITION” OF THE WORKS OF BRET HARTE, VOL. 12.
+
+P. F. COLLIER & SON
+
+NEW YORK
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+
+AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+
+DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+
+WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT “JULES'”
+
+THE BOOM IN THE “CALAVERAS CLARION”
+
+THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+
+LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+
+
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+
+At nightfall it began to rain. The wind arose too, and also began to
+buffet a small, struggling, nondescript figure, creeping along the trail
+over the rocky upland meadow towards Rylands's rancho. At times its
+head was hidden in what appeared to be wings thrown upward from its
+shoulders; at times its broad-brimmed hat was cocked jauntily on one
+side, and again the brim was fixed over the face like a visor. At one
+moment a drifting misshapen mass of drapery, at the next its vague
+garments, beaten back hard against the figure, revealed outlines far too
+delicate for that rude enwrapping. For it was Mrs. Rylands herself,
+in her husband's hat and her “hired man's” old blue army overcoat,
+returning from the post-office two miles away. The wind continued its
+aggression until she reached the front door of her newly plastered
+farmhouse, and then a heavier blast shook the pines above the
+low-pitched, shingled roof, and sent a shower of arrowy drops after her
+like a Parthian parting, as she entered. She threw aside the overcoat
+and hat, and somewhat inconsistently entered the sitting-room, to walk
+to the window and look back upon the path she had just traversed. The
+wind and the rain swept down a slope, half meadow, half clearing,--a
+mile away,--to a fringe of sycamores. A mile further lay the stage road,
+where, three hours later, her husband would alight on his return from
+Sacramento. It would be a long wet walk for Joshua Rylands, as their
+only horse had been borrowed by a neighbor.
+
+In that fading light Mrs. Rylands's oval cheek was shining still from
+the raindrops, but there was something in the expression of her worried
+face that might have as readily suggested tears. She was strikingly
+handsome, yet quite as incongruous an ornament to her surroundings as
+she had been to her outer wrappings a moment ago. Even the clothes she
+now stood in hinted an inadaptibility to the weather--the house--the
+position she occupied in it. A figured silk dress, spoiled rather than
+overworn, was still of a quality inconsistent with her evident habits,
+and the lace-edged petticoat that peeped beneath it was draggled with
+mud and unaccustomed usage. Her glossy black hair, which had been tossed
+into curls in some foreign fashion, was now wind-blown into a burlesque
+of it. This incongruity was still further accented by the appearance of
+the room she had entered. It was coldly and severely furnished, making
+the chill of the yet damp white plaster unpleasantly obvious. A black
+harmonium organ stood in one corner, set out with black and white
+hymn-books; a trestle-like table contained a large Bible; half a dozen
+black, horsehair-cushioned chairs stood, geometrically distant, against
+the walls, from which hung four engravings of “Paradise Lost” in black
+mourning frames; some dried ferns and autumn leaves stood in a vase on
+the mantelpiece, as if the chill of the room had prematurely blighted
+them. The coldly glittering grate below was also decorated with withered
+sprays, as if an attempt had been made to burn them, but was frustrated
+through damp. Suddenly recalled to a sense of her wet boots and the
+new carpet, she hurriedly turned away, crossed the hall into the
+dining-room, and thence passed into the kitchen. The “hired girl,” a
+large-boned Missourian, a daughter of a neighboring woodman, was peeling
+potatoes at the table. Mrs. Rylands drew a chair before the kitchen
+stove, and put her wet feet on the hob.
+
+“I'll bet a cooky, Mess Rylands, you've done forgot the vanillar,” said
+the girl, with a certain domestic and confidential familiarity.
+
+Mrs. Rylands started guiltily. She made a miserable feint of looking in
+her lap and on the table. “I'm afraid I did, Jane, if I didn't bring it
+in HERE.”
+
+“That you didn't,” returned Jane. “And I reckon ye forgot that 'ar
+pepper-sauce for yer husband.”
+
+Mrs. Rylands looked up with piteous contrition. “I really don't know
+what's the matter with me. I certainly went into the shop, and had it on
+my list,--and--really”--
+
+Jane evidently knew her mistress, and smiled with superior toleration.
+“It's kinder bewilderin' goin' in them big shops, and lookin' round them
+stuffed shelves.” The shop at the cross roads and post-office was 14
+x 14, but Jane was nurtured on the plains. “Anyhow,” she added
+good-humoredly, “the expressman is sure to look in as he goes by, and
+you've time to give him the order.”
+
+“But is he SURE to come?” asked Mrs. Rylands anxiously. “Mr. Rylands
+will be so put out without his pepper-sauce.”
+
+“He's sure to come ef he knows you're here. Ye kin always kalkilate on
+that.”
+
+“Why?” said Mrs. Rylands abstractedly.
+
+“Why? 'cause he just can't keep his eyes off ye! That's why he comes
+every day,--'tain't jest for trade!”
+
+This was quite true, not only of the expressman, but of the butcher
+and baker, and the “candlestick-maker,” had there been so advanced a
+vocation at the cross roads. All were equally and curiously attracted
+by her picturesque novelty. Mrs. Rylands knew this herself, but without
+vanity or coquettishness. Possibly that was why the other woman told
+her. She only slightly deepened the lines of discontent in her cheek and
+said abstractedly, “Well, when he comes, YOU ask him.”
+
+She dried her shoes, put on a pair of slippers that had a faded splendor
+about them, and went up to her bedroom. Here she hesitated for some time
+between the sewing-machine and her knitting-needles, but finally settled
+upon the latter, and a pair of socks for her husband which she had begun
+a year ago. But she presently despaired of finishing them before
+he returned, three hours hence, and so applied herself to the
+sewing-machine. For a little while its singing hum was heard between the
+blasts that shook the house, but the thread presently snapped, and the
+machine was put aside somewhat impatiently, with a discontented drawing
+of the lines around her handsome mouth. Then she began to “tidy” the
+room, putting a great many things away and bringing out a great many
+more, a process that was necessarily slow, owing to her falling into
+attitudes of minute inspection of certain articles of dress, with
+intervals of trying them on, and observing their effect in her mirror.
+This kind of interruption also occurred while she was putting away some
+books that were lying about on chairs and tables, stopping midway to
+open their pages, becoming interested, and quite finishing one chapter,
+with the book held close against the window to catch the fading light of
+day. The feminine reader will gather from this that Mrs. Rylands, though
+charming, was not facile in domestic duties. She had just glanced at the
+clock, and lit the candle to again set herself to work, and thus bridge
+over the two hours more of waiting, when there came a tap at the door.
+She opened it to Jane.
+
+“There's an entire stranger downstairs, ez hez got a lame hoss and wants
+to borry a fresh one.”
+
+“We have none, you know,” said Mrs. Rylands, a little impatiently.
+
+“Thet's what I told him. Then he wanted to know ef he could lie by here
+till he could get one or fix up his own hoss.”
+
+“As you like; you know if you can manage it,” said Mrs. Rylands, a
+little uneasily. “When Mr. Rylands comes you can arrange it between you.
+Where is he now?”
+
+“In the kitchen.”
+
+“The kitchen!” echoed Mrs. Rylands.
+
+“Yes, ma'am, I showed him into the parlor, but he kinder shivered his
+shoulders, and reckoned ez how he'd go inter the kitchen. Ye see, ma'am,
+he was all wet, and his shiny big boots was sloppy. But he ain't one o'
+the stuck-up kind, and he's willin' to make hisself cowf'ble before the
+kitchen stove.”
+
+“Well, then, he don't want ME,” said Mrs. Rylands, with a relieved
+voice.
+
+“Yes'm,” said Jane, apparently equally relieved. “Only, I thought I'd
+just tell you.”
+
+A few minutes later, in crossing the upper hall, Mrs. Rylands heard
+Jane's voice from the kitchen raised in rustic laughter. Had she been
+satirically inclined, she might have understood Jane's willingness to
+relieve her mistress of the duty of entertaining the stranger; had
+she been philosophical, she might have considered the girl's dreary,
+monotonous life at the rancho, and made allowance for her joy at this
+rare interruption of it. But I fear that Mrs. Rylands was neither
+satirical nor philosophical, and presently, when Jane reentered, with
+color in her alkaline face, and light in her huckleberry eyes, and said
+she was going over to the cattle-sheds in the “far pasture,” to see
+if the hired man didn't know of some horse that could be got for the
+stranger, Mrs. Rylands felt a little bitterness in the thought that the
+girl would have scarcely volunteered to go all that distance in the rain
+for HER. Yet, in a few moments she forgot all about it, and even the
+presence of her guest in the house, and in one of her fitful abstracted
+employments passed through the dining-room into the kitchen, and had
+opened the door with an “Oh, Jane!” before she remembered her absence.
+
+The kitchen, lit by a single candle, could be only partly seen by her
+as she stood with her hand on the lock, although she herself was plainly
+visible. There was a pause, and then a quiet, self-possessed, yet
+amused, voice answered:--
+
+“My name isn't Jane, and if you're the lady of the house, I reckon yours
+wasn't ALWAYS Rylands.”
+
+At the sound of the voice Mrs. Rylands threw the door wide open, and as
+her eyes fell upon the speaker--her unknown guest--she recoiled with a
+little cry, and a white, startled face. Yet the stranger was young and
+handsome, dressed with a scrupulousness and elegance which even the
+stress of travel had not deranged, and he was looking at her with
+a smile of recognition, mingled with that careless audacity and
+self-possession which seemed to be the characteristic of his face.
+
+“Jack Hamlin!” she gasped.
+
+“That's me, all the time,” he responded easily, “and YOU'RE Nell
+Montgomery!”
+
+“How did you know I was here? Who told you?” she said impetuously.
+
+“Nobody! never was so surprised in my life! When you opened that door
+just now you might have knocked me down with a feather.” Yet he spoke
+lazily, with an amused face, and looked at her without changing his
+position.
+
+“But you MUST have known SOMETHING! It was no mere accident,” she went
+on vehemently, glancing around the room.
+
+“That's where you slip up, Nell,” said Hamlin imperturbably. “It WAS an
+accident and a bad one. My horse lamed himself coming down the grade. I
+sighted the nearest shanty, where I thought I might get another horse.
+It happened to be this.” For the first time he changed his attitude, and
+leaned back contemplatively in his chair.
+
+She came towards him quickly. “You didn't use to lie, Jack,” she said
+hesitatingly.
+
+“Couldn't afford it in my business,--and can't now,” said Jack
+cheerfully. “But,” he added curiously, as if recognizing something in
+his companion's agitation, and lifting his brown lashes to her, the
+window, and the ceiling, “what's all this about? What's your little game
+here?”
+
+“I'm married,” she said, with nervous intensity,--“married, and this is
+my husband's house!”
+
+“Not married straight out!--regularly fixed?”
+
+“Yes,” she said hurriedly.
+
+“One of the boys? Don't remember any Rylands. SPELTER used to be very
+sweet on you,--but Spelter mightn't have been his real name?”
+
+“None of our lot! No one you ever knew; a--a straight out, square man,”
+ she said quickly.
+
+“I say, Nell, look here! You ought to have shown up your cards without
+even a call. You ought to have told him that you danced at the Casino.”
+
+“I did.”
+
+“Before he asked you to marry him?”
+
+“Before.”
+
+Jack got up from his chair, put his hands in his pockets, and looked
+at her curiously. This Nell Montgomery, this music-hall “dance and song
+girl,” this girl of whom so much had been SAID and so little PROVED!
+Well, this was becoming interesting.
+
+“You don't understand,” she said, with nervous feverishness; “you
+remember after that row I had with Jim, that night the manager gave us a
+supper,--when he treated me like a dog?”
+
+“He did that,” interrupted Jack.
+
+“I felt fit for anything,” she said, with a half-hysterical laugh, that
+seemed voiced, however, to check some slumbering memory. “I'd have cut
+my throat or his, it didn't matter which”--
+
+“It mattered something to us, Nell,” put in Jack again, with polite
+parenthesis; “don't leave US out in the cold.”
+
+“I started from 'Frisco that night on the boat ready to fling myself
+into anything--or the river!” she went on hurriedly. “There was a man
+in the cabin who noticed me, and began to hang around. I thought he
+knew who I was,--had seen me on the posters; and as I didn't feel like
+foolin', I told him so. But he wasn't that kind. He said he saw I was in
+trouble and wanted me to tell him all.”
+
+Mr. Hamlin regarded her cheerfully. “And you told him,” he said, “how
+you had once run away from your childhood's happy home to go on the
+stage! How you always regretted it, and would have gone back but that
+the doors were shut forever against you! How you longed to leave, but
+the wicked men and women around you always”--
+
+“I didn't!” she burst out, with sudden passion; “you know I didn't. I
+told him everything: who I was, what I had done, what I expected to do
+again. I pointed out the men--who were sitting there, whispering and
+grinning at us, as if they were in the front row of the theatre--and
+said I knew them all, and they knew me. I never spared myself a thing.
+I said what people said of me, and didn't even care to say it wasn't
+true!”
+
+“Oh, come!” protested Jack, in perfunctory politeness.
+
+“He said he liked me for telling the truth, and not being ashamed to do
+it! He said the sin was in the false shame and the hypocrisy; for that's
+the sort of man he is, you see, and that's like him always! He asked if
+I would marry him--out of hand--and do my best to be his lawful wife.
+He said he wanted me to think it over and sleep on it, and to-morrow he
+would come and see me for an answer. I slipped off the boat at 'Frisco,
+and went alone to a hotel where I wasn't known. In the morning I didn't
+know whether he'd keep his word or I'd keep mine. But he came! He said
+he'd marry me that very day, and take me to his farm in Santa Clara.
+I agreed. I thought it would take me out of everybody's knowledge,
+and they'd think me dead! We were married that day, before a regular
+clergyman. I was married under my own name,”--she stopped and looked
+at Jack, with a hysterical laugh,--“but he made me write underneath it,
+'known as Nell Montgomery;' for he said HE wasn't ashamed of it, nor
+should I be.”
+
+“Does he wear long hair and stick straws in it?” said Hamlin gravely.
+“Does he 'hear voices' and have 'visions'?”
+
+“He's a shrewd, sensible, hard-working man,--no more mad than you are,
+nor as mad as I was the day I married him. He's lived up to everything
+he's said.” She stopped, hesitated in her quick, nervous speech; her lip
+quivered slightly, but she recalled herself, and looking imploringly,
+yet hopelessly, at Jack, gasped, “And that's what's the matter!”
+
+Jack fixed his eyes keenly upon her. “And you?” he said curtly.
+
+“I?” she repeated wonderingly.
+
+“Yes, what have YOU done?” he said, with sudden sharpness.
+
+The wonder was so apparent in her eyes that his keen glance softened.
+“Why,” she said bewilderingly, “I have been his dog, his slave,--as far
+as he would let me. I have done everything; I have not been out of the
+house until he almost drove me out. I have never wanted to go anywhere
+or see any one; but he has always insisted upon it. I would have been
+willing to slave here, day and night, and have been happy. But he said
+I must not seem to be ashamed of my past, when he is not. I would have
+worn common homespun clothes and calico frocks, and been glad of it, but
+he insists upon my wearing my best things, even my theatre things; and
+as he can't afford to buy more, I wear these things I had. I know they
+look beastly here, and that I'm a laughing-stock, and when I go out
+I wear almost anything to try and hide them; but,” her lip quivered
+dangerously again, “he wants me to do it, and it pleases him.”
+
+Jack looked down. After a pause he lifted his lashes towards her
+draggled skirt, and said in an easier, conversational tone, “Yes! I
+thought I knew that dress. I gave it to you for that walking scene in
+'High Life,' didn't I?”
+
+“No,” she said quickly, “it was the blue one with silver
+trimming,--don't you remember? I tried to turn it the first year I was
+married, but it never looked the same.”
+
+“It was sweetly pretty,” said Jack encouragingly, “and with that blue
+hat lined with silver, it was just fetching! Somehow I don't quite
+remember this one,” and he looked at it critically.
+
+“I had it at the races in '58, and that supper Judge Boompointer gave us
+at 'Frisco where Colonel Fish upset the table trying to get at Jim. Do
+you know,” she said, with a little laugh, “it's got the stains of the
+champagne on it yet; it never would come off. See!” and she held the
+candle with great animation to the breadth of silk before her.
+
+“And there's more of it on the sleeve,” said Jack; “isn't there?”
+
+Mrs. Rylands looked reproachfully at Jack.
+
+“That isn't champagne; don't you know what it is?”
+
+“No!”
+
+“It's blood,” she said gravely; “when that Mexican cut poor Ned so
+bad,--don't you remember? I held his head upon my arm while you bandaged
+him.” She heaved a little sigh, and then added, with a faint laugh,
+“That's the worst thing about the clothes of a girl in the profession,
+they get spoiled or stained before they wear out.”
+
+This large truth did not seem to impress Mr. Hamlin. “Why did you leave
+Santa Clara?” he said abruptly, in his previous critical tone.
+
+“Because of the folks there. They were standoffish and ugly. You see,
+Josh”--
+
+“Who?”
+
+“Josh Rylands!--HIM! He told everybody who I was, even those who had
+never seen me in the bills,--how good I was to marry him, how he had
+faith in me and wasn't ashamed,--until they didn't believe we were
+married at all. So they looked another way when they met us, and didn't
+call. And all the while I was glad they didn't, but he wouldn't believe
+it, and allowed I was pining on account of it.”
+
+“And were you?”
+
+“I swear to God, Jack, I'd have been content, and more, to have been
+just there with him, seein' nobody, letting every one believe I was dead
+and gone, but he said it was wrong, and weak! Maybe it was,” she added,
+with a shy, interrogating look at Jack, of which, however, he took no
+notice. “Then when he found they wouldn't call, what do you think he
+did?”
+
+“Beat you, perhaps,” suggested Jack cheerfully.
+
+“He never did a thing to me that wasn't straight out, square, and kind,”
+ she said, half indignantly, half hopelessly. “He thought if HIS kind
+of people wouldn't see me, I might like to see my own sort. So without
+saying anything to me, he brought down, of all things! Tinkie Clifford,
+she that used to dance in the cheap variety shows at 'Frisco, and her
+particular friend, Captain Sykes. It would have just killed you, Jack,”
+ she said, with a sudden hysteric burst of laughter, “to have seen Josh,
+in his square, straight-out way, trying to be civil and help things
+along. But,” she went on, as suddenly relapsing into her former attitude
+of worried appeal, “I couldn't stand it, and when she got to talking
+free and easy before Josh, and Captain Sykes to guzzling champagne,
+she and me had a row. She allowed I was putting on airs, and I made her
+walk, in spite of Josh.”
+
+“And Josh seemed to like it,” said Hamlin carelessly. “Has he seen her
+since?”
+
+“No; I reckon he's cured of asking that kind of company for me. And then
+we came here. But I persuaded him not to begin by going round telling
+people who I was,--as he did the last time,--but to leave it to folks to
+find out if they wanted to, and he gave in. Then he let me fix up this
+house and furnish it my own way, and I did!”
+
+“Do you mean to say that YOU fixed up that family vault of a
+sitting-room?” said Jack, in horror.
+
+“Yes, I didn't want any fancy furniture or looking-glasses, and such
+like, to attract folks, nor anything to look like the old times. I don't
+think any of the boys would care to come here. And I got rid of a lot of
+sporting travelers, 'wild-cat' managers, and that kind of tramp in this
+way. But”--She hesitated, and her face fell again.
+
+“But what?” said Jack.
+
+“I don't think that Josh likes it either. He brought home the other day
+'My Johnny is a Shoemakiyure,' and wanted me to try it on the organ. But
+it reminded me how we used to get just sick of singing it on and off the
+boards, and I couldn't touch it. He wanted me to go to the circus that
+was touring over at the cross roads, but it was the old Flanigin's
+circus, you know, the one Gussie Riggs used to ride in, with its old
+clown and its old ringmaster and the old 'wheezes,' and I chucked it.”
+
+“Look here,” said Jack, rising and surveying Mrs. Rylands critically.
+“If you go on at this gait, I'll tell you what that man of yours will
+do. He'll bolt with some of your old friends!”
+
+She turned a quick, scared face upon him for an instant. But only for
+an instant. Her hysteric little laugh returned, at once, followed by her
+weary, worried look. “No, Jack, you don't know him! If it was only that!
+He cares only for me in his own way,--and,” she stammered as she went
+on, “I've no luck in making him happy.”
+
+She stopped. The wind shook the house and fired a volley of rain
+against the windows. She took advantage of it to draw a torn lace-edged
+handkerchief from her pocket behind, and keeping the tail of her eyes in
+a frightened fashion on Jack, applied the handkerchief furtively, first
+to her nose, and then to her eyes.
+
+“Don't do that,” said Jack fastidiously, “it's wet enough outside.”
+ Nevertheless, he stood up and gazed at her.
+
+“Well,” he began.
+
+She timidly drew nearer to him, and took a seat on the kitchen table,
+looking up wistfully into his eyes.
+
+“Well,” resumed Jack argumentatively, “if he won't 'chuck' you, why
+don't you 'chuck' HIM?”
+
+She turned quite white, and suddenly dropped her eyes. “Yes,” she said,
+almost inaudibly, “lots of girls would do that.”
+
+“I don't mean go back to your old life,” continued Jack. “I reckon
+you've had enough of that. But get into some business, you know, like
+other women. A bonnet shop, or a candy shop for children, see? I'll
+help start you. I've got a couple of hundred, if not in my own pocket
+in somebody's else, just burning to be used! And then you can look about
+you; and perhaps some square business man will turn up and you can marry
+him. You know you can't live this way, nohow. It's killing you; it ain't
+fair on you, nor on Rylands either.”
+
+“No,” she said quickly, “it ain't fair on HIM. I know it, I know it
+isn't, I know it isn't,” she repeated, “only”--She stopped.
+
+“Only what?” said Jack impatiently.
+
+She did not speak. After a pause she picked up the rolling-pin from
+the table and began absently rolling it down her lap to her knee, as
+if pressing out the stained silk skirt. “Only,” she stammered, slowly
+rolling the pin handles in her open palms, “I--I can't leave Josh.”
+
+“Why can't you?” said Jack quickly.
+
+“Because--because--I,” she went on, with a quivering lip, working the
+rolling-pin heavily down her knee as if she were crushing her answer out
+of it,--“because--I--love him!”
+
+There was a pause, a dash of rain against the window, and another dash
+from her eyes upon her hands, the rolling-pin, and the skirts she had
+gathered up hastily, as she cried, “O Jack! Jack! I never loved anybody
+like him! I never knew what love was! I never knew a man like him
+before! There never WAS one before!”
+
+To this large, comprehensive, and passionate statement Mr. Jack Hamlin
+made no reply. An audacity so supreme had conquered his. He walked to
+the window, looked out upon the dark, rain-filmed pane that, however,
+reflected no equal change in his own dark eyes, and then returned and
+walked round the kitchen table. When he was at her back, without looking
+at her, he reached out his hand, took her passive one that lay on the
+table in his, grasped it heartily for a single moment, laid it gently
+down, and returned around the table, where he again confronted her
+cheerfully face to face.
+
+“You'll make the riffle yet,” he said quietly. “Just now I don't see
+what I could do, or where I could chip in your little game; but if I DO,
+or you do, count me in and let me know. You know where to write,--my old
+address at Sacramento.” He walked to the corner, took up his still wet
+serape, threw it over his shoulders, and picked up his broad-brimmed
+riding-hat.
+
+“You're not going, Jack?” she said hesitatingly, as she rubbed her wet
+eyes into a consciousness of his movements. “You'll wait to see HIM?
+He'll be here in an hour.”
+
+“I've been here too long already,” said Jack. “And the less you say
+about my calling, even accidentally, the better. Nobody will believe
+it,--YOU didn't yourself. In fact, unless you see how I can help you,
+the sooner you consider us all dead and buried, the sooner your luck
+will change. Tell your girl I've found my own horse so much better that
+I have pushed on with him, and give her that.”
+
+He threw a gold coin on the table.
+
+“But your horse is still lame,” she said wonderingly. “What will you do
+in this storm?”
+
+“Get into the cover of the next wood and camp out. I've done it before.”
+
+“But, Jack!”
+
+He suddenly made a slight gesture of warning. His quick ear had caught
+the approach of footsteps along the wet gravel outside. A mischievous
+light slid into his dark eyes as he coolly moved backward to the door
+and, holding it open, said, in a remarkably clear and distinct voice:--
+
+“Yes, as you say, society is becoming very mixed and frivolous
+everywhere, and you'd scarcely know San Francisco now. So delighted,
+however, to have made your acquaintance, and regret my business prevents
+my waiting to see your good husband. So odd that I should have known
+your Aunt Jemima! But, as you say, the world is very small, after all. I
+shall tell the deacon how well you are looking,--in spite of the kitchen
+smoke in your eyes. Good-by! A thousand thanks for your hospitality.”
+
+And Jack, bowing profoundly to the ground, backed out upon Jane, the
+hired man, and the expressman, treading, I grieve to say, with some
+deliberation upon the toes of the two latter, in order, possibly, that
+in their momentary pain and discomposure they might not scan too closely
+the face of this ingenious gentleman, as he melted into the night and
+the storm.
+
+Jane entered, with a slight toss of her head.
+
+“Here's your expressman,--ef you're wantin' him NOW.”
+
+Mrs. Rylands was too preoccupied to notice her handmaiden's significant
+emphasis, as she indicated a fresh-looking, bashful young fellow, whose
+confusion was evidently heightened by the unexpected egress of Mr.
+Hamlin, and the point-blank presence of the handsome Mrs. Rylands.
+
+“Oh, certainly,” said Mrs. Rylands quickly. “So kind of him to oblige
+us. Give him the order, Jane, please.”
+
+She turned to escape from the kitchen and these new intruders, when her
+eye fell upon the coin left by Mr. Hamlin. “The gentleman wished you to
+take that for your trouble, Jane,” she said hastily, pointing to it, and
+passed out.
+
+Jane cast a withering look after her retreating skirts, and picking the
+coin from the table, turned to the hired man. “Run to the stable after
+that dandified young feller, Dick, and hand that back to him. Ye kin say
+that Jane Mackinnon don't run arrants fur money, nor play gooseberry to
+other folks fur fun.”
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+Mr. Joshua Rylands had, according to the vocabulary of his class, “found
+grace” at the age of sixteen, while still in the spiritual state of
+“original sin” and the political one of Missouri. He had not indeed
+found it by persistent youthful seeking or spiritual insight, but
+somewhat violently and turbulently at a camp-meeting. A village boy,
+naturally gentle and impressible, with an original character,--limited,
+however, in education and experience,--he had, after his first rustic
+debauch with some vulgar companions, fallen upon the camp-meeting in
+reckless audacity; and instead of being handed over to the district
+constable, was taken in and placed upon “the anxious bench,” “rastled
+with,” and exhorted by a strong revivalist preacher, “convicted of sin,”
+ and--converted! It is doubtful if the shame of a public arrest and legal
+punishment would have impressed his youthful spirit as much as did this
+spiritual examination and trial, in which he himself became accuser.
+Howbeit, its effect, though punitive, was also exemplary. He at once
+cast off his evil companions; remaining faithful to his conversion, in
+spite of their later “backslidings.” When, after the Western fashion,
+the time came for him to forsake his father's farm and seek a new
+“quarter section” on some more remote frontier, he carried into that
+secluded, lonely, half-monkish celibacy of pioneer life--which has been
+the foundation of so much strong Western character--more than the usual
+religious feeling. At once industrious and adventurous, he lived by “the
+Word,” as he called it, and Nature as he knew it,--tempted by none of
+the vices or sentiments of civilization. When he finally joined the
+Californian emigration, it was not as a gold-seeker, but as a discoverer
+of new agricultural fields; if the hardship was as great and the rewards
+fewer, he nevertheless knew that he retained his safer isolation and
+independence of spirit. Vice and civilization were to him synonymous
+terms; it was the natural condition of the worldly and unregenerate.
+Such was the man who chanced to meet “Nell Montgomery, the Pearl of the
+Variety Stage,” on the Sacramento boat, in one of his forced visits
+to civilization. Without knowing her in her profession, her frank
+exposition of herself did not startle him; he recognized it, accepted
+it, and strove to convert it. And as long as this daughter of Folly
+forsook her evil ways for him, it was a triumph in which there was no
+shame, and might be proclaimed from the housetop. When his neighbors
+thought differently, and avoided them, he saw no inconsistency in
+bringing his wife's old friends to divert her: she might in time convert
+THEM. He had no more fear of her returning to their ways than he had
+of himself “backsliding.” Narrow as was his creed, he had none of the
+harshness nor pessimism of the bigot. With the keenest self-scrutiny,
+his credulity regarding others was touching.
+
+The storm was still raging when he alighted that evening from the up
+coach at the trail nearest his house. Although incumbered with a
+heavy carpet-bag, he started resignedly on his two-mile tramp without
+begrudging the neighborly act of his wife which had deprived him of
+his horse. It was “like her” to do these things in her good-humored
+abstraction, an abstraction, however, that sometimes worried him, from
+the fear that it indicated some unhappiness with her present lot. He was
+longing to rejoin her after his absence of three days, the longest time
+they had been separated since their marriage, and he hurried on with
+a certain lover-like excitement, quite new to his usually calm and
+temperate blood.
+
+Struggling with the storm and darkness, but always with the happy
+consciousness of drawing nearer to her in that struggle, he labored on,
+finding his perilous way over the indistinguishable trail by certain
+landmarks in the distance, visible only to his pioneer eye. That heavier
+shadow to the right was not the hillside, but the SLOPE to the distant
+hill; that low, regular line immediately before him was not a fence or
+wall, but the line of distant gigantic woods, a mile from his home. Yet
+as he began to descend the slope towards the wood, he stopped and rubbed
+his eyes. There was distinctly a light in it. His first idea was that he
+had lost the trail and was nearing the woodman Mackinnon's cabin. But a
+more careful scrutiny revealed to him that it was really the wood, and
+the light was a camp-fire. It was a rough night for camping out, but
+they were probably some belated prospectors.
+
+When he had reached the fringe of woodland, he could see quite plainly
+that the fire was built beside one of the large pines, and that the
+little encampment, which looked quite comfortable and secluded from the
+storm-beaten trail, was occupied apparently by a single figure. By the
+good glow of the leaping fire, that figure standing erect before it,
+elegantly shaped, in the graceful folds of a serape, looked singularly
+romantic and picturesque, and reminded Joshua Rylands--whose ideas of
+art were purely reminiscent of boyish reading--of some picture in a
+novel. The heavy black columns of the pines, glancing out of the concave
+shadow, also seemed a fitting background to what might have been a scene
+in a play. So strongly was he impressed by it that but for his anxiety
+to reach his home, still a mile distant, and the fact that he was
+already late, he would have penetrated the wood and the seclusion of the
+stranger with an offer of hospitality for the night. The man, however,
+was evidently capable of taking care of himself, and the outline of a
+tethered horse was faintly visible under another tree. It might be
+a surveyor or engineer,--the only men of a better class who were
+itinerant.
+
+But another and even greater surprise greeted him as he toiled up the
+rocky slope towards his farmhouse. The windows of the sitting-room,
+which were usually blank and black by night, were glittering with
+unfamiliar light. Like most farmers, he seldom used the room except for
+formal company, his wife usually avoiding it, and even he himself now
+preferred the dining-room or the kitchen. His first suggestion that his
+wife had visitors gave him a sense of pleasure on her account, mingled,
+however, with a slight uneasiness of his own which he could not account
+for. More than that, as he approached nearer he could hear the swell of
+the organ above the roar of the swaying pines, and the cadences were
+not of a devotional character. He hesitated for a moment, as he had
+hesitated at the fire in the woods; yet it was surely his own house! He
+hurried to the door, opened it; not only the light of the sitting-room
+streamed into the hall, but the ruddier glow of an actual fire in the
+disused grate! The familiar dark furniture had been rearranged to catch
+some of the glow and relieve its sombreness. And his wife, rising from
+the music-stool, was the room's only occupant!
+
+Mrs. Rylands gazed anxiously and timidly at her husband's astonished
+face, as he threw off his waterproof and laid down his carpet-bag. Her
+own face was a little flurried with excitement, and his, half hidden in
+his tawny beard, and, possibly owing to his self-introspective nature,
+never spontaneously sympathetic, still expressed only wonder! Mrs.
+Rylands was a little frightened. It is sometimes dangerous to meddle
+with a man's habits, even when he has grown weary of them.
+
+“I thought,” she began hesitatingly, “that it would be more cheerful for
+you in here, this stormy evening. I thought you might like to put your
+wet things to dry in the kitchen, and we could sit here together, after
+supper, alone.”
+
+I am afraid that Mrs. Rylands did not offer all her thoughts. Ever
+since Mr. Hamlin's departure she had been uneasy and excited, sometimes
+falling into fits of dejection, and again lighting up into hysterical
+levity; at other times carefully examining her wardrobe, and then with a
+sudden impulse rushing downstairs again to give orders for her husband's
+supper, and to make the extraordinary changes in the sitting-room
+already noted. Only a few moments before he arrived, she had covertly
+brought down a piece of music, and put aside the hymn-books, and taken,
+with a little laugh, a pack of cards from her pocket, which she placed
+behind the already dismantled vase on the chimney.
+
+“I reckoned you had company, Ellen,” he said gravely, kissing her.
+
+“No,” she said quickly. “That is,” she stopped with a sudden surge of
+color in her face that startled her, “there was--a man--here, in the
+kitchen--who had a lame horse, and who wanted to get a fresh one. But
+he went away an hour ago. And he wasn't in this room--at least, after it
+was fixed up. So I've had no company.”
+
+She felt herself again blushing at having blushed, and a little
+terrified. There was no reason for it. But for Jack's warning, she would
+have been quite ready to tell her husband all. She had never blushed
+before him over her past life; why she should now blush over seeing
+Jack, of all people! made her utter a little hysterical laugh. I am
+afraid that this experienced little woman took it for granted that her
+husband knew that if Jack or any man had been there as a clandestine
+lover, she would not have blushed at all. Yet with all her experience,
+she did not know that she had blushed simply because it was to Jack that
+she had confessed that she loved the man before her. Her husband noted
+the blush as part of her general excitement. He permitted her to drag
+him into the room and seat him before the hearth, where she sank down on
+one knee to pull off his heavy rubber boots. But he waved her aside at
+this, pulled them off with his own hands, and let her take them to the
+kitchen and bring back his slippers. By this time a smile had lighted
+up his hard face. The room was certainly more comfortable and cheerful.
+Still he was a little worried; was there not in these changes a falling
+away from the grace of self-abnegation which she had so sedulously
+practiced?
+
+When supper was served by Jane, in the dull dining-room, Mr. Rylands,
+had he not been more engaged in these late domestic changes, might
+have noticed that the Missouri girl waited upon him with a certain
+commiserating air that was remarkable by its contrast with the frigid
+ceremonious politeness with which she attended her mistress. It had not
+escaped Mrs. Rylands, however, who ever since Jack's abrupt departure
+had noticed this change in the girl's demeanor to herself, and with
+a woman's intuitive insight of another woman, had fathomed it. The
+comfortable tete-a-tete with Jack, which Jane had looked forward to,
+Mrs. Rylands had anticipated herself, and then sent him off! When Joshua
+thanked his wife for remembering the pepper-sauce, and Mrs. Rylands
+pathetically admitted her forgetfulness, the head-toss which Jane
+gave as she left the room was too marked to be overlooked by him. Mrs.
+Rylands gave a hysterical little laugh. “I am afraid Jane doesn't like
+my sending away the expressman just after I had also dismissed the
+stranger whom she had taken a fancy to, and left her without company,”
+ she said unwisely.
+
+Mr. Rylands did not laugh. “I reckon,” he returned slowly, “that Jane
+must feel kinder lonely; she bears all the burden of our bein' outer the
+world, without any of our glory in the cause of it.”
+
+Nevertheless, when supper was over, and the pair were seated in the
+sitting-room before the fire, this episode was forgotten. Mrs. Rylands
+produced her husband's pipe and tobacco-pouch. He looked around the
+formal walls and hesitated. He had been in the habit of smoking in the
+kitchen.
+
+“Why not here?” said Mrs. Rylands, with a sudden little note of
+decision. “Why should we keep this room only for company that don't
+come? I call it silly.”
+
+This struck Mr. Rylands as logical. Besides, undoubtedly the fire had
+mellowed the room. After a puff or two he looked at his wife musingly.
+“Couldn't you make yourself one of them cigarettys, as they call 'em?
+Here's the tobacco, and I'll get you the paper.”
+
+“I COULD,” she said tentatively. Then suddenly, “What made you think of
+it? You never saw ME smoke!”
+
+“No,” said Rylands, “but that lady, your old friend, Miss Clifford,
+does, and I thought you might be hankering after it.”
+
+“How do you know Tinkie Clifford smokes?” said Mrs. Rylands quickly.
+
+“She lit a cigaretty that day she called.”
+
+“I hate it,” said Mrs. Rylands shortly.
+
+Mr. Rylands nodded approval, and puffed meditatively.
+
+“Josh, have you seen that girl since?”
+
+“No,” said Joshua.
+
+“Nor any other girl like her?”
+
+“No,” said Joshua wonderingly. “You see I only got to know her on your
+account, Ellen, that she might see you.”
+
+“Well, don't you do it any more! None of 'em! Promise me!” She leaned
+forward eagerly in her chair.
+
+“But Ellen,”--her husband began gravely.
+
+“I know what you're going to say, but they can't do me any good, and you
+can't do them any good as you did ME, so there!”
+
+Mr. Rylands was silent, and smiled meditatively.
+
+“Josh!”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“When you met me that night on the Sacramento boat, and looked at me,
+did you--did I,” she hesitated,--“did you look at me because I had been
+crying?”
+
+“I thought you were troubled in spirit, and looked so.”
+
+“I suppose I looked worried, of course; I had no time to change or even
+fix my hair; I had on that green dress, and it NEVER was becoming. And
+you only spoke to me on account of my awful looks?”
+
+“I saw only your wrestling soul, Ellen, and I thought you needed comfort
+and help.”
+
+She was silent for a moment, and then, leaning forward, picked up the
+poker and began to thrust it absently between the bars.
+
+“And if it had been some other girl crying and looking awful, you'd have
+spoken to her all the same?”
+
+This was a new idea to Mr. Rylands, but with most men logic is supreme.
+“I suppose I would,” he said slowly.
+
+“And married her?” She rattled the bars of the grate with the poker as
+if to drown the inevitable reply.
+
+Mr. Rylands loved the woman before him, but it pleased him to think that
+he loved truth better. “If it had been necessary to her salvation, yes,”
+ he said.
+
+“Not Tinkie?” she said suddenly.
+
+“SHE never would have been in your contrite condition.”
+
+“Much you know! Girls like that can cry as well as laugh, just as they
+want to. Well! I suppose I DID look horrid.” Nevertheless, she seemed
+to gain some gratification from her husband's reply, and changed
+the subject as if fearful of losing that satisfaction by further
+questioning.
+
+“I tried some of those songs you brought, but I don't think they go
+well with the harmonium,” she said, pointing to some music on its rack,
+“except one. Just listen.” She rose, and with the same nervous quickness
+she had shown before, went to the instrument and began to sing and play.
+There was a hopeless incongruity between the character of the instrument
+and the spirit of the song. Mrs. Rylands's voice was rather forced and
+crudely trained, but Joshua Rylands, sitting there comfortably slippered
+by the fire and conscious of the sheeted rain against the window, felt
+it good. Presently he arose, and lounging heavily over to the fair
+performer, leaned down and imprinted a kiss on the labyrinthine fringes
+of her hair. At which Mrs. Rylands caught blindly at his hand nearest
+her, and without lifting her other hand from the keys, or her eyes from
+the music, said tentatively:--
+
+“You know there's a chorus just here! Why can't you try it with me?”
+
+Mr. Rylands hesitated a moment, then, with a preliminary cough, lifted a
+voice as crude as hers, but powerful through much camp-meeting exercise,
+and roared a chorus which was remarkable chiefly for requiring that
+archness and playfulness in execution which he lacked. As the whole
+house seemed to dilate with the sound, and the wind outside to withhold
+its fury, Mr. Rylands felt that physical delight which children feel
+in personal outcry, and was grateful to his wife for the opportunity.
+Laying his hand affectionately on her shoulder, he noticed for the first
+time that she was in a kind of evening-dress, and that her delicate
+white shoulder shone through the black lace that enveloped it.
+
+For an instant Mr. Rylands was shocked at this unwonted exposure. He
+had never seen his wife in evening-dress before. It was true they were
+alone, and in their own sitting-room, but the room was still invested
+with that formality and publicity which seemed to accent this
+indiscretion. The simple-minded frontier man's mind went back to Jane,
+to the hired man, to the expressman, the stranger, all of whom might
+have noticed it also.
+
+“You have a new dress,” he said slowly, “have you worn it all day?”
+
+“No,” she said, with a timid smile. “I only put it on just before you
+came. It's the one I used to wear in the ballroom scene in 'Gay Times in
+'Frisco.' You don't know it, I know. I thought I would wear it tonight,
+and then,” she suddenly grasped his hand, “you'll let me put all these
+things away forever! Won't you, Josh? I've seen such nice pretty calico
+at the store to-day, and I can make up one or two home dresses, like
+Jane's, only better fitting, of course. In fact, I asked them to send
+the roll up here to-morrow for you to see.”
+
+Mr. Rylands felt relieved. Perhaps his views had changed about the moral
+effect of her retaining these symbols of her past, for he consented to
+the calico dresses, not, however, without an inward suspicion that she
+would not look so well in them, and that the one she had on was more
+becoming.
+
+Meantime she tried another piece of music. It was equally incongruous
+and slightly Bacchantic.
+
+“There used to be a mighty pretty dance went to that,” she said, nodding
+her head in time with the music, and assisting the heavily spasmodic
+attempts of the instrument with the pleasant levity of her voice. “I
+used to do it.”
+
+“Ye might try it now, Ellen,” suggested her husband, with a
+half-frightened, half-amused tolerance.
+
+“YOU play, then,” said Mrs. Rylands quickly, offering her seat to him.
+
+Mr. Rylands sat down to the harmonium, as Mrs. Rylands briskly moved
+the table and chairs against the wall. Mr. Rylands played slowly and
+strenuously, as from a conscientious regard of the instrument. Mrs.
+Rylands stood in the centre of the floor, making a rather pretty,
+animated picture, as she again stimulated the heavy harmonium swell not
+only with her voice but her hands and feet. Presently she began to skip.
+
+I should warn the reader here that this was before the “shawl” or
+“skirt” dancing was in vogue, and I am afraid that pretty Mrs. Rylands's
+performances would now be voted slow. Her silk skirt and frilled
+petticoat were lifted just over her small ankles and tiny bronze-kid
+shoes. In the course of a pirouette or two, there was a slight further
+revelation of blue silk stockings and some delicate embroidery, but
+really nothing more than may be seen in the sweep of a modern waltz.
+Suddenly the music ceased. Mr. Rylands had left the harmonium and walked
+over to the hearth. Mrs. Rylands stopped, and came towards him with a
+flushed, anxious face.
+
+“It don't seem to go right, does it?” she said, with her nervous laugh.
+“I suppose I'm getting too old now, and I don't quite remember it.”
+
+“Better forget it altogether,” he replied gravely. He stopped at seeing
+a singular change in her face, and added awkwardly, “When I told you I
+didn't want you to be ashamed of your past, nor to try to forget what
+you were, I didn't mean such things as that!”
+
+“What did you mean?” she said timidly.
+
+The truth was that Mr. Rylands did not know. He had known this sort of
+thing only in the abstract. He had never had the least acquaintance with
+the class to which his wife had belonged, nor known anything of their
+methods. It was a revelation to him now, in the woman he loved, and who
+was his wife. He was not shocked so much as he was frightened.
+
+“You shall have the dress to-morrow, Ellen,” he said gently, “and
+you can put away these gewgaws. You don't need to look like Tinkie
+Clifford.”
+
+He did not see the look of triumph that lit up her eye, but added, “Go
+on and play.”
+
+She sat down obediently to the instrument. He watched her for a few
+moments from the toe of her kid slipper on the pedals to the swell
+of her shoulders above the keyboard, with a strange, abstracted face.
+Presently she stopped and came over to him.
+
+“And when I've got these nice calico frocks, and you can't tell me from
+Jane, and I'm a good housekeeper, and settle down to be a farmer's wife,
+maybe I'll have a secret to tell you.”
+
+“A secret?” he repeated gravely. “Why not now?”
+
+Her face was quite aglow with excitement and a certain timid mischief as
+she laughed: “Not while you are so solemn. It can wait.”
+
+He looked at his watch. “I must give some orders to Jim about the stock
+before he turns in,” he said.
+
+“He's gone to the stables already,” said Mrs. Rylands.
+
+“No matter; I can go there and find him.”
+
+“Shall I bring your boots?” she said quickly.
+
+“I'll put them on when I pass through the kitchen. I won't be long away.
+Now go to bed. You are looking tired,” he said gently, as he gazed at
+the drawn lines about her eyes and mouth. Her former pretty color
+struck him also as having changed of late, and as being irregular and
+inharmonious.
+
+As Mrs. Rylands obediently ascended the stairs she heaved a faint sigh,
+her only recognition of her husband's criticism. He turned and passed
+quickly into the kitchen. He wanted to be alone to collect his thoughts.
+But he was surprised to find Jane still there, sitting bolt upright in
+a chair in the corner. Apparently she had been expecting him, for as he
+entered she stood up, and wiped her cheek and mouth with one hand, as if
+to compress her lips the more tightly.
+
+“I reckoned,” she began, “that unless you war for forgettin' everythin'
+in these yer goings on, ye'd be passin' through here to tend to your
+stock. I've got a word to say to ye, Mr. Rylands. When I first kem over
+here to help, I got word from the folks around that your wife afore
+you married her was just one o' them bally dancers. Well, that was YOUR
+lookout, not mine! Jane Mackinnon ain't the kind to take everybody's
+sayin' as gospil, but she kalkilates to treat folks ez she finds 'em.
+When she finds 'em lyin' and deceivin'; when she finds em purtendin' one
+thing and doin' another; when she finds 'em makin' fools tumble to 'em;
+playing soots on their own husbands, and turnin' an honest house into a
+music-hall and a fandango shop, she kicks! You hear me! Jane Mackinnon
+kicks!”
+
+“What do you mean?” said Mr. Rylands sternly.
+
+“I mean,” said Miss Mackinnon, striking her hips with the back of her
+hands smartly, and accenting each word that dropped like a bullet from
+her mouth with an additional blow,--“I--mean--that--your--wife--had
+one--of--her--old--hangers-on--from--'Frisco--here--in--this
+very--kitchen--all--the--arternoon; there! I mean that whiles she was
+waitin' here for you, she was canoodlin' and cryin' over old times with
+him! I saw her myself through the winder. That's what I mean, Mr. Joshua
+Rylands.”
+
+“It's false! She had some poor stranger here with a lame horse. She told
+me so herself.”
+
+Jane Mackinnon laughed shrilly.
+
+“Did she tell you that the poor stranger was young and pretty-faced,
+with black moustarches? that his store clothes must have cost a fortin,
+saying nothing of his gold-lined, broadcloth sarrapper? Did she say that
+his horse was so lame that when I went to get another he wouldn't WAIT
+for it? Did she tell you WHO he was?”
+
+“No, she did not know,” said Rylands sternly, but with a whitening face.
+
+“Well, I'll tell you! The gambler, the shooter!--the man whose name
+is black enough to stain any woman he knows. Jim recognized him like
+a shot; he sez, the moment he clapped eyes on him at the door, 'Dod
+blasted, if it ain't Jack Hamlin!'”
+
+Little as Mr. Rylands knew of the world, he had heard that name. But it
+was not THAT he was thinking of. He was thinking of the camp-fire in the
+wood, the handsome figure before it, the tethered horse. He was thinking
+of the lighted sitting-room, the fire, his wife's bare shoulders, her
+slippers, stockings, and the dance. He saw it all,--a lightning-flash to
+his dull imagination. The room seemed to expand and then grow smaller,
+the figure of Jane to sway backwards and forwards before him. He
+murmured the name of God with lips that were voiceless, caught at the
+kitchen table to steady himself, held it till he felt his arms grow
+rigid, and then recovered himself,--white, cold, and sane.
+
+“Speak a word of this to HER,” he said deliberately, “enter her room
+while I'm gone, even leave the kitchen before I come back, and I'll
+throw you into the road. Tell that hired man, if he dares to breathe it
+to a soul I'll strangle him.”
+
+The unlooked-for rage of this quiet, God-fearing man, and dupe, as she
+believed, was terrible, but convincing. She shrank back into the corner
+as he coolly drew on his boots and waterproof, and without another word
+left the house.
+
+He knew what he was going to do as well as if it had been ordained for
+him. He knew he would find the young man in the wood; for whatever were
+the truth of the other stories, he and the visitor were identical; he
+had seen him with his own eyes. He would confront him face to face and
+know all; and until then, he could not see his wife again. He walked on
+rapidly, but without feverishness or mental confusion. He saw his duty
+plainly,--if Ellen had “backslidden,” he must give her another trial.
+These were his articles of faith. He should not put her away; but she
+should nevermore be wife to him. It was HE who had tempted her, it was
+true; perhaps God would forgive her for that reason, but HE could never
+love her again.
+
+The fury of the storm had somewhat abated as he reached the wood. The
+fire was still there, but no longer a leaping flame. A dull glow in
+the darkness of the forest aisles was all that indicated its position.
+Rylands at once plunged in that direction; he was near enough to see the
+red embers when he heard a sharp click, and a voice called:--
+
+“Hold up!”
+
+Mr. Hamlin was a light sleeper. The crackle of underbrush had been
+enough to disturb him. The voice was his; the click was the cocking of
+his revolver.
+
+Rylands was no coward, but halted diplomatically.
+
+“Now, then,” said Mr. Hamlin's voice, “a little more this way, IN THE
+LIGHT, if you please!”
+
+Rylands moved as directed, and saw Mr. Hamlin lying before the fire,
+resting easily on one hand, with his revolver in the other.
+
+“Thank you!” said Jack. “Excuse my precautions, but it is night, and
+this is, for the present, my bedroom.”
+
+“My name is Rylands; you called at my house this afternoon and saw my
+wife,” said Rylands slowly.
+
+“I did,” said Hamlin. “It was mighty kind of you to return my call so
+soon, but I didn't expect it.”
+
+“I reckon not. But I know who you are, and that you are an old associate
+of hers, in the days of her sin and unregeneration. I want you to answer
+me, before God and man, what was your purpose in coming there to-day?”
+
+“Look here! I don't think it's necessary to drag in strangers to hear my
+answer,” said Jack, lying down again, “but I came to borrow a horse.”
+
+“Is that the truth?”
+
+Jack got upon his feet very solemnly, put on his hat, drew down his
+waistcoat, and approached Mr. Rylands with his hands in his pockets.
+
+“Mr. Rylands,” he said, with great suavity of manner, “this is the
+second time today that I have had the honor of having my word doubted by
+your family. Your wife was good enough to question my assertion that I
+didn't know that she was living here, but that was a woman's vanity. You
+have no such excuse. There is my horse yonder, lame, as you may see. I
+didn't lame him for the sake of seeing your wife nor you.”
+
+There was that in Mr. Hamlin's audacity and perfect self-possession
+which, even while it irritated, never suggested deceit. He was too
+reckless of consequence to lie. Mr. Rylands was staggered and half
+convinced. Nevertheless, he hesitated.
+
+“Dare you tell me everything that happened between my wife and you?”
+
+“Dare you listen?” said Mr. Hamlin quietly.
+
+Mr. Rylands turned a little white. After a moment he said:--
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Good!” said Mr. Hamlin. “I like your grit, though I don't mind telling
+you it's the ONLY thing I like about you. Sit down. Well, I haven't seen
+Nell Montgomery for three years until I met her as your wife, at your
+house. She was surprised as I was, and frightened as I wasn't. She spent
+the whole interview in telling me the history of her marriage and her
+life with you, and nothing more. I cannot say that it was remarkably
+entertaining, or that she was as amusing as your wife as she was as Nell
+Montgomery, the variety actress. When she had finished, I came away.”
+
+Mr. Rylands, who had seated himself, made a movement as if to rise. But
+Mr. Hamlin laid his hand on his knee.
+
+“I asked you if you dared to listen. I have something myself to say of
+that interview. I found your wife wearing the old dresses that other men
+had given her, and she said she wore them because she thought it pleased
+you. I found that you, who are questioning my calling upon her, had
+already got the worst of her old chums to visit her without asking her
+consent; I found that instead of being the first one to lie for her
+and hide her, you were the first one to tell anybody her history, just
+because you thought it was to the glory of God generally, and of Joshua
+Rylands in particular.”
+
+“A man's motives are his own,” stammered Rylands.
+
+“Sorry you didn't see it when you questioned mine just now,” said Jack
+coolly.
+
+“Then she complained to you?” said Rylands hesitatingly.
+
+“I didn't say that,” said Jack shortly.
+
+“But you found her unhappy?”
+
+“Damnably.”
+
+“And you advised her”--said Rylands tentatively.
+
+“I advised her to chuck you and try to get a better husband.” He paused,
+and then added, with a disgusted laugh, “but she didn't tumble to it,
+for a d----d silly reason.”
+
+“What reason?” said Rylands hurriedly.
+
+“Said she LOVED you,” returned Jack, kicking a brand back into the fire.
+Mr. Rylands's white cheeks flamed out suddenly like the brand. Seeing
+which, Jack turned upon him deliberately.
+
+“Mr. Joshua Rylands, I've seen many fools in my time. I've seen men
+holding four aces backed down because they thought they KNEW the other
+man had a royal flush! I've seen a man sell his claim for a wild-cat
+share, with the gold lying a foot below him in the ground he walked on.
+I've seen a dead shot shoot wild because he THOUGHT he saw something in
+the other man's eye. I've seen a heap of God-forsaken fools, but I never
+saw one before who claimed God as a pal. You've got a wife a d----d
+sight truer to you for what you call her 'sin,' than you've ever been
+to her, with all your d----d salvation! And as you couldn't make her
+otherwise, though you've tried to hard enough, it seems to me that for
+square downright chuckle-headedness, you can take the cake! Good-night!
+Now, run away and play! You're making me tired.”
+
+“One moment,” said Mr. Rylands awkwardly and hurriedly. “I may have
+wronged you; I was mistaken. Won't you come back with me and accept
+my--our--hospitality?”
+
+“Not much,” said Jack. “I left your house because I thought it better
+for you and her that no one should know of my being there.”
+
+“But you were already recognized,” said Mr. Rylands. “It was Jane who
+lied about you, and your return with me will confute her slanders.”
+
+“Who?” asked Jack.
+
+“Jane, our hired girl.”
+
+Mr. Hamlin uttered an indescribable laugh.
+
+“That's just as well! You simply tell Jane you SAW me; that I was
+greatly shocked at what she said, but that I forgive her. I don't think
+she'll say any more.”
+
+
+Strange to add, Mr. Hamlin's surmise was correct. Mr. Rylands found Jane
+still in the kitchen alone, terrified, remorseful, yet ever after
+silent on the subject. Stranger still, the hired man became equally
+uncommunicative. Mrs. Rylands, attributing her husband's absence only
+to care of the stock, had gone to bed in a feverish condition, and Mr.
+Rylands did not deem it prudent to tell her of his interview. The next
+day she sent for the doctor, and it was deemed necessary for her to
+keep her bed for a few days. Her husband was singularly attentive and
+considerate during that time, and it was probable that Mrs. Rylands
+seized that opportunity to tell him the secret she spoke of the night
+before. Whatever it was,--for it was not generally known for a few
+months later,--it seemed to draw them closer together, imparted a
+protecting dignity to Joshua Rylands, which took the place of his
+former selfish austerity, gave them a future to talk of confidentially,
+hopefully, and sometimes foolishly, which took the place of their more
+foolish past, and when the roll of calico came from the cross roads, it
+contained also a quantity of fine linen, laces, small caps, and other
+trifles, somewhat in contrast to the more homely materials ordered.
+
+And when three months were past, the sitting-room was often lit up and
+made cheerful, particularly on that supreme occasion when, with a great
+deal of enthusiasm, all the women of the countryside flocked to see Mrs.
+Rylands and her first baby. And a more considerate and devoted couple
+than the father and mother they had never known.
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+
+
+In the early days of the Californian immigration, on the extremest point
+of the sandy peninsula, where the bay of San Francisco debouches into
+the Pacific, there stood a semaphore telegraph. Tossing its black arms
+against the sky,--with its back to the Golden Gate and that vast expanse
+of sea whose nearest shore was Japan,--it signified to another semaphore
+further inland the “rigs” of incoming vessels, by certain uncouth signs,
+which were again passed on to Telegraph Hill, San Francisco, where they
+reappeared on a third semaphore, and read to the initiated “schooner,”
+ “brig” “ship,” or “steamer.” But all homesick San Francisco had learned
+the last sign, and on certain days of the month every eye was turned to
+welcome those gaunt arms widely extended at right angles, which meant
+“sidewheel steamer” (the only steamer which carried the mails) and
+“letters from home.” In the joyful reception accorded to that herald of
+glad tidings, very few thought of the lonely watcher on the sand dunes
+who dispatched them, or even knew of that desolate Station.
+
+For desolate it was beyond description. The Presidio, with its
+voiceless, dismounted cannon and empty embrasures hidden in a hollow,
+and the Mission Dolores, with its crumbling walls and belfry tower lost
+in another, made the ultima thule of all San Francisco wandering. The
+Cliff house and Fort Point did not then exist; from Black Point the
+curving line of shore of “Yerba Buena”--or San Francisco--showed only
+a stretch of glittering wind-swept sand dunes, interspersed with
+straggling gullies of half-buried black “scrub oak.” The long six
+months' summer sun fiercely beat upon it from the cloudless sky above;
+the long six months' trade winds fiercely beat upon it from the west;
+the monotonous roll-call of the long Pacific surges regularly beat upon
+it from the sea. Almost impossible to face by day through sliding sands
+and buffeting winds, at night it was impracticable through the dense
+sea-fog that stole softly through the Golden Gate at sunset. Thence,
+until morning, sea and shore were a trackless waste, bounded only by the
+warning thunders of the unseen sea. The station itself, a rudely built
+cabin, with two windows,--one furnished with a telescope,--looked like
+a heap of driftwood, or a stranded wreck left by the retiring sea; the
+semaphore--the only object for leagues--lifted above the undulating
+dunes, took upon itself various shapes, more or less gloomy, according
+to the hour or weather,--a blasted tree, the masts and clinging spars
+of a beached ship, a dismantled gallows; or, with the background of a
+golden sunset across the Gate, and its arms extended at right angles,
+to a more hopeful fancy it might have seemed the missionary Cross, which
+the enthusiast Portala lifted on that heathen shore a hundred years
+before.
+
+Not that Dick Jarman--the solitary station keeper--ever indulged this
+fancy. An escaped convict from one of her Britannic Majesty's penal
+colonies, a “stowaway” in the hold of an Australian ship, he had landed
+penniless in San Francisco, fearful of contact with his more honest
+countrymen already there, and liable to detection at any moment. Luckily
+for him, the English immigration consisted mainly of gold-seekers en
+route to Sacramento and the southern mines. He was prudent enough to
+resist the temptation to follow them, and accepted the post of semaphore
+keeper,--the first work offered him,--which the meanest immigrant,
+filled with dreams of gold, would have scorned. His employers asked him
+no questions, and demanded no references; his post could be scarcely
+deemed one of trust,--there was no property for him to abscond with but
+the telescope; he was removed from temptation and evil company in his
+lonely waste; his duties were as mechanical as the instrument he worked,
+and interruption of them would be instantly known at San Francisco. For
+this he would receive his board and lodging and seventy-five dollars a
+month,--a sum to be ridiculed in those “flush days,” but which seemed to
+the broken-spirited and half-famished stowaway a princely independence.
+
+And then there was rest and security! He was free from that torturing
+anxiety and fear of detection which had haunted him night and day for
+three months. The ceaseless vigilance and watchful dread he had known
+since his escape, he could lay aside now. The rude cabin on the sand
+dune was to him as the long-sought cave to some hunted animal. It seemed
+impossible that any one would seek him there. He was spared alike the
+contact of his enemies or the shame of recognizing even a friendly face,
+until by each he would be forgotten. From his coign of vantage on that
+desolate waste, and with the aid of his telescope, no stranger could
+approach within two or three miles of his cabin without undergoing his
+scrutiny. And at the worst, if he was pursued here, before him was the
+trackless shore and the boundless sea!
+
+And at times there was a certain satisfaction in watching, unseen and in
+perfect security, the decks of passing ships. With the aid of his glass
+he could mingle again with the world from which he was debarred, and
+gloomily wonder who among those passengers knew their solitary watcher,
+or had heard of his deeds; it might have made him gloomier had he known
+that in those eager faces turned towards the golden haven there was
+little thought of anything but themselves. He tried to read in faces on
+board the few outgoing ships the record of their success with a strange
+envy. They were returning home! HOME! For sometimes--but seldom--he
+thought of his own home and his past. It was a miserable past of forgery
+and embezzlement that had culminated a career of youthful dissipation
+and self-indulgence, and shut him out, forever, from the staid old
+English cathedral town where he was born. He knew that his relations
+believed and wished him dead. He thought of this past with little
+pleasure, but with little remorse. Like most of his stamp, he believed
+it was ill-luck, chance, somebody else's fault, but never his own
+responsible action. He would not repent; he would be wiser only. And he
+would not be retaken--alive!
+
+Two or three months passed in this monotonous duty, in which he partly
+recovered his strength and his nerves. He lost his furtive, restless,
+watchful look; the bracing sea air and the burning sun put into his face
+the healthy tan and the uplifted frankness of a sailor. His eyes grew
+keener from long scanning of the horizon; he knew where to look
+for sails, from the creeping coastwise schooner to the far-rounding
+merchantman from Cape Horn. He knew the faint line of haze that
+indicated the steamer long before her masts and funnels became visible.
+He saw no soul except the solitary boatman of the little “plunger,”
+ who landed his weekly provisions at a small cove hard by. The boatman
+thought his secretiveness and reticence only the surliness of his
+nation, and cared little for a man who never asked for the news, and to
+whom he brought no letters. The long nights which wrapped the cabin in
+sea-fog, and at first seemed to heighten the exile's sense of security,
+by degrees, however, became monotonous, and incited an odd restlessness,
+which he was wont to oppose by whiskey,--allowed as a part of his
+stores,--which, while it dulled his sensibilities, he, however, never
+permitted to interfere with his mechanical duties.
+
+He had been there five months, and the hills on the opposite shore
+between Tamalpais were already beginning to show their russet yellow
+sides. One bright morning he was watching the little fleet of Italian
+fishing-boats hovering in the bay. This was always a picturesque
+spectacle, perhaps the only one that relieved the general monotony of
+his outlook. The quaint lateen sails of dull red, or yellow, showing
+against the sparkling waters, and the red caps or handkerchiefs of the
+fishermen, might have attracted even a more abstracted man. Suddenly one
+of the larger boats tacked, and made directly for the little cove
+where his weekly plunger used to land. In an instant he was alert
+and suspicious. But a close examination of the boat through his glass
+satisfied him that it contained, in addition to the crew, only two or
+three women, apparently the family of the fishermen. As it ran up on
+the beach and the entire party disembarked he could see it was merely
+a careless, peaceable invasion, and he thought no more about it. The
+strangers wandered about the sands, gesticulating and laughing; they
+brought a pot ashore, built a fire, and cooked a homely meal. He
+could see that from time to time the semaphore--evidently a novelty to
+them--had attracted their attention; and having occasion to signal the
+arrival of a bark, the working of the uncouth arms of the instrument
+drew the children in half-frightened curiosity towards it, although the
+others held aloof, as if fearful of trespassing upon some work of the
+government, no doubt secretly guarded by the police. A few mornings
+later he was surprised to see upon the beach, near the same locality,
+a small heap of lumber which had evidently been landed in the early
+morning fog. The next day an old tent appeared on the spot, and the
+men, evidently fishermen, began the erection of a rude cabin beside it.
+Jarman had been long enough there to know that it was government land,
+and that these manifestly humble “squatters” upon it would not be
+interfered with for some time to come. He began to be uneasy again; it
+was true they were fully half a mile from him, and they were foreigners;
+but might not their reckless invasion of the law attract others, in
+this lawless country, to do the same? It ought to be stopped. For once
+Richard Jarman sided with legal authority.
+
+But when the cabin was completed, it was evident from what he saw of its
+rude structure that it was only a temporary shelter for the fisherman's
+family and the stores, and refitting of the fishing-boat, more
+convenient to them than the San Francisco wharves. The beach was
+utilized for the mending of nets and sails, and thus became half
+picturesque. In spite of the keen northwestern trades, the cloudless,
+sunshiny mornings tempted these southerners back to their native al
+fresco existence; they not only basked in the sun, but many of their
+household duties, and even the mysteries of their toilet, were performed
+in the open air. They did not seem to care to penetrate into the
+desolate region behind them; their half-amphibious habit kept them near
+the water's edge, and Richard Jarman, after taking his limited walks
+for the first few mornings in another direction, found it no longer
+necessary to avoid the locality, and even forgot their propinquity.
+
+But one morning, as the fog was clearing away and the sparkle of the
+distant sea was beginning to show from his window, he rose from his
+belated breakfast to fetch water from the “breaker” outside, which had
+to be replenished weekly from Sancelito, as there was no spring in his
+vicinity. As he opened the door, he was inexpressibly startled by the
+figure of a young woman standing in front of it, who, however, half
+fearfully, half laughingly withdrew before him. But his own manifest
+disturbance apparently gave her courage.
+
+“I jess was looking at that thing,” she said bashfully, pointing to the
+semaphore.
+
+He was still more astonished, for, looking at her dark eyes and olive
+complexion, he had expected her to speak Italian or broken English. And,
+possibly because for a long time he had seen and known little of women,
+he was quite struck with her good looks. He hesitated, stammered, and
+then said:--
+
+“Won't you come in?”
+
+She drew back still farther and made a rapid gesture of negation with
+her head, her hand, and even her whole lithe figure. Then she said, with
+a decided American intonation:--
+
+“No, sir.”
+
+“Why not?” said Jarman mechanically.
+
+The girl sidled up against the cabin, keeping her eyes fixed on Jarman
+with a certain youthful shrewdness.
+
+“Oh, you know!” she said.
+
+“I really do not. Tell me why.”
+
+She drew herself up against the wall a little proudly, though still
+youthfully, with her hands behind her.
+
+“I ain't that kind of girl,” she said simply.
+
+The blood rushed to Jarman's checks. Dissipated and abandoned as his
+life had been, small respecter of women as he was, he was shocked and
+shamed. Knowing too, as he did, how absorbed he was in other things, he
+was indignant, because not guilty.
+
+“Do as you please, then,” he said shortly, and reentered the cabin. But
+the next moment he saw his error in betraying an irritation that was
+open to misconstruction. He came out again, scarcely looking at the
+girl, who was lounging away.
+
+“Do you want me to explain to you how the thing works?” he said
+indifferently. “I can't show you unless a ship comes in.”
+
+The girl's eyes brightened softly as she turned to him.
+
+“Do tell me,” she said, with an anticipatory smile and flash of white
+teeth. “Won't you?”
+
+She certainly was very pretty and simple, in spite of her late speech.
+Jarman briefly explained to her the movements of the semaphore arms and
+their different significance. She listened with her capped head a little
+on one side like an attentive bird, and her arms unconsciously imitating
+the signs. Certainly, for all that she SPOKE like an American, her
+gesticulation was Italian.
+
+“And then,” she said triumphantly when he paused, “when the sailors see
+that sign up they know they are coming in the harbor.”
+
+Jarman smiled, as he had not smiled since he had been there. He
+corrected this mistake of her eager haste to show her intelligence, and,
+taking the telescope, pointed out the other semaphore,--a thin black
+outline on a distant inland hill. He then explained how HIS signs were
+repeated by that instrument to San Francisco.
+
+“My! Why, I always allowed that was only the cross stuck up in the Lone
+Mountain Cemetery,” she said.
+
+“You are a Catholic?”
+
+“I reckon.”
+
+“And you are an Italian?”
+
+“Father is, but mother was a 'Merikan, same as me. Mother's dead.”
+
+“And your father is the fisherman yonder?”
+
+“Yes,--but,” with a look of pride, “he's got the biggest boat of any.”
+
+“And only you and your family are ashore here?”
+
+“Yes, and sometimes Mark.” She laughed an odd little laugh.
+
+“Mark? Who's he?” he asked quickly.
+
+He had not noticed the sudden coquettish pose and half-affected
+bashfulness of the girl; he was thinking only of the possibility of
+detection by strangers.
+
+“Oh, he is Marco Franti, but I call him 'Mark.' It's the same name, you
+know, and it makes him mad,” said the girl, with the same suggestion of
+archness and coquetry.
+
+But all this was lost on Jarman.
+
+“Oh, another Italian,” he said, relieved. She turned away a little
+awkwardly when he added, “But you haven't told me YOUR name, you know.”
+
+“Cara.”
+
+“Cara,--that's 'dear' in Italian, isn't it?” he said, with a
+reminiscence of the opera and a half smile.
+
+“Yes,” she said a little scornfully, “but it means Carlotta,--Charlotte,
+you know. Some girls call me Charley,” she said hurriedly.
+
+“I see--Cara--or Carlotta Franti.”
+
+To his surprise she burst into a peal of laughter.
+
+“I reckon not YET. Franti is Mark's name, not mine. Mine is
+Murano,--Carlotta Murano. Good-by.” She moved away, then stopped
+suddenly and said, “I'm comin' again some time when the thing is
+working,” and with a nod of her head, ran away. He looked after her;
+could see the outlines of her youthful figure in her slim cotton
+gown,--limp and clinging in the damp sea air, and the sudden revelation
+of her bare ankles thrust stockingless into canvas shoes.
+
+He went back into his cabin, when presently his attention was engrossed
+by an incoming vessel. He made the signals, half expecting, almost
+hoping, that the girl would return to watch him. But her figure was
+already lost in the sand dunes. Yet he fancied he still heard the echoes
+of her voice and his own in this cabin which had so long been dumb and
+voiceless, and he now started at every sound. For the first time he
+became aware of the dreadful disorder and untidiness of its uninvaded
+privacy. He could scarcely believe he had been living with his stove,
+his bed, and cooking utensils all in one corner of the barnlike room,
+and he began to put them “to rights” in a rough, hard formality,
+strongly suggestive of his convict experience. He rolled up his blankets
+into a hard cylinder at the head of his cot. He scraped out his kettles
+and saucepans, and even “washed down” the floor, afterwards sprinkling
+clean dry sand, hot with the noonday sunshine, on its half-dried boards.
+In arranging these domestic details he had to change the position of a
+little mirror; and glancing at it for the first time in many days, he
+was dissatisfied with his straggling beard,--grown during his voyage
+from Australia,--and although he had retained it as a disguise, he at
+once shaved it off, leaving only a mustache, and revealing a face from
+which a healthier life and out-of-door existence had removed the last
+traces of vice and dissipation. But he did not know it.
+
+All the next day he thought of his fair visitor, and found himself often
+repeating her odd remark that she was “not that kind of girl,” with a
+smile that was alternately significant or vacant. Evidently she could
+take care of herself, he thought, although her very good looks no doubt
+had exposed her to the rude attentions of fishermen or the common drift
+of San Francisco wharves. Perhaps this was why her father brought her
+here. When the day passed and she came not, he began vaguely to wonder
+if he had been rude to her. Perhaps he had taken her simple remark too
+seriously; perhaps she had expected he would only laugh, and had found
+him dull and stupid. Perhaps he had thrown away an opportunity. An
+opportunity for what? To renew his old life and habits? No, no! The
+horrors of his recent imprisonment and escape were still too fresh in
+his memory; he was not safe yet. Then he wondered if he had not grown
+spiritless and pigeon-livered in his solitude and loneliness. The next
+day he searched for her with his glass, and saw her playing with one
+of the children on the beach,--a very picture of child or nymphlike
+innocence. Perhaps it was because she was not “that kind of girl” that
+she had attracted him. He laughed bitterly. Yes; that was very funny;
+he, an escaped convict, drawn towards honest, simple innocence! Yet he
+knew--he was positive--he had not thought of any ill when he spoke to
+her. He took a singular, a ridiculous pride in and credit to himself for
+that. He repeated it incessantly to himself. Then what made her angry?
+Himself! The devil! Did he carry, then, the record of his past life
+forever in his face--in his speech--in his manners? The thought made
+him sullen. The next day he would not look towards the shore; it was
+wonderful what excitement and satisfaction he got out of that strange
+act of self-denial; it made the day seem full that had been so vacant
+before; yet he could not tell why or wherefore. He felt injured, but he
+rather liked it. Yet in the night he was struck with the idea that she
+might have gone back to San Francisco, and he lay awake longing for
+the morning light to satisfy him. Yet when the fog cleared, and from
+a nearer point, behind a sand dune, he discovered, by the aid of his
+glass, that she was seated on the sun-warmed sands combing out her long
+hair like a mermaid, he immediately returned to the cabin, and that
+morning looked no more that way. In the afternoon, there being no sails
+in sight, he turned aside from the bay and walked westward towards the
+ocean, halting only at the league-long line of foam which marked the
+breaking Pacific surges. Here he was surprised to see a little child,
+half-naked, following barefooted the creeping line of spume, or running
+after the detached and quivering scraps of foam that chased each other
+over the wet sand, and only a little further on, to come upon Cara
+herself, sitting with her elbows on her knees and her round chin in her
+hands, apparently gazing over the waste of waters before her. A sudden
+and inexplicable shyness overtook him. He hesitated, and stepped
+half-hidden in a gully between the sand dunes.
+
+As yet he had not been observed; the young girl called to the child and,
+suddenly rising, threw off her red cap and shawl and quietly began to
+disrobe herself. A couple of coarse towels were at her feet. Jarman
+instantly comprehended that she was going to bathe with the child. She
+undoubtedly knew as well as he did that she was safe in that solitude;
+that no one could intrude upon her privacy from the bay shore, nor from
+the desolate inland trail to the sea, without her knowledge. Of his
+own contiguity she had evidently taken no thought, believing him safely
+housed in his cabin beside the semaphore. She lifted her hands, and with
+a sudden movement shook out her long hair and let it fall down her back
+at the same moment that her unloosened blouse began to slip from her
+shoulders. Richard Jarman turned quickly and walked noiselessly and
+rapidly away, until the little hillock had shut out the beach.
+
+His retreat was as sudden, unreasoning, and unpremeditated as his
+intrusion. It was not like himself, he knew, and yet it was as perfectly
+instinctive and natural as if he had intruded upon a sister. In the
+South Seas he had seen native girls diving beside the vessels for coins,
+but they had provoked no such instinct as that which possessed him now.
+More than that, he swept a quick, wrathful glance along the horizon on
+either side, and then, mounting a remote hillock which still hid him
+from the beach, he sat there and kept watch and ward. From time to time
+the strong sea-breeze brought him the sound of infantine screams and
+shouts of girlish laughter from the unseen shore; he only looked the
+more keenly and suspiciously for any wandering trespasser, and did not
+turn his head. He lay there nearly half an hour, and when the sounds had
+ceased, rose and made his way slowly back to the cabin. He had not gone
+many yards before he heard the twitter of voices and smothered laughter
+behind him. He turned; it was Cara and the child,--a girl of six or
+seven. Cara's face was rosy,--possibly from her bath, and possibly
+from some shame-faced consciousness. He slackened his pace, and as they
+ranged beside him said, “Good-morning!”
+
+“Lord!” said Cara, stifling another laugh, “we didn't know you were
+around; we thought you were always 'tending your telegraph, didn't we,
+Lucy?” (to the child, who was convulsed with mirth and sheepishness).
+“Why, we've been taking a wash in the sea.” She tried to gather up her
+long hair, which had been left to stray over her shoulders and dry in
+the sunlight, and even made a slight pretense of trying to conceal the
+wet towels they were carrying.
+
+Jarman did not laugh. “If you had told me,” he said gravely, “I could
+have kept watch for you with my glass while you were there. I could see
+further than you.”
+
+“Tould you see US?” asked the little girl, with hopeful vivacity.
+
+“No!” said Jarman, with masterly evasion. “There are little sandhills
+between this and the beach.”
+
+“Then how tould other people see us?” persisted the child.
+
+Jarman could see that the older girl was evidently embarrassed, and
+changed the subject. “I sometimes go out,” he said, “when I can see
+there are no vessels in sight, and I take ray glass with me. I can
+always get back in time to make signals. I thought, in fact,” he said,
+glancing at Cara's brightening face, “that I might get as far as
+your house on the shore some day.” To his surprise, her embarrassment
+suddenly seemed to increase, although she had looked relieved before,
+and she did not reply. After a moment she said abruptly:--
+
+“Did you ever see the sea-lions?”
+
+“No,” said Jarman.
+
+“Not the big ones on Seal Rock, beyond the cliffs?” continued the girl,
+in real astonishment.
+
+“No,” repeated Jarman. “I never walked in that direction.” He vaguely
+remembered that they were a curiosity which sometimes attracted parties
+thither, and for that reason he had avoided the spot.
+
+“Why, I have sailed all around the rock in father's boat,” continued
+Cara, with importance. “That's the best way to see 'em, and folks from
+Frisco sometimes takes a sail out there just on purpose,--it's too sandy
+to walk or drive there. But it's only a step from here. Look here!” she
+said suddenly, and frankly opening her fine eyes upon him. “I'm going
+to take Lucy there to-morrow, and I'll show you.” Jarman felt his cheeks
+flush quickly with a pleasure that embarrassed him. “It won't take
+long,” added Cara, mistaking his momentary hesitation, “and you can
+leave your telegraph alone. Nobody will be there, so no one will see you
+and nobody know it.”
+
+He would have gone then, anyway, he knew, yet in his absurd
+self-consciousness he was glad that her last suggestion had relieved him
+of a sense of reckless compliance. He assented eagerly, when with a wave
+of her hand, a flash of her white teeth, and the same abruptness she had
+shown at their last parting, she caught Lucy by the arm and darted away
+in a romping race to her dwelling. Jarman started after her. He had
+not wanted to go to her father's house particularly, but why was SHE
+evidently as averse to it? With the subtle pleasure that this admission
+gave him there was a faint stirring of suspicion.
+
+It was gone when he found her and Lucy the next morning, radiant with
+the sunshine, before his door. The restraint of their previous meetings
+had been removed in some mysterious way, and they chatted gayly as they
+walked towards the cliffs. She asked him frankly many questions about
+himself, why he had come there, and if he “wasn't lonely;” she answered
+frankly--I fear much more frankly than he answered her--the many
+questions he asked her about herself and her friends. When they reached
+the cliffs they descended to the beach, which they found deserted.
+Before them--it seemed scarce a pistol shot from the shore arose a high,
+broad rock, beaten at its base by the long Pacific surf, on which a
+number of shapeless animals were uncouthly disporting. This was Seal
+Rock, the goal of their journey.
+
+Yet after a few moments they no longer looked at it, but seated on the
+sand, with Lucy gathering shells at the water's edge, they continued
+their talk. Presently the talk became eager confidences, and
+then,--there were long and dangerous lapses of silence, when both were
+fain to make perfunctory talk with Lucy on the beach. After one of those
+silences Jarman said:--
+
+“Do you know I rather thought yesterday you didn't want me to come to
+your father's house. Why was that?”
+
+“Because Marco was there,” said the girl frankly.
+
+“What had HE to do with it?” said Jarman abruptly.
+
+“He wants to marry me.”
+
+“And do you want to marry HIM?” said Jarman quickly.
+
+“No,” said the girl passionately.
+
+“Why don't you get rid of him, then?”
+
+“I can't, he's hiding here,--he's father's friend.”
+
+“Hiding? What's he been doing?”
+
+“Stealing. Stealing gold-dust from miners. I never cared for him anyway.
+And I hate a thief!”
+
+She looked up quickly. Jarman had risen to his feet, his face turned to
+sea.
+
+“What are you looking at?” she said wonderingly.
+
+“A ship,” said Jarman, in a strange, hoarse voice. “I must hurry back
+and signal. I'm afraid I haven't even time to walk with you,--I must run
+for it. Good-by!”
+
+He turned without offering his hand and ran hurriedly in the direction
+of the semaphore.
+
+Cara, discomfited, turned her black eyes to the sea. But it seemed empty
+as before, no sail, no ship on the horizon line, only a little schooner
+slowly beating out of the Gate. Ah, well! It no doubt was there,--that
+sail,--though she could not see it; how keen and far-seeing his
+handsome, honest eyes were! She heaved a little sigh, and, calling Lucy
+to her side, began to make her way homeward. But she kept her eyes on
+the semaphore; it seemed to her the next thing to seeing him,--this man
+she was beginning to love. She waited for the gaunt arms to move with
+the signal of the vessel he had seen. But, strange to say, it was
+motionless. He must have been mistaken.
+
+All this, however, was driven from her mind in the excitement that she
+found on her return thrilling her own family. They had been warned that
+a police boat with detectives on board had been dispatched from San
+Francisco to the cove. Luckily, they had managed to convey the fugitive
+Franti on board a coastwise schooner,--Cara started as she remembered
+the one she had seen beating out of the Gate,--and he was now safe from
+pursuit. Cara felt relieved; at the same time she felt a strange joy
+at her heart, which sent the conscious blood to her cheek. She was not
+thinking of the escaped Marco, but of Jarman. Later, when the police
+boat arrived,--whether the detectives had been forewarned of Marco's
+escape or not,--they contented themselves with a formal search of the
+little fishing-hut and departed. But their boat remained lying off the
+shore.
+
+That night Cara tossed sleeplessly on her bed; she was sorry she had
+ever spoken of Marco to Jarman. It was unnecessary now; perhaps he
+disbelieved her and thought she loved Marco; perhaps that was the reason
+of his strange and abrupt leave-taking that afternoon. She longed for
+the next day, she could tell him everything now.
+
+Towards morning she slept fitfully, but was awakened by the sound of
+voices on the sands outside the hut. Its flimsy structure, already
+warped by the fierce day-long sun, allowed her through chinks and
+crevices not only to recognize the voices of the detectives, but to hear
+distinctly what they said. Suddenly the name of Jarman struck upon her
+ear. She sat upright in bed, breathless.
+
+“Are you sure it's the same man?” asked a second voice.
+
+“Perfectly,” answered the first. “He was tracked to 'Frisco, but
+disappeared the day he landed. We knew from our agents that he never
+left the bay. And when we found that somebody answering his description
+got the post of telegraph operator out here, we knew that we had spotted
+our man and the L250 sterling offered for his capture.”
+
+“But that was five months ago. Why didn't you take him then?”
+
+“Couldn't! For we couldn't hold him without the extradition papers from
+Australia. We sent for 'em; they're due to-day or to-morrow on the mail
+steamer.”
+
+“But he might have got away at any time?”
+
+“He couldn't without our knowing it. Don't you see? Every time the
+signals went up, we in San Francisco knew he was at his post. We had him
+safe, out here on these sandhills, as if he'd been under lock and key in
+'Frisco. He was his own keeper, and reported to us.”
+
+“But since you're here and expect the papers to-morrow, why don't you
+'cop' him now?”
+
+“Because there isn't a judge in San Francisco that would hold him
+a moment unless he had those extradition papers before him. He'd be
+discharged, and escape.”
+
+“Then what are you going to do?”
+
+“As soon as the steamer is signaled in 'Frisco, we'll board her in the
+bay, get the papers, and drop down upon him.”
+
+“I see; and as HE'S the signal man, the darned fool”--
+
+“Will give the signal himself.”
+
+The laugh that followed was so cruel that the young girl shuddered. But
+the next moment she slipped from the bed, erect, pale, and determined.
+
+The voices seemed gradually to retreat. She dressed herself hurriedly,
+and passed noiselessly through the room of her still sleeping parent,
+and passed out. A gray fog was lifting slowly over the sands and sea,
+and the police boat was gone. She no longer hesitated, but ran quickly
+in the direction of Jarman's cabin. As she ran, her mind seemed to be
+swept clear of all illusion and fancy; she saw plainly everything that
+had happened; she knew the mystery of Jarman's presence here,--the
+secret of his life,--the dreadful cruelty of her remark to him,--the man
+that she knew now she loved. The sun was painting the black arms of the
+semaphore as she toiled over the last stretch of sand and knocked
+loudly at the door. There was no reply. She knocked again; the cabin was
+silent. Had he already fled?--and without seeing her and knowing all!
+She tried the handle of the door; it yielded; she stepped boldly into
+the room, with his name upon her lips. He was lying fully dressed upon
+his couch. She ran eagerly to his side and stopped. It needed only a
+single glance at his congested face, his lips parted with his heavy
+breath, to see that the man was hopelessly, helplessly drunk!
+
+Yet even then, without knowing that it was her thoughtless speech which
+had driven him to seek this foolish oblivion of remorse and sorrow,
+she saw only his HELPLESSNESS. She tried in vain to rouse him; he
+only muttered a few incoherent words and sank back again. She looked
+despairingly around. Something must be done; the steamer might be
+visible at any moment. Ah, yes,--the telescope! She seized it and swept
+the horizon. There was a faint streak of haze against the line of sea
+and sky, abreast the Golden Gate. He had once told her what it meant.
+It WAS the steamer! A sudden thought leaped into her clear and active
+brain. If the police boat should chance to see that haze too, and saw
+no warning signal from the semaphore, they would suspect something. That
+signal must be made, BUT NOT THE RIGHT ONE! She remembered quickly
+how he had explained to her the difference between the signals for a
+coasting steamer and the one that brought the mails. At that distance
+the police boat could not detect whether the semaphore's arms were
+extended to perfect right angles for the mail steamer, or if the left
+arm slightly deflected for a coasting steamer. She ran out to the
+windlass and seized the crank. For a moment it defied her strength; she
+redoubled her efforts: it began to creak and groan, the great arms were
+slowly uplifted, and the signal made.
+
+But the familiar sounds of the moving machinery had pierced through
+Jarman's sluggish consciousness as no other sound in heaven or earth
+could have done, and awakened him to the one dominant sense he had
+left,--the habit of duty. She heard him roll from the bed with an oath,
+stumble to the door, and saw him dash forward with an affrighted face,
+and plunge his head into a bucket of water. He emerged from it pale and
+dripping, but with the full light of reason and consciousness in his
+eyes. He started when he saw her; even then she would have fled, but he
+caught her firmly by the wrist.
+
+Then with a hurried, trembling voice she told him all and everything. He
+listened in silence, and only at the end raised her hand gravely to his
+lips.
+
+“And now,” she added tremulously, “you must fly--quick--at once; or it
+will be too late!”
+
+But Richard Jarman walked slowly to the door of his cabin, still holding
+her hand, and said quietly, pointing to his only chair:--
+
+“Sit down; we must talk first.”
+
+What they said was never known, but a few moments later they left the
+cabin, Jarman carrying in a small bag all his possessions, and Cara
+leaning on his arm. An hour later the priest of the Mission Dolores was
+called upon to unite in matrimony a frank, honest-looking sailor and an
+Italian gypsy-looking girl. There were many hasty unions in those days,
+and the Holy Church was only too glad to be able to give them its
+legal indorsement. But the good Padre was a little sorry for the honest
+sailor, and gave the girl some serious advice.
+
+The San Francisco papers the next morning threw some dubious light upon
+the matter in a paragraph headed, “Another Police Fiasco.”
+
+“We understand that the indefatigable police of San Francisco, after
+ascertaining that Marco Franti, the noted gold-dust thief, was hiding on
+the shore near the Presidio, proceeded there with great solemnity, and
+arrived, as usual, a few hours after their man had escaped. But the
+climax of incapacity was reached when, as it is alleged, the sweetheart
+of the absconding Franti, and daughter of a brother fisherman, eloped
+still later, and joined her lover under the very noses of the police.
+The attempt of the detectives to excuse themselves at headquarters by
+reporting that they were also on the track of an alleged escaped Sydney
+Duck was received with the derision and skepticism it deserved, as it
+seemed that these worthies mistook the mail steamer, which they should
+have boarded to get certain extradition papers, for a coasting steamer.”
+
+*****
+
+It was not until four years later that Murano was delighted to recognize
+in the husband of his long-lost daughter a very rich cattle-owner in
+Southern California, called Jarman; but he never knew that he had been
+an escaped convict from Sydney, who had lately received a full pardon
+through the instrumentality of divers distinguished people in Australia.
+
+
+
+
+AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+
+
+It is to be feared that the hero of this chronicle began life as an
+impostor. He was offered to the credulous and sympathetic family of a
+San Francisco citizen as a lamb, who, unless bought as a playmate
+for the children, would inevitably pass into the butcher's hands.
+A combination of refined sensibility and urban ignorance of nature
+prevented them from discerning certain glaring facts that betrayed his
+caprid origin. So a ribbon was duly tied round his neck, and in pleasing
+emulation of the legendary “Mary,” he was taken to school by the
+confiding children. Here, alas the fraud was discovered, and history was
+reversed by his being turned out by the teacher, because he was NOT “a
+lamb at school.” Nevertheless, the kind-hearted mother of the family
+persisted in retaining him, on the plea that he might yet become
+“useful.” To her husband's feeble suggestion of “gloves,” she returned
+a scornful negative, and spoke of the weakly infant of a neighbor, who
+might later receive nourishment from this providential animal. But even
+this hope was destroyed by the eventual discovery of his sex. Nothing
+remained now but to accept him as an ordinary kid, and to find amusement
+in his accomplishments,--eating, climbing, and butting. It must be
+confessed that these were of a superior quality; a capacity to eat
+everything from a cambric handkerchief to an election poster, an
+agility which brought him even to the roofs of houses, and a power of
+overturning by a single push the chubbiest child who opposed him, made
+him a fearful joy to the nursery. This last quality was incautiously
+developed in him by a negro boy-servant, who, later, was hurriedly
+propelled down a flight of stairs by his too proficient scholar.
+Having once tasted victory, “Billy” needed no further incitement to his
+performances. The small wagon which he sometimes consented to draw for
+the benefit of the children never hindered his attempts to butt the
+passer-by. On the contrary, on well-known scientific principles he added
+the impact of the bodies of the children projected over his head in his
+charge, and the infelicitous pedestrian found himself not only knocked
+off his legs by Billy, but bombarded by the whole nursery.
+
+Delightful as was this recreation to juvenile limbs, it was felt to be
+dangerous to the adult public. Indignant protestations were made, and
+as Billy could not be kept in the house, he may be said to have at
+last butted himself out of that sympathetic family and into a hard and
+unfeeling world. One morning he broke his tether in the small back yard.
+For several days thereafter he displayed himself in guilty freedom on
+the tops of adjacent walls and outhouses. The San Francisco suburb
+where his credulous protectors lived was still in a volcanic state
+of disruption, caused by the grading of new streets through rocks and
+sandhills. In consequence the roofs of some houses were on the level
+of the doorsteps of others, and were especially adapted to Billy's
+performances. One afternoon, to the admiring and perplexed eyes of the
+nursery, he was discovered standing on the apex of a neighbor's new
+Elizabethan chimney, on a space scarcely larger than the crown of a hat,
+calmly surveying the world beneath him. High infantile voices appealed
+to him in vain; baby arms were outstretched to him in hopeless
+invitation; he remained exalted and obdurate, like Milton's hero,
+probably by his own merit “raised to that bad eminence.” Indeed, there
+was already something Satanic in his budding horns and pointed mask as
+the smoke curled softly around him. Then he appropriately vanished,
+and San Francisco knew him no more. At the same time, however, one Owen
+M'Ginnis, a neighboring sandhill squatter, also disappeared, leaving San
+Francisco for the southern mines, and he was said to have taken Billy
+with him,--for no conceivable reason except for companionship. Howbeit,
+it was the turning-point of Billy's career; such restraint as kindness,
+civilization, or even policemen had exercised upon his nature was gone.
+He retained, I fear, a certain wicked intelligence, picked up in San
+Francisco with the newspapers and theatrical and election posters he
+had consumed. He reappeared at Rocky Canyon among the miners as an
+exceedingly agile chamois, with the low cunning of a satyr. That was all
+that civilization had done for him!
+
+If Mr. M'Ginnis had fondly conceived that he would make Billy “useful,”
+ as well as companionable, he was singularly mistaken. Horses and mules
+were scarce in Rocky Canyon, and he attempted to utilize Billy by making
+him draw a small cart, laden with auriferous earth, from his claim to
+the river. Billy, rapidly gaining strength, was quite equal to the task,
+but alas! not his inborn propensity. An incautious gesture from the
+first passing miner Billy chose to construe into the usual challenge.
+Lowering his head, from which his budding horns had been already pruned
+by his master, he instantly went for his challenger, cart and all. Again
+the scientific law already pointed out prevailed. With the shock of
+the onset the entire contents of the cart arose and poured over the
+astonished miner, burying him from sight. In any other but a Californian
+mining-camp such a propensity in a draught animal would have been
+condemned, on account of the damage and suffering it entailed, but in
+Rocky Canyon it proved unprofitable to the owner from the very
+amusement and interest it excited. Miners lay in wait for Billy with
+a “greenhorn,” or new-comer, whom they would put up to challenge the
+animal by some indiscreet gesture. In this way hardly a cartload of
+“pay-gravel” ever arrived safely at its destination, and the unfortunate
+M'Ginnis was compelled to withdraw Billy as a beast of burden. It
+was whispered that so great had his propensity become, under repeated
+provocation, that M'Ginnis himself was no longer safe. Going ahead
+of his cart one day to remove a fallen bough from the trail, Billy
+construed the act of stooping into a playful challenge from his
+master,--with the inevitable result.
+
+The next day M'Ginnis appeared with a wheelbarrow, but without Billy.
+From that day he was relegated to the rocky crags above the camp, from
+whence he was only lured occasionally by the mischievous miners, who
+wished to exhibit his peculiar performances. For although Billy had
+ample food and sustenance among the crags, he had still a civilized
+longing for posters; and whenever a circus, a concert, or a political
+meeting was “billed” in the settlement, he was on hand while the paste
+was yet fresh and succulent. In this way it was averred that he
+once removed a gigantic theatre bill setting forth the charms of the
+“Sacramento Pet,” and being caught in the act by the advance agent, was
+pursued through the main street, carrying the damp bill on his horns,
+eventually affixing it, after his own peculiar fashion, on the back of
+Judge Boompointer, who was standing in front of his own court-house.
+
+In connection with the visits of this young lady another story
+concerning Billy survives in the legends of Rocky Canyon. Colonel
+Starbottle was at that time passing through the settlement on election
+business, and it was part of his chivalrous admiration for the sex to
+pay a visit to the pretty actress. The single waiting-room of the little
+hotel gave upon the veranda, which was also level with the street. After
+a brief yet gallant interview, in which he oratorically expressed
+the gratitude of the settlement with old-fashioned Southern courtesy,
+Colonel Starbottle lifted the chubby little hand of the “Pet” to his
+lips, and, with a low bow, backed out upon the veranda. But the Pet was
+astounded by his instant reappearance, and by his apparently casting
+himself passionately and hurriedly at her feet! It is needless to say
+that he was followed closely by Billy, who from the street had casually
+noticed him, and construed his novel exit into an ungentlemanly
+challenge.
+
+Billy's visits, however, became less frequent, and as Rocky Canyon
+underwent the changes incidental to mining settlements, he was presently
+forgotten in the invasion of a few Southwestern families, and the
+adoption of amusements less practical and turbulent than he had
+afforded. It was alleged that he was still seen in the more secluded
+fastnesses of the mountains, having reverted to a wild state, and it was
+suggested by one or two of the more adventurous that he might yet become
+edible, and a fair object of chase. A traveler through the Upper Pass of
+the canyon related how he had seen a savage-looking, hairy animal like
+a small elk perched upon inaccessible rocks, but always out of gunshot.
+But these and other legends were set at naught and overthrown by an
+unexpected incident.
+
+The Pioneer Coach was toiling up the long grade towards Skinners Pass
+when Yuba Bill suddenly pulled up, with his feet on the brake.
+
+“Jimminy!” he ejaculated, drawing a deep breath.
+
+The startled passenger beside him on the box followed the direction of
+his eyes. Through an opening in the wayside pines he could see, a few
+hundred yards away, a cuplike hollow in the hillside of the vividest
+green. In the centre a young girl of fifteen or sixteen was dancing and
+keeping step to the castanet “click” of a pair of “bones,” such as negro
+minstrels use, held in her hands above her head. But, more singular
+still, a few paces before her a large goat, with its neck roughly
+wreathed with flowers and vines, was taking ungainly bounds and leaps
+in imitation of its companion. The wild background of the Sierras, the
+pastoral hollow, the incongruousness of the figures, and the vivid color
+of the girl's red flannel petticoat showing beneath her calico skirt,
+that had been pinned around her waist, made a striking picture, which
+by this time had attracted all eyes. Perhaps the dancing of the girl
+suggested a negro “break-down” rather than any known sylvan measure; but
+all this, and even the clatter of the bones, was made gracious by the
+distance.
+
+“Esmeralda! by the living Harry!” shouted the excited passenger on the
+box.
+
+Yuba Bill took his feet off the brake, and turned a look of deep scorn
+upon his companion as he gathered the reins again.
+
+“It's that blanked goat, outer Rocky Canyon beyond, and Polly Harkness!
+How did she ever come to take up with HIM?”
+
+Nevertheless, as soon as the coach reached Rocky Canyon, the story was
+quickly told by the passengers, corroborated by Yuba Bill, and highly
+colored by the observer on the box-seat. Harkness was known to be a
+new-comer who lived with his wife and only daughter on the other side of
+Skinners Pass. He was a “logger” and charcoal-burner, who had eaten his
+way into the serried ranks of pines below the pass, and established in
+these efforts an almost insurmountable cordon of fallen trees, stripped
+bark, and charcoal pits around the clearing where his rude log
+hut stood,--which kept his seclusion unbroken. He was said to be a
+half-savage mountaineer from Georgia, in whose rude fastnesses he had
+distilled unlawful whiskey, and that his tastes and habits unfitted him
+for civilization. His wife chewed and smoked; he was believed to make a
+fiery brew of his own from acorns and pine nuts; he seldom came to Rocky
+Canyon except for provisions; his logs were slipped down a “shoot” or
+slide to the river, where they voyaged once a month to a distant mill,
+but HE did not accompany them. The daughter, seldom seen at Rocky
+Canyon, was a half-grown girl, brown as autumn fern, wild-eyed,
+disheveled, in a homespun skirt, sunbonnet, and boy's brogans. Such were
+the plain facts which skeptical Rocky Canyon opposed to the passengers'
+legends. Nevertheless, some of the younger miners found it not out of
+their way to go over Skinners Pass on the journey to the river, but with
+what success was not told. It was said, however, that a celebrated New
+York artist, making a tour of California, was on the coach one day going
+through the pass, and preserved the memory of what he saw there in a
+well-known picture entitled “Dancing Nymph and Satyr,” said by competent
+critics to be “replete with the study of Greek life.” This did not
+affect Rocky Canyon, where the study of mythology was presumably
+displaced by an experience of more wonderful flesh-and-blood people, but
+later it was remembered with some significance.
+
+Among the improvements already noted, a zinc and wooden chapel had been
+erected in the main street, where a certain popular revivalist preacher
+of a peculiar Southwestern sect regularly held exhortatory services. His
+rude emotional power over his ignorant fellow-sectarians was well known,
+while curiosity drew others. His effect upon the females of his flock
+was hysterical and sensational. Women prematurely aged by frontier
+drudgery and child-bearing, girls who had known only the rigors and
+pains of a half-equipped, ill-nourished youth in their battling with the
+hard realities of nature around them, all found a strange fascination in
+the extravagant glories and privileges of the unseen world he pictured
+to them, which they might have found in the fairy tales and nursery
+legends of civilized children, had they known them. Personally he was
+not attractive; his thin pointed face, and bushy hair rising on
+either side of his square forehead in two rounded knots, and his long,
+straggling, wiry beard dropping from a strong neck and shoulders,
+were indeed of a common Southwestern type; yet in him they suggested
+something more. This was voiced by a miner who attended his first
+service, and as the Reverend Mr. Withholder rose in the pulpit, the
+former was heard to audibly ejaculate, “Dod blasted!--if it ain't
+Billy!” But when on the following Sunday, to everybody's astonishment,
+Polly Harkness, in a new white muslin frock and broad-brimmed Leghorn
+hat, appeared before the church door with the real Billy, and exchanged
+conversation with the preacher, the likeness was appalling.
+
+I grieve to say that the goat was at once christened by Rocky Canyon as
+“The Reverend Billy,” and the minister himself was Billy's “brother.”
+ More than that, when an attempt was made by outsiders, during
+the service, to inveigle the tethered goat into his old butting
+performances, and he took not the least notice of their insults and
+challenges, the epithet “blanked hypocrite” was added to his title.
+
+Had he really reformed? Had his pastoral life with his nymph-like
+mistress completely cured him of his pugnacious propensity, or had
+he simply found it was inconsistent with his dancing, and seriously
+interfered with his “fancy steps”? Had he found tracts and hymn-books
+were as edible as theatre posters? These were questions that Rocky
+canyon discussed lightly, although there was always the more serious
+mystery of the relations of the Reverend Mr. Withholder, Polly Harkness,
+and the goat towards each other. The appearance of Polly at church was
+no doubt due to the minister's active canvass of the districts. But had
+he ever heard of Polly's dancing with the goat? And where in this plain,
+angular, badly dressed Polly was hidden that beautiful vision of the
+dancing nymph which had enthralled so many? And when had Billy ever
+given any suggestion of his Terpsichorean abilities--before or since?
+Were there any “points” of the kind to be discerned in him now? None!
+Was it not more probable that the Reverend Mr. Withholder had himself
+been dancing with Polly, and been mistaken for the goat? Passengers who
+could have been so deceived with regard to Polly's beauty might have as
+easily mistaken the minister for Billy. About this time another incident
+occurred which increased the mystery.
+
+The only male in the settlement who apparently dissented from the
+popular opinion regarding Polly was a new-comer, Jack Filgee. While
+discrediting her performance with the goat,--which he had never
+seen,--he was evidently greatly prepossessed with the girl herself.
+Unfortunately, he was equally addicted to drinking, and as he was
+exceedingly shy and timid when sober, and quite unpresentable at other
+times, his wooing, if it could be so called, progressed but slowly.
+Yet when he found that Polly went to church, he listened so far to the
+exhortations of the Reverend Mr. Withholder as to promise to come
+to “Bible class” immediately after the Sunday service. It was a hot
+afternoon, and Jack, who had kept sober for two days, incautiously
+fortified himself for the ordeal by taking a drink before arriving. He
+was nervously early, and immediately took a seat in the empty church
+near the open door. The quiet of the building, the drowsy buzzing of
+flies, and perhaps the soporific effect of the liquor caused his eyes
+to close and his head to fall forward on his breast repeatedly. He
+was recovering himself for the fourth time when he suddenly received a
+violent cuff on the ear, and was knocked backward off the bench on which
+he was sitting. That was all he knew.
+
+He picked himself up with a certain dignity, partly new to him, and
+partly the result of his condition, and staggered, somewhat bruised and
+disheveled, to the nearest saloon. Here a few frequenters who had
+seen him pass, who knew his errand and the devotion to Polly which had
+induced it, exhibited a natural concern.
+
+“How's things down at the gospel shop?” said one. “Look as ef you'd been
+wrastlin' with the Sperit, Jack!”
+
+“Old man must hev exhorted pow'ful,” said another, glancing at his
+disordered Sunday attire.
+
+“Ain't be'n hevin' a row with Polly? I'm told she slings an awful left.”
+
+Jack, instead of replying, poured out a dram of whiskey, drank it,
+and putting down his glass, leaned heavily against the counter as he
+surveyed his questioners with a sorrow chastened by reproachful dignity.
+
+“I'm a stranger here, gentlemen,” he said slowly “ye've known me only a
+little; but ez ye've seen me both blind drunk and sober, I reckon ye've
+caught on to my gin'ral gait! Now I wanter put it to you, ez fair-minded
+men, ef you ever saw me strike a parson?”
+
+“No,” said a chorus of sympathetic voices. The barkeeper, however, with
+a swift recollection of Polly and the Reverend Withholder, and some
+possible contingent jealousy in Jack, added prudently, “Not yet.”
+
+The chorus instantly added reflectively, “Well, no not yet.”
+
+“Did ye ever,” continued Jack solemnly, “know me to cuss, sass,
+bully-rag, or say anything agin parsons, or the church?”
+
+“No,” said the crowd, overthrowing prudence in curiosity, “ye never
+did,--we swear it! And now, what's up?”
+
+“I ain't what you call 'a member in good standin','” he went on,
+artistically protracting his climax. “I ain't be'n convicted o' sin;
+I ain't 'a meek an' lowly follower;' I ain't be'n exactly what I orter
+be'n; I hevn't lived anywhere up to my lights; but is thet a reason why
+a parson should strike me?”
+
+“Why? What? When did he? Who did?” asked the eager crowd, with one
+voice.
+
+Jack then painfully related how he had been invited by the Reverend
+Mr. Withholder to attend the Bible class. How he had arrived early,
+and found the church empty. How he had taken a seat near the door to
+be handy when the parson came. How he just felt “kinder kam and good,”
+ listenin' to the flies buzzing, and must have fallen asleep,--only he
+pulled himself up every time,--though, after all, it warn't no crime to
+fall asleep in an empty church! How “all of a suddent” the parson came
+in, “give him a clip side o' the head,” and knocked him off the bench,
+and left him there!
+
+“But what did he SAY?” queried the crowd.
+
+“Nuthin'. Afore I could get up, he got away.”
+
+“Are you sure it was him?” they asked. “You know you SAY you was
+asleep.”
+
+“Am I sure?” repeated Jack scornfully. “Don't I know thet face and
+beard? Didn't I feel it hangin' over me?”
+
+“What are you going to do about it?” continued the crowd eagerly.
+
+“Wait till he comes out--and you'll see,” said Jack, with dignity.
+
+This was enough for the crowd; they gathered excitedly at the door,
+where Jack was already standing, looking towards the church. The moments
+dragged slowly; it might be a long meeting. Suddenly the church door
+opened and a figure appeared, looking up and down the street. Jack
+colored--he recognized Polly--and stepped out into the road. The crowd
+delicately, but somewhat disappointedly, drew back in the saloon. They
+did not care to interfere in THAT sort of thing.
+
+Polly saw him, and came hurriedly towards him. She was holding something
+in her hand.
+
+“I picked this up on the church floor,” she said shyly, “so I reckoned
+you HAD be'n there,--though the parson said you hadn't,--and I just
+excused myself and ran out to give it ye. It's yourn, ain't it?”
+ She held up a gold specimen pin, which he had put on in honor of the
+occasion. “I had a harder time, though, to git this yer,--it's yourn
+too,--for Billy was laying down in the yard, back o' the church, and
+just comf'bly swallerin' it.”
+
+“Who?” said Jack quickly.
+
+“Billy,--my goat.”
+
+Jack drew a long breath, and glanced back at the saloon. “Ye ain't goin'
+back to class now, are ye?” he said hurriedly. “Ef you ain't, I'll--I'll
+see ye home.”
+
+“I don't mind,” said Polly demurely, “if it ain't takin' ye outer y'ur
+way.”
+
+Jack offered his arm, and hurrying past the saloon, the happy pair were
+soon on the road to Skinners Pass.
+
+
+Jack did not, I regret to say, confess his blunder, but left the
+Reverend Mr. Withholder to remain under suspicion of having committed an
+unprovoked assault and battery. It was characteristic of Rocky Canyon,
+however, that this suspicion, far from injuring his clerical reputation,
+incited a respect that had been hitherto denied him. A man who could
+hit out straight from the shoulder had, in the language of the critics,
+“suthin' in him.” Oddly enough, the crowd that had at first sympathized
+with Jack now began to admit provocations. His subsequent silence, a
+disposition when questioned on the subject to smile inanely, and, later,
+when insidiously asked if he had ever seen Polly dancing with the goat,
+his bursting into uproarious laughter completely turned the current of
+opinion against him. The public mind, however, soon became engrossed by
+a more interesting incident.
+
+The Reverend Mr. Withholder had organized a series of Biblical tableaux
+at Skinnerstown for the benefit of his church. Illustrations were to be
+given of “Rebecca at the Well,” “The Finding of Moses,” “Joseph and
+his Brethren;” but Rocky Canyon was more particularly excited by the
+announcement that Polly Harkness would personate “Jephthah's Daughter.”
+ On the evening of the performance, however, it was found that this
+tableau had been withdrawn and another substituted, for reasons not
+given. Rocky Canyon, naturally indignant at this omission to represent
+native talent, indulged in a hundred wild surmises. But it was generally
+believed that Jack Filgee's revengeful animosity to the Reverend Mr.
+Withholder was at the bottom of it. Jack, as usual, smiled inanely, but
+nothing was to be got from him. It was not until a few days later, when
+another incident crowned the climax of these mysteries, that a full
+disclosure came from his lips.
+
+One morning a flaming poster was displayed at Rocky Canyon, with a
+charming picture of the “Sacramento Pet” in the briefest of skirts,
+disporting with a tambourine before a goat garlanded with flowers, who
+bore, however, an undoubted likeness to Billy. The text in enormous
+letters, and bristling with points of admiration, stated that the “Pet”
+ would appear as “Esmeralda,” assisted by a performing goat, especially
+trained by the gifted actress. The goat would dance, play cards, and
+perform those tricks of magic familiar to the readers of Victor Hugo's
+beautiful story of the “Hunchback of Notre Dame,” and finally knock
+down and overthrow the designing seducer, Captain Phoebus. The marvelous
+spectacle would be produced under the patronage of the Hon. Colonel
+Starbottle and the Mayor of Skinnerstown.
+
+As all Rocky Canyon gathered open-mouthed around the poster, Jack
+demurely joined the group. Every eye was turned upon him.
+
+“It don't look as if yer Polly was in THIS show, any more than she
+was in the tablows,” said one, trying to conceal his curiosity under a
+slight sneer. “She don't seem to be doin' any dancin'!”
+
+“She never DID any dancin',” said Jack, with a smile.
+
+“Never DID! Then what was all these yarns about her dancin' up at the
+pass?”
+
+“It was the Sacramento Pet who did all the dancin'; Polly only LENT
+the goat. Ye see, the Pet kinder took a shine to Billy arter he bowled
+Starbottle over thet day at the hotel, and she thought she might teach
+him tricks. So she DID, doing all her teachin' and stage-rehearsin' up
+there at the pass, so's to be outer sight, and keep this thing dark. She
+bribed Polly to lend her the goat and keep her secret, and Polly never
+let on a word to anybody but me.”
+
+“Then it was the Pet that Yuba Bill saw dancin' from the coach?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And that yer artist from New York painted as an 'Imp and Satire'?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Then that's how Polly didn't show up in them tablows at Skinnerstown?
+It was Withholder who kinder smelt a rat, eh? and found out it was only
+a theayter gal all along that did the dancin'?”
+
+“Well, you see,” said Jack, with affected hesitation, “thet's another
+yarn. I don't know mebbe ez I oughter tell it. Et ain't got anything
+to do with this advertisement o' the Pet, and might be rough on old man
+Withholder! Ye mustn't ask me, boys.”
+
+But there was that in his eye, and above all in this lazy
+procrastination of the true humorist when he is approaching his climax,
+which rendered the crowd clamorous and unappeasable. They WOULD have the
+story!
+
+Seeing which, Jack leaned back against a rock with great gravity, put
+his hands in his pockets, looked discontentedly at the ground, and
+began: “You see, boys, old Parson Withholder had heard all these yarns
+about Polly and thet trick-goat, and he kinder reckoned that she might
+do for some one of his tablows. So he axed her if she'd mind standin'
+with the goat and a tambourine for Jephthah's Daughter, at about the
+time when old Jeph comes home, sailin' in and vowin' he'll kill the
+first thing he sees,--jest as it is in the Bible story. Well, Polly
+didn't like to say it wasn't HER that performed with the goat, but the
+Pet, for thet would give the Pet dead away; so Polly agrees to come thar
+with the goat and rehearse the tablow. Well, Polly's thar, a little
+shy; and Billy,--you bet HE'S all there, and ready for the fun; but the
+darned fool who plays Jephthah ain't worth shucks, and when HE comes
+in he does nothin' but grin at Polly and seem skeert at the goat. This
+makes old Withholder jest wild, and at last he goes on the platform
+hisself to show them how the thing oughter be done. So he comes bustlin'
+and prancin' in, and ketches sight o' Polly dancin' in with the goat to
+welcome him; and then he clasps his hands--so--and drops on his knees,
+and hangs down his head--so--and sez, 'Me chyld! me vow! Oh,
+heavens!' But jest then Billy--who's gettin' rather tired o' all this
+foolishness--kinder slues round on his hind legs, and ketches sight o'
+the parson!” Jack paused a moment, and thrusting his hands still deeper
+in his pockets, said lazily, “I don't know if you fellers have noticed
+how much old Withholder looks like Billy?”
+
+There was a rapid and impatient chorus of “Yes! yes!” and “Go on!”
+
+“Well,” continued Jack, “when Billy sees Withholder kneelin' thar
+with his head down, he gives a kind o' joyous leap and claps his hoofs
+together, ez much ez to say, 'I'm on in this scene,' drops his own head,
+and jest lights out for the parson!”
+
+“And butts him clean through the side scenes into the street,”
+ interrupted a delighted auditor.
+
+But Jack's face never changed. “Ye think so?” he said gravely. “But
+thet's jest whar ye slip up; and thet's jest whar Billy slipped up!” he
+added slowly. “Mebbe ye've noticed, too, thet the parson's built kinder
+solid about the head and shoulders. It mought hev be'n thet, or thet
+Billy didn't get a fair start, but thet goat went down on his fore legs
+like a shot, and the parson gave one heave, and jest scooted him off the
+platform! Then the parson reckoned thet this yer 'tablow' had better
+be left out, as thar didn't seem to be any other man who could play
+Jephthah, and it wasn't dignified for HIM to take the part. But the
+parson allowed thet it might be a great moral lesson to Billy!”
+
+And it WAS, for from that moment Billy never attempted to butt again.
+He performed with great docility later on in the Pet's engagement at
+Skinnerstown; he played a distinguished role throughout the provinces;
+he had had the advantages of Art from “the Pet,” and of Simplicity from
+Polly, but only Rocky Canyon knew that his real education had come with
+his first rehearsal with the Reverend Mr. Withholder.
+
+
+
+
+DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+
+
+There was surprise and sometimes disappointment in Rough and Ready, when
+it was known that Dick Spindler intended to give a “family” Christmas
+party at his own house. That he should take an early opportunity to
+celebrate his good fortune and show hospitality was only expected from
+the man who had just made a handsome “strike” on his claim; but that it
+should assume so conservative, old-fashioned, and respectable a form was
+quite unlooked-for by Rough and Ready, and was thought by some a trifle
+pretentious. There were not half-a-dozen families in Rough and Ready;
+nobody ever knew before that Spindler had any relations, and this
+“ringing in” of strangers to the settlement seemed to indicate at least
+a lack of public spirit. “He might,” urged one of his critics, “hev
+given the boys,--that had worked alongside o' him in the ditches by day,
+and slung lies with him around the camp-fire by night,--he might hev
+given them a square 'blow out,' and kep' the leavin's for his old
+Spindler crew, just as other families do. Why, when old man Scudder had
+his house-raisin' last year, his family lived for a week on what was
+left over, arter the boys had waltzed through the house that night,--and
+the Scudders warn't strangers, either.” It was also evident that there
+was an uneasy feeling that Spindler's action indicated an unhallowed
+leaning towards the minority of respectability and exclusiveness, and
+a desertion--without the excuse of matrimony--of the convivial and
+independent bachelor majority of Rough and Ready.
+
+“Ef he was stuck after some gal and was kinder looking ahead, I'd hev
+understood it,” argued another critic.
+
+“Don't ye be too sure he ain't,” said Uncle Jim Starbuck gloomily.
+“Ye'll find that some blamed woman is at the bottom of this yer 'family'
+gathering. That and trouble ez almost all they're made for!”
+
+There happened to be some truth in this dark prophecy, but none of the
+kind that the misogynist supposed. In fact, Spindler had called a
+few evenings before at the house of the Rev. Mr. Saltover, and Mrs.
+Saltover, having one of her “Saleratus headaches,” had turned him over
+to her widow sister, Mrs. Huldy Price, who obediently bestowed upon
+him that practical and critical attention which she divided with the
+stocking she was darning. She was a woman of thirty-five, of singular
+nerve and practical wisdom, who had once smuggled her wounded husband
+home from a border affray, calmly made coffee for his deceived pursuers
+while he lay hidden in the loft, walked four miles for that medical
+assistance which arrived too late to save him, buried him secretly in
+his own “quarter section,” with only one other witness and mourner, and
+so saved her position and property in that wild community, who believed
+he had fled. There was very little of this experience to be traced in
+her round, fresh-colored brunette cheek, her calm black eyes, set in
+a prickly hedge of stiff lashes, her plump figure, or her frank,
+courageous laugh. The latter appeared as a smile when she welcomed Mr.
+Spindler. “She hadn't seen him for a coon's age,” but “reckoned he was
+busy fixin' up his new house.”
+
+“Well, yes,” said Spindler, with a slight hesitation, “ye see, I'm
+reckonin' to hev a kinder Christmas gatherin' of my”--he was about to
+say “folks,” but dismissed it for “relations,” and finally settled upon
+“relatives” as being more correct in a preacher's house.
+
+Mrs. Price thought it a very good idea. Christmas was the natural season
+for the family to gather to “see who's here and who's there, who's
+gettin' on and who isn't, and who's dead and buried. It was lucky
+for them who were so placed that they could do so and be joyful.”
+ Her invincible philosophy probably carried her past any dangerous
+recollections of the lonely grave in Kansas, and holding up the stocking
+to the light, she glanced cheerfully along its level to Mr. Spindler's
+embarrassed face by the fire.
+
+“Well, I can't say much ez to that,” responded Spindler, still
+awkwardly, “for you see I don't know much about it anyway.”
+
+“How long since you've seen 'em?” asked Mrs. Price, apparently
+addressing herself to the stocking.
+
+Spindler gave a weak laugh. “Well, you see, ef it comes to that, I've
+never seen 'em!”
+
+Mrs. Price put the stocking in her lap and opened her direct eyes
+on Spindler. “Never seen 'em?” she repeated. “Then, they're not near
+relations?”
+
+“There are three cousins,” said Spindler, checking them off on his
+fingers, “a half-uncle, a kind of brother-in-law,--that is, the brother
+of my sister-in-law's second husband,--and a niece. That's six.”
+
+“But if you've not seen them, I suppose they've corresponded with you?”
+ said Mrs. Price.
+
+“They've nearly all of 'em written to me for money, seeing my name
+in the paper ez hevin' made a strike,” returned Spindler simply; “and
+hevin' sent it, I jest know their addresses.”
+
+“Oh!” said Mrs. Price, returning to the stocking.
+
+Something in the tone of her ejaculation increased Spindler's
+embarrassment, but it also made him desperate. “You see, Mrs. Price,”
+ he blurted out, “I oughter tell ye that I reckon they are the folks that
+'hevn't got on,' don't you see, and so it seemed only the square thing
+for me, ez had 'got on,' to give them a sort o' Christmas festival.
+Suthin', don't ye know, like what your brother-in-law was sayin' last
+Sunday in the pulpit about this yer peace and goodwill 'twixt man and
+man.”
+
+Mrs. Price looked again at the man before her. His sallow, perplexed
+face exhibited some doubt, yet a certain determination, regarding
+the prospect the quotation had opened to him. “A very good idea, Mr.
+Spindler, and one that does you great credit,” she said gravely.
+
+“I'm mighty glad to hear you say so, Mrs. Price,” he said, with an
+accent of great relief, “for I reckoned to ask you a great favor! You
+see,” he fell into his former hesitation, “that is--the fact is--that
+this sort o' thing is rather suddent to me,--a little outer my line,
+don't you see, and I was goin' to ask ye ef you'd mind takin' the hull
+thing in hand and runnin it for me.”
+
+“Running it for you,” said Mrs. Price, with a quick eye-shot from under
+the edge of her lashes. “Man alive! What are you thinking of?”
+
+“Bossin' the whole job for me,” hurried on Spindler, with nervous
+desperation. “Gettin' together all the things and makin' ready for
+'em,--orderin' in everythin' that's wanted, and fixin' up the rooms,--I
+kin step out while you're doin' it,--and then helpin' me receivin' 'em,
+and sittin' at the head o' the table, you know,--like ez ef you was the
+mistress.”
+
+“But,” said Mrs. Price, with her frank laugh, “that's the duty of one of
+your relations,--your niece, for instance,--or cousin, if one of them is
+a woman.”
+
+“But,” persisted Spindler, “you see, they're strangers to me; I don't
+know 'em, and I do you. You'd make it easy for 'em,--and for me,--don't
+you see? Kinder introduce 'em,--don't you know? A woman of your gin'ral
+experience would smooth down all them little difficulties,” continued
+Spindler, with a vague recollection of the Kansas story, “and put
+everybody on velvet. Don't say 'No,' Mrs. Price! I'm just kalkilatin' on
+you.”
+
+Sincerity and persistency in a man goes a great way with even the best
+of women. Mrs. Price, who had at first received Spindler's request as an
+amusing originality, now began to incline secretly towards it. And, of
+course, began to suggest objections.
+
+“I'm afraid it won't do,” she said thoughtfully, awakening to the fact
+that it would do and could be done. “You see, I've promised to spend
+Christmas at Sacramento with my nieces from Baltimore. And then there's
+Mrs. Saltover and my sister to consult.”
+
+But here Spindler's simple face showed such signs of distress that the
+widow declared she would “think it over,”--a process which the sanguine
+Spindler seemed to consider so nearly akin to talking it over that Mrs.
+Price began to believe it herself, as he hopefully departed.
+
+She “thought it over” sufficiently to go to Sacramento and excuse
+herself to her nieces. But here she permitted herself to “talk it over,”
+ to the infinite delight of those Baltimore girls, who thought this
+extravaganza of Spindler's “so Californian and eccentric!” So that it
+was not strange that presently the news came back to Rough and Ready,
+and his old associates learned for the first time that he had never seen
+his relatives, and that they would be doubly strangers. This did not
+increase his popularity; neither, I grieve to say, did the intelligence
+that his relatives were probably poor, and that the Reverend Mr.
+Saltover had approved of his course, and had likened it to the rich
+man's feast, to which the halt and blind were invited. Indeed, the
+allusion was supposed to add hypocrisy and a bid for popularity to
+Spindler's defection, for it was argued that he might have feasted
+“Wall-eyed Joe” or “Tangle-foot Billy,”--who had once been “chawed” by
+a bear while prospecting,--if he had been sincere. Howbeit, Spindler's
+faith was oblivious to these criticisms, in his joy at Mr. Saltover's
+adhesion to his plans and the loan of Mrs. Price as a hostess. In
+fact, he proposed to her that the invitation should also convey that
+information in the expression, “by the kind permission of the Rev. Mr.
+Saltover,” as a guarantee of good faith, but the widow would have none
+of it. The invitations were duly written and dispatched.
+
+“Suppose,” suggested Spindler, with a sudden lugubrious
+apprehension,--“suppose they shouldn't come?”
+
+“Have no fear of that,” said Mrs. Price, with a frank laugh.
+
+“Or ef they was dead,” continued Spindler.
+
+“They couldn't all be dead,” said the widow cheerfully.
+
+“I've written to another cousin by marriage,” said Spindler dubiously,
+“in case of accident; I didn't think of him before, because he was
+rich.”
+
+“And have you ever seen him either, Mr. Spindler?” asked the widow, with
+a slight mischievousness.
+
+“Lordy! No!” he responded, with unaffected concern.
+
+Only one mistake was made by Mrs. Price in her arrangements for the
+party. She had noticed what the simple-minded Spindler could never have
+conceived,--the feeling towards him held by his old associates, and had
+tactfully suggested that a general invitation should be extended to them
+in the evening.
+
+“You can have refreshments, you know, too, after the dinner, and games
+and music.”
+
+“But,” said the unsophisticated host, “won't the boys think I'm playing
+it rather low down on them, so to speak, givin' 'em a kind o' second
+table, as ef it was the tailings after a strike?”
+
+“Nonsense,” said Mrs. Price, with decision. “It's quite fashionable in
+San Francisco, and just the thing to do.”
+
+To this decision Spindler, in his blind faith in the widow's management,
+weakly yielded. An announcement in the “Weekly Banner” that, “On
+Christmas evening Richard Spindler, Esq., proposed to entertain his
+friends and fellow citizens at an 'at home,' in his own residence,”
+ not only widened the breach between him and the “boys,” but awakened an
+active resentment that only waited for an outlet. It was understood that
+they were all coming; but that they should have “some fun out of it”
+ which might not coincide with Spindler's nor his relatives' sense of
+humor seemed a foregone conclusion.
+
+Unfortunately, too, subsequent events lent themselves to this irony of
+the situation.
+
+He was so obviously sincere in his intent, and, above all, seemed to
+place such a pathetic reliance on her judgment, that she hesitated to
+let him know the shock his revelation had given her. And what might his
+other relations prove to be? Good Lord! Yet, oddly enough, she was so
+prepossessed by him, and so fascinated by his very Quixotism, that it
+was perhaps for these complex reasons that she said a little stiffly:--
+
+“One of these cousins, I see, is a lady, and then there is your niece.
+Do you know anything about them, Mr. Spindler?”
+
+His face grew serious. “No more than I know of the others,” he said
+apologetically. After a moment's hesitation he went on: “Now you speak
+of it, it seems to me I've heard that my niece was di-vorced. But,” he
+added, brightening up, “I've heard that she was popular.”
+
+Mrs. Price gave a short laugh, and was silent for a few minutes. Then
+this sublime little woman looked up at him. What he might have seen in
+her eyes was more than he expected, or, I fear, deserved. “Cheer up, Mr.
+Spindler,” she said manfully. “I'll see you through this thing, don't
+you mind! But don't you say anything about--about--this Vigilance
+Committee business to anybody. Nor about your niece--it was your niece,
+wasn't it?--being divorced. Charley (the late Mr. Price) had a queer
+sort of sister, who--but that's neither here nor there! And your niece
+mayn't come, you know; or if she does, you ain't bound to bring her out
+to the general company.”
+
+At parting, Spindler, in sheer gratefulness, pressed her hand, and
+lingered so long over it that a little color sprang into the widow's
+brown cheek. Perhaps a fresh courage sprang into her heart, too, for
+she went to Sacramento the next day, previously enjoining Spindler on no
+account to show any answers he might receive. At Sacramento her nieces
+flew to her with confidences.
+
+“We so wanted to see you, Aunt Huldy, for we've heard something so
+delightful about your funny Christmas Party!” Mrs. Price's heart sank,
+but her eyes snapped. “Only think of it! One of Mr. Spindler's long-lost
+relatives--a Mr. Wragg--lives in this hotel, and papa knows him. He's
+a sort of half-uncle, I believe, and he's just furious that Spindler
+should have invited him. He showed papa the letter; said it was
+the greatest piece of insolence in the world; that Spindler was an
+ostentatious fool, who had made a little money and wanted to use him
+to get into society; and the fun of the whole thing was that this
+half-uncle and whole brute is himself a parvenu,--a vulgar, ostentatious
+creature, who was only a”--
+
+“Never mind what he was, Kate,” interrupted Mrs. Price hastily. “I call
+his conduct a shame.”
+
+“So do we,” said both girls eagerly. After a pause Kate clasped her
+knees with her locked fingers, and rocking backwards and forwards, said,
+“Milly and I have got an idea, and don't you say 'No' to it. We've had
+it ever since that brute talked in that way. Now, through him, we know
+more about this Mr. Spindler's family connections than you do; and we
+know all the trouble you and he'll have in getting up this party. You
+understand? Now, we first want to know what Spindler's like. Is he a
+savage, bearded creature, like the miners we saw on the boat?”
+
+Mrs. Price said that, on the contrary, he was very gentle, soft-spoken,
+and rather good-looking.
+
+“Young or old?”
+
+“Young,--in fact, a mere boy, as you may judge from his actions,”
+ returned Mrs. Price, with a suggestive matronly air.
+
+Kate here put up a long-handled eyeglass to her fine gray eyes, fitted
+it ostentatiously over her aquiline nose, and then said, in a voice of
+simulated horror, “Aunt Huldy,--this revelation is shocking!”
+
+Mrs. Price laughed her usual frank laugh, albeit her brown cheek took
+upon it a faint tint of Indian red. “If that's the wonderful idea you
+girls have got, I don't see how it's going to help matters,” she said
+dryly.
+
+“No, that's not it? We really have an idea. Now look here.”
+
+Mrs. Price “looked here.” This process seemed to the superficial
+observer to be merely submitting her waist and shoulders to the arms of
+her nieces, and her ears to their confidential and coaxing voices.
+
+Twice she said “it couldn't be thought of,” and “it was impossible;”
+ once addressed Kate as “You limb!” and finally said that she “wouldn't
+promise, but might write!”
+
+*****
+
+It was two days before Christmas. There was nothing in the air, sky,
+or landscape of that Sierran slope to suggest the season to the Eastern
+stranger. A soft rain had been dropping for a week on laurel, pine, and
+buckeye, and the blades of springing grasses and shyly opening flowers.
+Sedate and silent hillsides that had grown dumb and parched towards the
+end of the dry season became gently articulate again; there were murmurs
+in hushed and forgotten canyons, the leap and laugh of water among the
+dry bones of dusty creeks, and the full song of the larger forks and
+rivers. Southwest winds brought the warm odor of the pine sap swelling
+in the forest, or the faint, far-off spice of wild mustard springing
+in the lower valleys. But, as if by some irony of Nature, this gentle
+invasion of spring in the wild wood brought only disturbance and
+discomfort to the haunts and works of man. The ditches were overflowed,
+the fords of the Fork impassable, the sluicing adrift, and the trails
+and wagon roads to Rough and Ready knee-deep in mud. The stage-coach
+from Sacramento, entering the settlement by the mountain highway, its
+wheels and panels clogged and crusted with an unctuous pigment like mud
+and blood, passed out of it through the overflowed and dangerous ford,
+and emerged in spotless purity, leaving its stains behind with Rough
+and Ready. A week of enforced idleness on the river “Bar” had driven
+the miners to the more comfortable recreation of the saloon bar, its
+mirrors, its florid paintings, its armchairs, and its stove. The steam
+of their wet boots and the smoke of their pipes hung over the latter
+like the sacrificial incense from an altar. But the attitude of the men
+was more critical and censorious than contented, and showed little of
+the gentleness of the weather or season.
+
+“Did you hear if the stage brought down any more relations of
+Spindler's?”
+
+The barkeeper, to whom this question was addressed, shifted his lounging
+position against the bar and said, “I reckon not, ez far ez I know.”
+
+“And that old bloat of a second cousin--that crimson beak--what kem
+down yesterday,--he ain't bin hangin' round here today for his reg'lar
+pizon?”
+
+“No,” said the barkeeper thoughtfully, “I reckon Spindler's got him
+locked up, and is settin' on him to keep him sober till after Christmas,
+and prevent you boys gettin' at him.”
+
+“He'll have the jimjams before that,” returned the first speaker; “and
+how about that dead beat of a half-nephew who borrowed twenty dollars of
+Yuba Bill on the way down, and then wanted to get off at Shootersvilie,
+but Bill wouldn't let him, and scooted him down to Spindler's and
+collected the money from Spindler himself afore he'd give him up?”
+
+“He's up thar with the rest of the menagerie,” said the barkeeper, “but
+I reckon that Mrs. Price hez bin feedin' him up. And ye know the old
+woman--that fifty-fifth cousin by marriage--whom Joe Chandler swears he
+remembers ez an old cook for a Chinese restaurant in Stockton,--darn my
+skin ef that Mrs. Price hasn't rigged her out in some fancy duds of her
+own, and made her look quite decent.”
+
+A deep groan here broke from Uncle Jim Starbuck.
+
+“Didn't I tell ye?” he said, turning appealingly to the others. “It's
+that darned widow that's at the bottom of it all! She first put Spindler
+up to givin' the party, and now, darn my skin, ef she ain't goin to fix
+up these ragamuffins and drill 'em so we can't get any fun outer 'em
+after all! And it's bein' a woman that's bossin' the job, and not
+Spindler, we've got to draw things mighty fine and not cut up too rough,
+or some of the boys will kick.”
+
+“You bet,” said a surly but decided voice in the crowd.
+
+“And,” said another voice, “Mrs. Price didn't live in 'Bleeding Kansas'
+for nothing.”
+
+“Wot's the programme you've settled on, Uncle Jim?” said the barkeeper
+lightly, to check what seemed to promise a dangerous discussion.
+
+“Well,” said Starbuck, “we kalkilate to gather early Christmas night in
+Hooper's Hollow and rig ourselves up Injun fashion, and then start for
+Spindler's with pitch-pine torches, and have a 'torchlight dance' around
+the house; them who does the dancin' and yellin' outside takin' their
+turn at goin' in and hevin' refreshment. Jake Cooledge, of Boston, sez
+if anybody objects to it, we've only got to say we're 'Mummers of the
+Olden Times,' sabe? Then, later, we'll have 'Them Sabbath Evening Bells'
+performed on prospectin' pans by the band. Then, at the finish, Jake
+Cooledge is goin' to give one of his surkastic speeches,--kinder
+welcomin' Spindler's family to the Free Openin' o' Spindler's Almshouse
+and Reformatory.” He paused, possibly for that approbation which,
+however, did not seem to come spontaneously. “It ain't much,” he added
+apologetically, “for we're hampered by women; but we'll add to the
+programme ez we see how things pan out. Ye see, from what we can hear,
+all of Spindler's relations ain't on hand yet! We've got to wait, like
+in elckshun times, for 'returns from the back counties.' Hello! What's
+that?”
+
+It was the swish and splutter of hoofs on the road before the door. The
+Sacramento coach! In an instant every man was expectant, and Starbuck
+darted outside on the platform. Then there was the usual greeting and
+bustle, the hurried ingress of thirsty passengers into the saloon, and a
+pause. Uncle Jim returned, excitedly and pantingly. “Look yer, boys! Ef
+this ain't the richest thing out! They say there's two more relations o'
+Spindler's on the coach, come down as express freight, consigned,--d'ye
+hear?--consigned to Spindler!”
+
+“Stiffs, in coffins?” suggested an eager voice.
+
+“I didn't get to hear more. But here they are.”
+
+There was the sudden irruption of a laughing, curious crowd into the
+bar-room, led by Yuba Bill, the driver. Then the crowd parted, and
+out of their midst stepped two children, a boy and a girl, the oldest
+apparently of not more than six years, holding each other's hands. They
+were coarsely yet cleanly dressed, and with a certain uniform precision
+that suggested formal charity. But more remarkable than all, around the
+neck of each was a little steel chain, from which depended the regular
+check and label of the powerful Express Company, Wells; Fargo & Co., and
+the words: “To Richard Spindler.” “Fragile.” “With great care.” “Collect
+on delivery.” Occasionally their little hands went up automatically and
+touched their labels, as if to show them. They surveyed the crowd, the
+floor, the gilded bar, and Yuba Bill without fear and without wonder.
+There was a pathetic suggestion that they were accustomed to this
+observation.
+
+“Now, Bobby,” said Yuba Bill, leaning back against the bar, with an air
+half-paternal, half-managerial, “tell these gents how you came here.”
+
+“By Wellth, Fargoth Expreth,” lisped Bobby.
+
+“Whar from?”
+
+“Wed Hill, Owegon.”
+
+“Red Hill, Oregon? Why, it's a thousand miles from here,” said a
+bystander.
+
+“I reckon,” said Yuba Bill coolly, “they kem by stage to Portland, by
+steamer to 'Frisco, steamer again to Stockton, and then by stage over
+the whole line. Allers by Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Express, from agent to
+agent, and from messenger to messenger. Fact! They ain't bin tetched or
+handled by any one but the Kempany's agents; they ain't had a line or
+direction except them checks around their necks! And they've wanted for
+nothin' else. Why, I've carried heaps o' treasure before, gentlemen,
+and once a hundred thousand dollars in greenbacks, but I never carried
+anythin' that was watched and guarded as them kids! Why, the division
+inspector at Stockton wanted to go with 'em over the line; but Jim
+Bracy, the messenger, said he'd call it a reflection on himself and
+resign, ef they didn't give 'em to him with the other packages! Ye had a
+pretty good time, Bobby, didn't ye? Plenty to eat and drink, eh?”
+
+The two children laughed a little weak laugh, turned each other
+bashfully around, and then looked up shyly at Yuba Bill and said,
+“Yeth.”
+
+“Do you know where you are goin'?” asked Starbuck, in a constrained
+voice.
+
+It was the little girl who answered quickly and eagerly:--
+
+“Yes, to Krissmass and Sandy Claus.”
+
+“To what?” asked Starbuck.
+
+Here the boy interposed with a superior air:--
+
+“Thee meanth Couthin Dick. He'th got Krithmath.”
+
+“Where's your mother?”
+
+“Dead.”
+
+“And your father?”
+
+“In orthpittal.”
+
+There was a laugh somewhere on the outskirts of the crowd. Every one
+faced angrily in that direction, but the laugher had disappeared. Yuba
+Bill, however, sent his voice after him. “Yes, in hospital! Funny, ain't
+it?--amoosin' place! Try it. Step over here, and in five minutes, by the
+living Hoky, I'll qualify you for admission, and not charge you a cent!”
+ He stopped, gave a sweeping glance of dissatisfaction around him, and
+then, leaning back against the bar, beckoned to some one near the door,
+and said in a disgusted tone, “You tell these galoots how it happened,
+Bracy. They make me sick!”
+
+Thus appealed to, Bracy, the express messenger, stepped forward in Yuba
+Bill's place.
+
+“It's nothing particular, gentlemen,” he said, with a laugh, “only
+it seems that some man called Spindler, who lives about here, sent an
+invitation to the father of these children to bring his family to a
+Christmas party. It wasn't a bad sort of thing for Spindler to do,
+considering that they were his poor relations, though they didn't know
+him from Adam,--was it?” He paused; several of the bystanders cleared
+their throats, but said nothing. “At least,” resumed Bracy, “that's what
+the boys up at Red Hill, Oregon, thought, when they heard of it. Well,
+as the father was in hospital with a broken leg, and the mother only a
+few weeks dead, the boys thought it mighty rough on these poor kids if
+they were done out of their fun because they had no one to bring them.
+The boys couldn't afford to go themselves, but they got a little money
+together, and then got the idea of sendin' 'em by express. Our agent at
+Red Hill tumbled to the idea at once; but he wouldn't take any money in
+advance, and said he would send 'em 'C. O. D.' like any other package.
+And he did, and here they are! That's all! And now, gentlemen, as I've
+got to deliver them personally to this Spindler, and get his receipt and
+take off their checks, I reckon we must toddle. Come, Bill, help take
+'em up!”
+
+“Hold on!” said a dozen voices. A dozen hands were thrust into a dozen
+pockets; I grieve to say some were regretfully withdrawn empty, for it
+was a hard season in Rough and Ready. But the expressman stepped before
+them, with warning, uplifted hand.
+
+“Not a cent, boys,--not a cent! Wells, Fargo's Express Company don't
+undertake to carry bullion with those kids, at least on the same
+contract!” He laughed, and then looking around him, said confidentially
+in a lower voice, which, however, was quite audible to the children,
+“There's as much as three bags of silver in quarter and half dollars in
+my treasure box in the coach that has been poured, yes, just showered
+upon them, ever since they started, and have been passed over from agent
+to agent and messenger to messenger,--enough to pay their passage from
+here to China! It's time to say quits now. But bet your life, they are
+not going to that Christmas party poor!”
+
+He caught up the boy, as Yuba Bill lifted the little girl to his
+shoulder, and both passed out. Then one by one the loungers in the
+bar-room silently and awkwardly followed, and when the barkeeper turned
+back from putting away his decanters and glasses, to his astonishment
+the room was empty.
+
+*****
+
+Spindler's house, or “Spindler's Splurge,” as Rough and Ready chose to
+call it, stood above the settlement, on a deforested hillside, which,
+however, revenged itself by producing not enough vegetation to cover
+even the few stumps that were ineradicable. A large wooden structure
+in the pseudo-classic style affected by Westerners, with an incongruous
+cupola, it was oddly enough relieved by a still more incongruous veranda
+extending around its four sides, upheld by wooden Doric columns, which
+were already picturesquely covered with flowering vines and sun-loving
+roses. Mr. Spindler had trusted the furnishing of its interior to the
+same contractor who had upholstered the gilded bar-room of the Eureka
+Saloon, and who had apparently bestowed the same design and material,
+impartially, on each. There were gilded mirrors all over the house and
+chilly marble-topped tables, gilt plaster Cupids in the corners, and
+stuccoed lions “in the way” everywhere. The tactful hands of Mrs. Price
+had screened some of these with seasonable laurels, fir boughs, and
+berries, and had imparted a slight Christmas flavor to the house. But
+the greater part of her time had been employed in trying to subdue the
+eccentricities of Spindler's amazing relations; in tranquilizing Mrs.
+“Aunt” Martha Spindler,--the elderly cook before alluded to,--who was
+inclined to regard the gilded splendors of the house as indicative
+of dangerous immorality; in restraining “Cousin” Morley Hewlett
+from considering the dining-room buffet as a bar for “intermittent
+refreshment;” and in keeping the weak-minded nephew, Phinney Spindler,
+from shooting at bottles from the veranda, wearing his uncle's clothes,
+or running up an account in his uncle's name for various articles at
+the general stores. Yet the unlooked-for arrival of the two children had
+been the one great compensation and diversion for her. She wrote at once
+to her nieces a brief account of her miraculous deliverance. “I think
+these poor children dropped from the skies here to make our Christmas
+party possible, to say nothing of the sympathy they have created in
+Rough and Ready for Spindler. He is going to keep them as long as
+he can, and is writing to the father. Think of the poor little tots
+traveling a thousand miles to 'Krissmass,' as they call it!--though they
+were so well cared for by the messengers that their little bodies were
+positively stuffed like quails. So, you see, dear, we will be able to
+get along without airing your famous idea. I'm sorry, for I know you're
+just dying to see it all.”
+
+Whatever Kate's “idea” might have been, there certainly seemed now no
+need of any extraneous aid to Mrs. Price's management. Christmas came at
+last, and the dinner passed off without serious disaster. But the ordeal
+of the reception of Rough and Ready was still to come. For Mrs. Price
+well knew that although “the boys” were more subdued, and, indeed,
+inclined to sympathize with their host's uncouth endeavor, there was
+still much in the aspect of Spindler's relations to excite their sense
+of the ludicrous.
+
+But here Fortune again favored the house of Spindler with a dramatic
+surprise, even greater than the advent of the children had been. In the
+change that had come over Rough and Ready, “the boys” had decided, out
+of deference to the women and children, to omit the first part of their
+programme, and had approached and entered the house as soberly and
+quietly as ordinary guests. But before they had shaken hands with the
+host and hostess, and seen the relations, the clatter of wheels was
+heard before the open door, and its lights flashed upon a carriage and
+pair,--an actual private carriage,--the like of which had not been seen
+since the governor of the State had come down to open the new ditch!
+Then there was a pause, the flash of the carriage lamps upon white silk,
+the light tread of a satin foot on the veranda and in the hall, and the
+entrance of a vision of loveliness! Middle-aged men and old dwellers
+of cities remembered their youth; younger men bethought themselves of
+Cinderella and the Prince! There was a thrill and a hush as this last
+guest--a beautiful girl, radiant with youth and adornment--put a dainty
+glass to her sparkling eye and advanced familiarly, with outstretched
+hand, to Dick Spindler. Mrs. Price gave a single gasp, and drew back
+speechless.
+
+“Uncle Dick,” said a laughing contralto voice, which, indeed, somewhat
+recalled Mrs. Price's own, in its courageous frankness, “I am so
+delighted to come, even if a little late, and so sorry that Mr. M'Kenna
+could not come on account of business.”
+
+Everybody listened eagerly, but none more eagerly and surprisingly than
+the host himself. M'Kenna! The rich cousin who had never answered the
+invitation! And Uncle Dick! This, then, was his divorced niece! Yet even
+in his astonishment he remembered that of course no one but himself and
+Mrs. Price knew it,--and that lady had glanced discreetly away.
+
+“Yes,” continued the half-niece brightly. “I came from Sacramento with
+some friends to Shootersville, and from thence I drove here; and though
+I must return to-night, I could not forego the pleasure of coming, if
+it was only for an hour or two, to answer the invitation of the uncle I
+have not seen for years.” She paused, and, raising her glasses, turned a
+politely questioning eye towards Mrs. Price. “One of our relations?” she
+said smilingly to Spindler.
+
+“No,” said Spindler, with some embarrassment, “a--a friend!”
+
+The half-niece extended her hand. Mrs. Price took it.
+
+But the fair stranger,--what she did and said were the only things
+remembered in Rough and Ready on that festive occasion; no one thought
+of the other relations; no one recalled them nor their eccentricities;
+Spindler himself was forgotten. People only recollected how Spindler's
+lovely niece lavished her smiles and courtesies on every one, and
+brought to her feet particularly the misogynist Starbuck and the
+sarcastic Cooledge, oblivious of his previous speech; how she sat at
+the piano and sang like an angel, hushing the most hilarious and excited
+into sentimental and even maudlin silence; how, graceful as a nymph, she
+led with “Uncle Dick” a Virginia reel until the whole assembly joined,
+eager for a passing touch of her dainty hand in its changes; how, when
+two hours had passed,--all too swiftly for the guests,--they stood with
+bared heads and glistening eyes on the veranda to see the fairy coach
+whirl the fairy princess away! How--but this incident was never known to
+Rough and Ready.
+
+It happened in the sacred dressing-room, where Mrs. Price was cloaking
+with her own hands the departing half-niece of Mr. Spindler. Taking that
+opportunity to seize the lovely relative by the shoulders and shake her
+violently, she said: “Oh, yes, and it's all very well for you, Kate, you
+limb! For you're going away, and will never see Rough and Ready and poor
+Spindler again. But what am I to do, miss? How am I to face it out?
+For you know I've got to tell him at least that you're no half-niece of
+his!”
+
+“Have you?” said the young lady.
+
+“Have I?” repeated the widow impatiently. “Have I? Of course I have!
+What are you thinking of?”
+
+“I was thinking, aunty,” said the girl audaciously, “that from what
+I've seen and heard to-night, if I'm not his half-niece now, it's only a
+question of time! So you'd better wait. Good-night, dear.”
+
+And, really,--it turned out that she was right!
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT “JULES'”
+
+
+When the waters were up at “Jules'” there was little else up on that
+monotonous level. For the few inhabitants who calmly and methodically
+moved to higher ground, camping out in tents until the flood
+had subsided, left no distracting wreckage behind them. A dozen
+half-submerged log cabins dotted the tranquil surface of the waters,
+without ripple or disturbance, looking in the moonlight more like the
+ruins of centuries than of a few days. There was no current to sap their
+slight foundations or sweep them away; nothing stirred that silent lake
+but the occasional shot-like indentations of a passing raindrop, or,
+still more rarely, a raft, made of a single log, propelled by some
+citizen on a tour of inspection of his cabin roof-tree, where some of
+his goods were still stored. There was no sense of terror in this bland
+obliteration of the little settlement; the ruins of a single burnt-up
+cabin would have been more impressive than this stupid and even
+grotesquely placid effect of the rival destroying element. People took
+it naturally; the water went as it had come,--slowly, impassively,
+noiselessly; a few days of fervid Californian sunshine dried the cabins,
+and in a week or two the red dust lay again as thickly before their
+doors as the winter mud had lain. The waters of Rattlesnake Creek
+dropped below its banks, the stage-coach from Marysville no longer made
+a detour of the settlement. There was even a singular compensation to
+this amicable invasion; the inhabitants sometimes found gold in those
+breaches in the banks made by the overflow. To wait for the “old
+Rattlesnake sluicing” was a vernal hope of the trusting miner.
+
+The history of “Jules',” however, was once destined to offer a singular
+interruption of this peaceful and methodical process. The winter of
+1859-60 was an exceptional one. But little rain had fallen in the
+valleys, although the snow lay deep in the high Sierras. Passes were
+choked, ravines filled, and glaciers found on their slopes. And when the
+tardy rains came with the withheld southwesterly “trades,” the regular
+phenomenon recurred; Jules' Flat silently, noiselessly, and peacefully
+went under water; the inhabitants moved to the higher ground, perhaps
+a little more expeditiously from an impatience born of the delay. The
+stagecoach from Marysville made its usual detour and stopped before the
+temporary hotel, express offices, and general store of “Jules',” under
+canvas, bark, and the limp leaves of a spreading alder. It deposited a
+single passenger,--Miles Hemmingway, of San Francisco, but originally of
+Boston,--the young secretary of a mining company, dispatched to report
+upon the alleged auriferous value of “Jules'.” Of this he had been by
+no means impressed as he looked down upon the submerged cabins from the
+box-seat of the coach and listened to the driver's lazy recital of
+the flood, and of the singularly patient acceptance of it by the
+inhabitants.
+
+It was the old story of the southwestern miner's indolence and
+incompetency,--utterly distasteful to his northern habits of thought
+and education. Here was their old fatuous endurance of Nature's wild
+caprices, without that struggle against them which brought others
+strength and success; here was the old philosophy which accepted the
+prairie fire and cyclone, and survived them without advancement,
+yet without repining. Perhaps in different places and surroundings a
+submission so stoic might have impressed him; in gentlemen who tucked
+their dirty trousers in their muddy boots and lived only for the gold
+they dug, it did not seem to him heroic. Nor was he mollified as
+he stood beside the rude refreshment bar--a few planks laid on
+trestles--and drank his coffee beneath the dripping canvas roof, with an
+odd recollection of his boyhood and an inclement Sunday-school picnic.
+Yet these men had been living in this shiftless fashion for three weeks!
+It exasperated him still more to think that he might have to wait there
+a few days longer for the water to subside sufficiently for him to make
+his examination and report. As he took a proffered seat on a candle-box,
+which tilted under him, and another survey of the feeble makeshifts
+around him, his irascibility found vent.
+
+“Why, in the name of God, didn't you, after you had been flooded out
+ONCE, build your cabins PERMANENTLY on higher ground?”
+
+Although the tone of his voice was more disturbing than his question, it
+pleased one of the loungers to affect to take it literally.
+
+“Well, ez you've put it that way,--'in the name of God!'”--returned the
+man lazily, “it mout hev struck us that ez HE was bossin' the job, so
+to speak, and handlin' things round here generally, we might leave it to
+Him. It wasn't OUR flood to monkey with.”
+
+“And as He didn't coven-ant, so to speak, to look arter this higher
+ground 'speshally, and make an Ararat of it for us, ez far ez we
+could see, we didn't see any reason for SETTLIN' yer,” put in a second
+speaker, with equal laziness.
+
+The secretary saw his mistake instantly, and had experience enough
+of Western humor not to prolong the disadvantage of his unfortunate
+adjuration. He colored slightly and said, with a smile, “You know what
+I mean; you could have protected yourselves better. A levee on the bank
+would have kept you clear of the highest watermark.”
+
+“Hey you ever heard WHAT the highest watermark was?” said the first
+speaker, turning to another of the loungers without looking at the
+secretary.
+
+“Never heard it,--didn't know there was a limit before,” responded the
+man.
+
+The first speaker turned back to the secretary. “Did you ever know what
+happened at 'Bulger's,' on the North Fork? They had one o' them levees.”
+
+“No. What happened?” asked the secretary impatiently.
+
+“They was fixed suthin' like us,” returned the first speaker. “THEY
+allowed they'd build a levee above THEIR highest watermark, and did. It
+worked like a charm at first; but the water hed to go somewhere, and it
+kinder collected at the first bend. Then it sorter raised itself on its
+elbows one day, and looked over the levee down upon whar some of the
+boys was washin' quite comf'ble. Then it paid no sorter attention to the
+limit o' that high watermark, but went six inches better! Not slow and
+quiet like ez it useter to, ez it does HERE, kinder fillin' up from
+below, but went over with a rush and a current, hevin' of course the
+whole height of the levee to fall on t'other side where the boys were
+sluicing.” He paused, and amidst a profound silence added, “They say
+that 'Bulger's' was scattered promiscuous-like all along the fort for
+five miles. I only know that one of his mules and a section of sluicing
+was picked up at Red Flat, eight miles away!”
+
+Mr. Hemmingway felt that there WAS an answer to this, but, being wise,
+also felt that it would be unavailing. He smiled politely and said
+nothing, at which the first speaker turned to him:--
+
+“Thar ain't anything to see to-day, but to-morrow, ez things go, the
+water oughter be droppin'. Mebbe you'd like to wash up now and clean
+yourself,” he added, with a glance at Hemmingway's small portmanteau.
+“Ez we thought you'd likely be crowded here, we've rigged up a corner
+for you at Stanton's shanty with the women.”
+
+The young man's cheek flushed slightly at some possible irony in this,
+and he protested with considerable stress that he was quite ready “to
+rough it” where he was.
+
+“I reckon it's already fixed,” returned the man decisively, “so you'd
+better come and I'll show you the way.”
+
+“One moment,” said Hemmingway, with a smile; “my credentials are
+addressed to the manager of the Boone Ditch Company at 'Jules'.' Perhaps
+I ought to see him first.”
+
+“All right; he's Stanton.”
+
+“And”--hesitated the secretary, “YOU, who appear to understand the
+locality so well,--I trust I may have the pleasure”--
+
+“Oh, I'm Jules.”
+
+The secretary was a little startled and amused. So “Jules” was a person,
+and not a place!
+
+“Then you're a pioneer?” asked Hemmingway, a little less dictatorially,
+as they passed out under the dripping trees.
+
+“I struck this creek in the fall of '49, comin' over Livermore's
+Pass with Stanton,” returned Jules, with great brevity of speech and
+deliberate tardiness of delivery. “Sent for my wife and two children the
+next year; wife died same winter, change bein' too sudden for her, and
+contractin' chills and fever at Sweetwater. When I kem here first thar
+wasn't six inches o' water in the creek; out there was a heap of it over
+there where you see them yallowish-green patches and strips o' brush
+and grass; all that war water then, and all that growth hez sprung up
+since.”
+
+Hemmingway looked around him. The “higher ground” where they stood was
+in reality only a mound-like elevation above the dead level of the flat,
+and the few trees were merely recent young willows and alders. The area
+of actual depression was much greater than he had imagined, and its
+resemblance to the bed of some prehistoric inland sea struck him
+forcibly. A previous larger inundation than Jules' brief experience had
+ever known had been by no means improbable. His cheek reddened at his
+previous hasty indictment of the settlers' ignorance and shiftlessness,
+and the thought that he had probably committed his employers to his
+own rash confidence and superiority of judgment. However, there was no
+evidence that this diluvial record was not of the remote past. He smiled
+again with greater security as he thought of the geological changes that
+had since tempered these cataclysms, and the amelioration brought by
+settlement and cultivation. Nevertheless, he would make a thorough
+examination to-morrow.
+
+Stanton's cabin was the furthest of these temporary habitations, and
+was partly on the declivity which began to slope to the river's bank. It
+was, like the others, a rough shanty of unplaned boards, but, unlike the
+others, it had a base of logs laid lengthwise on the ground and parallel
+with each other, on which the flooring and structure were securely
+fastened. This gave it the appearance of a box slid on runners, or a
+Noah's Ark whose bulk had been reduced. Jules explained that the logs,
+laid in that manner, kept the shanty warmer and free from damp. In reply
+to Hemmingway's suggestion that it was a great waste of material, Jules
+simply replied that the logs were the “flotsam and jetsam” of the creek
+from the overflowed mills below.
+
+Hemmingway again smiled. It was again the old story of Western waste
+and prodigality. Accompanied by Jules, however, he climbed up the huge,
+slippery logs which made a platform before the door, and entered.
+
+The single room was unequally divided; the larger part containing three
+beds, by day rolled in a single pile in one corner to make room for a
+table and chairs. A few dresses hanging from nails on the wall showed
+that it was the women's room. The smaller compartment was again
+subdivided by a hanging blanket, behind which was a rude bunk or berth
+against the wall, a table made of a packing-box, containing a tin basin
+and a can of water. This was his apartment.
+
+“The women-folks are down the creek, bakin', to-day,” said Jules
+explanatorily; “but I reckon that one of 'em will be up here in a jiffy
+to make supper, so you just take it easy till they come. I've got to
+meander over to the claim afore I turn in, but you just lie by to-night
+and take a rest.”
+
+He turned away, leaving Hemmingway standing in the doorway still
+distraught and hesitating. Nor did the young man recognize the delicacy
+of Jules' leave-taking until he had unstrapped his portmanteau and found
+himself alone, free to make his toilet, unembarrassed by company. But
+even then he would have preferred the rough companionship of the miners
+in the common dormitory of the general store to this intrusion upon
+the half-civilization of the women, their pitiable little comforts and
+secret makeshifts. His disgust of his own indecision which brought him
+there naturally recoiled in the direction of his host and hostesses, and
+after a hurried ablution, a change of linen, and an attempt to remove
+the stains of travel from his clothes, he strode out impatiently into
+the open air again.
+
+It was singularly mild even for the season. The southwest trades blew
+softly, and whispered to him of San Francisco and the distant Pacific,
+with its long, steady swell. He turned again to the overflowed Flat
+beneath him, and the sluggish yellow water that scarcely broke a ripple
+against the walls of the half-submerged cabins. And this was the water
+for whose going down they were waiting with an immobility as tranquil
+as the waters themselves! What marvelous incompetency,--or what infinite
+patience! He knew, of course, their expected compensation in this
+“ground sluicing” at Nature's own hand; the long rifts in the banks of
+the creek which so often showed “the color” in the sparkling scales of
+river gold disclosed by the action of the water; the heaps of reddish
+mud left after its subsidence around the walls of the cabins,--a deposit
+that often contained a treasure a dozen times more valuable than the
+cabin itself! And then he heard behind him a laugh, a short and panting
+breath, and turning, beheld a young woman running towards him.
+
+In his first astounded sight of her, in her limp nankeen sunbonnet,
+thrown back from her head by the impetus of her flight, he saw only too
+much hair, two much white teeth, too much eye-flash, and, above
+all,--as it appeared to him,--too much confidence in the power of these
+qualities. Even as she ran, it seemed to him that she was pulling down
+ostentatiously the rolled-up sleeves of her pink calico gown over her
+shapely arms. I am inclined to think that the young gentleman's temper
+was at fault, and his conclusion hasty; a calmer observer would have
+detected nothing of this in her frankly cheerful voice. Nevertheless,
+her evident pleasure in the meeting seemed to him only obtrusive
+coquetry.
+
+“Lordy! I reckoned to git here afore you'd get through fixin' up, and in
+time to do a little prinkin' myself, and here you're out already.” She
+laughed, glancing at his clean shirt and damp hair. “But all the same,
+we kin have a talk, and you kin tell me all the news afore the other
+wimmen get up here. It's a coon's age since I was at Sacramento and
+saw anybody or anything.” She stopped and, instinctively detecting some
+vague reticence in the man before her, said, still laughing, “You're Mr.
+Hemmingway, ain't you?”
+
+Hemmingway took off his hat quickly, with a slight start at his
+forgetfulness. “I beg your pardon; yes, certainly.”
+
+“Aunty Stanton thought it was 'Hummingbird,'” said the girl, with a
+laugh, “but I reckoned not. I'm Jinney Jules, you know; folks call me
+'J. J.' It wouldn't do for a Hummingbird and a Jay Jay to be in the same
+camp, would it? It would be just TOO funny!”
+
+Hemmingway did not find the humor of this so singularly exhaustive, but
+he was already beginning to be ashamed of his attitude towards her. “I'm
+very sorry to be giving you all this trouble by my intrusion, for I was
+quite willing to stay at the store yonder. Indeed,” he added, with
+a burst of frankness quite as sincere as her own, “if you think your
+father will not be offended, I would gladly go there now.”
+
+If he still believed in her coquetry and vanity, he would have been
+undeceived and crushed by the equal and sincere frankness with which she
+met this ungallant speech.
+
+“No! I reckon he wouldn't care, if you'd be as comf'ble and fit for
+to-morrow. But ye WOULDN'T,” she said reflectively. “The boys thar
+sit up late over euchre, and swear a heap, and Simpson, who'd sleep
+alongside of ye, snores pow'ful, I've heard. Aunty Stanton kin do her
+level at that, too, and they say”--with a laugh--“that I kin, too, but
+you're away off in that corner, and it won't reach you. So, takin' it
+all, by the large, you'd better stay whar ye are. We wimmen, that is,
+the most of us, will be off and away down to Rattlesnake Bar shoppin'
+afore sun up, so ye'll sleep ez long ez ye want to, and find yer
+breakfast ready when ye wake. So I'll jest set to and get ye some
+supper, and ye kin tell me all the doin's in Sacramento and 'Frisco
+while I'm workin'.”
+
+In spite of her unconscious rebuff to his own vanity, Hemmingway felt a
+sense of relief and less constraint in his relations to this decidedly
+provincial hostess.
+
+“Can I help you in any way?” he asked eagerly.
+
+“Well, ye MIGHT bring me an armful o' wood from the pile under the
+alders, ef ye ain't afraid o' dirtyin' your coat,” she said tentatively.
+
+Mr. Hemmingway was not afraid; he declared himself delighted. He brought
+a generous armful of small cut willow boughs, and deposited them before
+a small stove, which seemed a temporary substitute for the usual large
+adobe chimney that generally occupied the entire gable of a miner's
+cabin. An elbow and short length of stovepipe carried the smoke through
+the cabin side. But he also noticed that his fair companion had used
+the interval to put on a pair of white cuffs and a collar. However, she
+brushed the green moss from his sleeve with some toweling, and although
+this operation brought her so near to him that her breath--as soft and
+warm as the southwest trades--stirred his hair, it was evident that this
+contiguity was only frontier familiarity, as far removed from conscious
+coquetry as it was, perhaps, from educated delicacy.
+
+“The boys gin'rally kem to take up enough wood for me to begin with,”
+ she said, “but I reckon they didn't know I was comin' up so soon.”
+
+Hemmingway's distrust returned a little at this obvious suggestion that
+he was only a substitute for their general gallantry, but he smiled and
+said somewhat bluntly, “I don't suppose you lack for admirers here.”
+
+The girl, however, took him literally. “Lordy, no! Me and Mamie Robinson
+are the only girls for fifteen miles along the creek. ADMIRIN'! I call
+it jest PESTERIN' sometimes! I reckon I'll hev to keep a dog!”
+
+Hemmingway shivered. Yes, she was not only conscious, but spoilt
+already. He pictured to himself the uncouth gallantries of the
+settlement, the provincial badinage, the feeble rivalries of the young
+men whom he had seen at the general store. Undoubtedly this was what she
+was expecting in HIM!
+
+“Well,” she said, turning from the fire she had kindled, “while I'm
+settin' the table, tell me what's a-doin' in Sacramento! I reckon you've
+got heaps of lady friends thar,--I'm told there's lots of fashions just
+from the States.”
+
+“I'm afraid I don't know enough of them to interest you,” he said dryly.
+
+“Go on and talk,” she replied. “Why, when Tom Flynn kem back from
+Sacramento, and he warn't thar more nor a week, he jest slung yarns
+about his doin's thar to last the hull rainy season.”
+
+Half amused and half annoyed, Hemmingway seated himself on the little
+platform beside the open door, and began a conscientious description of
+the progress of Sacramento, its new buildings, hotels, and theatres,
+as it had struck him on his last visit. For a while he was somewhat
+entertained by the girl's vivacity and eager questioning, but presently
+it began to pall. He continued, however, with a grim sense of duty, and
+partly as a reason for watching her in her household duties. Certainly
+she was graceful! Her tall, lithe, but beautifully moulded figure,
+even in its characteristic southwestern indolence, fell into poses as
+picturesque as they were unconscious. She lifted the big molasses-can
+from its shelf on the rafters with the attitude of a Greek water-bearer.
+She upheaved the heavy flour-sack to the same secure shelf with the
+upraised palms of an Egyptian caryatid. Suddenly she interrupted
+Hemmingway's perfunctory talk with a hearty laugh. He started, looked
+up from his seat on the platform, and saw that she was standing over him
+and regarding him with a kind of mischievous pity.
+
+“Look here,” she said, “I reckon that'll do! You kin pull up short! I
+kin see what's the matter with you; you're jest plumb tired, tuckered
+out, and want to turn in! So jest you sit that quiet until I get supper
+ready and never mind me.” In vain Hemmingway protested, with a rising
+color. The girl only shook her head. “Don't tell me! You ain't keering
+to talk, and you're only playin' Sacramento statistics on me,” she
+retorted, with unfeigned cheerfulness. “Anyhow, here's the wimmen
+comin', and supper is ready.”
+
+There was a sound of weary, resigned ejaculations and pantings, and
+three gaunt women in lustreless alpaca gowns appeared before the cabin.
+They seemed prematurely aged and worn with labor, anxiety, and ill
+nourishment. Doubtless somewhere in these ruins a flower like Jay Jules
+had once flourished; doubtless somewhere in that graceful nymph herself
+the germ of this dreary maturity was hidden. Hemmingway welcomed them
+with a seriousness equal to their own. The supper was partaken with the
+kind of joyless formality which in the southwest is supposed to indicate
+deep respect, even the cheerful Jay falling under the influence, and it
+was with a feeling of relief that at last the young man retired to his
+fenced-off corner for solitude and repose. He gathered, however,
+that before “sun up” the next morning the elder women were going to
+Rattlesnake Bar for the weekly shopping, leaving Jay as before to
+prepare his breakfast and then join them later. It was already a change
+in his sentiments to find himself looking forward to that tete-a-tete
+with the young girl, as a chance of redeeming his character in her
+eyes. He was beginning to feel he had been stupid, unready, and withal
+prejudiced. He undressed himself in his seclusion, broken only by the
+monotonous voices in the adjoining apartment. From time to time he
+heard fragments and scraps of their conversation, always in reference to
+affairs of the household and settlement, but never of himself,--not even
+the suggestion of a prudent lowering of their voices,--and fell asleep.
+He woke up twice in the night with a sensation of cold so marked and
+distinct from his experience of the early evening, that he was fain to
+pile his clothes over his blankets to keep warm. He fell asleep again,
+coming once more to consciousness with a sense of a slight jar, but
+relapsing again into slumber for he knew not how long. Then he was
+fully awakened by a voice calling him, and, opening his eyes, beheld the
+blanket partition put aside, and the face of Jay thrust forward. To
+his surprise it wore a look of excited astonishment dominated by
+irrepressible laughter.
+
+“Get up quick as you kin,” she said gaspingly; “this is about the
+killingest thing that ever happened!”
+
+She disappeared, but he could still hear her laughing, and to his utter
+astonishment with her disappearance the floor seemed to change its
+level. A giddy feeling seized him; he put his feet to the floor; it
+was unmistakably wet and oozing. He hurriedly clothed himself, still
+accompanied by the strange feeling of oscillation and giddiness, and
+passed though the opening into the next room. Again his step produced
+the same effect upon the floor, and he actually stumbled against her
+shaking figure, as she wiped the tears of uncontrollable mirth from her
+eyes with her apron. The contact seemed to upset her remaining gravity.
+She dropped into a chair, and, pointing to the open door, gasped, “Look
+thar! Lordy! How's that for high?” threw her apron over her head, and
+gave way to an uproarious fit of laughter.
+
+Hemmingway turned to the open door. A lake was before him on the level
+of the cabin. He stepped forward on the platform; the water was right
+and left, all around him. The platform dipped slightly to his step. The
+cabin was afloat,--afloat upon its base of logs like a raft, the whole
+structure upheld by the floor on which the logs were securely fastened.
+The high ground had disappeared--the river--its banks the green area
+beyond. They, and THEY alone, were afloat upon an inland sea.
+
+He turned an astounded and serious face upon her mirth. “When did it
+happen?” he demanded. She checked her laugh, more from a sense of polite
+deference to his mood than any fear, and said quietly, “That gets me.
+Everything was all right two hours ago when the wimmen left. It was
+too early to get your breakfast and rouse ye out, and I felt asleep, I
+reckon, until I felt a kind o' slump and a jar.” Hemmingway remembered
+his own half-conscious sensation. “Then I got up and saw we was adrift.
+I didn't waken ye, for I thought it was only a sort of wave that would
+pass. It wasn't until I saw we were movin' and the hull rising ground
+gettin' away, that I thought o' callin' ye.”
+
+He thought of the vanished general store, of her father, the workers on
+the bank, the helpless women on their way to the Bar, and turned almost
+savagely on her.
+
+“But the others,--where are they?” he said indignantly. “Do you call
+that a laughing matter?”
+
+She stopped at the sound of his voice as at a blow. Her face hardened
+into immobility, yet when she replied it was with the deliberate
+indolence of her father. “The wimmen are up on the hills by this time.
+The boys hev bin drowned out many times afore this and got clear off,
+on sluice boxes and timber, without squealing. Tom Flynn went down
+ten miles to Sayer's once on two bar'ls, and I never heard that HE was
+cryin' when they picked him up.”
+
+A flush came to Hemmingway's cheek, but with it a gleam of intelligence.
+Of course the inundation was known to them FIRST, and there was the
+wreckage to support them. They had clearly saved themselves. If they had
+abandoned the cabin, it was because they knew its security, perhaps had
+even seen it safely adrift.
+
+“Has this ever happened to the cabin before?” he asked, as he thought of
+its peculiar base.
+
+“No.”
+
+He looked at the water again. There was a decided current. The overflow
+was evidently no part of the original inundation. He put his hand in
+the water. It was icy cold. Yes, he understood it now. It was the sudden
+melting of snow in the Sierras which had brought this volume down the
+canyon. But was there more still to come?
+
+“Have you anything like a long pole or stick in the cabin?”
+
+“Nary,” said the girl, opening her big eyes and shaking her head with
+a simulation of despair, which was, however, flatly contradicted by her
+laughing mouth.
+
+“Nor any cord or twine?” he continued.
+
+She handed him a ball of coarse twine.
+
+“May I take a couple of these hooks?” he asked, pointing to some rough
+iron hooks in the rafters, on which bacon and jerked beef were hanging.
+
+She nodded. He dislodged the hooks, greased them with the bacon rind,
+and affixed them to the twine.
+
+“Fishin'?” she asked demurely.
+
+“Exactly,” he replied gravely.
+
+He threw the line in the water. It slackened at about six feet,
+straightened, and became taut at an angle, and then dragged. After one
+or two sharp jerks he pulled it up. A few leaves and grasses were caught
+in the hooks. He examined them attentively.
+
+“We're not in the creek,” he said, “nor in the old overflow. There's no
+mud or gravel on the hooks, and these grasses don't grow near water.”
+
+“Now, that's mighty cute of you,” she said admiringly, as she knelt
+beside him on the platform. “Let's see what you've caught. Look yer!”
+ she added, suddenly lifting a limp stalk, “that's 'old man,' and thar
+ain't a scrap of it grows nearer than Springer's Rise,--four miles from
+home.”
+
+“Are you sure?” he asked quickly.
+
+“Sure as pop! I used to go huntin' it for smellidge.”
+
+“For what?” he said, with a bewildered smile.
+
+“For this,”--she thrust the leaves to his nose and then to her own
+pink nostrils; “for--for”--she hesitated, and then with a mischievous
+simulation of correctness added, “for the perfume.”
+
+He looked at her admiringly. For all her five feet ten inches, what
+a mere child she was, after all! What a fool he was to have taken a
+resentful attitude towards her! How charming and graceful she looked,
+kneeling there beside him!
+
+“Tell me,” he said suddenly, in a gentler voice, “what were you laughing
+at just now?”
+
+Her brown eyes wavered for a moment, and then brimmed with merriment.
+She threw herself sideways, in a leaning posture, supporting herself on
+one arm, while with her other hand she slowly drew out her apron string,
+as she said, in a demure voice:--
+
+“Well, I reckoned it was jest too killin' to think of you, who didn't
+want to talk to me, and would hev given your hull pile to hev skipped
+out o' this, jest stuck here alongside o' me, whether you would or no,
+for Lord knows how long!”
+
+“But that was last night,” he said, in a tone of raillery. “I was tired,
+and you said so yourself, you know. But I'm ready to talk now. What
+shall I tell you?”
+
+“Anything,” said the girl, with a laugh.
+
+“What I am thinking of?” he said, with frankly admiring eyes.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Everything?”
+
+“Yes, everything.” She stopped, and leaning forward, suddenly caught
+the brim of his soft felt hat, and drawing it down smartly over his
+audacious eyes, said, “Everything BUT THAT.”
+
+It was with some difficulty and some greater embarrassment that he
+succeeded in getting his eyes free again. When he did so, she had risen
+and entered the cabin. Disconcerted as he was, he was relieved to see
+that her expression of amusement was unchanged. Was her act a piece
+of rustic coquetry, or had she resented his advances? Nor did her next
+words settle the question.
+
+“Ye kin do yer nice talk and philanderin' after we've settled whar we
+are, what we're goin', and what's goin' to happen. Jest now it 'pears
+to me that ez these yere logs are the only thing betwixt us and 'kingdom
+come,' ye'd better be hustlin' round with a few spikes to clinch 'em to
+the floor.”
+
+She handed him a hammer and a few spikes. He obediently set to work,
+with little confidence, however, in the security of the fastening. There
+was neither rope nor chain for lashing the logs together; a stronger
+current and a collision with some submerged stump or wreckage would
+loosen them and wreck the cabin. But he said nothing. It was the girl
+who broke the silence.
+
+“What's your front name?”
+
+“Miles.”
+
+“MILES,--that's a funny name. I reckon that's why you war so FAR OFF and
+DISTANT at first.”
+
+Mr. Hemmingway thought this very witty, and said so. “But,” he added,
+“when I was a little nearer a moment ago, you stopped me.”
+
+“But you was moving faster than the shanty was. I reckon you don't take
+that gait with your lady friends at Sacramento! However, you kin talk
+now.”
+
+“But you forget I don't know 'where we are,' nor 'what's going to
+happen.'”
+
+“But I do,” she said quietly. “In a couple of hours we'll be picked up,
+so you'll be free again.”
+
+Something in the confidence of her manner made him go to the door again
+and look out. There was scarcely any current now, and the cabin seemed
+motionless. Even the wind, which might have acted upon it, was
+wanting. They were apparently in the same position as before, but his
+sounding-line showed that the water was slightly falling. He came back
+and imparted the fact with a certain confidence born of her previous
+praise of his knowledge. To his surprise she only laughed and said
+lazily, “We'll be all right, and you'll be free, in about two hours.”
+
+“I see no sign of it,” he said, looking through the door again.
+
+“That's because you're looking in the water and the sky and the mud for
+it,” she said, with a laugh. “I reckon you've been trained to watch them
+things a heap better than to study the folks about here.”
+
+“I daresay you're right,” said Hemmingway cheerfully, “but I don't
+clearly see what the folks about here have to do with our situation just
+now.”
+
+“You'll see,” she said, with a smile of mischievous mystery. “All the
+same,” she added, with a sudden and dangerous softness in her eyes, “I
+ain't sayin' that YOU ain't kinder right neither.”
+
+An hour ago he would have laughed at the thought that a mere look and
+sentence like this from the girl could have made his heart beat. “Then I
+may go on and talk?”
+
+She smiled, but her eyes said, “Yes,” plainly.
+
+He turned to take a chair near her. Suddenly the cabin trembled, there
+was a sound of scraping, a bump, and then the whole structure tilted to
+one side and they were both thrown violently towards the corner, with a
+swift inrush of water. Hemmingway quickly caught the girl by the waist;
+she clung to him instinctively, yet still laughing, as with a desperate
+effort he succeeded in dragging her to the upper side of the slanting
+cabin, and momentarily restoring its equilibrium. They remained for an
+instant breathless. But in that instant he had drawn her face to his and
+kissed her.
+
+She disengaged herself gently with neither excitement nor emotion, and
+pointing to the open door said, “Look there!”
+
+Two of the logs which formed the foundation of their floor were quietly
+floating in the water before the cabin! The submerged obstacle or snag
+which had torn them from their fastening was still holding the cabin
+fast. Hemmingway saw the danger. He ran along the narrow ledge to the
+point of contact and unhesitatingly leaped into the icy cold water. It
+reached his armpits before his feet struck the obstacle,--evidently a
+stump with a projecting branch. Bracing himself against it, he shoved
+off the cabin. But when he struck out to follow it, he found that the
+log nearest him was loose and his grasp might tear it away. At the
+same moment, however, a pink calico arm fluttered above his head, and a
+strong grasp seized his coat collar. The cabin half revolved as the girl
+dragged him into the open door.
+
+“You bantam!” she said, with a laugh, “why didn't you let ME do that?
+I'm taller than you! But,” she added, looking at his dripping clothes
+and dragging out a blanket from the corner, “I couldn't dry myself
+as quick as you kin!” To her surprise, however, Hemmingway tossed the
+blanket aside, and pointing to the floor, which was already filmed with
+water, ran to the still warm stove, detached it from its pipe, and threw
+it overboard. The sack of flour, bacon, molasses, and sugar, and all the
+heavier articles followed it into the stream. Relieved of their weight
+the cabin base rose an inch or two higher. Then he sat down and said,
+“There! that may keep us afloat for that 'couple of hours' you speak of.
+So I suppose I may talk now!”
+
+“Ye haven't no time,” she said, in a graver voice. “It won't be as long
+as a couple of hours now. Look over thar!”
+
+He looked where she pointed across the gray expanse of water. At first
+he could see nothing. Presently he saw a mere dot on its face which at
+times changed to a single black line.
+
+“It's a log, like these,” he said.
+
+“It's no log. It's an Injun dug-out*--comin' for me.”
+
+ * A canoe made from a hollowed log.
+
+“Your father?” he said joyfully.
+
+She smiled pityingly. “It's Tom Flynn. Father's got suthin' else to look
+arter. Tom Flynn hasn't.”
+
+“And who's Tom Flynn?” he asked, with an odd sensation.
+
+“The man I'm engaged to,” she said gravely, with a slight color.
+
+The rose that blossomed on her cheek faded in his. There was a moment of
+silence. Then he said frankly, “I owe you some apology. Forgive my folly
+and impertinence a moment ago. How could I have known this?”
+
+“You took no more than you deserved, or that Tom would have objected
+to,” she said, with a little laugh. “You've been mighty kind and handy.”
+
+She held out her hand; their fingers closed together in a frank
+pressure. Then his mind went back to his work, which he had
+forgotten,--to his first impressions of the camp and of her. They both
+stood silent, watching the canoe, now quite visible, and the man that
+was paddling it, with an intensity that both felt was insincere.
+
+“I'm afraid,” he said, with a forced laugh, “that I was a little too
+hasty in disposing of your goods and possessions. We could have kept
+afloat a little longer.”
+
+“It's all the same,” she said, with a slight laugh; “it's jest as well
+we didn't look too comf'ble--to HIM.”
+
+He did not reply; he did not dare to look at her. Yes! It was the same
+coquette he had seen last night. His first impressions were correct.
+
+The canoe came on rapidly now, propelled by a powerful arm. In a few
+moments it was alongside, and its owner leaped on the platform. It was
+the gentleman with his trousers tucked in his boots, the second voice
+in the gloomy discussion in the general store last evening. He nodded
+simply to the girl, and shook Hemmingway's hand warmly.
+
+Then he made a hurried apology for his delay: it was so difficult to
+find “the lay” of the drifted cabin. He had struck out first for the
+most dangerous spot,--the “old clearing,” on the right bank, with its
+stumps and new growths,--and it seemed he was right. And all the rest
+were safe, and “nobody was hurt.”
+
+“All the same, Tom,” she said, when they were seated and paddling off
+again, “you don't know HOW NEAR YOU CAME TO LOSING ME.” Then she
+raised her beautiful eyes and looked significantly, not at HIM, but at
+Hemmingway.
+
+When the water was down at “Jules'” the next day, they found certain
+curious changes and some gold, and the secretary was able to make a
+favorable report. But he made none whatever of his impressions “when
+the water was up at 'Jules','” though he often wondered if they were
+strictly trustworthy.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOM IN THE “CALAVERAS CLARION”
+
+
+The editorial sanctum of the “Calaveras Clarion” opened upon the
+“composing-room” of that paper on the one side, and gave apparently upon
+the rest of Calaveras County upon the other. For, situated on the very
+outskirts of the settlement and the summit of a very steep hill, the
+pines sloped away from the editorial windows to the long valley of the
+South Fork and--infinity. The little wooden building had invaded Nature
+without subduing it. It was filled night and day with the murmur of
+pines and their fragrance. Squirrels scampered over its roof when it was
+not preoccupied by woodpeckers, and a printer's devil had once seen a
+nest-building blue jay enter the composing window, flutter before one
+of the slanting type-cases with an air of deliberate selection, and then
+fly off with a vowel in its bill.
+
+Amidst these sylvan surroundings the temporary editor of the “Clarion”
+ sat at his sanctum, reading the proofs of an editorial. As he was
+occupying that position during a six weeks' absence of the bona fide
+editor and proprietor, he was consequently reading the proof with some
+anxiety and responsibility. It had been suggested to him by certain
+citizens that the “Clarion” needed a firmer and more aggressive policy
+towards the Bill before the Legislature for the wagon road to the South
+Fork. Several Assembly men had been “got at” by the rival settlement of
+Liberty Hill, and a scathing exposure and denunciation of such methods
+was necessary. The interests of their own township were also to be
+“whooped up.” All this had been vigorously explained to him, and he had
+grasped the spirit, if not always the facts, of his informants. It is
+to be feared, therefore, that he was perusing his article more with
+reference to its vigor than his own convictions. And yet he was not so
+greatly absorbed as to be unmindful of the murmur of the pines
+without, his half-savage environment, and the lazy talk of his sole
+companions,--the foreman and printer in the adjoining room.
+
+“Bet your life! I've always said that a man INSIDE a newspaper office
+could hold his own agin any outsider that wanted to play rough or tried
+to raid the office! Thar's the press, and thar's the printin' ink and
+roller! Folks talk a heap o' the power o' the Press!--I tell ye, ye
+don't half know it. Why, when old Kernel Fish was editin' the 'Sierra
+Banner,' one o' them bullies that he'd lampooned in the 'Banner' fought
+his way past the Kernel in the office, into the composin'-room, to
+wreck everythin' and 'pye' all the types. Spoffrel--ye don't remember
+Spoffrel?--little red-haired man?--was foreman. Spoffrel fended him off
+with the roller and got one good dab inter his eyes that blinded him,
+and then Spoffrel sorter skirmished him over to the press,--a plain
+lever just like ours,--whar the locked-up form of the inside was still
+a-lyin'! Then, quick as lightnin', Spoffrel tilts him over agin it, and
+HE throws out his hand and ketches hold o' the form to steady himself,
+when Spoffrel just runs the form and the hand under the press and down
+with the lever! And that held the feller fast as grim death! And when
+at last he begs off, and Spoff lets him loose, the hull o' that 'ere
+lampooning article he objected to was printed right onto the skin o' his
+hand! Fact, and it wouldn't come off, either.”
+
+“Gosh, but I'd like to hev seen it,” said the printer. “There ain't any
+chance, I reckon, o' such a sight here. The boss don't take no risks
+lampoonin', and he” (the editor knew he was being indicated by some
+unseen gesture of the unseen workman) “ain't that style.”
+
+“Ye never kin tell,” said the foreman didactically, “what might happen!
+I've known editors to get into a fight jest for a little innercent
+bedevilin' o' the opposite party. Sometimes for a misprint. Old man
+Pritchard of the 'Argus' oncet had a hole blown through his arm because
+his proofreader had called Colonel Starbottle's speech an 'ignominious'
+defense, when the old man hed written 'ingenuous' defense.”
+
+The editor paused in his proof-reading. He had just come upon the
+sentence: “We cannot congratulate Liberty Hill--in its superior
+elevation--upon the ignominious silence of the representative of all
+Calaveras when this infamous Bill was introduced.” He referred to his
+copy. Yes! He had certainly written “ignominious,”--that was what his
+informants had suggested. But was he sure they were right? He had a
+vague recollection, also, that the representative alluded to--Senator
+Bradley--had fought two duels, and was a “good” though somewhat
+impulsive shot! He might alter the word to “ingenuous” or “ingenious,”
+ either would be finely sarcastic, but then--there was his foreman, who
+would detect it! He would wait until he had finished the entire article.
+In that occupation he became oblivious of the next room, of a silence,
+a whispered conversation, which ended with a rapping at the door and the
+appearance of the foreman in the doorway.
+
+“There's a man in the office who wants to see the editor,” he said.
+
+“Show him in,” replied the editor briefly. He was, however, conscious
+that there was a singular significance in his foreman's manner, and an
+eager apparition of the other printer over the foreman's shoulder.
+
+“He's carryin' a shot-gun, and is a man twice as big as you be,” said
+the foreman gravely.
+
+The editor quickly recalled his own brief and as yet blameless record
+in the “Clarion.” “Perhaps,” he said tentatively, with a gentle smile,
+“he's looking for Captain Brush” (the absent editor).
+
+“I told him all that,” said the foreman grimly, “and he said he wanted
+to see the man in charge.”
+
+In proportion as the editor's heart sank his outward crest arose. “Show
+him in,” he said loftily.
+
+“We KIN keep him out,” suggested the foreman, lingering a moment; “me
+and him,” indicating the expectant printer behind him, “is enough for
+that.”
+
+“Show him up,” repeated the editor firmly.
+
+The foreman withdrew; the editor seated himself and again took up
+his proof. The doubtful word “ignominious” seemed to stand out of the
+paragraph before him; it certainly WAS a strong expression! He was about
+to run his pencil through it when he heard the heavy step of his visitor
+approaching. A sudden instinct of belligerency took possession of him,
+and he wrathfully threw the pencil down.
+
+The burly form of the stranger blocked the doorway. He was dressed like
+a miner, but his build and general physiognomy were quite distinct
+from the local variety. His upper lip and chin were clean-shaven, still
+showing the blue-black roots of the beard which covered the rest of his
+face and depended in a thick fleece under his throat. He carried a small
+bundle tied up in a silk handkerchief in one hand, and a “shot-gun” in
+the other, perilously at half-cock. Entering the sanctum, he put down
+his bundle and quietly closed the door behind him. He then drew an empty
+chair towards him and dropped heavily into it with his gun on his
+knees. The editor's heart dropped almost as heavily, although he quite
+composedly held out his hand.
+
+“Shall I relieve you of your gun?”
+
+“Thank ye, lad--noa. It's moor coomfortable wi' me, and it's main
+dangersome to handle on the half-cock. That's why I didn't leave 'im on
+the horse outside!”
+
+At the sound of his voice and occasional accent a flash of intelligence
+relieved the editor's mind. He remembered that twenty miles away, in
+the illimitable vista from his windows, lay a settlement of English
+north-country miners, who, while faithfully adopting the methods,
+customs, and even slang of the Californians, retained many of their
+native peculiarities. The gun he carried on his knee, however, was
+evidently part of the Californian imitation.
+
+“Can I do anything for you?” said the editor blandly.
+
+“Ay! I've coom here to bill ma woife.”
+
+“I--don't think I understand,” hesitated the editor, with a smile.
+
+“I've coom here to get ye to put into your paaper a warnin', a notiss,
+that onless she returns to my house in four weeks, I'll have nowt to do
+wi' her again.”
+
+“Oh!” said the editor, now perfectly reassured, “you want an
+advertisement? That's the business of the foreman; I'll call him.” He
+was rising from his seat when the stranger laid a heavy hand on his
+shoulder and gently forced him down again.
+
+“Noa, lad! I don't want noa foreman nor understrappers to take this job.
+I want to talk it over wi' you. Sabe? My woife she bin up and awaa these
+six months. We had a bit of difference, that ain't here nor there, but
+she skedaddled outer my house. I want to give her fair warning, and let
+her know I ain't payin' any debts o' hers arter this notiss, and I ain't
+takin' her back arter four weeks from date.”
+
+“I see,” said the editor glibly. “What's your wife's name?”
+
+“Eliza Jane Dimmidge.”
+
+“Good,” continued the editor, scribbling on the paper before him;
+“something like this will do: 'Whereas my wife, Eliza Jane Dimmidge,
+having left my bed and board without just cause or provocation, this
+is to give notice that I shall not be responsible for any debts of her
+contracting on or after this date.'”
+
+“Ye must be a lawyer,” said Mr. Dimmidge admiringly.
+
+It was an old enough form of advertisement, and the remark showed
+incontestably that Mr. Dimmidge was not a native; but the editor smiled
+patronizingly and went on: “'And I further give notice that if she does
+not return within the period of four weeks from this date, I shall take
+such proceedings for relief as the law affords.'”
+
+“Coom, lad, I didn't say THAT.”
+
+“But you said you wouldn't take her back.”
+
+“Ay.”
+
+“And you can't prevent her without legal proceedings. She's your wife.
+But you needn't take proceedings, you know. It's only a warning.”
+
+Mr. Dimmidge nodded approvingly. “That's so.”
+
+“You'll want it published for four weeks, until date?” asked the editor.
+
+“Mebbe longer, lad.”
+
+The editor wrote “till forbid” in the margin of the paper and smiled.
+
+“How big will it be?” said Mr. Dimmidge.
+
+The editor took up a copy of the “Clarion” and indicated about an inch
+of space. Mr. Dimmidge's face fell.
+
+“I want it bigger,--in large letters, like a play-card,” he said.
+“That's no good for a warning.”
+
+“You can have half a column or a whole column if you like,” said the
+editor airily.
+
+“I'll take a whole one,” said Mr. Dimmidge simply.
+
+The editor laughed. “Why! it would cost you a hundred dollars.”
+
+“I'll take it,” repeated Mr. Dimmidge.
+
+“But,” said the editor gravely, “the same notice in a small space will
+serve your purpose and be quite legal.”
+
+“Never you mind that, lad! It's the looks of the thing I'm arter, and
+not the expense. I'll take that column.”
+
+The editor called in the foreman and showed him the copy. “Can you
+display that so as to fill a column?”
+
+The foreman grasped the situation promptly. It would be big business for
+the paper. “Yes,” he said meditatively, “that bold-faced election type
+will do it.”
+
+Mr. Dimmidge's face brightened. The expression “bold-faced” pleased him.
+“That's it! I told you. I want to bill her in a portion of the paper.”
+
+“I might put in a cut,” said the foreman suggestively; “something like
+this.” He took a venerable woodcut from the case. I grieve to say it was
+one which, until the middle of the present century, was common enough in
+the newspaper offices in the Southwest. It showed the running figure of
+a negro woman carrying her personal property in a knotted handkerchief
+slung from a stick over her shoulder, and was supposed to represent “a
+fugitive slave.”
+
+Mr. Dimmidge's eyes brightened. “I'll take that, too. It's a little
+dark-complected for Mrs. P., but it will do. Now roon away, lad,” he
+said to the foreman, as he quietly pushed him into the outer office
+again and closed the door. Then, facing the surprised editor, he said,
+“Theer's another notiss I want ye to put in your paper; but that's
+atween US. Not a word to THEM,” he indicated the banished foreman with a
+jerk of his thumb. “Sabe? I want you to put this in another part o' your
+paper, quite innocent-like, ye know.” He drew from his pocket a gray
+wallet, and taking out a slip of paper read from it gravely, “'If this
+should meet the eye of R. B., look out for M. J. D. He is on your track.
+When this you see write a line to E. J. D., Elktown Post Office.' I want
+this to go in as 'Personal and Private'--sabe?--like them notisses in
+the big 'Frisco papers.”
+
+“I see,” said the editor, laying it aside. “It shall go in the same
+issue in another column.”
+
+Apparently Mr. Dimmidge expected something more than this reply, for
+after a moment's hesitation he said with an odd smile:
+
+“Ye ain't seein' the meanin' o' that, lad?”
+
+“No,” said the editor lightly; “but I suppose R. B. does, and it isn't
+intended that any one else should.”
+
+“Mebbe it is, and mebbe it isn't,” said Mr. Dimmidge, with a
+self-satisfied air. “I don't mind saying atween us that R. B. is the man
+as I've suspicioned as havin' something to do with my wife goin' away;
+and ye see, if he writes to E. J. D.--that's my wife's initials--at
+Elktown, I'LL get that letter and so make sure.”
+
+“But suppose your wife goes there first, or sends?”
+
+“Then I'll ketch her or her messenger. Ye see?”
+
+The editor did not see fit to oppose any argument to this phenomenal
+simplicity, and Mr. Dimmidge, after settling his bill with the foreman,
+and enjoining the editor to the strictest secrecy regarding the origin
+of the “personal notice,” took up his gun and departed, leaving the
+treasury of the “Clarion” unprecedentedly enriched, and the editor to
+his proofs.
+
+The paper duly appeared the next morning with the column advertisement,
+the personal notice, and the weighty editorial on the wagon road. There
+was a singular demand for the paper, the edition was speedily exhausted,
+and the editor was proportionately flattered, although he was surprised
+to receive neither praise nor criticism from his subscribers. Before
+evening, however, he learned to his astonishment that the excitement was
+caused by the column advertisement. Nobody knew Mr. Dimmidge, nor his
+domestic infelicities, and the editor and foreman, being equally in the
+dark, took refuge in a mysterious and impressive evasion of all inquiry.
+Never since the last San Francisco Vigilance Committee had the office
+been so besieged. The editor, foreman, and even the apprentice, were
+buttonholed and “treated” at the bar, but to no effect. All that could
+be learned was that it was a bona fide advertisement, for which one
+hundred dollars had been received! There were great discussions and
+conflicting theories as to whether the value of the wife, or the
+husband's anxiety to get rid of her, justified the enormous expense and
+ostentatious display. She was supposed to be an exceedingly beautiful
+woman by some, by others a perfect Sycorax; in one breath Mr. Dimmidge
+was a weak, uxorious spouse, wasting his substance on a creature who did
+not care for him, and in another a maddened, distracted, henpecked man,
+content to purchase peace and rest at any price. Certainly, never was
+advertisement more effective in its publicity, or cheaper in proportion
+to the circulation it commanded. It was copied throughout the whole
+Pacific slope; mighty San Francisco papers described its size and
+setting under the attractive headline, “How they Advertise a Wife in the
+Mountains!” It reappeared in the Eastern journals, under the title of
+“Whimsicalities of the Western Press.” It was believed to have crossed
+to England as a specimen of “Transatlantic Savagery.” The real editor
+of the “Clarion” awoke one morning, in San Francisco, to find his paper
+famous. Its advertising columns were eagerly sought for; he at once
+advanced the rates. People bought successive issues to gaze upon this
+monumental record of extravagance. A singular idea, which, however,
+brought further fortune to the paper, was advanced by an astute critic
+at the Eureka Saloon. “My opinion, gentlemen, is that the whole blamed
+thing is a bluff! There ain't no Mr. Dimmidge; there ain't no Mrs.
+Dimmidge; there ain't no desertion! The whole rotten thing is an
+ADVERTISEMENT o' suthin'! Ye'll find afore ye get through with it
+that that there wife won't come back until that blamed husband buys
+Somebody's Soap, or treats her to Somebody's particular Starch or Patent
+Medicine! Ye jest watch and see!” The idea was startling, and seized
+upon the mercantile mind. The principal merchant of the town, and
+purveyor to the mining settlements beyond, appeared the next morning at
+the office of the “Clarion.” “Ye wouldn't mind puttin' this 'ad' in
+a column alongside o' the Dimmidge one, would ye?” The young editor
+glanced at it, and then, with a serpent-like sagacity, veiled, however,
+by the suavity of the dove, pointed out that the original advertiser
+might think it called his bona fides into question and withdraw his
+advertisement. “But if we secured you by an offer of double the amount
+per column?” urged the merchant. “That,” responded the locum tenens,
+“was for the actual editor and proprietor in San Francisco to determine.
+He would telegraph.” He did so. The response was, “Put it in.” Whereupon
+in the next issue, side by side with Mr. Dimmidge's protracted warning,
+appeared a column with the announcement, in large letters, “WE HAVEN'T
+LOST ANY WIFE, but WE are prepared to furnish the following goods at
+a lower rate than any other advertiser in the county,” followed by the
+usual price list of the merchant's wares. There was an unprecedented
+demand for that issue. The reputation of the “Clarion,” both as a shrewd
+advertising medium and a comic paper, was established at once. For a few
+days the editor waited with some apprehension for a remonstrance from
+the absent Dimmidge, but none came. Whether Mr. Dimmidge recognized that
+this new advertisement gave extra publicity to his own, or that he was
+already on the track of the fugitive, the editor did not know. The
+few curious citizens who had, early in the excitement, penetrated
+the settlement of the English miners twenty miles away in search of
+information, found that Mr. Dimmidge had gone away, and that Mrs.
+Dimmidge had NEVER resided there with him!
+
+Six weeks passed. The limit of Mr. Dimmidge's advertisement had been
+reached, and, as it was not renewed, it had passed out of the pages
+of the “Clarion,” and with it the merchant's advertisement in the next
+column. The excitement had subsided, although its influence was still
+felt in the circulation of the paper and its advertising popularity. The
+temporary editor was also nearing the limit of his incumbency, but had
+so far participated in the good fortune of the “Clarion” as to receive
+an offer from one of the San Francisco dailies.
+
+It was a warm night, and he was alone in his sanctum. The rest of the
+building was dark and deserted, and his solitary light, flashing out
+through the open window, fell upon the nearer pines and was lost in the
+dark, indefinable slope below. He had reached the sanctum by the
+rear, and a door which he also left open to enjoy the freshness of
+the aromatic air. Nor did it in the least mar his privacy. Rather the
+solitude of the great woods without seemed to enter through that
+door and encompassed him with its protecting loneliness. There was
+occasionally a faint “peep” in the scant eaves, or a “pat-pat,” ending
+in a frightened scurry across the roof, or the slow flap of a heavy
+wing in the darkness below. These gentle disturbances did not, however,
+interrupt his work on “The True Functions of the County Newspaper,” the
+editorial on which he was engaged.
+
+Presently a more distinct rustling against the straggling blackberry
+bushes beside the door attracted his attention. It was followed by a
+light tapping against the side of the house. The editor started and
+turned quickly towards the open door. Two outside steps led to the
+ground. Standing upon the lower one was a woman. The upper part of her
+figure, illuminated by the light from the door, was thrown into greater
+relief by the dark background of the pines. Her face was unknown to
+him, but it was a pleasant one, marked by a certain good-humored
+determination.
+
+“May I come in?” she said confidently.
+
+“Certainly,” said the editor. “I am working here alone because it is
+so quiet.” He thought he would precipitate some explanation from her by
+excusing himself.
+
+“That's the reason why I came,” she said, with a quiet smile.
+
+She came up the next step and entered the room. She was plainly but
+neatly dressed, and now that her figure was revealed he saw that she was
+wearing a linsey-woolsey riding-skirt, and carried a serviceable rawhide
+whip in her cotton-gauntleted hand. She took the chair he offered her
+and sat down sideways on it, her whip hand now also holding up her
+skirt, and permitting a hem of clean white petticoat and a smart,
+well-shaped boot to be seen.
+
+“I don't remember to have had the pleasure of seeing you in Calaveras
+before,” said the editor tentatively.
+
+“No. I never was here before,” she said composedly, “but you've heard
+enough of me, I reckon. I'm Mrs. Dimmidge.” She threw one hand over
+the back of the chair, and with the other tapped her riding-whip on the
+floor.
+
+The editor started. Mrs. Dimmidge! Then she was not a myth. An absurd
+similarity between her attitude with the whip and her husband's entrance
+with his gun six weeks before forced itself upon him and made her an
+invincible presence.
+
+“Then you have returned to your husband?” he said hesitatingly.
+
+“Not much!” she returned, with a slight curl of her lip.
+
+“But you read his advertisement?”
+
+“I saw that column of fool nonsense he put in your paper--ef that's
+what you mean,” she said with decision, “but I didn't come here to see
+HIM--but YOU.”
+
+The editor looked at her with a forced smile, but a vague misgiving. He
+was alone at night in a deserted part of the settlement, with a plump,
+self-possessed woman who had a contralto voice, a horsewhip, and--he
+could not help feeling--an evident grievance.
+
+“To see me?” he repeated, with a faint attempt at gallantry. “You are
+paying me a great compliment, but really”--
+
+“When I tell you I've come three thousand miles from Kansas straight
+here without stopping, ye kin reckon it's so,” she replied firmly.
+
+“Three thousand miles!” echoed the editor wonderingly.
+
+“Yes. Three thousand miles from my own folks' home in Kansas, where six
+years ago I married Mr. Dimmidge,--a British furriner as could scarcely
+make himself understood in any Christian language! Well, he got round
+me and dad, allowin' he was a reg'lar out-and-out profeshnal miner,--had
+lived in mines ever since he was a boy; and so, not knowin' what kind o'
+mines, and dad just bilin' over with the gold fever, we were married and
+kem across the plains to Californy. He was a good enough man to look at,
+but it warn't three months before I discovered that he allowed a wife
+was no better nor a nigger slave, and he the master. That made me open
+my eyes; but then, as he didn't drink, and didn't gamble, and didn't
+swear, and was a good provider and laid by money, why I shifted along
+with him as best I could. We drifted down the first year to Sonora, at
+Red Dog, where there wasn't another woman. Well, I did the nigger slave
+business,--never stirring out o' the settlement, never seein' a town
+or a crowd o' decent people,--and he did the lord and master! We played
+that game for two years, and I got tired. But when at last he allowed
+he'd go up to Elktown Hill, where there was a passel o' his countrymen
+at work, with never a sign o' any other folks, and leave me alone at Red
+Dog until he fixed up a place for me at Elktown Hill,--I kicked! I gave
+him fair warning! I did as other nigger slaves did,--I ran away!”
+
+A recollection of the wretched woodcut which Mr. Dimmidge had selected
+to personify his wife flashed upon the editor with a new meaning.
+Yet perhaps she had not seen it, and had only read a copy of the
+advertisement. What could she want? The “Calaveras Clarion,” although a
+“Palladium” and a “Sentinel upon the Heights of Freedom” in reference to
+wagon roads, was not a redresser of domestic wrongs,--except through its
+advertising columns! Her next words intensified that suggestion.
+
+“I've come here to put an advertisement in your paper.”
+
+The editor heaved a sigh of relief, as once before. “Certainly,” he said
+briskly. “But that's another department of the paper, and the printers
+have gone home. Come to-morrow morning early.”
+
+“To-morrow morning I shall be miles away,” she said decisively,
+“and what I want done has got to be done NOW! I don't want to see no
+printers; I don't want ANYBODY to know I've been here but you. That's
+why I kem here at night, and rode all the way from Sawyer's Station,
+and wouldn't take the stage-coach. And when we've settled about the
+advertisement, I'm going to mount my horse, out thar in the bushes, and
+scoot outer the settlement.”
+
+“Very good,” said the editor resignedly. “Of course I can deliver your
+instructions to the foreman. And now--let me see--I suppose you wish to
+intimate in a personal notice to your husband that you've returned.”
+
+“Nothin' o' the kind!” said Mrs. Dimmidge coolly. “I want to placard him
+as he did me. I've got it all written out here. Sabe?”
+
+She took from her pocket a folded paper, and spreading it out on the
+editor's desk, with a certain pride of authorship read as follows:--
+
+“Whereas my husband, Micah J. Dimmidge, having given out that I have
+left his bed and board,--the same being a bunk in a log cabin and pork
+and molasses three times a day,--and having advertised that he'd pay
+no debts of MY contractin',--which, as thar ain't any, might be easier
+collected than debts of his own contractin',--this is to certify that
+unless he returns from Elktown Hill to his only home in Sonora in one
+week from date, payin' the cost of this advertisement, I'll know the
+reason why.--Eliza Jane Dimmidge.”
+
+“Thar,” she added, drawing a long breath, “put that in a column of the
+'Clarion,' same size as the last, and let it work, and that's all I want
+of you.”
+
+“A column?” repeated the editor. “Do you know the cost is very
+expensive, and I COULD put it in a single paragraph?”
+
+“I reckon I kin pay the same as Mr. Dimmidge did for HIS,” said the lady
+complacently. “I didn't see your paper myself, but the paper as copied
+it--one of them big New York dailies--said that it took up a whole
+column.”
+
+The editor breathed more freely; she had not seen the infamous woodcut
+which her husband had selected. At the same moment he was struck with a
+sense of retribution, justice, and compensation.
+
+“Would you,” he asked hesitatingly,--“would you like it illustrated--by
+a cut?”
+
+“With which?”
+
+“Wait a moment; I'll show you.”
+
+He went into the dark composing-room, lit a candle, and rummaging in a
+drawer sacred to weather-beaten, old-fashioned electrotyped advertising
+symbols of various trades, finally selected one and brought it to Mrs.
+Dimmidge. It represented a bare and exceedingly stalwart arm wielding a
+large hammer.
+
+“Your husband being a miner,--a quartz miner,--would that do?” he asked.
+(It had been previously used to advertise a blacksmith, a gold-beater,
+and a stone-mason.)
+
+The lady examined it critically.
+
+“It does look a little like Micah's arm,” she said meditatively.
+“Well--you kin put it in.”
+
+The editor was so well pleased with his success that he must needs make
+another suggestion. “I suppose,” he said ingenuously, “that you don't
+want to answer the 'Personal'?”
+
+“'Personal'?” she repeated quickly, “what's that? I ain't seen no
+'Personal.'” The editor saw his blunder. She, of course, had never seen
+Mr. Dimmidge's artful “Personal;” THAT the big dailies naturally had not
+noticed nor copied. But it was too late to withdraw now. He brought
+out a file of the “Clarion,” and snipping out the paragraph with his
+scissors, laid it before the lady.
+
+She stared at it with wrinkled brows and a darkening face.
+
+“And THIS was in the same paper?--put in by Mr. Dimmidge?” she asked
+breathlessly.
+
+The editor, somewhat alarmed, stammered “Yes.” But the next moment he
+was reassured. The wrinkles disappeared, a dozen dimples broke out where
+they had been, and the determined, matter-of-fact Mrs. Dimmidge burst
+into a fit of rosy merriment. Again and again she laughed, shaking
+the building, startling the sedate, melancholy woods beyond, until the
+editor himself laughed in sheer vacant sympathy.
+
+“Lordy!” she said at last, gasping, and wiping the laughter from her wet
+eyes. “I never thought of THAT.”
+
+“No,” explained the editor smilingly; “of course you didn't. Don't you
+see, the papers that copied the big advertisement never saw that little
+paragraph, or if they did, they never connected the two together.”
+
+“Oh, it ain't that,” said Mrs. Dimmidge, trying to regain her composure
+and holding her sides. “It's that blessed DEAR old dunderhead of a
+Dimmidge I'm thinking of. That gets me. I see it all now. Only, sakes
+alive! I never thought THAT of him. Oh, it's just too much!” and she
+again relapsed behind her handkerchief.
+
+“Then I suppose you don't want to reply to it,” said the editor.
+
+Her laughter instantly ceased. “Don't I?” she said, wiping her face into
+its previous complacent determination. “Well, young man, I reckon that's
+just what I WANT to do! Now, wait a moment; let's see what he said,”
+ she went on, taking up and reperusing the “Personal” paragraph. “Well,
+then,” she went on, after a moment's silent composition with moving
+lips, “you just put these lines in.”
+
+The editor took up his pencil.
+
+“To Mr. J. D. Dimmidge.--Hope you're still on R. B.'s tracks. Keep
+there!--E. J. D.”
+
+The editor wrote down the line, and then, remembering Mr. Dimmidge's
+voluntary explanation of HIS “Personal,” waited with some confidence for
+a like frankness from Mrs. Dimmidge. But he was mistaken.
+
+“You think that he--R. B.--or Mr. Dimmidge--will understand this?” he at
+last asked tentatively. “Is it enough?”
+
+“Quite enough,” said Mrs. Dimmidge emphatically. She took a roll of
+greenbacks from her pocket, selected a hundred-dollar bill and then a
+five, and laid them before the editor. “Young man,” she said, with a
+certain demure gravity, “you've done me a heap o' good. I never spent
+money with more satisfaction than this. I never thought much o' the
+'power o' the Press,' as you call it, afore. But this has been a right
+comfortable visit, and I'm glad I ketched you alone. But you understand
+one thing: this yer visit, and WHO I am, is betwixt you and me only.”
+
+“Of course I must say that the advertisement was AUTHORIZED,” returned
+the editor. “I'm only the temporary editor. The proprietor is away.”
+
+“So much the better,” said the lady complacently. “You just say you
+found it on your desk with the money; but don't you give me away.”
+
+“I can promise you that the secret of your personal visit is safe with
+me,” said the young man, with a bow, as Mrs. Dimmidge rose. “Let me see
+you to your horse,” he added. “It's quite dark in the woods.”
+
+“I can see well enough alone, and it's just as well you shouldn't know
+HOW I kem or HOW I went away. Enough for you to know that I'll be miles
+away before that paper comes out. So stay where you are.”
+
+She pressed his hand frankly and firmly, gathered up her riding-skirt,
+slipped backwards to the door, and the next moment rustled away into the
+darkness.
+
+Early the next morning the editor handed Mrs. Dimmidge's advertisement,
+and the woodcut he had selected, to his foreman. He was purposely brief
+in his directions, so as to avoid inquiry, and retired to his sanctum.
+In the space of a few moments the foreman entered with a slight
+embarrassment of manner.
+
+“You'll excuse my speaking to you, sir,” he said, with a singular
+mixture of humility and cunning. “It's no business of mine, I know; but
+I thought I ought to tell you that this yer kind o' thing won't pay any
+more,--it's about played out!”
+
+“I don't think I understand you,” said the editor loftily, but with
+an inward misgiving. “You don't mean to say that a regular, actual
+advertisement”--
+
+“Of course, I know all that,” said the foreman, with a peculiar smile;
+“and I'm ready to back you up in it, and so's the boy; but it won't
+pay.”
+
+“It HAS paid a hundred and five dollars,” said the editor, taking the
+notes from his pocket; “so I'd advise you to simply attend to your duty
+and set it up.”
+
+A look of surprise, followed, however, by a kind of pitying smile,
+passed over the foreman's face. “Of course, sir, THAT'S all right, and
+you know your own business; but if you think that the new advertisement
+will pay this time as the other one did, and whoop up another column
+from an advertiser, I'm afraid you'll slip up. It's a little 'off color'
+now,--not 'up to date,'--if it ain't a regular 'back number,' as you'll
+see.”
+
+“Meantime I'll dispense with your advice,” said the editor curtly, “and
+I think you had better let our subscribers and advertisers do the same,
+or the 'Clarion' might also be obliged to dispense with your SERVICES.”
+
+“I ain't no blab,” said the foreman, in an aggrieved manner, “and I
+don't intend to give the show away even if it don't PAY. But I thought
+I'd tell you, because I know the folks round here better than you do.”
+
+He was right. No sooner had the advertisement appeared than the editor
+found that everybody believed it to be a sheer invention of his own to
+“once more boom” the “Clarion.” If they had doubted MR. Dimmidge, they
+utterly rejected MRS. Dimmidge as an advertiser! It was a stale joke
+that nobody would follow up; and on the heels of this came a letter from
+the editor-in-chief.
+
+
+MY DEAR BOY,--You meant well, I know, but the second Dimmidge “ad” was
+a mistake. Still, it was a big bluff of yours to show the money, and I
+send you back your hundred dollars, hoping you won't “do it again.”
+ Of course you'll have to keep the advertisement in the paper for two
+issues, just as if it were a real thing, and it's lucky that there's
+just now no pressure in our columns. You might have told a better story
+than that hogwash about your finding the “ad” and a hundred dollars
+lying loose on your desk one morning. It was rather thin, and I don't
+wonder the foreman kicked.
+
+
+The young editor was in despair. At first he thought of writing to Mrs.
+Dimmidge at the Elktown Post-Office, asking her to relieve him of his
+vow of secrecy; but his pride forbade. There was a humorous concern, not
+without a touch of pity, in the faces of his contributors as he passed;
+a few affected to believe in the new advertisement, and asked him vague,
+perfunctory questions about it. His position was trying, and he was not
+sorry when the term of his engagement expired the next week, and he left
+Calaveras to take his new position on the San Francisco paper.
+
+He was standing in the saloon of the Sacramento boat when he felt a
+sudden heavy pressure on his shoulder, and looking round sharply, beheld
+not only the black-bearded face of Mr. Dimmidge, lit up by a smile, but
+beside it the beaming, buxom face of Mrs. Dimmidge, overflowing with
+good-humor. Still a little sore from his past experience, he was about
+to address them abruptly, when he was utterly vanquished by the hearty
+pressure of their hands and the unmistakable look of gratitude in their
+eyes.
+
+“I was just saying to 'Lizy Jane,” began Mr. Dimmidge breathlessly,
+“if I could only meet that young man o' the 'Clarion' what brought us
+together again”--
+
+“You'd be willin' to pay four times the amount we both paid him,”
+ interpolated the laughing Mrs. Dimmidge.
+
+“But I didn't bring you together,” burst out the dazed young man, “and
+I'd like to know, in the name of Heaven, what brought you together now?”
+
+“Don't you see, lad,” said the imperturbable Mr. Dimmidge, “'Lizy Jane
+and myself had qua'lled, and we just unpacked our fool nonsense in your
+paper and let the hull world know it! And we both felt kinder skeert and
+shamed like, and it looked such small hogwash, and of so little account,
+for all the talk it made, that we kinder felt lonely as two separated
+fools that really ought to share their foolishness together.”
+
+“And that ain't all,” said Mrs. Dimmidge, with a sly glance at her
+spouse, “for I found out from that 'Personal' you showed me that this
+particular old fool was actooally jealous!--JEALOUS!”
+
+“And then?” said the editor impatiently.
+
+“And then I KNEW he loved me all the time.”
+
+
+
+
+THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+
+
+Even to the eye of the most inexperienced traveler there was no doubt
+that Buena Vista was a “played-out” mining camp. There, seamed and
+scarred by hydraulic engines, was the old hillside, over whose denuded
+surface the grass had begun to spring again in fitful patches; there
+were the abandoned heaps of tailings already blackened by sun and rain,
+and worn into mounds like ruins of masonry; there were the waterless
+ditches, like giant graves, and the pools of slumgullion, now dried into
+shining, glazed cement. There were two or three wooden “stores,” from
+which the windows and doors had been taken and conveyed to the newer
+settlement of Wynyard's Gulch. Four or five buildings that still were
+inhabited--the blacksmith's shop, the post-office, a pioneer's
+cabin, and the old hotel and stage-office--only accented the general
+desolation. The latter building had a remoteness of prosperity far
+beyond the others, having been a wayside Spanish-American posada, with
+adobe walls of two feet in thickness, that shamed the later shells of
+half-inch plank, which were slowly warping and cracking like dried pods
+in the oven-like heat.
+
+The proprietor of this building, Colonel Swinger, had been looked
+upon by the community as a person quite as remote, old-fashioned, and
+inconsistent with present progress as the house itself. He was an old
+Virginian, who had emigrated from his decaying plantation on the James
+River only to find the slaves, which he had brought with him, freed men
+when they touched Californian soil; to be driven by Northern progress
+and “smartness” out of the larger cities into the mountains, to fix
+himself at last, with the hopeless fatuity of his race, upon an already
+impoverished settlement; to sink his scant capital in hopeless shafts
+and ledges, and finally to take over the decaying hostelry of Buena
+Vista, with its desultory custom and few, lingering, impecunious guests.
+Here, too, his old Virginian ideas of hospitality were against his
+financial success; he could not dun nor turn from his door those
+unfortunate prospectors whom the ebbing fortunes of Buena Vista had left
+stranded by his side.
+
+Colonel Swinger was sitting in a wicker-work rocking-chair on the
+veranda of his hotel--sipping a mint julep which he held in his hand,
+while he gazed into the dusty distance. Nothing could have convinced him
+that he was not performing a serious part of his duty as hotel-keeper
+in this attitude, even though there were no travelers expected, and the
+road at this hour of the day was deserted. On a bench at his side Larry
+Hawkins stretched his lazy length,--one foot dropped on the veranda,
+and one arm occasionally groping under the bench for his own tumbler
+of refreshment. Apart from this community of occupation, there was
+apparently no interchange of sentiment between the pair. The silence
+had continued for some moments, when the colonel put down his glass and
+gazed earnestly into the distance.
+
+“Seein' anything?” remarked the man on the bench, who had sleepily
+regarded him.
+
+“No,” said the colonel, “that is--it's only Dick Ruggles crossin' the
+road.”
+
+“Thought you looked a little startled, ez if you'd seen that ar
+wanderin' stranger.”
+
+“When I see that wandering stranger, sah,” said the colonel decisively,
+“I won't be sittin' long in this yer chyar. I'll let him know in about
+ten seconds that I don't harbor any vagrants prowlin' about like poor
+whites or free niggers on my propahty, sah!”
+
+“All the same, I kinder wish ye did see him, for you'd be settled in
+YOUR mind and I'd be easier in MINE, ef you found out what he was doin'
+round yer, or ye had to admit that it wasn't no LIVIN' man.”
+
+“What do you mean?” said the colonel, testily facing around in his
+chair.
+
+His companion also altered his attitude by dropping his other foot
+to the floor, sitting up, and leaning lazily forward with his hands
+clasped.
+
+“Look yer, colonel. When you took this place, I felt I didn't have no
+call to tell ye all I know about it, nor to pizen yer mind by any darned
+fool yarns I mout hev heard. Ye know it was one o' them old Spanish
+haciendas?”
+
+“I know,” said the colonel loftily, “that it was held by a grant from
+Charles the Fifth of Spain, just as my propahty on the James River was
+given to my people by King James of England, sah!”
+
+“That ez as may be,” returned his companion, in lazy indifference;
+“though I reckon that Charles the Fifth of Spain and King James of
+England ain't got much to do with what I'm goin' to tell ye. Ye see, I
+was here long afore YOUR time, or any of the boys that hev now cleared
+out; and at that time the hacienda belonged to a man named Juan
+Sobriente. He was that kind o' fool that he took no stock in mining.
+When the boys were whoopin' up the place and finding the color
+everywhere, and there was a hundred men working down there in the gulch,
+he was either ridin' round lookin' up the wild horses he owned, or
+sittin' with two or three lazy peons and Injins that was fed and looked
+arter by the priests. Gosh! now I think of it, it was mighty like YOU
+when you first kem here with your niggers. That's curious, too, ain't
+it?”
+
+He had stopped, gazing with an odd, superstitious wonderment at the
+colonel, as if overcome by this not very remarkable coincidence.
+The colonel, overlooking or totally oblivious to its somewhat
+uncomplimentary significance, simply said, “Go on. What about him?”
+
+“Well, ez I was sayin', he warn't in it nohow, but kept on his reg'lar
+way when the boom was the biggest. Some of the boys allowed it was
+mighty oncivil for him to stand off like that, and others--when he
+refused a big pile for his hacienda and the garden, that ran right into
+the gold-bearing ledge--war for lynching him and driving him outer the
+settlement. But as he had a pretty darter or niece livin' with him,
+and, except for his partickler cussedness towards mining, was kinder
+peaceable and perlite, they thought better of it. Things went along like
+this, until one day the boys noticed--particklerly the boys that had
+slipped up on their luck--that old man Sobriente was gettin' rich,--had
+stocked a ranch over on the Divide, and had given some gold candlesticks
+to the mission church. That would have been only human nature and
+business, ef he'd had any during them flush times; but he hadn't. This
+kinder puzzled them. They tackled the peons,--his niggers,--but it was
+all 'No sabe.' They tackled another man,--a kind of half-breed Kanaka,
+who, except the priest, was the only man who came to see him, and was
+supposed to be mighty sweet on the darter or niece,--but they didn't
+even get the color outer HIM. Then the first thing we knowed was that
+old Sobriente was found dead in the well!”
+
+“In the well, sah!” said the colonel, starting up. “The well on my
+propahty?”
+
+“No,” said his companion. “The old well that was afterwards shut up.
+Yours was dug by the last tenant, Jack Raintree, who allowed that he
+didn't want to 'take any Sobriente in his reg'lar whiskey and water.'
+Well, the half-breed Kanaka cleared out after the old man's death, and
+so did that darter or niece; and the church, to whom old Sobriente had
+left this house, let it to Raintree for next to nothin'.”
+
+“I don't see what all that has got to do with that wandering tramp,”
+ said the colonel, who was by no means pleased with this history of his
+property.
+
+“I'll tell ye. A few days after Raintree took it over, he was lookin'
+round the garden, which old Sobriente had always kept shut up agin
+strangers, and he finds a lot of dried-up 'slumgullion' * scattered all
+about the borders and beds, just as if the old man had been using it for
+fertilizing. Well, Raintree ain't no fool; he allowed the old man wasn't
+one, either; and he knew that slumgullion wasn't worth no more than mud
+for any good it would do the garden. So he put this yer together with
+Sobriente's good luck, and allowed to himself that the old coyote had
+been secretly gold-washin' all the while he seemed to be standin' off
+agin it! But where was the mine? Whar did he get the gold? That's what
+got Raintree. He hunted all over the garden, prospected every part of
+it,--ye kin see the holes yet,--but he never even got the color!”
+
+ * That is, a viscid cement-like refuse of gold-washing.
+
+He paused, and then, as the colonel made an impatient gesture, he went
+on.
+
+“Well, one night just afore you took the place, and when Raintree was
+gettin' just sick of it, he happened to be walkin' in the garden. He was
+puzzlin' his brain agin to know how old Sobriente made his pile, when
+all of a suddenst he saw suthin' a-movin' in the brush beside the house.
+He calls out, thinkin' it was one of the boys, but got no answer. Then
+he goes to the bushes, and a tall figger, all in black, starts out afore
+him. He couldn't see any face, for its head was covered with a hood, but
+he saw that it held suthin' like a big cross clasped agin its breast.
+This made him think it was one them priests, until he looks agin and
+sees that it wasn't no cross it was carryin,' but a PICKAXE! He makes
+a jump towards it, but it vanished! He traipsed over the hull
+garden,--went though ev'ry bush,--but it was clean gone. Then the hull
+thing flashed upon him with a cold shiver. The old man bein' found dead
+in the well! the goin' away of the half-breed and the girl! the findin'
+o' that slumgullion! The old man HAD made a strike in that garden, the
+half-breed had discovered his secret and murdered him, throwin' him down
+the well! It war no LIVIN' man that he had seen, but the ghost of old
+Sobriente!”
+
+The colonel emptied the remaining contents of his glass at a single
+gulp, and sat up. “It's my opinion, sah, that Raintree had that night
+more than his usual allowance of corn-juice on board; and it's only
+a wonder, sah, that he didn't see a few pink alligators and sky-blue
+snakes at the same time. But what's this got to do with that wanderin'
+tramp?”
+
+“They're all the same thing, colonel, and in my opinion that there tramp
+ain't no more alive than that figger was.”
+
+“But YOU were the one that saw this tramp with your own eyes,” retorted
+the colonel quickly, “and you never before allowed it was a spirit!”
+
+“Exactly! I saw it whar a minit afore nothin' had been standin', and a
+minit after nothin' stood,” said Larry Hawkins, with a certain serious
+emphasis; “but I warn't goin' to say it to ANYBODY, and I warn't goin'
+to give you and the hacienda away. And ez nobody knew Raintree's story,
+I jest shut up my head. But you kin bet your life that the man I saw
+warn't no livin' man!”
+
+“We'll see, sah!” said the colonel, rising from his chair with his
+fingers in the armholes of his nankeen waistcoat, “ef he ever intrudes
+on my property again. But look yar! don't ye go sayin' anything of this
+to Polly,--you know what women are!”
+
+A faint color came into Larry's face; an animation quite different to
+the lazy deliberation of his previous monologue shone in his eyes, as
+he said, with a certain rough respect he had not shown before to his
+companion, “That's why I'm tellin' ye, so that ef SHE happened to see
+anything and got skeert, ye'd know how to reason her out of it.”
+
+“'Sh!” said the colonel, with a warning gesture.
+
+A young girl had just appeared in the doorway, and now stood leaning
+against the central pillar that supported it, with one hand above her
+head, in a lazy attitude strongly suggestive of the colonel's Southern
+indolence, yet with a grace entirely her own. Indeed, it overcame the
+negligence of her creased and faded yellow cotton frock and unbuttoned
+collar, and suggested--at least to the eyes of ONE man--the curving and
+clinging of the jasmine vine against the outer column of the veranda.
+Larry Hawkins rose awkwardly to his feet.
+
+“Now what are you two men mumblin' and confidin' to each other? You look
+for all the world like two old women gossips,” she said, with languid
+impertinence.
+
+It was easy to see that a privileged and recognized autocrat spoke.
+No one had ever questioned Polly Swinger's right to interrupting,
+interfering, and saucy criticisms. Secure in the hopeless or chivalrous
+admiration of the men around her, she had repaid it with a frankness
+that scorned any coquetry; with an indifference to the ordinary feminine
+effect or provocation in dress or bearing that was as natural as it was
+invincible. No one had ever known Polly to “fix up” for anybody, yet
+no one ever doubted the effect, if she had. No one had ever rebuked her
+charming petulance, or wished to.
+
+Larry gave a weak, vague laugh. Colonel Swinger as ineffectively assumed
+a mock parental severity. “When you see two gentlemen, miss, discussin'
+politics together, it ain't behavin' like a lady to interrupt. Better
+run away and tidy yourself before the stage comes.”
+
+The young lady replied to the last innuendo by taking two spirals of
+soft hair, like “corn silk,” from her oval cheek, wetting them with
+her lips, and tucking them behind her ears. Her father's ungentlemanly
+suggestion being thus disposed of, she returned to her first charge.
+
+“It ain't no politics; you ain't been swearing enough for THAT! Come,
+now! It's the mysterious stranger ye've been talking about!”
+
+Both men stared at her with unaffected concern.
+
+“What do YOU know about any mysterious stranger?” demanded her father.
+
+“Do you suppose you men kin keep a secret,” scoffed Polly. “Why, Dick
+Ruggles told me how skeert ye all were over an entire stranger, and he
+advised me not to wander down the road after dark. I asked him if he
+thought I was a pickaninny to be frightened by bogies, and that if
+he hadn't a better excuse for wantin' 'to see me home' from the Injin
+spring, he might slide.”
+
+Larry laughed again, albeit a little bitterly, for it seemed to him that
+the excuse was fully justified; but the colonel said promptly, “Dick's
+a fool, and you might have told him there were worse things to be met on
+the road than bogies. Run away now, and see that the niggers are on hand
+when the stage comes.”
+
+Two hours later the stage came with a clatter of hoofs and a cloud of
+red dust, which precipitated itself and a dozen thirsty travelers
+upon the veranda before the hotel bar-room; it brought also the usual
+“express” newspapers and much talk to Colonel Swinger, who always
+received his guests in a lofty personal fashion at the door, as he might
+have done in his old Virginian home; but it brought likewise--marvelous
+to relate--an ACTUAL GUEST, who had two trunks and asked for a room! He
+was evidently a stranger to the ways of Buena Vista, and particularly
+to those of Colonel Swinger, and at first seemed inclined to resent the
+social attitude of his host, and his frank and free curiosity. When he,
+however, found that Colonel Swinger was even better satisfied to give
+an account of HIS OWN affairs, his family, pedigree, and his present
+residence, he began to betray some interest. The colonel told him
+all the news, and would no doubt have even expatiated on his ghostly
+visitant, had he not prudently concluded that his guest might decline to
+remain in a haunted inn. The stranger had spoken of staying a week; he
+had some private mining speculations to watch at Wynyard's Gulch,--the
+next settlement, but he did not care to appear openly at the “Gulch
+Hotel.” He was a man of thirty, with soft, pleasing features and a
+singular litheness of movement, which, combined with a nut-brown, gypsy
+complexion, at first suggested a foreigner. But his dialect, to the
+colonel's ears, was distinctly that of New England, and to this was
+added a puritanical and sanctimonious drawl. “He looked,” said the
+colonel in after years, “like a blank light mulatter, but talked like a
+blank Yankee parson.” For all that, he was acceptable to his host, who
+may have felt that his reminiscences of his plantation on the James
+River were palling on Buena Vista ears, and was glad of his new auditor.
+It was an advertisement, too, of the hotel, and a promise of its future
+fortunes. “Gentlemen having propahty interests at the Gulch, sah, prefer
+to stay at Buena Vista with another man of propahty, than to trust to
+those new-fangled papah-collared, gingerbread booths for traders that
+they call 'hotels' there,” he had remarked to some of “the boys.” In his
+preoccupation with the new guest, he also became a little neglectful
+of his old chum and dependent, Larry Hawkins. Nor was this the only
+circumstance that filled the head of that shiftless loyal retainer
+of the colonel with bitterness and foreboding. Polly Swinger--the
+scornfully indifferent, the contemptuously inaccessible, the coldly
+capricious and petulant--was inclined to be polite to the stranger!
+
+The fact was that Polly, after the fashion of her sex, took it into
+her pretty head, against all consistency and logic, suddenly to make
+an exception to her general attitude towards mankind in favor of one
+individual. The reason-seeking masculine reader will rashly conclude
+that this individual was the CAUSE as well as the object; but I am
+satisfied that every fair reader of these pages will instinctively know
+better. Miss Polly had simply selected the new guest, Mr. Starbuck, to
+show OTHERS, particularly Larry Hawkins, what she COULD do if she were
+inclined to be civil. For two days she “fixed up” her distracting hair
+at him so that its silken floss encircled her head like a nimbus; she
+tucked her oval chin into a white fichu instead of a buttonless collar;
+she appeared at dinner in a newly starched yellow frock! She talked
+to him with “company manners;” said she would “admire to go to San
+Francisco,” and asked if he knew her old friends the Fauquier girls
+from “Faginia.” The colonel was somewhat disturbed; he was glad that his
+daughter had become less negligent of her personal appearance; he could
+not but see, with the others, how it enhanced her graces; but he was,
+with the others, not entirely satisfied with her reasons. And he could
+not help observing--what was more or less patent to ALL--that Starbuck
+was far from being equally responsive to her attentions, and at times
+was indifferent and almost uncivil. Nobody seemed to be satisfied with
+Polly's transformation but herself.
+
+But eventually she was obliged to assert herself. The third evening
+after Starbuck's arrival she was going over to the cabin of Aunt Chloe,
+who not only did the washing for Buena Vista, but assisted Polly in
+dressmaking. It was not far, and the night was moonlit. As she crossed
+the garden she saw Starbuck moving in the manzanita bushes beyond; a
+mischievous light came into her eyes; she had not EXPECTED to meet him,
+but she had seen him go out, and there were always POSSIBILITIES. To her
+surprise, however, he merely lifted his hat as she passed, and
+turned abruptly in another direction. This was more than the little
+heart-breaker of Buena Vista was accustomed to!
+
+“Oh, Mr. Starbuck!” she called, in her laziest voice.
+
+He turned almost impatiently.
+
+“Since you're so civil and pressing, I thought I'd tell you I was just
+runnin' over to Aunt Chloe's,” she said dryly.
+
+“I should think it was hardly the proper thing for a young lady to do
+at this time of night,” he said superciliously. “But you know best,--you
+know the people here.”
+
+Polly's cheeks and eyes flamed. “Yes, I reckon I do,” she said crisply;
+“it's only a STRANGER here would think of being rude. Good-night, Mr.
+Starbuck!”
+
+She tripped away after this Parthian shot, yet feeling, even in her
+triumph, that the conceited fool seemed actually relieved at her
+departure! And for the first time she now thought that she had seen
+something in his face that she did not like! But her lazy independence
+reasserted itself soon, and half an hour later, when she had left Aunt
+Chloe's cabin, she had regained her self-esteem. Yet, to avoid meeting
+him again, she took a longer route home, across the dried ditch and over
+the bluff, scarred by hydraulics, and so fell, presently, upon the old
+garden at the point where it adjoined the abandoned diggings. She was
+quite sure she had escaped a meeting with Starbuck, and was gliding
+along under the shadow of the pear-trees, when she suddenly stopped. An
+indescribable terror overcame her as she stared at a spot in the garden,
+perfectly illuminated by the moonlight not fifty yards from where she
+stood. For she saw on its surface a human head--a man's head!--seemingly
+on the level of the ground, staring in her direction. A hysterical laugh
+sprang from her lips, and she caught at the branches above her or
+she would have fallen! Yet in that moment the head had vanished! The
+moonlight revealed the empty garden,--the ground she had gazed at,--but
+nothing more!
+
+She had never been superstitious. As a child she had heard the negroes
+talk of “the hants,”--that is, “the HAUNTS” or spirits,--but had
+believed it a part of their ignorance, and unworthy a white child,--the
+daughter of their master! She had laughed with Dick Ruggles over the
+illusions of Larry, and had shared her father's contemptuous disbelief
+of the wandering visitant being anything but a living man; yet she would
+have screamed for assistance now, only for the greater fear of making
+her weakness known to Mr. Starbuck, and being dependent upon him for
+help. And with it came the sudden conviction that HE had seen this awful
+vision, too. This would account for his impatience of her presence and
+his rudeness. She felt faint and giddy. Yet after the first shock had
+passed, her old independence and pride came to her relief. She would go
+to the spot and examine it. If it were some trick or illusion, she would
+show her superiority and have the laugh on Starbuck. She set her white
+teeth, clenched her little hands, and started out into the moonlight.
+But alas! for women's weakness. The next moment she uttered a scream and
+almost fell into the arms of Mr. Starbuck, who had stepped out of the
+shadows beside her.
+
+“So you see you HAVE been frightened,” he said, with a strange, forced
+laugh; “but I warned you about going out alone!”
+
+Even in her fright she could not help seeing that he, too, seemed pale
+and agitated, at which she recovered her tongue and her self-possession.
+
+“Anybody would be frightened by being dogged about under the trees,” she
+said pertly.
+
+“But you called out before you saw me,” he said bluntly, “as if
+something had frightened you. That was WHY I came towards you.”
+
+She knew it was the truth; but as she would not confess to her vision,
+she fibbed outrageously.
+
+“Frightened,” she said, with pale but lofty indignation. “What was there
+to frighten me? I'm not a baby, to think I see a bogie in the dark!”
+ This was said in the faint hope that HE had seen something too. If it
+had been Larry or her father who had met her, she would have confessed
+everything.
+
+“You had better go in,” he said curtly. “I will see you safe inside the
+house.”
+
+She demurred at this, but as she could not persist in her first bold
+intention of examining the locality of the vision without admitting its
+existence, she permitted him to walk with her to the house, and then at
+once fled to her own room. Larry and her father noticed their entrance
+together and their agitated manner, and were uneasy. Yet the colonel's
+paternal pride and Larry's lover's respect kept the two men from
+communicating their thoughts to each other.
+
+“The confounded pup has been tryin' to be familiar, and Polly's set him
+down,” thought Larry, with glowing satisfaction.
+
+“He's been trying some of his sanctimonious Yankee abolition talk on
+Polly, and she shocked him!” thought the colonel exultingly.
+
+But poor Polly had other things to think of in the silence of her room.
+Another woman would have unburdened herself to a confidante; but
+Polly was too loyal to her father to shatter his beliefs, and too
+high-spirited to take another and a lesser person into her confidence.
+She was certain that Aunt Chloe would be full of sympathetic belief and
+speculations, but she would not trust a nigger with what she couldn't
+tell her own father. For Polly really and truly believed that she had
+seen a ghost, no doubt the ghost of the murdered Sobriente, according
+to Larry's story. WHY he should appear with only his head above ground
+puzzled her, although it suggested the Catholic idea of purgatory, and
+he was a Catholic! Perhaps he would have risen entirely but for that
+stupid Starbuck's presence; perhaps he had a message for HER alone. The
+idea pleased Polly, albeit it was a “fearful joy” and attended with some
+cold shivering. Naturally, as a gentleman, he would appear to HER--the
+daughter of a gentleman--the successor to his house--rather than to
+a Yankee stranger. What was she to do? For once her calm nerves were
+strangely thrilled; she could not think of undressing and going to
+bed, and two o'clock surprised her, still meditating, and occasionally
+peeping from her window upon the moonlit but vacant garden. If she saw
+him again, would she dare to go down alone? Suddenly she started to
+her feet with a beating heart! There was the unmistakable sound of a
+stealthy footstep in the passage, coming towards her room. Was it he? In
+spite of her high resolves she felt that if the door opened she should
+scream! She held her breath--the footsteps came nearer--were before her
+door--and PASSED!
+
+Then it was that the blood rushed back to her cheek with a flush of
+indignation. Her room was at the end of the passage; there was nothing
+beyond but a private staircase, long disused, except by herself, as a
+short cut through the old patio to the garden. No one else knew of
+it, and no one else had the right of access to it! This insolent human
+intrusion--as she was satisfied it was now--overcame her fear, and
+she glided to the door. Opening it softly, she could hear the stealthy
+footsteps descending. She darted back, threw a shawl over her head and
+shoulders, and taking the small Derringer pistol which it had always
+been part of her ostentatious independence to place at her bed-head,
+she as stealthily followed the intruder. But the footsteps had died
+away before she reached the patio, and she saw only the small deserted,
+grass-grown courtyard, half hidden in shadows, in whose centre stood the
+fateful and long sealed-up well! A shudder came over her at again being
+brought into contact with the cause of her frightful vision, but as her
+eyes became accustomed to the darkness, she saw something more real and
+appalling! The well was no longer sealed! Fragments of bricks and boards
+lay around it! One end of a rope, coiled around it like a huge snake,
+descended its foul depths; and as she gazed with staring eyes, the
+head and shoulders of a man emerged slowly from it! But it was NOT the
+ghostly apparition of last evening, and her terror changed to scorn and
+indignation as she recognized the face of Starbuck!
+
+Their eyes met; an oath broke from his lips. He made a movement to
+spring from the well, but as the girl started back, the pistol held
+in her hand was discharged aimlessly in the air, and the report echoed
+throughout the courtyard. With a curse Starbuck drew back, instantly
+disappeared in the well, and Polly fell fainting on the steps. When she
+came to, her father and Larry were at her side. They had been alarmed
+at the report, and had rushed quickly to the patio, but not in time to
+prevent the escape of Starbuck and his accomplice. By the time she had
+recovered her consciousness, they had learned the full extent of that
+extraordinary revelation which she had so innocently precipitated.
+Sobriente's well had really concealed a rich gold ledge,--actually
+tunneled and galleried by him secretly in the past,--and its only other
+outlet was an opening in the garden hidden by a stone which turned on a
+swivel. Its existence had been unknown to Sobriente's successor, but
+was known to the Kanaka who had worked with Sobriente, who fled with
+his daughter after the murder, but who no doubt was afraid to return
+and work the mine. He had imparted the secret to Starbuck, another
+half-breed, son of a Yankee missionary and Hawaiian wife, who had
+evidently conceived this plan of seeking Buena Vista with an accomplice,
+and secretly removing such gold as was still accessible. The accomplice,
+afterwards identified by Larry as the wandering tramp, failed to
+discover the secret entrance FROM the garden, and Starbuck was
+consequently obliged to attempt it from the hotel--for which purpose
+he had introduced himself as a boarder--by opening the disused well
+secretly at night. These facts were obtained from papers found in the
+otherwise valueless trunks, weighted with stones for ballast, which
+Starbuck had brought to the hotel to take away his stolen treasure in,
+but which he was obliged to leave in his hurried flight. The attempt
+would have doubtless succeeded but for Polly's courageous and timely
+interference!
+
+And now that they had told her ALL, they only wanted to know what had
+first excited HER suspicions, and driven her to seek the well as the
+object of Starbuck's machinations? THEY had noticed her manner when she
+entered the house that night, and Starbuck's evident annoyance. Had she
+taxed him with her suspicions, and so discovered a clue?
+
+It was a terrible temptation to Polly to pose as a more perfect heroine,
+and one may not blame her if she did not rise entirely superior to it.
+Her previous belief, that the head of the accomplice at the opening of
+the garden was that of a GHOST, she now felt was certainly in the way,
+as was also her conduct to Starbuck, whom she believed to be equally
+frightened, and whom she never once suspected! So she said, with a
+certain lofty simplicity, that there were SOME THINGS which she really
+did not care to talk about, and Larry and her father left her that night
+with the firm conviction that the rascal Starbuck had tried to tempt her
+to fly with him and his riches, and had been crushingly foiled. Polly
+never denied this, and once, in later days, when admiringly taxed with
+it by Larry, she admitted with dove-like simplicity that she MAY have
+been too foolishly polite to her father's guest for the sake of her
+father's hotel.
+
+However, all this was of small account to the thrilling news of a new
+discovery and working of the “old gold ledge” at Buena Vista! As the
+three kept their secret from the world, the discovery was accepted in
+the neighborhood as the result of careful examination and prospecting on
+the part of Colonel Swinger and his partner Larry Hawkins. And when
+the latter gentleman afterwards boldly proposed to Polly Swinger, she
+mischievously declared that she accepted him only that the secret might
+not go “out of the family.”
+
+
+
+
+LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+
+
+It was at best merely a rocky trail winding along a shelf of the eastern
+slope of the Santa Cruz range, yet the only road between the sea and the
+inland valley. The hoof-prints of a whole century of zigzagging mules
+were impressed on the soil, regularly soaked by winter rains and dried
+by summer suns during that period; the occasional ruts of heavy,
+rude, wooden wheels--long obsolete--were still preserved and visible.
+Weather-worn boulders and ledges, lying in the unclouded glare of an
+August sky, radiated a quivering heat that was intolerable, even while
+above them the masts of gigantic pines rocked their tops in the cold
+southwestern trades from the unseen ocean beyond. A red, burning dust
+lay everywhere, as if the heat were slowly and visibly precipitating
+itself.
+
+The creaking of wheels and axles, the muffled plunge of hoofs, and the
+cough of a horse in the dust thus stirred presently broke the profound
+woodland silence. Then a dirty white canvas-covered emigrant wagon
+slowly arose with the dust along the ascent. It was travel-stained and
+worn, and with its rawboned horses seemed to have reached the last
+stage of its journey and fitness. The only occupants, a man and a girl,
+appeared to be equally jaded and exhausted, with the added querulousness
+of discontent in their sallow and badly nourished faces. Their voices,
+too, were not unlike the creaking they had been pitched to overcome, and
+there was an absence of reserve and consciousness in their speech, which
+told pathetically of an equal absence of society.
+
+“It's no user talkin'! I tell ye, ye hain't got no more sense than a
+coyote! I'm sick and tired of it, doggoned if I ain't! Ye ain't no more
+use nor a hossfly,--and jest ez hinderin'! It was along o' you that we
+lost the stock at Laramie, and ef ye'd bin at all decent and takin',
+we'd hev had kempany that helped, instead of laggin' on yere alone!”
+
+“What did ye bring me for?” retorted the girl shrilly. “I might hev
+stayed with Aunt Marty. I wasn't hankerin' to come.”
+
+“Bring ye for?” repeated her father contemptuously; “I reckoned ye might
+he o' some account here, whar wimmin folks is skeerce, in the way o'
+helpin',--and mebbe gettin' yer married to some likely feller. Mighty
+much chance o' that, with yer yaller face and skin and bones.”
+
+“Ye can't blame me for takin' arter you, dad,” she said, with a shrill
+laugh, but no other resentment of his brutality.
+
+“Ye want somebody to take arter you--with a club,” he retorted angrily.
+“Ye hear! Wot's that ye're doin' now?”
+
+She had risen and walked to the tail of the wagon. “Goin' to get out and
+walk. I'm tired o' bein' jawed at.”
+
+She jumped into the road. The act was neither indignant nor vengeful;
+the frequency of such scenes had blunted their sting. She was probably
+“tired” of the quarrel, and ended it rudely. Her father, however, let
+fly a Parthian arrow.
+
+“Ye needn't think I'm goin' to wait for ye, ez I hev! Ye've got to keep
+tetch with the team, or get left. And a good riddance of bad rubbidge.”
+
+In reply the girl dived into the underwood beside the trail, picked a
+wild berry or two, stripped a wand of young hazel she had broken off,
+and switching it at her side, skipped along on the outskirts of the
+wood and ambled after the wagon. Seen in the full, merciless glare of a
+Californian sky, she justified her father's description; thin and bony,
+her lank frame outstripped the body of her ragged calico dress, which
+was only kept on her shoulders by straps,--possibly her father's
+cast-off braces. A boy's soft felt hat covered her head, and shadowed
+her only notable feature, a pair of large dark eyes, looking larger for
+the hollow temples which narrowed the frame in which they were set.
+
+So long as the wagon crawled up the ascent the girl knew she could
+easily keep up with it, or even distance the tired horses. She made one
+or two incursions into the wood, returning like an animal from quest of
+food, with something in her mouth, which she was tentatively chewing,
+and once only with some inedible mandrono berries, plucked solely for
+their brilliant coloring. It was very hot and singularly close; the
+higher current of air had subsided, and, looking up, a singular haze
+seemed to have taken its place between the treetops. Suddenly she heard
+a strange, rumbling sound; an odd giddiness overtook her, and she was
+obliged to clutch at a sapling to support herself; she laughed vacantly,
+though a little frightened, and looked vaguely towards the summit of the
+road; but the wagon had already disappeared. A strange feeling of
+nausea then overcame her; she spat out the leaves she had been chewing,
+disgustedly. But the sensation as quickly passed, and she once more
+sought the trail and began slowly to follow the tracks of the wagon. The
+air blew freshly, the treetops began again to rock over her head, and
+the incident was forgotten.
+
+Presently she paused; she must have missed the trail, for the wagon
+tracks had ended abruptly before a large boulder that lay across the
+mountain trail. She dipped into the woods again; here there were other
+wagon tracks that confused her. It was like her dogged, stupid father
+to miss the trail; she felt a gleam of malicious satisfaction at his
+discomfiture. Sooner or later, he would have to retrace his steps and
+virtually come back for her! She took up a position where two rough
+wheel ruts and tracks intersected each other, one of which must be
+the missing trail. She noticed, too, the broader hoof-prints of cattle
+without the following wheel ruts, and instead of traces, the long smooth
+trails made by the dragging of logs, and knew by these tokens that she
+must be near the highway or some woodman's hut or ranch. She began to be
+thirsty, and was glad, presently, when her quick, rustic ear caught
+the tinkling of water. Yet it was not so easy to discover, and she was
+getting footsore and tired again before she found it, some distance
+away, in a gully coming from a fissure in a dislocated piece of outcrop.
+It was beautifully clear, cold, and sparkling, with a slightly sweetish
+taste, yet unlike the brackish “alkali” of the plains. It refreshed and
+soothed her greatly, so much that, reclining against a tree, but where
+she would be quite visible from the trail, her eyes closed dreamily, and
+presently she slept.
+
+When she awoke, the shafts of sunlight were striking almost level into
+her eyes. She must have slept two hours. Her father had not returned;
+she knew the passage of the wagon would have awakened her. She began to
+feel strange, but not yet alarmed; it was only the uncertainty that made
+her uneasy. Had her father really gone on by some other trail? Or had he
+really hurried on and left her, as he said he would? The thought
+brought an odd excitement to her rather than any fear. A sudden sense of
+freedom, as if some galling chain had dropped from her, sent a singular
+thrill through her frame. Yet she felt confused with her independence,
+not knowing what to do with it, and momentarily dazzled with the
+possible gift.
+
+At this moment she heard voices, and the figures of two men appeared on
+the trail.
+
+They were talking earnestly, and walking as if familiar with the spot,
+yet gazing around them as if at some novelty of the aspect.
+
+“And look there,” said one; “there has been some serious disturbance of
+that outcrop,” pointing in the direction of the spring; “the lower
+part has distinctly subsided.” He spoke with a certain authority, and
+dominance of position, and was evidently the superior, as he was the
+elder of the two, although both were roughly dressed.
+
+“Yes, it does kinder look as if it had lost its holt, like the ledge
+yonder.”
+
+“And you see I am right; the movement was from east to west,” continued
+the elder man.
+
+The girl could not comprehend what they said, and even thought them
+a little silly. But she advanced towards them; at which they stopped
+short, staring at her. With feminine instinct she addressed the more
+important one:--
+
+“Ye ain't passed no wagon nor team goin' on, hev ye?”
+
+“What sort of wagon?” said the man.
+
+“Em'grant wagon, two yaller hosses. Old man--my dad--drivin'.” She added
+the latter kinship as a protecting influence against strangers, in spite
+of her previous independence.
+
+The men glanced at each other.
+
+“How long ago?”
+
+The girl suddenly remembered that she had slept two hours.
+
+“Sens noon,” she said hesitatingly.
+
+“Since the earthquake?”
+
+“Wot's that?”
+
+The man came impatiently towards her. “How did you come here?”
+
+“Got outer the wagon to walk. I reckon dad missed the trail, and hez got
+off somewhere where I can't find him.”
+
+“What trail was he on,--where was he going?”
+
+“Sank Hozay,* I reckon. He was goin' up the grade--side o' the hill; he
+must hev turned off where there's a big rock hangin' over.”
+
+ * San Jose.
+
+“Did you SEE him turn off?”
+
+“No.”
+
+The second man, who was in hearing distance, had turned away, and was
+ostentatiously examining the sky and the treetops; the man who had
+spoken to her joined him, and they said something in a low voice. They
+turned again and came slowly towards her. She, from some obscure sense
+of imitation, stared at the treetops and the sky as the second man had
+done. But the first man now laid his hand kindly on her shoulder and
+said, “Sit down.”
+
+Then they told her there had been an earthquake so strong that it had
+thrown down a part of the hillside, including the wagon trail. That a
+wagon team and driver, such as she had described, had been carried down
+with it, crushed to fragments, and buried under a hundred feet of rock
+in the gulch below. A party had gone down to examine, but it would be
+weeks perhaps before they found it, and she must be prepared for the
+worst. She looked at them vaguely and with tearless eyes.
+
+“Then ye reckon dad's dead?”
+
+“We fear it.”
+
+“Then wot's a-goin' to become o' me?” she said simply.
+
+They glanced again at each other. “Have you no friends in California?”
+ said the elder man.
+
+“Nary one.”
+
+“What was your father going to do?”
+
+“Dunno. I reckon HE didn't either.”
+
+“You may stay here for the present,” said the elder man meditatively.
+“Can you milk?”
+
+The girl nodded. “And I suppose you know something about looking after
+stock?” he continued.
+
+The girl remembered that her father thought she didn't, but this was no
+time for criticism, and she again nodded.
+
+“Come with me,” said the older man, rising. “I suppose,” he added,
+glancing at her ragged frock, “everything you have is in the wagon.”
+
+She nodded, adding with the same cold naivete, “It ain't much!”
+
+They walked on, the girl following; at times straying furtively on
+either side, as if meditating an escape in the woods,--which indeed
+had once or twice been vaguely in her thoughts,--but chiefly to avoid
+further questioning and not to hear what the men said to each other. For
+they were evidently speaking of her, and she could not help hearing
+the younger repeat her words, “Wot's agoin' to become o' me?” with
+considerable amusement, and the addition: “She'll take care of herself,
+you bet! I call that remark o' hers the richest thing out.”
+
+“And I call the state of things that provoked it--monstrous!” said the
+elder man grimly. “You don't know the lives of these people.”
+
+Presently they came to an open clearing in the forest, yet so incomplete
+that many of the felled trees, partly lopped of their boughs, still
+lay where they had fallen. There was a cabin or dwelling of unplaned,
+unpainted boards; very simple in structure, yet made in a workmanlike
+fashion, quite unlike the usual log cabin she had seen. This made her
+think that the elder man was a “towny,” and not a frontiersman like the
+other.
+
+As they approached the cabin the elder man stopped, and turning to her,
+said:--
+
+“Do you know Indians?”
+
+The girl started, and then recovering herself with a quick laugh:
+“G'lang!--there ain't any Injins here!”
+
+“Not the kind YOU mean; these are very peaceful. There's a squaw here
+whom you will”--he stopped, hesitated as he looked critically at the
+girl, and then corrected himself--“who will help you.”
+
+He pushed open the cabin door and showed an interior, equally simple but
+well joined and fitted,--a marvel of neatness and finish to the frontier
+girl's eye. There were shelves and cupboards and other conveniences, yet
+with no ostentation of refinement to frighten her rustic sensibilities.
+
+Then he pushed open another door leading into a shed and called “Waya.”
+ A stout, undersized Indian woman, fitted with a coarse cotton gown, but
+cleaner and more presentable than the girl's one frock, appeared in the
+doorway. “This is Waya, who attends to the cooking and cleaning,” he
+said; “and by the way, what is your name?”
+
+“Libby Jones.”
+
+He took a small memorandum book and a “stub” of pencil from his pocket.
+“Elizabeth Jones,” he said, writing it down. The girl interposed a long
+red hand.
+
+“No,” she interrupted sharply, “not Elizabeth, but Libby, short for
+Lib'rty.”
+
+“Liberty?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Liberty Jones, then. Well, Waya, this is Miss Jones, who will look
+after the cows and calves--and the dairy.” Then glancing at her torn
+dress, he added: “You'll find some clean things in there, until I can
+send up something from San Jose. Waya will show you.”
+
+Without further speech he turned away with the other man. When they were
+some distance from the cabin, the younger remarked:--
+
+“More like a boy than a girl, ain't she?”
+
+“So much the better for her work,” returned the elder grimly.
+
+“I reckon! I was only thinkin' she didn't han'some much either as a boy
+or girl, eh, doctor?” he pursued.
+
+“Well! as THAT won't make much difference to the cows, calves, or the
+dairy, it needn't trouble US,” returned the doctor dryly. But here a
+sudden outburst of laughter from the cabin made them both turn in that
+direction. They were in time to see Liberty Jones dancing out of the
+cabin door in a large cotton pinafore, evidently belonging to the
+squaw, who was following her with half-laughing, half-frightened
+expostulations. The two men stopped and gazed at the spectacle.
+
+“Don't seem to be takin' the old man's death very pow'fully,” said the
+younger, with a laugh.
+
+“Quite as much as he deserved, I daresay,” said the doctor curtly. “If
+the accident had happened to HER, he would have whined and whimpered to
+us for the sake of getting something, but have been as much relieved,
+you may be certain. SHE'S too young and too natural to be a hypocrite
+yet.”
+
+Suddenly the laughter ceased and Liberty Jones's voice arose, shrill
+but masterful: “Thar, that'll do! Quit now! You jest get back to your
+scrubbin'--d'ye hear? I'm boss o' this shanty, you bet!”
+
+The doctor turned with a grim smile to his companion. “That's the only
+thing that bothered me, and I've been waiting for. She's settled it.
+She'll do. Come.”
+
+They turned away briskly through the wood. At the end of half an hour's
+walk they found the team that had brought them there in waiting, and
+drove towards San Jose. It was nearly ten miles before they passed
+another habitation or trace of clearing. And by this time night had
+fallen upon the cabin they had left, and upon the newly made orphan and
+her Indian companion, alone and contented in that trackless solitude.
+
+*****
+
+Liberty Jones had been a year at the cabin. In that time she had learned
+that her employer's name was Doctor Ruysdael, that he had a lucrative
+practice in San Jose, but had also “taken up” a league or two of wild
+forest land in the Santa Cruz range, which he preserved and held after
+a fashion of his own, which gave him the reputation of being a “crank”
+ among the very few neighbors his vast possessions permitted, and the
+equally few friends his singular tastes allowed him. It was believed
+that a man owning such an enormous quantity of timber land, who should
+refuse to set up a sawmill and absolutely forbid the felling of trees;
+who should decline to connect it with the highway to Santa Cruz, and
+close it against improvement and speculation, had given sufficient
+evidence of his insanity; but when to this was added the rumor that he
+himself was not only devoid of the human instinct of hunting the wild
+animals with which his domain abounded, but that he held it so sacred to
+their use as to forbid the firing of a gun within his limits, and that
+these restrictions were further preserved and “policed” by the scattered
+remnants of a band of aborigines,--known as “digger Injins,”--it was
+seriously hinted that his eccentricity had acquired a political and
+moral significance, and demanded legislative interference. But the
+doctor was a rich man, a necessity to his patients, a good marksman,
+and, it was rumored, did not include his fellow men among the animals he
+had a distaste for killing.
+
+Of all this, however, Liberty knew little and cared less. The solitude
+appealed to her sense of freedom; she did not “hanker” after a society
+she had never known. At the end of the first week, when the doctor
+communicated to her briefly, by letter, the convincing proofs of the
+death of her father and his entombment beneath the sunken cliff, she
+accepted the fact without comment or apparent emotion. Two months
+later, when her only surviving relative, “Aunt Marty,” of Missouri,
+acknowledged the news--communicated by Doctor Ruysdael--with Scriptural
+quotations and the cheerful hope that it “would be a lesson to her”
+ and she would “profit in her new place,” she left her aunt's letter
+unanswered.
+
+She looked after the cows and calves with an interest that was almost
+possessory, patronized and played with the squaw,--yet made her feel
+her inferiority,--and moved among the peaceful aborigines with
+the domination of a white woman and a superior. She tolerated the
+half-monthly visits of “Jim Hoskins,” the young companion of the doctor,
+who she learned was the doctor's factor and overseer of the property,
+who lived seven miles away on an agricultural clearing, and whose
+control of her actions was evidently limited by the doctor,--for the
+doctor's sake alone. Nor was Mr. Hoskins inclined to exceed those
+limits. He looked upon her as something abnormal,--a “crank” as
+remarkable in her way as her patron was in his, neuter of sex and vague
+of race, and he simply restricted his supervision to the bringing
+and taking of messages. She remained sole queen of the domain. A rare
+straggler from the main road, penetrating this seclusion, might have
+scarcely distinguished her from Waya, in her coarse cotton gown and
+slouched hat, except for the free stride which contrasted with her
+companion's waddle. Once, in following an estrayed calf, she had
+crossed the highway and been saluted by a passing teamster in the digger
+dialect; yet the mistake left no sting in her memory. And, like the
+digger, she shrank from that civilization which had only proved a hard
+taskmaster.
+
+The sole touch of human interest she had in her surroundings was in the
+rare visits of the doctor and his brief but sincere commendation of
+her rude and rustic work. It is possible that the strange, middle-aged,
+gray-haired, intellectual man, whose very language was at times
+mysterious and unintelligible to her, and whose suggestion of power awed
+her, might have touched some untried filial chord in her being. Although
+she felt that, save for absolute freedom, she was little more to him
+than she had been to her father, yet he had never told her she had
+“no sense,” that she was “a hindrance,” and he had even praised her
+performance of her duties. Eagerly as she looked for his coming, in
+his actual presence she felt a singular uneasiness of which she was not
+entirely ashamed, and if she was relieved at his departure, it none
+the less left her to a delightful memory of him, a warm sense of his
+approval, and a fierce ambition to be worthy of it, for which she would
+have sacrificed herself or the other miserable retainers about her, as a
+matter of course. She had driven Waya and the other squaws far along
+the sparse tableland pasture in search of missing stock; she herself
+had lain out all night on the rocks beside an ailing heifer. Yet, while
+satisfied to earn his praise for the performance of her duty, for some
+feminine reason she thought more frequently of a casual remark he had
+made on his last visit: “You are stronger and more healthy in this
+air,” he had said, looking critically into her face. “We have got that
+abominable alkali out of your system, and wholesome food will do the
+rest.” She was not sure she had quite understood him, but she remembered
+that she had felt her face grow hot when he spoke,--perhaps because she
+had not understood him.
+
+His next visit was a day or two delayed, and in her anxiety she had
+ventured as far as the highway to earnestly watch for his coming. From
+her hiding-place in the underwood she could see the team and Jim Hoskins
+already waiting for him. Presently she saw him drive up to the trail
+in a carryall with a party of ladies and gentlemen. He alighted, bade
+“Good-by” to the party, and the team turned to retrace its course. But
+in that single moment she had been struck and bewildered by what
+seemed to her the dazzlingly beautiful apparel of the women, and their
+prettiness. She felt a sudden consciousness of her own coarse, shapeless
+calico gown, her straggling hair, and her felt hat, and a revulsion
+of feeling seized her. She crept like a wounded animal out of the
+underwood, and then ran swiftly and almost fiercely back towards the
+cabin. She ran so fast that for a time she almost kept pace with the
+doctor and Hoskins in the wagon on the distant trail. Then she dived
+into the underwood again, and making a short cut through the
+forest, came at the end of two hours within hailing distance of the
+cabin,--footsore and exhausted, in spite of the strange excitement that
+had driven her back. Here she thought she heard voices--his voice
+among the rest--calling her, but the same singular revulsion of feeling
+hurried her vaguely on again, even while she experienced a foolish
+savage delight in not answering the summons. In this erratic wandering
+she came upon the spring she had found on her first entrance in the
+forest a year ago, and drank feverishly a second time at its trickling
+source. She could see that since her first visit it had worn a great
+hollow below the tree roots and now formed a shining, placid pool. As
+she stooped to look at it, she suddenly observed that it reflected her
+whole figure as in a cruel mirror,--her slouched hat and loosened
+hair, her coarse and shapeless gown, her hollow cheeks and dry yellow
+skin,--in all their hopeless, uncompromising details. She uttered a
+quick, angry, half-reproachful cry, and turned again to fly. But she had
+not gone far before she came upon the hurrying figures and anxious faces
+of the doctor and Hoskins. She stopped, trembling and irresolute.
+
+“Ah,” said the doctor, in a tone of frank relief. “Here you are! I was
+getting worried about you. Waya said you had been gone since morning!”
+ He stopped and looked at her attentively. “Is anything the matter?”
+
+His evident concern sent a warm glow over her chilly frame, and yet the
+strange sensation remained. “No--no!” she stammered.
+
+Doctor Ruysdael turned to Hoskins. “Go back and tell Waya I've found
+her.”
+
+Libby felt that the doctor only wanted to get rid of his companion, and
+became awed again.
+
+“Has anybody been bothering you?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“Have the diggers frightened you?”
+
+“No”--with a gesture of contempt.
+
+“Have you and Waya quarreled?”
+
+“Nary”--with a faint, tremulous smile.
+
+He still stared at her, and then dropped his blue eyes musingly. “Are
+you lonely here? Would you rather go to San Jose?”
+
+Like a flash the figures of the two smartly dressed women started up
+before her again, with every detail of their fresh and wholesome finery
+as cruelly distinct as had been her own shapeless ugliness in the mirror
+of the spring. “No! NO!” she broke out vehemently and passionately.
+“Never!”
+
+He smiled gently. “Look here! I'll send you up some books. You
+read--don't you?” She nodded quickly. “Some magazines and papers. Odd I
+never thought of it before,” he added half musingly. “Come along to the
+cabin. And,” he stopped again and said decisively, “the next time you
+want anything, don't wait for me to come, but write.”
+
+A few days after he left she received a package of books,--an odd
+collection of novels, magazines, and illustrated journals of the period.
+She received them eagerly as an evidence of his concern for her, but it
+is to be feared that her youthful nature found little satisfaction in
+the gratification of fancy. Many of the people she read of were strange
+to her; many of the incidents related seemed to her mere lies; some
+tales which treated of people in her own sphere she found profoundly
+uninteresting. In one of the cheaper magazines she chanced upon a
+fashion plate; she glanced eagerly through all the others for a like
+revelation until she got a dozen together, when she promptly relegated
+the remaining literature to a corner and oblivion. The text accompanying
+the plates was in a jargon not always clear, but her instinct supplied
+the rest. She dispatched by Hoskins a note to Doctor Ruysdael: “Please
+send me some brite kalikers and things for sewing. You told me to ask.”
+ A few days later brought the response in a good-sized parcel.
+
+Yet this did not keep her from her care of the stock nor her rambles in
+the forest; she was quick to utilize her rediscovery of the spring for
+watering the cattle; it was not so far afield as the half-dried creek in
+the canyon, and was a quiet sylvan spot. She ate her frugal midday meal
+there and drank of its waters, and, secure in her seclusion, bathed
+there and made her rude toilet when the cows were driven home. But she
+did not again look into its mirrored surface when it was tranquil!
+
+And so a month passed. But when Doctor Ruysdael was again due at the
+cabin, a letter was brought by Hoskins, with the news that he was called
+away on professional business down the coast, and could not come until
+two weeks later. In the disappointment that overcame her, she did not at
+first notice that Hoskins was gazing at her with a singular expression,
+which was really one of undisguised admiration. Never having seen this
+before in the eyes of any man who looked at her, she referred it to some
+vague “larking” or jocularity, for which she was in no mood.
+
+“Say, Libby! you're gettin' to be a right smart-lookin' gal. Seems to
+agree with ye up here,” said Hoskins with an awkward laugh. “Darned ef
+ye ain't lookin' awful purty!”
+
+“G'long!” said Liberty Jones, more than ever convinced of his badinage.
+
+“Fact,” said Hoskins energetically. “Why, Doc would tell ye so, too. See
+ef he don't!”
+
+At this Liberty Jones felt her face grow hot. “You jess get!” she said,
+turning away in as much embarrassment as anger. Yet he hovered near
+her with awkward attentions that pleased while it still angered her.
+He offered to go with her to look up the cows; she flatly declined, yet
+with a strange satisfaction in his evident embarrassment. This may have
+lent some animation to her face, for he drew a long breath and said:--
+
+“Don't go pertendin' ye don't know yer purty. Say, let me and you walk
+a bit and have a talk together.” But Libby had another idea in her mind
+and curtly dismissed him. Then she ran swiftly to the spring, for the
+words “The Doc will tell ye so, too” were ringing in her ears. The
+doctor who came with the two beautifully dressed women! HE--would tell
+her she was pretty! She had not dared to look at herself in that crystal
+mirror since that dreadful day two months ago. She would now.
+
+It was a pretty place in the cool shade of the giant trees, and the
+hoof-marks of cattle drinking from the run beneath the pool had not
+disturbed the margin of that tranquil sylvan basin. For a moment she
+stood tremulous and uncertain, and then going up to the shining mirror,
+dropped on her knees before it with her thin red hands clasped on her
+lap. Unconsciously she had taken the attitude of prayer; perhaps there
+was something like it in her mind.
+
+And then the light glanced full on the figure that she saw there!
+
+It fell on a full oval face and throat guileless of fleck or stain,
+smooth as a child's and glowing with health; on large dark eyes, no
+longer sunk in their orbits, but filled with an eager, happy light; on
+bared arms now shapely in contour and cushioned with firm flesh; on a
+dazzling smile, the like of which had never been on the face of Liberty
+Jones before!
+
+She rose to her feet, and yet lingered as if loath to part from this
+delightful vision. Then a fear overcame her that it was some trick of
+the water, and she sped swiftly back to the house to consult the little
+mirror which hung in her sleeping-room, but which she had never glanced
+at since the momentous day of the spring. She took it shyly into the
+sunshine, and found that it corroborated the reflection of the spring.
+That night she worked until late at the calico Doctor Ruysdael had sent
+her, and went to bed happy. The next day brought her Hoskins again with
+a feeble excuse of inquiring if she had a letter for the doctor, and
+she was surprised to find that he was reinforced by a stranger from
+Hoskins's farm, who was equally awkward and vaguely admiring. But the
+appearance of the TWO men produced a singular phase in her impressions
+and experience. She was no longer indignant at Hoskins, but she found
+relief in accepting the compliments of the stranger in preference,
+and felt a delight in Hoskins's discomfiture. Waya, promoted to
+the burlesque of a chaperone, grinned with infinite delight and
+understanding.
+
+When at last the day came for the doctor's arrival, he was duly met by
+Hoskins, and as duly informed by that impressible subordinate of the
+great change in Liberty's appearance. But the doctor was far from being
+equally impressed with his factor's story, and indeed showed much more
+interest in the appearance of the stock which they met along the road.
+Once the doctor got out of the wagon to inspect a cow, and particularly
+the coat of a rough draught horse that had been turned out and put under
+Liberty's care. “His skin is like velvet,” said the doctor. “The girl
+evidently understands stock, and knows how to keep them in condition.”
+
+“I reckon she's beginning to understand herself, too,” said Hoskins.
+“Golly! wait till ye see HER.”
+
+The doctor DID see her, but with what feelings he did not as frankly
+express. She was not at the cabin when they arrived, but presently
+appeared from the direction of the spring where, for reasons of her
+own, she had evidently made her toilet. Doctor Ruysdael was astounded;
+Hoskins's praise was not exaggerated; and there was an added charm
+that Hoskins was not prepared for. She had put on a gown of her own
+making,--the secret toil of many a long night,--amateurishly fashioned
+from some cheap yellow calico the doctor had sent her, yet fitting her
+wonderfully, and showing every curve of her graceful figure. Unaccented
+by a corset,--an article she had never known,--even the lines of the
+stiff, unyielding calico had a fashion that was nymph-like and suited
+her unfettered limbs. Doctor Ruysdael was profoundly moved. Though a
+philosopher, he was practical. He found himself suddenly confronted not
+only by a beautiful girl, but a problem! It was impossible to keep
+the existence of this woodland nymph from the knowledge of his
+distant neighbors; it was equally impossible for him to assume the
+responsibility of keeping a goddess like this in her present position.
+He had noticed her previous improvement, but had never dreamed that pure
+and wholesome living could in two months work such a miracle. And he
+was to a certain degree responsible, HE had created her,--a beautiful
+Frankenstein, whose lustrous, appealing eyes were even now menacing his
+security and position.
+
+Perhaps she saw trouble and perplexity in the face where she had
+expected admiration and pleasure, for a slight chill went over her as
+he quickly praised the appearance of the stock and spoke of her own
+improvement. But when they were alone, he turned to her abruptly.
+
+“You said you had no wish to go to San Jose?”
+
+“No.” Yet she was conscious that her greatest objection had been
+removed, and she colored faintly.
+
+“Listen to me,” he said dryly. “You deserve a better position than
+this,--a better home and surroundings than you have here. You are older,
+too,--a woman almost,--and you must look ahead.”
+
+A look of mingled fright, reproach, and appeal came into her eloquent
+face. “Yer wantin' to send me away?” she stammered.
+
+“No,” he said frankly. “It is you who are GROWING away. This is no
+longer the place for you.”
+
+“But I want to stay. I don't wanter go. I am--I WAS happy here.”
+
+“But I'm thinking of giving up this place. It takes up too much of my
+time. You must be provided”--
+
+“YOU are going away?” she said passionately.
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Take me with you. I'll go anywhere!--to San Jose---wherever you go.
+Don't turn me off as dad did, for I'll foller you as I never followed
+dad. I'll go with you--or I'll die!”
+
+There was neither fear nor shame in her words; it was the outspoken
+instinct of the animal he had been rearing; he was convinced and
+appalled by it.
+
+“I am returning to San Jose at once,” he said gravely. “You shall go
+with me--FOR THE PRESENT! Get yourself ready!”
+
+He took her to San Jose, and temporarily to the house of a patient,--a
+widow lady,--while he tried, alone, to grapple with the problem that now
+confronted him. But that problem became more complicated at the end of
+the third day, by Liberty Jones falling suddenly and alarmingly ill.
+The symptoms were so grave that the doctor, in his anxiety, called in
+a brother physician in consultation. When the examination was over, the
+two men withdrew and stared at each other.
+
+“Of course there is no doubt that the symptoms all point to slow
+arsenical poisoning,” said the consulting doctor.
+
+“Yes,” said Ruysdael quickly, “yet it is utterly inexplicable, both as
+to motive and opportunity.”
+
+“Humph!” said the other grimly, “young ladies take arsenic in minute
+doses to improve the complexion and promote tissue, forgetting that the
+effects are cumulative when they stop suddenly. Your young friend has
+'sworn off' too quickly.”
+
+“But it is impossible,” said Doctor Ruysdael impatiently. “She is a mere
+child--a country girl--ignorant of such habits.”
+
+“Humph! the peasants in the Tyrol try it on themselves after noticing
+the effect on the coats of cattle.”
+
+Doctor Ruysdael started. A recollection of the sleek draught horse
+flashed upon him. He rose and hastily re-entered the patient's room. In
+a few moments he returned. “Do you think I could remove her at once to
+the mountains?” he said gravely.
+
+“Yes, with care and a return to graduated doses of the same poison; you
+know it's the only remedy just now,” answered the other.
+
+By noon the next day the doctor and his patient had returned to the
+cabin, but Ruysdael himself carried the helpless Liberty Jones to the
+spring and deposited her gently beside it. “You may drink now,” he said
+gravely.
+
+The girl did so eagerly, apparently imbibing new strength from the
+sparkling water. The doctor meanwhile coolly filled a phial from the
+same source, and made a hasty test of the contents by the aid of some
+other phials from his case. The result seemed to satisfy him. Then he
+said gravely:
+
+“And THIS is the spring you had discovered?”
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+“And you and the cattle have daily used it?”
+
+She nodded again wonderingly. Then she caught his hand appealingly.
+
+“You won't send me away?”
+
+He smiled oddly as he glanced from the waters of the hill to the
+brimming eyes. “No.”
+
+“No-r,” tremulously, “go away--yourself?”
+
+The doctor looked this time only into her eyes. There was a tremendous
+idea in his own, which seemed in some way to have solved that dreadful
+problem.
+
+“No! We will stay here TOGETHER.”
+
+*****
+
+Six months later there was a paragraph in the San Francisco press: “The
+wonderful Arsenical Spring in the Santa Cruz Mountain, known as 'Liberty
+Spring,' discovered by Doctor Ruysdael, has proved such a remarkable
+success that we understand the temporary huts for patients are to be
+shortly replaced by a magnificent Spa Hotel worthy of the spot, and the
+eligible villa sites it has brought into the market. It will be a source
+of pleasure to all to know that the beautiful nymph--a worthy successor
+to the far-famed 'Elise' of the German 'Brunnen'--who has administered
+the waters to so many grateful patients will still be in attendance,
+although it is rumored that she is shortly to become the wife of the
+distinguished discoverer.”
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other
+Stories, by Bret Harte
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION ***
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+
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+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation, by Bret Harte
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other
+Stories, by Bret Harte
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other Stories
+
+Author: Bret Harte
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2006 [EBook #2556]
+Last Updated: March 5, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Donald Lainson; An Anonymous Volunteer; David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Bret Harte
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ From: &ldquo;ARGONAUT EDITION&rdquo; OF THE WORKS OF BRET HARTE, VOL. 12.<br /> <br />
+ P. F. COLLIER &amp; SON<br /> <br /> NEW YORK <br /> <br />
+ </h3>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT &ldquo;JULES'&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE BOOM IN THE &ldquo;CALAVERAS CLARION&rdquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At nightfall it began to rain. The wind arose too, and also began to
+ buffet a small, struggling, nondescript figure, creeping along the trail
+ over the rocky upland meadow towards Rylands's rancho. At times its head
+ was hidden in what appeared to be wings thrown upward from its shoulders;
+ at times its broad-brimmed hat was cocked jauntily on one side, and again
+ the brim was fixed over the face like a visor. At one moment a drifting
+ misshapen mass of drapery, at the next its vague garments, beaten back
+ hard against the figure, revealed outlines far too delicate for that rude
+ enwrapping. For it was Mrs. Rylands herself, in her husband's hat and her
+ &ldquo;hired man's&rdquo; old blue army overcoat, returning from the post-office two
+ miles away. The wind continued its aggression until she reached the front
+ door of her newly plastered farmhouse, and then a heavier blast shook the
+ pines above the low-pitched, shingled roof, and sent a shower of arrowy
+ drops after her like a Parthian parting, as she entered. She threw aside
+ the overcoat and hat, and somewhat inconsistently entered the
+ sitting-room, to walk to the window and look back upon the path she had
+ just traversed. The wind and the rain swept down a slope, half meadow,
+ half clearing,&mdash;a mile away,&mdash;to a fringe of sycamores. A mile
+ further lay the stage road, where, three hours later, her husband would
+ alight on his return from Sacramento. It would be a long wet walk for
+ Joshua Rylands, as their only horse had been borrowed by a neighbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that fading light Mrs. Rylands's oval cheek was shining still from the
+ raindrops, but there was something in the expression of her worried face
+ that might have as readily suggested tears. She was strikingly handsome,
+ yet quite as incongruous an ornament to her surroundings as she had been
+ to her outer wrappings a moment ago. Even the clothes she now stood in
+ hinted an inadaptibility to the weather&mdash;the house&mdash;the position
+ she occupied in it. A figured silk dress, spoiled rather than overworn,
+ was still of a quality inconsistent with her evident habits, and the
+ lace-edged petticoat that peeped beneath it was draggled with mud and
+ unaccustomed usage. Her glossy black hair, which had been tossed into
+ curls in some foreign fashion, was now wind-blown into a burlesque of it.
+ This incongruity was still further accented by the appearance of the room
+ she had entered. It was coldly and severely furnished, making the chill of
+ the yet damp white plaster unpleasantly obvious. A black harmonium organ
+ stood in one corner, set out with black and white hymn-books; a
+ trestle-like table contained a large Bible; half a dozen black,
+ horsehair-cushioned chairs stood, geometrically distant, against the
+ walls, from which hung four engravings of &ldquo;Paradise Lost&rdquo; in black
+ mourning frames; some dried ferns and autumn leaves stood in a vase on the
+ mantelpiece, as if the chill of the room had prematurely blighted them.
+ The coldly glittering grate below was also decorated with withered sprays,
+ as if an attempt had been made to burn them, but was frustrated through
+ damp. Suddenly recalled to a sense of her wet boots and the new carpet,
+ she hurriedly turned away, crossed the hall into the dining-room, and
+ thence passed into the kitchen. The &ldquo;hired girl,&rdquo; a large-boned
+ Missourian, a daughter of a neighboring woodman, was peeling potatoes at
+ the table. Mrs. Rylands drew a chair before the kitchen stove, and put her
+ wet feet on the hob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll bet a cooky, Mess Rylands, you've done forgot the vanillar,&rdquo; said
+ the girl, with a certain domestic and confidential familiarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Rylands started guiltily. She made a miserable feint of looking in
+ her lap and on the table. &ldquo;I'm afraid I did, Jane, if I didn't bring it in
+ HERE.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you didn't,&rdquo; returned Jane. &ldquo;And I reckon ye forgot that 'ar
+ pepper-sauce for yer husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Rylands looked up with piteous contrition. &ldquo;I really don't know
+ what's the matter with me. I certainly went into the shop, and had it on
+ my list,&mdash;and&mdash;really&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jane evidently knew her mistress, and smiled with superior toleration.
+ &ldquo;It's kinder bewilderin' goin' in them big shops, and lookin' round them
+ stuffed shelves.&rdquo; The shop at the cross roads and post-office was 14 x 14,
+ but Jane was nurtured on the plains. &ldquo;Anyhow,&rdquo; she added good-humoredly,
+ &ldquo;the expressman is sure to look in as he goes by, and you've time to give
+ him the order.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But is he SURE to come?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Rylands anxiously. &ldquo;Mr. Rylands will
+ be so put out without his pepper-sauce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's sure to come ef he knows you're here. Ye kin always kalkilate on
+ that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands abstractedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why? 'cause he just can't keep his eyes off ye! That's why he comes every
+ day,&mdash;'tain't jest for trade!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was quite true, not only of the expressman, but of the butcher and
+ baker, and the &ldquo;candlestick-maker,&rdquo; had there been so advanced a vocation
+ at the cross roads. All were equally and curiously attracted by her
+ picturesque novelty. Mrs. Rylands knew this herself, but without vanity or
+ coquettishness. Possibly that was why the other woman told her. She only
+ slightly deepened the lines of discontent in her cheek and said
+ abstractedly, &ldquo;Well, when he comes, YOU ask him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She dried her shoes, put on a pair of slippers that had a faded splendor
+ about them, and went up to her bedroom. Here she hesitated for some time
+ between the sewing-machine and her knitting-needles, but finally settled
+ upon the latter, and a pair of socks for her husband which she had begun a
+ year ago. But she presently despaired of finishing them before he
+ returned, three hours hence, and so applied herself to the sewing-machine.
+ For a little while its singing hum was heard between the blasts that shook
+ the house, but the thread presently snapped, and the machine was put aside
+ somewhat impatiently, with a discontented drawing of the lines around her
+ handsome mouth. Then she began to &ldquo;tidy&rdquo; the room, putting a great many
+ things away and bringing out a great many more, a process that was
+ necessarily slow, owing to her falling into attitudes of minute inspection
+ of certain articles of dress, with intervals of trying them on, and
+ observing their effect in her mirror. This kind of interruption also
+ occurred while she was putting away some books that were lying about on
+ chairs and tables, stopping midway to open their pages, becoming
+ interested, and quite finishing one chapter, with the book held close
+ against the window to catch the fading light of day. The feminine reader
+ will gather from this that Mrs. Rylands, though charming, was not facile
+ in domestic duties. She had just glanced at the clock, and lit the candle
+ to again set herself to work, and thus bridge over the two hours more of
+ waiting, when there came a tap at the door. She opened it to Jane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's an entire stranger downstairs, ez hez got a lame hoss and wants
+ to borry a fresh one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have none, you know,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands, a little impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thet's what I told him. Then he wanted to know ef he could lie by here
+ till he could get one or fix up his own hoss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you like; you know if you can manage it,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands, a little
+ uneasily. &ldquo;When Mr. Rylands comes you can arrange it between you. Where is
+ he now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the kitchen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The kitchen!&rdquo; echoed Mrs. Rylands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, ma'am, I showed him into the parlor, but he kinder shivered his
+ shoulders, and reckoned ez how he'd go inter the kitchen. Ye see, ma'am,
+ he was all wet, and his shiny big boots was sloppy. But he ain't one o'
+ the stuck-up kind, and he's willin' to make hisself cowf'ble before the
+ kitchen stove.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, he don't want ME,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands, with a relieved voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes'm,&rdquo; said Jane, apparently equally relieved. &ldquo;Only, I thought I'd just
+ tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later, in crossing the upper hall, Mrs. Rylands heard Jane's
+ voice from the kitchen raised in rustic laughter. Had she been satirically
+ inclined, she might have understood Jane's willingness to relieve her
+ mistress of the duty of entertaining the stranger; had she been
+ philosophical, she might have considered the girl's dreary, monotonous
+ life at the rancho, and made allowance for her joy at this rare
+ interruption of it. But I fear that Mrs. Rylands was neither satirical nor
+ philosophical, and presently, when Jane reentered, with color in her
+ alkaline face, and light in her huckleberry eyes, and said she was going
+ over to the cattle-sheds in the &ldquo;far pasture,&rdquo; to see if the hired man
+ didn't know of some horse that could be got for the stranger, Mrs. Rylands
+ felt a little bitterness in the thought that the girl would have scarcely
+ volunteered to go all that distance in the rain for HER. Yet, in a few
+ moments she forgot all about it, and even the presence of her guest in the
+ house, and in one of her fitful abstracted employments passed through the
+ dining-room into the kitchen, and had opened the door with an &ldquo;Oh, Jane!&rdquo;
+ before she remembered her absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The kitchen, lit by a single candle, could be only partly seen by her as
+ she stood with her hand on the lock, although she herself was plainly
+ visible. There was a pause, and then a quiet, self-possessed, yet amused,
+ voice answered:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name isn't Jane, and if you're the lady of the house, I reckon yours
+ wasn't ALWAYS Rylands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sound of the voice Mrs. Rylands threw the door wide open, and as
+ her eyes fell upon the speaker&mdash;her unknown guest&mdash;she recoiled
+ with a little cry, and a white, startled face. Yet the stranger was young
+ and handsome, dressed with a scrupulousness and elegance which even the
+ stress of travel had not deranged, and he was looking at her with a smile
+ of recognition, mingled with that careless audacity and self-possession
+ which seemed to be the characteristic of his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jack Hamlin!&rdquo; she gasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's me, all the time,&rdquo; he responded easily, &ldquo;and YOU'RE Nell
+ Montgomery!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How did you know I was here? Who told you?&rdquo; she said impetuously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobody! never was so surprised in my life! When you opened that door just
+ now you might have knocked me down with a feather.&rdquo; Yet he spoke lazily,
+ with an amused face, and looked at her without changing his position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you MUST have known SOMETHING! It was no mere accident,&rdquo; she went on
+ vehemently, glancing around the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's where you slip up, Nell,&rdquo; said Hamlin imperturbably. &ldquo;It WAS an
+ accident and a bad one. My horse lamed himself coming down the grade. I
+ sighted the nearest shanty, where I thought I might get another horse. It
+ happened to be this.&rdquo; For the first time he changed his attitude, and
+ leaned back contemplatively in his chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came towards him quickly. &ldquo;You didn't use to lie, Jack,&rdquo; she said
+ hesitatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Couldn't afford it in my business,&mdash;and can't now,&rdquo; said Jack
+ cheerfully. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he added curiously, as if recognizing something in his
+ companion's agitation, and lifting his brown lashes to her, the window,
+ and the ceiling, &ldquo;what's all this about? What's your little game here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm married,&rdquo; she said, with nervous intensity,&mdash;&ldquo;married, and this
+ is my husband's house!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not married straight out!&mdash;regularly fixed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said hurriedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of the boys? Don't remember any Rylands. SPELTER used to be very
+ sweet on you,&mdash;but Spelter mightn't have been his real name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of our lot! No one you ever knew; a&mdash;a straight out, square
+ man,&rdquo; she said quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say, Nell, look here! You ought to have shown up your cards without
+ even a call. You ought to have told him that you danced at the Casino.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before he asked you to marry him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack got up from his chair, put his hands in his pockets, and looked at
+ her curiously. This Nell Montgomery, this music-hall &ldquo;dance and song
+ girl,&rdquo; this girl of whom so much had been SAID and so little PROVED! Well,
+ this was becoming interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't understand,&rdquo; she said, with nervous feverishness; &ldquo;you remember
+ after that row I had with Jim, that night the manager gave us a supper,&mdash;when
+ he treated me like a dog?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He did that,&rdquo; interrupted Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I felt fit for anything,&rdquo; she said, with a half-hysterical laugh, that
+ seemed voiced, however, to check some slumbering memory. &ldquo;I'd have cut my
+ throat or his, it didn't matter which&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It mattered something to us, Nell,&rdquo; put in Jack again, with polite
+ parenthesis; &ldquo;don't leave US out in the cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I started from 'Frisco that night on the boat ready to fling myself into
+ anything&mdash;or the river!&rdquo; she went on hurriedly. &ldquo;There was a man in
+ the cabin who noticed me, and began to hang around. I thought he knew who
+ I was,&mdash;had seen me on the posters; and as I didn't feel like
+ foolin', I told him so. But he wasn't that kind. He said he saw I was in
+ trouble and wanted me to tell him all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hamlin regarded her cheerfully. &ldquo;And you told him,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;how you
+ had once run away from your childhood's happy home to go on the stage! How
+ you always regretted it, and would have gone back but that the doors were
+ shut forever against you! How you longed to leave, but the wicked men and
+ women around you always&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't!&rdquo; she burst out, with sudden passion; &ldquo;you know I didn't. I told
+ him everything: who I was, what I had done, what I expected to do again. I
+ pointed out the men&mdash;who were sitting there, whispering and grinning
+ at us, as if they were in the front row of the theatre&mdash;and said I
+ knew them all, and they knew me. I never spared myself a thing. I said
+ what people said of me, and didn't even care to say it wasn't true!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, come!&rdquo; protested Jack, in perfunctory politeness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He said he liked me for telling the truth, and not being ashamed to do
+ it! He said the sin was in the false shame and the hypocrisy; for that's
+ the sort of man he is, you see, and that's like him always! He asked if I
+ would marry him&mdash;out of hand&mdash;and do my best to be his lawful
+ wife. He said he wanted me to think it over and sleep on it, and to-morrow
+ he would come and see me for an answer. I slipped off the boat at 'Frisco,
+ and went alone to a hotel where I wasn't known. In the morning I didn't
+ know whether he'd keep his word or I'd keep mine. But he came! He said
+ he'd marry me that very day, and take me to his farm in Santa Clara. I
+ agreed. I thought it would take me out of everybody's knowledge, and
+ they'd think me dead! We were married that day, before a regular
+ clergyman. I was married under my own name,&rdquo;&mdash;she stopped and looked
+ at Jack, with a hysterical laugh,&mdash;&ldquo;but he made me write underneath
+ it, 'known as Nell Montgomery;' for he said HE wasn't ashamed of it, nor
+ should I be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does he wear long hair and stick straws in it?&rdquo; said Hamlin gravely.
+ &ldquo;Does he 'hear voices' and have 'visions'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's a shrewd, sensible, hard-working man,&mdash;no more mad than you
+ are, nor as mad as I was the day I married him. He's lived up to
+ everything he's said.&rdquo; She stopped, hesitated in her quick, nervous
+ speech; her lip quivered slightly, but she recalled herself, and looking
+ imploringly, yet hopelessly, at Jack, gasped, &ldquo;And that's what's the
+ matter!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack fixed his eyes keenly upon her. &ldquo;And you?&rdquo; he said curtly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I?&rdquo; she repeated wonderingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, what have YOU done?&rdquo; he said, with sudden sharpness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wonder was so apparent in her eyes that his keen glance softened.
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; she said bewilderingly, &ldquo;I have been his dog, his slave,&mdash;as
+ far as he would let me. I have done everything; I have not been out of the
+ house until he almost drove me out. I have never wanted to go anywhere or
+ see any one; but he has always insisted upon it. I would have been willing
+ to slave here, day and night, and have been happy. But he said I must not
+ seem to be ashamed of my past, when he is not. I would have worn common
+ homespun clothes and calico frocks, and been glad of it, but he insists
+ upon my wearing my best things, even my theatre things; and as he can't
+ afford to buy more, I wear these things I had. I know they look beastly
+ here, and that I'm a laughing-stock, and when I go out I wear almost
+ anything to try and hide them; but,&rdquo; her lip quivered dangerously again,
+ &ldquo;he wants me to do it, and it pleases him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack looked down. After a pause he lifted his lashes towards her draggled
+ skirt, and said in an easier, conversational tone, &ldquo;Yes! I thought I knew
+ that dress. I gave it to you for that walking scene in 'High Life,' didn't
+ I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said quickly, &ldquo;it was the blue one with silver trimming,&mdash;don't
+ you remember? I tried to turn it the first year I was married, but it
+ never looked the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was sweetly pretty,&rdquo; said Jack encouragingly, &ldquo;and with that blue hat
+ lined with silver, it was just fetching! Somehow I don't quite remember
+ this one,&rdquo; and he looked at it critically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had it at the races in '58, and that supper Judge Boompointer gave us
+ at 'Frisco where Colonel Fish upset the table trying to get at Jim. Do you
+ know,&rdquo; she said, with a little laugh, &ldquo;it's got the stains of the
+ champagne on it yet; it never would come off. See!&rdquo; and she held the
+ candle with great animation to the breadth of silk before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And there's more of it on the sleeve,&rdquo; said Jack; &ldquo;isn't there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Rylands looked reproachfully at Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't champagne; don't you know what it is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's blood,&rdquo; she said gravely; &ldquo;when that Mexican cut poor Ned so bad,&mdash;don't
+ you remember? I held his head upon my arm while you bandaged him.&rdquo; She
+ heaved a little sigh, and then added, with a faint laugh, &ldquo;That's the
+ worst thing about the clothes of a girl in the profession, they get
+ spoiled or stained before they wear out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This large truth did not seem to impress Mr. Hamlin. &ldquo;Why did you leave
+ Santa Clara?&rdquo; he said abruptly, in his previous critical tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because of the folks there. They were standoffish and ugly. You see,
+ Josh&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Josh Rylands!&mdash;HIM! He told everybody who I was, even those who had
+ never seen me in the bills,&mdash;how good I was to marry him, how he had
+ faith in me and wasn't ashamed,&mdash;until they didn't believe we were
+ married at all. So they looked another way when they met us, and didn't
+ call. And all the while I was glad they didn't, but he wouldn't believe
+ it, and allowed I was pining on account of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And were you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I swear to God, Jack, I'd have been content, and more, to have been just
+ there with him, seein' nobody, letting every one believe I was dead and
+ gone, but he said it was wrong, and weak! Maybe it was,&rdquo; she added, with a
+ shy, interrogating look at Jack, of which, however, he took no notice.
+ &ldquo;Then when he found they wouldn't call, what do you think he did?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beat you, perhaps,&rdquo; suggested Jack cheerfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He never did a thing to me that wasn't straight out, square, and kind,&rdquo;
+ she said, half indignantly, half hopelessly. &ldquo;He thought if HIS kind of
+ people wouldn't see me, I might like to see my own sort. So without saying
+ anything to me, he brought down, of all things! Tinkie Clifford, she that
+ used to dance in the cheap variety shows at 'Frisco, and her particular
+ friend, Captain Sykes. It would have just killed you, Jack,&rdquo; she said,
+ with a sudden hysteric burst of laughter, &ldquo;to have seen Josh, in his
+ square, straight-out way, trying to be civil and help things along. But,&rdquo;
+ she went on, as suddenly relapsing into her former attitude of worried
+ appeal, &ldquo;I couldn't stand it, and when she got to talking free and easy
+ before Josh, and Captain Sykes to guzzling champagne, she and me had a
+ row. She allowed I was putting on airs, and I made her walk, in spite of
+ Josh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Josh seemed to like it,&rdquo; said Hamlin carelessly. &ldquo;Has he seen her
+ since?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; I reckon he's cured of asking that kind of company for me. And then
+ we came here. But I persuaded him not to begin by going round telling
+ people who I was,&mdash;as he did the last time,&mdash;but to leave it to
+ folks to find out if they wanted to, and he gave in. Then he let me fix up
+ this house and furnish it my own way, and I did!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you mean to say that YOU fixed up that family vault of a
+ sitting-room?&rdquo; said Jack, in horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I didn't want any fancy furniture or looking-glasses, and such like,
+ to attract folks, nor anything to look like the old times. I don't think
+ any of the boys would care to come here. And I got rid of a lot of
+ sporting travelers, 'wild-cat' managers, and that kind of tramp in this
+ way. But&rdquo;&mdash;She hesitated, and her face fell again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what?&rdquo; said Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think that Josh likes it either. He brought home the other day
+ 'My Johnny is a Shoemakiyure,' and wanted me to try it on the organ. But
+ it reminded me how we used to get just sick of singing it on and off the
+ boards, and I couldn't touch it. He wanted me to go to the circus that was
+ touring over at the cross roads, but it was the old Flanigin's circus, you
+ know, the one Gussie Riggs used to ride in, with its old clown and its old
+ ringmaster and the old 'wheezes,' and I chucked it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said Jack, rising and surveying Mrs. Rylands critically. &ldquo;If
+ you go on at this gait, I'll tell you what that man of yours will do.
+ He'll bolt with some of your old friends!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned a quick, scared face upon him for an instant. But only for an
+ instant. Her hysteric little laugh returned, at once, followed by her
+ weary, worried look. &ldquo;No, Jack, you don't know him! If it was only that!
+ He cares only for me in his own way,&mdash;and,&rdquo; she stammered as she went
+ on, &ldquo;I've no luck in making him happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped. The wind shook the house and fired a volley of rain against
+ the windows. She took advantage of it to draw a torn lace-edged
+ handkerchief from her pocket behind, and keeping the tail of her eyes in a
+ frightened fashion on Jack, applied the handkerchief furtively, first to
+ her nose, and then to her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't do that,&rdquo; said Jack fastidiously, &ldquo;it's wet enough outside.&rdquo;
+ Nevertheless, he stood up and gazed at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She timidly drew nearer to him, and took a seat on the kitchen table,
+ looking up wistfully into his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed Jack argumentatively, &ldquo;if he won't 'chuck' you, why don't
+ you 'chuck' HIM?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned quite white, and suddenly dropped her eyes. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said,
+ almost inaudibly, &ldquo;lots of girls would do that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't mean go back to your old life,&rdquo; continued Jack. &ldquo;I reckon you've
+ had enough of that. But get into some business, you know, like other
+ women. A bonnet shop, or a candy shop for children, see? I'll help start
+ you. I've got a couple of hundred, if not in my own pocket in somebody's
+ else, just burning to be used! And then you can look about you; and
+ perhaps some square business man will turn up and you can marry him. You
+ know you can't live this way, nohow. It's killing you; it ain't fair on
+ you, nor on Rylands either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said quickly, &ldquo;it ain't fair on HIM. I know it, I know it isn't,
+ I know it isn't,&rdquo; she repeated, &ldquo;only&rdquo;&mdash;She stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only what?&rdquo; said Jack impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not speak. After a pause she picked up the rolling-pin from the
+ table and began absently rolling it down her lap to her knee, as if
+ pressing out the stained silk skirt. &ldquo;Only,&rdquo; she stammered, slowly rolling
+ the pin handles in her open palms, &ldquo;I&mdash;I can't leave Josh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why can't you?&rdquo; said Jack quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because&mdash;because&mdash;I,&rdquo; she went on, with a quivering lip,
+ working the rolling-pin heavily down her knee as if she were crushing her
+ answer out of it,&mdash;&ldquo;because&mdash;I&mdash;love him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause, a dash of rain against the window, and another dash
+ from her eyes upon her hands, the rolling-pin, and the skirts she had
+ gathered up hastily, as she cried, &ldquo;O Jack! Jack! I never loved anybody
+ like him! I never knew what love was! I never knew a man like him before!
+ There never WAS one before!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this large, comprehensive, and passionate statement Mr. Jack Hamlin
+ made no reply. An audacity so supreme had conquered his. He walked to the
+ window, looked out upon the dark, rain-filmed pane that, however,
+ reflected no equal change in his own dark eyes, and then returned and
+ walked round the kitchen table. When he was at her back, without looking
+ at her, he reached out his hand, took her passive one that lay on the
+ table in his, grasped it heartily for a single moment, laid it gently
+ down, and returned around the table, where he again confronted her
+ cheerfully face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll make the riffle yet,&rdquo; he said quietly. &ldquo;Just now I don't see what
+ I could do, or where I could chip in your little game; but if I DO, or you
+ do, count me in and let me know. You know where to write,&mdash;my old
+ address at Sacramento.&rdquo; He walked to the corner, took up his still wet
+ serape, threw it over his shoulders, and picked up his broad-brimmed
+ riding-hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're not going, Jack?&rdquo; she said hesitatingly, as she rubbed her wet
+ eyes into a consciousness of his movements. &ldquo;You'll wait to see HIM? He'll
+ be here in an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've been here too long already,&rdquo; said Jack. &ldquo;And the less you say about
+ my calling, even accidentally, the better. Nobody will believe it,&mdash;YOU
+ didn't yourself. In fact, unless you see how I can help you, the sooner
+ you consider us all dead and buried, the sooner your luck will change.
+ Tell your girl I've found my own horse so much better that I have pushed
+ on with him, and give her that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He threw a gold coin on the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But your horse is still lame,&rdquo; she said wonderingly. &ldquo;What will you do in
+ this storm?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get into the cover of the next wood and camp out. I've done it before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Jack!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He suddenly made a slight gesture of warning. His quick ear had caught the
+ approach of footsteps along the wet gravel outside. A mischievous light
+ slid into his dark eyes as he coolly moved backward to the door and,
+ holding it open, said, in a remarkably clear and distinct voice:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, as you say, society is becoming very mixed and frivolous everywhere,
+ and you'd scarcely know San Francisco now. So delighted, however, to have
+ made your acquaintance, and regret my business prevents my waiting to see
+ your good husband. So odd that I should have known your Aunt Jemima! But,
+ as you say, the world is very small, after all. I shall tell the deacon
+ how well you are looking,&mdash;in spite of the kitchen smoke in your
+ eyes. Good-by! A thousand thanks for your hospitality.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Jack, bowing profoundly to the ground, backed out upon Jane, the hired
+ man, and the expressman, treading, I grieve to say, with some deliberation
+ upon the toes of the two latter, in order, possibly, that in their
+ momentary pain and discomposure they might not scan too closely the face
+ of this ingenious gentleman, as he melted into the night and the storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jane entered, with a slight toss of her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here's your expressman,&mdash;ef you're wantin' him NOW.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Rylands was too preoccupied to notice her handmaiden's significant
+ emphasis, as she indicated a fresh-looking, bashful young fellow, whose
+ confusion was evidently heightened by the unexpected egress of Mr. Hamlin,
+ and the point-blank presence of the handsome Mrs. Rylands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, certainly,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands quickly. &ldquo;So kind of him to oblige us.
+ Give him the order, Jane, please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned to escape from the kitchen and these new intruders, when her
+ eye fell upon the coin left by Mr. Hamlin. &ldquo;The gentleman wished you to
+ take that for your trouble, Jane,&rdquo; she said hastily, pointing to it, and
+ passed out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jane cast a withering look after her retreating skirts, and picking the
+ coin from the table, turned to the hired man. &ldquo;Run to the stable after
+ that dandified young feller, Dick, and hand that back to him. Ye kin say
+ that Jane Mackinnon don't run arrants fur money, nor play gooseberry to
+ other folks fur fun.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PART II
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Joshua Rylands had, according to the vocabulary of his class, &ldquo;found
+ grace&rdquo; at the age of sixteen, while still in the spiritual state of
+ &ldquo;original sin&rdquo; and the political one of Missouri. He had not indeed found
+ it by persistent youthful seeking or spiritual insight, but somewhat
+ violently and turbulently at a camp-meeting. A village boy, naturally
+ gentle and impressible, with an original character,&mdash;limited,
+ however, in education and experience,&mdash;he had, after his first rustic
+ debauch with some vulgar companions, fallen upon the camp-meeting in
+ reckless audacity; and instead of being handed over to the district
+ constable, was taken in and placed upon &ldquo;the anxious bench,&rdquo; &ldquo;rastled
+ with,&rdquo; and exhorted by a strong revivalist preacher, &ldquo;convicted of sin,&rdquo;
+ and&mdash;converted! It is doubtful if the shame of a public arrest and
+ legal punishment would have impressed his youthful spirit as much as did
+ this spiritual examination and trial, in which he himself became accuser.
+ Howbeit, its effect, though punitive, was also exemplary. He at once cast
+ off his evil companions; remaining faithful to his conversion, in spite of
+ their later &ldquo;backslidings.&rdquo; When, after the Western fashion, the time came
+ for him to forsake his father's farm and seek a new &ldquo;quarter section&rdquo; on
+ some more remote frontier, he carried into that secluded, lonely,
+ half-monkish celibacy of pioneer life&mdash;which has been the foundation
+ of so much strong Western character&mdash;more than the usual religious
+ feeling. At once industrious and adventurous, he lived by &ldquo;the Word,&rdquo; as
+ he called it, and Nature as he knew it,&mdash;tempted by none of the vices
+ or sentiments of civilization. When he finally joined the Californian
+ emigration, it was not as a gold-seeker, but as a discoverer of new
+ agricultural fields; if the hardship was as great and the rewards fewer,
+ he nevertheless knew that he retained his safer isolation and independence
+ of spirit. Vice and civilization were to him synonymous terms; it was the
+ natural condition of the worldly and unregenerate. Such was the man who
+ chanced to meet &ldquo;Nell Montgomery, the Pearl of the Variety Stage,&rdquo; on the
+ Sacramento boat, in one of his forced visits to civilization. Without
+ knowing her in her profession, her frank exposition of herself did not
+ startle him; he recognized it, accepted it, and strove to convert it. And
+ as long as this daughter of Folly forsook her evil ways for him, it was a
+ triumph in which there was no shame, and might be proclaimed from the
+ housetop. When his neighbors thought differently, and avoided them, he saw
+ no inconsistency in bringing his wife's old friends to divert her: she
+ might in time convert THEM. He had no more fear of her returning to their
+ ways than he had of himself &ldquo;backsliding.&rdquo; Narrow as was his creed, he had
+ none of the harshness nor pessimism of the bigot. With the keenest
+ self-scrutiny, his credulity regarding others was touching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The storm was still raging when he alighted that evening from the up coach
+ at the trail nearest his house. Although incumbered with a heavy
+ carpet-bag, he started resignedly on his two-mile tramp without begrudging
+ the neighborly act of his wife which had deprived him of his horse. It was
+ &ldquo;like her&rdquo; to do these things in her good-humored abstraction, an
+ abstraction, however, that sometimes worried him, from the fear that it
+ indicated some unhappiness with her present lot. He was longing to rejoin
+ her after his absence of three days, the longest time they had been
+ separated since their marriage, and he hurried on with a certain
+ lover-like excitement, quite new to his usually calm and temperate blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Struggling with the storm and darkness, but always with the happy
+ consciousness of drawing nearer to her in that struggle, he labored on,
+ finding his perilous way over the indistinguishable trail by certain
+ landmarks in the distance, visible only to his pioneer eye. That heavier
+ shadow to the right was not the hillside, but the SLOPE to the distant
+ hill; that low, regular line immediately before him was not a fence or
+ wall, but the line of distant gigantic woods, a mile from his home. Yet as
+ he began to descend the slope towards the wood, he stopped and rubbed his
+ eyes. There was distinctly a light in it. His first idea was that he had
+ lost the trail and was nearing the woodman Mackinnon's cabin. But a more
+ careful scrutiny revealed to him that it was really the wood, and the
+ light was a camp-fire. It was a rough night for camping out, but they were
+ probably some belated prospectors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had reached the fringe of woodland, he could see quite plainly
+ that the fire was built beside one of the large pines, and that the little
+ encampment, which looked quite comfortable and secluded from the
+ storm-beaten trail, was occupied apparently by a single figure. By the
+ good glow of the leaping fire, that figure standing erect before it,
+ elegantly shaped, in the graceful folds of a serape, looked singularly
+ romantic and picturesque, and reminded Joshua Rylands&mdash;whose ideas of
+ art were purely reminiscent of boyish reading&mdash;of some picture in a
+ novel. The heavy black columns of the pines, glancing out of the concave
+ shadow, also seemed a fitting background to what might have been a scene
+ in a play. So strongly was he impressed by it that but for his anxiety to
+ reach his home, still a mile distant, and the fact that he was already
+ late, he would have penetrated the wood and the seclusion of the stranger
+ with an offer of hospitality for the night. The man, however, was
+ evidently capable of taking care of himself, and the outline of a tethered
+ horse was faintly visible under another tree. It might be a surveyor or
+ engineer,&mdash;the only men of a better class who were itinerant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But another and even greater surprise greeted him as he toiled up the
+ rocky slope towards his farmhouse. The windows of the sitting-room, which
+ were usually blank and black by night, were glittering with unfamiliar
+ light. Like most farmers, he seldom used the room except for formal
+ company, his wife usually avoiding it, and even he himself now preferred
+ the dining-room or the kitchen. His first suggestion that his wife had
+ visitors gave him a sense of pleasure on her account, mingled, however,
+ with a slight uneasiness of his own which he could not account for. More
+ than that, as he approached nearer he could hear the swell of the organ
+ above the roar of the swaying pines, and the cadences were not of a
+ devotional character. He hesitated for a moment, as he had hesitated at
+ the fire in the woods; yet it was surely his own house! He hurried to the
+ door, opened it; not only the light of the sitting-room streamed into the
+ hall, but the ruddier glow of an actual fire in the disused grate! The
+ familiar dark furniture had been rearranged to catch some of the glow and
+ relieve its sombreness. And his wife, rising from the music-stool, was the
+ room's only occupant!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Rylands gazed anxiously and timidly at her husband's astonished face,
+ as he threw off his waterproof and laid down his carpet-bag. Her own face
+ was a little flurried with excitement, and his, half hidden in his tawny
+ beard, and, possibly owing to his self-introspective nature, never
+ spontaneously sympathetic, still expressed only wonder! Mrs. Rylands was a
+ little frightened. It is sometimes dangerous to meddle with a man's
+ habits, even when he has grown weary of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought,&rdquo; she began hesitatingly, &ldquo;that it would be more cheerful for
+ you in here, this stormy evening. I thought you might like to put your wet
+ things to dry in the kitchen, and we could sit here together, after
+ supper, alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am afraid that Mrs. Rylands did not offer all her thoughts. Ever since
+ Mr. Hamlin's departure she had been uneasy and excited, sometimes falling
+ into fits of dejection, and again lighting up into hysterical levity; at
+ other times carefully examining her wardrobe, and then with a sudden
+ impulse rushing downstairs again to give orders for her husband's supper,
+ and to make the extraordinary changes in the sitting-room already noted.
+ Only a few moments before he arrived, she had covertly brought down a
+ piece of music, and put aside the hymn-books, and taken, with a little
+ laugh, a pack of cards from her pocket, which she placed behind the
+ already dismantled vase on the chimney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckoned you had company, Ellen,&rdquo; he said gravely, kissing her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said quickly. &ldquo;That is,&rdquo; she stopped with a sudden surge of
+ color in her face that startled her, &ldquo;there was&mdash;a man&mdash;here, in
+ the kitchen&mdash;who had a lame horse, and who wanted to get a fresh one.
+ But he went away an hour ago. And he wasn't in this room&mdash;at least,
+ after it was fixed up. So I've had no company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She felt herself again blushing at having blushed, and a little terrified.
+ There was no reason for it. But for Jack's warning, she would have been
+ quite ready to tell her husband all. She had never blushed before him over
+ her past life; why she should now blush over seeing Jack, of all people!
+ made her utter a little hysterical laugh. I am afraid that this
+ experienced little woman took it for granted that her husband knew that if
+ Jack or any man had been there as a clandestine lover, she would not have
+ blushed at all. Yet with all her experience, she did not know that she had
+ blushed simply because it was to Jack that she had confessed that she
+ loved the man before her. Her husband noted the blush as part of her
+ general excitement. He permitted her to drag him into the room and seat
+ him before the hearth, where she sank down on one knee to pull off his
+ heavy rubber boots. But he waved her aside at this, pulled them off with
+ his own hands, and let her take them to the kitchen and bring back his
+ slippers. By this time a smile had lighted up his hard face. The room was
+ certainly more comfortable and cheerful. Still he was a little worried;
+ was there not in these changes a falling away from the grace of
+ self-abnegation which she had so sedulously practiced?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When supper was served by Jane, in the dull dining-room, Mr. Rylands, had
+ he not been more engaged in these late domestic changes, might have
+ noticed that the Missouri girl waited upon him with a certain
+ commiserating air that was remarkable by its contrast with the frigid
+ ceremonious politeness with which she attended her mistress. It had not
+ escaped Mrs. Rylands, however, who ever since Jack's abrupt departure had
+ noticed this change in the girl's demeanor to herself, and with a woman's
+ intuitive insight of another woman, had fathomed it. The comfortable
+ tete-a-tete with Jack, which Jane had looked forward to, Mrs. Rylands had
+ anticipated herself, and then sent him off! When Joshua thanked his wife
+ for remembering the pepper-sauce, and Mrs. Rylands pathetically admitted
+ her forgetfulness, the head-toss which Jane gave as she left the room was
+ too marked to be overlooked by him. Mrs. Rylands gave a hysterical little
+ laugh. &ldquo;I am afraid Jane doesn't like my sending away the expressman just
+ after I had also dismissed the stranger whom she had taken a fancy to, and
+ left her without company,&rdquo; she said unwisely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands did not laugh. &ldquo;I reckon,&rdquo; he returned slowly, &ldquo;that Jane must
+ feel kinder lonely; she bears all the burden of our bein' outer the world,
+ without any of our glory in the cause of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, when supper was over, and the pair were seated in the
+ sitting-room before the fire, this episode was forgotten. Mrs. Rylands
+ produced her husband's pipe and tobacco-pouch. He looked around the formal
+ walls and hesitated. He had been in the habit of smoking in the kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not here?&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands, with a sudden little note of decision.
+ &ldquo;Why should we keep this room only for company that don't come? I call it
+ silly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This struck Mr. Rylands as logical. Besides, undoubtedly the fire had
+ mellowed the room. After a puff or two he looked at his wife musingly.
+ &ldquo;Couldn't you make yourself one of them cigarettys, as they call 'em?
+ Here's the tobacco, and I'll get you the paper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I COULD,&rdquo; she said tentatively. Then suddenly, &ldquo;What made you think of
+ it? You never saw ME smoke!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Rylands, &ldquo;but that lady, your old friend, Miss Clifford, does,
+ and I thought you might be hankering after it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do you know Tinkie Clifford smokes?&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She lit a cigaretty that day she called.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hate it,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands shortly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands nodded approval, and puffed meditatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Josh, have you seen that girl since?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Joshua.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor any other girl like her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Joshua wonderingly. &ldquo;You see I only got to know her on your
+ account, Ellen, that she might see you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, don't you do it any more! None of 'em! Promise me!&rdquo; She leaned
+ forward eagerly in her chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Ellen,&rdquo;&mdash;her husband began gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know what you're going to say, but they can't do me any good, and you
+ can't do them any good as you did ME, so there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands was silent, and smiled meditatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Josh!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When you met me that night on the Sacramento boat, and looked at me, did
+ you&mdash;did I,&rdquo; she hesitated,&mdash;&ldquo;did you look at me because I had
+ been crying?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought you were troubled in spirit, and looked so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose I looked worried, of course; I had no time to change or even
+ fix my hair; I had on that green dress, and it NEVER was becoming. And you
+ only spoke to me on account of my awful looks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw only your wrestling soul, Ellen, and I thought you needed comfort
+ and help.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was silent for a moment, and then, leaning forward, picked up the
+ poker and began to thrust it absently between the bars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if it had been some other girl crying and looking awful, you'd have
+ spoken to her all the same?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a new idea to Mr. Rylands, but with most men logic is supreme. &ldquo;I
+ suppose I would,&rdquo; he said slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And married her?&rdquo; She rattled the bars of the grate with the poker as if
+ to drown the inevitable reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands loved the woman before him, but it pleased him to think that
+ he loved truth better. &ldquo;If it had been necessary to her salvation, yes,&rdquo;
+ he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not Tinkie?&rdquo; she said suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;SHE never would have been in your contrite condition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much you know! Girls like that can cry as well as laugh, just as they
+ want to. Well! I suppose I DID look horrid.&rdquo; Nevertheless, she seemed to
+ gain some gratification from her husband's reply, and changed the subject
+ as if fearful of losing that satisfaction by further questioning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tried some of those songs you brought, but I don't think they go well
+ with the harmonium,&rdquo; she said, pointing to some music on its rack, &ldquo;except
+ one. Just listen.&rdquo; She rose, and with the same nervous quickness she had
+ shown before, went to the instrument and began to sing and play. There was
+ a hopeless incongruity between the character of the instrument and the
+ spirit of the song. Mrs. Rylands's voice was rather forced and crudely
+ trained, but Joshua Rylands, sitting there comfortably slippered by the
+ fire and conscious of the sheeted rain against the window, felt it good.
+ Presently he arose, and lounging heavily over to the fair performer,
+ leaned down and imprinted a kiss on the labyrinthine fringes of her hair.
+ At which Mrs. Rylands caught blindly at his hand nearest her, and without
+ lifting her other hand from the keys, or her eyes from the music, said
+ tentatively:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know there's a chorus just here! Why can't you try it with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands hesitated a moment, then, with a preliminary cough, lifted a
+ voice as crude as hers, but powerful through much camp-meeting exercise,
+ and roared a chorus which was remarkable chiefly for requiring that
+ archness and playfulness in execution which he lacked. As the whole house
+ seemed to dilate with the sound, and the wind outside to withhold its
+ fury, Mr. Rylands felt that physical delight which children feel in
+ personal outcry, and was grateful to his wife for the opportunity. Laying
+ his hand affectionately on her shoulder, he noticed for the first time
+ that she was in a kind of evening-dress, and that her delicate white
+ shoulder shone through the black lace that enveloped it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For an instant Mr. Rylands was shocked at this unwonted exposure. He had
+ never seen his wife in evening-dress before. It was true they were alone,
+ and in their own sitting-room, but the room was still invested with that
+ formality and publicity which seemed to accent this indiscretion. The
+ simple-minded frontier man's mind went back to Jane, to the hired man, to
+ the expressman, the stranger, all of whom might have noticed it also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have a new dress,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;have you worn it all day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said, with a timid smile. &ldquo;I only put it on just before you
+ came. It's the one I used to wear in the ballroom scene in 'Gay Times in
+ 'Frisco.' You don't know it, I know. I thought I would wear it tonight,
+ and then,&rdquo; she suddenly grasped his hand, &ldquo;you'll let me put all these
+ things away forever! Won't you, Josh? I've seen such nice pretty calico at
+ the store to-day, and I can make up one or two home dresses, like Jane's,
+ only better fitting, of course. In fact, I asked them to send the roll up
+ here to-morrow for you to see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands felt relieved. Perhaps his views had changed about the moral
+ effect of her retaining these symbols of her past, for he consented to the
+ calico dresses, not, however, without an inward suspicion that she would
+ not look so well in them, and that the one she had on was more becoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime she tried another piece of music. It was equally incongruous and
+ slightly Bacchantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There used to be a mighty pretty dance went to that,&rdquo; she said, nodding
+ her head in time with the music, and assisting the heavily spasmodic
+ attempts of the instrument with the pleasant levity of her voice. &ldquo;I used
+ to do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye might try it now, Ellen,&rdquo; suggested her husband, with a
+ half-frightened, half-amused tolerance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOU play, then,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands quickly, offering her seat to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands sat down to the harmonium, as Mrs. Rylands briskly moved the
+ table and chairs against the wall. Mr. Rylands played slowly and
+ strenuously, as from a conscientious regard of the instrument. Mrs.
+ Rylands stood in the centre of the floor, making a rather pretty, animated
+ picture, as she again stimulated the heavy harmonium swell not only with
+ her voice but her hands and feet. Presently she began to skip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should warn the reader here that this was before the &ldquo;shawl&rdquo; or &ldquo;skirt&rdquo;
+ dancing was in vogue, and I am afraid that pretty Mrs. Rylands's
+ performances would now be voted slow. Her silk skirt and frilled petticoat
+ were lifted just over her small ankles and tiny bronze-kid shoes. In the
+ course of a pirouette or two, there was a slight further revelation of
+ blue silk stockings and some delicate embroidery, but really nothing more
+ than may be seen in the sweep of a modern waltz. Suddenly the music
+ ceased. Mr. Rylands had left the harmonium and walked over to the hearth.
+ Mrs. Rylands stopped, and came towards him with a flushed, anxious face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It don't seem to go right, does it?&rdquo; she said, with her nervous laugh. &ldquo;I
+ suppose I'm getting too old now, and I don't quite remember it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better forget it altogether,&rdquo; he replied gravely. He stopped at seeing a
+ singular change in her face, and added awkwardly, &ldquo;When I told you I
+ didn't want you to be ashamed of your past, nor to try to forget what you
+ were, I didn't mean such things as that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did you mean?&rdquo; she said timidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth was that Mr. Rylands did not know. He had known this sort of
+ thing only in the abstract. He had never had the least acquaintance with
+ the class to which his wife had belonged, nor known anything of their
+ methods. It was a revelation to him now, in the woman he loved, and who
+ was his wife. He was not shocked so much as he was frightened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall have the dress to-morrow, Ellen,&rdquo; he said gently, &ldquo;and you can
+ put away these gewgaws. You don't need to look like Tinkie Clifford.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not see the look of triumph that lit up her eye, but added, &ldquo;Go on
+ and play.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sat down obediently to the instrument. He watched her for a few
+ moments from the toe of her kid slipper on the pedals to the swell of her
+ shoulders above the keyboard, with a strange, abstracted face. Presently
+ she stopped and came over to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And when I've got these nice calico frocks, and you can't tell me from
+ Jane, and I'm a good housekeeper, and settle down to be a farmer's wife,
+ maybe I'll have a secret to tell you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A secret?&rdquo; he repeated gravely. &ldquo;Why not now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her face was quite aglow with excitement and a certain timid mischief as
+ she laughed: &ldquo;Not while you are so solemn. It can wait.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at his watch. &ldquo;I must give some orders to Jim about the stock
+ before he turns in,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's gone to the stables already,&rdquo; said Mrs. Rylands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No matter; I can go there and find him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I bring your boots?&rdquo; she said quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll put them on when I pass through the kitchen. I won't be long away.
+ Now go to bed. You are looking tired,&rdquo; he said gently, as he gazed at the
+ drawn lines about her eyes and mouth. Her former pretty color struck him
+ also as having changed of late, and as being irregular and inharmonious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Mrs. Rylands obediently ascended the stairs she heaved a faint sigh,
+ her only recognition of her husband's criticism. He turned and passed
+ quickly into the kitchen. He wanted to be alone to collect his thoughts.
+ But he was surprised to find Jane still there, sitting bolt upright in a
+ chair in the corner. Apparently she had been expecting him, for as he
+ entered she stood up, and wiped her cheek and mouth with one hand, as if
+ to compress her lips the more tightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckoned,&rdquo; she began, &ldquo;that unless you war for forgettin' everythin' in
+ these yer goings on, ye'd be passin' through here to tend to your stock.
+ I've got a word to say to ye, Mr. Rylands. When I first kem over here to
+ help, I got word from the folks around that your wife afore you married
+ her was just one o' them bally dancers. Well, that was YOUR lookout, not
+ mine! Jane Mackinnon ain't the kind to take everybody's sayin' as gospil,
+ but she kalkilates to treat folks ez she finds 'em. When she finds 'em
+ lyin' and deceivin'; when she finds em purtendin' one thing and doin'
+ another; when she finds 'em makin' fools tumble to 'em; playing soots on
+ their own husbands, and turnin' an honest house into a music-hall and a
+ fandango shop, she kicks! You hear me! Jane Mackinnon kicks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; said Mr. Rylands sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean,&rdquo; said Miss Mackinnon, striking her hips with the back of her
+ hands smartly, and accenting each word that dropped like a bullet from her
+ mouth with an additional blow,&mdash;&ldquo;I&mdash;mean&mdash;that&mdash;your&mdash;wife&mdash;had
+ one&mdash;of&mdash;her&mdash;old&mdash;hangers-on&mdash;from&mdash;'Frisco&mdash;here&mdash;in&mdash;this
+ very&mdash;kitchen&mdash;all&mdash;the&mdash;arternoon; there! I mean that
+ whiles she was waitin' here for you, she was canoodlin' and cryin' over
+ old times with him! I saw her myself through the winder. That's what I
+ mean, Mr. Joshua Rylands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's false! She had some poor stranger here with a lame horse. She told
+ me so herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jane Mackinnon laughed shrilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did she tell you that the poor stranger was young and pretty-faced, with
+ black moustarches? that his store clothes must have cost a fortin, saying
+ nothing of his gold-lined, broadcloth sarrapper? Did she say that his
+ horse was so lame that when I went to get another he wouldn't WAIT for it?
+ Did she tell you WHO he was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, she did not know,&rdquo; said Rylands sternly, but with a whitening face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I'll tell you! The gambler, the shooter!&mdash;the man whose name
+ is black enough to stain any woman he knows. Jim recognized him like a
+ shot; he sez, the moment he clapped eyes on him at the door, 'Dod blasted,
+ if it ain't Jack Hamlin!'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little as Mr. Rylands knew of the world, he had heard that name. But it
+ was not THAT he was thinking of. He was thinking of the camp-fire in the
+ wood, the handsome figure before it, the tethered horse. He was thinking
+ of the lighted sitting-room, the fire, his wife's bare shoulders, her
+ slippers, stockings, and the dance. He saw it all,&mdash;a lightning-flash
+ to his dull imagination. The room seemed to expand and then grow smaller,
+ the figure of Jane to sway backwards and forwards before him. He murmured
+ the name of God with lips that were voiceless, caught at the kitchen table
+ to steady himself, held it till he felt his arms grow rigid, and then
+ recovered himself,&mdash;white, cold, and sane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak a word of this to HER,&rdquo; he said deliberately, &ldquo;enter her room while
+ I'm gone, even leave the kitchen before I come back, and I'll throw you
+ into the road. Tell that hired man, if he dares to breathe it to a soul
+ I'll strangle him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unlooked-for rage of this quiet, God-fearing man, and dupe, as she
+ believed, was terrible, but convincing. She shrank back into the corner as
+ he coolly drew on his boots and waterproof, and without another word left
+ the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew what he was going to do as well as if it had been ordained for
+ him. He knew he would find the young man in the wood; for whatever were
+ the truth of the other stories, he and the visitor were identical; he had
+ seen him with his own eyes. He would confront him face to face and know
+ all; and until then, he could not see his wife again. He walked on
+ rapidly, but without feverishness or mental confusion. He saw his duty
+ plainly,&mdash;if Ellen had &ldquo;backslidden,&rdquo; he must give her another trial.
+ These were his articles of faith. He should not put her away; but she
+ should nevermore be wife to him. It was HE who had tempted her, it was
+ true; perhaps God would forgive her for that reason, but HE could never
+ love her again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fury of the storm had somewhat abated as he reached the wood. The fire
+ was still there, but no longer a leaping flame. A dull glow in the
+ darkness of the forest aisles was all that indicated its position. Rylands
+ at once plunged in that direction; he was near enough to see the red
+ embers when he heard a sharp click, and a voice called:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hamlin was a light sleeper. The crackle of underbrush had been enough
+ to disturb him. The voice was his; the click was the cocking of his
+ revolver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rylands was no coward, but halted diplomatically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, then,&rdquo; said Mr. Hamlin's voice, &ldquo;a little more this way, IN THE
+ LIGHT, if you please!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rylands moved as directed, and saw Mr. Hamlin lying before the fire,
+ resting easily on one hand, with his revolver in the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you!&rdquo; said Jack. &ldquo;Excuse my precautions, but it is night, and this
+ is, for the present, my bedroom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My name is Rylands; you called at my house this afternoon and saw my
+ wife,&rdquo; said Rylands slowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did,&rdquo; said Hamlin. &ldquo;It was mighty kind of you to return my call so
+ soon, but I didn't expect it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon not. But I know who you are, and that you are an old associate
+ of hers, in the days of her sin and unregeneration. I want you to answer
+ me, before God and man, what was your purpose in coming there to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here! I don't think it's necessary to drag in strangers to hear my
+ answer,&rdquo; said Jack, lying down again, &ldquo;but I came to borrow a horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that the truth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack got upon his feet very solemnly, put on his hat, drew down his
+ waistcoat, and approached Mr. Rylands with his hands in his pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Rylands,&rdquo; he said, with great suavity of manner, &ldquo;this is the second
+ time today that I have had the honor of having my word doubted by your
+ family. Your wife was good enough to question my assertion that I didn't
+ know that she was living here, but that was a woman's vanity. You have no
+ such excuse. There is my horse yonder, lame, as you may see. I didn't lame
+ him for the sake of seeing your wife nor you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was that in Mr. Hamlin's audacity and perfect self-possession which,
+ even while it irritated, never suggested deceit. He was too reckless of
+ consequence to lie. Mr. Rylands was staggered and half convinced.
+ Nevertheless, he hesitated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dare you tell me everything that happened between my wife and you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dare you listen?&rdquo; said Mr. Hamlin quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands turned a little white. After a moment he said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; said Mr. Hamlin. &ldquo;I like your grit, though I don't mind telling
+ you it's the ONLY thing I like about you. Sit down. Well, I haven't seen
+ Nell Montgomery for three years until I met her as your wife, at your
+ house. She was surprised as I was, and frightened as I wasn't. She spent
+ the whole interview in telling me the history of her marriage and her life
+ with you, and nothing more. I cannot say that it was remarkably
+ entertaining, or that she was as amusing as your wife as she was as Nell
+ Montgomery, the variety actress. When she had finished, I came away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Rylands, who had seated himself, made a movement as if to rise. But
+ Mr. Hamlin laid his hand on his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I asked you if you dared to listen. I have something myself to say of
+ that interview. I found your wife wearing the old dresses that other men
+ had given her, and she said she wore them because she thought it pleased
+ you. I found that you, who are questioning my calling upon her, had
+ already got the worst of her old chums to visit her without asking her
+ consent; I found that instead of being the first one to lie for her and
+ hide her, you were the first one to tell anybody her history, just because
+ you thought it was to the glory of God generally, and of Joshua Rylands in
+ particular.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man's motives are his own,&rdquo; stammered Rylands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sorry you didn't see it when you questioned mine just now,&rdquo; said Jack
+ coolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then she complained to you?&rdquo; said Rylands hesitatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't say that,&rdquo; said Jack shortly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you found her unhappy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damnably.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you advised her&rdquo;&mdash;said Rylands tentatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I advised her to chuck you and try to get a better husband.&rdquo; He paused,
+ and then added, with a disgusted laugh, &ldquo;but she didn't tumble to it, for
+ a d&mdash;&mdash;d silly reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What reason?&rdquo; said Rylands hurriedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Said she LOVED you,&rdquo; returned Jack, kicking a brand back into the fire.
+ Mr. Rylands's white cheeks flamed out suddenly like the brand. Seeing
+ which, Jack turned upon him deliberately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Joshua Rylands, I've seen many fools in my time. I've seen men
+ holding four aces backed down because they thought they KNEW the other man
+ had a royal flush! I've seen a man sell his claim for a wild-cat share,
+ with the gold lying a foot below him in the ground he walked on. I've seen
+ a dead shot shoot wild because he THOUGHT he saw something in the other
+ man's eye. I've seen a heap of God-forsaken fools, but I never saw one
+ before who claimed God as a pal. You've got a wife a d&mdash;&mdash;d
+ sight truer to you for what you call her 'sin,' than you've ever been to
+ her, with all your d&mdash;&mdash;d salvation! And as you couldn't make
+ her otherwise, though you've tried to hard enough, it seems to me that for
+ square downright chuckle-headedness, you can take the cake! Good-night!
+ Now, run away and play! You're making me tired.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One moment,&rdquo; said Mr. Rylands awkwardly and hurriedly. &ldquo;I may have
+ wronged you; I was mistaken. Won't you come back with me and accept my&mdash;our&mdash;hospitality?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not much,&rdquo; said Jack. &ldquo;I left your house because I thought it better for
+ you and her that no one should know of my being there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you were already recognized,&rdquo; said Mr. Rylands. &ldquo;It was Jane who lied
+ about you, and your return with me will confute her slanders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo; asked Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jane, our hired girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hamlin uttered an indescribable laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's just as well! You simply tell Jane you SAW me; that I was greatly
+ shocked at what she said, but that I forgive her. I don't think she'll say
+ any more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to add, Mr. Hamlin's surmise was correct. Mr. Rylands found Jane
+ still in the kitchen alone, terrified, remorseful, yet ever after silent
+ on the subject. Stranger still, the hired man became equally
+ uncommunicative. Mrs. Rylands, attributing her husband's absence only to
+ care of the stock, had gone to bed in a feverish condition, and Mr.
+ Rylands did not deem it prudent to tell her of his interview. The next day
+ she sent for the doctor, and it was deemed necessary for her to keep her
+ bed for a few days. Her husband was singularly attentive and considerate
+ during that time, and it was probable that Mrs. Rylands seized that
+ opportunity to tell him the secret she spoke of the night before. Whatever
+ it was,&mdash;for it was not generally known for a few months later,&mdash;it
+ seemed to draw them closer together, imparted a protecting dignity to
+ Joshua Rylands, which took the place of his former selfish austerity, gave
+ them a future to talk of confidentially, hopefully, and sometimes
+ foolishly, which took the place of their more foolish past, and when the
+ roll of calico came from the cross roads, it contained also a quantity of
+ fine linen, laces, small caps, and other trifles, somewhat in contrast to
+ the more homely materials ordered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when three months were past, the sitting-room was often lit up and
+ made cheerful, particularly on that supreme occasion when, with a great
+ deal of enthusiasm, all the women of the countryside flocked to see Mrs.
+ Rylands and her first baby. And a more considerate and devoted couple than
+ the father and mother they had never known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the early days of the Californian immigration, on the extremest point
+ of the sandy peninsula, where the bay of San Francisco debouches into the
+ Pacific, there stood a semaphore telegraph. Tossing its black arms against
+ the sky,&mdash;with its back to the Golden Gate and that vast expanse of
+ sea whose nearest shore was Japan,&mdash;it signified to another semaphore
+ further inland the &ldquo;rigs&rdquo; of incoming vessels, by certain uncouth signs,
+ which were again passed on to Telegraph Hill, San Francisco, where they
+ reappeared on a third semaphore, and read to the initiated &ldquo;schooner,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;brig&rdquo; &ldquo;ship,&rdquo; or &ldquo;steamer.&rdquo; But all homesick San Francisco had learned
+ the last sign, and on certain days of the month every eye was turned to
+ welcome those gaunt arms widely extended at right angles, which meant
+ &ldquo;sidewheel steamer&rdquo; (the only steamer which carried the mails) and
+ &ldquo;letters from home.&rdquo; In the joyful reception accorded to that herald of
+ glad tidings, very few thought of the lonely watcher on the sand dunes who
+ dispatched them, or even knew of that desolate Station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For desolate it was beyond description. The Presidio, with its voiceless,
+ dismounted cannon and empty embrasures hidden in a hollow, and the Mission
+ Dolores, with its crumbling walls and belfry tower lost in another, made
+ the ultima thule of all San Francisco wandering. The Cliff house and Fort
+ Point did not then exist; from Black Point the curving line of shore of
+ &ldquo;Yerba Buena&rdquo;&mdash;or San Francisco&mdash;showed only a stretch of
+ glittering wind-swept sand dunes, interspersed with straggling gullies of
+ half-buried black &ldquo;scrub oak.&rdquo; The long six months' summer sun fiercely
+ beat upon it from the cloudless sky above; the long six months' trade
+ winds fiercely beat upon it from the west; the monotonous roll-call of the
+ long Pacific surges regularly beat upon it from the sea. Almost impossible
+ to face by day through sliding sands and buffeting winds, at night it was
+ impracticable through the dense sea-fog that stole softly through the
+ Golden Gate at sunset. Thence, until morning, sea and shore were a
+ trackless waste, bounded only by the warning thunders of the unseen sea.
+ The station itself, a rudely built cabin, with two windows,&mdash;one
+ furnished with a telescope,&mdash;looked like a heap of driftwood, or a
+ stranded wreck left by the retiring sea; the semaphore&mdash;the only
+ object for leagues&mdash;lifted above the undulating dunes, took upon
+ itself various shapes, more or less gloomy, according to the hour or
+ weather,&mdash;a blasted tree, the masts and clinging spars of a beached
+ ship, a dismantled gallows; or, with the background of a golden sunset
+ across the Gate, and its arms extended at right angles, to a more hopeful
+ fancy it might have seemed the missionary Cross, which the enthusiast
+ Portala lifted on that heathen shore a hundred years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not that Dick Jarman&mdash;the solitary station keeper&mdash;ever indulged
+ this fancy. An escaped convict from one of her Britannic Majesty's penal
+ colonies, a &ldquo;stowaway&rdquo; in the hold of an Australian ship, he had landed
+ penniless in San Francisco, fearful of contact with his more honest
+ countrymen already there, and liable to detection at any moment. Luckily
+ for him, the English immigration consisted mainly of gold-seekers en route
+ to Sacramento and the southern mines. He was prudent enough to resist the
+ temptation to follow them, and accepted the post of semaphore keeper,&mdash;the
+ first work offered him,&mdash;which the meanest immigrant, filled with
+ dreams of gold, would have scorned. His employers asked him no questions,
+ and demanded no references; his post could be scarcely deemed one of
+ trust,&mdash;there was no property for him to abscond with but the
+ telescope; he was removed from temptation and evil company in his lonely
+ waste; his duties were as mechanical as the instrument he worked, and
+ interruption of them would be instantly known at San Francisco. For this
+ he would receive his board and lodging and seventy-five dollars a month,&mdash;a
+ sum to be ridiculed in those &ldquo;flush days,&rdquo; but which seemed to the
+ broken-spirited and half-famished stowaway a princely independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then there was rest and security! He was free from that torturing
+ anxiety and fear of detection which had haunted him night and day for
+ three months. The ceaseless vigilance and watchful dread he had known
+ since his escape, he could lay aside now. The rude cabin on the sand dune
+ was to him as the long-sought cave to some hunted animal. It seemed
+ impossible that any one would seek him there. He was spared alike the
+ contact of his enemies or the shame of recognizing even a friendly face,
+ until by each he would be forgotten. From his coign of vantage on that
+ desolate waste, and with the aid of his telescope, no stranger could
+ approach within two or three miles of his cabin without undergoing his
+ scrutiny. And at the worst, if he was pursued here, before him was the
+ trackless shore and the boundless sea!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at times there was a certain satisfaction in watching, unseen and in
+ perfect security, the decks of passing ships. With the aid of his glass he
+ could mingle again with the world from which he was debarred, and gloomily
+ wonder who among those passengers knew their solitary watcher, or had
+ heard of his deeds; it might have made him gloomier had he known that in
+ those eager faces turned towards the golden haven there was little thought
+ of anything but themselves. He tried to read in faces on board the few
+ outgoing ships the record of their success with a strange envy. They were
+ returning home! HOME! For sometimes&mdash;but seldom&mdash;he thought of
+ his own home and his past. It was a miserable past of forgery and
+ embezzlement that had culminated a career of youthful dissipation and
+ self-indulgence, and shut him out, forever, from the staid old English
+ cathedral town where he was born. He knew that his relations believed and
+ wished him dead. He thought of this past with little pleasure, but with
+ little remorse. Like most of his stamp, he believed it was ill-luck,
+ chance, somebody else's fault, but never his own responsible action. He
+ would not repent; he would be wiser only. And he would not be retaken&mdash;alive!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three months passed in this monotonous duty, in which he partly
+ recovered his strength and his nerves. He lost his furtive, restless,
+ watchful look; the bracing sea air and the burning sun put into his face
+ the healthy tan and the uplifted frankness of a sailor. His eyes grew
+ keener from long scanning of the horizon; he knew where to look for sails,
+ from the creeping coastwise schooner to the far-rounding merchantman from
+ Cape Horn. He knew the faint line of haze that indicated the steamer long
+ before her masts and funnels became visible. He saw no soul except the
+ solitary boatman of the little &ldquo;plunger,&rdquo; who landed his weekly provisions
+ at a small cove hard by. The boatman thought his secretiveness and
+ reticence only the surliness of his nation, and cared little for a man who
+ never asked for the news, and to whom he brought no letters. The long
+ nights which wrapped the cabin in sea-fog, and at first seemed to heighten
+ the exile's sense of security, by degrees, however, became monotonous, and
+ incited an odd restlessness, which he was wont to oppose by whiskey,&mdash;allowed
+ as a part of his stores,&mdash;which, while it dulled his sensibilities,
+ he, however, never permitted to interfere with his mechanical duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been there five months, and the hills on the opposite shore between
+ Tamalpais were already beginning to show their russet yellow sides. One
+ bright morning he was watching the little fleet of Italian fishing-boats
+ hovering in the bay. This was always a picturesque spectacle, perhaps the
+ only one that relieved the general monotony of his outlook. The quaint
+ lateen sails of dull red, or yellow, showing against the sparkling waters,
+ and the red caps or handkerchiefs of the fishermen, might have attracted
+ even a more abstracted man. Suddenly one of the larger boats tacked, and
+ made directly for the little cove where his weekly plunger used to land.
+ In an instant he was alert and suspicious. But a close examination of the
+ boat through his glass satisfied him that it contained, in addition to the
+ crew, only two or three women, apparently the family of the fishermen. As
+ it ran up on the beach and the entire party disembarked he could see it
+ was merely a careless, peaceable invasion, and he thought no more about
+ it. The strangers wandered about the sands, gesticulating and laughing;
+ they brought a pot ashore, built a fire, and cooked a homely meal. He
+ could see that from time to time the semaphore&mdash;evidently a novelty
+ to them&mdash;had attracted their attention; and having occasion to signal
+ the arrival of a bark, the working of the uncouth arms of the instrument
+ drew the children in half-frightened curiosity towards it, although the
+ others held aloof, as if fearful of trespassing upon some work of the
+ government, no doubt secretly guarded by the police. A few mornings later
+ he was surprised to see upon the beach, near the same locality, a small
+ heap of lumber which had evidently been landed in the early morning fog.
+ The next day an old tent appeared on the spot, and the men, evidently
+ fishermen, began the erection of a rude cabin beside it. Jarman had been
+ long enough there to know that it was government land, and that these
+ manifestly humble &ldquo;squatters&rdquo; upon it would not be interfered with for
+ some time to come. He began to be uneasy again; it was true they were
+ fully half a mile from him, and they were foreigners; but might not their
+ reckless invasion of the law attract others, in this lawless country, to
+ do the same? It ought to be stopped. For once Richard Jarman sided with
+ legal authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the cabin was completed, it was evident from what he saw of its
+ rude structure that it was only a temporary shelter for the fisherman's
+ family and the stores, and refitting of the fishing-boat, more convenient
+ to them than the San Francisco wharves. The beach was utilized for the
+ mending of nets and sails, and thus became half picturesque. In spite of
+ the keen northwestern trades, the cloudless, sunshiny mornings tempted
+ these southerners back to their native al fresco existence; they not only
+ basked in the sun, but many of their household duties, and even the
+ mysteries of their toilet, were performed in the open air. They did not
+ seem to care to penetrate into the desolate region behind them; their
+ half-amphibious habit kept them near the water's edge, and Richard Jarman,
+ after taking his limited walks for the first few mornings in another
+ direction, found it no longer necessary to avoid the locality, and even
+ forgot their propinquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one morning, as the fog was clearing away and the sparkle of the
+ distant sea was beginning to show from his window, he rose from his
+ belated breakfast to fetch water from the &ldquo;breaker&rdquo; outside, which had to
+ be replenished weekly from Sancelito, as there was no spring in his
+ vicinity. As he opened the door, he was inexpressibly startled by the
+ figure of a young woman standing in front of it, who, however, half
+ fearfully, half laughingly withdrew before him. But his own manifest
+ disturbance apparently gave her courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I jess was looking at that thing,&rdquo; she said bashfully, pointing to the
+ semaphore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was still more astonished, for, looking at her dark eyes and olive
+ complexion, he had expected her to speak Italian or broken English. And,
+ possibly because for a long time he had seen and known little of women, he
+ was quite struck with her good looks. He hesitated, stammered, and then
+ said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't you come in?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She drew back still farther and made a rapid gesture of negation with her
+ head, her hand, and even her whole lithe figure. Then she said, with a
+ decided American intonation:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; said Jarman mechanically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl sidled up against the cabin, keeping her eyes fixed on Jarman
+ with a certain youthful shrewdness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, you know!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I really do not. Tell me why.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She drew herself up against the wall a little proudly, though still
+ youthfully, with her hands behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain't that kind of girl,&rdquo; she said simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blood rushed to Jarman's checks. Dissipated and abandoned as his life
+ had been, small respecter of women as he was, he was shocked and shamed.
+ Knowing too, as he did, how absorbed he was in other things, he was
+ indignant, because not guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do as you please, then,&rdquo; he said shortly, and reentered the cabin. But
+ the next moment he saw his error in betraying an irritation that was open
+ to misconstruction. He came out again, scarcely looking at the girl, who
+ was lounging away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you want me to explain to you how the thing works?&rdquo; he said
+ indifferently. &ldquo;I can't show you unless a ship comes in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl's eyes brightened softly as she turned to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do tell me,&rdquo; she said, with an anticipatory smile and flash of white
+ teeth. &ldquo;Won't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She certainly was very pretty and simple, in spite of her late speech.
+ Jarman briefly explained to her the movements of the semaphore arms and
+ their different significance. She listened with her capped head a little
+ on one side like an attentive bird, and her arms unconsciously imitating
+ the signs. Certainly, for all that she SPOKE like an American, her
+ gesticulation was Italian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; she said triumphantly when he paused, &ldquo;when the sailors see
+ that sign up they know they are coming in the harbor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jarman smiled, as he had not smiled since he had been there. He corrected
+ this mistake of her eager haste to show her intelligence, and, taking the
+ telescope, pointed out the other semaphore,&mdash;a thin black outline on
+ a distant inland hill. He then explained how HIS signs were repeated by
+ that instrument to San Francisco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My! Why, I always allowed that was only the cross stuck up in the Lone
+ Mountain Cemetery,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a Catholic?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are an Italian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father is, but mother was a 'Merikan, same as me. Mother's dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your father is the fisherman yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&mdash;but,&rdquo; with a look of pride, &ldquo;he's got the biggest boat of
+ any.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And only you and your family are ashore here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, and sometimes Mark.&rdquo; She laughed an odd little laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mark? Who's he?&rdquo; he asked quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not noticed the sudden coquettish pose and half-affected
+ bashfulness of the girl; he was thinking only of the possibility of
+ detection by strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, he is Marco Franti, but I call him 'Mark.' It's the same name, you
+ know, and it makes him mad,&rdquo; said the girl, with the same suggestion of
+ archness and coquetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all this was lost on Jarman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, another Italian,&rdquo; he said, relieved. She turned away a little
+ awkwardly when he added, &ldquo;But you haven't told me YOUR name, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cara.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cara,&mdash;that's 'dear' in Italian, isn't it?&rdquo; he said, with a
+ reminiscence of the opera and a half smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said a little scornfully, &ldquo;but it means Carlotta,&mdash;Charlotte,
+ you know. Some girls call me Charley,&rdquo; she said hurriedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see&mdash;Cara&mdash;or Carlotta Franti.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his surprise she burst into a peal of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon not YET. Franti is Mark's name, not mine. Mine is Murano,&mdash;Carlotta
+ Murano. Good-by.&rdquo; She moved away, then stopped suddenly and said, &ldquo;I'm
+ comin' again some time when the thing is working,&rdquo; and with a nod of her
+ head, ran away. He looked after her; could see the outlines of her
+ youthful figure in her slim cotton gown,&mdash;limp and clinging in the
+ damp sea air, and the sudden revelation of her bare ankles thrust
+ stockingless into canvas shoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went back into his cabin, when presently his attention was engrossed by
+ an incoming vessel. He made the signals, half expecting, almost hoping,
+ that the girl would return to watch him. But her figure was already lost
+ in the sand dunes. Yet he fancied he still heard the echoes of her voice
+ and his own in this cabin which had so long been dumb and voiceless, and
+ he now started at every sound. For the first time he became aware of the
+ dreadful disorder and untidiness of its uninvaded privacy. He could
+ scarcely believe he had been living with his stove, his bed, and cooking
+ utensils all in one corner of the barnlike room, and he began to put them
+ &ldquo;to rights&rdquo; in a rough, hard formality, strongly suggestive of his convict
+ experience. He rolled up his blankets into a hard cylinder at the head of
+ his cot. He scraped out his kettles and saucepans, and even &ldquo;washed down&rdquo;
+ the floor, afterwards sprinkling clean dry sand, hot with the noonday
+ sunshine, on its half-dried boards. In arranging these domestic details he
+ had to change the position of a little mirror; and glancing at it for the
+ first time in many days, he was dissatisfied with his straggling beard,&mdash;grown
+ during his voyage from Australia,&mdash;and although he had retained it as
+ a disguise, he at once shaved it off, leaving only a mustache, and
+ revealing a face from which a healthier life and out-of-door existence had
+ removed the last traces of vice and dissipation. But he did not know it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the next day he thought of his fair visitor, and found himself often
+ repeating her odd remark that she was &ldquo;not that kind of girl,&rdquo; with a
+ smile that was alternately significant or vacant. Evidently she could take
+ care of herself, he thought, although her very good looks no doubt had
+ exposed her to the rude attentions of fishermen or the common drift of San
+ Francisco wharves. Perhaps this was why her father brought her here. When
+ the day passed and she came not, he began vaguely to wonder if he had been
+ rude to her. Perhaps he had taken her simple remark too seriously; perhaps
+ she had expected he would only laugh, and had found him dull and stupid.
+ Perhaps he had thrown away an opportunity. An opportunity for what? To
+ renew his old life and habits? No, no! The horrors of his recent
+ imprisonment and escape were still too fresh in his memory; he was not
+ safe yet. Then he wondered if he had not grown spiritless and
+ pigeon-livered in his solitude and loneliness. The next day he searched
+ for her with his glass, and saw her playing with one of the children on
+ the beach,&mdash;a very picture of child or nymphlike innocence. Perhaps
+ it was because she was not &ldquo;that kind of girl&rdquo; that she had attracted him.
+ He laughed bitterly. Yes; that was very funny; he, an escaped convict,
+ drawn towards honest, simple innocence! Yet he knew&mdash;he was positive&mdash;he
+ had not thought of any ill when he spoke to her. He took a singular, a
+ ridiculous pride in and credit to himself for that. He repeated it
+ incessantly to himself. Then what made her angry? Himself! The devil! Did
+ he carry, then, the record of his past life forever in his face&mdash;in
+ his speech&mdash;in his manners? The thought made him sullen. The next day
+ he would not look towards the shore; it was wonderful what excitement and
+ satisfaction he got out of that strange act of self-denial; it made the
+ day seem full that had been so vacant before; yet he could not tell why or
+ wherefore. He felt injured, but he rather liked it. Yet in the night he
+ was struck with the idea that she might have gone back to San Francisco,
+ and he lay awake longing for the morning light to satisfy him. Yet when
+ the fog cleared, and from a nearer point, behind a sand dune, he
+ discovered, by the aid of his glass, that she was seated on the sun-warmed
+ sands combing out her long hair like a mermaid, he immediately returned to
+ the cabin, and that morning looked no more that way. In the afternoon,
+ there being no sails in sight, he turned aside from the bay and walked
+ westward towards the ocean, halting only at the league-long line of foam
+ which marked the breaking Pacific surges. Here he was surprised to see a
+ little child, half-naked, following barefooted the creeping line of spume,
+ or running after the detached and quivering scraps of foam that chased
+ each other over the wet sand, and only a little further on, to come upon
+ Cara herself, sitting with her elbows on her knees and her round chin in
+ her hands, apparently gazing over the waste of waters before her. A sudden
+ and inexplicable shyness overtook him. He hesitated, and stepped
+ half-hidden in a gully between the sand dunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As yet he had not been observed; the young girl called to the child and,
+ suddenly rising, threw off her red cap and shawl and quietly began to
+ disrobe herself. A couple of coarse towels were at her feet. Jarman
+ instantly comprehended that she was going to bathe with the child. She
+ undoubtedly knew as well as he did that she was safe in that solitude;
+ that no one could intrude upon her privacy from the bay shore, nor from
+ the desolate inland trail to the sea, without her knowledge. Of his own
+ contiguity she had evidently taken no thought, believing him safely housed
+ in his cabin beside the semaphore. She lifted her hands, and with a sudden
+ movement shook out her long hair and let it fall down her back at the same
+ moment that her unloosened blouse began to slip from her shoulders.
+ Richard Jarman turned quickly and walked noiselessly and rapidly away,
+ until the little hillock had shut out the beach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His retreat was as sudden, unreasoning, and unpremeditated as his
+ intrusion. It was not like himself, he knew, and yet it was as perfectly
+ instinctive and natural as if he had intruded upon a sister. In the South
+ Seas he had seen native girls diving beside the vessels for coins, but
+ they had provoked no such instinct as that which possessed him now. More
+ than that, he swept a quick, wrathful glance along the horizon on either
+ side, and then, mounting a remote hillock which still hid him from the
+ beach, he sat there and kept watch and ward. From time to time the strong
+ sea-breeze brought him the sound of infantine screams and shouts of
+ girlish laughter from the unseen shore; he only looked the more keenly and
+ suspiciously for any wandering trespasser, and did not turn his head. He
+ lay there nearly half an hour, and when the sounds had ceased, rose and
+ made his way slowly back to the cabin. He had not gone many yards before
+ he heard the twitter of voices and smothered laughter behind him. He
+ turned; it was Cara and the child,&mdash;a girl of six or seven. Cara's
+ face was rosy,&mdash;possibly from her bath, and possibly from some
+ shame-faced consciousness. He slackened his pace, and as they ranged
+ beside him said, &ldquo;Good-morning!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; said Cara, stifling another laugh, &ldquo;we didn't know you were
+ around; we thought you were always 'tending your telegraph, didn't we,
+ Lucy?&rdquo; (to the child, who was convulsed with mirth and sheepishness).
+ &ldquo;Why, we've been taking a wash in the sea.&rdquo; She tried to gather up her
+ long hair, which had been left to stray over her shoulders and dry in the
+ sunlight, and even made a slight pretense of trying to conceal the wet
+ towels they were carrying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jarman did not laugh. &ldquo;If you had told me,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;I could have
+ kept watch for you with my glass while you were there. I could see further
+ than you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tould you see US?&rdquo; asked the little girl, with hopeful vivacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; said Jarman, with masterly evasion. &ldquo;There are little sandhills
+ between this and the beach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then how tould other people see us?&rdquo; persisted the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jarman could see that the older girl was evidently embarrassed, and
+ changed the subject. &ldquo;I sometimes go out,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when I can see there
+ are no vessels in sight, and I take ray glass with me. I can always get
+ back in time to make signals. I thought, in fact,&rdquo; he said, glancing at
+ Cara's brightening face, &ldquo;that I might get as far as your house on the
+ shore some day.&rdquo; To his surprise, her embarrassment suddenly seemed to
+ increase, although she had looked relieved before, and she did not reply.
+ After a moment she said abruptly:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ever see the sea-lions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jarman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the big ones on Seal Rock, beyond the cliffs?&rdquo; continued the girl, in
+ real astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; repeated Jarman. &ldquo;I never walked in that direction.&rdquo; He vaguely
+ remembered that they were a curiosity which sometimes attracted parties
+ thither, and for that reason he had avoided the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I have sailed all around the rock in father's boat,&rdquo; continued Cara,
+ with importance. &ldquo;That's the best way to see 'em, and folks from Frisco
+ sometimes takes a sail out there just on purpose,&mdash;it's too sandy to
+ walk or drive there. But it's only a step from here. Look here!&rdquo; she said
+ suddenly, and frankly opening her fine eyes upon him. &ldquo;I'm going to take
+ Lucy there to-morrow, and I'll show you.&rdquo; Jarman felt his cheeks flush
+ quickly with a pleasure that embarrassed him. &ldquo;It won't take long,&rdquo; added
+ Cara, mistaking his momentary hesitation, &ldquo;and you can leave your
+ telegraph alone. Nobody will be there, so no one will see you and nobody
+ know it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would have gone then, anyway, he knew, yet in his absurd
+ self-consciousness he was glad that her last suggestion had relieved him
+ of a sense of reckless compliance. He assented eagerly, when with a wave
+ of her hand, a flash of her white teeth, and the same abruptness she had
+ shown at their last parting, she caught Lucy by the arm and darted away in
+ a romping race to her dwelling. Jarman started after her. He had not
+ wanted to go to her father's house particularly, but why was SHE evidently
+ as averse to it? With the subtle pleasure that this admission gave him
+ there was a faint stirring of suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was gone when he found her and Lucy the next morning, radiant with the
+ sunshine, before his door. The restraint of their previous meetings had
+ been removed in some mysterious way, and they chatted gayly as they walked
+ towards the cliffs. She asked him frankly many questions about himself,
+ why he had come there, and if he &ldquo;wasn't lonely;&rdquo; she answered frankly&mdash;I
+ fear much more frankly than he answered her&mdash;the many questions he
+ asked her about herself and her friends. When they reached the cliffs they
+ descended to the beach, which they found deserted. Before them&mdash;it
+ seemed scarce a pistol shot from the shore arose a high, broad rock,
+ beaten at its base by the long Pacific surf, on which a number of
+ shapeless animals were uncouthly disporting. This was Seal Rock, the goal
+ of their journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet after a few moments they no longer looked at it, but seated on the
+ sand, with Lucy gathering shells at the water's edge, they continued their
+ talk. Presently the talk became eager confidences, and then,&mdash;there
+ were long and dangerous lapses of silence, when both were fain to make
+ perfunctory talk with Lucy on the beach. After one of those silences
+ Jarman said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know I rather thought yesterday you didn't want me to come to your
+ father's house. Why was that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because Marco was there,&rdquo; said the girl frankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What had HE to do with it?&rdquo; said Jarman abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He wants to marry me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you want to marry HIM?&rdquo; said Jarman quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the girl passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why don't you get rid of him, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't, he's hiding here,&mdash;he's father's friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hiding? What's he been doing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stealing. Stealing gold-dust from miners. I never cared for him anyway.
+ And I hate a thief!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked up quickly. Jarman had risen to his feet, his face turned to
+ sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you looking at?&rdquo; she said wonderingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A ship,&rdquo; said Jarman, in a strange, hoarse voice. &ldquo;I must hurry back and
+ signal. I'm afraid I haven't even time to walk with you,&mdash;I must run
+ for it. Good-by!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned without offering his hand and ran hurriedly in the direction of
+ the semaphore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cara, discomfited, turned her black eyes to the sea. But it seemed empty
+ as before, no sail, no ship on the horizon line, only a little schooner
+ slowly beating out of the Gate. Ah, well! It no doubt was there,&mdash;that
+ sail,&mdash;though she could not see it; how keen and far-seeing his
+ handsome, honest eyes were! She heaved a little sigh, and, calling Lucy to
+ her side, began to make her way homeward. But she kept her eyes on the
+ semaphore; it seemed to her the next thing to seeing him,&mdash;this man
+ she was beginning to love. She waited for the gaunt arms to move with the
+ signal of the vessel he had seen. But, strange to say, it was motionless.
+ He must have been mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, however, was driven from her mind in the excitement that she
+ found on her return thrilling her own family. They had been warned that a
+ police boat with detectives on board had been dispatched from San
+ Francisco to the cove. Luckily, they had managed to convey the fugitive
+ Franti on board a coastwise schooner,&mdash;Cara started as she remembered
+ the one she had seen beating out of the Gate,&mdash;and he was now safe
+ from pursuit. Cara felt relieved; at the same time she felt a strange joy
+ at her heart, which sent the conscious blood to her cheek. She was not
+ thinking of the escaped Marco, but of Jarman. Later, when the police boat
+ arrived,&mdash;whether the detectives had been forewarned of Marco's
+ escape or not,&mdash;they contented themselves with a formal search of the
+ little fishing-hut and departed. But their boat remained lying off the
+ shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night Cara tossed sleeplessly on her bed; she was sorry she had ever
+ spoken of Marco to Jarman. It was unnecessary now; perhaps he disbelieved
+ her and thought she loved Marco; perhaps that was the reason of his
+ strange and abrupt leave-taking that afternoon. She longed for the next
+ day, she could tell him everything now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards morning she slept fitfully, but was awakened by the sound of
+ voices on the sands outside the hut. Its flimsy structure, already warped
+ by the fierce day-long sun, allowed her through chinks and crevices not
+ only to recognize the voices of the detectives, but to hear distinctly
+ what they said. Suddenly the name of Jarman struck upon her ear. She sat
+ upright in bed, breathless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure it's the same man?&rdquo; asked a second voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perfectly,&rdquo; answered the first. &ldquo;He was tracked to 'Frisco, but
+ disappeared the day he landed. We knew from our agents that he never left
+ the bay. And when we found that somebody answering his description got the
+ post of telegraph operator out here, we knew that we had spotted our man
+ and the L250 sterling offered for his capture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that was five months ago. Why didn't you take him then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Couldn't! For we couldn't hold him without the extradition papers from
+ Australia. We sent for 'em; they're due to-day or to-morrow on the mail
+ steamer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But he might have got away at any time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He couldn't without our knowing it. Don't you see? Every time the signals
+ went up, we in San Francisco knew he was at his post. We had him safe, out
+ here on these sandhills, as if he'd been under lock and key in 'Frisco. He
+ was his own keeper, and reported to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But since you're here and expect the papers to-morrow, why don't you
+ 'cop' him now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because there isn't a judge in San Francisco that would hold him a moment
+ unless he had those extradition papers before him. He'd be discharged, and
+ escape.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then what are you going to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As soon as the steamer is signaled in 'Frisco, we'll board her in the
+ bay, get the papers, and drop down upon him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see; and as HE'S the signal man, the darned fool&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will give the signal himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laugh that followed was so cruel that the young girl shuddered. But
+ the next moment she slipped from the bed, erect, pale, and determined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voices seemed gradually to retreat. She dressed herself hurriedly, and
+ passed noiselessly through the room of her still sleeping parent, and
+ passed out. A gray fog was lifting slowly over the sands and sea, and the
+ police boat was gone. She no longer hesitated, but ran quickly in the
+ direction of Jarman's cabin. As she ran, her mind seemed to be swept clear
+ of all illusion and fancy; she saw plainly everything that had happened;
+ she knew the mystery of Jarman's presence here,&mdash;the secret of his
+ life,&mdash;the dreadful cruelty of her remark to him,&mdash;the man that
+ she knew now she loved. The sun was painting the black arms of the
+ semaphore as she toiled over the last stretch of sand and knocked loudly
+ at the door. There was no reply. She knocked again; the cabin was silent.
+ Had he already fled?&mdash;and without seeing her and knowing all! She
+ tried the handle of the door; it yielded; she stepped boldly into the
+ room, with his name upon her lips. He was lying fully dressed upon his
+ couch. She ran eagerly to his side and stopped. It needed only a single
+ glance at his congested face, his lips parted with his heavy breath, to
+ see that the man was hopelessly, helplessly drunk!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet even then, without knowing that it was her thoughtless speech which
+ had driven him to seek this foolish oblivion of remorse and sorrow, she
+ saw only his HELPLESSNESS. She tried in vain to rouse him; he only
+ muttered a few incoherent words and sank back again. She looked
+ despairingly around. Something must be done; the steamer might be visible
+ at any moment. Ah, yes,&mdash;the telescope! She seized it and swept the
+ horizon. There was a faint streak of haze against the line of sea and sky,
+ abreast the Golden Gate. He had once told her what it meant. It WAS the
+ steamer! A sudden thought leaped into her clear and active brain. If the
+ police boat should chance to see that haze too, and saw no warning signal
+ from the semaphore, they would suspect something. That signal must be
+ made, BUT NOT THE RIGHT ONE! She remembered quickly how he had explained
+ to her the difference between the signals for a coasting steamer and the
+ one that brought the mails. At that distance the police boat could not
+ detect whether the semaphore's arms were extended to perfect right angles
+ for the mail steamer, or if the left arm slightly deflected for a coasting
+ steamer. She ran out to the windlass and seized the crank. For a moment it
+ defied her strength; she redoubled her efforts: it began to creak and
+ groan, the great arms were slowly uplifted, and the signal made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the familiar sounds of the moving machinery had pierced through
+ Jarman's sluggish consciousness as no other sound in heaven or earth could
+ have done, and awakened him to the one dominant sense he had left,&mdash;the
+ habit of duty. She heard him roll from the bed with an oath, stumble to
+ the door, and saw him dash forward with an affrighted face, and plunge his
+ head into a bucket of water. He emerged from it pale and dripping, but
+ with the full light of reason and consciousness in his eyes. He started
+ when he saw her; even then she would have fled, but he caught her firmly
+ by the wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then with a hurried, trembling voice she told him all and everything. He
+ listened in silence, and only at the end raised her hand gravely to his
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; she added tremulously, &ldquo;you must fly&mdash;quick&mdash;at once;
+ or it will be too late!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Richard Jarman walked slowly to the door of his cabin, still holding
+ her hand, and said quietly, pointing to his only chair:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit down; we must talk first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What they said was never known, but a few moments later they left the
+ cabin, Jarman carrying in a small bag all his possessions, and Cara
+ leaning on his arm. An hour later the priest of the Mission Dolores was
+ called upon to unite in matrimony a frank, honest-looking sailor and an
+ Italian gypsy-looking girl. There were many hasty unions in those days,
+ and the Holy Church was only too glad to be able to give them its legal
+ indorsement. But the good Padre was a little sorry for the honest sailor,
+ and gave the girl some serious advice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The San Francisco papers the next morning threw some dubious light upon
+ the matter in a paragraph headed, &ldquo;Another Police Fiasco.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We understand that the indefatigable police of San Francisco, after
+ ascertaining that Marco Franti, the noted gold-dust thief, was hiding on
+ the shore near the Presidio, proceeded there with great solemnity, and
+ arrived, as usual, a few hours after their man had escaped. But the climax
+ of incapacity was reached when, as it is alleged, the sweetheart of the
+ absconding Franti, and daughter of a brother fisherman, eloped still
+ later, and joined her lover under the very noses of the police. The
+ attempt of the detectives to excuse themselves at headquarters by
+ reporting that they were also on the track of an alleged escaped Sydney
+ Duck was received with the derision and skepticism it deserved, as it
+ seemed that these worthies mistook the mail steamer, which they should
+ have boarded to get certain extradition papers, for a coasting steamer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ It was not until four years later that Murano was delighted to recognize
+ in the husband of his long-lost daughter a very rich cattle-owner in
+ Southern California, called Jarman; but he never knew that he had been an
+ escaped convict from Sydney, who had lately received a full pardon through
+ the instrumentality of divers distinguished people in Australia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is to be feared that the hero of this chronicle began life as an
+ impostor. He was offered to the credulous and sympathetic family of a San
+ Francisco citizen as a lamb, who, unless bought as a playmate for the
+ children, would inevitably pass into the butcher's hands. A combination of
+ refined sensibility and urban ignorance of nature prevented them from
+ discerning certain glaring facts that betrayed his caprid origin. So a
+ ribbon was duly tied round his neck, and in pleasing emulation of the
+ legendary &ldquo;Mary,&rdquo; he was taken to school by the confiding children. Here,
+ alas the fraud was discovered, and history was reversed by his being
+ turned out by the teacher, because he was NOT &ldquo;a lamb at school.&rdquo;
+ Nevertheless, the kind-hearted mother of the family persisted in retaining
+ him, on the plea that he might yet become &ldquo;useful.&rdquo; To her husband's
+ feeble suggestion of &ldquo;gloves,&rdquo; she returned a scornful negative, and spoke
+ of the weakly infant of a neighbor, who might later receive nourishment
+ from this providential animal. But even this hope was destroyed by the
+ eventual discovery of his sex. Nothing remained now but to accept him as
+ an ordinary kid, and to find amusement in his accomplishments,&mdash;eating,
+ climbing, and butting. It must be confessed that these were of a superior
+ quality; a capacity to eat everything from a cambric handkerchief to an
+ election poster, an agility which brought him even to the roofs of houses,
+ and a power of overturning by a single push the chubbiest child who
+ opposed him, made him a fearful joy to the nursery. This last quality was
+ incautiously developed in him by a negro boy-servant, who, later, was
+ hurriedly propelled down a flight of stairs by his too proficient scholar.
+ Having once tasted victory, &ldquo;Billy&rdquo; needed no further incitement to his
+ performances. The small wagon which he sometimes consented to draw for the
+ benefit of the children never hindered his attempts to butt the passer-by.
+ On the contrary, on well-known scientific principles he added the impact
+ of the bodies of the children projected over his head in his charge, and
+ the infelicitous pedestrian found himself not only knocked off his legs by
+ Billy, but bombarded by the whole nursery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delightful as was this recreation to juvenile limbs, it was felt to be
+ dangerous to the adult public. Indignant protestations were made, and as
+ Billy could not be kept in the house, he may be said to have at last
+ butted himself out of that sympathetic family and into a hard and
+ unfeeling world. One morning he broke his tether in the small back yard.
+ For several days thereafter he displayed himself in guilty freedom on the
+ tops of adjacent walls and outhouses. The San Francisco suburb where his
+ credulous protectors lived was still in a volcanic state of disruption,
+ caused by the grading of new streets through rocks and sandhills. In
+ consequence the roofs of some houses were on the level of the doorsteps of
+ others, and were especially adapted to Billy's performances. One
+ afternoon, to the admiring and perplexed eyes of the nursery, he was
+ discovered standing on the apex of a neighbor's new Elizabethan chimney,
+ on a space scarcely larger than the crown of a hat, calmly surveying the
+ world beneath him. High infantile voices appealed to him in vain; baby
+ arms were outstretched to him in hopeless invitation; he remained exalted
+ and obdurate, like Milton's hero, probably by his own merit &ldquo;raised to
+ that bad eminence.&rdquo; Indeed, there was already something Satanic in his
+ budding horns and pointed mask as the smoke curled softly around him. Then
+ he appropriately vanished, and San Francisco knew him no more. At the same
+ time, however, one Owen M'Ginnis, a neighboring sandhill squatter, also
+ disappeared, leaving San Francisco for the southern mines, and he was said
+ to have taken Billy with him,&mdash;for no conceivable reason except for
+ companionship. Howbeit, it was the turning-point of Billy's career; such
+ restraint as kindness, civilization, or even policemen had exercised upon
+ his nature was gone. He retained, I fear, a certain wicked intelligence,
+ picked up in San Francisco with the newspapers and theatrical and election
+ posters he had consumed. He reappeared at Rocky Canyon among the miners as
+ an exceedingly agile chamois, with the low cunning of a satyr. That was
+ all that civilization had done for him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Mr. M'Ginnis had fondly conceived that he would make Billy &ldquo;useful,&rdquo; as
+ well as companionable, he was singularly mistaken. Horses and mules were
+ scarce in Rocky Canyon, and he attempted to utilize Billy by making him
+ draw a small cart, laden with auriferous earth, from his claim to the
+ river. Billy, rapidly gaining strength, was quite equal to the task, but
+ alas! not his inborn propensity. An incautious gesture from the first
+ passing miner Billy chose to construe into the usual challenge. Lowering
+ his head, from which his budding horns had been already pruned by his
+ master, he instantly went for his challenger, cart and all. Again the
+ scientific law already pointed out prevailed. With the shock of the onset
+ the entire contents of the cart arose and poured over the astonished
+ miner, burying him from sight. In any other but a Californian mining-camp
+ such a propensity in a draught animal would have been condemned, on
+ account of the damage and suffering it entailed, but in Rocky Canyon it
+ proved unprofitable to the owner from the very amusement and interest it
+ excited. Miners lay in wait for Billy with a &ldquo;greenhorn,&rdquo; or new-comer,
+ whom they would put up to challenge the animal by some indiscreet gesture.
+ In this way hardly a cartload of &ldquo;pay-gravel&rdquo; ever arrived safely at its
+ destination, and the unfortunate M'Ginnis was compelled to withdraw Billy
+ as a beast of burden. It was whispered that so great had his propensity
+ become, under repeated provocation, that M'Ginnis himself was no longer
+ safe. Going ahead of his cart one day to remove a fallen bough from the
+ trail, Billy construed the act of stooping into a playful challenge from
+ his master,&mdash;with the inevitable result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day M'Ginnis appeared with a wheelbarrow, but without Billy. From
+ that day he was relegated to the rocky crags above the camp, from whence
+ he was only lured occasionally by the mischievous miners, who wished to
+ exhibit his peculiar performances. For although Billy had ample food and
+ sustenance among the crags, he had still a civilized longing for posters;
+ and whenever a circus, a concert, or a political meeting was &ldquo;billed&rdquo; in
+ the settlement, he was on hand while the paste was yet fresh and
+ succulent. In this way it was averred that he once removed a gigantic
+ theatre bill setting forth the charms of the &ldquo;Sacramento Pet,&rdquo; and being
+ caught in the act by the advance agent, was pursued through the main
+ street, carrying the damp bill on his horns, eventually affixing it, after
+ his own peculiar fashion, on the back of Judge Boompointer, who was
+ standing in front of his own court-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In connection with the visits of this young lady another story concerning
+ Billy survives in the legends of Rocky Canyon. Colonel Starbottle was at
+ that time passing through the settlement on election business, and it was
+ part of his chivalrous admiration for the sex to pay a visit to the pretty
+ actress. The single waiting-room of the little hotel gave upon the
+ veranda, which was also level with the street. After a brief yet gallant
+ interview, in which he oratorically expressed the gratitude of the
+ settlement with old-fashioned Southern courtesy, Colonel Starbottle lifted
+ the chubby little hand of the &ldquo;Pet&rdquo; to his lips, and, with a low bow,
+ backed out upon the veranda. But the Pet was astounded by his instant
+ reappearance, and by his apparently casting himself passionately and
+ hurriedly at her feet! It is needless to say that he was followed closely
+ by Billy, who from the street had casually noticed him, and construed his
+ novel exit into an ungentlemanly challenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Billy's visits, however, became less frequent, and as Rocky Canyon
+ underwent the changes incidental to mining settlements, he was presently
+ forgotten in the invasion of a few Southwestern families, and the adoption
+ of amusements less practical and turbulent than he had afforded. It was
+ alleged that he was still seen in the more secluded fastnesses of the
+ mountains, having reverted to a wild state, and it was suggested by one or
+ two of the more adventurous that he might yet become edible, and a fair
+ object of chase. A traveler through the Upper Pass of the canyon related
+ how he had seen a savage-looking, hairy animal like a small elk perched
+ upon inaccessible rocks, but always out of gunshot. But these and other
+ legends were set at naught and overthrown by an unexpected incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pioneer Coach was toiling up the long grade towards Skinners Pass when
+ Yuba Bill suddenly pulled up, with his feet on the brake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jimminy!&rdquo; he ejaculated, drawing a deep breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The startled passenger beside him on the box followed the direction of his
+ eyes. Through an opening in the wayside pines he could see, a few hundred
+ yards away, a cuplike hollow in the hillside of the vividest green. In the
+ centre a young girl of fifteen or sixteen was dancing and keeping step to
+ the castanet &ldquo;click&rdquo; of a pair of &ldquo;bones,&rdquo; such as negro minstrels use,
+ held in her hands above her head. But, more singular still, a few paces
+ before her a large goat, with its neck roughly wreathed with flowers and
+ vines, was taking ungainly bounds and leaps in imitation of its companion.
+ The wild background of the Sierras, the pastoral hollow, the
+ incongruousness of the figures, and the vivid color of the girl's red
+ flannel petticoat showing beneath her calico skirt, that had been pinned
+ around her waist, made a striking picture, which by this time had
+ attracted all eyes. Perhaps the dancing of the girl suggested a negro
+ &ldquo;break-down&rdquo; rather than any known sylvan measure; but all this, and even
+ the clatter of the bones, was made gracious by the distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Esmeralda! by the living Harry!&rdquo; shouted the excited passenger on the
+ box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yuba Bill took his feet off the brake, and turned a look of deep scorn
+ upon his companion as he gathered the reins again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's that blanked goat, outer Rocky Canyon beyond, and Polly Harkness!
+ How did she ever come to take up with HIM?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, as soon as the coach reached Rocky Canyon, the story was
+ quickly told by the passengers, corroborated by Yuba Bill, and highly
+ colored by the observer on the box-seat. Harkness was known to be a
+ new-comer who lived with his wife and only daughter on the other side of
+ Skinners Pass. He was a &ldquo;logger&rdquo; and charcoal-burner, who had eaten his
+ way into the serried ranks of pines below the pass, and established in
+ these efforts an almost insurmountable cordon of fallen trees, stripped
+ bark, and charcoal pits around the clearing where his rude log hut stood,&mdash;which
+ kept his seclusion unbroken. He was said to be a half-savage mountaineer
+ from Georgia, in whose rude fastnesses he had distilled unlawful whiskey,
+ and that his tastes and habits unfitted him for civilization. His wife
+ chewed and smoked; he was believed to make a fiery brew of his own from
+ acorns and pine nuts; he seldom came to Rocky Canyon except for
+ provisions; his logs were slipped down a &ldquo;shoot&rdquo; or slide to the river,
+ where they voyaged once a month to a distant mill, but HE did not
+ accompany them. The daughter, seldom seen at Rocky Canyon, was a
+ half-grown girl, brown as autumn fern, wild-eyed, disheveled, in a
+ homespun skirt, sunbonnet, and boy's brogans. Such were the plain facts
+ which skeptical Rocky Canyon opposed to the passengers' legends.
+ Nevertheless, some of the younger miners found it not out of their way to
+ go over Skinners Pass on the journey to the river, but with what success
+ was not told. It was said, however, that a celebrated New York artist,
+ making a tour of California, was on the coach one day going through the
+ pass, and preserved the memory of what he saw there in a well-known
+ picture entitled &ldquo;Dancing Nymph and Satyr,&rdquo; said by competent critics to
+ be &ldquo;replete with the study of Greek life.&rdquo; This did not affect Rocky
+ Canyon, where the study of mythology was presumably displaced by an
+ experience of more wonderful flesh-and-blood people, but later it was
+ remembered with some significance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the improvements already noted, a zinc and wooden chapel had been
+ erected in the main street, where a certain popular revivalist preacher of
+ a peculiar Southwestern sect regularly held exhortatory services. His rude
+ emotional power over his ignorant fellow-sectarians was well known, while
+ curiosity drew others. His effect upon the females of his flock was
+ hysterical and sensational. Women prematurely aged by frontier drudgery
+ and child-bearing, girls who had known only the rigors and pains of a
+ half-equipped, ill-nourished youth in their battling with the hard
+ realities of nature around them, all found a strange fascination in the
+ extravagant glories and privileges of the unseen world he pictured to
+ them, which they might have found in the fairy tales and nursery legends
+ of civilized children, had they known them. Personally he was not
+ attractive; his thin pointed face, and bushy hair rising on either side of
+ his square forehead in two rounded knots, and his long, straggling, wiry
+ beard dropping from a strong neck and shoulders, were indeed of a common
+ Southwestern type; yet in him they suggested something more. This was
+ voiced by a miner who attended his first service, and as the Reverend Mr.
+ Withholder rose in the pulpit, the former was heard to audibly ejaculate,
+ &ldquo;Dod blasted!&mdash;if it ain't Billy!&rdquo; But when on the following Sunday,
+ to everybody's astonishment, Polly Harkness, in a new white muslin frock
+ and broad-brimmed Leghorn hat, appeared before the church door with the
+ real Billy, and exchanged conversation with the preacher, the likeness was
+ appalling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I grieve to say that the goat was at once christened by Rocky Canyon as
+ &ldquo;The Reverend Billy,&rdquo; and the minister himself was Billy's &ldquo;brother.&rdquo; More
+ than that, when an attempt was made by outsiders, during the service, to
+ inveigle the tethered goat into his old butting performances, and he took
+ not the least notice of their insults and challenges, the epithet &ldquo;blanked
+ hypocrite&rdquo; was added to his title.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had he really reformed? Had his pastoral life with his nymph-like mistress
+ completely cured him of his pugnacious propensity, or had he simply found
+ it was inconsistent with his dancing, and seriously interfered with his
+ &ldquo;fancy steps&rdquo;? Had he found tracts and hymn-books were as edible as
+ theatre posters? These were questions that Rocky canyon discussed lightly,
+ although there was always the more serious mystery of the relations of the
+ Reverend Mr. Withholder, Polly Harkness, and the goat towards each other.
+ The appearance of Polly at church was no doubt due to the minister's
+ active canvass of the districts. But had he ever heard of Polly's dancing
+ with the goat? And where in this plain, angular, badly dressed Polly was
+ hidden that beautiful vision of the dancing nymph which had enthralled so
+ many? And when had Billy ever given any suggestion of his Terpsichorean
+ abilities&mdash;before or since? Were there any &ldquo;points&rdquo; of the kind to be
+ discerned in him now? None! Was it not more probable that the Reverend Mr.
+ Withholder had himself been dancing with Polly, and been mistaken for the
+ goat? Passengers who could have been so deceived with regard to Polly's
+ beauty might have as easily mistaken the minister for Billy. About this
+ time another incident occurred which increased the mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only male in the settlement who apparently dissented from the popular
+ opinion regarding Polly was a new-comer, Jack Filgee. While discrediting
+ her performance with the goat,&mdash;which he had never seen,&mdash;he was
+ evidently greatly prepossessed with the girl herself. Unfortunately, he
+ was equally addicted to drinking, and as he was exceedingly shy and timid
+ when sober, and quite unpresentable at other times, his wooing, if it
+ could be so called, progressed but slowly. Yet when he found that Polly
+ went to church, he listened so far to the exhortations of the Reverend Mr.
+ Withholder as to promise to come to &ldquo;Bible class&rdquo; immediately after the
+ Sunday service. It was a hot afternoon, and Jack, who had kept sober for
+ two days, incautiously fortified himself for the ordeal by taking a drink
+ before arriving. He was nervously early, and immediately took a seat in
+ the empty church near the open door. The quiet of the building, the drowsy
+ buzzing of flies, and perhaps the soporific effect of the liquor caused
+ his eyes to close and his head to fall forward on his breast repeatedly.
+ He was recovering himself for the fourth time when he suddenly received a
+ violent cuff on the ear, and was knocked backward off the bench on which
+ he was sitting. That was all he knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He picked himself up with a certain dignity, partly new to him, and partly
+ the result of his condition, and staggered, somewhat bruised and
+ disheveled, to the nearest saloon. Here a few frequenters who had seen him
+ pass, who knew his errand and the devotion to Polly which had induced it,
+ exhibited a natural concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How's things down at the gospel shop?&rdquo; said one. &ldquo;Look as ef you'd been
+ wrastlin' with the Sperit, Jack!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old man must hev exhorted pow'ful,&rdquo; said another, glancing at his
+ disordered Sunday attire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ain't be'n hevin' a row with Polly? I'm told she slings an awful left.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack, instead of replying, poured out a dram of whiskey, drank it, and
+ putting down his glass, leaned heavily against the counter as he surveyed
+ his questioners with a sorrow chastened by reproachful dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm a stranger here, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said slowly &ldquo;ye've known me only a
+ little; but ez ye've seen me both blind drunk and sober, I reckon ye've
+ caught on to my gin'ral gait! Now I wanter put it to you, ez fair-minded
+ men, ef you ever saw me strike a parson?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said a chorus of sympathetic voices. The barkeeper, however, with a
+ swift recollection of Polly and the Reverend Withholder, and some possible
+ contingent jealousy in Jack, added prudently, &ldquo;Not yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chorus instantly added reflectively, &ldquo;Well, no not yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did ye ever,&rdquo; continued Jack solemnly, &ldquo;know me to cuss, sass, bully-rag,
+ or say anything agin parsons, or the church?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the crowd, overthrowing prudence in curiosity, &ldquo;ye never did,&mdash;we
+ swear it! And now, what's up?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain't what you call 'a member in good standin','&rdquo; he went on,
+ artistically protracting his climax. &ldquo;I ain't be'n convicted o' sin; I
+ ain't 'a meek an' lowly follower;' I ain't be'n exactly what I orter be'n;
+ I hevn't lived anywhere up to my lights; but is thet a reason why a parson
+ should strike me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why? What? When did he? Who did?&rdquo; asked the eager crowd, with one voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack then painfully related how he had been invited by the Reverend Mr.
+ Withholder to attend the Bible class. How he had arrived early, and found
+ the church empty. How he had taken a seat near the door to be handy when
+ the parson came. How he just felt &ldquo;kinder kam and good,&rdquo; listenin' to the
+ flies buzzing, and must have fallen asleep,&mdash;only he pulled himself
+ up every time,&mdash;though, after all, it warn't no crime to fall asleep
+ in an empty church! How &ldquo;all of a suddent&rdquo; the parson came in, &ldquo;give him a
+ clip side o' the head,&rdquo; and knocked him off the bench, and left him there!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what did he SAY?&rdquo; queried the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nuthin'. Afore I could get up, he got away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure it was him?&rdquo; they asked. &ldquo;You know you SAY you was asleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I sure?&rdquo; repeated Jack scornfully. &ldquo;Don't I know thet face and beard?
+ Didn't I feel it hangin' over me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are you going to do about it?&rdquo; continued the crowd eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait till he comes out&mdash;and you'll see,&rdquo; said Jack, with dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was enough for the crowd; they gathered excitedly at the door, where
+ Jack was already standing, looking towards the church. The moments dragged
+ slowly; it might be a long meeting. Suddenly the church door opened and a
+ figure appeared, looking up and down the street. Jack colored&mdash;he
+ recognized Polly&mdash;and stepped out into the road. The crowd
+ delicately, but somewhat disappointedly, drew back in the saloon. They did
+ not care to interfere in THAT sort of thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Polly saw him, and came hurriedly towards him. She was holding something
+ in her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I picked this up on the church floor,&rdquo; she said shyly, &ldquo;so I reckoned you
+ HAD be'n there,&mdash;though the parson said you hadn't,&mdash;and I just
+ excused myself and ran out to give it ye. It's yourn, ain't it?&rdquo; She held
+ up a gold specimen pin, which he had put on in honor of the occasion. &ldquo;I
+ had a harder time, though, to git this yer,&mdash;it's yourn too,&mdash;for
+ Billy was laying down in the yard, back o' the church, and just comf'bly
+ swallerin' it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&rdquo; said Jack quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Billy,&mdash;my goat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack drew a long breath, and glanced back at the saloon. &ldquo;Ye ain't goin'
+ back to class now, are ye?&rdquo; he said hurriedly. &ldquo;Ef you ain't, I'll&mdash;I'll
+ see ye home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't mind,&rdquo; said Polly demurely, &ldquo;if it ain't takin' ye outer y'ur
+ way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack offered his arm, and hurrying past the saloon, the happy pair were
+ soon on the road to Skinners Pass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack did not, I regret to say, confess his blunder, but left the Reverend
+ Mr. Withholder to remain under suspicion of having committed an unprovoked
+ assault and battery. It was characteristic of Rocky Canyon, however, that
+ this suspicion, far from injuring his clerical reputation, incited a
+ respect that had been hitherto denied him. A man who could hit out
+ straight from the shoulder had, in the language of the critics, &ldquo;suthin'
+ in him.&rdquo; Oddly enough, the crowd that had at first sympathized with Jack
+ now began to admit provocations. His subsequent silence, a disposition
+ when questioned on the subject to smile inanely, and, later, when
+ insidiously asked if he had ever seen Polly dancing with the goat, his
+ bursting into uproarious laughter completely turned the current of opinion
+ against him. The public mind, however, soon became engrossed by a more
+ interesting incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Reverend Mr. Withholder had organized a series of Biblical tableaux at
+ Skinnerstown for the benefit of his church. Illustrations were to be given
+ of &ldquo;Rebecca at the Well,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Finding of Moses,&rdquo; &ldquo;Joseph and his
+ Brethren;&rdquo; but Rocky Canyon was more particularly excited by the
+ announcement that Polly Harkness would personate &ldquo;Jephthah's Daughter.&rdquo; On
+ the evening of the performance, however, it was found that this tableau
+ had been withdrawn and another substituted, for reasons not given. Rocky
+ Canyon, naturally indignant at this omission to represent native talent,
+ indulged in a hundred wild surmises. But it was generally believed that
+ Jack Filgee's revengeful animosity to the Reverend Mr. Withholder was at
+ the bottom of it. Jack, as usual, smiled inanely, but nothing was to be
+ got from him. It was not until a few days later, when another incident
+ crowned the climax of these mysteries, that a full disclosure came from
+ his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning a flaming poster was displayed at Rocky Canyon, with a
+ charming picture of the &ldquo;Sacramento Pet&rdquo; in the briefest of skirts,
+ disporting with a tambourine before a goat garlanded with flowers, who
+ bore, however, an undoubted likeness to Billy. The text in enormous
+ letters, and bristling with points of admiration, stated that the &ldquo;Pet&rdquo;
+ would appear as &ldquo;Esmeralda,&rdquo; assisted by a performing goat, especially
+ trained by the gifted actress. The goat would dance, play cards, and
+ perform those tricks of magic familiar to the readers of Victor Hugo's
+ beautiful story of the &ldquo;Hunchback of Notre Dame,&rdquo; and finally knock down
+ and overthrow the designing seducer, Captain Phoebus. The marvelous
+ spectacle would be produced under the patronage of the Hon. Colonel
+ Starbottle and the Mayor of Skinnerstown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As all Rocky Canyon gathered open-mouthed around the poster, Jack demurely
+ joined the group. Every eye was turned upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It don't look as if yer Polly was in THIS show, any more than she was in
+ the tablows,&rdquo; said one, trying to conceal his curiosity under a slight
+ sneer. &ldquo;She don't seem to be doin' any dancin'!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She never DID any dancin',&rdquo; said Jack, with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never DID! Then what was all these yarns about her dancin' up at the
+ pass?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was the Sacramento Pet who did all the dancin'; Polly only LENT the
+ goat. Ye see, the Pet kinder took a shine to Billy arter he bowled
+ Starbottle over thet day at the hotel, and she thought she might teach him
+ tricks. So she DID, doing all her teachin' and stage-rehearsin' up there
+ at the pass, so's to be outer sight, and keep this thing dark. She bribed
+ Polly to lend her the goat and keep her secret, and Polly never let on a
+ word to anybody but me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then it was the Pet that Yuba Bill saw dancin' from the coach?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that yer artist from New York painted as an 'Imp and Satire'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then that's how Polly didn't show up in them tablows at Skinnerstown? It
+ was Withholder who kinder smelt a rat, eh? and found out it was only a
+ theayter gal all along that did the dancin'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, you see,&rdquo; said Jack, with affected hesitation, &ldquo;thet's another
+ yarn. I don't know mebbe ez I oughter tell it. Et ain't got anything to do
+ with this advertisement o' the Pet, and might be rough on old man
+ Withholder! Ye mustn't ask me, boys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was that in his eye, and above all in this lazy procrastination
+ of the true humorist when he is approaching his climax, which rendered the
+ crowd clamorous and unappeasable. They WOULD have the story!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing which, Jack leaned back against a rock with great gravity, put his
+ hands in his pockets, looked discontentedly at the ground, and began: &ldquo;You
+ see, boys, old Parson Withholder had heard all these yarns about Polly and
+ thet trick-goat, and he kinder reckoned that she might do for some one of
+ his tablows. So he axed her if she'd mind standin' with the goat and a
+ tambourine for Jephthah's Daughter, at about the time when old Jeph comes
+ home, sailin' in and vowin' he'll kill the first thing he sees,&mdash;jest
+ as it is in the Bible story. Well, Polly didn't like to say it wasn't HER
+ that performed with the goat, but the Pet, for thet would give the Pet
+ dead away; so Polly agrees to come thar with the goat and rehearse the
+ tablow. Well, Polly's thar, a little shy; and Billy,&mdash;you bet HE'S
+ all there, and ready for the fun; but the darned fool who plays Jephthah
+ ain't worth shucks, and when HE comes in he does nothin' but grin at Polly
+ and seem skeert at the goat. This makes old Withholder jest wild, and at
+ last he goes on the platform hisself to show them how the thing oughter be
+ done. So he comes bustlin' and prancin' in, and ketches sight o' Polly
+ dancin' in with the goat to welcome him; and then he clasps his hands&mdash;so&mdash;and
+ drops on his knees, and hangs down his head&mdash;so&mdash;and sez, 'Me
+ chyld! me vow! Oh, heavens!' But jest then Billy&mdash;who's gettin'
+ rather tired o' all this foolishness&mdash;kinder slues round on his hind
+ legs, and ketches sight o' the parson!&rdquo; Jack paused a moment, and
+ thrusting his hands still deeper in his pockets, said lazily, &ldquo;I don't
+ know if you fellers have noticed how much old Withholder looks like
+ Billy?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a rapid and impatient chorus of &ldquo;Yes! yes!&rdquo; and &ldquo;Go on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Jack, &ldquo;when Billy sees Withholder kneelin' thar with his
+ head down, he gives a kind o' joyous leap and claps his hoofs together, ez
+ much ez to say, 'I'm on in this scene,' drops his own head, and jest
+ lights out for the parson!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And butts him clean through the side scenes into the street,&rdquo; interrupted
+ a delighted auditor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Jack's face never changed. &ldquo;Ye think so?&rdquo; he said gravely. &ldquo;But thet's
+ jest whar ye slip up; and thet's jest whar Billy slipped up!&rdquo; he added
+ slowly. &ldquo;Mebbe ye've noticed, too, thet the parson's built kinder solid
+ about the head and shoulders. It mought hev be'n thet, or thet Billy
+ didn't get a fair start, but thet goat went down on his fore legs like a
+ shot, and the parson gave one heave, and jest scooted him off the
+ platform! Then the parson reckoned thet this yer 'tablow' had better be
+ left out, as thar didn't seem to be any other man who could play Jephthah,
+ and it wasn't dignified for HIM to take the part. But the parson allowed
+ thet it might be a great moral lesson to Billy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it WAS, for from that moment Billy never attempted to butt again. He
+ performed with great docility later on in the Pet's engagement at
+ Skinnerstown; he played a distinguished role throughout the provinces; he
+ had had the advantages of Art from &ldquo;the Pet,&rdquo; and of Simplicity from
+ Polly, but only Rocky Canyon knew that his real education had come with
+ his first rehearsal with the Reverend Mr. Withholder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was surprise and sometimes disappointment in Rough and Ready, when
+ it was known that Dick Spindler intended to give a &ldquo;family&rdquo; Christmas
+ party at his own house. That he should take an early opportunity to
+ celebrate his good fortune and show hospitality was only expected from the
+ man who had just made a handsome &ldquo;strike&rdquo; on his claim; but that it should
+ assume so conservative, old-fashioned, and respectable a form was quite
+ unlooked-for by Rough and Ready, and was thought by some a trifle
+ pretentious. There were not half-a-dozen families in Rough and Ready;
+ nobody ever knew before that Spindler had any relations, and this &ldquo;ringing
+ in&rdquo; of strangers to the settlement seemed to indicate at least a lack of
+ public spirit. &ldquo;He might,&rdquo; urged one of his critics, &ldquo;hev given the boys,&mdash;that
+ had worked alongside o' him in the ditches by day, and slung lies with him
+ around the camp-fire by night,&mdash;he might hev given them a square
+ 'blow out,' and kep' the leavin's for his old Spindler crew, just as other
+ families do. Why, when old man Scudder had his house-raisin' last year,
+ his family lived for a week on what was left over, arter the boys had
+ waltzed through the house that night,&mdash;and the Scudders warn't
+ strangers, either.&rdquo; It was also evident that there was an uneasy feeling
+ that Spindler's action indicated an unhallowed leaning towards the
+ minority of respectability and exclusiveness, and a desertion&mdash;without
+ the excuse of matrimony&mdash;of the convivial and independent bachelor
+ majority of Rough and Ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ef he was stuck after some gal and was kinder looking ahead, I'd hev
+ understood it,&rdquo; argued another critic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't ye be too sure he ain't,&rdquo; said Uncle Jim Starbuck gloomily. &ldquo;Ye'll
+ find that some blamed woman is at the bottom of this yer 'family'
+ gathering. That and trouble ez almost all they're made for!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There happened to be some truth in this dark prophecy, but none of the
+ kind that the misogynist supposed. In fact, Spindler had called a few
+ evenings before at the house of the Rev. Mr. Saltover, and Mrs. Saltover,
+ having one of her &ldquo;Saleratus headaches,&rdquo; had turned him over to her widow
+ sister, Mrs. Huldy Price, who obediently bestowed upon him that practical
+ and critical attention which she divided with the stocking she was
+ darning. She was a woman of thirty-five, of singular nerve and practical
+ wisdom, who had once smuggled her wounded husband home from a border
+ affray, calmly made coffee for his deceived pursuers while he lay hidden
+ in the loft, walked four miles for that medical assistance which arrived
+ too late to save him, buried him secretly in his own &ldquo;quarter section,&rdquo;
+ with only one other witness and mourner, and so saved her position and
+ property in that wild community, who believed he had fled. There was very
+ little of this experience to be traced in her round, fresh-colored
+ brunette cheek, her calm black eyes, set in a prickly hedge of stiff
+ lashes, her plump figure, or her frank, courageous laugh. The latter
+ appeared as a smile when she welcomed Mr. Spindler. &ldquo;She hadn't seen him
+ for a coon's age,&rdquo; but &ldquo;reckoned he was busy fixin' up his new house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, yes,&rdquo; said Spindler, with a slight hesitation, &ldquo;ye see, I'm
+ reckonin' to hev a kinder Christmas gatherin' of my&rdquo;&mdash;he was about to
+ say &ldquo;folks,&rdquo; but dismissed it for &ldquo;relations,&rdquo; and finally settled upon
+ &ldquo;relatives&rdquo; as being more correct in a preacher's house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price thought it a very good idea. Christmas was the natural season
+ for the family to gather to &ldquo;see who's here and who's there, who's gettin'
+ on and who isn't, and who's dead and buried. It was lucky for them who
+ were so placed that they could do so and be joyful.&rdquo; Her invincible
+ philosophy probably carried her past any dangerous recollections of the
+ lonely grave in Kansas, and holding up the stocking to the light, she
+ glanced cheerfully along its level to Mr. Spindler's embarrassed face by
+ the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I can't say much ez to that,&rdquo; responded Spindler, still awkwardly,
+ &ldquo;for you see I don't know much about it anyway.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long since you've seen 'em?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Price, apparently addressing
+ herself to the stocking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spindler gave a weak laugh. &ldquo;Well, you see, ef it comes to that, I've
+ never seen 'em!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price put the stocking in her lap and opened her direct eyes on
+ Spindler. &ldquo;Never seen 'em?&rdquo; she repeated. &ldquo;Then, they're not near
+ relations?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are three cousins,&rdquo; said Spindler, checking them off on his
+ fingers, &ldquo;a half-uncle, a kind of brother-in-law,&mdash;that is, the
+ brother of my sister-in-law's second husband,&mdash;and a niece. That's
+ six.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if you've not seen them, I suppose they've corresponded with you?&rdquo;
+ said Mrs. Price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They've nearly all of 'em written to me for money, seeing my name in the
+ paper ez hevin' made a strike,&rdquo; returned Spindler simply; &ldquo;and hevin' sent
+ it, I jest know their addresses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Mrs. Price, returning to the stocking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something in the tone of her ejaculation increased Spindler's
+ embarrassment, but it also made him desperate. &ldquo;You see, Mrs. Price,&rdquo; he
+ blurted out, &ldquo;I oughter tell ye that I reckon they are the folks that
+ 'hevn't got on,' don't you see, and so it seemed only the square thing for
+ me, ez had 'got on,' to give them a sort o' Christmas festival. Suthin',
+ don't ye know, like what your brother-in-law was sayin' last Sunday in the
+ pulpit about this yer peace and goodwill 'twixt man and man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price looked again at the man before her. His sallow, perplexed face
+ exhibited some doubt, yet a certain determination, regarding the prospect
+ the quotation had opened to him. &ldquo;A very good idea, Mr. Spindler, and one
+ that does you great credit,&rdquo; she said gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm mighty glad to hear you say so, Mrs. Price,&rdquo; he said, with an accent
+ of great relief, &ldquo;for I reckoned to ask you a great favor! You see,&rdquo; he
+ fell into his former hesitation, &ldquo;that is&mdash;the fact is&mdash;that
+ this sort o' thing is rather suddent to me,&mdash;a little outer my line,
+ don't you see, and I was goin' to ask ye ef you'd mind takin' the hull
+ thing in hand and runnin it for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Running it for you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Price, with a quick eye-shot from under
+ the edge of her lashes. &ldquo;Man alive! What are you thinking of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bossin' the whole job for me,&rdquo; hurried on Spindler, with nervous
+ desperation. &ldquo;Gettin' together all the things and makin' ready for 'em,&mdash;orderin'
+ in everythin' that's wanted, and fixin' up the rooms,&mdash;I kin step out
+ while you're doin' it,&mdash;and then helpin' me receivin' 'em, and
+ sittin' at the head o' the table, you know,&mdash;like ez ef you was the
+ mistress.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mrs. Price, with her frank laugh, &ldquo;that's the duty of one of
+ your relations,&mdash;your niece, for instance,&mdash;or cousin, if one of
+ them is a woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; persisted Spindler, &ldquo;you see, they're strangers to me; I don't know
+ 'em, and I do you. You'd make it easy for 'em,&mdash;and for me,&mdash;don't
+ you see? Kinder introduce 'em,&mdash;don't you know? A woman of your
+ gin'ral experience would smooth down all them little difficulties,&rdquo;
+ continued Spindler, with a vague recollection of the Kansas story, &ldquo;and
+ put everybody on velvet. Don't say 'No,' Mrs. Price! I'm just kalkilatin'
+ on you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sincerity and persistency in a man goes a great way with even the best of
+ women. Mrs. Price, who had at first received Spindler's request as an
+ amusing originality, now began to incline secretly towards it. And, of
+ course, began to suggest objections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid it won't do,&rdquo; she said thoughtfully, awakening to the fact
+ that it would do and could be done. &ldquo;You see, I've promised to spend
+ Christmas at Sacramento with my nieces from Baltimore. And then there's
+ Mrs. Saltover and my sister to consult.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here Spindler's simple face showed such signs of distress that the
+ widow declared she would &ldquo;think it over,&rdquo;&mdash;a process which the
+ sanguine Spindler seemed to consider so nearly akin to talking it over
+ that Mrs. Price began to believe it herself, as he hopefully departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She &ldquo;thought it over&rdquo; sufficiently to go to Sacramento and excuse herself
+ to her nieces. But here she permitted herself to &ldquo;talk it over,&rdquo; to the
+ infinite delight of those Baltimore girls, who thought this extravaganza
+ of Spindler's &ldquo;so Californian and eccentric!&rdquo; So that it was not strange
+ that presently the news came back to Rough and Ready, and his old
+ associates learned for the first time that he had never seen his
+ relatives, and that they would be doubly strangers. This did not increase
+ his popularity; neither, I grieve to say, did the intelligence that his
+ relatives were probably poor, and that the Reverend Mr. Saltover had
+ approved of his course, and had likened it to the rich man's feast, to
+ which the halt and blind were invited. Indeed, the allusion was supposed
+ to add hypocrisy and a bid for popularity to Spindler's defection, for it
+ was argued that he might have feasted &ldquo;Wall-eyed Joe&rdquo; or &ldquo;Tangle-foot
+ Billy,&rdquo;&mdash;who had once been &ldquo;chawed&rdquo; by a bear while prospecting,&mdash;if
+ he had been sincere. Howbeit, Spindler's faith was oblivious to these
+ criticisms, in his joy at Mr. Saltover's adhesion to his plans and the
+ loan of Mrs. Price as a hostess. In fact, he proposed to her that the
+ invitation should also convey that information in the expression, &ldquo;by the
+ kind permission of the Rev. Mr. Saltover,&rdquo; as a guarantee of good faith,
+ but the widow would have none of it. The invitations were duly written and
+ dispatched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Suppose,&rdquo; suggested Spindler, with a sudden lugubrious apprehension,&mdash;&ldquo;suppose
+ they shouldn't come?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have no fear of that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Price, with a frank laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or ef they was dead,&rdquo; continued Spindler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They couldn't all be dead,&rdquo; said the widow cheerfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've written to another cousin by marriage,&rdquo; said Spindler dubiously, &ldquo;in
+ case of accident; I didn't think of him before, because he was rich.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And have you ever seen him either, Mr. Spindler?&rdquo; asked the widow, with a
+ slight mischievousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lordy! No!&rdquo; he responded, with unaffected concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only one mistake was made by Mrs. Price in her arrangements for the party.
+ She had noticed what the simple-minded Spindler could never have
+ conceived,&mdash;the feeling towards him held by his old associates, and
+ had tactfully suggested that a general invitation should be extended to
+ them in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can have refreshments, you know, too, after the dinner, and games and
+ music.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said the unsophisticated host, &ldquo;won't the boys think I'm playing it
+ rather low down on them, so to speak, givin' 'em a kind o' second table,
+ as ef it was the tailings after a strike?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense,&rdquo; said Mrs. Price, with decision. &ldquo;It's quite fashionable in San
+ Francisco, and just the thing to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this decision Spindler, in his blind faith in the widow's management,
+ weakly yielded. An announcement in the &ldquo;Weekly Banner&rdquo; that, &ldquo;On Christmas
+ evening Richard Spindler, Esq., proposed to entertain his friends and
+ fellow citizens at an 'at home,' in his own residence,&rdquo; not only widened
+ the breach between him and the &ldquo;boys,&rdquo; but awakened an active resentment
+ that only waited for an outlet. It was understood that they were all
+ coming; but that they should have &ldquo;some fun out of it&rdquo; which might not
+ coincide with Spindler's nor his relatives' sense of humor seemed a
+ foregone conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, too, subsequent events lent themselves to this irony of the
+ situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was so obviously sincere in his intent, and, above all, seemed to place
+ such a pathetic reliance on her judgment, that she hesitated to let him
+ know the shock his revelation had given her. And what might his other
+ relations prove to be? Good Lord! Yet, oddly enough, she was so
+ prepossessed by him, and so fascinated by his very Quixotism, that it was
+ perhaps for these complex reasons that she said a little stiffly:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of these cousins, I see, is a lady, and then there is your niece. Do
+ you know anything about them, Mr. Spindler?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His face grew serious. &ldquo;No more than I know of the others,&rdquo; he said
+ apologetically. After a moment's hesitation he went on: &ldquo;Now you speak of
+ it, it seems to me I've heard that my niece was di-vorced. But,&rdquo; he added,
+ brightening up, &ldquo;I've heard that she was popular.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price gave a short laugh, and was silent for a few minutes. Then this
+ sublime little woman looked up at him. What he might have seen in her eyes
+ was more than he expected, or, I fear, deserved. &ldquo;Cheer up, Mr. Spindler,&rdquo;
+ she said manfully. &ldquo;I'll see you through this thing, don't you mind! But
+ don't you say anything about&mdash;about&mdash;this Vigilance Committee
+ business to anybody. Nor about your niece&mdash;it was your niece, wasn't
+ it?&mdash;being divorced. Charley (the late Mr. Price) had a queer sort of
+ sister, who&mdash;but that's neither here nor there! And your niece mayn't
+ come, you know; or if she does, you ain't bound to bring her out to the
+ general company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At parting, Spindler, in sheer gratefulness, pressed her hand, and
+ lingered so long over it that a little color sprang into the widow's brown
+ cheek. Perhaps a fresh courage sprang into her heart, too, for she went to
+ Sacramento the next day, previously enjoining Spindler on no account to
+ show any answers he might receive. At Sacramento her nieces flew to her
+ with confidences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We so wanted to see you, Aunt Huldy, for we've heard something so
+ delightful about your funny Christmas Party!&rdquo; Mrs. Price's heart sank, but
+ her eyes snapped. &ldquo;Only think of it! One of Mr. Spindler's long-lost
+ relatives&mdash;a Mr. Wragg&mdash;lives in this hotel, and papa knows him.
+ He's a sort of half-uncle, I believe, and he's just furious that Spindler
+ should have invited him. He showed papa the letter; said it was the
+ greatest piece of insolence in the world; that Spindler was an
+ ostentatious fool, who had made a little money and wanted to use him to
+ get into society; and the fun of the whole thing was that this half-uncle
+ and whole brute is himself a parvenu,&mdash;a vulgar, ostentatious
+ creature, who was only a&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind what he was, Kate,&rdquo; interrupted Mrs. Price hastily. &ldquo;I call
+ his conduct a shame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So do we,&rdquo; said both girls eagerly. After a pause Kate clasped her knees
+ with her locked fingers, and rocking backwards and forwards, said, &ldquo;Milly
+ and I have got an idea, and don't you say 'No' to it. We've had it ever
+ since that brute talked in that way. Now, through him, we know more about
+ this Mr. Spindler's family connections than you do; and we know all the
+ trouble you and he'll have in getting up this party. You understand? Now,
+ we first want to know what Spindler's like. Is he a savage, bearded
+ creature, like the miners we saw on the boat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price said that, on the contrary, he was very gentle, soft-spoken,
+ and rather good-looking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young or old?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young,&mdash;in fact, a mere boy, as you may judge from his actions,&rdquo;
+ returned Mrs. Price, with a suggestive matronly air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kate here put up a long-handled eyeglass to her fine gray eyes, fitted it
+ ostentatiously over her aquiline nose, and then said, in a voice of
+ simulated horror, &ldquo;Aunt Huldy,&mdash;this revelation is shocking!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price laughed her usual frank laugh, albeit her brown cheek took upon
+ it a faint tint of Indian red. &ldquo;If that's the wonderful idea you girls
+ have got, I don't see how it's going to help matters,&rdquo; she said dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, that's not it? We really have an idea. Now look here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Price &ldquo;looked here.&rdquo; This process seemed to the superficial observer
+ to be merely submitting her waist and shoulders to the arms of her nieces,
+ and her ears to their confidential and coaxing voices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twice she said &ldquo;it couldn't be thought of,&rdquo; and &ldquo;it was impossible;&rdquo; once
+ addressed Kate as &ldquo;You limb!&rdquo; and finally said that she &ldquo;wouldn't promise,
+ but might write!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ It was two days before Christmas. There was nothing in the air, sky, or
+ landscape of that Sierran slope to suggest the season to the Eastern
+ stranger. A soft rain had been dropping for a week on laurel, pine, and
+ buckeye, and the blades of springing grasses and shyly opening flowers.
+ Sedate and silent hillsides that had grown dumb and parched towards the
+ end of the dry season became gently articulate again; there were murmurs
+ in hushed and forgotten canyons, the leap and laugh of water among the dry
+ bones of dusty creeks, and the full song of the larger forks and rivers.
+ Southwest winds brought the warm odor of the pine sap swelling in the
+ forest, or the faint, far-off spice of wild mustard springing in the lower
+ valleys. But, as if by some irony of Nature, this gentle invasion of
+ spring in the wild wood brought only disturbance and discomfort to the
+ haunts and works of man. The ditches were overflowed, the fords of the
+ Fork impassable, the sluicing adrift, and the trails and wagon roads to
+ Rough and Ready knee-deep in mud. The stage-coach from Sacramento,
+ entering the settlement by the mountain highway, its wheels and panels
+ clogged and crusted with an unctuous pigment like mud and blood, passed
+ out of it through the overflowed and dangerous ford, and emerged in
+ spotless purity, leaving its stains behind with Rough and Ready. A week of
+ enforced idleness on the river &ldquo;Bar&rdquo; had driven the miners to the more
+ comfortable recreation of the saloon bar, its mirrors, its florid
+ paintings, its armchairs, and its stove. The steam of their wet boots and
+ the smoke of their pipes hung over the latter like the sacrificial incense
+ from an altar. But the attitude of the men was more critical and
+ censorious than contented, and showed little of the gentleness of the
+ weather or season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you hear if the stage brought down any more relations of Spindler's?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barkeeper, to whom this question was addressed, shifted his lounging
+ position against the bar and said, &ldquo;I reckon not, ez far ez I know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that old bloat of a second cousin&mdash;that crimson beak&mdash;what
+ kem down yesterday,&mdash;he ain't bin hangin' round here today for his
+ reg'lar pizon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the barkeeper thoughtfully, &ldquo;I reckon Spindler's got him locked
+ up, and is settin' on him to keep him sober till after Christmas, and
+ prevent you boys gettin' at him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He'll have the jimjams before that,&rdquo; returned the first speaker; &ldquo;and how
+ about that dead beat of a half-nephew who borrowed twenty dollars of Yuba
+ Bill on the way down, and then wanted to get off at Shootersvilie, but
+ Bill wouldn't let him, and scooted him down to Spindler's and collected
+ the money from Spindler himself afore he'd give him up?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's up thar with the rest of the menagerie,&rdquo; said the barkeeper, &ldquo;but I
+ reckon that Mrs. Price hez bin feedin' him up. And ye know the old woman&mdash;that
+ fifty-fifth cousin by marriage&mdash;whom Joe Chandler swears he remembers
+ ez an old cook for a Chinese restaurant in Stockton,&mdash;darn my skin ef
+ that Mrs. Price hasn't rigged her out in some fancy duds of her own, and
+ made her look quite decent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep groan here broke from Uncle Jim Starbuck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't I tell ye?&rdquo; he said, turning appealingly to the others. &ldquo;It's that
+ darned widow that's at the bottom of it all! She first put Spindler up to
+ givin' the party, and now, darn my skin, ef she ain't goin to fix up these
+ ragamuffins and drill 'em so we can't get any fun outer 'em after all! And
+ it's bein' a woman that's bossin' the job, and not Spindler, we've got to
+ draw things mighty fine and not cut up too rough, or some of the boys will
+ kick.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bet,&rdquo; said a surly but decided voice in the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And,&rdquo; said another voice, &ldquo;Mrs. Price didn't live in 'Bleeding Kansas'
+ for nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wot's the programme you've settled on, Uncle Jim?&rdquo; said the barkeeper
+ lightly, to check what seemed to promise a dangerous discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Starbuck, &ldquo;we kalkilate to gather early Christmas night in
+ Hooper's Hollow and rig ourselves up Injun fashion, and then start for
+ Spindler's with pitch-pine torches, and have a 'torchlight dance' around
+ the house; them who does the dancin' and yellin' outside takin' their turn
+ at goin' in and hevin' refreshment. Jake Cooledge, of Boston, sez if
+ anybody objects to it, we've only got to say we're 'Mummers of the Olden
+ Times,' sabe? Then, later, we'll have 'Them Sabbath Evening Bells'
+ performed on prospectin' pans by the band. Then, at the finish, Jake
+ Cooledge is goin' to give one of his surkastic speeches,&mdash;kinder
+ welcomin' Spindler's family to the Free Openin' o' Spindler's Almshouse
+ and Reformatory.&rdquo; He paused, possibly for that approbation which, however,
+ did not seem to come spontaneously. &ldquo;It ain't much,&rdquo; he added
+ apologetically, &ldquo;for we're hampered by women; but we'll add to the
+ programme ez we see how things pan out. Ye see, from what we can hear, all
+ of Spindler's relations ain't on hand yet! We've got to wait, like in
+ elckshun times, for 'returns from the back counties.' Hello! What's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the swish and splutter of hoofs on the road before the door. The
+ Sacramento coach! In an instant every man was expectant, and Starbuck
+ darted outside on the platform. Then there was the usual greeting and
+ bustle, the hurried ingress of thirsty passengers into the saloon, and a
+ pause. Uncle Jim returned, excitedly and pantingly. &ldquo;Look yer, boys! Ef
+ this ain't the richest thing out! They say there's two more relations o'
+ Spindler's on the coach, come down as express freight, consigned,&mdash;d'ye
+ hear?&mdash;consigned to Spindler!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stiffs, in coffins?&rdquo; suggested an eager voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't get to hear more. But here they are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was the sudden irruption of a laughing, curious crowd into the
+ bar-room, led by Yuba Bill, the driver. Then the crowd parted, and out of
+ their midst stepped two children, a boy and a girl, the oldest apparently
+ of not more than six years, holding each other's hands. They were coarsely
+ yet cleanly dressed, and with a certain uniform precision that suggested
+ formal charity. But more remarkable than all, around the neck of each was
+ a little steel chain, from which depended the regular check and label of
+ the powerful Express Company, Wells; Fargo &amp; Co., and the words: &ldquo;To
+ Richard Spindler.&rdquo; &ldquo;Fragile.&rdquo; &ldquo;With great care.&rdquo; &ldquo;Collect on delivery.&rdquo;
+ Occasionally their little hands went up automatically and touched their
+ labels, as if to show them. They surveyed the crowd, the floor, the gilded
+ bar, and Yuba Bill without fear and without wonder. There was a pathetic
+ suggestion that they were accustomed to this observation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Bobby,&rdquo; said Yuba Bill, leaning back against the bar, with an air
+ half-paternal, half-managerial, &ldquo;tell these gents how you came here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Wellth, Fargoth Expreth,&rdquo; lisped Bobby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whar from?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wed Hill, Owegon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Red Hill, Oregon? Why, it's a thousand miles from here,&rdquo; said a
+ bystander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon,&rdquo; said Yuba Bill coolly, &ldquo;they kem by stage to Portland, by
+ steamer to 'Frisco, steamer again to Stockton, and then by stage over the
+ whole line. Allers by Wells, Fargo &amp; Co.'s Express, from agent to
+ agent, and from messenger to messenger. Fact! They ain't bin tetched or
+ handled by any one but the Kempany's agents; they ain't had a line or
+ direction except them checks around their necks! And they've wanted for
+ nothin' else. Why, I've carried heaps o' treasure before, gentlemen, and
+ once a hundred thousand dollars in greenbacks, but I never carried
+ anythin' that was watched and guarded as them kids! Why, the division
+ inspector at Stockton wanted to go with 'em over the line; but Jim Bracy,
+ the messenger, said he'd call it a reflection on himself and resign, ef
+ they didn't give 'em to him with the other packages! Ye had a pretty good
+ time, Bobby, didn't ye? Plenty to eat and drink, eh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two children laughed a little weak laugh, turned each other bashfully
+ around, and then looked up shyly at Yuba Bill and said, &ldquo;Yeth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know where you are goin'?&rdquo; asked Starbuck, in a constrained voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the little girl who answered quickly and eagerly:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, to Krissmass and Sandy Claus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To what?&rdquo; asked Starbuck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the boy interposed with a superior air:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thee meanth Couthin Dick. He'th got Krithmath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where's your mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In orthpittal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a laugh somewhere on the outskirts of the crowd. Every one faced
+ angrily in that direction, but the laugher had disappeared. Yuba Bill,
+ however, sent his voice after him. &ldquo;Yes, in hospital! Funny, ain't it?&mdash;amoosin'
+ place! Try it. Step over here, and in five minutes, by the living Hoky,
+ I'll qualify you for admission, and not charge you a cent!&rdquo; He stopped,
+ gave a sweeping glance of dissatisfaction around him, and then, leaning
+ back against the bar, beckoned to some one near the door, and said in a
+ disgusted tone, &ldquo;You tell these galoots how it happened, Bracy. They make
+ me sick!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus appealed to, Bracy, the express messenger, stepped forward in Yuba
+ Bill's place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's nothing particular, gentlemen,&rdquo; he said, with a laugh, &ldquo;only it
+ seems that some man called Spindler, who lives about here, sent an
+ invitation to the father of these children to bring his family to a
+ Christmas party. It wasn't a bad sort of thing for Spindler to do,
+ considering that they were his poor relations, though they didn't know him
+ from Adam,&mdash;was it?&rdquo; He paused; several of the bystanders cleared
+ their throats, but said nothing. &ldquo;At least,&rdquo; resumed Bracy, &ldquo;that's what
+ the boys up at Red Hill, Oregon, thought, when they heard of it. Well, as
+ the father was in hospital with a broken leg, and the mother only a few
+ weeks dead, the boys thought it mighty rough on these poor kids if they
+ were done out of their fun because they had no one to bring them. The boys
+ couldn't afford to go themselves, but they got a little money together,
+ and then got the idea of sendin' 'em by express. Our agent at Red Hill
+ tumbled to the idea at once; but he wouldn't take any money in advance,
+ and said he would send 'em 'C. O. D.' like any other package. And he did,
+ and here they are! That's all! And now, gentlemen, as I've got to deliver
+ them personally to this Spindler, and get his receipt and take off their
+ checks, I reckon we must toddle. Come, Bill, help take 'em up!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold on!&rdquo; said a dozen voices. A dozen hands were thrust into a dozen
+ pockets; I grieve to say some were regretfully withdrawn empty, for it was
+ a hard season in Rough and Ready. But the expressman stepped before them,
+ with warning, uplifted hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a cent, boys,&mdash;not a cent! Wells, Fargo's Express Company don't
+ undertake to carry bullion with those kids, at least on the same
+ contract!&rdquo; He laughed, and then looking around him, said confidentially in
+ a lower voice, which, however, was quite audible to the children, &ldquo;There's
+ as much as three bags of silver in quarter and half dollars in my treasure
+ box in the coach that has been poured, yes, just showered upon them, ever
+ since they started, and have been passed over from agent to agent and
+ messenger to messenger,&mdash;enough to pay their passage from here to
+ China! It's time to say quits now. But bet your life, they are not going
+ to that Christmas party poor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He caught up the boy, as Yuba Bill lifted the little girl to his shoulder,
+ and both passed out. Then one by one the loungers in the bar-room silently
+ and awkwardly followed, and when the barkeeper turned back from putting
+ away his decanters and glasses, to his astonishment the room was empty.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Spindler's house, or &ldquo;Spindler's Splurge,&rdquo; as Rough and Ready chose to
+ call it, stood above the settlement, on a deforested hillside, which,
+ however, revenged itself by producing not enough vegetation to cover even
+ the few stumps that were ineradicable. A large wooden structure in the
+ pseudo-classic style affected by Westerners, with an incongruous cupola,
+ it was oddly enough relieved by a still more incongruous veranda extending
+ around its four sides, upheld by wooden Doric columns, which were already
+ picturesquely covered with flowering vines and sun-loving roses. Mr.
+ Spindler had trusted the furnishing of its interior to the same contractor
+ who had upholstered the gilded bar-room of the Eureka Saloon, and who had
+ apparently bestowed the same design and material, impartially, on each.
+ There were gilded mirrors all over the house and chilly marble-topped
+ tables, gilt plaster Cupids in the corners, and stuccoed lions &ldquo;in the
+ way&rdquo; everywhere. The tactful hands of Mrs. Price had screened some of
+ these with seasonable laurels, fir boughs, and berries, and had imparted a
+ slight Christmas flavor to the house. But the greater part of her time had
+ been employed in trying to subdue the eccentricities of Spindler's amazing
+ relations; in tranquilizing Mrs. &ldquo;Aunt&rdquo; Martha Spindler,&mdash;the elderly
+ cook before alluded to,&mdash;who was inclined to regard the gilded
+ splendors of the house as indicative of dangerous immorality; in
+ restraining &ldquo;Cousin&rdquo; Morley Hewlett from considering the dining-room
+ buffet as a bar for &ldquo;intermittent refreshment;&rdquo; and in keeping the
+ weak-minded nephew, Phinney Spindler, from shooting at bottles from the
+ veranda, wearing his uncle's clothes, or running up an account in his
+ uncle's name for various articles at the general stores. Yet the
+ unlooked-for arrival of the two children had been the one great
+ compensation and diversion for her. She wrote at once to her nieces a
+ brief account of her miraculous deliverance. &ldquo;I think these poor children
+ dropped from the skies here to make our Christmas party possible, to say
+ nothing of the sympathy they have created in Rough and Ready for Spindler.
+ He is going to keep them as long as he can, and is writing to the father.
+ Think of the poor little tots traveling a thousand miles to 'Krissmass,'
+ as they call it!&mdash;though they were so well cared for by the
+ messengers that their little bodies were positively stuffed like quails.
+ So, you see, dear, we will be able to get along without airing your famous
+ idea. I'm sorry, for I know you're just dying to see it all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever Kate's &ldquo;idea&rdquo; might have been, there certainly seemed now no need
+ of any extraneous aid to Mrs. Price's management. Christmas came at last,
+ and the dinner passed off without serious disaster. But the ordeal of the
+ reception of Rough and Ready was still to come. For Mrs. Price well knew
+ that although &ldquo;the boys&rdquo; were more subdued, and, indeed, inclined to
+ sympathize with their host's uncouth endeavor, there was still much in the
+ aspect of Spindler's relations to excite their sense of the ludicrous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here Fortune again favored the house of Spindler with a dramatic
+ surprise, even greater than the advent of the children had been. In the
+ change that had come over Rough and Ready, &ldquo;the boys&rdquo; had decided, out of
+ deference to the women and children, to omit the first part of their
+ programme, and had approached and entered the house as soberly and quietly
+ as ordinary guests. But before they had shaken hands with the host and
+ hostess, and seen the relations, the clatter of wheels was heard before
+ the open door, and its lights flashed upon a carriage and pair,&mdash;an
+ actual private carriage,&mdash;the like of which had not been seen since
+ the governor of the State had come down to open the new ditch! Then there
+ was a pause, the flash of the carriage lamps upon white silk, the light
+ tread of a satin foot on the veranda and in the hall, and the entrance of
+ a vision of loveliness! Middle-aged men and old dwellers of cities
+ remembered their youth; younger men bethought themselves of Cinderella and
+ the Prince! There was a thrill and a hush as this last guest&mdash;a
+ beautiful girl, radiant with youth and adornment&mdash;put a dainty glass
+ to her sparkling eye and advanced familiarly, with outstretched hand, to
+ Dick Spindler. Mrs. Price gave a single gasp, and drew back speechless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Uncle Dick,&rdquo; said a laughing contralto voice, which, indeed, somewhat
+ recalled Mrs. Price's own, in its courageous frankness, &ldquo;I am so delighted
+ to come, even if a little late, and so sorry that Mr. M'Kenna could not
+ come on account of business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody listened eagerly, but none more eagerly and surprisingly than
+ the host himself. M'Kenna! The rich cousin who had never answered the
+ invitation! And Uncle Dick! This, then, was his divorced niece! Yet even
+ in his astonishment he remembered that of course no one but himself and
+ Mrs. Price knew it,&mdash;and that lady had glanced discreetly away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; continued the half-niece brightly. &ldquo;I came from Sacramento with
+ some friends to Shootersville, and from thence I drove here; and though I
+ must return to-night, I could not forego the pleasure of coming, if it was
+ only for an hour or two, to answer the invitation of the uncle I have not
+ seen for years.&rdquo; She paused, and, raising her glasses, turned a politely
+ questioning eye towards Mrs. Price. &ldquo;One of our relations?&rdquo; she said
+ smilingly to Spindler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Spindler, with some embarrassment, &ldquo;a&mdash;a friend!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The half-niece extended her hand. Mrs. Price took it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fair stranger,&mdash;what she did and said were the only things
+ remembered in Rough and Ready on that festive occasion; no one thought of
+ the other relations; no one recalled them nor their eccentricities;
+ Spindler himself was forgotten. People only recollected how Spindler's
+ lovely niece lavished her smiles and courtesies on every one, and brought
+ to her feet particularly the misogynist Starbuck and the sarcastic
+ Cooledge, oblivious of his previous speech; how she sat at the piano and
+ sang like an angel, hushing the most hilarious and excited into
+ sentimental and even maudlin silence; how, graceful as a nymph, she led
+ with &ldquo;Uncle Dick&rdquo; a Virginia reel until the whole assembly joined, eager
+ for a passing touch of her dainty hand in its changes; how, when two hours
+ had passed,&mdash;all too swiftly for the guests,&mdash;they stood with
+ bared heads and glistening eyes on the veranda to see the fairy coach
+ whirl the fairy princess away! How&mdash;but this incident was never known
+ to Rough and Ready.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened in the sacred dressing-room, where Mrs. Price was cloaking
+ with her own hands the departing half-niece of Mr. Spindler. Taking that
+ opportunity to seize the lovely relative by the shoulders and shake her
+ violently, she said: &ldquo;Oh, yes, and it's all very well for you, Kate, you
+ limb! For you're going away, and will never see Rough and Ready and poor
+ Spindler again. But what am I to do, miss? How am I to face it out? For
+ you know I've got to tell him at least that you're no half-niece of his!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you?&rdquo; said the young lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have I?&rdquo; repeated the widow impatiently. &ldquo;Have I? Of course I have! What
+ are you thinking of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was thinking, aunty,&rdquo; said the girl audaciously, &ldquo;that from what I've
+ seen and heard to-night, if I'm not his half-niece now, it's only a
+ question of time! So you'd better wait. Good-night, dear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, really,&mdash;it turned out that she was right!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT &ldquo;JULES'&rdquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When the waters were up at &ldquo;Jules'&rdquo; there was little else up on that
+ monotonous level. For the few inhabitants who calmly and methodically
+ moved to higher ground, camping out in tents until the flood had subsided,
+ left no distracting wreckage behind them. A dozen half-submerged log
+ cabins dotted the tranquil surface of the waters, without ripple or
+ disturbance, looking in the moonlight more like the ruins of centuries
+ than of a few days. There was no current to sap their slight foundations
+ or sweep them away; nothing stirred that silent lake but the occasional
+ shot-like indentations of a passing raindrop, or, still more rarely, a
+ raft, made of a single log, propelled by some citizen on a tour of
+ inspection of his cabin roof-tree, where some of his goods were still
+ stored. There was no sense of terror in this bland obliteration of the
+ little settlement; the ruins of a single burnt-up cabin would have been
+ more impressive than this stupid and even grotesquely placid effect of the
+ rival destroying element. People took it naturally; the water went as it
+ had come,&mdash;slowly, impassively, noiselessly; a few days of fervid
+ Californian sunshine dried the cabins, and in a week or two the red dust
+ lay again as thickly before their doors as the winter mud had lain. The
+ waters of Rattlesnake Creek dropped below its banks, the stage-coach from
+ Marysville no longer made a detour of the settlement. There was even a
+ singular compensation to this amicable invasion; the inhabitants sometimes
+ found gold in those breaches in the banks made by the overflow. To wait
+ for the &ldquo;old Rattlesnake sluicing&rdquo; was a vernal hope of the trusting
+ miner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of &ldquo;Jules',&rdquo; however, was once destined to offer a singular
+ interruption of this peaceful and methodical process. The winter of
+ 1859-60 was an exceptional one. But little rain had fallen in the valleys,
+ although the snow lay deep in the high Sierras. Passes were choked,
+ ravines filled, and glaciers found on their slopes. And when the tardy
+ rains came with the withheld southwesterly &ldquo;trades,&rdquo; the regular
+ phenomenon recurred; Jules' Flat silently, noiselessly, and peacefully
+ went under water; the inhabitants moved to the higher ground, perhaps a
+ little more expeditiously from an impatience born of the delay. The
+ stagecoach from Marysville made its usual detour and stopped before the
+ temporary hotel, express offices, and general store of &ldquo;Jules',&rdquo; under
+ canvas, bark, and the limp leaves of a spreading alder. It deposited a
+ single passenger,&mdash;Miles Hemmingway, of San Francisco, but originally
+ of Boston,&mdash;the young secretary of a mining company, dispatched to
+ report upon the alleged auriferous value of &ldquo;Jules'.&rdquo; Of this he had been
+ by no means impressed as he looked down upon the submerged cabins from the
+ box-seat of the coach and listened to the driver's lazy recital of the
+ flood, and of the singularly patient acceptance of it by the inhabitants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the old story of the southwestern miner's indolence and
+ incompetency,&mdash;utterly distasteful to his northern habits of thought
+ and education. Here was their old fatuous endurance of Nature's wild
+ caprices, without that struggle against them which brought others strength
+ and success; here was the old philosophy which accepted the prairie fire
+ and cyclone, and survived them without advancement, yet without repining.
+ Perhaps in different places and surroundings a submission so stoic might
+ have impressed him; in gentlemen who tucked their dirty trousers in their
+ muddy boots and lived only for the gold they dug, it did not seem to him
+ heroic. Nor was he mollified as he stood beside the rude refreshment bar&mdash;a
+ few planks laid on trestles&mdash;and drank his coffee beneath the
+ dripping canvas roof, with an odd recollection of his boyhood and an
+ inclement Sunday-school picnic. Yet these men had been living in this
+ shiftless fashion for three weeks! It exasperated him still more to think
+ that he might have to wait there a few days longer for the water to
+ subside sufficiently for him to make his examination and report. As he
+ took a proffered seat on a candle-box, which tilted under him, and another
+ survey of the feeble makeshifts around him, his irascibility found vent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, in the name of God, didn't you, after you had been flooded out ONCE,
+ build your cabins PERMANENTLY on higher ground?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the tone of his voice was more disturbing than his question, it
+ pleased one of the loungers to affect to take it literally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ez you've put it that way,&mdash;'in the name of God!'&rdquo;&mdash;returned
+ the man lazily, &ldquo;it mout hev struck us that ez HE was bossin' the job, so
+ to speak, and handlin' things round here generally, we might leave it to
+ Him. It wasn't OUR flood to monkey with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And as He didn't coven-ant, so to speak, to look arter this higher ground
+ 'speshally, and make an Ararat of it for us, ez far ez we could see, we
+ didn't see any reason for SETTLIN' yer,&rdquo; put in a second speaker, with
+ equal laziness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary saw his mistake instantly, and had experience enough of
+ Western humor not to prolong the disadvantage of his unfortunate
+ adjuration. He colored slightly and said, with a smile, &ldquo;You know what I
+ mean; you could have protected yourselves better. A levee on the bank
+ would have kept you clear of the highest watermark.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hey you ever heard WHAT the highest watermark was?&rdquo; said the first
+ speaker, turning to another of the loungers without looking at the
+ secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never heard it,&mdash;didn't know there was a limit before,&rdquo; responded
+ the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first speaker turned back to the secretary. &ldquo;Did you ever know what
+ happened at 'Bulger's,' on the North Fork? They had one o' them levees.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. What happened?&rdquo; asked the secretary impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They was fixed suthin' like us,&rdquo; returned the first speaker. &ldquo;THEY
+ allowed they'd build a levee above THEIR highest watermark, and did. It
+ worked like a charm at first; but the water hed to go somewhere, and it
+ kinder collected at the first bend. Then it sorter raised itself on its
+ elbows one day, and looked over the levee down upon whar some of the boys
+ was washin' quite comf'ble. Then it paid no sorter attention to the limit
+ o' that high watermark, but went six inches better! Not slow and quiet
+ like ez it useter to, ez it does HERE, kinder fillin' up from below, but
+ went over with a rush and a current, hevin' of course the whole height of
+ the levee to fall on t'other side where the boys were sluicing.&rdquo; He
+ paused, and amidst a profound silence added, &ldquo;They say that 'Bulger's' was
+ scattered promiscuous-like all along the fort for five miles. I only know
+ that one of his mules and a section of sluicing was picked up at Red Flat,
+ eight miles away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hemmingway felt that there WAS an answer to this, but, being wise,
+ also felt that it would be unavailing. He smiled politely and said
+ nothing, at which the first speaker turned to him:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thar ain't anything to see to-day, but to-morrow, ez things go, the water
+ oughter be droppin'. Mebbe you'd like to wash up now and clean yourself,&rdquo;
+ he added, with a glance at Hemmingway's small portmanteau. &ldquo;Ez we thought
+ you'd likely be crowded here, we've rigged up a corner for you at
+ Stanton's shanty with the women.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man's cheek flushed slightly at some possible irony in this, and
+ he protested with considerable stress that he was quite ready &ldquo;to rough
+ it&rdquo; where he was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon it's already fixed,&rdquo; returned the man decisively, &ldquo;so you'd
+ better come and I'll show you the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One moment,&rdquo; said Hemmingway, with a smile; &ldquo;my credentials are addressed
+ to the manager of the Boone Ditch Company at 'Jules'.' Perhaps I ought to
+ see him first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right; he's Stanton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And&rdquo;&mdash;hesitated the secretary, &ldquo;YOU, who appear to understand the
+ locality so well,&mdash;I trust I may have the pleasure&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'm Jules.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary was a little startled and amused. So &ldquo;Jules&rdquo; was a person,
+ and not a place!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you're a pioneer?&rdquo; asked Hemmingway, a little less dictatorially, as
+ they passed out under the dripping trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I struck this creek in the fall of '49, comin' over Livermore's Pass with
+ Stanton,&rdquo; returned Jules, with great brevity of speech and deliberate
+ tardiness of delivery. &ldquo;Sent for my wife and two children the next year;
+ wife died same winter, change bein' too sudden for her, and contractin'
+ chills and fever at Sweetwater. When I kem here first thar wasn't six
+ inches o' water in the creek; out there was a heap of it over there where
+ you see them yallowish-green patches and strips o' brush and grass; all
+ that war water then, and all that growth hez sprung up since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway looked around him. The &ldquo;higher ground&rdquo; where they stood was in
+ reality only a mound-like elevation above the dead level of the flat, and
+ the few trees were merely recent young willows and alders. The area of
+ actual depression was much greater than he had imagined, and its
+ resemblance to the bed of some prehistoric inland sea struck him forcibly.
+ A previous larger inundation than Jules' brief experience had ever known
+ had been by no means improbable. His cheek reddened at his previous hasty
+ indictment of the settlers' ignorance and shiftlessness, and the thought
+ that he had probably committed his employers to his own rash confidence
+ and superiority of judgment. However, there was no evidence that this
+ diluvial record was not of the remote past. He smiled again with greater
+ security as he thought of the geological changes that had since tempered
+ these cataclysms, and the amelioration brought by settlement and
+ cultivation. Nevertheless, he would make a thorough examination to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanton's cabin was the furthest of these temporary habitations, and was
+ partly on the declivity which began to slope to the river's bank. It was,
+ like the others, a rough shanty of unplaned boards, but, unlike the
+ others, it had a base of logs laid lengthwise on the ground and parallel
+ with each other, on which the flooring and structure were securely
+ fastened. This gave it the appearance of a box slid on runners, or a
+ Noah's Ark whose bulk had been reduced. Jules explained that the logs,
+ laid in that manner, kept the shanty warmer and free from damp. In reply
+ to Hemmingway's suggestion that it was a great waste of material, Jules
+ simply replied that the logs were the &ldquo;flotsam and jetsam&rdquo; of the creek
+ from the overflowed mills below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway again smiled. It was again the old story of Western waste and
+ prodigality. Accompanied by Jules, however, he climbed up the huge,
+ slippery logs which made a platform before the door, and entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single room was unequally divided; the larger part containing three
+ beds, by day rolled in a single pile in one corner to make room for a
+ table and chairs. A few dresses hanging from nails on the wall showed that
+ it was the women's room. The smaller compartment was again subdivided by a
+ hanging blanket, behind which was a rude bunk or berth against the wall, a
+ table made of a packing-box, containing a tin basin and a can of water.
+ This was his apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The women-folks are down the creek, bakin', to-day,&rdquo; said Jules
+ explanatorily; &ldquo;but I reckon that one of 'em will be up here in a jiffy to
+ make supper, so you just take it easy till they come. I've got to meander
+ over to the claim afore I turn in, but you just lie by to-night and take a
+ rest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned away, leaving Hemmingway standing in the doorway still
+ distraught and hesitating. Nor did the young man recognize the delicacy of
+ Jules' leave-taking until he had unstrapped his portmanteau and found
+ himself alone, free to make his toilet, unembarrassed by company. But even
+ then he would have preferred the rough companionship of the miners in the
+ common dormitory of the general store to this intrusion upon the
+ half-civilization of the women, their pitiable little comforts and secret
+ makeshifts. His disgust of his own indecision which brought him there
+ naturally recoiled in the direction of his host and hostesses, and after a
+ hurried ablution, a change of linen, and an attempt to remove the stains
+ of travel from his clothes, he strode out impatiently into the open air
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was singularly mild even for the season. The southwest trades blew
+ softly, and whispered to him of San Francisco and the distant Pacific,
+ with its long, steady swell. He turned again to the overflowed Flat
+ beneath him, and the sluggish yellow water that scarcely broke a ripple
+ against the walls of the half-submerged cabins. And this was the water for
+ whose going down they were waiting with an immobility as tranquil as the
+ waters themselves! What marvelous incompetency,&mdash;or what infinite
+ patience! He knew, of course, their expected compensation in this &ldquo;ground
+ sluicing&rdquo; at Nature's own hand; the long rifts in the banks of the creek
+ which so often showed &ldquo;the color&rdquo; in the sparkling scales of river gold
+ disclosed by the action of the water; the heaps of reddish mud left after
+ its subsidence around the walls of the cabins,&mdash;a deposit that often
+ contained a treasure a dozen times more valuable than the cabin itself!
+ And then he heard behind him a laugh, a short and panting breath, and
+ turning, beheld a young woman running towards him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his first astounded sight of her, in her limp nankeen sunbonnet, thrown
+ back from her head by the impetus of her flight, he saw only too much
+ hair, two much white teeth, too much eye-flash, and, above all,&mdash;as
+ it appeared to him,&mdash;too much confidence in the power of these
+ qualities. Even as she ran, it seemed to him that she was pulling down
+ ostentatiously the rolled-up sleeves of her pink calico gown over her
+ shapely arms. I am inclined to think that the young gentleman's temper was
+ at fault, and his conclusion hasty; a calmer observer would have detected
+ nothing of this in her frankly cheerful voice. Nevertheless, her evident
+ pleasure in the meeting seemed to him only obtrusive coquetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lordy! I reckoned to git here afore you'd get through fixin' up, and in
+ time to do a little prinkin' myself, and here you're out already.&rdquo; She
+ laughed, glancing at his clean shirt and damp hair. &ldquo;But all the same, we
+ kin have a talk, and you kin tell me all the news afore the other wimmen
+ get up here. It's a coon's age since I was at Sacramento and saw anybody
+ or anything.&rdquo; She stopped and, instinctively detecting some vague
+ reticence in the man before her, said, still laughing, &ldquo;You're Mr.
+ Hemmingway, ain't you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway took off his hat quickly, with a slight start at his
+ forgetfulness. &ldquo;I beg your pardon; yes, certainly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aunty Stanton thought it was 'Hummingbird,'&rdquo; said the girl, with a laugh,
+ &ldquo;but I reckoned not. I'm Jinney Jules, you know; folks call me 'J. J.' It
+ wouldn't do for a Hummingbird and a Jay Jay to be in the same camp, would
+ it? It would be just TOO funny!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway did not find the humor of this so singularly exhaustive, but he
+ was already beginning to be ashamed of his attitude towards her. &ldquo;I'm very
+ sorry to be giving you all this trouble by my intrusion, for I was quite
+ willing to stay at the store yonder. Indeed,&rdquo; he added, with a burst of
+ frankness quite as sincere as her own, &ldquo;if you think your father will not
+ be offended, I would gladly go there now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he still believed in her coquetry and vanity, he would have been
+ undeceived and crushed by the equal and sincere frankness with which she
+ met this ungallant speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! I reckon he wouldn't care, if you'd be as comf'ble and fit for
+ to-morrow. But ye WOULDN'T,&rdquo; she said reflectively. &ldquo;The boys thar sit up
+ late over euchre, and swear a heap, and Simpson, who'd sleep alongside of
+ ye, snores pow'ful, I've heard. Aunty Stanton kin do her level at that,
+ too, and they say&rdquo;&mdash;with a laugh&mdash;&ldquo;that I kin, too, but you're
+ away off in that corner, and it won't reach you. So, takin' it all, by the
+ large, you'd better stay whar ye are. We wimmen, that is, the most of us,
+ will be off and away down to Rattlesnake Bar shoppin' afore sun up, so
+ ye'll sleep ez long ez ye want to, and find yer breakfast ready when ye
+ wake. So I'll jest set to and get ye some supper, and ye kin tell me all
+ the doin's in Sacramento and 'Frisco while I'm workin'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of her unconscious rebuff to his own vanity, Hemmingway felt a
+ sense of relief and less constraint in his relations to this decidedly
+ provincial hostess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I help you in any way?&rdquo; he asked eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ye MIGHT bring me an armful o' wood from the pile under the alders,
+ ef ye ain't afraid o' dirtyin' your coat,&rdquo; she said tentatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hemmingway was not afraid; he declared himself delighted. He brought a
+ generous armful of small cut willow boughs, and deposited them before a
+ small stove, which seemed a temporary substitute for the usual large adobe
+ chimney that generally occupied the entire gable of a miner's cabin. An
+ elbow and short length of stovepipe carried the smoke through the cabin
+ side. But he also noticed that his fair companion had used the interval to
+ put on a pair of white cuffs and a collar. However, she brushed the green
+ moss from his sleeve with some toweling, and although this operation
+ brought her so near to him that her breath&mdash;as soft and warm as the
+ southwest trades&mdash;stirred his hair, it was evident that this
+ contiguity was only frontier familiarity, as far removed from conscious
+ coquetry as it was, perhaps, from educated delicacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The boys gin'rally kem to take up enough wood for me to begin with,&rdquo; she
+ said, &ldquo;but I reckon they didn't know I was comin' up so soon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway's distrust returned a little at this obvious suggestion that he
+ was only a substitute for their general gallantry, but he smiled and said
+ somewhat bluntly, &ldquo;I don't suppose you lack for admirers here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl, however, took him literally. &ldquo;Lordy, no! Me and Mamie Robinson
+ are the only girls for fifteen miles along the creek. ADMIRIN'! I call it
+ jest PESTERIN' sometimes! I reckon I'll hev to keep a dog!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway shivered. Yes, she was not only conscious, but spoilt already.
+ He pictured to himself the uncouth gallantries of the settlement, the
+ provincial badinage, the feeble rivalries of the young men whom he had
+ seen at the general store. Undoubtedly this was what she was expecting in
+ HIM!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; she said, turning from the fire she had kindled, &ldquo;while I'm
+ settin' the table, tell me what's a-doin' in Sacramento! I reckon you've
+ got heaps of lady friends thar,&mdash;I'm told there's lots of fashions
+ just from the States.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid I don't know enough of them to interest you,&rdquo; he said dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on and talk,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Why, when Tom Flynn kem back from
+ Sacramento, and he warn't thar more nor a week, he jest slung yarns about
+ his doin's thar to last the hull rainy season.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half amused and half annoyed, Hemmingway seated himself on the little
+ platform beside the open door, and began a conscientious description of
+ the progress of Sacramento, its new buildings, hotels, and theatres, as it
+ had struck him on his last visit. For a while he was somewhat entertained
+ by the girl's vivacity and eager questioning, but presently it began to
+ pall. He continued, however, with a grim sense of duty, and partly as a
+ reason for watching her in her household duties. Certainly she was
+ graceful! Her tall, lithe, but beautifully moulded figure, even in its
+ characteristic southwestern indolence, fell into poses as picturesque as
+ they were unconscious. She lifted the big molasses-can from its shelf on
+ the rafters with the attitude of a Greek water-bearer. She upheaved the
+ heavy flour-sack to the same secure shelf with the upraised palms of an
+ Egyptian caryatid. Suddenly she interrupted Hemmingway's perfunctory talk
+ with a hearty laugh. He started, looked up from his seat on the platform,
+ and saw that she was standing over him and regarding him with a kind of
+ mischievous pity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I reckon that'll do! You kin pull up short! I kin
+ see what's the matter with you; you're jest plumb tired, tuckered out, and
+ want to turn in! So jest you sit that quiet until I get supper ready and
+ never mind me.&rdquo; In vain Hemmingway protested, with a rising color. The
+ girl only shook her head. &ldquo;Don't tell me! You ain't keering to talk, and
+ you're only playin' Sacramento statistics on me,&rdquo; she retorted, with
+ unfeigned cheerfulness. &ldquo;Anyhow, here's the wimmen comin', and supper is
+ ready.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sound of weary, resigned ejaculations and pantings, and three
+ gaunt women in lustreless alpaca gowns appeared before the cabin. They
+ seemed prematurely aged and worn with labor, anxiety, and ill nourishment.
+ Doubtless somewhere in these ruins a flower like Jay Jules had once
+ flourished; doubtless somewhere in that graceful nymph herself the germ of
+ this dreary maturity was hidden. Hemmingway welcomed them with a
+ seriousness equal to their own. The supper was partaken with the kind of
+ joyless formality which in the southwest is supposed to indicate deep
+ respect, even the cheerful Jay falling under the influence, and it was
+ with a feeling of relief that at last the young man retired to his
+ fenced-off corner for solitude and repose. He gathered, however, that
+ before &ldquo;sun up&rdquo; the next morning the elder women were going to Rattlesnake
+ Bar for the weekly shopping, leaving Jay as before to prepare his
+ breakfast and then join them later. It was already a change in his
+ sentiments to find himself looking forward to that tete-a-tete with the
+ young girl, as a chance of redeeming his character in her eyes. He was
+ beginning to feel he had been stupid, unready, and withal prejudiced. He
+ undressed himself in his seclusion, broken only by the monotonous voices
+ in the adjoining apartment. From time to time he heard fragments and
+ scraps of their conversation, always in reference to affairs of the
+ household and settlement, but never of himself,&mdash;not even the
+ suggestion of a prudent lowering of their voices,&mdash;and fell asleep.
+ He woke up twice in the night with a sensation of cold so marked and
+ distinct from his experience of the early evening, that he was fain to
+ pile his clothes over his blankets to keep warm. He fell asleep again,
+ coming once more to consciousness with a sense of a slight jar, but
+ relapsing again into slumber for he knew not how long. Then he was fully
+ awakened by a voice calling him, and, opening his eyes, beheld the blanket
+ partition put aside, and the face of Jay thrust forward. To his surprise
+ it wore a look of excited astonishment dominated by irrepressible
+ laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get up quick as you kin,&rdquo; she said gaspingly; &ldquo;this is about the
+ killingest thing that ever happened!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She disappeared, but he could still hear her laughing, and to his utter
+ astonishment with her disappearance the floor seemed to change its level.
+ A giddy feeling seized him; he put his feet to the floor; it was
+ unmistakably wet and oozing. He hurriedly clothed himself, still
+ accompanied by the strange feeling of oscillation and giddiness, and
+ passed though the opening into the next room. Again his step produced the
+ same effect upon the floor, and he actually stumbled against her shaking
+ figure, as she wiped the tears of uncontrollable mirth from her eyes with
+ her apron. The contact seemed to upset her remaining gravity. She dropped
+ into a chair, and, pointing to the open door, gasped, &ldquo;Look thar! Lordy!
+ How's that for high?&rdquo; threw her apron over her head, and gave way to an
+ uproarious fit of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemmingway turned to the open door. A lake was before him on the level of
+ the cabin. He stepped forward on the platform; the water was right and
+ left, all around him. The platform dipped slightly to his step. The cabin
+ was afloat,&mdash;afloat upon its base of logs like a raft, the whole
+ structure upheld by the floor on which the logs were securely fastened.
+ The high ground had disappeared&mdash;the river&mdash;its banks the green
+ area beyond. They, and THEY alone, were afloat upon an inland sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned an astounded and serious face upon her mirth. &ldquo;When did it
+ happen?&rdquo; he demanded. She checked her laugh, more from a sense of polite
+ deference to his mood than any fear, and said quietly, &ldquo;That gets me.
+ Everything was all right two hours ago when the wimmen left. It was too
+ early to get your breakfast and rouse ye out, and I felt asleep, I reckon,
+ until I felt a kind o' slump and a jar.&rdquo; Hemmingway remembered his own
+ half-conscious sensation. &ldquo;Then I got up and saw we was adrift. I didn't
+ waken ye, for I thought it was only a sort of wave that would pass. It
+ wasn't until I saw we were movin' and the hull rising ground gettin' away,
+ that I thought o' callin' ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thought of the vanished general store, of her father, the workers on
+ the bank, the helpless women on their way to the Bar, and turned almost
+ savagely on her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the others,&mdash;where are they?&rdquo; he said indignantly. &ldquo;Do you call
+ that a laughing matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped at the sound of his voice as at a blow. Her face hardened into
+ immobility, yet when she replied it was with the deliberate indolence of
+ her father. &ldquo;The wimmen are up on the hills by this time. The boys hev bin
+ drowned out many times afore this and got clear off, on sluice boxes and
+ timber, without squealing. Tom Flynn went down ten miles to Sayer's once
+ on two bar'ls, and I never heard that HE was cryin' when they picked him
+ up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A flush came to Hemmingway's cheek, but with it a gleam of intelligence.
+ Of course the inundation was known to them FIRST, and there was the
+ wreckage to support them. They had clearly saved themselves. If they had
+ abandoned the cabin, it was because they knew its security, perhaps had
+ even seen it safely adrift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has this ever happened to the cabin before?&rdquo; he asked, as he thought of
+ its peculiar base.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at the water again. There was a decided current. The overflow
+ was evidently no part of the original inundation. He put his hand in the
+ water. It was icy cold. Yes, he understood it now. It was the sudden
+ melting of snow in the Sierras which had brought this volume down the
+ canyon. But was there more still to come?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you anything like a long pole or stick in the cabin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nary,&rdquo; said the girl, opening her big eyes and shaking her head with a
+ simulation of despair, which was, however, flatly contradicted by her
+ laughing mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor any cord or twine?&rdquo; he continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She handed him a ball of coarse twine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I take a couple of these hooks?&rdquo; he asked, pointing to some rough
+ iron hooks in the rafters, on which bacon and jerked beef were hanging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded. He dislodged the hooks, greased them with the bacon rind, and
+ affixed them to the twine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fishin'?&rdquo; she asked demurely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo; he replied gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He threw the line in the water. It slackened at about six feet,
+ straightened, and became taut at an angle, and then dragged. After one or
+ two sharp jerks he pulled it up. A few leaves and grasses were caught in
+ the hooks. He examined them attentively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We're not in the creek,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;nor in the old overflow. There's no
+ mud or gravel on the hooks, and these grasses don't grow near water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, that's mighty cute of you,&rdquo; she said admiringly, as she knelt beside
+ him on the platform. &ldquo;Let's see what you've caught. Look yer!&rdquo; she added,
+ suddenly lifting a limp stalk, &ldquo;that's 'old man,' and thar ain't a scrap
+ of it grows nearer than Springer's Rise,&mdash;four miles from home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure?&rdquo; he asked quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sure as pop! I used to go huntin' it for smellidge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For what?&rdquo; he said, with a bewildered smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For this,&rdquo;&mdash;she thrust the leaves to his nose and then to her own
+ pink nostrils; &ldquo;for&mdash;for&rdquo;&mdash;she hesitated, and then with a
+ mischievous simulation of correctness added, &ldquo;for the perfume.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her admiringly. For all her five feet ten inches, what a mere
+ child she was, after all! What a fool he was to have taken a resentful
+ attitude towards her! How charming and graceful she looked, kneeling there
+ beside him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he said suddenly, in a gentler voice, &ldquo;what were you laughing
+ at just now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her brown eyes wavered for a moment, and then brimmed with merriment. She
+ threw herself sideways, in a leaning posture, supporting herself on one
+ arm, while with her other hand she slowly drew out her apron string, as
+ she said, in a demure voice:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I reckoned it was jest too killin' to think of you, who didn't want
+ to talk to me, and would hev given your hull pile to hev skipped out o'
+ this, jest stuck here alongside o' me, whether you would or no, for Lord
+ knows how long!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But that was last night,&rdquo; he said, in a tone of raillery. &ldquo;I was tired,
+ and you said so yourself, you know. But I'm ready to talk now. What shall
+ I tell you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything,&rdquo; said the girl, with a laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What I am thinking of?&rdquo; he said, with frankly admiring eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, everything.&rdquo; She stopped, and leaning forward, suddenly caught the
+ brim of his soft felt hat, and drawing it down smartly over his audacious
+ eyes, said, &ldquo;Everything BUT THAT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with some difficulty and some greater embarrassment that he
+ succeeded in getting his eyes free again. When he did so, she had risen
+ and entered the cabin. Disconcerted as he was, he was relieved to see that
+ her expression of amusement was unchanged. Was her act a piece of rustic
+ coquetry, or had she resented his advances? Nor did her next words settle
+ the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye kin do yer nice talk and philanderin' after we've settled whar we are,
+ what we're goin', and what's goin' to happen. Jest now it 'pears to me
+ that ez these yere logs are the only thing betwixt us and 'kingdom come,'
+ ye'd better be hustlin' round with a few spikes to clinch 'em to the
+ floor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She handed him a hammer and a few spikes. He obediently set to work, with
+ little confidence, however, in the security of the fastening. There was
+ neither rope nor chain for lashing the logs together; a stronger current
+ and a collision with some submerged stump or wreckage would loosen them
+ and wreck the cabin. But he said nothing. It was the girl who broke the
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's your front name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MILES,&mdash;that's a funny name. I reckon that's why you war so FAR OFF
+ and DISTANT at first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hemmingway thought this very witty, and said so. &ldquo;But,&rdquo; he added,
+ &ldquo;when I was a little nearer a moment ago, you stopped me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you was moving faster than the shanty was. I reckon you don't take
+ that gait with your lady friends at Sacramento! However, you kin talk
+ now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you forget I don't know 'where we are,' nor 'what's going to
+ happen.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I do,&rdquo; she said quietly. &ldquo;In a couple of hours we'll be picked up, so
+ you'll be free again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something in the confidence of her manner made him go to the door again
+ and look out. There was scarcely any current now, and the cabin seemed
+ motionless. Even the wind, which might have acted upon it, was wanting.
+ They were apparently in the same position as before, but his sounding-line
+ showed that the water was slightly falling. He came back and imparted the
+ fact with a certain confidence born of her previous praise of his
+ knowledge. To his surprise she only laughed and said lazily, &ldquo;We'll be all
+ right, and you'll be free, in about two hours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see no sign of it,&rdquo; he said, looking through the door again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's because you're looking in the water and the sky and the mud for
+ it,&rdquo; she said, with a laugh. &ldquo;I reckon you've been trained to watch them
+ things a heap better than to study the folks about here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I daresay you're right,&rdquo; said Hemmingway cheerfully, &ldquo;but I don't clearly
+ see what the folks about here have to do with our situation just now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll see,&rdquo; she said, with a smile of mischievous mystery. &ldquo;All the
+ same,&rdquo; she added, with a sudden and dangerous softness in her eyes, &ldquo;I
+ ain't sayin' that YOU ain't kinder right neither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour ago he would have laughed at the thought that a mere look and
+ sentence like this from the girl could have made his heart beat. &ldquo;Then I
+ may go on and talk?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled, but her eyes said, &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; plainly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned to take a chair near her. Suddenly the cabin trembled, there was
+ a sound of scraping, a bump, and then the whole structure tilted to one
+ side and they were both thrown violently towards the corner, with a swift
+ inrush of water. Hemmingway quickly caught the girl by the waist; she
+ clung to him instinctively, yet still laughing, as with a desperate effort
+ he succeeded in dragging her to the upper side of the slanting cabin, and
+ momentarily restoring its equilibrium. They remained for an instant
+ breathless. But in that instant he had drawn her face to his and kissed
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She disengaged herself gently with neither excitement nor emotion, and
+ pointing to the open door said, &ldquo;Look there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two of the logs which formed the foundation of their floor were quietly
+ floating in the water before the cabin! The submerged obstacle or snag
+ which had torn them from their fastening was still holding the cabin fast.
+ Hemmingway saw the danger. He ran along the narrow ledge to the point of
+ contact and unhesitatingly leaped into the icy cold water. It reached his
+ armpits before his feet struck the obstacle,&mdash;evidently a stump with
+ a projecting branch. Bracing himself against it, he shoved off the cabin.
+ But when he struck out to follow it, he found that the log nearest him was
+ loose and his grasp might tear it away. At the same moment, however, a
+ pink calico arm fluttered above his head, and a strong grasp seized his
+ coat collar. The cabin half revolved as the girl dragged him into the open
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bantam!&rdquo; she said, with a laugh, &ldquo;why didn't you let ME do that? I'm
+ taller than you! But,&rdquo; she added, looking at his dripping clothes and
+ dragging out a blanket from the corner, &ldquo;I couldn't dry myself as quick as
+ you kin!&rdquo; To her surprise, however, Hemmingway tossed the blanket aside,
+ and pointing to the floor, which was already filmed with water, ran to the
+ still warm stove, detached it from its pipe, and threw it overboard. The
+ sack of flour, bacon, molasses, and sugar, and all the heavier articles
+ followed it into the stream. Relieved of their weight the cabin base rose
+ an inch or two higher. Then he sat down and said, &ldquo;There! that may keep us
+ afloat for that 'couple of hours' you speak of. So I suppose I may talk
+ now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye haven't no time,&rdquo; she said, in a graver voice. &ldquo;It won't be as long as
+ a couple of hours now. Look over thar!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked where she pointed across the gray expanse of water. At first he
+ could see nothing. Presently he saw a mere dot on its face which at times
+ changed to a single black line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a log, like these,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's no log. It's an Injun dug-out*&mdash;comin' for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A canoe made from a hollowed log.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your father?&rdquo; he said joyfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She smiled pityingly. &ldquo;It's Tom Flynn. Father's got suthin' else to look
+ arter. Tom Flynn hasn't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who's Tom Flynn?&rdquo; he asked, with an odd sensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The man I'm engaged to,&rdquo; she said gravely, with a slight color.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rose that blossomed on her cheek faded in his. There was a moment of
+ silence. Then he said frankly, &ldquo;I owe you some apology. Forgive my folly
+ and impertinence a moment ago. How could I have known this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You took no more than you deserved, or that Tom would have objected to,&rdquo;
+ she said, with a little laugh. &ldquo;You've been mighty kind and handy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She held out her hand; their fingers closed together in a frank pressure.
+ Then his mind went back to his work, which he had forgotten,&mdash;to his
+ first impressions of the camp and of her. They both stood silent, watching
+ the canoe, now quite visible, and the man that was paddling it, with an
+ intensity that both felt was insincere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm afraid,&rdquo; he said, with a forced laugh, &ldquo;that I was a little too hasty
+ in disposing of your goods and possessions. We could have kept afloat a
+ little longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's all the same,&rdquo; she said, with a slight laugh; &ldquo;it's jest as well we
+ didn't look too comf'ble&mdash;to HIM.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not reply; he did not dare to look at her. Yes! It was the same
+ coquette he had seen last night. His first impressions were correct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canoe came on rapidly now, propelled by a powerful arm. In a few
+ moments it was alongside, and its owner leaped on the platform. It was the
+ gentleman with his trousers tucked in his boots, the second voice in the
+ gloomy discussion in the general store last evening. He nodded simply to
+ the girl, and shook Hemmingway's hand warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he made a hurried apology for his delay: it was so difficult to find
+ &ldquo;the lay&rdquo; of the drifted cabin. He had struck out first for the most
+ dangerous spot,&mdash;the &ldquo;old clearing,&rdquo; on the right bank, with its
+ stumps and new growths,&mdash;and it seemed he was right. And all the rest
+ were safe, and &ldquo;nobody was hurt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All the same, Tom,&rdquo; she said, when they were seated and paddling off
+ again, &ldquo;you don't know HOW NEAR YOU CAME TO LOSING ME.&rdquo; Then she raised
+ her beautiful eyes and looked significantly, not at HIM, but at
+ Hemmingway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the water was down at &ldquo;Jules'&rdquo; the next day, they found certain
+ curious changes and some gold, and the secretary was able to make a
+ favorable report. But he made none whatever of his impressions &ldquo;when the
+ water was up at 'Jules','&rdquo; though he often wondered if they were strictly
+ trustworthy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BOOM IN THE &ldquo;CALAVERAS CLARION&rdquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The editorial sanctum of the &ldquo;Calaveras Clarion&rdquo; opened upon the
+ &ldquo;composing-room&rdquo; of that paper on the one side, and gave apparently upon
+ the rest of Calaveras County upon the other. For, situated on the very
+ outskirts of the settlement and the summit of a very steep hill, the pines
+ sloped away from the editorial windows to the long valley of the South
+ Fork and&mdash;infinity. The little wooden building had invaded Nature
+ without subduing it. It was filled night and day with the murmur of pines
+ and their fragrance. Squirrels scampered over its roof when it was not
+ preoccupied by woodpeckers, and a printer's devil had once seen a
+ nest-building blue jay enter the composing window, flutter before one of
+ the slanting type-cases with an air of deliberate selection, and then fly
+ off with a vowel in its bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst these sylvan surroundings the temporary editor of the &ldquo;Clarion&rdquo; sat
+ at his sanctum, reading the proofs of an editorial. As he was occupying
+ that position during a six weeks' absence of the bona fide editor and
+ proprietor, he was consequently reading the proof with some anxiety and
+ responsibility. It had been suggested to him by certain citizens that the
+ &ldquo;Clarion&rdquo; needed a firmer and more aggressive policy towards the Bill
+ before the Legislature for the wagon road to the South Fork. Several
+ Assembly men had been &ldquo;got at&rdquo; by the rival settlement of Liberty Hill,
+ and a scathing exposure and denunciation of such methods was necessary.
+ The interests of their own township were also to be &ldquo;whooped up.&rdquo; All this
+ had been vigorously explained to him, and he had grasped the spirit, if
+ not always the facts, of his informants. It is to be feared, therefore,
+ that he was perusing his article more with reference to its vigor than his
+ own convictions. And yet he was not so greatly absorbed as to be unmindful
+ of the murmur of the pines without, his half-savage environment, and the
+ lazy talk of his sole companions,&mdash;the foreman and printer in the
+ adjoining room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bet your life! I've always said that a man INSIDE a newspaper office
+ could hold his own agin any outsider that wanted to play rough or tried to
+ raid the office! Thar's the press, and thar's the printin' ink and roller!
+ Folks talk a heap o' the power o' the Press!&mdash;I tell ye, ye don't
+ half know it. Why, when old Kernel Fish was editin' the 'Sierra Banner,'
+ one o' them bullies that he'd lampooned in the 'Banner' fought his way
+ past the Kernel in the office, into the composin'-room, to wreck
+ everythin' and 'pye' all the types. Spoffrel&mdash;ye don't remember
+ Spoffrel?&mdash;little red-haired man?&mdash;was foreman. Spoffrel fended
+ him off with the roller and got one good dab inter his eyes that blinded
+ him, and then Spoffrel sorter skirmished him over to the press,&mdash;a
+ plain lever just like ours,&mdash;whar the locked-up form of the inside
+ was still a-lyin'! Then, quick as lightnin', Spoffrel tilts him over agin
+ it, and HE throws out his hand and ketches hold o' the form to steady
+ himself, when Spoffrel just runs the form and the hand under the press and
+ down with the lever! And that held the feller fast as grim death! And when
+ at last he begs off, and Spoff lets him loose, the hull o' that 'ere
+ lampooning article he objected to was printed right onto the skin o' his
+ hand! Fact, and it wouldn't come off, either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gosh, but I'd like to hev seen it,&rdquo; said the printer. &ldquo;There ain't any
+ chance, I reckon, o' such a sight here. The boss don't take no risks
+ lampoonin', and he&rdquo; (the editor knew he was being indicated by some unseen
+ gesture of the unseen workman) &ldquo;ain't that style.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye never kin tell,&rdquo; said the foreman didactically, &ldquo;what might happen!
+ I've known editors to get into a fight jest for a little innercent
+ bedevilin' o' the opposite party. Sometimes for a misprint. Old man
+ Pritchard of the 'Argus' oncet had a hole blown through his arm because
+ his proofreader had called Colonel Starbottle's speech an 'ignominious'
+ defense, when the old man hed written 'ingenuous' defense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor paused in his proof-reading. He had just come upon the
+ sentence: &ldquo;We cannot congratulate Liberty Hill&mdash;in its superior
+ elevation&mdash;upon the ignominious silence of the representative of all
+ Calaveras when this infamous Bill was introduced.&rdquo; He referred to his
+ copy. Yes! He had certainly written &ldquo;ignominious,&rdquo;&mdash;that was what his
+ informants had suggested. But was he sure they were right? He had a vague
+ recollection, also, that the representative alluded to&mdash;Senator
+ Bradley&mdash;had fought two duels, and was a &ldquo;good&rdquo; though somewhat
+ impulsive shot! He might alter the word to &ldquo;ingenuous&rdquo; or &ldquo;ingenious,&rdquo;
+ either would be finely sarcastic, but then&mdash;there was his foreman,
+ who would detect it! He would wait until he had finished the entire
+ article. In that occupation he became oblivious of the next room, of a
+ silence, a whispered conversation, which ended with a rapping at the door
+ and the appearance of the foreman in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a man in the office who wants to see the editor,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show him in,&rdquo; replied the editor briefly. He was, however, conscious that
+ there was a singular significance in his foreman's manner, and an eager
+ apparition of the other printer over the foreman's shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's carryin' a shot-gun, and is a man twice as big as you be,&rdquo; said the
+ foreman gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor quickly recalled his own brief and as yet blameless record in
+ the &ldquo;Clarion.&rdquo; &ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; he said tentatively, with a gentle smile, &ldquo;he's
+ looking for Captain Brush&rdquo; (the absent editor).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told him all that,&rdquo; said the foreman grimly, &ldquo;and he said he wanted to
+ see the man in charge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In proportion as the editor's heart sank his outward crest arose. &ldquo;Show
+ him in,&rdquo; he said loftily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We KIN keep him out,&rdquo; suggested the foreman, lingering a moment; &ldquo;me and
+ him,&rdquo; indicating the expectant printer behind him, &ldquo;is enough for that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show him up,&rdquo; repeated the editor firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foreman withdrew; the editor seated himself and again took up his
+ proof. The doubtful word &ldquo;ignominious&rdquo; seemed to stand out of the
+ paragraph before him; it certainly WAS a strong expression! He was about
+ to run his pencil through it when he heard the heavy step of his visitor
+ approaching. A sudden instinct of belligerency took possession of him, and
+ he wrathfully threw the pencil down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burly form of the stranger blocked the doorway. He was dressed like a
+ miner, but his build and general physiognomy were quite distinct from the
+ local variety. His upper lip and chin were clean-shaven, still showing the
+ blue-black roots of the beard which covered the rest of his face and
+ depended in a thick fleece under his throat. He carried a small bundle
+ tied up in a silk handkerchief in one hand, and a &ldquo;shot-gun&rdquo; in the other,
+ perilously at half-cock. Entering the sanctum, he put down his bundle and
+ quietly closed the door behind him. He then drew an empty chair towards
+ him and dropped heavily into it with his gun on his knees. The editor's
+ heart dropped almost as heavily, although he quite composedly held out his
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I relieve you of your gun?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank ye, lad&mdash;noa. It's moor coomfortable wi' me, and it's main
+ dangersome to handle on the half-cock. That's why I didn't leave 'im on
+ the horse outside!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sound of his voice and occasional accent a flash of intelligence
+ relieved the editor's mind. He remembered that twenty miles away, in the
+ illimitable vista from his windows, lay a settlement of English
+ north-country miners, who, while faithfully adopting the methods, customs,
+ and even slang of the Californians, retained many of their native
+ peculiarities. The gun he carried on his knee, however, was evidently part
+ of the Californian imitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I do anything for you?&rdquo; said the editor blandly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay! I've coom here to bill ma woife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;don't think I understand,&rdquo; hesitated the editor, with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've coom here to get ye to put into your paaper a warnin', a notiss,
+ that onless she returns to my house in four weeks, I'll have nowt to do
+ wi' her again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said the editor, now perfectly reassured, &ldquo;you want an
+ advertisement? That's the business of the foreman; I'll call him.&rdquo; He was
+ rising from his seat when the stranger laid a heavy hand on his shoulder
+ and gently forced him down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Noa, lad! I don't want noa foreman nor understrappers to take this job. I
+ want to talk it over wi' you. Sabe? My woife she bin up and awaa these six
+ months. We had a bit of difference, that ain't here nor there, but she
+ skedaddled outer my house. I want to give her fair warning, and let her
+ know I ain't payin' any debts o' hers arter this notiss, and I ain't
+ takin' her back arter four weeks from date.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the editor glibly. &ldquo;What's your wife's name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eliza Jane Dimmidge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good,&rdquo; continued the editor, scribbling on the paper before him;
+ &ldquo;something like this will do: 'Whereas my wife, Eliza Jane Dimmidge,
+ having left my bed and board without just cause or provocation, this is to
+ give notice that I shall not be responsible for any debts of her
+ contracting on or after this date.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye must be a lawyer,&rdquo; said Mr. Dimmidge admiringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an old enough form of advertisement, and the remark showed
+ incontestably that Mr. Dimmidge was not a native; but the editor smiled
+ patronizingly and went on: &ldquo;'And I further give notice that if she does
+ not return within the period of four weeks from this date, I shall take
+ such proceedings for relief as the law affords.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Coom, lad, I didn't say THAT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you said you wouldn't take her back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you can't prevent her without legal proceedings. She's your wife. But
+ you needn't take proceedings, you know. It's only a warning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Dimmidge nodded approvingly. &ldquo;That's so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll want it published for four weeks, until date?&rdquo; asked the editor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mebbe longer, lad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor wrote &ldquo;till forbid&rdquo; in the margin of the paper and smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How big will it be?&rdquo; said Mr. Dimmidge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor took up a copy of the &ldquo;Clarion&rdquo; and indicated about an inch of
+ space. Mr. Dimmidge's face fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want it bigger,&mdash;in large letters, like a play-card,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;That's no good for a warning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can have half a column or a whole column if you like,&rdquo; said the
+ editor airily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll take a whole one,&rdquo; said Mr. Dimmidge simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor laughed. &ldquo;Why! it would cost you a hundred dollars.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll take it,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Dimmidge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said the editor gravely, &ldquo;the same notice in a small space will
+ serve your purpose and be quite legal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never you mind that, lad! It's the looks of the thing I'm arter, and not
+ the expense. I'll take that column.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor called in the foreman and showed him the copy. &ldquo;Can you display
+ that so as to fill a column?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foreman grasped the situation promptly. It would be big business for
+ the paper. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said meditatively, &ldquo;that bold-faced election type
+ will do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Dimmidge's face brightened. The expression &ldquo;bold-faced&rdquo; pleased him.
+ &ldquo;That's it! I told you. I want to bill her in a portion of the paper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might put in a cut,&rdquo; said the foreman suggestively; &ldquo;something like
+ this.&rdquo; He took a venerable woodcut from the case. I grieve to say it was
+ one which, until the middle of the present century, was common enough in
+ the newspaper offices in the Southwest. It showed the running figure of a
+ negro woman carrying her personal property in a knotted handkerchief slung
+ from a stick over her shoulder, and was supposed to represent &ldquo;a fugitive
+ slave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Dimmidge's eyes brightened. &ldquo;I'll take that, too. It's a little
+ dark-complected for Mrs. P., but it will do. Now roon away, lad,&rdquo; he said
+ to the foreman, as he quietly pushed him into the outer office again and
+ closed the door. Then, facing the surprised editor, he said, &ldquo;Theer's
+ another notiss I want ye to put in your paper; but that's atween US. Not a
+ word to THEM,&rdquo; he indicated the banished foreman with a jerk of his thumb.
+ &ldquo;Sabe? I want you to put this in another part o' your paper, quite
+ innocent-like, ye know.&rdquo; He drew from his pocket a gray wallet, and taking
+ out a slip of paper read from it gravely, &ldquo;'If this should meet the eye of
+ R. B., look out for M. J. D. He is on your track. When this you see write
+ a line to E. J. D., Elktown Post Office.' I want this to go in as
+ 'Personal and Private'&mdash;sabe?&mdash;like them notisses in the big
+ 'Frisco papers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the editor, laying it aside. &ldquo;It shall go in the same issue
+ in another column.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently Mr. Dimmidge expected something more than this reply, for after
+ a moment's hesitation he said with an odd smile:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye ain't seein' the meanin' o' that, lad?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the editor lightly; &ldquo;but I suppose R. B. does, and it isn't
+ intended that any one else should.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mebbe it is, and mebbe it isn't,&rdquo; said Mr. Dimmidge, with a
+ self-satisfied air. &ldquo;I don't mind saying atween us that R. B. is the man
+ as I've suspicioned as havin' something to do with my wife goin' away; and
+ ye see, if he writes to E. J. D.&mdash;that's my wife's initials&mdash;at
+ Elktown, I'LL get that letter and so make sure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose your wife goes there first, or sends?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I'll ketch her or her messenger. Ye see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor did not see fit to oppose any argument to this phenomenal
+ simplicity, and Mr. Dimmidge, after settling his bill with the foreman,
+ and enjoining the editor to the strictest secrecy regarding the origin of
+ the &ldquo;personal notice,&rdquo; took up his gun and departed, leaving the treasury
+ of the &ldquo;Clarion&rdquo; unprecedentedly enriched, and the editor to his proofs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The paper duly appeared the next morning with the column advertisement,
+ the personal notice, and the weighty editorial on the wagon road. There
+ was a singular demand for the paper, the edition was speedily exhausted,
+ and the editor was proportionately flattered, although he was surprised to
+ receive neither praise nor criticism from his subscribers. Before evening,
+ however, he learned to his astonishment that the excitement was caused by
+ the column advertisement. Nobody knew Mr. Dimmidge, nor his domestic
+ infelicities, and the editor and foreman, being equally in the dark, took
+ refuge in a mysterious and impressive evasion of all inquiry. Never since
+ the last San Francisco Vigilance Committee had the office been so
+ besieged. The editor, foreman, and even the apprentice, were buttonholed
+ and &ldquo;treated&rdquo; at the bar, but to no effect. All that could be learned was
+ that it was a bona fide advertisement, for which one hundred dollars had
+ been received! There were great discussions and conflicting theories as to
+ whether the value of the wife, or the husband's anxiety to get rid of her,
+ justified the enormous expense and ostentatious display. She was supposed
+ to be an exceedingly beautiful woman by some, by others a perfect Sycorax;
+ in one breath Mr. Dimmidge was a weak, uxorious spouse, wasting his
+ substance on a creature who did not care for him, and in another a
+ maddened, distracted, henpecked man, content to purchase peace and rest at
+ any price. Certainly, never was advertisement more effective in its
+ publicity, or cheaper in proportion to the circulation it commanded. It
+ was copied throughout the whole Pacific slope; mighty San Francisco papers
+ described its size and setting under the attractive headline, &ldquo;How they
+ Advertise a Wife in the Mountains!&rdquo; It reappeared in the Eastern journals,
+ under the title of &ldquo;Whimsicalities of the Western Press.&rdquo; It was believed
+ to have crossed to England as a specimen of &ldquo;Transatlantic Savagery.&rdquo; The
+ real editor of the &ldquo;Clarion&rdquo; awoke one morning, in San Francisco, to find
+ his paper famous. Its advertising columns were eagerly sought for; he at
+ once advanced the rates. People bought successive issues to gaze upon this
+ monumental record of extravagance. A singular idea, which, however,
+ brought further fortune to the paper, was advanced by an astute critic at
+ the Eureka Saloon. &ldquo;My opinion, gentlemen, is that the whole blamed thing
+ is a bluff! There ain't no Mr. Dimmidge; there ain't no Mrs. Dimmidge;
+ there ain't no desertion! The whole rotten thing is an ADVERTISEMENT o'
+ suthin'! Ye'll find afore ye get through with it that that there wife
+ won't come back until that blamed husband buys Somebody's Soap, or treats
+ her to Somebody's particular Starch or Patent Medicine! Ye jest watch and
+ see!&rdquo; The idea was startling, and seized upon the mercantile mind. The
+ principal merchant of the town, and purveyor to the mining settlements
+ beyond, appeared the next morning at the office of the &ldquo;Clarion.&rdquo; &ldquo;Ye
+ wouldn't mind puttin' this 'ad' in a column alongside o' the Dimmidge one,
+ would ye?&rdquo; The young editor glanced at it, and then, with a serpent-like
+ sagacity, veiled, however, by the suavity of the dove, pointed out that
+ the original advertiser might think it called his bona fides into question
+ and withdraw his advertisement. &ldquo;But if we secured you by an offer of
+ double the amount per column?&rdquo; urged the merchant. &ldquo;That,&rdquo; responded the
+ locum tenens, &ldquo;was for the actual editor and proprietor in San Francisco
+ to determine. He would telegraph.&rdquo; He did so. The response was, &ldquo;Put it
+ in.&rdquo; Whereupon in the next issue, side by side with Mr. Dimmidge's
+ protracted warning, appeared a column with the announcement, in large
+ letters, &ldquo;WE HAVEN'T LOST ANY WIFE, but WE are prepared to furnish the
+ following goods at a lower rate than any other advertiser in the county,&rdquo;
+ followed by the usual price list of the merchant's wares. There was an
+ unprecedented demand for that issue. The reputation of the &ldquo;Clarion,&rdquo; both
+ as a shrewd advertising medium and a comic paper, was established at once.
+ For a few days the editor waited with some apprehension for a remonstrance
+ from the absent Dimmidge, but none came. Whether Mr. Dimmidge recognized
+ that this new advertisement gave extra publicity to his own, or that he
+ was already on the track of the fugitive, the editor did not know. The few
+ curious citizens who had, early in the excitement, penetrated the
+ settlement of the English miners twenty miles away in search of
+ information, found that Mr. Dimmidge had gone away, and that Mrs. Dimmidge
+ had NEVER resided there with him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six weeks passed. The limit of Mr. Dimmidge's advertisement had been
+ reached, and, as it was not renewed, it had passed out of the pages of the
+ &ldquo;Clarion,&rdquo; and with it the merchant's advertisement in the next column.
+ The excitement had subsided, although its influence was still felt in the
+ circulation of the paper and its advertising popularity. The temporary
+ editor was also nearing the limit of his incumbency, but had so far
+ participated in the good fortune of the &ldquo;Clarion&rdquo; as to receive an offer
+ from one of the San Francisco dailies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a warm night, and he was alone in his sanctum. The rest of the
+ building was dark and deserted, and his solitary light, flashing out
+ through the open window, fell upon the nearer pines and was lost in the
+ dark, indefinable slope below. He had reached the sanctum by the rear, and
+ a door which he also left open to enjoy the freshness of the aromatic air.
+ Nor did it in the least mar his privacy. Rather the solitude of the great
+ woods without seemed to enter through that door and encompassed him with
+ its protecting loneliness. There was occasionally a faint &ldquo;peep&rdquo; in the
+ scant eaves, or a &ldquo;pat-pat,&rdquo; ending in a frightened scurry across the
+ roof, or the slow flap of a heavy wing in the darkness below. These gentle
+ disturbances did not, however, interrupt his work on &ldquo;The True Functions
+ of the County Newspaper,&rdquo; the editorial on which he was engaged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently a more distinct rustling against the straggling blackberry
+ bushes beside the door attracted his attention. It was followed by a light
+ tapping against the side of the house. The editor started and turned
+ quickly towards the open door. Two outside steps led to the ground.
+ Standing upon the lower one was a woman. The upper part of her figure,
+ illuminated by the light from the door, was thrown into greater relief by
+ the dark background of the pines. Her face was unknown to him, but it was
+ a pleasant one, marked by a certain good-humored determination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I come in?&rdquo; she said confidently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said the editor. &ldquo;I am working here alone because it is so
+ quiet.&rdquo; He thought he would precipitate some explanation from her by
+ excusing himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's the reason why I came,&rdquo; she said, with a quiet smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came up the next step and entered the room. She was plainly but neatly
+ dressed, and now that her figure was revealed he saw that she was wearing
+ a linsey-woolsey riding-skirt, and carried a serviceable rawhide whip in
+ her cotton-gauntleted hand. She took the chair he offered her and sat down
+ sideways on it, her whip hand now also holding up her skirt, and
+ permitting a hem of clean white petticoat and a smart, well-shaped boot to
+ be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't remember to have had the pleasure of seeing you in Calaveras
+ before,&rdquo; said the editor tentatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I never was here before,&rdquo; she said composedly, &ldquo;but you've heard
+ enough of me, I reckon. I'm Mrs. Dimmidge.&rdquo; She threw one hand over the
+ back of the chair, and with the other tapped her riding-whip on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor started. Mrs. Dimmidge! Then she was not a myth. An absurd
+ similarity between her attitude with the whip and her husband's entrance
+ with his gun six weeks before forced itself upon him and made her an
+ invincible presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you have returned to your husband?&rdquo; he said hesitatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not much!&rdquo; she returned, with a slight curl of her lip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you read his advertisement?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw that column of fool nonsense he put in your paper&mdash;ef that's
+ what you mean,&rdquo; she said with decision, &ldquo;but I didn't come here to see HIM&mdash;but
+ YOU.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor looked at her with a forced smile, but a vague misgiving. He
+ was alone at night in a deserted part of the settlement, with a plump,
+ self-possessed woman who had a contralto voice, a horsewhip, and&mdash;he
+ could not help feeling&mdash;an evident grievance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To see me?&rdquo; he repeated, with a faint attempt at gallantry. &ldquo;You are
+ paying me a great compliment, but really&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I tell you I've come three thousand miles from Kansas straight here
+ without stopping, ye kin reckon it's so,&rdquo; she replied firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three thousand miles!&rdquo; echoed the editor wonderingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. Three thousand miles from my own folks' home in Kansas, where six
+ years ago I married Mr. Dimmidge,&mdash;a British furriner as could
+ scarcely make himself understood in any Christian language! Well, he got
+ round me and dad, allowin' he was a reg'lar out-and-out profeshnal miner,&mdash;had
+ lived in mines ever since he was a boy; and so, not knowin' what kind o'
+ mines, and dad just bilin' over with the gold fever, we were married and
+ kem across the plains to Californy. He was a good enough man to look at,
+ but it warn't three months before I discovered that he allowed a wife was
+ no better nor a nigger slave, and he the master. That made me open my
+ eyes; but then, as he didn't drink, and didn't gamble, and didn't swear,
+ and was a good provider and laid by money, why I shifted along with him as
+ best I could. We drifted down the first year to Sonora, at Red Dog, where
+ there wasn't another woman. Well, I did the nigger slave business,&mdash;never
+ stirring out o' the settlement, never seein' a town or a crowd o' decent
+ people,&mdash;and he did the lord and master! We played that game for two
+ years, and I got tired. But when at last he allowed he'd go up to Elktown
+ Hill, where there was a passel o' his countrymen at work, with never a
+ sign o' any other folks, and leave me alone at Red Dog until he fixed up a
+ place for me at Elktown Hill,&mdash;I kicked! I gave him fair warning! I
+ did as other nigger slaves did,&mdash;I ran away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A recollection of the wretched woodcut which Mr. Dimmidge had selected to
+ personify his wife flashed upon the editor with a new meaning. Yet perhaps
+ she had not seen it, and had only read a copy of the advertisement. What
+ could she want? The &ldquo;Calaveras Clarion,&rdquo; although a &ldquo;Palladium&rdquo; and a
+ &ldquo;Sentinel upon the Heights of Freedom&rdquo; in reference to wagon roads, was
+ not a redresser of domestic wrongs,&mdash;except through its advertising
+ columns! Her next words intensified that suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've come here to put an advertisement in your paper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor heaved a sigh of relief, as once before. &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; he said
+ briskly. &ldquo;But that's another department of the paper, and the printers
+ have gone home. Come to-morrow morning early.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow morning I shall be miles away,&rdquo; she said decisively, &ldquo;and what
+ I want done has got to be done NOW! I don't want to see no printers; I
+ don't want ANYBODY to know I've been here but you. That's why I kem here
+ at night, and rode all the way from Sawyer's Station, and wouldn't take
+ the stage-coach. And when we've settled about the advertisement, I'm going
+ to mount my horse, out thar in the bushes, and scoot outer the
+ settlement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; said the editor resignedly. &ldquo;Of course I can deliver your
+ instructions to the foreman. And now&mdash;let me see&mdash;I suppose you
+ wish to intimate in a personal notice to your husband that you've
+ returned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothin' o' the kind!&rdquo; said Mrs. Dimmidge coolly. &ldquo;I want to placard him
+ as he did me. I've got it all written out here. Sabe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took from her pocket a folded paper, and spreading it out on the
+ editor's desk, with a certain pride of authorship read as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whereas my husband, Micah J. Dimmidge, having given out that I have left
+ his bed and board,&mdash;the same being a bunk in a log cabin and pork and
+ molasses three times a day,&mdash;and having advertised that he'd pay no
+ debts of MY contractin',&mdash;which, as thar ain't any, might be easier
+ collected than debts of his own contractin',&mdash;this is to certify that
+ unless he returns from Elktown Hill to his only home in Sonora in one week
+ from date, payin' the cost of this advertisement, I'll know the reason
+ why.&mdash;Eliza Jane Dimmidge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thar,&rdquo; she added, drawing a long breath, &ldquo;put that in a column of the
+ 'Clarion,' same size as the last, and let it work, and that's all I want
+ of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A column?&rdquo; repeated the editor. &ldquo;Do you know the cost is very expensive,
+ and I COULD put it in a single paragraph?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon I kin pay the same as Mr. Dimmidge did for HIS,&rdquo; said the lady
+ complacently. &ldquo;I didn't see your paper myself, but the paper as copied it&mdash;one
+ of them big New York dailies&mdash;said that it took up a whole column.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor breathed more freely; she had not seen the infamous woodcut
+ which her husband had selected. At the same moment he was struck with a
+ sense of retribution, justice, and compensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would you,&rdquo; he asked hesitatingly,&mdash;&ldquo;would you like it illustrated&mdash;by
+ a cut?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With which?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait a moment; I'll show you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went into the dark composing-room, lit a candle, and rummaging in a
+ drawer sacred to weather-beaten, old-fashioned electrotyped advertising
+ symbols of various trades, finally selected one and brought it to Mrs.
+ Dimmidge. It represented a bare and exceedingly stalwart arm wielding a
+ large hammer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your husband being a miner,&mdash;a quartz miner,&mdash;would that do?&rdquo;
+ he asked. (It had been previously used to advertise a blacksmith, a
+ gold-beater, and a stone-mason.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady examined it critically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It does look a little like Micah's arm,&rdquo; she said meditatively. &ldquo;Well&mdash;you
+ kin put it in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor was so well pleased with his success that he must needs make
+ another suggestion. &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; he said ingenuously, &ldquo;that you don't want
+ to answer the 'Personal'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Personal'?&rdquo; she repeated quickly, &ldquo;what's that? I ain't seen no
+ 'Personal.'&rdquo; The editor saw his blunder. She, of course, had never seen
+ Mr. Dimmidge's artful &ldquo;Personal;&rdquo; THAT the big dailies naturally had not
+ noticed nor copied. But it was too late to withdraw now. He brought out a
+ file of the &ldquo;Clarion,&rdquo; and snipping out the paragraph with his scissors,
+ laid it before the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stared at it with wrinkled brows and a darkening face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And THIS was in the same paper?&mdash;put in by Mr. Dimmidge?&rdquo; she asked
+ breathlessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor, somewhat alarmed, stammered &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; But the next moment he was
+ reassured. The wrinkles disappeared, a dozen dimples broke out where they
+ had been, and the determined, matter-of-fact Mrs. Dimmidge burst into a
+ fit of rosy merriment. Again and again she laughed, shaking the building,
+ startling the sedate, melancholy woods beyond, until the editor himself
+ laughed in sheer vacant sympathy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lordy!&rdquo; she said at last, gasping, and wiping the laughter from her wet
+ eyes. &ldquo;I never thought of THAT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; explained the editor smilingly; &ldquo;of course you didn't. Don't you
+ see, the papers that copied the big advertisement never saw that little
+ paragraph, or if they did, they never connected the two together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, it ain't that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dimmidge, trying to regain her composure
+ and holding her sides. &ldquo;It's that blessed DEAR old dunderhead of a
+ Dimmidge I'm thinking of. That gets me. I see it all now. Only, sakes
+ alive! I never thought THAT of him. Oh, it's just too much!&rdquo; and she again
+ relapsed behind her handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I suppose you don't want to reply to it,&rdquo; said the editor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her laughter instantly ceased. &ldquo;Don't I?&rdquo; she said, wiping her face into
+ its previous complacent determination. &ldquo;Well, young man, I reckon that's
+ just what I WANT to do! Now, wait a moment; let's see what he said,&rdquo; she
+ went on, taking up and reperusing the &ldquo;Personal&rdquo; paragraph. &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo;
+ she went on, after a moment's silent composition with moving lips, &ldquo;you
+ just put these lines in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor took up his pencil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Mr. J. D. Dimmidge.&mdash;Hope you're still on R. B.'s tracks. Keep
+ there!&mdash;E. J. D.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor wrote down the line, and then, remembering Mr. Dimmidge's
+ voluntary explanation of HIS &ldquo;Personal,&rdquo; waited with some confidence for a
+ like frankness from Mrs. Dimmidge. But he was mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You think that he&mdash;R. B.&mdash;or Mr. Dimmidge&mdash;will understand
+ this?&rdquo; he at last asked tentatively. &ldquo;Is it enough?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite enough,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dimmidge emphatically. She took a roll of
+ greenbacks from her pocket, selected a hundred-dollar bill and then a
+ five, and laid them before the editor. &ldquo;Young man,&rdquo; she said, with a
+ certain demure gravity, &ldquo;you've done me a heap o' good. I never spent
+ money with more satisfaction than this. I never thought much o' the 'power
+ o' the Press,' as you call it, afore. But this has been a right
+ comfortable visit, and I'm glad I ketched you alone. But you understand
+ one thing: this yer visit, and WHO I am, is betwixt you and me only.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course I must say that the advertisement was AUTHORIZED,&rdquo; returned the
+ editor. &ldquo;I'm only the temporary editor. The proprietor is away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So much the better,&rdquo; said the lady complacently. &ldquo;You just say you found
+ it on your desk with the money; but don't you give me away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can promise you that the secret of your personal visit is safe with
+ me,&rdquo; said the young man, with a bow, as Mrs. Dimmidge rose. &ldquo;Let me see
+ you to your horse,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;It's quite dark in the woods.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can see well enough alone, and it's just as well you shouldn't know HOW
+ I kem or HOW I went away. Enough for you to know that I'll be miles away
+ before that paper comes out. So stay where you are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She pressed his hand frankly and firmly, gathered up her riding-skirt,
+ slipped backwards to the door, and the next moment rustled away into the
+ darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early the next morning the editor handed Mrs. Dimmidge's advertisement,
+ and the woodcut he had selected, to his foreman. He was purposely brief in
+ his directions, so as to avoid inquiry, and retired to his sanctum. In the
+ space of a few moments the foreman entered with a slight embarrassment of
+ manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'll excuse my speaking to you, sir,&rdquo; he said, with a singular mixture
+ of humility and cunning. &ldquo;It's no business of mine, I know; but I thought
+ I ought to tell you that this yer kind o' thing won't pay any more,&mdash;it's
+ about played out!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think I understand you,&rdquo; said the editor loftily, but with an
+ inward misgiving. &ldquo;You don't mean to say that a regular, actual
+ advertisement&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course, I know all that,&rdquo; said the foreman, with a peculiar smile;
+ &ldquo;and I'm ready to back you up in it, and so's the boy; but it won't pay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It HAS paid a hundred and five dollars,&rdquo; said the editor, taking the
+ notes from his pocket; &ldquo;so I'd advise you to simply attend to your duty
+ and set it up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A look of surprise, followed, however, by a kind of pitying smile, passed
+ over the foreman's face. &ldquo;Of course, sir, THAT'S all right, and you know
+ your own business; but if you think that the new advertisement will pay
+ this time as the other one did, and whoop up another column from an
+ advertiser, I'm afraid you'll slip up. It's a little 'off color' now,&mdash;not
+ 'up to date,'&mdash;if it ain't a regular 'back number,' as you'll see.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meantime I'll dispense with your advice,&rdquo; said the editor curtly, &ldquo;and I
+ think you had better let our subscribers and advertisers do the same, or
+ the 'Clarion' might also be obliged to dispense with your SERVICES.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain't no blab,&rdquo; said the foreman, in an aggrieved manner, &ldquo;and I don't
+ intend to give the show away even if it don't PAY. But I thought I'd tell
+ you, because I know the folks round here better than you do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was right. No sooner had the advertisement appeared than the editor
+ found that everybody believed it to be a sheer invention of his own to
+ &ldquo;once more boom&rdquo; the &ldquo;Clarion.&rdquo; If they had doubted MR. Dimmidge, they
+ utterly rejected MRS. Dimmidge as an advertiser! It was a stale joke that
+ nobody would follow up; and on the heels of this came a letter from the
+ editor-in-chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MY DEAR BOY,&mdash;You meant well, I know, but the second Dimmidge &ldquo;ad&rdquo;
+ was a mistake. Still, it was a big bluff of yours to show the money, and I
+ send you back your hundred dollars, hoping you won't &ldquo;do it again.&rdquo; Of
+ course you'll have to keep the advertisement in the paper for two issues,
+ just as if it were a real thing, and it's lucky that there's just now no
+ pressure in our columns. You might have told a better story than that
+ hogwash about your finding the &ldquo;ad&rdquo; and a hundred dollars lying loose on
+ your desk one morning. It was rather thin, and I don't wonder the foreman
+ kicked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young editor was in despair. At first he thought of writing to Mrs.
+ Dimmidge at the Elktown Post-Office, asking her to relieve him of his vow
+ of secrecy; but his pride forbade. There was a humorous concern, not
+ without a touch of pity, in the faces of his contributors as he passed; a
+ few affected to believe in the new advertisement, and asked him vague,
+ perfunctory questions about it. His position was trying, and he was not
+ sorry when the term of his engagement expired the next week, and he left
+ Calaveras to take his new position on the San Francisco paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was standing in the saloon of the Sacramento boat when he felt a sudden
+ heavy pressure on his shoulder, and looking round sharply, beheld not only
+ the black-bearded face of Mr. Dimmidge, lit up by a smile, but beside it
+ the beaming, buxom face of Mrs. Dimmidge, overflowing with good-humor.
+ Still a little sore from his past experience, he was about to address them
+ abruptly, when he was utterly vanquished by the hearty pressure of their
+ hands and the unmistakable look of gratitude in their eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was just saying to 'Lizy Jane,&rdquo; began Mr. Dimmidge breathlessly, &ldquo;if I
+ could only meet that young man o' the 'Clarion' what brought us together
+ again&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You'd be willin' to pay four times the amount we both paid him,&rdquo;
+ interpolated the laughing Mrs. Dimmidge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I didn't bring you together,&rdquo; burst out the dazed young man, &ldquo;and I'd
+ like to know, in the name of Heaven, what brought you together now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you see, lad,&rdquo; said the imperturbable Mr. Dimmidge, &ldquo;'Lizy Jane and
+ myself had qua'lled, and we just unpacked our fool nonsense in your paper
+ and let the hull world know it! And we both felt kinder skeert and shamed
+ like, and it looked such small hogwash, and of so little account, for all
+ the talk it made, that we kinder felt lonely as two separated fools that
+ really ought to share their foolishness together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that ain't all,&rdquo; said Mrs. Dimmidge, with a sly glance at her spouse,
+ &ldquo;for I found out from that 'Personal' you showed me that this particular
+ old fool was actooally jealous!&mdash;JEALOUS!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then?&rdquo; said the editor impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then I KNEW he loved me all the time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Even to the eye of the most inexperienced traveler there was no doubt that
+ Buena Vista was a &ldquo;played-out&rdquo; mining camp. There, seamed and scarred by
+ hydraulic engines, was the old hillside, over whose denuded surface the
+ grass had begun to spring again in fitful patches; there were the
+ abandoned heaps of tailings already blackened by sun and rain, and worn
+ into mounds like ruins of masonry; there were the waterless ditches, like
+ giant graves, and the pools of slumgullion, now dried into shining, glazed
+ cement. There were two or three wooden &ldquo;stores,&rdquo; from which the windows
+ and doors had been taken and conveyed to the newer settlement of Wynyard's
+ Gulch. Four or five buildings that still were inhabited&mdash;the
+ blacksmith's shop, the post-office, a pioneer's cabin, and the old hotel
+ and stage-office&mdash;only accented the general desolation. The latter
+ building had a remoteness of prosperity far beyond the others, having been
+ a wayside Spanish-American posada, with adobe walls of two feet in
+ thickness, that shamed the later shells of half-inch plank, which were
+ slowly warping and cracking like dried pods in the oven-like heat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proprietor of this building, Colonel Swinger, had been looked upon by
+ the community as a person quite as remote, old-fashioned, and inconsistent
+ with present progress as the house itself. He was an old Virginian, who
+ had emigrated from his decaying plantation on the James River only to find
+ the slaves, which he had brought with him, freed men when they touched
+ Californian soil; to be driven by Northern progress and &ldquo;smartness&rdquo; out of
+ the larger cities into the mountains, to fix himself at last, with the
+ hopeless fatuity of his race, upon an already impoverished settlement; to
+ sink his scant capital in hopeless shafts and ledges, and finally to take
+ over the decaying hostelry of Buena Vista, with its desultory custom and
+ few, lingering, impecunious guests. Here, too, his old Virginian ideas of
+ hospitality were against his financial success; he could not dun nor turn
+ from his door those unfortunate prospectors whom the ebbing fortunes of
+ Buena Vista had left stranded by his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Swinger was sitting in a wicker-work rocking-chair on the veranda
+ of his hotel&mdash;sipping a mint julep which he held in his hand, while
+ he gazed into the dusty distance. Nothing could have convinced him that he
+ was not performing a serious part of his duty as hotel-keeper in this
+ attitude, even though there were no travelers expected, and the road at
+ this hour of the day was deserted. On a bench at his side Larry Hawkins
+ stretched his lazy length,&mdash;one foot dropped on the veranda, and one
+ arm occasionally groping under the bench for his own tumbler of
+ refreshment. Apart from this community of occupation, there was apparently
+ no interchange of sentiment between the pair. The silence had continued
+ for some moments, when the colonel put down his glass and gazed earnestly
+ into the distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seein' anything?&rdquo; remarked the man on the bench, who had sleepily
+ regarded him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the colonel, &ldquo;that is&mdash;it's only Dick Ruggles crossin' the
+ road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thought you looked a little startled, ez if you'd seen that ar wanderin'
+ stranger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I see that wandering stranger, sah,&rdquo; said the colonel decisively, &ldquo;I
+ won't be sittin' long in this yer chyar. I'll let him know in about ten
+ seconds that I don't harbor any vagrants prowlin' about like poor whites
+ or free niggers on my propahty, sah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All the same, I kinder wish ye did see him, for you'd be settled in YOUR
+ mind and I'd be easier in MINE, ef you found out what he was doin' round
+ yer, or ye had to admit that it wasn't no LIVIN' man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; said the colonel, testily facing around in his chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His companion also altered his attitude by dropping his other foot to the
+ floor, sitting up, and leaning lazily forward with his hands clasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look yer, colonel. When you took this place, I felt I didn't have no call
+ to tell ye all I know about it, nor to pizen yer mind by any darned fool
+ yarns I mout hev heard. Ye know it was one o' them old Spanish haciendas?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said the colonel loftily, &ldquo;that it was held by a grant from
+ Charles the Fifth of Spain, just as my propahty on the James River was
+ given to my people by King James of England, sah!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That ez as may be,&rdquo; returned his companion, in lazy indifference; &ldquo;though
+ I reckon that Charles the Fifth of Spain and King James of England ain't
+ got much to do with what I'm goin' to tell ye. Ye see, I was here long
+ afore YOUR time, or any of the boys that hev now cleared out; and at that
+ time the hacienda belonged to a man named Juan Sobriente. He was that kind
+ o' fool that he took no stock in mining. When the boys were whoopin' up
+ the place and finding the color everywhere, and there was a hundred men
+ working down there in the gulch, he was either ridin' round lookin' up the
+ wild horses he owned, or sittin' with two or three lazy peons and Injins
+ that was fed and looked arter by the priests. Gosh! now I think of it, it
+ was mighty like YOU when you first kem here with your niggers. That's
+ curious, too, ain't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had stopped, gazing with an odd, superstitious wonderment at the
+ colonel, as if overcome by this not very remarkable coincidence. The
+ colonel, overlooking or totally oblivious to its somewhat uncomplimentary
+ significance, simply said, &ldquo;Go on. What about him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, ez I was sayin', he warn't in it nohow, but kept on his reg'lar way
+ when the boom was the biggest. Some of the boys allowed it was mighty
+ oncivil for him to stand off like that, and others&mdash;when he refused a
+ big pile for his hacienda and the garden, that ran right into the
+ gold-bearing ledge&mdash;war for lynching him and driving him outer the
+ settlement. But as he had a pretty darter or niece livin' with him, and,
+ except for his partickler cussedness towards mining, was kinder peaceable
+ and perlite, they thought better of it. Things went along like this, until
+ one day the boys noticed&mdash;particklerly the boys that had slipped up
+ on their luck&mdash;that old man Sobriente was gettin' rich,&mdash;had
+ stocked a ranch over on the Divide, and had given some gold candlesticks
+ to the mission church. That would have been only human nature and
+ business, ef he'd had any during them flush times; but he hadn't. This
+ kinder puzzled them. They tackled the peons,&mdash;his niggers,&mdash;but
+ it was all 'No sabe.' They tackled another man,&mdash;a kind of half-breed
+ Kanaka, who, except the priest, was the only man who came to see him, and
+ was supposed to be mighty sweet on the darter or niece,&mdash;but they
+ didn't even get the color outer HIM. Then the first thing we knowed was
+ that old Sobriente was found dead in the well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the well, sah!&rdquo; said the colonel, starting up. &ldquo;The well on my
+ propahty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said his companion. &ldquo;The old well that was afterwards shut up. Yours
+ was dug by the last tenant, Jack Raintree, who allowed that he didn't want
+ to 'take any Sobriente in his reg'lar whiskey and water.' Well, the
+ half-breed Kanaka cleared out after the old man's death, and so did that
+ darter or niece; and the church, to whom old Sobriente had left this
+ house, let it to Raintree for next to nothin'.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see what all that has got to do with that wandering tramp,&rdquo; said
+ the colonel, who was by no means pleased with this history of his
+ property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll tell ye. A few days after Raintree took it over, he was lookin'
+ round the garden, which old Sobriente had always kept shut up agin
+ strangers, and he finds a lot of dried-up 'slumgullion' * scattered all
+ about the borders and beds, just as if the old man had been using it for
+ fertilizing. Well, Raintree ain't no fool; he allowed the old man wasn't
+ one, either; and he knew that slumgullion wasn't worth no more than mud
+ for any good it would do the garden. So he put this yer together with
+ Sobriente's good luck, and allowed to himself that the old coyote had been
+ secretly gold-washin' all the while he seemed to be standin' off agin it!
+ But where was the mine? Whar did he get the gold? That's what got
+ Raintree. He hunted all over the garden, prospected every part of it,&mdash;ye
+ kin see the holes yet,&mdash;but he never even got the color!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * That is, a viscid cement-like refuse of gold-washing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He paused, and then, as the colonel made an impatient gesture, he went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, one night just afore you took the place, and when Raintree was
+ gettin' just sick of it, he happened to be walkin' in the garden. He was
+ puzzlin' his brain agin to know how old Sobriente made his pile, when all
+ of a suddenst he saw suthin' a-movin' in the brush beside the house. He
+ calls out, thinkin' it was one of the boys, but got no answer. Then he
+ goes to the bushes, and a tall figger, all in black, starts out afore him.
+ He couldn't see any face, for its head was covered with a hood, but he saw
+ that it held suthin' like a big cross clasped agin its breast. This made
+ him think it was one them priests, until he looks agin and sees that it
+ wasn't no cross it was carryin,' but a PICKAXE! He makes a jump towards
+ it, but it vanished! He traipsed over the hull garden,&mdash;went though
+ ev'ry bush,&mdash;but it was clean gone. Then the hull thing flashed upon
+ him with a cold shiver. The old man bein' found dead in the well! the
+ goin' away of the half-breed and the girl! the findin' o' that
+ slumgullion! The old man HAD made a strike in that garden, the half-breed
+ had discovered his secret and murdered him, throwin' him down the well! It
+ war no LIVIN' man that he had seen, but the ghost of old Sobriente!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The colonel emptied the remaining contents of his glass at a single gulp,
+ and sat up. &ldquo;It's my opinion, sah, that Raintree had that night more than
+ his usual allowance of corn-juice on board; and it's only a wonder, sah,
+ that he didn't see a few pink alligators and sky-blue snakes at the same
+ time. But what's this got to do with that wanderin' tramp?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They're all the same thing, colonel, and in my opinion that there tramp
+ ain't no more alive than that figger was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But YOU were the one that saw this tramp with your own eyes,&rdquo; retorted
+ the colonel quickly, &ldquo;and you never before allowed it was a spirit!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly! I saw it whar a minit afore nothin' had been standin', and a
+ minit after nothin' stood,&rdquo; said Larry Hawkins, with a certain serious
+ emphasis; &ldquo;but I warn't goin' to say it to ANYBODY, and I warn't goin' to
+ give you and the hacienda away. And ez nobody knew Raintree's story, I
+ jest shut up my head. But you kin bet your life that the man I saw warn't
+ no livin' man!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll see, sah!&rdquo; said the colonel, rising from his chair with his fingers
+ in the armholes of his nankeen waistcoat, &ldquo;ef he ever intrudes on my
+ property again. But look yar! don't ye go sayin' anything of this to
+ Polly,&mdash;you know what women are!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A faint color came into Larry's face; an animation quite different to the
+ lazy deliberation of his previous monologue shone in his eyes, as he said,
+ with a certain rough respect he had not shown before to his companion,
+ &ldquo;That's why I'm tellin' ye, so that ef SHE happened to see anything and
+ got skeert, ye'd know how to reason her out of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Sh!&rdquo; said the colonel, with a warning gesture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young girl had just appeared in the doorway, and now stood leaning
+ against the central pillar that supported it, with one hand above her
+ head, in a lazy attitude strongly suggestive of the colonel's Southern
+ indolence, yet with a grace entirely her own. Indeed, it overcame the
+ negligence of her creased and faded yellow cotton frock and unbuttoned
+ collar, and suggested&mdash;at least to the eyes of ONE man&mdash;the
+ curving and clinging of the jasmine vine against the outer column of the
+ veranda. Larry Hawkins rose awkwardly to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now what are you two men mumblin' and confidin' to each other? You look
+ for all the world like two old women gossips,&rdquo; she said, with languid
+ impertinence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was easy to see that a privileged and recognized autocrat spoke. No one
+ had ever questioned Polly Swinger's right to interrupting, interfering,
+ and saucy criticisms. Secure in the hopeless or chivalrous admiration of
+ the men around her, she had repaid it with a frankness that scorned any
+ coquetry; with an indifference to the ordinary feminine effect or
+ provocation in dress or bearing that was as natural as it was invincible.
+ No one had ever known Polly to &ldquo;fix up&rdquo; for anybody, yet no one ever
+ doubted the effect, if she had. No one had ever rebuked her charming
+ petulance, or wished to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Larry gave a weak, vague laugh. Colonel Swinger as ineffectively assumed a
+ mock parental severity. &ldquo;When you see two gentlemen, miss, discussin'
+ politics together, it ain't behavin' like a lady to interrupt. Better run
+ away and tidy yourself before the stage comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young lady replied to the last innuendo by taking two spirals of soft
+ hair, like &ldquo;corn silk,&rdquo; from her oval cheek, wetting them with her lips,
+ and tucking them behind her ears. Her father's ungentlemanly suggestion
+ being thus disposed of, she returned to her first charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It ain't no politics; you ain't been swearing enough for THAT! Come, now!
+ It's the mysterious stranger ye've been talking about!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both men stared at her with unaffected concern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What do YOU know about any mysterious stranger?&rdquo; demanded her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you suppose you men kin keep a secret,&rdquo; scoffed Polly. &ldquo;Why, Dick
+ Ruggles told me how skeert ye all were over an entire stranger, and he
+ advised me not to wander down the road after dark. I asked him if he
+ thought I was a pickaninny to be frightened by bogies, and that if he
+ hadn't a better excuse for wantin' 'to see me home' from the Injin spring,
+ he might slide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Larry laughed again, albeit a little bitterly, for it seemed to him that
+ the excuse was fully justified; but the colonel said promptly, &ldquo;Dick's a
+ fool, and you might have told him there were worse things to be met on the
+ road than bogies. Run away now, and see that the niggers are on hand when
+ the stage comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two hours later the stage came with a clatter of hoofs and a cloud of red
+ dust, which precipitated itself and a dozen thirsty travelers upon the
+ veranda before the hotel bar-room; it brought also the usual &ldquo;express&rdquo;
+ newspapers and much talk to Colonel Swinger, who always received his
+ guests in a lofty personal fashion at the door, as he might have done in
+ his old Virginian home; but it brought likewise&mdash;marvelous to relate&mdash;an
+ ACTUAL GUEST, who had two trunks and asked for a room! He was evidently a
+ stranger to the ways of Buena Vista, and particularly to those of Colonel
+ Swinger, and at first seemed inclined to resent the social attitude of his
+ host, and his frank and free curiosity. When he, however, found that
+ Colonel Swinger was even better satisfied to give an account of HIS OWN
+ affairs, his family, pedigree, and his present residence, he began to
+ betray some interest. The colonel told him all the news, and would no
+ doubt have even expatiated on his ghostly visitant, had he not prudently
+ concluded that his guest might decline to remain in a haunted inn. The
+ stranger had spoken of staying a week; he had some private mining
+ speculations to watch at Wynyard's Gulch,&mdash;the next settlement, but
+ he did not care to appear openly at the &ldquo;Gulch Hotel.&rdquo; He was a man of
+ thirty, with soft, pleasing features and a singular litheness of movement,
+ which, combined with a nut-brown, gypsy complexion, at first suggested a
+ foreigner. But his dialect, to the colonel's ears, was distinctly that of
+ New England, and to this was added a puritanical and sanctimonious drawl.
+ &ldquo;He looked,&rdquo; said the colonel in after years, &ldquo;like a blank light
+ mulatter, but talked like a blank Yankee parson.&rdquo; For all that, he was
+ acceptable to his host, who may have felt that his reminiscences of his
+ plantation on the James River were palling on Buena Vista ears, and was
+ glad of his new auditor. It was an advertisement, too, of the hotel, and a
+ promise of its future fortunes. &ldquo;Gentlemen having propahty interests at
+ the Gulch, sah, prefer to stay at Buena Vista with another man of
+ propahty, than to trust to those new-fangled papah-collared, gingerbread
+ booths for traders that they call 'hotels' there,&rdquo; he had remarked to some
+ of &ldquo;the boys.&rdquo; In his preoccupation with the new guest, he also became a
+ little neglectful of his old chum and dependent, Larry Hawkins. Nor was
+ this the only circumstance that filled the head of that shiftless loyal
+ retainer of the colonel with bitterness and foreboding. Polly Swinger&mdash;the
+ scornfully indifferent, the contemptuously inaccessible, the coldly
+ capricious and petulant&mdash;was inclined to be polite to the stranger!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact was that Polly, after the fashion of her sex, took it into her
+ pretty head, against all consistency and logic, suddenly to make an
+ exception to her general attitude towards mankind in favor of one
+ individual. The reason-seeking masculine reader will rashly conclude that
+ this individual was the CAUSE as well as the object; but I am satisfied
+ that every fair reader of these pages will instinctively know better. Miss
+ Polly had simply selected the new guest, Mr. Starbuck, to show OTHERS,
+ particularly Larry Hawkins, what she COULD do if she were inclined to be
+ civil. For two days she &ldquo;fixed up&rdquo; her distracting hair at him so that its
+ silken floss encircled her head like a nimbus; she tucked her oval chin
+ into a white fichu instead of a buttonless collar; she appeared at dinner
+ in a newly starched yellow frock! She talked to him with &ldquo;company
+ manners;&rdquo; said she would &ldquo;admire to go to San Francisco,&rdquo; and asked if he
+ knew her old friends the Fauquier girls from &ldquo;Faginia.&rdquo; The colonel was
+ somewhat disturbed; he was glad that his daughter had become less
+ negligent of her personal appearance; he could not but see, with the
+ others, how it enhanced her graces; but he was, with the others, not
+ entirely satisfied with her reasons. And he could not help observing&mdash;what
+ was more or less patent to ALL&mdash;that Starbuck was far from being
+ equally responsive to her attentions, and at times was indifferent and
+ almost uncivil. Nobody seemed to be satisfied with Polly's transformation
+ but herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But eventually she was obliged to assert herself. The third evening after
+ Starbuck's arrival she was going over to the cabin of Aunt Chloe, who not
+ only did the washing for Buena Vista, but assisted Polly in dressmaking.
+ It was not far, and the night was moonlit. As she crossed the garden she
+ saw Starbuck moving in the manzanita bushes beyond; a mischievous light
+ came into her eyes; she had not EXPECTED to meet him, but she had seen him
+ go out, and there were always POSSIBILITIES. To her surprise, however, he
+ merely lifted his hat as she passed, and turned abruptly in another
+ direction. This was more than the little heart-breaker of Buena Vista was
+ accustomed to!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Mr. Starbuck!&rdquo; she called, in her laziest voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned almost impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since you're so civil and pressing, I thought I'd tell you I was just
+ runnin' over to Aunt Chloe's,&rdquo; she said dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think it was hardly the proper thing for a young lady to do at
+ this time of night,&rdquo; he said superciliously. &ldquo;But you know best,&mdash;you
+ know the people here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Polly's cheeks and eyes flamed. &ldquo;Yes, I reckon I do,&rdquo; she said crisply;
+ &ldquo;it's only a STRANGER here would think of being rude. Good-night, Mr.
+ Starbuck!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She tripped away after this Parthian shot, yet feeling, even in her
+ triumph, that the conceited fool seemed actually relieved at her
+ departure! And for the first time she now thought that she had seen
+ something in his face that she did not like! But her lazy independence
+ reasserted itself soon, and half an hour later, when she had left Aunt
+ Chloe's cabin, she had regained her self-esteem. Yet, to avoid meeting him
+ again, she took a longer route home, across the dried ditch and over the
+ bluff, scarred by hydraulics, and so fell, presently, upon the old garden
+ at the point where it adjoined the abandoned diggings. She was quite sure
+ she had escaped a meeting with Starbuck, and was gliding along under the
+ shadow of the pear-trees, when she suddenly stopped. An indescribable
+ terror overcame her as she stared at a spot in the garden, perfectly
+ illuminated by the moonlight not fifty yards from where she stood. For she
+ saw on its surface a human head&mdash;a man's head!&mdash;seemingly on the
+ level of the ground, staring in her direction. A hysterical laugh sprang
+ from her lips, and she caught at the branches above her or she would have
+ fallen! Yet in that moment the head had vanished! The moonlight revealed
+ the empty garden,&mdash;the ground she had gazed at,&mdash;but nothing
+ more!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had never been superstitious. As a child she had heard the negroes
+ talk of &ldquo;the hants,&rdquo;&mdash;that is, &ldquo;the HAUNTS&rdquo; or spirits,&mdash;but had
+ believed it a part of their ignorance, and unworthy a white child,&mdash;the
+ daughter of their master! She had laughed with Dick Ruggles over the
+ illusions of Larry, and had shared her father's contemptuous disbelief of
+ the wandering visitant being anything but a living man; yet she would have
+ screamed for assistance now, only for the greater fear of making her
+ weakness known to Mr. Starbuck, and being dependent upon him for help. And
+ with it came the sudden conviction that HE had seen this awful vision,
+ too. This would account for his impatience of her presence and his
+ rudeness. She felt faint and giddy. Yet after the first shock had passed,
+ her old independence and pride came to her relief. She would go to the
+ spot and examine it. If it were some trick or illusion, she would show her
+ superiority and have the laugh on Starbuck. She set her white teeth,
+ clenched her little hands, and started out into the moonlight. But alas!
+ for women's weakness. The next moment she uttered a scream and almost fell
+ into the arms of Mr. Starbuck, who had stepped out of the shadows beside
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you see you HAVE been frightened,&rdquo; he said, with a strange, forced
+ laugh; &ldquo;but I warned you about going out alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in her fright she could not help seeing that he, too, seemed pale and
+ agitated, at which she recovered her tongue and her self-possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anybody would be frightened by being dogged about under the trees,&rdquo; she
+ said pertly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you called out before you saw me,&rdquo; he said bluntly, &ldquo;as if something
+ had frightened you. That was WHY I came towards you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She knew it was the truth; but as she would not confess to her vision, she
+ fibbed outrageously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frightened,&rdquo; she said, with pale but lofty indignation. &ldquo;What was there
+ to frighten me? I'm not a baby, to think I see a bogie in the dark!&rdquo; This
+ was said in the faint hope that HE had seen something too. If it had been
+ Larry or her father who had met her, she would have confessed everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had better go in,&rdquo; he said curtly. &ldquo;I will see you safe inside the
+ house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She demurred at this, but as she could not persist in her first bold
+ intention of examining the locality of the vision without admitting its
+ existence, she permitted him to walk with her to the house, and then at
+ once fled to her own room. Larry and her father noticed their entrance
+ together and their agitated manner, and were uneasy. Yet the colonel's
+ paternal pride and Larry's lover's respect kept the two men from
+ communicating their thoughts to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The confounded pup has been tryin' to be familiar, and Polly's set him
+ down,&rdquo; thought Larry, with glowing satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's been trying some of his sanctimonious Yankee abolition talk on
+ Polly, and she shocked him!&rdquo; thought the colonel exultingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But poor Polly had other things to think of in the silence of her room.
+ Another woman would have unburdened herself to a confidante; but Polly was
+ too loyal to her father to shatter his beliefs, and too high-spirited to
+ take another and a lesser person into her confidence. She was certain that
+ Aunt Chloe would be full of sympathetic belief and speculations, but she
+ would not trust a nigger with what she couldn't tell her own father. For
+ Polly really and truly believed that she had seen a ghost, no doubt the
+ ghost of the murdered Sobriente, according to Larry's story. WHY he should
+ appear with only his head above ground puzzled her, although it suggested
+ the Catholic idea of purgatory, and he was a Catholic! Perhaps he would
+ have risen entirely but for that stupid Starbuck's presence; perhaps he
+ had a message for HER alone. The idea pleased Polly, albeit it was a
+ &ldquo;fearful joy&rdquo; and attended with some cold shivering. Naturally, as a
+ gentleman, he would appear to HER&mdash;the daughter of a gentleman&mdash;the
+ successor to his house&mdash;rather than to a Yankee stranger. What was
+ she to do? For once her calm nerves were strangely thrilled; she could not
+ think of undressing and going to bed, and two o'clock surprised her, still
+ meditating, and occasionally peeping from her window upon the moonlit but
+ vacant garden. If she saw him again, would she dare to go down alone?
+ Suddenly she started to her feet with a beating heart! There was the
+ unmistakable sound of a stealthy footstep in the passage, coming towards
+ her room. Was it he? In spite of her high resolves she felt that if the
+ door opened she should scream! She held her breath&mdash;the footsteps
+ came nearer&mdash;were before her door&mdash;and PASSED!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then it was that the blood rushed back to her cheek with a flush of
+ indignation. Her room was at the end of the passage; there was nothing
+ beyond but a private staircase, long disused, except by herself, as a
+ short cut through the old patio to the garden. No one else knew of it, and
+ no one else had the right of access to it! This insolent human intrusion&mdash;as
+ she was satisfied it was now&mdash;overcame her fear, and she glided to
+ the door. Opening it softly, she could hear the stealthy footsteps
+ descending. She darted back, threw a shawl over her head and shoulders,
+ and taking the small Derringer pistol which it had always been part of her
+ ostentatious independence to place at her bed-head, she as stealthily
+ followed the intruder. But the footsteps had died away before she reached
+ the patio, and she saw only the small deserted, grass-grown courtyard,
+ half hidden in shadows, in whose centre stood the fateful and long
+ sealed-up well! A shudder came over her at again being brought into
+ contact with the cause of her frightful vision, but as her eyes became
+ accustomed to the darkness, she saw something more real and appalling! The
+ well was no longer sealed! Fragments of bricks and boards lay around it!
+ One end of a rope, coiled around it like a huge snake, descended its foul
+ depths; and as she gazed with staring eyes, the head and shoulders of a
+ man emerged slowly from it! But it was NOT the ghostly apparition of last
+ evening, and her terror changed to scorn and indignation as she recognized
+ the face of Starbuck!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their eyes met; an oath broke from his lips. He made a movement to spring
+ from the well, but as the girl started back, the pistol held in her hand
+ was discharged aimlessly in the air, and the report echoed throughout the
+ courtyard. With a curse Starbuck drew back, instantly disappeared in the
+ well, and Polly fell fainting on the steps. When she came to, her father
+ and Larry were at her side. They had been alarmed at the report, and had
+ rushed quickly to the patio, but not in time to prevent the escape of
+ Starbuck and his accomplice. By the time she had recovered her
+ consciousness, they had learned the full extent of that extraordinary
+ revelation which she had so innocently precipitated. Sobriente's well had
+ really concealed a rich gold ledge,&mdash;actually tunneled and galleried
+ by him secretly in the past,&mdash;and its only other outlet was an
+ opening in the garden hidden by a stone which turned on a swivel. Its
+ existence had been unknown to Sobriente's successor, but was known to the
+ Kanaka who had worked with Sobriente, who fled with his daughter after the
+ murder, but who no doubt was afraid to return and work the mine. He had
+ imparted the secret to Starbuck, another half-breed, son of a Yankee
+ missionary and Hawaiian wife, who had evidently conceived this plan of
+ seeking Buena Vista with an accomplice, and secretly removing such gold as
+ was still accessible. The accomplice, afterwards identified by Larry as
+ the wandering tramp, failed to discover the secret entrance FROM the
+ garden, and Starbuck was consequently obliged to attempt it from the hotel&mdash;for
+ which purpose he had introduced himself as a boarder&mdash;by opening the
+ disused well secretly at night. These facts were obtained from papers
+ found in the otherwise valueless trunks, weighted with stones for ballast,
+ which Starbuck had brought to the hotel to take away his stolen treasure
+ in, but which he was obliged to leave in his hurried flight. The attempt
+ would have doubtless succeeded but for Polly's courageous and timely
+ interference!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now that they had told her ALL, they only wanted to know what had
+ first excited HER suspicions, and driven her to seek the well as the
+ object of Starbuck's machinations? THEY had noticed her manner when she
+ entered the house that night, and Starbuck's evident annoyance. Had she
+ taxed him with her suspicions, and so discovered a clue?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a terrible temptation to Polly to pose as a more perfect heroine,
+ and one may not blame her if she did not rise entirely superior to it. Her
+ previous belief, that the head of the accomplice at the opening of the
+ garden was that of a GHOST, she now felt was certainly in the way, as was
+ also her conduct to Starbuck, whom she believed to be equally frightened,
+ and whom she never once suspected! So she said, with a certain lofty
+ simplicity, that there were SOME THINGS which she really did not care to
+ talk about, and Larry and her father left her that night with the firm
+ conviction that the rascal Starbuck had tried to tempt her to fly with him
+ and his riches, and had been crushingly foiled. Polly never denied this,
+ and once, in later days, when admiringly taxed with it by Larry, she
+ admitted with dove-like simplicity that she MAY have been too foolishly
+ polite to her father's guest for the sake of her father's hotel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, all this was of small account to the thrilling news of a new
+ discovery and working of the &ldquo;old gold ledge&rdquo; at Buena Vista! As the three
+ kept their secret from the world, the discovery was accepted in the
+ neighborhood as the result of careful examination and prospecting on the
+ part of Colonel Swinger and his partner Larry Hawkins. And when the latter
+ gentleman afterwards boldly proposed to Polly Swinger, she mischievously
+ declared that she accepted him only that the secret might not go &ldquo;out of
+ the family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was at best merely a rocky trail winding along a shelf of the eastern
+ slope of the Santa Cruz range, yet the only road between the sea and the
+ inland valley. The hoof-prints of a whole century of zigzagging mules were
+ impressed on the soil, regularly soaked by winter rains and dried by
+ summer suns during that period; the occasional ruts of heavy, rude, wooden
+ wheels&mdash;long obsolete&mdash;were still preserved and visible.
+ Weather-worn boulders and ledges, lying in the unclouded glare of an
+ August sky, radiated a quivering heat that was intolerable, even while
+ above them the masts of gigantic pines rocked their tops in the cold
+ southwestern trades from the unseen ocean beyond. A red, burning dust lay
+ everywhere, as if the heat were slowly and visibly precipitating itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The creaking of wheels and axles, the muffled plunge of hoofs, and the
+ cough of a horse in the dust thus stirred presently broke the profound
+ woodland silence. Then a dirty white canvas-covered emigrant wagon slowly
+ arose with the dust along the ascent. It was travel-stained and worn, and
+ with its rawboned horses seemed to have reached the last stage of its
+ journey and fitness. The only occupants, a man and a girl, appeared to be
+ equally jaded and exhausted, with the added querulousness of discontent in
+ their sallow and badly nourished faces. Their voices, too, were not unlike
+ the creaking they had been pitched to overcome, and there was an absence
+ of reserve and consciousness in their speech, which told pathetically of
+ an equal absence of society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's no user talkin'! I tell ye, ye hain't got no more sense than a
+ coyote! I'm sick and tired of it, doggoned if I ain't! Ye ain't no more
+ use nor a hossfly,&mdash;and jest ez hinderin'! It was along o' you that
+ we lost the stock at Laramie, and ef ye'd bin at all decent and takin',
+ we'd hev had kempany that helped, instead of laggin' on yere alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did ye bring me for?&rdquo; retorted the girl shrilly. &ldquo;I might hev stayed
+ with Aunt Marty. I wasn't hankerin' to come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bring ye for?&rdquo; repeated her father contemptuously; &ldquo;I reckoned ye might
+ he o' some account here, whar wimmin folks is skeerce, in the way o'
+ helpin',&mdash;and mebbe gettin' yer married to some likely feller. Mighty
+ much chance o' that, with yer yaller face and skin and bones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye can't blame me for takin' arter you, dad,&rdquo; she said, with a shrill
+ laugh, but no other resentment of his brutality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye want somebody to take arter you&mdash;with a club,&rdquo; he retorted
+ angrily. &ldquo;Ye hear! Wot's that ye're doin' now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had risen and walked to the tail of the wagon. &ldquo;Goin' to get out and
+ walk. I'm tired o' bein' jawed at.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She jumped into the road. The act was neither indignant nor vengeful; the
+ frequency of such scenes had blunted their sting. She was probably &ldquo;tired&rdquo;
+ of the quarrel, and ended it rudely. Her father, however, let fly a
+ Parthian arrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye needn't think I'm goin' to wait for ye, ez I hev! Ye've got to keep
+ tetch with the team, or get left. And a good riddance of bad rubbidge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reply the girl dived into the underwood beside the trail, picked a wild
+ berry or two, stripped a wand of young hazel she had broken off, and
+ switching it at her side, skipped along on the outskirts of the wood and
+ ambled after the wagon. Seen in the full, merciless glare of a Californian
+ sky, she justified her father's description; thin and bony, her lank frame
+ outstripped the body of her ragged calico dress, which was only kept on
+ her shoulders by straps,&mdash;possibly her father's cast-off braces. A
+ boy's soft felt hat covered her head, and shadowed her only notable
+ feature, a pair of large dark eyes, looking larger for the hollow temples
+ which narrowed the frame in which they were set.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the wagon crawled up the ascent the girl knew she could easily
+ keep up with it, or even distance the tired horses. She made one or two
+ incursions into the wood, returning like an animal from quest of food,
+ with something in her mouth, which she was tentatively chewing, and once
+ only with some inedible mandrono berries, plucked solely for their
+ brilliant coloring. It was very hot and singularly close; the higher
+ current of air had subsided, and, looking up, a singular haze seemed to
+ have taken its place between the treetops. Suddenly she heard a strange,
+ rumbling sound; an odd giddiness overtook her, and she was obliged to
+ clutch at a sapling to support herself; she laughed vacantly, though a
+ little frightened, and looked vaguely towards the summit of the road; but
+ the wagon had already disappeared. A strange feeling of nausea then
+ overcame her; she spat out the leaves she had been chewing, disgustedly.
+ But the sensation as quickly passed, and she once more sought the trail
+ and began slowly to follow the tracks of the wagon. The air blew freshly,
+ the treetops began again to rock over her head, and the incident was
+ forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently she paused; she must have missed the trail, for the wagon tracks
+ had ended abruptly before a large boulder that lay across the mountain
+ trail. She dipped into the woods again; here there were other wagon tracks
+ that confused her. It was like her dogged, stupid father to miss the
+ trail; she felt a gleam of malicious satisfaction at his discomfiture.
+ Sooner or later, he would have to retrace his steps and virtually come
+ back for her! She took up a position where two rough wheel ruts and tracks
+ intersected each other, one of which must be the missing trail. She
+ noticed, too, the broader hoof-prints of cattle without the following
+ wheel ruts, and instead of traces, the long smooth trails made by the
+ dragging of logs, and knew by these tokens that she must be near the
+ highway or some woodman's hut or ranch. She began to be thirsty, and was
+ glad, presently, when her quick, rustic ear caught the tinkling of water.
+ Yet it was not so easy to discover, and she was getting footsore and tired
+ again before she found it, some distance away, in a gully coming from a
+ fissure in a dislocated piece of outcrop. It was beautifully clear, cold,
+ and sparkling, with a slightly sweetish taste, yet unlike the brackish
+ &ldquo;alkali&rdquo; of the plains. It refreshed and soothed her greatly, so much
+ that, reclining against a tree, but where she would be quite visible from
+ the trail, her eyes closed dreamily, and presently she slept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When she awoke, the shafts of sunlight were striking almost level into her
+ eyes. She must have slept two hours. Her father had not returned; she knew
+ the passage of the wagon would have awakened her. She began to feel
+ strange, but not yet alarmed; it was only the uncertainty that made her
+ uneasy. Had her father really gone on by some other trail? Or had he
+ really hurried on and left her, as he said he would? The thought brought
+ an odd excitement to her rather than any fear. A sudden sense of freedom,
+ as if some galling chain had dropped from her, sent a singular thrill
+ through her frame. Yet she felt confused with her independence, not
+ knowing what to do with it, and momentarily dazzled with the possible
+ gift.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment she heard voices, and the figures of two men appeared on
+ the trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were talking earnestly, and walking as if familiar with the spot, yet
+ gazing around them as if at some novelty of the aspect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And look there,&rdquo; said one; &ldquo;there has been some serious disturbance of
+ that outcrop,&rdquo; pointing in the direction of the spring; &ldquo;the lower part
+ has distinctly subsided.&rdquo; He spoke with a certain authority, and dominance
+ of position, and was evidently the superior, as he was the elder of the
+ two, although both were roughly dressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it does kinder look as if it had lost its holt, like the ledge
+ yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you see I am right; the movement was from east to west,&rdquo; continued
+ the elder man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl could not comprehend what they said, and even thought them a
+ little silly. But she advanced towards them; at which they stopped short,
+ staring at her. With feminine instinct she addressed the more important
+ one:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye ain't passed no wagon nor team goin' on, hev ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What sort of wagon?&rdquo; said the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Em'grant wagon, two yaller hosses. Old man&mdash;my dad&mdash;drivin'.&rdquo;
+ She added the latter kinship as a protecting influence against strangers,
+ in spite of her previous independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men glanced at each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long ago?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl suddenly remembered that she had slept two hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sens noon,&rdquo; she said hesitatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since the earthquake?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wot's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man came impatiently towards her. &ldquo;How did you come here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Got outer the wagon to walk. I reckon dad missed the trail, and hez got
+ off somewhere where I can't find him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What trail was he on,&mdash;where was he going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sank Hozay,* I reckon. He was goin' up the grade&mdash;side o' the hill;
+ he must hev turned off where there's a big rock hangin' over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * San Jose.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you SEE him turn off?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second man, who was in hearing distance, had turned away, and was
+ ostentatiously examining the sky and the treetops; the man who had spoken
+ to her joined him, and they said something in a low voice. They turned
+ again and came slowly towards her. She, from some obscure sense of
+ imitation, stared at the treetops and the sky as the second man had done.
+ But the first man now laid his hand kindly on her shoulder and said, &ldquo;Sit
+ down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they told her there had been an earthquake so strong that it had
+ thrown down a part of the hillside, including the wagon trail. That a
+ wagon team and driver, such as she had described, had been carried down
+ with it, crushed to fragments, and buried under a hundred feet of rock in
+ the gulch below. A party had gone down to examine, but it would be weeks
+ perhaps before they found it, and she must be prepared for the worst. She
+ looked at them vaguely and with tearless eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then ye reckon dad's dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We fear it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then wot's a-goin' to become o' me?&rdquo; she said simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They glanced again at each other. &ldquo;Have you no friends in California?&rdquo;
+ said the elder man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nary one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What was your father going to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dunno. I reckon HE didn't either.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may stay here for the present,&rdquo; said the elder man meditatively. &ldquo;Can
+ you milk?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl nodded. &ldquo;And I suppose you know something about looking after
+ stock?&rdquo; he continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl remembered that her father thought she didn't, but this was no
+ time for criticism, and she again nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; said the older man, rising. &ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; he added,
+ glancing at her ragged frock, &ldquo;everything you have is in the wagon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded, adding with the same cold naivete, &ldquo;It ain't much!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked on, the girl following; at times straying furtively on either
+ side, as if meditating an escape in the woods,&mdash;which indeed had once
+ or twice been vaguely in her thoughts,&mdash;but chiefly to avoid further
+ questioning and not to hear what the men said to each other. For they were
+ evidently speaking of her, and she could not help hearing the younger
+ repeat her words, &ldquo;Wot's agoin' to become o' me?&rdquo; with considerable
+ amusement, and the addition: &ldquo;She'll take care of herself, you bet! I call
+ that remark o' hers the richest thing out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I call the state of things that provoked it&mdash;monstrous!&rdquo; said
+ the elder man grimly. &ldquo;You don't know the lives of these people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently they came to an open clearing in the forest, yet so incomplete
+ that many of the felled trees, partly lopped of their boughs, still lay
+ where they had fallen. There was a cabin or dwelling of unplaned,
+ unpainted boards; very simple in structure, yet made in a workmanlike
+ fashion, quite unlike the usual log cabin she had seen. This made her
+ think that the elder man was a &ldquo;towny,&rdquo; and not a frontiersman like the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they approached the cabin the elder man stopped, and turning to her,
+ said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know Indians?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl started, and then recovering herself with a quick laugh: &ldquo;G'lang!&mdash;there
+ ain't any Injins here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the kind YOU mean; these are very peaceful. There's a squaw here whom
+ you will&rdquo;&mdash;he stopped, hesitated as he looked critically at the girl,
+ and then corrected himself&mdash;&ldquo;who will help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He pushed open the cabin door and showed an interior, equally simple but
+ well joined and fitted,&mdash;a marvel of neatness and finish to the
+ frontier girl's eye. There were shelves and cupboards and other
+ conveniences, yet with no ostentation of refinement to frighten her rustic
+ sensibilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he pushed open another door leading into a shed and called &ldquo;Waya.&rdquo; A
+ stout, undersized Indian woman, fitted with a coarse cotton gown, but
+ cleaner and more presentable than the girl's one frock, appeared in the
+ doorway. &ldquo;This is Waya, who attends to the cooking and cleaning,&rdquo; he said;
+ &ldquo;and by the way, what is your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Libby Jones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took a small memorandum book and a &ldquo;stub&rdquo; of pencil from his pocket.
+ &ldquo;Elizabeth Jones,&rdquo; he said, writing it down. The girl interposed a long
+ red hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she interrupted sharply, &ldquo;not Elizabeth, but Libby, short for
+ Lib'rty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Liberty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Liberty Jones, then. Well, Waya, this is Miss Jones, who will look after
+ the cows and calves&mdash;and the dairy.&rdquo; Then glancing at her torn dress,
+ he added: &ldquo;You'll find some clean things in there, until I can send up
+ something from San Jose. Waya will show you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without further speech he turned away with the other man. When they were
+ some distance from the cabin, the younger remarked:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More like a boy than a girl, ain't she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So much the better for her work,&rdquo; returned the elder grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon! I was only thinkin' she didn't han'some much either as a boy or
+ girl, eh, doctor?&rdquo; he pursued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well! as THAT won't make much difference to the cows, calves, or the
+ dairy, it needn't trouble US,&rdquo; returned the doctor dryly. But here a
+ sudden outburst of laughter from the cabin made them both turn in that
+ direction. They were in time to see Liberty Jones dancing out of the cabin
+ door in a large cotton pinafore, evidently belonging to the squaw, who was
+ following her with half-laughing, half-frightened expostulations. The two
+ men stopped and gazed at the spectacle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't seem to be takin' the old man's death very pow'fully,&rdquo; said the
+ younger, with a laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite as much as he deserved, I daresay,&rdquo; said the doctor curtly. &ldquo;If the
+ accident had happened to HER, he would have whined and whimpered to us for
+ the sake of getting something, but have been as much relieved, you may be
+ certain. SHE'S too young and too natural to be a hypocrite yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the laughter ceased and Liberty Jones's voice arose, shrill but
+ masterful: &ldquo;Thar, that'll do! Quit now! You jest get back to your
+ scrubbin'&mdash;d'ye hear? I'm boss o' this shanty, you bet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor turned with a grim smile to his companion. &ldquo;That's the only
+ thing that bothered me, and I've been waiting for. She's settled it.
+ She'll do. Come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They turned away briskly through the wood. At the end of half an hour's
+ walk they found the team that had brought them there in waiting, and drove
+ towards San Jose. It was nearly ten miles before they passed another
+ habitation or trace of clearing. And by this time night had fallen upon
+ the cabin they had left, and upon the newly made orphan and her Indian
+ companion, alone and contented in that trackless solitude.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Liberty Jones had been a year at the cabin. In that time she had learned
+ that her employer's name was Doctor Ruysdael, that he had a lucrative
+ practice in San Jose, but had also &ldquo;taken up&rdquo; a league or two of wild
+ forest land in the Santa Cruz range, which he preserved and held after a
+ fashion of his own, which gave him the reputation of being a &ldquo;crank&rdquo; among
+ the very few neighbors his vast possessions permitted, and the equally few
+ friends his singular tastes allowed him. It was believed that a man owning
+ such an enormous quantity of timber land, who should refuse to set up a
+ sawmill and absolutely forbid the felling of trees; who should decline to
+ connect it with the highway to Santa Cruz, and close it against
+ improvement and speculation, had given sufficient evidence of his
+ insanity; but when to this was added the rumor that he himself was not
+ only devoid of the human instinct of hunting the wild animals with which
+ his domain abounded, but that he held it so sacred to their use as to
+ forbid the firing of a gun within his limits, and that these restrictions
+ were further preserved and &ldquo;policed&rdquo; by the scattered remnants of a band
+ of aborigines,&mdash;known as &ldquo;digger Injins,&rdquo;&mdash;it was seriously
+ hinted that his eccentricity had acquired a political and moral
+ significance, and demanded legislative interference. But the doctor was a
+ rich man, a necessity to his patients, a good marksman, and, it was
+ rumored, did not include his fellow men among the animals he had a
+ distaste for killing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all this, however, Liberty knew little and cared less. The solitude
+ appealed to her sense of freedom; she did not &ldquo;hanker&rdquo; after a society she
+ had never known. At the end of the first week, when the doctor
+ communicated to her briefly, by letter, the convincing proofs of the death
+ of her father and his entombment beneath the sunken cliff, she accepted
+ the fact without comment or apparent emotion. Two months later, when her
+ only surviving relative, &ldquo;Aunt Marty,&rdquo; of Missouri, acknowledged the news&mdash;communicated
+ by Doctor Ruysdael&mdash;with Scriptural quotations and the cheerful hope
+ that it &ldquo;would be a lesson to her&rdquo; and she would &ldquo;profit in her new
+ place,&rdquo; she left her aunt's letter unanswered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked after the cows and calves with an interest that was almost
+ possessory, patronized and played with the squaw,&mdash;yet made her feel
+ her inferiority,&mdash;and moved among the peaceful aborigines with the
+ domination of a white woman and a superior. She tolerated the half-monthly
+ visits of &ldquo;Jim Hoskins,&rdquo; the young companion of the doctor, who she
+ learned was the doctor's factor and overseer of the property, who lived
+ seven miles away on an agricultural clearing, and whose control of her
+ actions was evidently limited by the doctor,&mdash;for the doctor's sake
+ alone. Nor was Mr. Hoskins inclined to exceed those limits. He looked upon
+ her as something abnormal,&mdash;a &ldquo;crank&rdquo; as remarkable in her way as her
+ patron was in his, neuter of sex and vague of race, and he simply
+ restricted his supervision to the bringing and taking of messages. She
+ remained sole queen of the domain. A rare straggler from the main road,
+ penetrating this seclusion, might have scarcely distinguished her from
+ Waya, in her coarse cotton gown and slouched hat, except for the free
+ stride which contrasted with her companion's waddle. Once, in following an
+ estrayed calf, she had crossed the highway and been saluted by a passing
+ teamster in the digger dialect; yet the mistake left no sting in her
+ memory. And, like the digger, she shrank from that civilization which had
+ only proved a hard taskmaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sole touch of human interest she had in her surroundings was in the
+ rare visits of the doctor and his brief but sincere commendation of her
+ rude and rustic work. It is possible that the strange, middle-aged,
+ gray-haired, intellectual man, whose very language was at times mysterious
+ and unintelligible to her, and whose suggestion of power awed her, might
+ have touched some untried filial chord in her being. Although she felt
+ that, save for absolute freedom, she was little more to him than she had
+ been to her father, yet he had never told her she had &ldquo;no sense,&rdquo; that she
+ was &ldquo;a hindrance,&rdquo; and he had even praised her performance of her duties.
+ Eagerly as she looked for his coming, in his actual presence she felt a
+ singular uneasiness of which she was not entirely ashamed, and if she was
+ relieved at his departure, it none the less left her to a delightful
+ memory of him, a warm sense of his approval, and a fierce ambition to be
+ worthy of it, for which she would have sacrificed herself or the other
+ miserable retainers about her, as a matter of course. She had driven Waya
+ and the other squaws far along the sparse tableland pasture in search of
+ missing stock; she herself had lain out all night on the rocks beside an
+ ailing heifer. Yet, while satisfied to earn his praise for the performance
+ of her duty, for some feminine reason she thought more frequently of a
+ casual remark he had made on his last visit: &ldquo;You are stronger and more
+ healthy in this air,&rdquo; he had said, looking critically into her face. &ldquo;We
+ have got that abominable alkali out of your system, and wholesome food
+ will do the rest.&rdquo; She was not sure she had quite understood him, but she
+ remembered that she had felt her face grow hot when he spoke,&mdash;perhaps
+ because she had not understood him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His next visit was a day or two delayed, and in her anxiety she had
+ ventured as far as the highway to earnestly watch for his coming. From her
+ hiding-place in the underwood she could see the team and Jim Hoskins
+ already waiting for him. Presently she saw him drive up to the trail in a
+ carryall with a party of ladies and gentlemen. He alighted, bade &ldquo;Good-by&rdquo;
+ to the party, and the team turned to retrace its course. But in that
+ single moment she had been struck and bewildered by what seemed to her the
+ dazzlingly beautiful apparel of the women, and their prettiness. She felt
+ a sudden consciousness of her own coarse, shapeless calico gown, her
+ straggling hair, and her felt hat, and a revulsion of feeling seized her.
+ She crept like a wounded animal out of the underwood, and then ran swiftly
+ and almost fiercely back towards the cabin. She ran so fast that for a
+ time she almost kept pace with the doctor and Hoskins in the wagon on the
+ distant trail. Then she dived into the underwood again, and making a short
+ cut through the forest, came at the end of two hours within hailing
+ distance of the cabin,&mdash;footsore and exhausted, in spite of the
+ strange excitement that had driven her back. Here she thought she heard
+ voices&mdash;his voice among the rest&mdash;calling her, but the same
+ singular revulsion of feeling hurried her vaguely on again, even while she
+ experienced a foolish savage delight in not answering the summons. In this
+ erratic wandering she came upon the spring she had found on her first
+ entrance in the forest a year ago, and drank feverishly a second time at
+ its trickling source. She could see that since her first visit it had worn
+ a great hollow below the tree roots and now formed a shining, placid pool.
+ As she stooped to look at it, she suddenly observed that it reflected her
+ whole figure as in a cruel mirror,&mdash;her slouched hat and loosened
+ hair, her coarse and shapeless gown, her hollow cheeks and dry yellow
+ skin,&mdash;in all their hopeless, uncompromising details. She uttered a
+ quick, angry, half-reproachful cry, and turned again to fly. But she had
+ not gone far before she came upon the hurrying figures and anxious faces
+ of the doctor and Hoskins. She stopped, trembling and irresolute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the doctor, in a tone of frank relief. &ldquo;Here you are! I was
+ getting worried about you. Waya said you had been gone since morning!&rdquo; He
+ stopped and looked at her attentively. &ldquo;Is anything the matter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His evident concern sent a warm glow over her chilly frame, and yet the
+ strange sensation remained. &ldquo;No&mdash;no!&rdquo; she stammered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Ruysdael turned to Hoskins. &ldquo;Go back and tell Waya I've found her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Libby felt that the doctor only wanted to get rid of his companion, and
+ became awed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has anybody been bothering you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have the diggers frightened you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&rdquo;&mdash;with a gesture of contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you and Waya quarreled?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nary&rdquo;&mdash;with a faint, tremulous smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He still stared at her, and then dropped his blue eyes musingly. &ldquo;Are you
+ lonely here? Would you rather go to San Jose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like a flash the figures of the two smartly dressed women started up
+ before her again, with every detail of their fresh and wholesome finery as
+ cruelly distinct as had been her own shapeless ugliness in the mirror of
+ the spring. &ldquo;No! NO!&rdquo; she broke out vehemently and passionately. &ldquo;Never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled gently. &ldquo;Look here! I'll send you up some books. You read&mdash;don't
+ you?&rdquo; She nodded quickly. &ldquo;Some magazines and papers. Odd I never thought
+ of it before,&rdquo; he added half musingly. &ldquo;Come along to the cabin. And,&rdquo; he
+ stopped again and said decisively, &ldquo;the next time you want anything, don't
+ wait for me to come, but write.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after he left she received a package of books,&mdash;an odd
+ collection of novels, magazines, and illustrated journals of the period.
+ She received them eagerly as an evidence of his concern for her, but it is
+ to be feared that her youthful nature found little satisfaction in the
+ gratification of fancy. Many of the people she read of were strange to
+ her; many of the incidents related seemed to her mere lies; some tales
+ which treated of people in her own sphere she found profoundly
+ uninteresting. In one of the cheaper magazines she chanced upon a fashion
+ plate; she glanced eagerly through all the others for a like revelation
+ until she got a dozen together, when she promptly relegated the remaining
+ literature to a corner and oblivion. The text accompanying the plates was
+ in a jargon not always clear, but her instinct supplied the rest. She
+ dispatched by Hoskins a note to Doctor Ruysdael: &ldquo;Please send me some
+ brite kalikers and things for sewing. You told me to ask.&rdquo; A few days
+ later brought the response in a good-sized parcel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet this did not keep her from her care of the stock nor her rambles in
+ the forest; she was quick to utilize her rediscovery of the spring for
+ watering the cattle; it was not so far afield as the half-dried creek in
+ the canyon, and was a quiet sylvan spot. She ate her frugal midday meal
+ there and drank of its waters, and, secure in her seclusion, bathed there
+ and made her rude toilet when the cows were driven home. But she did not
+ again look into its mirrored surface when it was tranquil!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so a month passed. But when Doctor Ruysdael was again due at the
+ cabin, a letter was brought by Hoskins, with the news that he was called
+ away on professional business down the coast, and could not come until two
+ weeks later. In the disappointment that overcame her, she did not at first
+ notice that Hoskins was gazing at her with a singular expression, which
+ was really one of undisguised admiration. Never having seen this before in
+ the eyes of any man who looked at her, she referred it to some vague
+ &ldquo;larking&rdquo; or jocularity, for which she was in no mood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, Libby! you're gettin' to be a right smart-lookin' gal. Seems to
+ agree with ye up here,&rdquo; said Hoskins with an awkward laugh. &ldquo;Darned ef ye
+ ain't lookin' awful purty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;G'long!&rdquo; said Liberty Jones, more than ever convinced of his badinage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fact,&rdquo; said Hoskins energetically. &ldquo;Why, Doc would tell ye so, too. See
+ ef he don't!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Liberty Jones felt her face grow hot. &ldquo;You jess get!&rdquo; she said,
+ turning away in as much embarrassment as anger. Yet he hovered near her
+ with awkward attentions that pleased while it still angered her. He
+ offered to go with her to look up the cows; she flatly declined, yet with
+ a strange satisfaction in his evident embarrassment. This may have lent
+ some animation to her face, for he drew a long breath and said:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't go pertendin' ye don't know yer purty. Say, let me and you walk a
+ bit and have a talk together.&rdquo; But Libby had another idea in her mind and
+ curtly dismissed him. Then she ran swiftly to the spring, for the words
+ &ldquo;The Doc will tell ye so, too&rdquo; were ringing in her ears. The doctor who
+ came with the two beautifully dressed women! HE&mdash;would tell her she
+ was pretty! She had not dared to look at herself in that crystal mirror
+ since that dreadful day two months ago. She would now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a pretty place in the cool shade of the giant trees, and the
+ hoof-marks of cattle drinking from the run beneath the pool had not
+ disturbed the margin of that tranquil sylvan basin. For a moment she stood
+ tremulous and uncertain, and then going up to the shining mirror, dropped
+ on her knees before it with her thin red hands clasped on her lap.
+ Unconsciously she had taken the attitude of prayer; perhaps there was
+ something like it in her mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the light glanced full on the figure that she saw there!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It fell on a full oval face and throat guileless of fleck or stain, smooth
+ as a child's and glowing with health; on large dark eyes, no longer sunk
+ in their orbits, but filled with an eager, happy light; on bared arms now
+ shapely in contour and cushioned with firm flesh; on a dazzling smile, the
+ like of which had never been on the face of Liberty Jones before!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rose to her feet, and yet lingered as if loath to part from this
+ delightful vision. Then a fear overcame her that it was some trick of the
+ water, and she sped swiftly back to the house to consult the little mirror
+ which hung in her sleeping-room, but which she had never glanced at since
+ the momentous day of the spring. She took it shyly into the sunshine, and
+ found that it corroborated the reflection of the spring. That night she
+ worked until late at the calico Doctor Ruysdael had sent her, and went to
+ bed happy. The next day brought her Hoskins again with a feeble excuse of
+ inquiring if she had a letter for the doctor, and she was surprised to
+ find that he was reinforced by a stranger from Hoskins's farm, who was
+ equally awkward and vaguely admiring. But the appearance of the TWO men
+ produced a singular phase in her impressions and experience. She was no
+ longer indignant at Hoskins, but she found relief in accepting the
+ compliments of the stranger in preference, and felt a delight in Hoskins's
+ discomfiture. Waya, promoted to the burlesque of a chaperone, grinned with
+ infinite delight and understanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at last the day came for the doctor's arrival, he was duly met by
+ Hoskins, and as duly informed by that impressible subordinate of the great
+ change in Liberty's appearance. But the doctor was far from being equally
+ impressed with his factor's story, and indeed showed much more interest in
+ the appearance of the stock which they met along the road. Once the doctor
+ got out of the wagon to inspect a cow, and particularly the coat of a
+ rough draught horse that had been turned out and put under Liberty's care.
+ &ldquo;His skin is like velvet,&rdquo; said the doctor. &ldquo;The girl evidently
+ understands stock, and knows how to keep them in condition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I reckon she's beginning to understand herself, too,&rdquo; said Hoskins.
+ &ldquo;Golly! wait till ye see HER.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor DID see her, but with what feelings he did not as frankly
+ express. She was not at the cabin when they arrived, but presently
+ appeared from the direction of the spring where, for reasons of her own,
+ she had evidently made her toilet. Doctor Ruysdael was astounded;
+ Hoskins's praise was not exaggerated; and there was an added charm that
+ Hoskins was not prepared for. She had put on a gown of her own making,&mdash;the
+ secret toil of many a long night,&mdash;amateurishly fashioned from some
+ cheap yellow calico the doctor had sent her, yet fitting her wonderfully,
+ and showing every curve of her graceful figure. Unaccented by a corset,&mdash;an
+ article she had never known,&mdash;even the lines of the stiff, unyielding
+ calico had a fashion that was nymph-like and suited her unfettered limbs.
+ Doctor Ruysdael was profoundly moved. Though a philosopher, he was
+ practical. He found himself suddenly confronted not only by a beautiful
+ girl, but a problem! It was impossible to keep the existence of this
+ woodland nymph from the knowledge of his distant neighbors; it was equally
+ impossible for him to assume the responsibility of keeping a goddess like
+ this in her present position. He had noticed her previous improvement, but
+ had never dreamed that pure and wholesome living could in two months work
+ such a miracle. And he was to a certain degree responsible, HE had created
+ her,&mdash;a beautiful Frankenstein, whose lustrous, appealing eyes were
+ even now menacing his security and position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps she saw trouble and perplexity in the face where she had expected
+ admiration and pleasure, for a slight chill went over her as he quickly
+ praised the appearance of the stock and spoke of her own improvement. But
+ when they were alone, he turned to her abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You said you had no wish to go to San Jose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No.&rdquo; Yet she was conscious that her greatest objection had been removed,
+ and she colored faintly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Listen to me,&rdquo; he said dryly. &ldquo;You deserve a better position than this,&mdash;a
+ better home and surroundings than you have here. You are older, too,&mdash;a
+ woman almost,&mdash;and you must look ahead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A look of mingled fright, reproach, and appeal came into her eloquent
+ face. &ldquo;Yer wantin' to send me away?&rdquo; she stammered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said frankly. &ldquo;It is you who are GROWING away. This is no longer
+ the place for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I want to stay. I don't wanter go. I am&mdash;I WAS happy here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I'm thinking of giving up this place. It takes up too much of my
+ time. You must be provided&rdquo;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;YOU are going away?&rdquo; she said passionately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take me with you. I'll go anywhere!&mdash;to San Jose&mdash;-wherever you
+ go. Don't turn me off as dad did, for I'll foller you as I never followed
+ dad. I'll go with you&mdash;or I'll die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was neither fear nor shame in her words; it was the outspoken
+ instinct of the animal he had been rearing; he was convinced and appalled
+ by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am returning to San Jose at once,&rdquo; he said gravely. &ldquo;You shall go with
+ me&mdash;FOR THE PRESENT! Get yourself ready!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took her to San Jose, and temporarily to the house of a patient,&mdash;a
+ widow lady,&mdash;while he tried, alone, to grapple with the problem that
+ now confronted him. But that problem became more complicated at the end of
+ the third day, by Liberty Jones falling suddenly and alarmingly ill. The
+ symptoms were so grave that the doctor, in his anxiety, called in a
+ brother physician in consultation. When the examination was over, the two
+ men withdrew and stared at each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course there is no doubt that the symptoms all point to slow arsenical
+ poisoning,&rdquo; said the consulting doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Ruysdael quickly, &ldquo;yet it is utterly inexplicable, both as to
+ motive and opportunity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; said the other grimly, &ldquo;young ladies take arsenic in minute doses
+ to improve the complexion and promote tissue, forgetting that the effects
+ are cumulative when they stop suddenly. Your young friend has 'sworn off'
+ too quickly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it is impossible,&rdquo; said Doctor Ruysdael impatiently. &ldquo;She is a mere
+ child&mdash;a country girl&mdash;ignorant of such habits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Humph! the peasants in the Tyrol try it on themselves after noticing the
+ effect on the coats of cattle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Ruysdael started. A recollection of the sleek draught horse flashed
+ upon him. He rose and hastily re-entered the patient's room. In a few
+ moments he returned. &ldquo;Do you think I could remove her at once to the
+ mountains?&rdquo; he said gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, with care and a return to graduated doses of the same poison; you
+ know it's the only remedy just now,&rdquo; answered the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By noon the next day the doctor and his patient had returned to the cabin,
+ but Ruysdael himself carried the helpless Liberty Jones to the spring and
+ deposited her gently beside it. &ldquo;You may drink now,&rdquo; he said gravely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl did so eagerly, apparently imbibing new strength from the
+ sparkling water. The doctor meanwhile coolly filled a phial from the same
+ source, and made a hasty test of the contents by the aid of some other
+ phials from his case. The result seemed to satisfy him. Then he said
+ gravely:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And THIS is the spring you had discovered?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you and the cattle have daily used it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She nodded again wonderingly. Then she caught his hand appealingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You won't send me away?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He smiled oddly as he glanced from the waters of the hill to the brimming
+ eyes. &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No-r,&rdquo; tremulously, &ldquo;go away&mdash;yourself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor looked this time only into her eyes. There was a tremendous
+ idea in his own, which seemed in some way to have solved that dreadful
+ problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! We will stay here TOGETHER.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ Six months later there was a paragraph in the San Francisco press: &ldquo;The
+ wonderful Arsenical Spring in the Santa Cruz Mountain, known as 'Liberty
+ Spring,' discovered by Doctor Ruysdael, has proved such a remarkable
+ success that we understand the temporary huts for patients are to be
+ shortly replaced by a magnificent Spa Hotel worthy of the spot, and the
+ eligible villa sites it has brought into the market. It will be a source
+ of pleasure to all to know that the beautiful nymph&mdash;a worthy
+ successor to the far-famed 'Elise' of the German 'Brunnen'&mdash;who has
+ administered the waters to so many grateful patients will still be in
+ attendance, although it is rumored that she is shortly to become the wife
+ of the distinguished discoverer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/2556.txt b/2556.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dfb7d42
--- /dev/null
+++ b/2556.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,6225 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other
+Stories, by Bret Harte
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other Stories
+
+Author: Bret Harte
+
+Release Date: May 18, 2006 [EBook #2556]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Donald Lainson and an Anonymous Volunteer
+
+
+
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+
+By Bret Harte
+
+
+
+From: "ARGONAUT EDITION" OF THE WORKS OF BRET HARTE, VOL. 12.
+
+P. F. COLLIER & SON
+
+NEW YORK
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+
+AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+
+DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+
+WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT "JULES'"
+
+THE BOOM IN THE "CALAVERAS CLARION"
+
+THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+
+LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+
+
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+
+At nightfall it began to rain. The wind arose too, and also began to
+buffet a small, struggling, nondescript figure, creeping along the trail
+over the rocky upland meadow towards Rylands's rancho. At times its
+head was hidden in what appeared to be wings thrown upward from its
+shoulders; at times its broad-brimmed hat was cocked jauntily on one
+side, and again the brim was fixed over the face like a visor. At one
+moment a drifting misshapen mass of drapery, at the next its vague
+garments, beaten back hard against the figure, revealed outlines far too
+delicate for that rude enwrapping. For it was Mrs. Rylands herself,
+in her husband's hat and her "hired man's" old blue army overcoat,
+returning from the post-office two miles away. The wind continued its
+aggression until she reached the front door of her newly plastered
+farmhouse, and then a heavier blast shook the pines above the
+low-pitched, shingled roof, and sent a shower of arrowy drops after her
+like a Parthian parting, as she entered. She threw aside the overcoat
+and hat, and somewhat inconsistently entered the sitting-room, to walk
+to the window and look back upon the path she had just traversed. The
+wind and the rain swept down a slope, half meadow, half clearing,--a
+mile away,--to a fringe of sycamores. A mile further lay the stage road,
+where, three hours later, her husband would alight on his return from
+Sacramento. It would be a long wet walk for Joshua Rylands, as their
+only horse had been borrowed by a neighbor.
+
+In that fading light Mrs. Rylands's oval cheek was shining still from
+the raindrops, but there was something in the expression of her worried
+face that might have as readily suggested tears. She was strikingly
+handsome, yet quite as incongruous an ornament to her surroundings as
+she had been to her outer wrappings a moment ago. Even the clothes she
+now stood in hinted an inadaptibility to the weather--the house--the
+position she occupied in it. A figured silk dress, spoiled rather than
+overworn, was still of a quality inconsistent with her evident habits,
+and the lace-edged petticoat that peeped beneath it was draggled with
+mud and unaccustomed usage. Her glossy black hair, which had been tossed
+into curls in some foreign fashion, was now wind-blown into a burlesque
+of it. This incongruity was still further accented by the appearance of
+the room she had entered. It was coldly and severely furnished, making
+the chill of the yet damp white plaster unpleasantly obvious. A black
+harmonium organ stood in one corner, set out with black and white
+hymn-books; a trestle-like table contained a large Bible; half a dozen
+black, horsehair-cushioned chairs stood, geometrically distant, against
+the walls, from which hung four engravings of "Paradise Lost" in black
+mourning frames; some dried ferns and autumn leaves stood in a vase on
+the mantelpiece, as if the chill of the room had prematurely blighted
+them. The coldly glittering grate below was also decorated with withered
+sprays, as if an attempt had been made to burn them, but was frustrated
+through damp. Suddenly recalled to a sense of her wet boots and the
+new carpet, she hurriedly turned away, crossed the hall into the
+dining-room, and thence passed into the kitchen. The "hired girl," a
+large-boned Missourian, a daughter of a neighboring woodman, was peeling
+potatoes at the table. Mrs. Rylands drew a chair before the kitchen
+stove, and put her wet feet on the hob.
+
+"I'll bet a cooky, Mess Rylands, you've done forgot the vanillar," said
+the girl, with a certain domestic and confidential familiarity.
+
+Mrs. Rylands started guiltily. She made a miserable feint of looking in
+her lap and on the table. "I'm afraid I did, Jane, if I didn't bring it
+in HERE."
+
+"That you didn't," returned Jane. "And I reckon ye forgot that 'ar
+pepper-sauce for yer husband."
+
+Mrs. Rylands looked up with piteous contrition. "I really don't know
+what's the matter with me. I certainly went into the shop, and had it on
+my list,--and--really"--
+
+Jane evidently knew her mistress, and smiled with superior toleration.
+"It's kinder bewilderin' goin' in them big shops, and lookin' round them
+stuffed shelves." The shop at the cross roads and post-office was 14
+x 14, but Jane was nurtured on the plains. "Anyhow," she added
+good-humoredly, "the expressman is sure to look in as he goes by, and
+you've time to give him the order."
+
+"But is he SURE to come?" asked Mrs. Rylands anxiously. "Mr. Rylands
+will be so put out without his pepper-sauce."
+
+"He's sure to come ef he knows you're here. Ye kin always kalkilate on
+that."
+
+"Why?" said Mrs. Rylands abstractedly.
+
+"Why? 'cause he just can't keep his eyes off ye! That's why he comes
+every day,--'tain't jest for trade!"
+
+This was quite true, not only of the expressman, but of the butcher
+and baker, and the "candlestick-maker," had there been so advanced a
+vocation at the cross roads. All were equally and curiously attracted
+by her picturesque novelty. Mrs. Rylands knew this herself, but without
+vanity or coquettishness. Possibly that was why the other woman told
+her. She only slightly deepened the lines of discontent in her cheek and
+said abstractedly, "Well, when he comes, YOU ask him."
+
+She dried her shoes, put on a pair of slippers that had a faded splendor
+about them, and went up to her bedroom. Here she hesitated for some time
+between the sewing-machine and her knitting-needles, but finally settled
+upon the latter, and a pair of socks for her husband which she had begun
+a year ago. But she presently despaired of finishing them before
+he returned, three hours hence, and so applied herself to the
+sewing-machine. For a little while its singing hum was heard between the
+blasts that shook the house, but the thread presently snapped, and the
+machine was put aside somewhat impatiently, with a discontented drawing
+of the lines around her handsome mouth. Then she began to "tidy" the
+room, putting a great many things away and bringing out a great many
+more, a process that was necessarily slow, owing to her falling into
+attitudes of minute inspection of certain articles of dress, with
+intervals of trying them on, and observing their effect in her mirror.
+This kind of interruption also occurred while she was putting away some
+books that were lying about on chairs and tables, stopping midway to
+open their pages, becoming interested, and quite finishing one chapter,
+with the book held close against the window to catch the fading light of
+day. The feminine reader will gather from this that Mrs. Rylands, though
+charming, was not facile in domestic duties. She had just glanced at the
+clock, and lit the candle to again set herself to work, and thus bridge
+over the two hours more of waiting, when there came a tap at the door.
+She opened it to Jane.
+
+"There's an entire stranger downstairs, ez hez got a lame hoss and wants
+to borry a fresh one."
+
+"We have none, you know," said Mrs. Rylands, a little impatiently.
+
+"Thet's what I told him. Then he wanted to know ef he could lie by here
+till he could get one or fix up his own hoss."
+
+"As you like; you know if you can manage it," said Mrs. Rylands, a
+little uneasily. "When Mr. Rylands comes you can arrange it between you.
+Where is he now?"
+
+"In the kitchen."
+
+"The kitchen!" echoed Mrs. Rylands.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, I showed him into the parlor, but he kinder shivered his
+shoulders, and reckoned ez how he'd go inter the kitchen. Ye see, ma'am,
+he was all wet, and his shiny big boots was sloppy. But he ain't one o'
+the stuck-up kind, and he's willin' to make hisself cowf'ble before the
+kitchen stove."
+
+"Well, then, he don't want ME," said Mrs. Rylands, with a relieved
+voice.
+
+"Yes'm," said Jane, apparently equally relieved. "Only, I thought I'd
+just tell you."
+
+A few minutes later, in crossing the upper hall, Mrs. Rylands heard
+Jane's voice from the kitchen raised in rustic laughter. Had she been
+satirically inclined, she might have understood Jane's willingness to
+relieve her mistress of the duty of entertaining the stranger; had
+she been philosophical, she might have considered the girl's dreary,
+monotonous life at the rancho, and made allowance for her joy at this
+rare interruption of it. But I fear that Mrs. Rylands was neither
+satirical nor philosophical, and presently, when Jane reentered, with
+color in her alkaline face, and light in her huckleberry eyes, and said
+she was going over to the cattle-sheds in the "far pasture," to see
+if the hired man didn't know of some horse that could be got for the
+stranger, Mrs. Rylands felt a little bitterness in the thought that the
+girl would have scarcely volunteered to go all that distance in the rain
+for HER. Yet, in a few moments she forgot all about it, and even the
+presence of her guest in the house, and in one of her fitful abstracted
+employments passed through the dining-room into the kitchen, and had
+opened the door with an "Oh, Jane!" before she remembered her absence.
+
+The kitchen, lit by a single candle, could be only partly seen by her
+as she stood with her hand on the lock, although she herself was plainly
+visible. There was a pause, and then a quiet, self-possessed, yet
+amused, voice answered:--
+
+"My name isn't Jane, and if you're the lady of the house, I reckon yours
+wasn't ALWAYS Rylands."
+
+At the sound of the voice Mrs. Rylands threw the door wide open, and as
+her eyes fell upon the speaker--her unknown guest--she recoiled with a
+little cry, and a white, startled face. Yet the stranger was young and
+handsome, dressed with a scrupulousness and elegance which even the
+stress of travel had not deranged, and he was looking at her with
+a smile of recognition, mingled with that careless audacity and
+self-possession which seemed to be the characteristic of his face.
+
+"Jack Hamlin!" she gasped.
+
+"That's me, all the time," he responded easily, "and YOU'RE Nell
+Montgomery!"
+
+"How did you know I was here? Who told you?" she said impetuously.
+
+"Nobody! never was so surprised in my life! When you opened that door
+just now you might have knocked me down with a feather." Yet he spoke
+lazily, with an amused face, and looked at her without changing his
+position.
+
+"But you MUST have known SOMETHING! It was no mere accident," she went
+on vehemently, glancing around the room.
+
+"That's where you slip up, Nell," said Hamlin imperturbably. "It WAS an
+accident and a bad one. My horse lamed himself coming down the grade. I
+sighted the nearest shanty, where I thought I might get another horse.
+It happened to be this." For the first time he changed his attitude, and
+leaned back contemplatively in his chair.
+
+She came towards him quickly. "You didn't use to lie, Jack," she said
+hesitatingly.
+
+"Couldn't afford it in my business,--and can't now," said Jack
+cheerfully. "But," he added curiously, as if recognizing something in
+his companion's agitation, and lifting his brown lashes to her, the
+window, and the ceiling, "what's all this about? What's your little game
+here?"
+
+"I'm married," she said, with nervous intensity,--"married, and this is
+my husband's house!"
+
+"Not married straight out!--regularly fixed?"
+
+"Yes," she said hurriedly.
+
+"One of the boys? Don't remember any Rylands. SPELTER used to be very
+sweet on you,--but Spelter mightn't have been his real name?"
+
+"None of our lot! No one you ever knew; a--a straight out, square man,"
+she said quickly.
+
+"I say, Nell, look here! You ought to have shown up your cards without
+even a call. You ought to have told him that you danced at the Casino."
+
+"I did."
+
+"Before he asked you to marry him?"
+
+"Before."
+
+Jack got up from his chair, put his hands in his pockets, and looked
+at her curiously. This Nell Montgomery, this music-hall "dance and song
+girl," this girl of whom so much had been SAID and so little PROVED!
+Well, this was becoming interesting.
+
+"You don't understand," she said, with nervous feverishness; "you
+remember after that row I had with Jim, that night the manager gave us a
+supper,--when he treated me like a dog?"
+
+"He did that," interrupted Jack.
+
+"I felt fit for anything," she said, with a half-hysterical laugh, that
+seemed voiced, however, to check some slumbering memory. "I'd have cut
+my throat or his, it didn't matter which"--
+
+"It mattered something to us, Nell," put in Jack again, with polite
+parenthesis; "don't leave US out in the cold."
+
+"I started from 'Frisco that night on the boat ready to fling myself
+into anything--or the river!" she went on hurriedly. "There was a man
+in the cabin who noticed me, and began to hang around. I thought he
+knew who I was,--had seen me on the posters; and as I didn't feel like
+foolin', I told him so. But he wasn't that kind. He said he saw I was in
+trouble and wanted me to tell him all."
+
+Mr. Hamlin regarded her cheerfully. "And you told him," he said, "how
+you had once run away from your childhood's happy home to go on the
+stage! How you always regretted it, and would have gone back but that
+the doors were shut forever against you! How you longed to leave, but
+the wicked men and women around you always"--
+
+"I didn't!" she burst out, with sudden passion; "you know I didn't. I
+told him everything: who I was, what I had done, what I expected to do
+again. I pointed out the men--who were sitting there, whispering and
+grinning at us, as if they were in the front row of the theatre--and
+said I knew them all, and they knew me. I never spared myself a thing.
+I said what people said of me, and didn't even care to say it wasn't
+true!"
+
+"Oh, come!" protested Jack, in perfunctory politeness.
+
+"He said he liked me for telling the truth, and not being ashamed to do
+it! He said the sin was in the false shame and the hypocrisy; for that's
+the sort of man he is, you see, and that's like him always! He asked if
+I would marry him--out of hand--and do my best to be his lawful wife.
+He said he wanted me to think it over and sleep on it, and to-morrow he
+would come and see me for an answer. I slipped off the boat at 'Frisco,
+and went alone to a hotel where I wasn't known. In the morning I didn't
+know whether he'd keep his word or I'd keep mine. But he came! He said
+he'd marry me that very day, and take me to his farm in Santa Clara.
+I agreed. I thought it would take me out of everybody's knowledge,
+and they'd think me dead! We were married that day, before a regular
+clergyman. I was married under my own name,"--she stopped and looked
+at Jack, with a hysterical laugh,--"but he made me write underneath it,
+'known as Nell Montgomery;' for he said HE wasn't ashamed of it, nor
+should I be."
+
+"Does he wear long hair and stick straws in it?" said Hamlin gravely.
+"Does he 'hear voices' and have 'visions'?"
+
+"He's a shrewd, sensible, hard-working man,--no more mad than you are,
+nor as mad as I was the day I married him. He's lived up to everything
+he's said." She stopped, hesitated in her quick, nervous speech; her lip
+quivered slightly, but she recalled herself, and looking imploringly,
+yet hopelessly, at Jack, gasped, "And that's what's the matter!"
+
+Jack fixed his eyes keenly upon her. "And you?" he said curtly.
+
+"I?" she repeated wonderingly.
+
+"Yes, what have YOU done?" he said, with sudden sharpness.
+
+The wonder was so apparent in her eyes that his keen glance softened.
+"Why," she said bewilderingly, "I have been his dog, his slave,--as far
+as he would let me. I have done everything; I have not been out of the
+house until he almost drove me out. I have never wanted to go anywhere
+or see any one; but he has always insisted upon it. I would have been
+willing to slave here, day and night, and have been happy. But he said
+I must not seem to be ashamed of my past, when he is not. I would have
+worn common homespun clothes and calico frocks, and been glad of it, but
+he insists upon my wearing my best things, even my theatre things; and
+as he can't afford to buy more, I wear these things I had. I know they
+look beastly here, and that I'm a laughing-stock, and when I go out
+I wear almost anything to try and hide them; but," her lip quivered
+dangerously again, "he wants me to do it, and it pleases him."
+
+Jack looked down. After a pause he lifted his lashes towards her
+draggled skirt, and said in an easier, conversational tone, "Yes! I
+thought I knew that dress. I gave it to you for that walking scene in
+'High Life,' didn't I?"
+
+"No," she said quickly, "it was the blue one with silver
+trimming,--don't you remember? I tried to turn it the first year I was
+married, but it never looked the same."
+
+"It was sweetly pretty," said Jack encouragingly, "and with that blue
+hat lined with silver, it was just fetching! Somehow I don't quite
+remember this one," and he looked at it critically.
+
+"I had it at the races in '58, and that supper Judge Boompointer gave us
+at 'Frisco where Colonel Fish upset the table trying to get at Jim. Do
+you know," she said, with a little laugh, "it's got the stains of the
+champagne on it yet; it never would come off. See!" and she held the
+candle with great animation to the breadth of silk before her.
+
+"And there's more of it on the sleeve," said Jack; "isn't there?"
+
+Mrs. Rylands looked reproachfully at Jack.
+
+"That isn't champagne; don't you know what it is?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"It's blood," she said gravely; "when that Mexican cut poor Ned so
+bad,--don't you remember? I held his head upon my arm while you bandaged
+him." She heaved a little sigh, and then added, with a faint laugh,
+"That's the worst thing about the clothes of a girl in the profession,
+they get spoiled or stained before they wear out."
+
+This large truth did not seem to impress Mr. Hamlin. "Why did you leave
+Santa Clara?" he said abruptly, in his previous critical tone.
+
+"Because of the folks there. They were standoffish and ugly. You see,
+Josh"--
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Josh Rylands!--HIM! He told everybody who I was, even those who had
+never seen me in the bills,--how good I was to marry him, how he had
+faith in me and wasn't ashamed,--until they didn't believe we were
+married at all. So they looked another way when they met us, and didn't
+call. And all the while I was glad they didn't, but he wouldn't believe
+it, and allowed I was pining on account of it."
+
+"And were you?"
+
+"I swear to God, Jack, I'd have been content, and more, to have been
+just there with him, seein' nobody, letting every one believe I was dead
+and gone, but he said it was wrong, and weak! Maybe it was," she added,
+with a shy, interrogating look at Jack, of which, however, he took no
+notice. "Then when he found they wouldn't call, what do you think he
+did?"
+
+"Beat you, perhaps," suggested Jack cheerfully.
+
+"He never did a thing to me that wasn't straight out, square, and kind,"
+she said, half indignantly, half hopelessly. "He thought if HIS kind
+of people wouldn't see me, I might like to see my own sort. So without
+saying anything to me, he brought down, of all things! Tinkie Clifford,
+she that used to dance in the cheap variety shows at 'Frisco, and her
+particular friend, Captain Sykes. It would have just killed you, Jack,"
+she said, with a sudden hysteric burst of laughter, "to have seen Josh,
+in his square, straight-out way, trying to be civil and help things
+along. But," she went on, as suddenly relapsing into her former attitude
+of worried appeal, "I couldn't stand it, and when she got to talking
+free and easy before Josh, and Captain Sykes to guzzling champagne,
+she and me had a row. She allowed I was putting on airs, and I made her
+walk, in spite of Josh."
+
+"And Josh seemed to like it," said Hamlin carelessly. "Has he seen her
+since?"
+
+"No; I reckon he's cured of asking that kind of company for me. And then
+we came here. But I persuaded him not to begin by going round telling
+people who I was,--as he did the last time,--but to leave it to folks to
+find out if they wanted to, and he gave in. Then he let me fix up this
+house and furnish it my own way, and I did!"
+
+"Do you mean to say that YOU fixed up that family vault of a
+sitting-room?" said Jack, in horror.
+
+"Yes, I didn't want any fancy furniture or looking-glasses, and such
+like, to attract folks, nor anything to look like the old times. I don't
+think any of the boys would care to come here. And I got rid of a lot of
+sporting travelers, 'wild-cat' managers, and that kind of tramp in this
+way. But"--She hesitated, and her face fell again.
+
+"But what?" said Jack.
+
+"I don't think that Josh likes it either. He brought home the other day
+'My Johnny is a Shoemakiyure,' and wanted me to try it on the organ. But
+it reminded me how we used to get just sick of singing it on and off the
+boards, and I couldn't touch it. He wanted me to go to the circus that
+was touring over at the cross roads, but it was the old Flanigin's
+circus, you know, the one Gussie Riggs used to ride in, with its old
+clown and its old ringmaster and the old 'wheezes,' and I chucked it."
+
+"Look here," said Jack, rising and surveying Mrs. Rylands critically.
+"If you go on at this gait, I'll tell you what that man of yours will
+do. He'll bolt with some of your old friends!"
+
+She turned a quick, scared face upon him for an instant. But only for
+an instant. Her hysteric little laugh returned, at once, followed by her
+weary, worried look. "No, Jack, you don't know him! If it was only that!
+He cares only for me in his own way,--and," she stammered as she went
+on, "I've no luck in making him happy."
+
+She stopped. The wind shook the house and fired a volley of rain
+against the windows. She took advantage of it to draw a torn lace-edged
+handkerchief from her pocket behind, and keeping the tail of her eyes in
+a frightened fashion on Jack, applied the handkerchief furtively, first
+to her nose, and then to her eyes.
+
+"Don't do that," said Jack fastidiously, "it's wet enough outside."
+Nevertheless, he stood up and gazed at her.
+
+"Well," he began.
+
+She timidly drew nearer to him, and took a seat on the kitchen table,
+looking up wistfully into his eyes.
+
+"Well," resumed Jack argumentatively, "if he won't 'chuck' you, why
+don't you 'chuck' HIM?"
+
+She turned quite white, and suddenly dropped her eyes. "Yes," she said,
+almost inaudibly, "lots of girls would do that."
+
+"I don't mean go back to your old life," continued Jack. "I reckon
+you've had enough of that. But get into some business, you know, like
+other women. A bonnet shop, or a candy shop for children, see? I'll
+help start you. I've got a couple of hundred, if not in my own pocket
+in somebody's else, just burning to be used! And then you can look about
+you; and perhaps some square business man will turn up and you can marry
+him. You know you can't live this way, nohow. It's killing you; it ain't
+fair on you, nor on Rylands either."
+
+"No," she said quickly, "it ain't fair on HIM. I know it, I know it
+isn't, I know it isn't," she repeated, "only"--She stopped.
+
+"Only what?" said Jack impatiently.
+
+She did not speak. After a pause she picked up the rolling-pin from
+the table and began absently rolling it down her lap to her knee, as
+if pressing out the stained silk skirt. "Only," she stammered, slowly
+rolling the pin handles in her open palms, "I--I can't leave Josh."
+
+"Why can't you?" said Jack quickly.
+
+"Because--because--I," she went on, with a quivering lip, working the
+rolling-pin heavily down her knee as if she were crushing her answer out
+of it,--"because--I--love him!"
+
+There was a pause, a dash of rain against the window, and another dash
+from her eyes upon her hands, the rolling-pin, and the skirts she had
+gathered up hastily, as she cried, "O Jack! Jack! I never loved anybody
+like him! I never knew what love was! I never knew a man like him
+before! There never WAS one before!"
+
+To this large, comprehensive, and passionate statement Mr. Jack Hamlin
+made no reply. An audacity so supreme had conquered his. He walked to
+the window, looked out upon the dark, rain-filmed pane that, however,
+reflected no equal change in his own dark eyes, and then returned and
+walked round the kitchen table. When he was at her back, without looking
+at her, he reached out his hand, took her passive one that lay on the
+table in his, grasped it heartily for a single moment, laid it gently
+down, and returned around the table, where he again confronted her
+cheerfully face to face.
+
+"You'll make the riffle yet," he said quietly. "Just now I don't see
+what I could do, or where I could chip in your little game; but if I DO,
+or you do, count me in and let me know. You know where to write,--my old
+address at Sacramento." He walked to the corner, took up his still wet
+serape, threw it over his shoulders, and picked up his broad-brimmed
+riding-hat.
+
+"You're not going, Jack?" she said hesitatingly, as she rubbed her wet
+eyes into a consciousness of his movements. "You'll wait to see HIM?
+He'll be here in an hour."
+
+"I've been here too long already," said Jack. "And the less you say
+about my calling, even accidentally, the better. Nobody will believe
+it,--YOU didn't yourself. In fact, unless you see how I can help you,
+the sooner you consider us all dead and buried, the sooner your luck
+will change. Tell your girl I've found my own horse so much better that
+I have pushed on with him, and give her that."
+
+He threw a gold coin on the table.
+
+"But your horse is still lame," she said wonderingly. "What will you do
+in this storm?"
+
+"Get into the cover of the next wood and camp out. I've done it before."
+
+"But, Jack!"
+
+He suddenly made a slight gesture of warning. His quick ear had caught
+the approach of footsteps along the wet gravel outside. A mischievous
+light slid into his dark eyes as he coolly moved backward to the door
+and, holding it open, said, in a remarkably clear and distinct voice:--
+
+"Yes, as you say, society is becoming very mixed and frivolous
+everywhere, and you'd scarcely know San Francisco now. So delighted,
+however, to have made your acquaintance, and regret my business prevents
+my waiting to see your good husband. So odd that I should have known
+your Aunt Jemima! But, as you say, the world is very small, after all. I
+shall tell the deacon how well you are looking,--in spite of the kitchen
+smoke in your eyes. Good-by! A thousand thanks for your hospitality."
+
+And Jack, bowing profoundly to the ground, backed out upon Jane, the
+hired man, and the expressman, treading, I grieve to say, with some
+deliberation upon the toes of the two latter, in order, possibly, that
+in their momentary pain and discomposure they might not scan too closely
+the face of this ingenious gentleman, as he melted into the night and
+the storm.
+
+Jane entered, with a slight toss of her head.
+
+"Here's your expressman,--ef you're wantin' him NOW."
+
+Mrs. Rylands was too preoccupied to notice her handmaiden's significant
+emphasis, as she indicated a fresh-looking, bashful young fellow, whose
+confusion was evidently heightened by the unexpected egress of Mr.
+Hamlin, and the point-blank presence of the handsome Mrs. Rylands.
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Mrs. Rylands quickly. "So kind of him to oblige
+us. Give him the order, Jane, please."
+
+She turned to escape from the kitchen and these new intruders, when her
+eye fell upon the coin left by Mr. Hamlin. "The gentleman wished you to
+take that for your trouble, Jane," she said hastily, pointing to it, and
+passed out.
+
+Jane cast a withering look after her retreating skirts, and picking the
+coin from the table, turned to the hired man. "Run to the stable after
+that dandified young feller, Dick, and hand that back to him. Ye kin say
+that Jane Mackinnon don't run arrants fur money, nor play gooseberry to
+other folks fur fun."
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+Mr. Joshua Rylands had, according to the vocabulary of his class, "found
+grace" at the age of sixteen, while still in the spiritual state of
+"original sin" and the political one of Missouri. He had not indeed
+found it by persistent youthful seeking or spiritual insight, but
+somewhat violently and turbulently at a camp-meeting. A village boy,
+naturally gentle and impressible, with an original character,--limited,
+however, in education and experience,--he had, after his first rustic
+debauch with some vulgar companions, fallen upon the camp-meeting in
+reckless audacity; and instead of being handed over to the district
+constable, was taken in and placed upon "the anxious bench," "rastled
+with," and exhorted by a strong revivalist preacher, "convicted of sin,"
+and--converted! It is doubtful if the shame of a public arrest and legal
+punishment would have impressed his youthful spirit as much as did this
+spiritual examination and trial, in which he himself became accuser.
+Howbeit, its effect, though punitive, was also exemplary. He at once
+cast off his evil companions; remaining faithful to his conversion, in
+spite of their later "backslidings." When, after the Western fashion,
+the time came for him to forsake his father's farm and seek a new
+"quarter section" on some more remote frontier, he carried into that
+secluded, lonely, half-monkish celibacy of pioneer life--which has been
+the foundation of so much strong Western character--more than the usual
+religious feeling. At once industrious and adventurous, he lived by "the
+Word," as he called it, and Nature as he knew it,--tempted by none of
+the vices or sentiments of civilization. When he finally joined the
+Californian emigration, it was not as a gold-seeker, but as a discoverer
+of new agricultural fields; if the hardship was as great and the rewards
+fewer, he nevertheless knew that he retained his safer isolation and
+independence of spirit. Vice and civilization were to him synonymous
+terms; it was the natural condition of the worldly and unregenerate.
+Such was the man who chanced to meet "Nell Montgomery, the Pearl of the
+Variety Stage," on the Sacramento boat, in one of his forced visits
+to civilization. Without knowing her in her profession, her frank
+exposition of herself did not startle him; he recognized it, accepted
+it, and strove to convert it. And as long as this daughter of Folly
+forsook her evil ways for him, it was a triumph in which there was no
+shame, and might be proclaimed from the housetop. When his neighbors
+thought differently, and avoided them, he saw no inconsistency in
+bringing his wife's old friends to divert her: she might in time convert
+THEM. He had no more fear of her returning to their ways than he had
+of himself "backsliding." Narrow as was his creed, he had none of the
+harshness nor pessimism of the bigot. With the keenest self-scrutiny,
+his credulity regarding others was touching.
+
+The storm was still raging when he alighted that evening from the up
+coach at the trail nearest his house. Although incumbered with a
+heavy carpet-bag, he started resignedly on his two-mile tramp without
+begrudging the neighborly act of his wife which had deprived him of
+his horse. It was "like her" to do these things in her good-humored
+abstraction, an abstraction, however, that sometimes worried him, from
+the fear that it indicated some unhappiness with her present lot. He was
+longing to rejoin her after his absence of three days, the longest time
+they had been separated since their marriage, and he hurried on with
+a certain lover-like excitement, quite new to his usually calm and
+temperate blood.
+
+Struggling with the storm and darkness, but always with the happy
+consciousness of drawing nearer to her in that struggle, he labored on,
+finding his perilous way over the indistinguishable trail by certain
+landmarks in the distance, visible only to his pioneer eye. That heavier
+shadow to the right was not the hillside, but the SLOPE to the distant
+hill; that low, regular line immediately before him was not a fence or
+wall, but the line of distant gigantic woods, a mile from his home. Yet
+as he began to descend the slope towards the wood, he stopped and rubbed
+his eyes. There was distinctly a light in it. His first idea was that he
+had lost the trail and was nearing the woodman Mackinnon's cabin. But a
+more careful scrutiny revealed to him that it was really the wood, and
+the light was a camp-fire. It was a rough night for camping out, but
+they were probably some belated prospectors.
+
+When he had reached the fringe of woodland, he could see quite plainly
+that the fire was built beside one of the large pines, and that the
+little encampment, which looked quite comfortable and secluded from the
+storm-beaten trail, was occupied apparently by a single figure. By the
+good glow of the leaping fire, that figure standing erect before it,
+elegantly shaped, in the graceful folds of a serape, looked singularly
+romantic and picturesque, and reminded Joshua Rylands--whose ideas of
+art were purely reminiscent of boyish reading--of some picture in a
+novel. The heavy black columns of the pines, glancing out of the concave
+shadow, also seemed a fitting background to what might have been a scene
+in a play. So strongly was he impressed by it that but for his anxiety
+to reach his home, still a mile distant, and the fact that he was
+already late, he would have penetrated the wood and the seclusion of the
+stranger with an offer of hospitality for the night. The man, however,
+was evidently capable of taking care of himself, and the outline of a
+tethered horse was faintly visible under another tree. It might be
+a surveyor or engineer,--the only men of a better class who were
+itinerant.
+
+But another and even greater surprise greeted him as he toiled up the
+rocky slope towards his farmhouse. The windows of the sitting-room,
+which were usually blank and black by night, were glittering with
+unfamiliar light. Like most farmers, he seldom used the room except for
+formal company, his wife usually avoiding it, and even he himself now
+preferred the dining-room or the kitchen. His first suggestion that his
+wife had visitors gave him a sense of pleasure on her account, mingled,
+however, with a slight uneasiness of his own which he could not account
+for. More than that, as he approached nearer he could hear the swell of
+the organ above the roar of the swaying pines, and the cadences were
+not of a devotional character. He hesitated for a moment, as he had
+hesitated at the fire in the woods; yet it was surely his own house! He
+hurried to the door, opened it; not only the light of the sitting-room
+streamed into the hall, but the ruddier glow of an actual fire in the
+disused grate! The familiar dark furniture had been rearranged to catch
+some of the glow and relieve its sombreness. And his wife, rising from
+the music-stool, was the room's only occupant!
+
+Mrs. Rylands gazed anxiously and timidly at her husband's astonished
+face, as he threw off his waterproof and laid down his carpet-bag. Her
+own face was a little flurried with excitement, and his, half hidden in
+his tawny beard, and, possibly owing to his self-introspective nature,
+never spontaneously sympathetic, still expressed only wonder! Mrs.
+Rylands was a little frightened. It is sometimes dangerous to meddle
+with a man's habits, even when he has grown weary of them.
+
+"I thought," she began hesitatingly, "that it would be more cheerful for
+you in here, this stormy evening. I thought you might like to put your
+wet things to dry in the kitchen, and we could sit here together, after
+supper, alone."
+
+I am afraid that Mrs. Rylands did not offer all her thoughts. Ever
+since Mr. Hamlin's departure she had been uneasy and excited, sometimes
+falling into fits of dejection, and again lighting up into hysterical
+levity; at other times carefully examining her wardrobe, and then with a
+sudden impulse rushing downstairs again to give orders for her husband's
+supper, and to make the extraordinary changes in the sitting-room
+already noted. Only a few moments before he arrived, she had covertly
+brought down a piece of music, and put aside the hymn-books, and taken,
+with a little laugh, a pack of cards from her pocket, which she placed
+behind the already dismantled vase on the chimney.
+
+"I reckoned you had company, Ellen," he said gravely, kissing her.
+
+"No," she said quickly. "That is," she stopped with a sudden surge of
+color in her face that startled her, "there was--a man--here, in the
+kitchen--who had a lame horse, and who wanted to get a fresh one. But
+he went away an hour ago. And he wasn't in this room--at least, after it
+was fixed up. So I've had no company."
+
+She felt herself again blushing at having blushed, and a little
+terrified. There was no reason for it. But for Jack's warning, she would
+have been quite ready to tell her husband all. She had never blushed
+before him over her past life; why she should now blush over seeing
+Jack, of all people! made her utter a little hysterical laugh. I am
+afraid that this experienced little woman took it for granted that her
+husband knew that if Jack or any man had been there as a clandestine
+lover, she would not have blushed at all. Yet with all her experience,
+she did not know that she had blushed simply because it was to Jack that
+she had confessed that she loved the man before her. Her husband noted
+the blush as part of her general excitement. He permitted her to drag
+him into the room and seat him before the hearth, where she sank down on
+one knee to pull off his heavy rubber boots. But he waved her aside at
+this, pulled them off with his own hands, and let her take them to the
+kitchen and bring back his slippers. By this time a smile had lighted
+up his hard face. The room was certainly more comfortable and cheerful.
+Still he was a little worried; was there not in these changes a falling
+away from the grace of self-abnegation which she had so sedulously
+practiced?
+
+When supper was served by Jane, in the dull dining-room, Mr. Rylands,
+had he not been more engaged in these late domestic changes, might
+have noticed that the Missouri girl waited upon him with a certain
+commiserating air that was remarkable by its contrast with the frigid
+ceremonious politeness with which she attended her mistress. It had not
+escaped Mrs. Rylands, however, who ever since Jack's abrupt departure
+had noticed this change in the girl's demeanor to herself, and with
+a woman's intuitive insight of another woman, had fathomed it. The
+comfortable tete-a-tete with Jack, which Jane had looked forward to,
+Mrs. Rylands had anticipated herself, and then sent him off! When Joshua
+thanked his wife for remembering the pepper-sauce, and Mrs. Rylands
+pathetically admitted her forgetfulness, the head-toss which Jane
+gave as she left the room was too marked to be overlooked by him. Mrs.
+Rylands gave a hysterical little laugh. "I am afraid Jane doesn't like
+my sending away the expressman just after I had also dismissed the
+stranger whom she had taken a fancy to, and left her without company,"
+she said unwisely.
+
+Mr. Rylands did not laugh. "I reckon," he returned slowly, "that Jane
+must feel kinder lonely; she bears all the burden of our bein' outer the
+world, without any of our glory in the cause of it."
+
+Nevertheless, when supper was over, and the pair were seated in the
+sitting-room before the fire, this episode was forgotten. Mrs. Rylands
+produced her husband's pipe and tobacco-pouch. He looked around the
+formal walls and hesitated. He had been in the habit of smoking in the
+kitchen.
+
+"Why not here?" said Mrs. Rylands, with a sudden little note of
+decision. "Why should we keep this room only for company that don't
+come? I call it silly."
+
+This struck Mr. Rylands as logical. Besides, undoubtedly the fire had
+mellowed the room. After a puff or two he looked at his wife musingly.
+"Couldn't you make yourself one of them cigarettys, as they call 'em?
+Here's the tobacco, and I'll get you the paper."
+
+"I COULD," she said tentatively. Then suddenly, "What made you think of
+it? You never saw ME smoke!"
+
+"No," said Rylands, "but that lady, your old friend, Miss Clifford,
+does, and I thought you might be hankering after it."
+
+"How do you know Tinkie Clifford smokes?" said Mrs. Rylands quickly.
+
+"She lit a cigaretty that day she called."
+
+"I hate it," said Mrs. Rylands shortly.
+
+Mr. Rylands nodded approval, and puffed meditatively.
+
+"Josh, have you seen that girl since?"
+
+"No," said Joshua.
+
+"Nor any other girl like her?"
+
+"No," said Joshua wonderingly. "You see I only got to know her on your
+account, Ellen, that she might see you."
+
+"Well, don't you do it any more! None of 'em! Promise me!" She leaned
+forward eagerly in her chair.
+
+"But Ellen,"--her husband began gravely.
+
+"I know what you're going to say, but they can't do me any good, and you
+can't do them any good as you did ME, so there!"
+
+Mr. Rylands was silent, and smiled meditatively.
+
+"Josh!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"When you met me that night on the Sacramento boat, and looked at me,
+did you--did I," she hesitated,--"did you look at me because I had been
+crying?"
+
+"I thought you were troubled in spirit, and looked so."
+
+"I suppose I looked worried, of course; I had no time to change or even
+fix my hair; I had on that green dress, and it NEVER was becoming. And
+you only spoke to me on account of my awful looks?"
+
+"I saw only your wrestling soul, Ellen, and I thought you needed comfort
+and help."
+
+She was silent for a moment, and then, leaning forward, picked up the
+poker and began to thrust it absently between the bars.
+
+"And if it had been some other girl crying and looking awful, you'd have
+spoken to her all the same?"
+
+This was a new idea to Mr. Rylands, but with most men logic is supreme.
+"I suppose I would," he said slowly.
+
+"And married her?" She rattled the bars of the grate with the poker as
+if to drown the inevitable reply.
+
+Mr. Rylands loved the woman before him, but it pleased him to think that
+he loved truth better. "If it had been necessary to her salvation, yes,"
+he said.
+
+"Not Tinkie?" she said suddenly.
+
+"SHE never would have been in your contrite condition."
+
+"Much you know! Girls like that can cry as well as laugh, just as they
+want to. Well! I suppose I DID look horrid." Nevertheless, she seemed
+to gain some gratification from her husband's reply, and changed
+the subject as if fearful of losing that satisfaction by further
+questioning.
+
+"I tried some of those songs you brought, but I don't think they go
+well with the harmonium," she said, pointing to some music on its rack,
+"except one. Just listen." She rose, and with the same nervous quickness
+she had shown before, went to the instrument and began to sing and play.
+There was a hopeless incongruity between the character of the instrument
+and the spirit of the song. Mrs. Rylands's voice was rather forced and
+crudely trained, but Joshua Rylands, sitting there comfortably slippered
+by the fire and conscious of the sheeted rain against the window, felt
+it good. Presently he arose, and lounging heavily over to the fair
+performer, leaned down and imprinted a kiss on the labyrinthine fringes
+of her hair. At which Mrs. Rylands caught blindly at his hand nearest
+her, and without lifting her other hand from the keys, or her eyes from
+the music, said tentatively:--
+
+"You know there's a chorus just here! Why can't you try it with me?"
+
+Mr. Rylands hesitated a moment, then, with a preliminary cough, lifted a
+voice as crude as hers, but powerful through much camp-meeting exercise,
+and roared a chorus which was remarkable chiefly for requiring that
+archness and playfulness in execution which he lacked. As the whole
+house seemed to dilate with the sound, and the wind outside to withhold
+its fury, Mr. Rylands felt that physical delight which children feel
+in personal outcry, and was grateful to his wife for the opportunity.
+Laying his hand affectionately on her shoulder, he noticed for the first
+time that she was in a kind of evening-dress, and that her delicate
+white shoulder shone through the black lace that enveloped it.
+
+For an instant Mr. Rylands was shocked at this unwonted exposure. He
+had never seen his wife in evening-dress before. It was true they were
+alone, and in their own sitting-room, but the room was still invested
+with that formality and publicity which seemed to accent this
+indiscretion. The simple-minded frontier man's mind went back to Jane,
+to the hired man, to the expressman, the stranger, all of whom might
+have noticed it also.
+
+"You have a new dress," he said slowly, "have you worn it all day?"
+
+"No," she said, with a timid smile. "I only put it on just before you
+came. It's the one I used to wear in the ballroom scene in 'Gay Times in
+'Frisco.' You don't know it, I know. I thought I would wear it tonight,
+and then," she suddenly grasped his hand, "you'll let me put all these
+things away forever! Won't you, Josh? I've seen such nice pretty calico
+at the store to-day, and I can make up one or two home dresses, like
+Jane's, only better fitting, of course. In fact, I asked them to send
+the roll up here to-morrow for you to see."
+
+Mr. Rylands felt relieved. Perhaps his views had changed about the moral
+effect of her retaining these symbols of her past, for he consented to
+the calico dresses, not, however, without an inward suspicion that she
+would not look so well in them, and that the one she had on was more
+becoming.
+
+Meantime she tried another piece of music. It was equally incongruous
+and slightly Bacchantic.
+
+"There used to be a mighty pretty dance went to that," she said, nodding
+her head in time with the music, and assisting the heavily spasmodic
+attempts of the instrument with the pleasant levity of her voice. "I
+used to do it."
+
+"Ye might try it now, Ellen," suggested her husband, with a
+half-frightened, half-amused tolerance.
+
+"YOU play, then," said Mrs. Rylands quickly, offering her seat to him.
+
+Mr. Rylands sat down to the harmonium, as Mrs. Rylands briskly moved
+the table and chairs against the wall. Mr. Rylands played slowly and
+strenuously, as from a conscientious regard of the instrument. Mrs.
+Rylands stood in the centre of the floor, making a rather pretty,
+animated picture, as she again stimulated the heavy harmonium swell not
+only with her voice but her hands and feet. Presently she began to skip.
+
+I should warn the reader here that this was before the "shawl" or
+"skirt" dancing was in vogue, and I am afraid that pretty Mrs. Rylands's
+performances would now be voted slow. Her silk skirt and frilled
+petticoat were lifted just over her small ankles and tiny bronze-kid
+shoes. In the course of a pirouette or two, there was a slight further
+revelation of blue silk stockings and some delicate embroidery, but
+really nothing more than may be seen in the sweep of a modern waltz.
+Suddenly the music ceased. Mr. Rylands had left the harmonium and walked
+over to the hearth. Mrs. Rylands stopped, and came towards him with a
+flushed, anxious face.
+
+"It don't seem to go right, does it?" she said, with her nervous laugh.
+"I suppose I'm getting too old now, and I don't quite remember it."
+
+"Better forget it altogether," he replied gravely. He stopped at seeing
+a singular change in her face, and added awkwardly, "When I told you I
+didn't want you to be ashamed of your past, nor to try to forget what
+you were, I didn't mean such things as that!"
+
+"What did you mean?" she said timidly.
+
+The truth was that Mr. Rylands did not know. He had known this sort of
+thing only in the abstract. He had never had the least acquaintance with
+the class to which his wife had belonged, nor known anything of their
+methods. It was a revelation to him now, in the woman he loved, and who
+was his wife. He was not shocked so much as he was frightened.
+
+"You shall have the dress to-morrow, Ellen," he said gently, "and
+you can put away these gewgaws. You don't need to look like Tinkie
+Clifford."
+
+He did not see the look of triumph that lit up her eye, but added, "Go
+on and play."
+
+She sat down obediently to the instrument. He watched her for a few
+moments from the toe of her kid slipper on the pedals to the swell
+of her shoulders above the keyboard, with a strange, abstracted face.
+Presently she stopped and came over to him.
+
+"And when I've got these nice calico frocks, and you can't tell me from
+Jane, and I'm a good housekeeper, and settle down to be a farmer's wife,
+maybe I'll have a secret to tell you."
+
+"A secret?" he repeated gravely. "Why not now?"
+
+Her face was quite aglow with excitement and a certain timid mischief as
+she laughed: "Not while you are so solemn. It can wait."
+
+He looked at his watch. "I must give some orders to Jim about the stock
+before he turns in," he said.
+
+"He's gone to the stables already," said Mrs. Rylands.
+
+"No matter; I can go there and find him."
+
+"Shall I bring your boots?" she said quickly.
+
+"I'll put them on when I pass through the kitchen. I won't be long away.
+Now go to bed. You are looking tired," he said gently, as he gazed at
+the drawn lines about her eyes and mouth. Her former pretty color
+struck him also as having changed of late, and as being irregular and
+inharmonious.
+
+As Mrs. Rylands obediently ascended the stairs she heaved a faint sigh,
+her only recognition of her husband's criticism. He turned and passed
+quickly into the kitchen. He wanted to be alone to collect his thoughts.
+But he was surprised to find Jane still there, sitting bolt upright in
+a chair in the corner. Apparently she had been expecting him, for as he
+entered she stood up, and wiped her cheek and mouth with one hand, as if
+to compress her lips the more tightly.
+
+"I reckoned," she began, "that unless you war for forgettin' everythin'
+in these yer goings on, ye'd be passin' through here to tend to your
+stock. I've got a word to say to ye, Mr. Rylands. When I first kem over
+here to help, I got word from the folks around that your wife afore
+you married her was just one o' them bally dancers. Well, that was YOUR
+lookout, not mine! Jane Mackinnon ain't the kind to take everybody's
+sayin' as gospil, but she kalkilates to treat folks ez she finds 'em.
+When she finds 'em lyin' and deceivin'; when she finds em purtendin' one
+thing and doin' another; when she finds 'em makin' fools tumble to 'em;
+playing soots on their own husbands, and turnin' an honest house into a
+music-hall and a fandango shop, she kicks! You hear me! Jane Mackinnon
+kicks!"
+
+"What do you mean?" said Mr. Rylands sternly.
+
+"I mean," said Miss Mackinnon, striking her hips with the back of her
+hands smartly, and accenting each word that dropped like a bullet from
+her mouth with an additional blow,--"I--mean--that--your--wife--had
+one--of--her--old--hangers-on--from--'Frisco--here--in--this
+very--kitchen--all--the--arternoon; there! I mean that whiles she was
+waitin' here for you, she was canoodlin' and cryin' over old times with
+him! I saw her myself through the winder. That's what I mean, Mr. Joshua
+Rylands."
+
+"It's false! She had some poor stranger here with a lame horse. She told
+me so herself."
+
+Jane Mackinnon laughed shrilly.
+
+"Did she tell you that the poor stranger was young and pretty-faced,
+with black moustarches? that his store clothes must have cost a fortin,
+saying nothing of his gold-lined, broadcloth sarrapper? Did she say that
+his horse was so lame that when I went to get another he wouldn't WAIT
+for it? Did she tell you WHO he was?"
+
+"No, she did not know," said Rylands sternly, but with a whitening face.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you! The gambler, the shooter!--the man whose name
+is black enough to stain any woman he knows. Jim recognized him like
+a shot; he sez, the moment he clapped eyes on him at the door, 'Dod
+blasted, if it ain't Jack Hamlin!'"
+
+Little as Mr. Rylands knew of the world, he had heard that name. But it
+was not THAT he was thinking of. He was thinking of the camp-fire in the
+wood, the handsome figure before it, the tethered horse. He was thinking
+of the lighted sitting-room, the fire, his wife's bare shoulders, her
+slippers, stockings, and the dance. He saw it all,--a lightning-flash to
+his dull imagination. The room seemed to expand and then grow smaller,
+the figure of Jane to sway backwards and forwards before him. He
+murmured the name of God with lips that were voiceless, caught at the
+kitchen table to steady himself, held it till he felt his arms grow
+rigid, and then recovered himself,--white, cold, and sane.
+
+"Speak a word of this to HER," he said deliberately, "enter her room
+while I'm gone, even leave the kitchen before I come back, and I'll
+throw you into the road. Tell that hired man, if he dares to breathe it
+to a soul I'll strangle him."
+
+The unlooked-for rage of this quiet, God-fearing man, and dupe, as she
+believed, was terrible, but convincing. She shrank back into the corner
+as he coolly drew on his boots and waterproof, and without another word
+left the house.
+
+He knew what he was going to do as well as if it had been ordained for
+him. He knew he would find the young man in the wood; for whatever were
+the truth of the other stories, he and the visitor were identical; he
+had seen him with his own eyes. He would confront him face to face and
+know all; and until then, he could not see his wife again. He walked on
+rapidly, but without feverishness or mental confusion. He saw his duty
+plainly,--if Ellen had "backslidden," he must give her another trial.
+These were his articles of faith. He should not put her away; but she
+should nevermore be wife to him. It was HE who had tempted her, it was
+true; perhaps God would forgive her for that reason, but HE could never
+love her again.
+
+The fury of the storm had somewhat abated as he reached the wood. The
+fire was still there, but no longer a leaping flame. A dull glow in
+the darkness of the forest aisles was all that indicated its position.
+Rylands at once plunged in that direction; he was near enough to see the
+red embers when he heard a sharp click, and a voice called:--
+
+"Hold up!"
+
+Mr. Hamlin was a light sleeper. The crackle of underbrush had been
+enough to disturb him. The voice was his; the click was the cocking of
+his revolver.
+
+Rylands was no coward, but halted diplomatically.
+
+"Now, then," said Mr. Hamlin's voice, "a little more this way, IN THE
+LIGHT, if you please!"
+
+Rylands moved as directed, and saw Mr. Hamlin lying before the fire,
+resting easily on one hand, with his revolver in the other.
+
+"Thank you!" said Jack. "Excuse my precautions, but it is night, and
+this is, for the present, my bedroom."
+
+"My name is Rylands; you called at my house this afternoon and saw my
+wife," said Rylands slowly.
+
+"I did," said Hamlin. "It was mighty kind of you to return my call so
+soon, but I didn't expect it."
+
+"I reckon not. But I know who you are, and that you are an old associate
+of hers, in the days of her sin and unregeneration. I want you to answer
+me, before God and man, what was your purpose in coming there to-day?"
+
+"Look here! I don't think it's necessary to drag in strangers to hear my
+answer," said Jack, lying down again, "but I came to borrow a horse."
+
+"Is that the truth?"
+
+Jack got upon his feet very solemnly, put on his hat, drew down his
+waistcoat, and approached Mr. Rylands with his hands in his pockets.
+
+"Mr. Rylands," he said, with great suavity of manner, "this is the
+second time today that I have had the honor of having my word doubted by
+your family. Your wife was good enough to question my assertion that I
+didn't know that she was living here, but that was a woman's vanity. You
+have no such excuse. There is my horse yonder, lame, as you may see. I
+didn't lame him for the sake of seeing your wife nor you."
+
+There was that in Mr. Hamlin's audacity and perfect self-possession
+which, even while it irritated, never suggested deceit. He was too
+reckless of consequence to lie. Mr. Rylands was staggered and half
+convinced. Nevertheless, he hesitated.
+
+"Dare you tell me everything that happened between my wife and you?"
+
+"Dare you listen?" said Mr. Hamlin quietly.
+
+Mr. Rylands turned a little white. After a moment he said:--
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Good!" said Mr. Hamlin. "I like your grit, though I don't mind telling
+you it's the ONLY thing I like about you. Sit down. Well, I haven't seen
+Nell Montgomery for three years until I met her as your wife, at your
+house. She was surprised as I was, and frightened as I wasn't. She spent
+the whole interview in telling me the history of her marriage and her
+life with you, and nothing more. I cannot say that it was remarkably
+entertaining, or that she was as amusing as your wife as she was as Nell
+Montgomery, the variety actress. When she had finished, I came away."
+
+Mr. Rylands, who had seated himself, made a movement as if to rise. But
+Mr. Hamlin laid his hand on his knee.
+
+"I asked you if you dared to listen. I have something myself to say of
+that interview. I found your wife wearing the old dresses that other men
+had given her, and she said she wore them because she thought it pleased
+you. I found that you, who are questioning my calling upon her, had
+already got the worst of her old chums to visit her without asking her
+consent; I found that instead of being the first one to lie for her
+and hide her, you were the first one to tell anybody her history, just
+because you thought it was to the glory of God generally, and of Joshua
+Rylands in particular."
+
+"A man's motives are his own," stammered Rylands.
+
+"Sorry you didn't see it when you questioned mine just now," said Jack
+coolly.
+
+"Then she complained to you?" said Rylands hesitatingly.
+
+"I didn't say that," said Jack shortly.
+
+"But you found her unhappy?"
+
+"Damnably."
+
+"And you advised her"--said Rylands tentatively.
+
+"I advised her to chuck you and try to get a better husband." He paused,
+and then added, with a disgusted laugh, "but she didn't tumble to it,
+for a d----d silly reason."
+
+"What reason?" said Rylands hurriedly.
+
+"Said she LOVED you," returned Jack, kicking a brand back into the fire.
+Mr. Rylands's white cheeks flamed out suddenly like the brand. Seeing
+which, Jack turned upon him deliberately.
+
+"Mr. Joshua Rylands, I've seen many fools in my time. I've seen men
+holding four aces backed down because they thought they KNEW the other
+man had a royal flush! I've seen a man sell his claim for a wild-cat
+share, with the gold lying a foot below him in the ground he walked on.
+I've seen a dead shot shoot wild because he THOUGHT he saw something in
+the other man's eye. I've seen a heap of God-forsaken fools, but I never
+saw one before who claimed God as a pal. You've got a wife a d----d
+sight truer to you for what you call her 'sin,' than you've ever been
+to her, with all your d----d salvation! And as you couldn't make her
+otherwise, though you've tried to hard enough, it seems to me that for
+square downright chuckle-headedness, you can take the cake! Good-night!
+Now, run away and play! You're making me tired."
+
+"One moment," said Mr. Rylands awkwardly and hurriedly. "I may have
+wronged you; I was mistaken. Won't you come back with me and accept
+my--our--hospitality?"
+
+"Not much," said Jack. "I left your house because I thought it better
+for you and her that no one should know of my being there."
+
+"But you were already recognized," said Mr. Rylands. "It was Jane who
+lied about you, and your return with me will confute her slanders."
+
+"Who?" asked Jack.
+
+"Jane, our hired girl."
+
+Mr. Hamlin uttered an indescribable laugh.
+
+"That's just as well! You simply tell Jane you SAW me; that I was
+greatly shocked at what she said, but that I forgive her. I don't think
+she'll say any more."
+
+
+Strange to add, Mr. Hamlin's surmise was correct. Mr. Rylands found Jane
+still in the kitchen alone, terrified, remorseful, yet ever after
+silent on the subject. Stranger still, the hired man became equally
+uncommunicative. Mrs. Rylands, attributing her husband's absence only
+to care of the stock, had gone to bed in a feverish condition, and Mr.
+Rylands did not deem it prudent to tell her of his interview. The next
+day she sent for the doctor, and it was deemed necessary for her to
+keep her bed for a few days. Her husband was singularly attentive and
+considerate during that time, and it was probable that Mrs. Rylands
+seized that opportunity to tell him the secret she spoke of the night
+before. Whatever it was,--for it was not generally known for a few
+months later,--it seemed to draw them closer together, imparted a
+protecting dignity to Joshua Rylands, which took the place of his
+former selfish austerity, gave them a future to talk of confidentially,
+hopefully, and sometimes foolishly, which took the place of their more
+foolish past, and when the roll of calico came from the cross roads, it
+contained also a quantity of fine linen, laces, small caps, and other
+trifles, somewhat in contrast to the more homely materials ordered.
+
+And when three months were past, the sitting-room was often lit up and
+made cheerful, particularly on that supreme occasion when, with a great
+deal of enthusiasm, all the women of the countryside flocked to see Mrs.
+Rylands and her first baby. And a more considerate and devoted couple
+than the father and mother they had never known.
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+
+
+In the early days of the Californian immigration, on the extremest point
+of the sandy peninsula, where the bay of San Francisco debouches into
+the Pacific, there stood a semaphore telegraph. Tossing its black arms
+against the sky,--with its back to the Golden Gate and that vast expanse
+of sea whose nearest shore was Japan,--it signified to another semaphore
+further inland the "rigs" of incoming vessels, by certain uncouth signs,
+which were again passed on to Telegraph Hill, San Francisco, where they
+reappeared on a third semaphore, and read to the initiated "schooner,"
+"brig" "ship," or "steamer." But all homesick San Francisco had learned
+the last sign, and on certain days of the month every eye was turned to
+welcome those gaunt arms widely extended at right angles, which meant
+"sidewheel steamer" (the only steamer which carried the mails) and
+"letters from home." In the joyful reception accorded to that herald of
+glad tidings, very few thought of the lonely watcher on the sand dunes
+who dispatched them, or even knew of that desolate Station.
+
+For desolate it was beyond description. The Presidio, with its
+voiceless, dismounted cannon and empty embrasures hidden in a hollow,
+and the Mission Dolores, with its crumbling walls and belfry tower lost
+in another, made the ultima thule of all San Francisco wandering. The
+Cliff house and Fort Point did not then exist; from Black Point the
+curving line of shore of "Yerba Buena"--or San Francisco--showed only
+a stretch of glittering wind-swept sand dunes, interspersed with
+straggling gullies of half-buried black "scrub oak." The long six
+months' summer sun fiercely beat upon it from the cloudless sky above;
+the long six months' trade winds fiercely beat upon it from the west;
+the monotonous roll-call of the long Pacific surges regularly beat upon
+it from the sea. Almost impossible to face by day through sliding sands
+and buffeting winds, at night it was impracticable through the dense
+sea-fog that stole softly through the Golden Gate at sunset. Thence,
+until morning, sea and shore were a trackless waste, bounded only by the
+warning thunders of the unseen sea. The station itself, a rudely built
+cabin, with two windows,--one furnished with a telescope,--looked like
+a heap of driftwood, or a stranded wreck left by the retiring sea; the
+semaphore--the only object for leagues--lifted above the undulating
+dunes, took upon itself various shapes, more or less gloomy, according
+to the hour or weather,--a blasted tree, the masts and clinging spars
+of a beached ship, a dismantled gallows; or, with the background of a
+golden sunset across the Gate, and its arms extended at right angles,
+to a more hopeful fancy it might have seemed the missionary Cross, which
+the enthusiast Portala lifted on that heathen shore a hundred years
+before.
+
+Not that Dick Jarman--the solitary station keeper--ever indulged this
+fancy. An escaped convict from one of her Britannic Majesty's penal
+colonies, a "stowaway" in the hold of an Australian ship, he had landed
+penniless in San Francisco, fearful of contact with his more honest
+countrymen already there, and liable to detection at any moment. Luckily
+for him, the English immigration consisted mainly of gold-seekers en
+route to Sacramento and the southern mines. He was prudent enough to
+resist the temptation to follow them, and accepted the post of semaphore
+keeper,--the first work offered him,--which the meanest immigrant,
+filled with dreams of gold, would have scorned. His employers asked him
+no questions, and demanded no references; his post could be scarcely
+deemed one of trust,--there was no property for him to abscond with but
+the telescope; he was removed from temptation and evil company in his
+lonely waste; his duties were as mechanical as the instrument he worked,
+and interruption of them would be instantly known at San Francisco. For
+this he would receive his board and lodging and seventy-five dollars a
+month,--a sum to be ridiculed in those "flush days," but which seemed to
+the broken-spirited and half-famished stowaway a princely independence.
+
+And then there was rest and security! He was free from that torturing
+anxiety and fear of detection which had haunted him night and day for
+three months. The ceaseless vigilance and watchful dread he had known
+since his escape, he could lay aside now. The rude cabin on the sand
+dune was to him as the long-sought cave to some hunted animal. It seemed
+impossible that any one would seek him there. He was spared alike the
+contact of his enemies or the shame of recognizing even a friendly face,
+until by each he would be forgotten. From his coign of vantage on that
+desolate waste, and with the aid of his telescope, no stranger could
+approach within two or three miles of his cabin without undergoing his
+scrutiny. And at the worst, if he was pursued here, before him was the
+trackless shore and the boundless sea!
+
+And at times there was a certain satisfaction in watching, unseen and in
+perfect security, the decks of passing ships. With the aid of his glass
+he could mingle again with the world from which he was debarred, and
+gloomily wonder who among those passengers knew their solitary watcher,
+or had heard of his deeds; it might have made him gloomier had he known
+that in those eager faces turned towards the golden haven there was
+little thought of anything but themselves. He tried to read in faces on
+board the few outgoing ships the record of their success with a strange
+envy. They were returning home! HOME! For sometimes--but seldom--he
+thought of his own home and his past. It was a miserable past of forgery
+and embezzlement that had culminated a career of youthful dissipation
+and self-indulgence, and shut him out, forever, from the staid old
+English cathedral town where he was born. He knew that his relations
+believed and wished him dead. He thought of this past with little
+pleasure, but with little remorse. Like most of his stamp, he believed
+it was ill-luck, chance, somebody else's fault, but never his own
+responsible action. He would not repent; he would be wiser only. And he
+would not be retaken--alive!
+
+Two or three months passed in this monotonous duty, in which he partly
+recovered his strength and his nerves. He lost his furtive, restless,
+watchful look; the bracing sea air and the burning sun put into his face
+the healthy tan and the uplifted frankness of a sailor. His eyes grew
+keener from long scanning of the horizon; he knew where to look
+for sails, from the creeping coastwise schooner to the far-rounding
+merchantman from Cape Horn. He knew the faint line of haze that
+indicated the steamer long before her masts and funnels became visible.
+He saw no soul except the solitary boatman of the little "plunger,"
+who landed his weekly provisions at a small cove hard by. The boatman
+thought his secretiveness and reticence only the surliness of his
+nation, and cared little for a man who never asked for the news, and to
+whom he brought no letters. The long nights which wrapped the cabin in
+sea-fog, and at first seemed to heighten the exile's sense of security,
+by degrees, however, became monotonous, and incited an odd restlessness,
+which he was wont to oppose by whiskey,--allowed as a part of his
+stores,--which, while it dulled his sensibilities, he, however, never
+permitted to interfere with his mechanical duties.
+
+He had been there five months, and the hills on the opposite shore
+between Tamalpais were already beginning to show their russet yellow
+sides. One bright morning he was watching the little fleet of Italian
+fishing-boats hovering in the bay. This was always a picturesque
+spectacle, perhaps the only one that relieved the general monotony of
+his outlook. The quaint lateen sails of dull red, or yellow, showing
+against the sparkling waters, and the red caps or handkerchiefs of the
+fishermen, might have attracted even a more abstracted man. Suddenly one
+of the larger boats tacked, and made directly for the little cove
+where his weekly plunger used to land. In an instant he was alert
+and suspicious. But a close examination of the boat through his glass
+satisfied him that it contained, in addition to the crew, only two or
+three women, apparently the family of the fishermen. As it ran up on
+the beach and the entire party disembarked he could see it was merely
+a careless, peaceable invasion, and he thought no more about it. The
+strangers wandered about the sands, gesticulating and laughing; they
+brought a pot ashore, built a fire, and cooked a homely meal. He
+could see that from time to time the semaphore--evidently a novelty to
+them--had attracted their attention; and having occasion to signal the
+arrival of a bark, the working of the uncouth arms of the instrument
+drew the children in half-frightened curiosity towards it, although the
+others held aloof, as if fearful of trespassing upon some work of the
+government, no doubt secretly guarded by the police. A few mornings
+later he was surprised to see upon the beach, near the same locality,
+a small heap of lumber which had evidently been landed in the early
+morning fog. The next day an old tent appeared on the spot, and the
+men, evidently fishermen, began the erection of a rude cabin beside it.
+Jarman had been long enough there to know that it was government land,
+and that these manifestly humble "squatters" upon it would not be
+interfered with for some time to come. He began to be uneasy again; it
+was true they were fully half a mile from him, and they were foreigners;
+but might not their reckless invasion of the law attract others, in
+this lawless country, to do the same? It ought to be stopped. For once
+Richard Jarman sided with legal authority.
+
+But when the cabin was completed, it was evident from what he saw of its
+rude structure that it was only a temporary shelter for the fisherman's
+family and the stores, and refitting of the fishing-boat, more
+convenient to them than the San Francisco wharves. The beach was
+utilized for the mending of nets and sails, and thus became half
+picturesque. In spite of the keen northwestern trades, the cloudless,
+sunshiny mornings tempted these southerners back to their native al
+fresco existence; they not only basked in the sun, but many of their
+household duties, and even the mysteries of their toilet, were performed
+in the open air. They did not seem to care to penetrate into the
+desolate region behind them; their half-amphibious habit kept them near
+the water's edge, and Richard Jarman, after taking his limited walks
+for the first few mornings in another direction, found it no longer
+necessary to avoid the locality, and even forgot their propinquity.
+
+But one morning, as the fog was clearing away and the sparkle of the
+distant sea was beginning to show from his window, he rose from his
+belated breakfast to fetch water from the "breaker" outside, which had
+to be replenished weekly from Sancelito, as there was no spring in his
+vicinity. As he opened the door, he was inexpressibly startled by the
+figure of a young woman standing in front of it, who, however, half
+fearfully, half laughingly withdrew before him. But his own manifest
+disturbance apparently gave her courage.
+
+"I jess was looking at that thing," she said bashfully, pointing to the
+semaphore.
+
+He was still more astonished, for, looking at her dark eyes and olive
+complexion, he had expected her to speak Italian or broken English. And,
+possibly because for a long time he had seen and known little of women,
+he was quite struck with her good looks. He hesitated, stammered, and
+then said:--
+
+"Won't you come in?"
+
+She drew back still farther and made a rapid gesture of negation with
+her head, her hand, and even her whole lithe figure. Then she said, with
+a decided American intonation:--
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Why not?" said Jarman mechanically.
+
+The girl sidled up against the cabin, keeping her eyes fixed on Jarman
+with a certain youthful shrewdness.
+
+"Oh, you know!" she said.
+
+"I really do not. Tell me why."
+
+She drew herself up against the wall a little proudly, though still
+youthfully, with her hands behind her.
+
+"I ain't that kind of girl," she said simply.
+
+The blood rushed to Jarman's checks. Dissipated and abandoned as his
+life had been, small respecter of women as he was, he was shocked and
+shamed. Knowing too, as he did, how absorbed he was in other things, he
+was indignant, because not guilty.
+
+"Do as you please, then," he said shortly, and reentered the cabin. But
+the next moment he saw his error in betraying an irritation that was
+open to misconstruction. He came out again, scarcely looking at the
+girl, who was lounging away.
+
+"Do you want me to explain to you how the thing works?" he said
+indifferently. "I can't show you unless a ship comes in."
+
+The girl's eyes brightened softly as she turned to him.
+
+"Do tell me," she said, with an anticipatory smile and flash of white
+teeth. "Won't you?"
+
+She certainly was very pretty and simple, in spite of her late speech.
+Jarman briefly explained to her the movements of the semaphore arms and
+their different significance. She listened with her capped head a little
+on one side like an attentive bird, and her arms unconsciously imitating
+the signs. Certainly, for all that she SPOKE like an American, her
+gesticulation was Italian.
+
+"And then," she said triumphantly when he paused, "when the sailors see
+that sign up they know they are coming in the harbor."
+
+Jarman smiled, as he had not smiled since he had been there. He
+corrected this mistake of her eager haste to show her intelligence, and,
+taking the telescope, pointed out the other semaphore,--a thin black
+outline on a distant inland hill. He then explained how HIS signs were
+repeated by that instrument to San Francisco.
+
+"My! Why, I always allowed that was only the cross stuck up in the Lone
+Mountain Cemetery," she said.
+
+"You are a Catholic?"
+
+"I reckon."
+
+"And you are an Italian?"
+
+"Father is, but mother was a 'Merikan, same as me. Mother's dead."
+
+"And your father is the fisherman yonder?"
+
+"Yes,--but," with a look of pride, "he's got the biggest boat of any."
+
+"And only you and your family are ashore here?"
+
+"Yes, and sometimes Mark." She laughed an odd little laugh.
+
+"Mark? Who's he?" he asked quickly.
+
+He had not noticed the sudden coquettish pose and half-affected
+bashfulness of the girl; he was thinking only of the possibility of
+detection by strangers.
+
+"Oh, he is Marco Franti, but I call him 'Mark.' It's the same name, you
+know, and it makes him mad," said the girl, with the same suggestion of
+archness and coquetry.
+
+But all this was lost on Jarman.
+
+"Oh, another Italian," he said, relieved. She turned away a little
+awkwardly when he added, "But you haven't told me YOUR name, you know."
+
+"Cara."
+
+"Cara,--that's 'dear' in Italian, isn't it?" he said, with a
+reminiscence of the opera and a half smile.
+
+"Yes," she said a little scornfully, "but it means Carlotta,--Charlotte,
+you know. Some girls call me Charley," she said hurriedly.
+
+"I see--Cara--or Carlotta Franti."
+
+To his surprise she burst into a peal of laughter.
+
+"I reckon not YET. Franti is Mark's name, not mine. Mine is
+Murano,--Carlotta Murano. Good-by." She moved away, then stopped
+suddenly and said, "I'm comin' again some time when the thing is
+working," and with a nod of her head, ran away. He looked after her;
+could see the outlines of her youthful figure in her slim cotton
+gown,--limp and clinging in the damp sea air, and the sudden revelation
+of her bare ankles thrust stockingless into canvas shoes.
+
+He went back into his cabin, when presently his attention was engrossed
+by an incoming vessel. He made the signals, half expecting, almost
+hoping, that the girl would return to watch him. But her figure was
+already lost in the sand dunes. Yet he fancied he still heard the echoes
+of her voice and his own in this cabin which had so long been dumb and
+voiceless, and he now started at every sound. For the first time he
+became aware of the dreadful disorder and untidiness of its uninvaded
+privacy. He could scarcely believe he had been living with his stove,
+his bed, and cooking utensils all in one corner of the barnlike room,
+and he began to put them "to rights" in a rough, hard formality,
+strongly suggestive of his convict experience. He rolled up his blankets
+into a hard cylinder at the head of his cot. He scraped out his kettles
+and saucepans, and even "washed down" the floor, afterwards sprinkling
+clean dry sand, hot with the noonday sunshine, on its half-dried boards.
+In arranging these domestic details he had to change the position of a
+little mirror; and glancing at it for the first time in many days, he
+was dissatisfied with his straggling beard,--grown during his voyage
+from Australia,--and although he had retained it as a disguise, he at
+once shaved it off, leaving only a mustache, and revealing a face from
+which a healthier life and out-of-door existence had removed the last
+traces of vice and dissipation. But he did not know it.
+
+All the next day he thought of his fair visitor, and found himself often
+repeating her odd remark that she was "not that kind of girl," with a
+smile that was alternately significant or vacant. Evidently she could
+take care of herself, he thought, although her very good looks no doubt
+had exposed her to the rude attentions of fishermen or the common drift
+of San Francisco wharves. Perhaps this was why her father brought her
+here. When the day passed and she came not, he began vaguely to wonder
+if he had been rude to her. Perhaps he had taken her simple remark too
+seriously; perhaps she had expected he would only laugh, and had found
+him dull and stupid. Perhaps he had thrown away an opportunity. An
+opportunity for what? To renew his old life and habits? No, no! The
+horrors of his recent imprisonment and escape were still too fresh in
+his memory; he was not safe yet. Then he wondered if he had not grown
+spiritless and pigeon-livered in his solitude and loneliness. The next
+day he searched for her with his glass, and saw her playing with one
+of the children on the beach,--a very picture of child or nymphlike
+innocence. Perhaps it was because she was not "that kind of girl" that
+she had attracted him. He laughed bitterly. Yes; that was very funny;
+he, an escaped convict, drawn towards honest, simple innocence! Yet he
+knew--he was positive--he had not thought of any ill when he spoke to
+her. He took a singular, a ridiculous pride in and credit to himself for
+that. He repeated it incessantly to himself. Then what made her angry?
+Himself! The devil! Did he carry, then, the record of his past life
+forever in his face--in his speech--in his manners? The thought made
+him sullen. The next day he would not look towards the shore; it was
+wonderful what excitement and satisfaction he got out of that strange
+act of self-denial; it made the day seem full that had been so vacant
+before; yet he could not tell why or wherefore. He felt injured, but he
+rather liked it. Yet in the night he was struck with the idea that she
+might have gone back to San Francisco, and he lay awake longing for
+the morning light to satisfy him. Yet when the fog cleared, and from
+a nearer point, behind a sand dune, he discovered, by the aid of his
+glass, that she was seated on the sun-warmed sands combing out her long
+hair like a mermaid, he immediately returned to the cabin, and that
+morning looked no more that way. In the afternoon, there being no sails
+in sight, he turned aside from the bay and walked westward towards the
+ocean, halting only at the league-long line of foam which marked the
+breaking Pacific surges. Here he was surprised to see a little child,
+half-naked, following barefooted the creeping line of spume, or running
+after the detached and quivering scraps of foam that chased each other
+over the wet sand, and only a little further on, to come upon Cara
+herself, sitting with her elbows on her knees and her round chin in her
+hands, apparently gazing over the waste of waters before her. A sudden
+and inexplicable shyness overtook him. He hesitated, and stepped
+half-hidden in a gully between the sand dunes.
+
+As yet he had not been observed; the young girl called to the child and,
+suddenly rising, threw off her red cap and shawl and quietly began to
+disrobe herself. A couple of coarse towels were at her feet. Jarman
+instantly comprehended that she was going to bathe with the child. She
+undoubtedly knew as well as he did that she was safe in that solitude;
+that no one could intrude upon her privacy from the bay shore, nor from
+the desolate inland trail to the sea, without her knowledge. Of his
+own contiguity she had evidently taken no thought, believing him safely
+housed in his cabin beside the semaphore. She lifted her hands, and with
+a sudden movement shook out her long hair and let it fall down her back
+at the same moment that her unloosened blouse began to slip from her
+shoulders. Richard Jarman turned quickly and walked noiselessly and
+rapidly away, until the little hillock had shut out the beach.
+
+His retreat was as sudden, unreasoning, and unpremeditated as his
+intrusion. It was not like himself, he knew, and yet it was as perfectly
+instinctive and natural as if he had intruded upon a sister. In the
+South Seas he had seen native girls diving beside the vessels for coins,
+but they had provoked no such instinct as that which possessed him now.
+More than that, he swept a quick, wrathful glance along the horizon on
+either side, and then, mounting a remote hillock which still hid him
+from the beach, he sat there and kept watch and ward. From time to time
+the strong sea-breeze brought him the sound of infantine screams and
+shouts of girlish laughter from the unseen shore; he only looked the
+more keenly and suspiciously for any wandering trespasser, and did not
+turn his head. He lay there nearly half an hour, and when the sounds had
+ceased, rose and made his way slowly back to the cabin. He had not gone
+many yards before he heard the twitter of voices and smothered laughter
+behind him. He turned; it was Cara and the child,--a girl of six or
+seven. Cara's face was rosy,--possibly from her bath, and possibly
+from some shame-faced consciousness. He slackened his pace, and as they
+ranged beside him said, "Good-morning!"
+
+"Lord!" said Cara, stifling another laugh, "we didn't know you were
+around; we thought you were always 'tending your telegraph, didn't we,
+Lucy?" (to the child, who was convulsed with mirth and sheepishness).
+"Why, we've been taking a wash in the sea." She tried to gather up her
+long hair, which had been left to stray over her shoulders and dry in
+the sunlight, and even made a slight pretense of trying to conceal the
+wet towels they were carrying.
+
+Jarman did not laugh. "If you had told me," he said gravely, "I could
+have kept watch for you with my glass while you were there. I could see
+further than you."
+
+"Tould you see US?" asked the little girl, with hopeful vivacity.
+
+"No!" said Jarman, with masterly evasion. "There are little sandhills
+between this and the beach."
+
+"Then how tould other people see us?" persisted the child.
+
+Jarman could see that the older girl was evidently embarrassed, and
+changed the subject. "I sometimes go out," he said, "when I can see
+there are no vessels in sight, and I take ray glass with me. I can
+always get back in time to make signals. I thought, in fact," he said,
+glancing at Cara's brightening face, "that I might get as far as
+your house on the shore some day." To his surprise, her embarrassment
+suddenly seemed to increase, although she had looked relieved before,
+and she did not reply. After a moment she said abruptly:--
+
+"Did you ever see the sea-lions?"
+
+"No," said Jarman.
+
+"Not the big ones on Seal Rock, beyond the cliffs?" continued the girl,
+in real astonishment.
+
+"No," repeated Jarman. "I never walked in that direction." He vaguely
+remembered that they were a curiosity which sometimes attracted parties
+thither, and for that reason he had avoided the spot.
+
+"Why, I have sailed all around the rock in father's boat," continued
+Cara, with importance. "That's the best way to see 'em, and folks from
+Frisco sometimes takes a sail out there just on purpose,--it's too sandy
+to walk or drive there. But it's only a step from here. Look here!" she
+said suddenly, and frankly opening her fine eyes upon him. "I'm going
+to take Lucy there to-morrow, and I'll show you." Jarman felt his cheeks
+flush quickly with a pleasure that embarrassed him. "It won't take
+long," added Cara, mistaking his momentary hesitation, "and you can
+leave your telegraph alone. Nobody will be there, so no one will see you
+and nobody know it."
+
+He would have gone then, anyway, he knew, yet in his absurd
+self-consciousness he was glad that her last suggestion had relieved him
+of a sense of reckless compliance. He assented eagerly, when with a wave
+of her hand, a flash of her white teeth, and the same abruptness she had
+shown at their last parting, she caught Lucy by the arm and darted away
+in a romping race to her dwelling. Jarman started after her. He had
+not wanted to go to her father's house particularly, but why was SHE
+evidently as averse to it? With the subtle pleasure that this admission
+gave him there was a faint stirring of suspicion.
+
+It was gone when he found her and Lucy the next morning, radiant with
+the sunshine, before his door. The restraint of their previous meetings
+had been removed in some mysterious way, and they chatted gayly as they
+walked towards the cliffs. She asked him frankly many questions about
+himself, why he had come there, and if he "wasn't lonely;" she answered
+frankly--I fear much more frankly than he answered her--the many
+questions he asked her about herself and her friends. When they reached
+the cliffs they descended to the beach, which they found deserted.
+Before them--it seemed scarce a pistol shot from the shore arose a high,
+broad rock, beaten at its base by the long Pacific surf, on which a
+number of shapeless animals were uncouthly disporting. This was Seal
+Rock, the goal of their journey.
+
+Yet after a few moments they no longer looked at it, but seated on the
+sand, with Lucy gathering shells at the water's edge, they continued
+their talk. Presently the talk became eager confidences, and
+then,--there were long and dangerous lapses of silence, when both were
+fain to make perfunctory talk with Lucy on the beach. After one of those
+silences Jarman said:--
+
+"Do you know I rather thought yesterday you didn't want me to come to
+your father's house. Why was that?"
+
+"Because Marco was there," said the girl frankly.
+
+"What had HE to do with it?" said Jarman abruptly.
+
+"He wants to marry me."
+
+"And do you want to marry HIM?" said Jarman quickly.
+
+"No," said the girl passionately.
+
+"Why don't you get rid of him, then?"
+
+"I can't, he's hiding here,--he's father's friend."
+
+"Hiding? What's he been doing?"
+
+"Stealing. Stealing gold-dust from miners. I never cared for him anyway.
+And I hate a thief!"
+
+She looked up quickly. Jarman had risen to his feet, his face turned to
+sea.
+
+"What are you looking at?" she said wonderingly.
+
+"A ship," said Jarman, in a strange, hoarse voice. "I must hurry back
+and signal. I'm afraid I haven't even time to walk with you,--I must run
+for it. Good-by!"
+
+He turned without offering his hand and ran hurriedly in the direction
+of the semaphore.
+
+Cara, discomfited, turned her black eyes to the sea. But it seemed empty
+as before, no sail, no ship on the horizon line, only a little schooner
+slowly beating out of the Gate. Ah, well! It no doubt was there,--that
+sail,--though she could not see it; how keen and far-seeing his
+handsome, honest eyes were! She heaved a little sigh, and, calling Lucy
+to her side, began to make her way homeward. But she kept her eyes on
+the semaphore; it seemed to her the next thing to seeing him,--this man
+she was beginning to love. She waited for the gaunt arms to move with
+the signal of the vessel he had seen. But, strange to say, it was
+motionless. He must have been mistaken.
+
+All this, however, was driven from her mind in the excitement that she
+found on her return thrilling her own family. They had been warned that
+a police boat with detectives on board had been dispatched from San
+Francisco to the cove. Luckily, they had managed to convey the fugitive
+Franti on board a coastwise schooner,--Cara started as she remembered
+the one she had seen beating out of the Gate,--and he was now safe from
+pursuit. Cara felt relieved; at the same time she felt a strange joy
+at her heart, which sent the conscious blood to her cheek. She was not
+thinking of the escaped Marco, but of Jarman. Later, when the police
+boat arrived,--whether the detectives had been forewarned of Marco's
+escape or not,--they contented themselves with a formal search of the
+little fishing-hut and departed. But their boat remained lying off the
+shore.
+
+That night Cara tossed sleeplessly on her bed; she was sorry she had
+ever spoken of Marco to Jarman. It was unnecessary now; perhaps he
+disbelieved her and thought she loved Marco; perhaps that was the reason
+of his strange and abrupt leave-taking that afternoon. She longed for
+the next day, she could tell him everything now.
+
+Towards morning she slept fitfully, but was awakened by the sound of
+voices on the sands outside the hut. Its flimsy structure, already
+warped by the fierce day-long sun, allowed her through chinks and
+crevices not only to recognize the voices of the detectives, but to hear
+distinctly what they said. Suddenly the name of Jarman struck upon her
+ear. She sat upright in bed, breathless.
+
+"Are you sure it's the same man?" asked a second voice.
+
+"Perfectly," answered the first. "He was tracked to 'Frisco, but
+disappeared the day he landed. We knew from our agents that he never
+left the bay. And when we found that somebody answering his description
+got the post of telegraph operator out here, we knew that we had spotted
+our man and the L250 sterling offered for his capture."
+
+"But that was five months ago. Why didn't you take him then?"
+
+"Couldn't! For we couldn't hold him without the extradition papers from
+Australia. We sent for 'em; they're due to-day or to-morrow on the mail
+steamer."
+
+"But he might have got away at any time?"
+
+"He couldn't without our knowing it. Don't you see? Every time the
+signals went up, we in San Francisco knew he was at his post. We had him
+safe, out here on these sandhills, as if he'd been under lock and key in
+'Frisco. He was his own keeper, and reported to us."
+
+"But since you're here and expect the papers to-morrow, why don't you
+'cop' him now?"
+
+"Because there isn't a judge in San Francisco that would hold him
+a moment unless he had those extradition papers before him. He'd be
+discharged, and escape."
+
+"Then what are you going to do?"
+
+"As soon as the steamer is signaled in 'Frisco, we'll board her in the
+bay, get the papers, and drop down upon him."
+
+"I see; and as HE'S the signal man, the darned fool"--
+
+"Will give the signal himself."
+
+The laugh that followed was so cruel that the young girl shuddered. But
+the next moment she slipped from the bed, erect, pale, and determined.
+
+The voices seemed gradually to retreat. She dressed herself hurriedly,
+and passed noiselessly through the room of her still sleeping parent,
+and passed out. A gray fog was lifting slowly over the sands and sea,
+and the police boat was gone. She no longer hesitated, but ran quickly
+in the direction of Jarman's cabin. As she ran, her mind seemed to be
+swept clear of all illusion and fancy; she saw plainly everything that
+had happened; she knew the mystery of Jarman's presence here,--the
+secret of his life,--the dreadful cruelty of her remark to him,--the man
+that she knew now she loved. The sun was painting the black arms of the
+semaphore as she toiled over the last stretch of sand and knocked
+loudly at the door. There was no reply. She knocked again; the cabin was
+silent. Had he already fled?--and without seeing her and knowing all!
+She tried the handle of the door; it yielded; she stepped boldly into
+the room, with his name upon her lips. He was lying fully dressed upon
+his couch. She ran eagerly to his side and stopped. It needed only a
+single glance at his congested face, his lips parted with his heavy
+breath, to see that the man was hopelessly, helplessly drunk!
+
+Yet even then, without knowing that it was her thoughtless speech which
+had driven him to seek this foolish oblivion of remorse and sorrow,
+she saw only his HELPLESSNESS. She tried in vain to rouse him; he
+only muttered a few incoherent words and sank back again. She looked
+despairingly around. Something must be done; the steamer might be
+visible at any moment. Ah, yes,--the telescope! She seized it and swept
+the horizon. There was a faint streak of haze against the line of sea
+and sky, abreast the Golden Gate. He had once told her what it meant.
+It WAS the steamer! A sudden thought leaped into her clear and active
+brain. If the police boat should chance to see that haze too, and saw
+no warning signal from the semaphore, they would suspect something. That
+signal must be made, BUT NOT THE RIGHT ONE! She remembered quickly
+how he had explained to her the difference between the signals for a
+coasting steamer and the one that brought the mails. At that distance
+the police boat could not detect whether the semaphore's arms were
+extended to perfect right angles for the mail steamer, or if the left
+arm slightly deflected for a coasting steamer. She ran out to the
+windlass and seized the crank. For a moment it defied her strength; she
+redoubled her efforts: it began to creak and groan, the great arms were
+slowly uplifted, and the signal made.
+
+But the familiar sounds of the moving machinery had pierced through
+Jarman's sluggish consciousness as no other sound in heaven or earth
+could have done, and awakened him to the one dominant sense he had
+left,--the habit of duty. She heard him roll from the bed with an oath,
+stumble to the door, and saw him dash forward with an affrighted face,
+and plunge his head into a bucket of water. He emerged from it pale and
+dripping, but with the full light of reason and consciousness in his
+eyes. He started when he saw her; even then she would have fled, but he
+caught her firmly by the wrist.
+
+Then with a hurried, trembling voice she told him all and everything. He
+listened in silence, and only at the end raised her hand gravely to his
+lips.
+
+"And now," she added tremulously, "you must fly--quick--at once; or it
+will be too late!"
+
+But Richard Jarman walked slowly to the door of his cabin, still holding
+her hand, and said quietly, pointing to his only chair:--
+
+"Sit down; we must talk first."
+
+What they said was never known, but a few moments later they left the
+cabin, Jarman carrying in a small bag all his possessions, and Cara
+leaning on his arm. An hour later the priest of the Mission Dolores was
+called upon to unite in matrimony a frank, honest-looking sailor and an
+Italian gypsy-looking girl. There were many hasty unions in those days,
+and the Holy Church was only too glad to be able to give them its
+legal indorsement. But the good Padre was a little sorry for the honest
+sailor, and gave the girl some serious advice.
+
+The San Francisco papers the next morning threw some dubious light upon
+the matter in a paragraph headed, "Another Police Fiasco."
+
+"We understand that the indefatigable police of San Francisco, after
+ascertaining that Marco Franti, the noted gold-dust thief, was hiding on
+the shore near the Presidio, proceeded there with great solemnity, and
+arrived, as usual, a few hours after their man had escaped. But the
+climax of incapacity was reached when, as it is alleged, the sweetheart
+of the absconding Franti, and daughter of a brother fisherman, eloped
+still later, and joined her lover under the very noses of the police.
+The attempt of the detectives to excuse themselves at headquarters by
+reporting that they were also on the track of an alleged escaped Sydney
+Duck was received with the derision and skepticism it deserved, as it
+seemed that these worthies mistook the mail steamer, which they should
+have boarded to get certain extradition papers, for a coasting steamer."
+
+*****
+
+It was not until four years later that Murano was delighted to recognize
+in the husband of his long-lost daughter a very rich cattle-owner in
+Southern California, called Jarman; but he never knew that he had been
+an escaped convict from Sydney, who had lately received a full pardon
+through the instrumentality of divers distinguished people in Australia.
+
+
+
+
+AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+
+
+It is to be feared that the hero of this chronicle began life as an
+impostor. He was offered to the credulous and sympathetic family of a
+San Francisco citizen as a lamb, who, unless bought as a playmate
+for the children, would inevitably pass into the butcher's hands.
+A combination of refined sensibility and urban ignorance of nature
+prevented them from discerning certain glaring facts that betrayed his
+caprid origin. So a ribbon was duly tied round his neck, and in pleasing
+emulation of the legendary "Mary," he was taken to school by the
+confiding children. Here, alas the fraud was discovered, and history was
+reversed by his being turned out by the teacher, because he was NOT "a
+lamb at school." Nevertheless, the kind-hearted mother of the family
+persisted in retaining him, on the plea that he might yet become
+"useful." To her husband's feeble suggestion of "gloves," she returned
+a scornful negative, and spoke of the weakly infant of a neighbor, who
+might later receive nourishment from this providential animal. But even
+this hope was destroyed by the eventual discovery of his sex. Nothing
+remained now but to accept him as an ordinary kid, and to find amusement
+in his accomplishments,--eating, climbing, and butting. It must be
+confessed that these were of a superior quality; a capacity to eat
+everything from a cambric handkerchief to an election poster, an
+agility which brought him even to the roofs of houses, and a power of
+overturning by a single push the chubbiest child who opposed him, made
+him a fearful joy to the nursery. This last quality was incautiously
+developed in him by a negro boy-servant, who, later, was hurriedly
+propelled down a flight of stairs by his too proficient scholar.
+Having once tasted victory, "Billy" needed no further incitement to his
+performances. The small wagon which he sometimes consented to draw for
+the benefit of the children never hindered his attempts to butt the
+passer-by. On the contrary, on well-known scientific principles he added
+the impact of the bodies of the children projected over his head in his
+charge, and the infelicitous pedestrian found himself not only knocked
+off his legs by Billy, but bombarded by the whole nursery.
+
+Delightful as was this recreation to juvenile limbs, it was felt to be
+dangerous to the adult public. Indignant protestations were made, and
+as Billy could not be kept in the house, he may be said to have at
+last butted himself out of that sympathetic family and into a hard and
+unfeeling world. One morning he broke his tether in the small back yard.
+For several days thereafter he displayed himself in guilty freedom on
+the tops of adjacent walls and outhouses. The San Francisco suburb
+where his credulous protectors lived was still in a volcanic state
+of disruption, caused by the grading of new streets through rocks and
+sandhills. In consequence the roofs of some houses were on the level
+of the doorsteps of others, and were especially adapted to Billy's
+performances. One afternoon, to the admiring and perplexed eyes of the
+nursery, he was discovered standing on the apex of a neighbor's new
+Elizabethan chimney, on a space scarcely larger than the crown of a hat,
+calmly surveying the world beneath him. High infantile voices appealed
+to him in vain; baby arms were outstretched to him in hopeless
+invitation; he remained exalted and obdurate, like Milton's hero,
+probably by his own merit "raised to that bad eminence." Indeed, there
+was already something Satanic in his budding horns and pointed mask as
+the smoke curled softly around him. Then he appropriately vanished,
+and San Francisco knew him no more. At the same time, however, one Owen
+M'Ginnis, a neighboring sandhill squatter, also disappeared, leaving San
+Francisco for the southern mines, and he was said to have taken Billy
+with him,--for no conceivable reason except for companionship. Howbeit,
+it was the turning-point of Billy's career; such restraint as kindness,
+civilization, or even policemen had exercised upon his nature was gone.
+He retained, I fear, a certain wicked intelligence, picked up in San
+Francisco with the newspapers and theatrical and election posters he
+had consumed. He reappeared at Rocky Canyon among the miners as an
+exceedingly agile chamois, with the low cunning of a satyr. That was all
+that civilization had done for him!
+
+If Mr. M'Ginnis had fondly conceived that he would make Billy "useful,"
+as well as companionable, he was singularly mistaken. Horses and mules
+were scarce in Rocky Canyon, and he attempted to utilize Billy by making
+him draw a small cart, laden with auriferous earth, from his claim to
+the river. Billy, rapidly gaining strength, was quite equal to the task,
+but alas! not his inborn propensity. An incautious gesture from the
+first passing miner Billy chose to construe into the usual challenge.
+Lowering his head, from which his budding horns had been already pruned
+by his master, he instantly went for his challenger, cart and all. Again
+the scientific law already pointed out prevailed. With the shock of
+the onset the entire contents of the cart arose and poured over the
+astonished miner, burying him from sight. In any other but a Californian
+mining-camp such a propensity in a draught animal would have been
+condemned, on account of the damage and suffering it entailed, but in
+Rocky Canyon it proved unprofitable to the owner from the very
+amusement and interest it excited. Miners lay in wait for Billy with
+a "greenhorn," or new-comer, whom they would put up to challenge the
+animal by some indiscreet gesture. In this way hardly a cartload of
+"pay-gravel" ever arrived safely at its destination, and the unfortunate
+M'Ginnis was compelled to withdraw Billy as a beast of burden. It
+was whispered that so great had his propensity become, under repeated
+provocation, that M'Ginnis himself was no longer safe. Going ahead
+of his cart one day to remove a fallen bough from the trail, Billy
+construed the act of stooping into a playful challenge from his
+master,--with the inevitable result.
+
+The next day M'Ginnis appeared with a wheelbarrow, but without Billy.
+From that day he was relegated to the rocky crags above the camp, from
+whence he was only lured occasionally by the mischievous miners, who
+wished to exhibit his peculiar performances. For although Billy had
+ample food and sustenance among the crags, he had still a civilized
+longing for posters; and whenever a circus, a concert, or a political
+meeting was "billed" in the settlement, he was on hand while the paste
+was yet fresh and succulent. In this way it was averred that he
+once removed a gigantic theatre bill setting forth the charms of the
+"Sacramento Pet," and being caught in the act by the advance agent, was
+pursued through the main street, carrying the damp bill on his horns,
+eventually affixing it, after his own peculiar fashion, on the back of
+Judge Boompointer, who was standing in front of his own court-house.
+
+In connection with the visits of this young lady another story
+concerning Billy survives in the legends of Rocky Canyon. Colonel
+Starbottle was at that time passing through the settlement on election
+business, and it was part of his chivalrous admiration for the sex to
+pay a visit to the pretty actress. The single waiting-room of the little
+hotel gave upon the veranda, which was also level with the street. After
+a brief yet gallant interview, in which he oratorically expressed
+the gratitude of the settlement with old-fashioned Southern courtesy,
+Colonel Starbottle lifted the chubby little hand of the "Pet" to his
+lips, and, with a low bow, backed out upon the veranda. But the Pet was
+astounded by his instant reappearance, and by his apparently casting
+himself passionately and hurriedly at her feet! It is needless to say
+that he was followed closely by Billy, who from the street had casually
+noticed him, and construed his novel exit into an ungentlemanly
+challenge.
+
+Billy's visits, however, became less frequent, and as Rocky Canyon
+underwent the changes incidental to mining settlements, he was presently
+forgotten in the invasion of a few Southwestern families, and the
+adoption of amusements less practical and turbulent than he had
+afforded. It was alleged that he was still seen in the more secluded
+fastnesses of the mountains, having reverted to a wild state, and it was
+suggested by one or two of the more adventurous that he might yet become
+edible, and a fair object of chase. A traveler through the Upper Pass of
+the canyon related how he had seen a savage-looking, hairy animal like
+a small elk perched upon inaccessible rocks, but always out of gunshot.
+But these and other legends were set at naught and overthrown by an
+unexpected incident.
+
+The Pioneer Coach was toiling up the long grade towards Skinners Pass
+when Yuba Bill suddenly pulled up, with his feet on the brake.
+
+"Jimminy!" he ejaculated, drawing a deep breath.
+
+The startled passenger beside him on the box followed the direction of
+his eyes. Through an opening in the wayside pines he could see, a few
+hundred yards away, a cuplike hollow in the hillside of the vividest
+green. In the centre a young girl of fifteen or sixteen was dancing and
+keeping step to the castanet "click" of a pair of "bones," such as negro
+minstrels use, held in her hands above her head. But, more singular
+still, a few paces before her a large goat, with its neck roughly
+wreathed with flowers and vines, was taking ungainly bounds and leaps
+in imitation of its companion. The wild background of the Sierras, the
+pastoral hollow, the incongruousness of the figures, and the vivid color
+of the girl's red flannel petticoat showing beneath her calico skirt,
+that had been pinned around her waist, made a striking picture, which
+by this time had attracted all eyes. Perhaps the dancing of the girl
+suggested a negro "break-down" rather than any known sylvan measure; but
+all this, and even the clatter of the bones, was made gracious by the
+distance.
+
+"Esmeralda! by the living Harry!" shouted the excited passenger on the
+box.
+
+Yuba Bill took his feet off the brake, and turned a look of deep scorn
+upon his companion as he gathered the reins again.
+
+"It's that blanked goat, outer Rocky Canyon beyond, and Polly Harkness!
+How did she ever come to take up with HIM?"
+
+Nevertheless, as soon as the coach reached Rocky Canyon, the story was
+quickly told by the passengers, corroborated by Yuba Bill, and highly
+colored by the observer on the box-seat. Harkness was known to be a
+new-comer who lived with his wife and only daughter on the other side of
+Skinners Pass. He was a "logger" and charcoal-burner, who had eaten his
+way into the serried ranks of pines below the pass, and established in
+these efforts an almost insurmountable cordon of fallen trees, stripped
+bark, and charcoal pits around the clearing where his rude log
+hut stood,--which kept his seclusion unbroken. He was said to be a
+half-savage mountaineer from Georgia, in whose rude fastnesses he had
+distilled unlawful whiskey, and that his tastes and habits unfitted him
+for civilization. His wife chewed and smoked; he was believed to make a
+fiery brew of his own from acorns and pine nuts; he seldom came to Rocky
+Canyon except for provisions; his logs were slipped down a "shoot" or
+slide to the river, where they voyaged once a month to a distant mill,
+but HE did not accompany them. The daughter, seldom seen at Rocky
+Canyon, was a half-grown girl, brown as autumn fern, wild-eyed,
+disheveled, in a homespun skirt, sunbonnet, and boy's brogans. Such were
+the plain facts which skeptical Rocky Canyon opposed to the passengers'
+legends. Nevertheless, some of the younger miners found it not out of
+their way to go over Skinners Pass on the journey to the river, but with
+what success was not told. It was said, however, that a celebrated New
+York artist, making a tour of California, was on the coach one day going
+through the pass, and preserved the memory of what he saw there in a
+well-known picture entitled "Dancing Nymph and Satyr," said by competent
+critics to be "replete with the study of Greek life." This did not
+affect Rocky Canyon, where the study of mythology was presumably
+displaced by an experience of more wonderful flesh-and-blood people, but
+later it was remembered with some significance.
+
+Among the improvements already noted, a zinc and wooden chapel had been
+erected in the main street, where a certain popular revivalist preacher
+of a peculiar Southwestern sect regularly held exhortatory services. His
+rude emotional power over his ignorant fellow-sectarians was well known,
+while curiosity drew others. His effect upon the females of his flock
+was hysterical and sensational. Women prematurely aged by frontier
+drudgery and child-bearing, girls who had known only the rigors and
+pains of a half-equipped, ill-nourished youth in their battling with the
+hard realities of nature around them, all found a strange fascination in
+the extravagant glories and privileges of the unseen world he pictured
+to them, which they might have found in the fairy tales and nursery
+legends of civilized children, had they known them. Personally he was
+not attractive; his thin pointed face, and bushy hair rising on
+either side of his square forehead in two rounded knots, and his long,
+straggling, wiry beard dropping from a strong neck and shoulders,
+were indeed of a common Southwestern type; yet in him they suggested
+something more. This was voiced by a miner who attended his first
+service, and as the Reverend Mr. Withholder rose in the pulpit, the
+former was heard to audibly ejaculate, "Dod blasted!--if it ain't
+Billy!" But when on the following Sunday, to everybody's astonishment,
+Polly Harkness, in a new white muslin frock and broad-brimmed Leghorn
+hat, appeared before the church door with the real Billy, and exchanged
+conversation with the preacher, the likeness was appalling.
+
+I grieve to say that the goat was at once christened by Rocky Canyon as
+"The Reverend Billy," and the minister himself was Billy's "brother."
+More than that, when an attempt was made by outsiders, during
+the service, to inveigle the tethered goat into his old butting
+performances, and he took not the least notice of their insults and
+challenges, the epithet "blanked hypocrite" was added to his title.
+
+Had he really reformed? Had his pastoral life with his nymph-like
+mistress completely cured him of his pugnacious propensity, or had
+he simply found it was inconsistent with his dancing, and seriously
+interfered with his "fancy steps"? Had he found tracts and hymn-books
+were as edible as theatre posters? These were questions that Rocky
+canyon discussed lightly, although there was always the more serious
+mystery of the relations of the Reverend Mr. Withholder, Polly Harkness,
+and the goat towards each other. The appearance of Polly at church was
+no doubt due to the minister's active canvass of the districts. But had
+he ever heard of Polly's dancing with the goat? And where in this plain,
+angular, badly dressed Polly was hidden that beautiful vision of the
+dancing nymph which had enthralled so many? And when had Billy ever
+given any suggestion of his Terpsichorean abilities--before or since?
+Were there any "points" of the kind to be discerned in him now? None!
+Was it not more probable that the Reverend Mr. Withholder had himself
+been dancing with Polly, and been mistaken for the goat? Passengers who
+could have been so deceived with regard to Polly's beauty might have as
+easily mistaken the minister for Billy. About this time another incident
+occurred which increased the mystery.
+
+The only male in the settlement who apparently dissented from the
+popular opinion regarding Polly was a new-comer, Jack Filgee. While
+discrediting her performance with the goat,--which he had never
+seen,--he was evidently greatly prepossessed with the girl herself.
+Unfortunately, he was equally addicted to drinking, and as he was
+exceedingly shy and timid when sober, and quite unpresentable at other
+times, his wooing, if it could be so called, progressed but slowly.
+Yet when he found that Polly went to church, he listened so far to the
+exhortations of the Reverend Mr. Withholder as to promise to come
+to "Bible class" immediately after the Sunday service. It was a hot
+afternoon, and Jack, who had kept sober for two days, incautiously
+fortified himself for the ordeal by taking a drink before arriving. He
+was nervously early, and immediately took a seat in the empty church
+near the open door. The quiet of the building, the drowsy buzzing of
+flies, and perhaps the soporific effect of the liquor caused his eyes
+to close and his head to fall forward on his breast repeatedly. He
+was recovering himself for the fourth time when he suddenly received a
+violent cuff on the ear, and was knocked backward off the bench on which
+he was sitting. That was all he knew.
+
+He picked himself up with a certain dignity, partly new to him, and
+partly the result of his condition, and staggered, somewhat bruised and
+disheveled, to the nearest saloon. Here a few frequenters who had
+seen him pass, who knew his errand and the devotion to Polly which had
+induced it, exhibited a natural concern.
+
+"How's things down at the gospel shop?" said one. "Look as ef you'd been
+wrastlin' with the Sperit, Jack!"
+
+"Old man must hev exhorted pow'ful," said another, glancing at his
+disordered Sunday attire.
+
+"Ain't be'n hevin' a row with Polly? I'm told she slings an awful left."
+
+Jack, instead of replying, poured out a dram of whiskey, drank it,
+and putting down his glass, leaned heavily against the counter as he
+surveyed his questioners with a sorrow chastened by reproachful dignity.
+
+"I'm a stranger here, gentlemen," he said slowly "ye've known me only a
+little; but ez ye've seen me both blind drunk and sober, I reckon ye've
+caught on to my gin'ral gait! Now I wanter put it to you, ez fair-minded
+men, ef you ever saw me strike a parson?"
+
+"No," said a chorus of sympathetic voices. The barkeeper, however, with
+a swift recollection of Polly and the Reverend Withholder, and some
+possible contingent jealousy in Jack, added prudently, "Not yet."
+
+The chorus instantly added reflectively, "Well, no not yet."
+
+"Did ye ever," continued Jack solemnly, "know me to cuss, sass,
+bully-rag, or say anything agin parsons, or the church?"
+
+"No," said the crowd, overthrowing prudence in curiosity, "ye never
+did,--we swear it! And now, what's up?"
+
+"I ain't what you call 'a member in good standin','" he went on,
+artistically protracting his climax. "I ain't be'n convicted o' sin;
+I ain't 'a meek an' lowly follower;' I ain't be'n exactly what I orter
+be'n; I hevn't lived anywhere up to my lights; but is thet a reason why
+a parson should strike me?"
+
+"Why? What? When did he? Who did?" asked the eager crowd, with one
+voice.
+
+Jack then painfully related how he had been invited by the Reverend
+Mr. Withholder to attend the Bible class. How he had arrived early,
+and found the church empty. How he had taken a seat near the door to
+be handy when the parson came. How he just felt "kinder kam and good,"
+listenin' to the flies buzzing, and must have fallen asleep,--only he
+pulled himself up every time,--though, after all, it warn't no crime to
+fall asleep in an empty church! How "all of a suddent" the parson came
+in, "give him a clip side o' the head," and knocked him off the bench,
+and left him there!
+
+"But what did he SAY?" queried the crowd.
+
+"Nuthin'. Afore I could get up, he got away."
+
+"Are you sure it was him?" they asked. "You know you SAY you was
+asleep."
+
+"Am I sure?" repeated Jack scornfully. "Don't I know thet face and
+beard? Didn't I feel it hangin' over me?"
+
+"What are you going to do about it?" continued the crowd eagerly.
+
+"Wait till he comes out--and you'll see," said Jack, with dignity.
+
+This was enough for the crowd; they gathered excitedly at the door,
+where Jack was already standing, looking towards the church. The moments
+dragged slowly; it might be a long meeting. Suddenly the church door
+opened and a figure appeared, looking up and down the street. Jack
+colored--he recognized Polly--and stepped out into the road. The crowd
+delicately, but somewhat disappointedly, drew back in the saloon. They
+did not care to interfere in THAT sort of thing.
+
+Polly saw him, and came hurriedly towards him. She was holding something
+in her hand.
+
+"I picked this up on the church floor," she said shyly, "so I reckoned
+you HAD be'n there,--though the parson said you hadn't,--and I just
+excused myself and ran out to give it ye. It's yourn, ain't it?"
+She held up a gold specimen pin, which he had put on in honor of the
+occasion. "I had a harder time, though, to git this yer,--it's yourn
+too,--for Billy was laying down in the yard, back o' the church, and
+just comf'bly swallerin' it."
+
+"Who?" said Jack quickly.
+
+"Billy,--my goat."
+
+Jack drew a long breath, and glanced back at the saloon. "Ye ain't goin'
+back to class now, are ye?" he said hurriedly. "Ef you ain't, I'll--I'll
+see ye home."
+
+"I don't mind," said Polly demurely, "if it ain't takin' ye outer y'ur
+way."
+
+Jack offered his arm, and hurrying past the saloon, the happy pair were
+soon on the road to Skinners Pass.
+
+
+Jack did not, I regret to say, confess his blunder, but left the
+Reverend Mr. Withholder to remain under suspicion of having committed an
+unprovoked assault and battery. It was characteristic of Rocky Canyon,
+however, that this suspicion, far from injuring his clerical reputation,
+incited a respect that had been hitherto denied him. A man who could
+hit out straight from the shoulder had, in the language of the critics,
+"suthin' in him." Oddly enough, the crowd that had at first sympathized
+with Jack now began to admit provocations. His subsequent silence, a
+disposition when questioned on the subject to smile inanely, and, later,
+when insidiously asked if he had ever seen Polly dancing with the goat,
+his bursting into uproarious laughter completely turned the current of
+opinion against him. The public mind, however, soon became engrossed by
+a more interesting incident.
+
+The Reverend Mr. Withholder had organized a series of Biblical tableaux
+at Skinnerstown for the benefit of his church. Illustrations were to be
+given of "Rebecca at the Well," "The Finding of Moses," "Joseph and
+his Brethren;" but Rocky Canyon was more particularly excited by the
+announcement that Polly Harkness would personate "Jephthah's Daughter."
+On the evening of the performance, however, it was found that this
+tableau had been withdrawn and another substituted, for reasons not
+given. Rocky Canyon, naturally indignant at this omission to represent
+native talent, indulged in a hundred wild surmises. But it was generally
+believed that Jack Filgee's revengeful animosity to the Reverend Mr.
+Withholder was at the bottom of it. Jack, as usual, smiled inanely, but
+nothing was to be got from him. It was not until a few days later, when
+another incident crowned the climax of these mysteries, that a full
+disclosure came from his lips.
+
+One morning a flaming poster was displayed at Rocky Canyon, with a
+charming picture of the "Sacramento Pet" in the briefest of skirts,
+disporting with a tambourine before a goat garlanded with flowers, who
+bore, however, an undoubted likeness to Billy. The text in enormous
+letters, and bristling with points of admiration, stated that the "Pet"
+would appear as "Esmeralda," assisted by a performing goat, especially
+trained by the gifted actress. The goat would dance, play cards, and
+perform those tricks of magic familiar to the readers of Victor Hugo's
+beautiful story of the "Hunchback of Notre Dame," and finally knock
+down and overthrow the designing seducer, Captain Phoebus. The marvelous
+spectacle would be produced under the patronage of the Hon. Colonel
+Starbottle and the Mayor of Skinnerstown.
+
+As all Rocky Canyon gathered open-mouthed around the poster, Jack
+demurely joined the group. Every eye was turned upon him.
+
+"It don't look as if yer Polly was in THIS show, any more than she
+was in the tablows," said one, trying to conceal his curiosity under a
+slight sneer. "She don't seem to be doin' any dancin'!"
+
+"She never DID any dancin'," said Jack, with a smile.
+
+"Never DID! Then what was all these yarns about her dancin' up at the
+pass?"
+
+"It was the Sacramento Pet who did all the dancin'; Polly only LENT
+the goat. Ye see, the Pet kinder took a shine to Billy arter he bowled
+Starbottle over thet day at the hotel, and she thought she might teach
+him tricks. So she DID, doing all her teachin' and stage-rehearsin' up
+there at the pass, so's to be outer sight, and keep this thing dark. She
+bribed Polly to lend her the goat and keep her secret, and Polly never
+let on a word to anybody but me."
+
+"Then it was the Pet that Yuba Bill saw dancin' from the coach?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And that yer artist from New York painted as an 'Imp and Satire'?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then that's how Polly didn't show up in them tablows at Skinnerstown?
+It was Withholder who kinder smelt a rat, eh? and found out it was only
+a theayter gal all along that did the dancin'?"
+
+"Well, you see," said Jack, with affected hesitation, "thet's another
+yarn. I don't know mebbe ez I oughter tell it. Et ain't got anything
+to do with this advertisement o' the Pet, and might be rough on old man
+Withholder! Ye mustn't ask me, boys."
+
+But there was that in his eye, and above all in this lazy
+procrastination of the true humorist when he is approaching his climax,
+which rendered the crowd clamorous and unappeasable. They WOULD have the
+story!
+
+Seeing which, Jack leaned back against a rock with great gravity, put
+his hands in his pockets, looked discontentedly at the ground, and
+began: "You see, boys, old Parson Withholder had heard all these yarns
+about Polly and thet trick-goat, and he kinder reckoned that she might
+do for some one of his tablows. So he axed her if she'd mind standin'
+with the goat and a tambourine for Jephthah's Daughter, at about the
+time when old Jeph comes home, sailin' in and vowin' he'll kill the
+first thing he sees,--jest as it is in the Bible story. Well, Polly
+didn't like to say it wasn't HER that performed with the goat, but the
+Pet, for thet would give the Pet dead away; so Polly agrees to come thar
+with the goat and rehearse the tablow. Well, Polly's thar, a little
+shy; and Billy,--you bet HE'S all there, and ready for the fun; but the
+darned fool who plays Jephthah ain't worth shucks, and when HE comes
+in he does nothin' but grin at Polly and seem skeert at the goat. This
+makes old Withholder jest wild, and at last he goes on the platform
+hisself to show them how the thing oughter be done. So he comes bustlin'
+and prancin' in, and ketches sight o' Polly dancin' in with the goat to
+welcome him; and then he clasps his hands--so--and drops on his knees,
+and hangs down his head--so--and sez, 'Me chyld! me vow! Oh,
+heavens!' But jest then Billy--who's gettin' rather tired o' all this
+foolishness--kinder slues round on his hind legs, and ketches sight o'
+the parson!" Jack paused a moment, and thrusting his hands still deeper
+in his pockets, said lazily, "I don't know if you fellers have noticed
+how much old Withholder looks like Billy?"
+
+There was a rapid and impatient chorus of "Yes! yes!" and "Go on!"
+
+"Well," continued Jack, "when Billy sees Withholder kneelin' thar
+with his head down, he gives a kind o' joyous leap and claps his hoofs
+together, ez much ez to say, 'I'm on in this scene,' drops his own head,
+and jest lights out for the parson!"
+
+"And butts him clean through the side scenes into the street,"
+interrupted a delighted auditor.
+
+But Jack's face never changed. "Ye think so?" he said gravely. "But
+thet's jest whar ye slip up; and thet's jest whar Billy slipped up!" he
+added slowly. "Mebbe ye've noticed, too, thet the parson's built kinder
+solid about the head and shoulders. It mought hev be'n thet, or thet
+Billy didn't get a fair start, but thet goat went down on his fore legs
+like a shot, and the parson gave one heave, and jest scooted him off the
+platform! Then the parson reckoned thet this yer 'tablow' had better
+be left out, as thar didn't seem to be any other man who could play
+Jephthah, and it wasn't dignified for HIM to take the part. But the
+parson allowed thet it might be a great moral lesson to Billy!"
+
+And it WAS, for from that moment Billy never attempted to butt again.
+He performed with great docility later on in the Pet's engagement at
+Skinnerstown; he played a distinguished role throughout the provinces;
+he had had the advantages of Art from "the Pet," and of Simplicity from
+Polly, but only Rocky Canyon knew that his real education had come with
+his first rehearsal with the Reverend Mr. Withholder.
+
+
+
+
+DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+
+
+There was surprise and sometimes disappointment in Rough and Ready, when
+it was known that Dick Spindler intended to give a "family" Christmas
+party at his own house. That he should take an early opportunity to
+celebrate his good fortune and show hospitality was only expected from
+the man who had just made a handsome "strike" on his claim; but that it
+should assume so conservative, old-fashioned, and respectable a form was
+quite unlooked-for by Rough and Ready, and was thought by some a trifle
+pretentious. There were not half-a-dozen families in Rough and Ready;
+nobody ever knew before that Spindler had any relations, and this
+"ringing in" of strangers to the settlement seemed to indicate at least
+a lack of public spirit. "He might," urged one of his critics, "hev
+given the boys,--that had worked alongside o' him in the ditches by day,
+and slung lies with him around the camp-fire by night,--he might hev
+given them a square 'blow out,' and kep' the leavin's for his old
+Spindler crew, just as other families do. Why, when old man Scudder had
+his house-raisin' last year, his family lived for a week on what was
+left over, arter the boys had waltzed through the house that night,--and
+the Scudders warn't strangers, either." It was also evident that there
+was an uneasy feeling that Spindler's action indicated an unhallowed
+leaning towards the minority of respectability and exclusiveness, and
+a desertion--without the excuse of matrimony--of the convivial and
+independent bachelor majority of Rough and Ready.
+
+"Ef he was stuck after some gal and was kinder looking ahead, I'd hev
+understood it," argued another critic.
+
+"Don't ye be too sure he ain't," said Uncle Jim Starbuck gloomily.
+"Ye'll find that some blamed woman is at the bottom of this yer 'family'
+gathering. That and trouble ez almost all they're made for!"
+
+There happened to be some truth in this dark prophecy, but none of the
+kind that the misogynist supposed. In fact, Spindler had called a
+few evenings before at the house of the Rev. Mr. Saltover, and Mrs.
+Saltover, having one of her "Saleratus headaches," had turned him over
+to her widow sister, Mrs. Huldy Price, who obediently bestowed upon
+him that practical and critical attention which she divided with the
+stocking she was darning. She was a woman of thirty-five, of singular
+nerve and practical wisdom, who had once smuggled her wounded husband
+home from a border affray, calmly made coffee for his deceived pursuers
+while he lay hidden in the loft, walked four miles for that medical
+assistance which arrived too late to save him, buried him secretly in
+his own "quarter section," with only one other witness and mourner, and
+so saved her position and property in that wild community, who believed
+he had fled. There was very little of this experience to be traced in
+her round, fresh-colored brunette cheek, her calm black eyes, set in
+a prickly hedge of stiff lashes, her plump figure, or her frank,
+courageous laugh. The latter appeared as a smile when she welcomed Mr.
+Spindler. "She hadn't seen him for a coon's age," but "reckoned he was
+busy fixin' up his new house."
+
+"Well, yes," said Spindler, with a slight hesitation, "ye see, I'm
+reckonin' to hev a kinder Christmas gatherin' of my"--he was about to
+say "folks," but dismissed it for "relations," and finally settled upon
+"relatives" as being more correct in a preacher's house.
+
+Mrs. Price thought it a very good idea. Christmas was the natural season
+for the family to gather to "see who's here and who's there, who's
+gettin' on and who isn't, and who's dead and buried. It was lucky
+for them who were so placed that they could do so and be joyful."
+Her invincible philosophy probably carried her past any dangerous
+recollections of the lonely grave in Kansas, and holding up the stocking
+to the light, she glanced cheerfully along its level to Mr. Spindler's
+embarrassed face by the fire.
+
+"Well, I can't say much ez to that," responded Spindler, still
+awkwardly, "for you see I don't know much about it anyway."
+
+"How long since you've seen 'em?" asked Mrs. Price, apparently
+addressing herself to the stocking.
+
+Spindler gave a weak laugh. "Well, you see, ef it comes to that, I've
+never seen 'em!"
+
+Mrs. Price put the stocking in her lap and opened her direct eyes
+on Spindler. "Never seen 'em?" she repeated. "Then, they're not near
+relations?"
+
+"There are three cousins," said Spindler, checking them off on his
+fingers, "a half-uncle, a kind of brother-in-law,--that is, the brother
+of my sister-in-law's second husband,--and a niece. That's six."
+
+"But if you've not seen them, I suppose they've corresponded with you?"
+said Mrs. Price.
+
+"They've nearly all of 'em written to me for money, seeing my name
+in the paper ez hevin' made a strike," returned Spindler simply; "and
+hevin' sent it, I jest know their addresses."
+
+"Oh!" said Mrs. Price, returning to the stocking.
+
+Something in the tone of her ejaculation increased Spindler's
+embarrassment, but it also made him desperate. "You see, Mrs. Price,"
+he blurted out, "I oughter tell ye that I reckon they are the folks that
+'hevn't got on,' don't you see, and so it seemed only the square thing
+for me, ez had 'got on,' to give them a sort o' Christmas festival.
+Suthin', don't ye know, like what your brother-in-law was sayin' last
+Sunday in the pulpit about this yer peace and goodwill 'twixt man and
+man."
+
+Mrs. Price looked again at the man before her. His sallow, perplexed
+face exhibited some doubt, yet a certain determination, regarding
+the prospect the quotation had opened to him. "A very good idea, Mr.
+Spindler, and one that does you great credit," she said gravely.
+
+"I'm mighty glad to hear you say so, Mrs. Price," he said, with an
+accent of great relief, "for I reckoned to ask you a great favor! You
+see," he fell into his former hesitation, "that is--the fact is--that
+this sort o' thing is rather suddent to me,--a little outer my line,
+don't you see, and I was goin' to ask ye ef you'd mind takin' the hull
+thing in hand and runnin it for me."
+
+"Running it for you," said Mrs. Price, with a quick eye-shot from under
+the edge of her lashes. "Man alive! What are you thinking of?"
+
+"Bossin' the whole job for me," hurried on Spindler, with nervous
+desperation. "Gettin' together all the things and makin' ready for
+'em,--orderin' in everythin' that's wanted, and fixin' up the rooms,--I
+kin step out while you're doin' it,--and then helpin' me receivin' 'em,
+and sittin' at the head o' the table, you know,--like ez ef you was the
+mistress."
+
+"But," said Mrs. Price, with her frank laugh, "that's the duty of one of
+your relations,--your niece, for instance,--or cousin, if one of them is
+a woman."
+
+"But," persisted Spindler, "you see, they're strangers to me; I don't
+know 'em, and I do you. You'd make it easy for 'em,--and for me,--don't
+you see? Kinder introduce 'em,--don't you know? A woman of your gin'ral
+experience would smooth down all them little difficulties," continued
+Spindler, with a vague recollection of the Kansas story, "and put
+everybody on velvet. Don't say 'No,' Mrs. Price! I'm just kalkilatin' on
+you."
+
+Sincerity and persistency in a man goes a great way with even the best
+of women. Mrs. Price, who had at first received Spindler's request as an
+amusing originality, now began to incline secretly towards it. And, of
+course, began to suggest objections.
+
+"I'm afraid it won't do," she said thoughtfully, awakening to the fact
+that it would do and could be done. "You see, I've promised to spend
+Christmas at Sacramento with my nieces from Baltimore. And then there's
+Mrs. Saltover and my sister to consult."
+
+But here Spindler's simple face showed such signs of distress that the
+widow declared she would "think it over,"--a process which the sanguine
+Spindler seemed to consider so nearly akin to talking it over that Mrs.
+Price began to believe it herself, as he hopefully departed.
+
+She "thought it over" sufficiently to go to Sacramento and excuse
+herself to her nieces. But here she permitted herself to "talk it over,"
+to the infinite delight of those Baltimore girls, who thought this
+extravaganza of Spindler's "so Californian and eccentric!" So that it
+was not strange that presently the news came back to Rough and Ready,
+and his old associates learned for the first time that he had never seen
+his relatives, and that they would be doubly strangers. This did not
+increase his popularity; neither, I grieve to say, did the intelligence
+that his relatives were probably poor, and that the Reverend Mr.
+Saltover had approved of his course, and had likened it to the rich
+man's feast, to which the halt and blind were invited. Indeed, the
+allusion was supposed to add hypocrisy and a bid for popularity to
+Spindler's defection, for it was argued that he might have feasted
+"Wall-eyed Joe" or "Tangle-foot Billy,"--who had once been "chawed" by
+a bear while prospecting,--if he had been sincere. Howbeit, Spindler's
+faith was oblivious to these criticisms, in his joy at Mr. Saltover's
+adhesion to his plans and the loan of Mrs. Price as a hostess. In
+fact, he proposed to her that the invitation should also convey that
+information in the expression, "by the kind permission of the Rev. Mr.
+Saltover," as a guarantee of good faith, but the widow would have none
+of it. The invitations were duly written and dispatched.
+
+"Suppose," suggested Spindler, with a sudden lugubrious
+apprehension,--"suppose they shouldn't come?"
+
+"Have no fear of that," said Mrs. Price, with a frank laugh.
+
+"Or ef they was dead," continued Spindler.
+
+"They couldn't all be dead," said the widow cheerfully.
+
+"I've written to another cousin by marriage," said Spindler dubiously,
+"in case of accident; I didn't think of him before, because he was
+rich."
+
+"And have you ever seen him either, Mr. Spindler?" asked the widow, with
+a slight mischievousness.
+
+"Lordy! No!" he responded, with unaffected concern.
+
+Only one mistake was made by Mrs. Price in her arrangements for the
+party. She had noticed what the simple-minded Spindler could never have
+conceived,--the feeling towards him held by his old associates, and had
+tactfully suggested that a general invitation should be extended to them
+in the evening.
+
+"You can have refreshments, you know, too, after the dinner, and games
+and music."
+
+"But," said the unsophisticated host, "won't the boys think I'm playing
+it rather low down on them, so to speak, givin' 'em a kind o' second
+table, as ef it was the tailings after a strike?"
+
+"Nonsense," said Mrs. Price, with decision. "It's quite fashionable in
+San Francisco, and just the thing to do."
+
+To this decision Spindler, in his blind faith in the widow's management,
+weakly yielded. An announcement in the "Weekly Banner" that, "On
+Christmas evening Richard Spindler, Esq., proposed to entertain his
+friends and fellow citizens at an 'at home,' in his own residence,"
+not only widened the breach between him and the "boys," but awakened an
+active resentment that only waited for an outlet. It was understood that
+they were all coming; but that they should have "some fun out of it"
+which might not coincide with Spindler's nor his relatives' sense of
+humor seemed a foregone conclusion.
+
+Unfortunately, too, subsequent events lent themselves to this irony of
+the situation.
+
+He was so obviously sincere in his intent, and, above all, seemed to
+place such a pathetic reliance on her judgment, that she hesitated to
+let him know the shock his revelation had given her. And what might his
+other relations prove to be? Good Lord! Yet, oddly enough, she was so
+prepossessed by him, and so fascinated by his very Quixotism, that it
+was perhaps for these complex reasons that she said a little stiffly:--
+
+"One of these cousins, I see, is a lady, and then there is your niece.
+Do you know anything about them, Mr. Spindler?"
+
+His face grew serious. "No more than I know of the others," he said
+apologetically. After a moment's hesitation he went on: "Now you speak
+of it, it seems to me I've heard that my niece was di-vorced. But," he
+added, brightening up, "I've heard that she was popular."
+
+Mrs. Price gave a short laugh, and was silent for a few minutes. Then
+this sublime little woman looked up at him. What he might have seen in
+her eyes was more than he expected, or, I fear, deserved. "Cheer up, Mr.
+Spindler," she said manfully. "I'll see you through this thing, don't
+you mind! But don't you say anything about--about--this Vigilance
+Committee business to anybody. Nor about your niece--it was your niece,
+wasn't it?--being divorced. Charley (the late Mr. Price) had a queer
+sort of sister, who--but that's neither here nor there! And your niece
+mayn't come, you know; or if she does, you ain't bound to bring her out
+to the general company."
+
+At parting, Spindler, in sheer gratefulness, pressed her hand, and
+lingered so long over it that a little color sprang into the widow's
+brown cheek. Perhaps a fresh courage sprang into her heart, too, for
+she went to Sacramento the next day, previously enjoining Spindler on no
+account to show any answers he might receive. At Sacramento her nieces
+flew to her with confidences.
+
+"We so wanted to see you, Aunt Huldy, for we've heard something so
+delightful about your funny Christmas Party!" Mrs. Price's heart sank,
+but her eyes snapped. "Only think of it! One of Mr. Spindler's long-lost
+relatives--a Mr. Wragg--lives in this hotel, and papa knows him. He's
+a sort of half-uncle, I believe, and he's just furious that Spindler
+should have invited him. He showed papa the letter; said it was
+the greatest piece of insolence in the world; that Spindler was an
+ostentatious fool, who had made a little money and wanted to use him
+to get into society; and the fun of the whole thing was that this
+half-uncle and whole brute is himself a parvenu,--a vulgar, ostentatious
+creature, who was only a"--
+
+"Never mind what he was, Kate," interrupted Mrs. Price hastily. "I call
+his conduct a shame."
+
+"So do we," said both girls eagerly. After a pause Kate clasped her
+knees with her locked fingers, and rocking backwards and forwards, said,
+"Milly and I have got an idea, and don't you say 'No' to it. We've had
+it ever since that brute talked in that way. Now, through him, we know
+more about this Mr. Spindler's family connections than you do; and we
+know all the trouble you and he'll have in getting up this party. You
+understand? Now, we first want to know what Spindler's like. Is he a
+savage, bearded creature, like the miners we saw on the boat?"
+
+Mrs. Price said that, on the contrary, he was very gentle, soft-spoken,
+and rather good-looking.
+
+"Young or old?"
+
+"Young,--in fact, a mere boy, as you may judge from his actions,"
+returned Mrs. Price, with a suggestive matronly air.
+
+Kate here put up a long-handled eyeglass to her fine gray eyes, fitted
+it ostentatiously over her aquiline nose, and then said, in a voice of
+simulated horror, "Aunt Huldy,--this revelation is shocking!"
+
+Mrs. Price laughed her usual frank laugh, albeit her brown cheek took
+upon it a faint tint of Indian red. "If that's the wonderful idea you
+girls have got, I don't see how it's going to help matters," she said
+dryly.
+
+"No, that's not it? We really have an idea. Now look here."
+
+Mrs. Price "looked here." This process seemed to the superficial
+observer to be merely submitting her waist and shoulders to the arms of
+her nieces, and her ears to their confidential and coaxing voices.
+
+Twice she said "it couldn't be thought of," and "it was impossible;"
+once addressed Kate as "You limb!" and finally said that she "wouldn't
+promise, but might write!"
+
+*****
+
+It was two days before Christmas. There was nothing in the air, sky,
+or landscape of that Sierran slope to suggest the season to the Eastern
+stranger. A soft rain had been dropping for a week on laurel, pine, and
+buckeye, and the blades of springing grasses and shyly opening flowers.
+Sedate and silent hillsides that had grown dumb and parched towards the
+end of the dry season became gently articulate again; there were murmurs
+in hushed and forgotten canyons, the leap and laugh of water among the
+dry bones of dusty creeks, and the full song of the larger forks and
+rivers. Southwest winds brought the warm odor of the pine sap swelling
+in the forest, or the faint, far-off spice of wild mustard springing
+in the lower valleys. But, as if by some irony of Nature, this gentle
+invasion of spring in the wild wood brought only disturbance and
+discomfort to the haunts and works of man. The ditches were overflowed,
+the fords of the Fork impassable, the sluicing adrift, and the trails
+and wagon roads to Rough and Ready knee-deep in mud. The stage-coach
+from Sacramento, entering the settlement by the mountain highway, its
+wheels and panels clogged and crusted with an unctuous pigment like mud
+and blood, passed out of it through the overflowed and dangerous ford,
+and emerged in spotless purity, leaving its stains behind with Rough
+and Ready. A week of enforced idleness on the river "Bar" had driven
+the miners to the more comfortable recreation of the saloon bar, its
+mirrors, its florid paintings, its armchairs, and its stove. The steam
+of their wet boots and the smoke of their pipes hung over the latter
+like the sacrificial incense from an altar. But the attitude of the men
+was more critical and censorious than contented, and showed little of
+the gentleness of the weather or season.
+
+"Did you hear if the stage brought down any more relations of
+Spindler's?"
+
+The barkeeper, to whom this question was addressed, shifted his lounging
+position against the bar and said, "I reckon not, ez far ez I know."
+
+"And that old bloat of a second cousin--that crimson beak--what kem
+down yesterday,--he ain't bin hangin' round here today for his reg'lar
+pizon?"
+
+"No," said the barkeeper thoughtfully, "I reckon Spindler's got him
+locked up, and is settin' on him to keep him sober till after Christmas,
+and prevent you boys gettin' at him."
+
+"He'll have the jimjams before that," returned the first speaker; "and
+how about that dead beat of a half-nephew who borrowed twenty dollars of
+Yuba Bill on the way down, and then wanted to get off at Shootersvilie,
+but Bill wouldn't let him, and scooted him down to Spindler's and
+collected the money from Spindler himself afore he'd give him up?"
+
+"He's up thar with the rest of the menagerie," said the barkeeper, "but
+I reckon that Mrs. Price hez bin feedin' him up. And ye know the old
+woman--that fifty-fifth cousin by marriage--whom Joe Chandler swears he
+remembers ez an old cook for a Chinese restaurant in Stockton,--darn my
+skin ef that Mrs. Price hasn't rigged her out in some fancy duds of her
+own, and made her look quite decent."
+
+A deep groan here broke from Uncle Jim Starbuck.
+
+"Didn't I tell ye?" he said, turning appealingly to the others. "It's
+that darned widow that's at the bottom of it all! She first put Spindler
+up to givin' the party, and now, darn my skin, ef she ain't goin to fix
+up these ragamuffins and drill 'em so we can't get any fun outer 'em
+after all! And it's bein' a woman that's bossin' the job, and not
+Spindler, we've got to draw things mighty fine and not cut up too rough,
+or some of the boys will kick."
+
+"You bet," said a surly but decided voice in the crowd.
+
+"And," said another voice, "Mrs. Price didn't live in 'Bleeding Kansas'
+for nothing."
+
+"Wot's the programme you've settled on, Uncle Jim?" said the barkeeper
+lightly, to check what seemed to promise a dangerous discussion.
+
+"Well," said Starbuck, "we kalkilate to gather early Christmas night in
+Hooper's Hollow and rig ourselves up Injun fashion, and then start for
+Spindler's with pitch-pine torches, and have a 'torchlight dance' around
+the house; them who does the dancin' and yellin' outside takin' their
+turn at goin' in and hevin' refreshment. Jake Cooledge, of Boston, sez
+if anybody objects to it, we've only got to say we're 'Mummers of the
+Olden Times,' sabe? Then, later, we'll have 'Them Sabbath Evening Bells'
+performed on prospectin' pans by the band. Then, at the finish, Jake
+Cooledge is goin' to give one of his surkastic speeches,--kinder
+welcomin' Spindler's family to the Free Openin' o' Spindler's Almshouse
+and Reformatory." He paused, possibly for that approbation which,
+however, did not seem to come spontaneously. "It ain't much," he added
+apologetically, "for we're hampered by women; but we'll add to the
+programme ez we see how things pan out. Ye see, from what we can hear,
+all of Spindler's relations ain't on hand yet! We've got to wait, like
+in elckshun times, for 'returns from the back counties.' Hello! What's
+that?"
+
+It was the swish and splutter of hoofs on the road before the door. The
+Sacramento coach! In an instant every man was expectant, and Starbuck
+darted outside on the platform. Then there was the usual greeting and
+bustle, the hurried ingress of thirsty passengers into the saloon, and a
+pause. Uncle Jim returned, excitedly and pantingly. "Look yer, boys! Ef
+this ain't the richest thing out! They say there's two more relations o'
+Spindler's on the coach, come down as express freight, consigned,--d'ye
+hear?--consigned to Spindler!"
+
+"Stiffs, in coffins?" suggested an eager voice.
+
+"I didn't get to hear more. But here they are."
+
+There was the sudden irruption of a laughing, curious crowd into the
+bar-room, led by Yuba Bill, the driver. Then the crowd parted, and
+out of their midst stepped two children, a boy and a girl, the oldest
+apparently of not more than six years, holding each other's hands. They
+were coarsely yet cleanly dressed, and with a certain uniform precision
+that suggested formal charity. But more remarkable than all, around the
+neck of each was a little steel chain, from which depended the regular
+check and label of the powerful Express Company, Wells; Fargo & Co., and
+the words: "To Richard Spindler." "Fragile." "With great care." "Collect
+on delivery." Occasionally their little hands went up automatically and
+touched their labels, as if to show them. They surveyed the crowd, the
+floor, the gilded bar, and Yuba Bill without fear and without wonder.
+There was a pathetic suggestion that they were accustomed to this
+observation.
+
+"Now, Bobby," said Yuba Bill, leaning back against the bar, with an air
+half-paternal, half-managerial, "tell these gents how you came here."
+
+"By Wellth, Fargoth Expreth," lisped Bobby.
+
+"Whar from?"
+
+"Wed Hill, Owegon."
+
+"Red Hill, Oregon? Why, it's a thousand miles from here," said a
+bystander.
+
+"I reckon," said Yuba Bill coolly, "they kem by stage to Portland, by
+steamer to 'Frisco, steamer again to Stockton, and then by stage over
+the whole line. Allers by Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Express, from agent to
+agent, and from messenger to messenger. Fact! They ain't bin tetched or
+handled by any one but the Kempany's agents; they ain't had a line or
+direction except them checks around their necks! And they've wanted for
+nothin' else. Why, I've carried heaps o' treasure before, gentlemen,
+and once a hundred thousand dollars in greenbacks, but I never carried
+anythin' that was watched and guarded as them kids! Why, the division
+inspector at Stockton wanted to go with 'em over the line; but Jim
+Bracy, the messenger, said he'd call it a reflection on himself and
+resign, ef they didn't give 'em to him with the other packages! Ye had a
+pretty good time, Bobby, didn't ye? Plenty to eat and drink, eh?"
+
+The two children laughed a little weak laugh, turned each other
+bashfully around, and then looked up shyly at Yuba Bill and said,
+"Yeth."
+
+"Do you know where you are goin'?" asked Starbuck, in a constrained
+voice.
+
+It was the little girl who answered quickly and eagerly:--
+
+"Yes, to Krissmass and Sandy Claus."
+
+"To what?" asked Starbuck.
+
+Here the boy interposed with a superior air:--
+
+"Thee meanth Couthin Dick. He'th got Krithmath."
+
+"Where's your mother?"
+
+"Dead."
+
+"And your father?"
+
+"In orthpittal."
+
+There was a laugh somewhere on the outskirts of the crowd. Every one
+faced angrily in that direction, but the laugher had disappeared. Yuba
+Bill, however, sent his voice after him. "Yes, in hospital! Funny, ain't
+it?--amoosin' place! Try it. Step over here, and in five minutes, by the
+living Hoky, I'll qualify you for admission, and not charge you a cent!"
+He stopped, gave a sweeping glance of dissatisfaction around him, and
+then, leaning back against the bar, beckoned to some one near the door,
+and said in a disgusted tone, "You tell these galoots how it happened,
+Bracy. They make me sick!"
+
+Thus appealed to, Bracy, the express messenger, stepped forward in Yuba
+Bill's place.
+
+"It's nothing particular, gentlemen," he said, with a laugh, "only
+it seems that some man called Spindler, who lives about here, sent an
+invitation to the father of these children to bring his family to a
+Christmas party. It wasn't a bad sort of thing for Spindler to do,
+considering that they were his poor relations, though they didn't know
+him from Adam,--was it?" He paused; several of the bystanders cleared
+their throats, but said nothing. "At least," resumed Bracy, "that's what
+the boys up at Red Hill, Oregon, thought, when they heard of it. Well,
+as the father was in hospital with a broken leg, and the mother only a
+few weeks dead, the boys thought it mighty rough on these poor kids if
+they were done out of their fun because they had no one to bring them.
+The boys couldn't afford to go themselves, but they got a little money
+together, and then got the idea of sendin' 'em by express. Our agent at
+Red Hill tumbled to the idea at once; but he wouldn't take any money in
+advance, and said he would send 'em 'C. O. D.' like any other package.
+And he did, and here they are! That's all! And now, gentlemen, as I've
+got to deliver them personally to this Spindler, and get his receipt and
+take off their checks, I reckon we must toddle. Come, Bill, help take
+'em up!"
+
+"Hold on!" said a dozen voices. A dozen hands were thrust into a dozen
+pockets; I grieve to say some were regretfully withdrawn empty, for it
+was a hard season in Rough and Ready. But the expressman stepped before
+them, with warning, uplifted hand.
+
+"Not a cent, boys,--not a cent! Wells, Fargo's Express Company don't
+undertake to carry bullion with those kids, at least on the same
+contract!" He laughed, and then looking around him, said confidentially
+in a lower voice, which, however, was quite audible to the children,
+"There's as much as three bags of silver in quarter and half dollars in
+my treasure box in the coach that has been poured, yes, just showered
+upon them, ever since they started, and have been passed over from agent
+to agent and messenger to messenger,--enough to pay their passage from
+here to China! It's time to say quits now. But bet your life, they are
+not going to that Christmas party poor!"
+
+He caught up the boy, as Yuba Bill lifted the little girl to his
+shoulder, and both passed out. Then one by one the loungers in the
+bar-room silently and awkwardly followed, and when the barkeeper turned
+back from putting away his decanters and glasses, to his astonishment
+the room was empty.
+
+*****
+
+Spindler's house, or "Spindler's Splurge," as Rough and Ready chose to
+call it, stood above the settlement, on a deforested hillside, which,
+however, revenged itself by producing not enough vegetation to cover
+even the few stumps that were ineradicable. A large wooden structure
+in the pseudo-classic style affected by Westerners, with an incongruous
+cupola, it was oddly enough relieved by a still more incongruous veranda
+extending around its four sides, upheld by wooden Doric columns, which
+were already picturesquely covered with flowering vines and sun-loving
+roses. Mr. Spindler had trusted the furnishing of its interior to the
+same contractor who had upholstered the gilded bar-room of the Eureka
+Saloon, and who had apparently bestowed the same design and material,
+impartially, on each. There were gilded mirrors all over the house and
+chilly marble-topped tables, gilt plaster Cupids in the corners, and
+stuccoed lions "in the way" everywhere. The tactful hands of Mrs. Price
+had screened some of these with seasonable laurels, fir boughs, and
+berries, and had imparted a slight Christmas flavor to the house. But
+the greater part of her time had been employed in trying to subdue the
+eccentricities of Spindler's amazing relations; in tranquilizing Mrs.
+"Aunt" Martha Spindler,--the elderly cook before alluded to,--who was
+inclined to regard the gilded splendors of the house as indicative
+of dangerous immorality; in restraining "Cousin" Morley Hewlett
+from considering the dining-room buffet as a bar for "intermittent
+refreshment;" and in keeping the weak-minded nephew, Phinney Spindler,
+from shooting at bottles from the veranda, wearing his uncle's clothes,
+or running up an account in his uncle's name for various articles at
+the general stores. Yet the unlooked-for arrival of the two children had
+been the one great compensation and diversion for her. She wrote at once
+to her nieces a brief account of her miraculous deliverance. "I think
+these poor children dropped from the skies here to make our Christmas
+party possible, to say nothing of the sympathy they have created in
+Rough and Ready for Spindler. He is going to keep them as long as
+he can, and is writing to the father. Think of the poor little tots
+traveling a thousand miles to 'Krissmass,' as they call it!--though they
+were so well cared for by the messengers that their little bodies were
+positively stuffed like quails. So, you see, dear, we will be able to
+get along without airing your famous idea. I'm sorry, for I know you're
+just dying to see it all."
+
+Whatever Kate's "idea" might have been, there certainly seemed now no
+need of any extraneous aid to Mrs. Price's management. Christmas came at
+last, and the dinner passed off without serious disaster. But the ordeal
+of the reception of Rough and Ready was still to come. For Mrs. Price
+well knew that although "the boys" were more subdued, and, indeed,
+inclined to sympathize with their host's uncouth endeavor, there was
+still much in the aspect of Spindler's relations to excite their sense
+of the ludicrous.
+
+But here Fortune again favored the house of Spindler with a dramatic
+surprise, even greater than the advent of the children had been. In the
+change that had come over Rough and Ready, "the boys" had decided, out
+of deference to the women and children, to omit the first part of their
+programme, and had approached and entered the house as soberly and
+quietly as ordinary guests. But before they had shaken hands with the
+host and hostess, and seen the relations, the clatter of wheels was
+heard before the open door, and its lights flashed upon a carriage and
+pair,--an actual private carriage,--the like of which had not been seen
+since the governor of the State had come down to open the new ditch!
+Then there was a pause, the flash of the carriage lamps upon white silk,
+the light tread of a satin foot on the veranda and in the hall, and the
+entrance of a vision of loveliness! Middle-aged men and old dwellers
+of cities remembered their youth; younger men bethought themselves of
+Cinderella and the Prince! There was a thrill and a hush as this last
+guest--a beautiful girl, radiant with youth and adornment--put a dainty
+glass to her sparkling eye and advanced familiarly, with outstretched
+hand, to Dick Spindler. Mrs. Price gave a single gasp, and drew back
+speechless.
+
+"Uncle Dick," said a laughing contralto voice, which, indeed, somewhat
+recalled Mrs. Price's own, in its courageous frankness, "I am so
+delighted to come, even if a little late, and so sorry that Mr. M'Kenna
+could not come on account of business."
+
+Everybody listened eagerly, but none more eagerly and surprisingly than
+the host himself. M'Kenna! The rich cousin who had never answered the
+invitation! And Uncle Dick! This, then, was his divorced niece! Yet even
+in his astonishment he remembered that of course no one but himself and
+Mrs. Price knew it,--and that lady had glanced discreetly away.
+
+"Yes," continued the half-niece brightly. "I came from Sacramento with
+some friends to Shootersville, and from thence I drove here; and though
+I must return to-night, I could not forego the pleasure of coming, if
+it was only for an hour or two, to answer the invitation of the uncle I
+have not seen for years." She paused, and, raising her glasses, turned a
+politely questioning eye towards Mrs. Price. "One of our relations?" she
+said smilingly to Spindler.
+
+"No," said Spindler, with some embarrassment, "a--a friend!"
+
+The half-niece extended her hand. Mrs. Price took it.
+
+But the fair stranger,--what she did and said were the only things
+remembered in Rough and Ready on that festive occasion; no one thought
+of the other relations; no one recalled them nor their eccentricities;
+Spindler himself was forgotten. People only recollected how Spindler's
+lovely niece lavished her smiles and courtesies on every one, and
+brought to her feet particularly the misogynist Starbuck and the
+sarcastic Cooledge, oblivious of his previous speech; how she sat at
+the piano and sang like an angel, hushing the most hilarious and excited
+into sentimental and even maudlin silence; how, graceful as a nymph, she
+led with "Uncle Dick" a Virginia reel until the whole assembly joined,
+eager for a passing touch of her dainty hand in its changes; how, when
+two hours had passed,--all too swiftly for the guests,--they stood with
+bared heads and glistening eyes on the veranda to see the fairy coach
+whirl the fairy princess away! How--but this incident was never known to
+Rough and Ready.
+
+It happened in the sacred dressing-room, where Mrs. Price was cloaking
+with her own hands the departing half-niece of Mr. Spindler. Taking that
+opportunity to seize the lovely relative by the shoulders and shake her
+violently, she said: "Oh, yes, and it's all very well for you, Kate, you
+limb! For you're going away, and will never see Rough and Ready and poor
+Spindler again. But what am I to do, miss? How am I to face it out?
+For you know I've got to tell him at least that you're no half-niece of
+his!"
+
+"Have you?" said the young lady.
+
+"Have I?" repeated the widow impatiently. "Have I? Of course I have!
+What are you thinking of?"
+
+"I was thinking, aunty," said the girl audaciously, "that from what
+I've seen and heard to-night, if I'm not his half-niece now, it's only a
+question of time! So you'd better wait. Good-night, dear."
+
+And, really,--it turned out that she was right!
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT "JULES'"
+
+
+When the waters were up at "Jules'" there was little else up on that
+monotonous level. For the few inhabitants who calmly and methodically
+moved to higher ground, camping out in tents until the flood
+had subsided, left no distracting wreckage behind them. A dozen
+half-submerged log cabins dotted the tranquil surface of the waters,
+without ripple or disturbance, looking in the moonlight more like the
+ruins of centuries than of a few days. There was no current to sap their
+slight foundations or sweep them away; nothing stirred that silent lake
+but the occasional shot-like indentations of a passing raindrop, or,
+still more rarely, a raft, made of a single log, propelled by some
+citizen on a tour of inspection of his cabin roof-tree, where some of
+his goods were still stored. There was no sense of terror in this bland
+obliteration of the little settlement; the ruins of a single burnt-up
+cabin would have been more impressive than this stupid and even
+grotesquely placid effect of the rival destroying element. People took
+it naturally; the water went as it had come,--slowly, impassively,
+noiselessly; a few days of fervid Californian sunshine dried the cabins,
+and in a week or two the red dust lay again as thickly before their
+doors as the winter mud had lain. The waters of Rattlesnake Creek
+dropped below its banks, the stage-coach from Marysville no longer made
+a detour of the settlement. There was even a singular compensation to
+this amicable invasion; the inhabitants sometimes found gold in those
+breaches in the banks made by the overflow. To wait for the "old
+Rattlesnake sluicing" was a vernal hope of the trusting miner.
+
+The history of "Jules'," however, was once destined to offer a singular
+interruption of this peaceful and methodical process. The winter of
+1859-60 was an exceptional one. But little rain had fallen in the
+valleys, although the snow lay deep in the high Sierras. Passes were
+choked, ravines filled, and glaciers found on their slopes. And when the
+tardy rains came with the withheld southwesterly "trades," the regular
+phenomenon recurred; Jules' Flat silently, noiselessly, and peacefully
+went under water; the inhabitants moved to the higher ground, perhaps
+a little more expeditiously from an impatience born of the delay. The
+stagecoach from Marysville made its usual detour and stopped before the
+temporary hotel, express offices, and general store of "Jules'," under
+canvas, bark, and the limp leaves of a spreading alder. It deposited a
+single passenger,--Miles Hemmingway, of San Francisco, but originally of
+Boston,--the young secretary of a mining company, dispatched to report
+upon the alleged auriferous value of "Jules'." Of this he had been by
+no means impressed as he looked down upon the submerged cabins from the
+box-seat of the coach and listened to the driver's lazy recital of
+the flood, and of the singularly patient acceptance of it by the
+inhabitants.
+
+It was the old story of the southwestern miner's indolence and
+incompetency,--utterly distasteful to his northern habits of thought
+and education. Here was their old fatuous endurance of Nature's wild
+caprices, without that struggle against them which brought others
+strength and success; here was the old philosophy which accepted the
+prairie fire and cyclone, and survived them without advancement,
+yet without repining. Perhaps in different places and surroundings a
+submission so stoic might have impressed him; in gentlemen who tucked
+their dirty trousers in their muddy boots and lived only for the gold
+they dug, it did not seem to him heroic. Nor was he mollified as
+he stood beside the rude refreshment bar--a few planks laid on
+trestles--and drank his coffee beneath the dripping canvas roof, with an
+odd recollection of his boyhood and an inclement Sunday-school picnic.
+Yet these men had been living in this shiftless fashion for three weeks!
+It exasperated him still more to think that he might have to wait there
+a few days longer for the water to subside sufficiently for him to make
+his examination and report. As he took a proffered seat on a candle-box,
+which tilted under him, and another survey of the feeble makeshifts
+around him, his irascibility found vent.
+
+"Why, in the name of God, didn't you, after you had been flooded out
+ONCE, build your cabins PERMANENTLY on higher ground?"
+
+Although the tone of his voice was more disturbing than his question, it
+pleased one of the loungers to affect to take it literally.
+
+"Well, ez you've put it that way,--'in the name of God!'"--returned the
+man lazily, "it mout hev struck us that ez HE was bossin' the job, so
+to speak, and handlin' things round here generally, we might leave it to
+Him. It wasn't OUR flood to monkey with."
+
+"And as He didn't coven-ant, so to speak, to look arter this higher
+ground 'speshally, and make an Ararat of it for us, ez far ez we
+could see, we didn't see any reason for SETTLIN' yer," put in a second
+speaker, with equal laziness.
+
+The secretary saw his mistake instantly, and had experience enough
+of Western humor not to prolong the disadvantage of his unfortunate
+adjuration. He colored slightly and said, with a smile, "You know what
+I mean; you could have protected yourselves better. A levee on the bank
+would have kept you clear of the highest watermark."
+
+"Hey you ever heard WHAT the highest watermark was?" said the first
+speaker, turning to another of the loungers without looking at the
+secretary.
+
+"Never heard it,--didn't know there was a limit before," responded the
+man.
+
+The first speaker turned back to the secretary. "Did you ever know what
+happened at 'Bulger's,' on the North Fork? They had one o' them levees."
+
+"No. What happened?" asked the secretary impatiently.
+
+"They was fixed suthin' like us," returned the first speaker. "THEY
+allowed they'd build a levee above THEIR highest watermark, and did. It
+worked like a charm at first; but the water hed to go somewhere, and it
+kinder collected at the first bend. Then it sorter raised itself on its
+elbows one day, and looked over the levee down upon whar some of the
+boys was washin' quite comf'ble. Then it paid no sorter attention to the
+limit o' that high watermark, but went six inches better! Not slow and
+quiet like ez it useter to, ez it does HERE, kinder fillin' up from
+below, but went over with a rush and a current, hevin' of course the
+whole height of the levee to fall on t'other side where the boys were
+sluicing." He paused, and amidst a profound silence added, "They say
+that 'Bulger's' was scattered promiscuous-like all along the fort for
+five miles. I only know that one of his mules and a section of sluicing
+was picked up at Red Flat, eight miles away!"
+
+Mr. Hemmingway felt that there WAS an answer to this, but, being wise,
+also felt that it would be unavailing. He smiled politely and said
+nothing, at which the first speaker turned to him:--
+
+"Thar ain't anything to see to-day, but to-morrow, ez things go, the
+water oughter be droppin'. Mebbe you'd like to wash up now and clean
+yourself," he added, with a glance at Hemmingway's small portmanteau.
+"Ez we thought you'd likely be crowded here, we've rigged up a corner
+for you at Stanton's shanty with the women."
+
+The young man's cheek flushed slightly at some possible irony in this,
+and he protested with considerable stress that he was quite ready "to
+rough it" where he was.
+
+"I reckon it's already fixed," returned the man decisively, "so you'd
+better come and I'll show you the way."
+
+"One moment," said Hemmingway, with a smile; "my credentials are
+addressed to the manager of the Boone Ditch Company at 'Jules'.' Perhaps
+I ought to see him first."
+
+"All right; he's Stanton."
+
+"And"--hesitated the secretary, "YOU, who appear to understand the
+locality so well,--I trust I may have the pleasure"--
+
+"Oh, I'm Jules."
+
+The secretary was a little startled and amused. So "Jules" was a person,
+and not a place!
+
+"Then you're a pioneer?" asked Hemmingway, a little less dictatorially,
+as they passed out under the dripping trees.
+
+"I struck this creek in the fall of '49, comin' over Livermore's
+Pass with Stanton," returned Jules, with great brevity of speech and
+deliberate tardiness of delivery. "Sent for my wife and two children the
+next year; wife died same winter, change bein' too sudden for her, and
+contractin' chills and fever at Sweetwater. When I kem here first thar
+wasn't six inches o' water in the creek; out there was a heap of it over
+there where you see them yallowish-green patches and strips o' brush
+and grass; all that war water then, and all that growth hez sprung up
+since."
+
+Hemmingway looked around him. The "higher ground" where they stood was
+in reality only a mound-like elevation above the dead level of the flat,
+and the few trees were merely recent young willows and alders. The area
+of actual depression was much greater than he had imagined, and its
+resemblance to the bed of some prehistoric inland sea struck him
+forcibly. A previous larger inundation than Jules' brief experience had
+ever known had been by no means improbable. His cheek reddened at his
+previous hasty indictment of the settlers' ignorance and shiftlessness,
+and the thought that he had probably committed his employers to his
+own rash confidence and superiority of judgment. However, there was no
+evidence that this diluvial record was not of the remote past. He smiled
+again with greater security as he thought of the geological changes that
+had since tempered these cataclysms, and the amelioration brought by
+settlement and cultivation. Nevertheless, he would make a thorough
+examination to-morrow.
+
+Stanton's cabin was the furthest of these temporary habitations, and
+was partly on the declivity which began to slope to the river's bank. It
+was, like the others, a rough shanty of unplaned boards, but, unlike the
+others, it had a base of logs laid lengthwise on the ground and parallel
+with each other, on which the flooring and structure were securely
+fastened. This gave it the appearance of a box slid on runners, or a
+Noah's Ark whose bulk had been reduced. Jules explained that the logs,
+laid in that manner, kept the shanty warmer and free from damp. In reply
+to Hemmingway's suggestion that it was a great waste of material, Jules
+simply replied that the logs were the "flotsam and jetsam" of the creek
+from the overflowed mills below.
+
+Hemmingway again smiled. It was again the old story of Western waste
+and prodigality. Accompanied by Jules, however, he climbed up the huge,
+slippery logs which made a platform before the door, and entered.
+
+The single room was unequally divided; the larger part containing three
+beds, by day rolled in a single pile in one corner to make room for a
+table and chairs. A few dresses hanging from nails on the wall showed
+that it was the women's room. The smaller compartment was again
+subdivided by a hanging blanket, behind which was a rude bunk or berth
+against the wall, a table made of a packing-box, containing a tin basin
+and a can of water. This was his apartment.
+
+"The women-folks are down the creek, bakin', to-day," said Jules
+explanatorily; "but I reckon that one of 'em will be up here in a jiffy
+to make supper, so you just take it easy till they come. I've got to
+meander over to the claim afore I turn in, but you just lie by to-night
+and take a rest."
+
+He turned away, leaving Hemmingway standing in the doorway still
+distraught and hesitating. Nor did the young man recognize the delicacy
+of Jules' leave-taking until he had unstrapped his portmanteau and found
+himself alone, free to make his toilet, unembarrassed by company. But
+even then he would have preferred the rough companionship of the miners
+in the common dormitory of the general store to this intrusion upon
+the half-civilization of the women, their pitiable little comforts and
+secret makeshifts. His disgust of his own indecision which brought him
+there naturally recoiled in the direction of his host and hostesses, and
+after a hurried ablution, a change of linen, and an attempt to remove
+the stains of travel from his clothes, he strode out impatiently into
+the open air again.
+
+It was singularly mild even for the season. The southwest trades blew
+softly, and whispered to him of San Francisco and the distant Pacific,
+with its long, steady swell. He turned again to the overflowed Flat
+beneath him, and the sluggish yellow water that scarcely broke a ripple
+against the walls of the half-submerged cabins. And this was the water
+for whose going down they were waiting with an immobility as tranquil
+as the waters themselves! What marvelous incompetency,--or what infinite
+patience! He knew, of course, their expected compensation in this
+"ground sluicing" at Nature's own hand; the long rifts in the banks of
+the creek which so often showed "the color" in the sparkling scales of
+river gold disclosed by the action of the water; the heaps of reddish
+mud left after its subsidence around the walls of the cabins,--a deposit
+that often contained a treasure a dozen times more valuable than the
+cabin itself! And then he heard behind him a laugh, a short and panting
+breath, and turning, beheld a young woman running towards him.
+
+In his first astounded sight of her, in her limp nankeen sunbonnet,
+thrown back from her head by the impetus of her flight, he saw only too
+much hair, two much white teeth, too much eye-flash, and, above
+all,--as it appeared to him,--too much confidence in the power of these
+qualities. Even as she ran, it seemed to him that she was pulling down
+ostentatiously the rolled-up sleeves of her pink calico gown over her
+shapely arms. I am inclined to think that the young gentleman's temper
+was at fault, and his conclusion hasty; a calmer observer would have
+detected nothing of this in her frankly cheerful voice. Nevertheless,
+her evident pleasure in the meeting seemed to him only obtrusive
+coquetry.
+
+"Lordy! I reckoned to git here afore you'd get through fixin' up, and in
+time to do a little prinkin' myself, and here you're out already." She
+laughed, glancing at his clean shirt and damp hair. "But all the same,
+we kin have a talk, and you kin tell me all the news afore the other
+wimmen get up here. It's a coon's age since I was at Sacramento and
+saw anybody or anything." She stopped and, instinctively detecting some
+vague reticence in the man before her, said, still laughing, "You're Mr.
+Hemmingway, ain't you?"
+
+Hemmingway took off his hat quickly, with a slight start at his
+forgetfulness. "I beg your pardon; yes, certainly."
+
+"Aunty Stanton thought it was 'Hummingbird,'" said the girl, with a
+laugh, "but I reckoned not. I'm Jinney Jules, you know; folks call me
+'J. J.' It wouldn't do for a Hummingbird and a Jay Jay to be in the same
+camp, would it? It would be just TOO funny!"
+
+Hemmingway did not find the humor of this so singularly exhaustive, but
+he was already beginning to be ashamed of his attitude towards her. "I'm
+very sorry to be giving you all this trouble by my intrusion, for I was
+quite willing to stay at the store yonder. Indeed," he added, with
+a burst of frankness quite as sincere as her own, "if you think your
+father will not be offended, I would gladly go there now."
+
+If he still believed in her coquetry and vanity, he would have been
+undeceived and crushed by the equal and sincere frankness with which she
+met this ungallant speech.
+
+"No! I reckon he wouldn't care, if you'd be as comf'ble and fit for
+to-morrow. But ye WOULDN'T," she said reflectively. "The boys thar
+sit up late over euchre, and swear a heap, and Simpson, who'd sleep
+alongside of ye, snores pow'ful, I've heard. Aunty Stanton kin do her
+level at that, too, and they say"--with a laugh--"that I kin, too, but
+you're away off in that corner, and it won't reach you. So, takin' it
+all, by the large, you'd better stay whar ye are. We wimmen, that is,
+the most of us, will be off and away down to Rattlesnake Bar shoppin'
+afore sun up, so ye'll sleep ez long ez ye want to, and find yer
+breakfast ready when ye wake. So I'll jest set to and get ye some
+supper, and ye kin tell me all the doin's in Sacramento and 'Frisco
+while I'm workin'."
+
+In spite of her unconscious rebuff to his own vanity, Hemmingway felt a
+sense of relief and less constraint in his relations to this decidedly
+provincial hostess.
+
+"Can I help you in any way?" he asked eagerly.
+
+"Well, ye MIGHT bring me an armful o' wood from the pile under the
+alders, ef ye ain't afraid o' dirtyin' your coat," she said tentatively.
+
+Mr. Hemmingway was not afraid; he declared himself delighted. He brought
+a generous armful of small cut willow boughs, and deposited them before
+a small stove, which seemed a temporary substitute for the usual large
+adobe chimney that generally occupied the entire gable of a miner's
+cabin. An elbow and short length of stovepipe carried the smoke through
+the cabin side. But he also noticed that his fair companion had used
+the interval to put on a pair of white cuffs and a collar. However, she
+brushed the green moss from his sleeve with some toweling, and although
+this operation brought her so near to him that her breath--as soft and
+warm as the southwest trades--stirred his hair, it was evident that this
+contiguity was only frontier familiarity, as far removed from conscious
+coquetry as it was, perhaps, from educated delicacy.
+
+"The boys gin'rally kem to take up enough wood for me to begin with,"
+she said, "but I reckon they didn't know I was comin' up so soon."
+
+Hemmingway's distrust returned a little at this obvious suggestion that
+he was only a substitute for their general gallantry, but he smiled and
+said somewhat bluntly, "I don't suppose you lack for admirers here."
+
+The girl, however, took him literally. "Lordy, no! Me and Mamie Robinson
+are the only girls for fifteen miles along the creek. ADMIRIN'! I call
+it jest PESTERIN' sometimes! I reckon I'll hev to keep a dog!"
+
+Hemmingway shivered. Yes, she was not only conscious, but spoilt
+already. He pictured to himself the uncouth gallantries of the
+settlement, the provincial badinage, the feeble rivalries of the young
+men whom he had seen at the general store. Undoubtedly this was what she
+was expecting in HIM!
+
+"Well," she said, turning from the fire she had kindled, "while I'm
+settin' the table, tell me what's a-doin' in Sacramento! I reckon you've
+got heaps of lady friends thar,--I'm told there's lots of fashions just
+from the States."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't know enough of them to interest you," he said dryly.
+
+"Go on and talk," she replied. "Why, when Tom Flynn kem back from
+Sacramento, and he warn't thar more nor a week, he jest slung yarns
+about his doin's thar to last the hull rainy season."
+
+Half amused and half annoyed, Hemmingway seated himself on the little
+platform beside the open door, and began a conscientious description of
+the progress of Sacramento, its new buildings, hotels, and theatres,
+as it had struck him on his last visit. For a while he was somewhat
+entertained by the girl's vivacity and eager questioning, but presently
+it began to pall. He continued, however, with a grim sense of duty, and
+partly as a reason for watching her in her household duties. Certainly
+she was graceful! Her tall, lithe, but beautifully moulded figure,
+even in its characteristic southwestern indolence, fell into poses as
+picturesque as they were unconscious. She lifted the big molasses-can
+from its shelf on the rafters with the attitude of a Greek water-bearer.
+She upheaved the heavy flour-sack to the same secure shelf with the
+upraised palms of an Egyptian caryatid. Suddenly she interrupted
+Hemmingway's perfunctory talk with a hearty laugh. He started, looked
+up from his seat on the platform, and saw that she was standing over him
+and regarding him with a kind of mischievous pity.
+
+"Look here," she said, "I reckon that'll do! You kin pull up short! I
+kin see what's the matter with you; you're jest plumb tired, tuckered
+out, and want to turn in! So jest you sit that quiet until I get supper
+ready and never mind me." In vain Hemmingway protested, with a rising
+color. The girl only shook her head. "Don't tell me! You ain't keering
+to talk, and you're only playin' Sacramento statistics on me," she
+retorted, with unfeigned cheerfulness. "Anyhow, here's the wimmen
+comin', and supper is ready."
+
+There was a sound of weary, resigned ejaculations and pantings, and
+three gaunt women in lustreless alpaca gowns appeared before the cabin.
+They seemed prematurely aged and worn with labor, anxiety, and ill
+nourishment. Doubtless somewhere in these ruins a flower like Jay Jules
+had once flourished; doubtless somewhere in that graceful nymph herself
+the germ of this dreary maturity was hidden. Hemmingway welcomed them
+with a seriousness equal to their own. The supper was partaken with the
+kind of joyless formality which in the southwest is supposed to indicate
+deep respect, even the cheerful Jay falling under the influence, and it
+was with a feeling of relief that at last the young man retired to his
+fenced-off corner for solitude and repose. He gathered, however,
+that before "sun up" the next morning the elder women were going to
+Rattlesnake Bar for the weekly shopping, leaving Jay as before to
+prepare his breakfast and then join them later. It was already a change
+in his sentiments to find himself looking forward to that tete-a-tete
+with the young girl, as a chance of redeeming his character in her
+eyes. He was beginning to feel he had been stupid, unready, and withal
+prejudiced. He undressed himself in his seclusion, broken only by the
+monotonous voices in the adjoining apartment. From time to time he
+heard fragments and scraps of their conversation, always in reference to
+affairs of the household and settlement, but never of himself,--not even
+the suggestion of a prudent lowering of their voices,--and fell asleep.
+He woke up twice in the night with a sensation of cold so marked and
+distinct from his experience of the early evening, that he was fain to
+pile his clothes over his blankets to keep warm. He fell asleep again,
+coming once more to consciousness with a sense of a slight jar, but
+relapsing again into slumber for he knew not how long. Then he was
+fully awakened by a voice calling him, and, opening his eyes, beheld the
+blanket partition put aside, and the face of Jay thrust forward. To
+his surprise it wore a look of excited astonishment dominated by
+irrepressible laughter.
+
+"Get up quick as you kin," she said gaspingly; "this is about the
+killingest thing that ever happened!"
+
+She disappeared, but he could still hear her laughing, and to his utter
+astonishment with her disappearance the floor seemed to change its
+level. A giddy feeling seized him; he put his feet to the floor; it
+was unmistakably wet and oozing. He hurriedly clothed himself, still
+accompanied by the strange feeling of oscillation and giddiness, and
+passed though the opening into the next room. Again his step produced
+the same effect upon the floor, and he actually stumbled against her
+shaking figure, as she wiped the tears of uncontrollable mirth from her
+eyes with her apron. The contact seemed to upset her remaining gravity.
+She dropped into a chair, and, pointing to the open door, gasped, "Look
+thar! Lordy! How's that for high?" threw her apron over her head, and
+gave way to an uproarious fit of laughter.
+
+Hemmingway turned to the open door. A lake was before him on the level
+of the cabin. He stepped forward on the platform; the water was right
+and left, all around him. The platform dipped slightly to his step. The
+cabin was afloat,--afloat upon its base of logs like a raft, the whole
+structure upheld by the floor on which the logs were securely fastened.
+The high ground had disappeared--the river--its banks the green area
+beyond. They, and THEY alone, were afloat upon an inland sea.
+
+He turned an astounded and serious face upon her mirth. "When did it
+happen?" he demanded. She checked her laugh, more from a sense of polite
+deference to his mood than any fear, and said quietly, "That gets me.
+Everything was all right two hours ago when the wimmen left. It was
+too early to get your breakfast and rouse ye out, and I felt asleep, I
+reckon, until I felt a kind o' slump and a jar." Hemmingway remembered
+his own half-conscious sensation. "Then I got up and saw we was adrift.
+I didn't waken ye, for I thought it was only a sort of wave that would
+pass. It wasn't until I saw we were movin' and the hull rising ground
+gettin' away, that I thought o' callin' ye."
+
+He thought of the vanished general store, of her father, the workers on
+the bank, the helpless women on their way to the Bar, and turned almost
+savagely on her.
+
+"But the others,--where are they?" he said indignantly. "Do you call
+that a laughing matter?"
+
+She stopped at the sound of his voice as at a blow. Her face hardened
+into immobility, yet when she replied it was with the deliberate
+indolence of her father. "The wimmen are up on the hills by this time.
+The boys hev bin drowned out many times afore this and got clear off,
+on sluice boxes and timber, without squealing. Tom Flynn went down
+ten miles to Sayer's once on two bar'ls, and I never heard that HE was
+cryin' when they picked him up."
+
+A flush came to Hemmingway's cheek, but with it a gleam of intelligence.
+Of course the inundation was known to them FIRST, and there was the
+wreckage to support them. They had clearly saved themselves. If they had
+abandoned the cabin, it was because they knew its security, perhaps had
+even seen it safely adrift.
+
+"Has this ever happened to the cabin before?" he asked, as he thought of
+its peculiar base.
+
+"No."
+
+He looked at the water again. There was a decided current. The overflow
+was evidently no part of the original inundation. He put his hand in
+the water. It was icy cold. Yes, he understood it now. It was the sudden
+melting of snow in the Sierras which had brought this volume down the
+canyon. But was there more still to come?
+
+"Have you anything like a long pole or stick in the cabin?"
+
+"Nary," said the girl, opening her big eyes and shaking her head with
+a simulation of despair, which was, however, flatly contradicted by her
+laughing mouth.
+
+"Nor any cord or twine?" he continued.
+
+She handed him a ball of coarse twine.
+
+"May I take a couple of these hooks?" he asked, pointing to some rough
+iron hooks in the rafters, on which bacon and jerked beef were hanging.
+
+She nodded. He dislodged the hooks, greased them with the bacon rind,
+and affixed them to the twine.
+
+"Fishin'?" she asked demurely.
+
+"Exactly," he replied gravely.
+
+He threw the line in the water. It slackened at about six feet,
+straightened, and became taut at an angle, and then dragged. After one
+or two sharp jerks he pulled it up. A few leaves and grasses were caught
+in the hooks. He examined them attentively.
+
+"We're not in the creek," he said, "nor in the old overflow. There's no
+mud or gravel on the hooks, and these grasses don't grow near water."
+
+"Now, that's mighty cute of you," she said admiringly, as she knelt
+beside him on the platform. "Let's see what you've caught. Look yer!"
+she added, suddenly lifting a limp stalk, "that's 'old man,' and thar
+ain't a scrap of it grows nearer than Springer's Rise,--four miles from
+home."
+
+"Are you sure?" he asked quickly.
+
+"Sure as pop! I used to go huntin' it for smellidge."
+
+"For what?" he said, with a bewildered smile.
+
+"For this,"--she thrust the leaves to his nose and then to her own
+pink nostrils; "for--for"--she hesitated, and then with a mischievous
+simulation of correctness added, "for the perfume."
+
+He looked at her admiringly. For all her five feet ten inches, what
+a mere child she was, after all! What a fool he was to have taken a
+resentful attitude towards her! How charming and graceful she looked,
+kneeling there beside him!
+
+"Tell me," he said suddenly, in a gentler voice, "what were you laughing
+at just now?"
+
+Her brown eyes wavered for a moment, and then brimmed with merriment.
+She threw herself sideways, in a leaning posture, supporting herself on
+one arm, while with her other hand she slowly drew out her apron string,
+as she said, in a demure voice:--
+
+"Well, I reckoned it was jest too killin' to think of you, who didn't
+want to talk to me, and would hev given your hull pile to hev skipped
+out o' this, jest stuck here alongside o' me, whether you would or no,
+for Lord knows how long!"
+
+"But that was last night," he said, in a tone of raillery. "I was tired,
+and you said so yourself, you know. But I'm ready to talk now. What
+shall I tell you?"
+
+"Anything," said the girl, with a laugh.
+
+"What I am thinking of?" he said, with frankly admiring eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Everything?"
+
+"Yes, everything." She stopped, and leaning forward, suddenly caught
+the brim of his soft felt hat, and drawing it down smartly over his
+audacious eyes, said, "Everything BUT THAT."
+
+It was with some difficulty and some greater embarrassment that he
+succeeded in getting his eyes free again. When he did so, she had risen
+and entered the cabin. Disconcerted as he was, he was relieved to see
+that her expression of amusement was unchanged. Was her act a piece
+of rustic coquetry, or had she resented his advances? Nor did her next
+words settle the question.
+
+"Ye kin do yer nice talk and philanderin' after we've settled whar we
+are, what we're goin', and what's goin' to happen. Jest now it 'pears
+to me that ez these yere logs are the only thing betwixt us and 'kingdom
+come,' ye'd better be hustlin' round with a few spikes to clinch 'em to
+the floor."
+
+She handed him a hammer and a few spikes. He obediently set to work,
+with little confidence, however, in the security of the fastening. There
+was neither rope nor chain for lashing the logs together; a stronger
+current and a collision with some submerged stump or wreckage would
+loosen them and wreck the cabin. But he said nothing. It was the girl
+who broke the silence.
+
+"What's your front name?"
+
+"Miles."
+
+"MILES,--that's a funny name. I reckon that's why you war so FAR OFF and
+DISTANT at first."
+
+Mr. Hemmingway thought this very witty, and said so. "But," he added,
+"when I was a little nearer a moment ago, you stopped me."
+
+"But you was moving faster than the shanty was. I reckon you don't take
+that gait with your lady friends at Sacramento! However, you kin talk
+now."
+
+"But you forget I don't know 'where we are,' nor 'what's going to
+happen.'"
+
+"But I do," she said quietly. "In a couple of hours we'll be picked up,
+so you'll be free again."
+
+Something in the confidence of her manner made him go to the door again
+and look out. There was scarcely any current now, and the cabin seemed
+motionless. Even the wind, which might have acted upon it, was
+wanting. They were apparently in the same position as before, but his
+sounding-line showed that the water was slightly falling. He came back
+and imparted the fact with a certain confidence born of her previous
+praise of his knowledge. To his surprise she only laughed and said
+lazily, "We'll be all right, and you'll be free, in about two hours."
+
+"I see no sign of it," he said, looking through the door again.
+
+"That's because you're looking in the water and the sky and the mud for
+it," she said, with a laugh. "I reckon you've been trained to watch them
+things a heap better than to study the folks about here."
+
+"I daresay you're right," said Hemmingway cheerfully, "but I don't
+clearly see what the folks about here have to do with our situation just
+now."
+
+"You'll see," she said, with a smile of mischievous mystery. "All the
+same," she added, with a sudden and dangerous softness in her eyes, "I
+ain't sayin' that YOU ain't kinder right neither."
+
+An hour ago he would have laughed at the thought that a mere look and
+sentence like this from the girl could have made his heart beat. "Then I
+may go on and talk?"
+
+She smiled, but her eyes said, "Yes," plainly.
+
+He turned to take a chair near her. Suddenly the cabin trembled, there
+was a sound of scraping, a bump, and then the whole structure tilted to
+one side and they were both thrown violently towards the corner, with a
+swift inrush of water. Hemmingway quickly caught the girl by the waist;
+she clung to him instinctively, yet still laughing, as with a desperate
+effort he succeeded in dragging her to the upper side of the slanting
+cabin, and momentarily restoring its equilibrium. They remained for an
+instant breathless. But in that instant he had drawn her face to his and
+kissed her.
+
+She disengaged herself gently with neither excitement nor emotion, and
+pointing to the open door said, "Look there!"
+
+Two of the logs which formed the foundation of their floor were quietly
+floating in the water before the cabin! The submerged obstacle or snag
+which had torn them from their fastening was still holding the cabin
+fast. Hemmingway saw the danger. He ran along the narrow ledge to the
+point of contact and unhesitatingly leaped into the icy cold water. It
+reached his armpits before his feet struck the obstacle,--evidently a
+stump with a projecting branch. Bracing himself against it, he shoved
+off the cabin. But when he struck out to follow it, he found that the
+log nearest him was loose and his grasp might tear it away. At the
+same moment, however, a pink calico arm fluttered above his head, and a
+strong grasp seized his coat collar. The cabin half revolved as the girl
+dragged him into the open door.
+
+"You bantam!" she said, with a laugh, "why didn't you let ME do that?
+I'm taller than you! But," she added, looking at his dripping clothes
+and dragging out a blanket from the corner, "I couldn't dry myself
+as quick as you kin!" To her surprise, however, Hemmingway tossed the
+blanket aside, and pointing to the floor, which was already filmed with
+water, ran to the still warm stove, detached it from its pipe, and threw
+it overboard. The sack of flour, bacon, molasses, and sugar, and all the
+heavier articles followed it into the stream. Relieved of their weight
+the cabin base rose an inch or two higher. Then he sat down and said,
+"There! that may keep us afloat for that 'couple of hours' you speak of.
+So I suppose I may talk now!"
+
+"Ye haven't no time," she said, in a graver voice. "It won't be as long
+as a couple of hours now. Look over thar!"
+
+He looked where she pointed across the gray expanse of water. At first
+he could see nothing. Presently he saw a mere dot on its face which at
+times changed to a single black line.
+
+"It's a log, like these," he said.
+
+"It's no log. It's an Injun dug-out*--comin' for me."
+
+ * A canoe made from a hollowed log.
+
+"Your father?" he said joyfully.
+
+She smiled pityingly. "It's Tom Flynn. Father's got suthin' else to look
+arter. Tom Flynn hasn't."
+
+"And who's Tom Flynn?" he asked, with an odd sensation.
+
+"The man I'm engaged to," she said gravely, with a slight color.
+
+The rose that blossomed on her cheek faded in his. There was a moment of
+silence. Then he said frankly, "I owe you some apology. Forgive my folly
+and impertinence a moment ago. How could I have known this?"
+
+"You took no more than you deserved, or that Tom would have objected
+to," she said, with a little laugh. "You've been mighty kind and handy."
+
+She held out her hand; their fingers closed together in a frank
+pressure. Then his mind went back to his work, which he had
+forgotten,--to his first impressions of the camp and of her. They both
+stood silent, watching the canoe, now quite visible, and the man that
+was paddling it, with an intensity that both felt was insincere.
+
+"I'm afraid," he said, with a forced laugh, "that I was a little too
+hasty in disposing of your goods and possessions. We could have kept
+afloat a little longer."
+
+"It's all the same," she said, with a slight laugh; "it's jest as well
+we didn't look too comf'ble--to HIM."
+
+He did not reply; he did not dare to look at her. Yes! It was the same
+coquette he had seen last night. His first impressions were correct.
+
+The canoe came on rapidly now, propelled by a powerful arm. In a few
+moments it was alongside, and its owner leaped on the platform. It was
+the gentleman with his trousers tucked in his boots, the second voice
+in the gloomy discussion in the general store last evening. He nodded
+simply to the girl, and shook Hemmingway's hand warmly.
+
+Then he made a hurried apology for his delay: it was so difficult to
+find "the lay" of the drifted cabin. He had struck out first for the
+most dangerous spot,--the "old clearing," on the right bank, with its
+stumps and new growths,--and it seemed he was right. And all the rest
+were safe, and "nobody was hurt."
+
+"All the same, Tom," she said, when they were seated and paddling off
+again, "you don't know HOW NEAR YOU CAME TO LOSING ME." Then she
+raised her beautiful eyes and looked significantly, not at HIM, but at
+Hemmingway.
+
+When the water was down at "Jules'" the next day, they found certain
+curious changes and some gold, and the secretary was able to make a
+favorable report. But he made none whatever of his impressions "when
+the water was up at 'Jules','" though he often wondered if they were
+strictly trustworthy.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOM IN THE "CALAVERAS CLARION"
+
+
+The editorial sanctum of the "Calaveras Clarion" opened upon the
+"composing-room" of that paper on the one side, and gave apparently upon
+the rest of Calaveras County upon the other. For, situated on the very
+outskirts of the settlement and the summit of a very steep hill, the
+pines sloped away from the editorial windows to the long valley of the
+South Fork and--infinity. The little wooden building had invaded Nature
+without subduing it. It was filled night and day with the murmur of
+pines and their fragrance. Squirrels scampered over its roof when it was
+not preoccupied by woodpeckers, and a printer's devil had once seen a
+nest-building blue jay enter the composing window, flutter before one
+of the slanting type-cases with an air of deliberate selection, and then
+fly off with a vowel in its bill.
+
+Amidst these sylvan surroundings the temporary editor of the "Clarion"
+sat at his sanctum, reading the proofs of an editorial. As he was
+occupying that position during a six weeks' absence of the bona fide
+editor and proprietor, he was consequently reading the proof with some
+anxiety and responsibility. It had been suggested to him by certain
+citizens that the "Clarion" needed a firmer and more aggressive policy
+towards the Bill before the Legislature for the wagon road to the South
+Fork. Several Assembly men had been "got at" by the rival settlement of
+Liberty Hill, and a scathing exposure and denunciation of such methods
+was necessary. The interests of their own township were also to be
+"whooped up." All this had been vigorously explained to him, and he had
+grasped the spirit, if not always the facts, of his informants. It is
+to be feared, therefore, that he was perusing his article more with
+reference to its vigor than his own convictions. And yet he was not so
+greatly absorbed as to be unmindful of the murmur of the pines
+without, his half-savage environment, and the lazy talk of his sole
+companions,--the foreman and printer in the adjoining room.
+
+"Bet your life! I've always said that a man INSIDE a newspaper office
+could hold his own agin any outsider that wanted to play rough or tried
+to raid the office! Thar's the press, and thar's the printin' ink and
+roller! Folks talk a heap o' the power o' the Press!--I tell ye, ye
+don't half know it. Why, when old Kernel Fish was editin' the 'Sierra
+Banner,' one o' them bullies that he'd lampooned in the 'Banner' fought
+his way past the Kernel in the office, into the composin'-room, to
+wreck everythin' and 'pye' all the types. Spoffrel--ye don't remember
+Spoffrel?--little red-haired man?--was foreman. Spoffrel fended him off
+with the roller and got one good dab inter his eyes that blinded him,
+and then Spoffrel sorter skirmished him over to the press,--a plain
+lever just like ours,--whar the locked-up form of the inside was still
+a-lyin'! Then, quick as lightnin', Spoffrel tilts him over agin it, and
+HE throws out his hand and ketches hold o' the form to steady himself,
+when Spoffrel just runs the form and the hand under the press and down
+with the lever! And that held the feller fast as grim death! And when
+at last he begs off, and Spoff lets him loose, the hull o' that 'ere
+lampooning article he objected to was printed right onto the skin o' his
+hand! Fact, and it wouldn't come off, either."
+
+"Gosh, but I'd like to hev seen it," said the printer. "There ain't any
+chance, I reckon, o' such a sight here. The boss don't take no risks
+lampoonin', and he" (the editor knew he was being indicated by some
+unseen gesture of the unseen workman) "ain't that style."
+
+"Ye never kin tell," said the foreman didactically, "what might happen!
+I've known editors to get into a fight jest for a little innercent
+bedevilin' o' the opposite party. Sometimes for a misprint. Old man
+Pritchard of the 'Argus' oncet had a hole blown through his arm because
+his proofreader had called Colonel Starbottle's speech an 'ignominious'
+defense, when the old man hed written 'ingenuous' defense."
+
+The editor paused in his proof-reading. He had just come upon the
+sentence: "We cannot congratulate Liberty Hill--in its superior
+elevation--upon the ignominious silence of the representative of all
+Calaveras when this infamous Bill was introduced." He referred to his
+copy. Yes! He had certainly written "ignominious,"--that was what his
+informants had suggested. But was he sure they were right? He had a
+vague recollection, also, that the representative alluded to--Senator
+Bradley--had fought two duels, and was a "good" though somewhat
+impulsive shot! He might alter the word to "ingenuous" or "ingenious,"
+either would be finely sarcastic, but then--there was his foreman, who
+would detect it! He would wait until he had finished the entire article.
+In that occupation he became oblivious of the next room, of a silence,
+a whispered conversation, which ended with a rapping at the door and the
+appearance of the foreman in the doorway.
+
+"There's a man in the office who wants to see the editor," he said.
+
+"Show him in," replied the editor briefly. He was, however, conscious
+that there was a singular significance in his foreman's manner, and an
+eager apparition of the other printer over the foreman's shoulder.
+
+"He's carryin' a shot-gun, and is a man twice as big as you be," said
+the foreman gravely.
+
+The editor quickly recalled his own brief and as yet blameless record
+in the "Clarion." "Perhaps," he said tentatively, with a gentle smile,
+"he's looking for Captain Brush" (the absent editor).
+
+"I told him all that," said the foreman grimly, "and he said he wanted
+to see the man in charge."
+
+In proportion as the editor's heart sank his outward crest arose. "Show
+him in," he said loftily.
+
+"We KIN keep him out," suggested the foreman, lingering a moment; "me
+and him," indicating the expectant printer behind him, "is enough for
+that."
+
+"Show him up," repeated the editor firmly.
+
+The foreman withdrew; the editor seated himself and again took up
+his proof. The doubtful word "ignominious" seemed to stand out of the
+paragraph before him; it certainly WAS a strong expression! He was about
+to run his pencil through it when he heard the heavy step of his visitor
+approaching. A sudden instinct of belligerency took possession of him,
+and he wrathfully threw the pencil down.
+
+The burly form of the stranger blocked the doorway. He was dressed like
+a miner, but his build and general physiognomy were quite distinct
+from the local variety. His upper lip and chin were clean-shaven, still
+showing the blue-black roots of the beard which covered the rest of his
+face and depended in a thick fleece under his throat. He carried a small
+bundle tied up in a silk handkerchief in one hand, and a "shot-gun" in
+the other, perilously at half-cock. Entering the sanctum, he put down
+his bundle and quietly closed the door behind him. He then drew an empty
+chair towards him and dropped heavily into it with his gun on his
+knees. The editor's heart dropped almost as heavily, although he quite
+composedly held out his hand.
+
+"Shall I relieve you of your gun?"
+
+"Thank ye, lad--noa. It's moor coomfortable wi' me, and it's main
+dangersome to handle on the half-cock. That's why I didn't leave 'im on
+the horse outside!"
+
+At the sound of his voice and occasional accent a flash of intelligence
+relieved the editor's mind. He remembered that twenty miles away, in
+the illimitable vista from his windows, lay a settlement of English
+north-country miners, who, while faithfully adopting the methods,
+customs, and even slang of the Californians, retained many of their
+native peculiarities. The gun he carried on his knee, however, was
+evidently part of the Californian imitation.
+
+"Can I do anything for you?" said the editor blandly.
+
+"Ay! I've coom here to bill ma woife."
+
+"I--don't think I understand," hesitated the editor, with a smile.
+
+"I've coom here to get ye to put into your paaper a warnin', a notiss,
+that onless she returns to my house in four weeks, I'll have nowt to do
+wi' her again."
+
+"Oh!" said the editor, now perfectly reassured, "you want an
+advertisement? That's the business of the foreman; I'll call him." He
+was rising from his seat when the stranger laid a heavy hand on his
+shoulder and gently forced him down again.
+
+"Noa, lad! I don't want noa foreman nor understrappers to take this job.
+I want to talk it over wi' you. Sabe? My woife she bin up and awaa these
+six months. We had a bit of difference, that ain't here nor there, but
+she skedaddled outer my house. I want to give her fair warning, and let
+her know I ain't payin' any debts o' hers arter this notiss, and I ain't
+takin' her back arter four weeks from date."
+
+"I see," said the editor glibly. "What's your wife's name?"
+
+"Eliza Jane Dimmidge."
+
+"Good," continued the editor, scribbling on the paper before him;
+"something like this will do: 'Whereas my wife, Eliza Jane Dimmidge,
+having left my bed and board without just cause or provocation, this
+is to give notice that I shall not be responsible for any debts of her
+contracting on or after this date.'"
+
+"Ye must be a lawyer," said Mr. Dimmidge admiringly.
+
+It was an old enough form of advertisement, and the remark showed
+incontestably that Mr. Dimmidge was not a native; but the editor smiled
+patronizingly and went on: "'And I further give notice that if she does
+not return within the period of four weeks from this date, I shall take
+such proceedings for relief as the law affords.'"
+
+"Coom, lad, I didn't say THAT."
+
+"But you said you wouldn't take her back."
+
+"Ay."
+
+"And you can't prevent her without legal proceedings. She's your wife.
+But you needn't take proceedings, you know. It's only a warning."
+
+Mr. Dimmidge nodded approvingly. "That's so."
+
+"You'll want it published for four weeks, until date?" asked the editor.
+
+"Mebbe longer, lad."
+
+The editor wrote "till forbid" in the margin of the paper and smiled.
+
+"How big will it be?" said Mr. Dimmidge.
+
+The editor took up a copy of the "Clarion" and indicated about an inch
+of space. Mr. Dimmidge's face fell.
+
+"I want it bigger,--in large letters, like a play-card," he said.
+"That's no good for a warning."
+
+"You can have half a column or a whole column if you like," said the
+editor airily.
+
+"I'll take a whole one," said Mr. Dimmidge simply.
+
+The editor laughed. "Why! it would cost you a hundred dollars."
+
+"I'll take it," repeated Mr. Dimmidge.
+
+"But," said the editor gravely, "the same notice in a small space will
+serve your purpose and be quite legal."
+
+"Never you mind that, lad! It's the looks of the thing I'm arter, and
+not the expense. I'll take that column."
+
+The editor called in the foreman and showed him the copy. "Can you
+display that so as to fill a column?"
+
+The foreman grasped the situation promptly. It would be big business for
+the paper. "Yes," he said meditatively, "that bold-faced election type
+will do it."
+
+Mr. Dimmidge's face brightened. The expression "bold-faced" pleased him.
+"That's it! I told you. I want to bill her in a portion of the paper."
+
+"I might put in a cut," said the foreman suggestively; "something like
+this." He took a venerable woodcut from the case. I grieve to say it was
+one which, until the middle of the present century, was common enough in
+the newspaper offices in the Southwest. It showed the running figure of
+a negro woman carrying her personal property in a knotted handkerchief
+slung from a stick over her shoulder, and was supposed to represent "a
+fugitive slave."
+
+Mr. Dimmidge's eyes brightened. "I'll take that, too. It's a little
+dark-complected for Mrs. P., but it will do. Now roon away, lad," he
+said to the foreman, as he quietly pushed him into the outer office
+again and closed the door. Then, facing the surprised editor, he said,
+"Theer's another notiss I want ye to put in your paper; but that's
+atween US. Not a word to THEM," he indicated the banished foreman with a
+jerk of his thumb. "Sabe? I want you to put this in another part o' your
+paper, quite innocent-like, ye know." He drew from his pocket a gray
+wallet, and taking out a slip of paper read from it gravely, "'If this
+should meet the eye of R. B., look out for M. J. D. He is on your track.
+When this you see write a line to E. J. D., Elktown Post Office.' I want
+this to go in as 'Personal and Private'--sabe?--like them notisses in
+the big 'Frisco papers."
+
+"I see," said the editor, laying it aside. "It shall go in the same
+issue in another column."
+
+Apparently Mr. Dimmidge expected something more than this reply, for
+after a moment's hesitation he said with an odd smile:
+
+"Ye ain't seein' the meanin' o' that, lad?"
+
+"No," said the editor lightly; "but I suppose R. B. does, and it isn't
+intended that any one else should."
+
+"Mebbe it is, and mebbe it isn't," said Mr. Dimmidge, with a
+self-satisfied air. "I don't mind saying atween us that R. B. is the man
+as I've suspicioned as havin' something to do with my wife goin' away;
+and ye see, if he writes to E. J. D.--that's my wife's initials--at
+Elktown, I'LL get that letter and so make sure."
+
+"But suppose your wife goes there first, or sends?"
+
+"Then I'll ketch her or her messenger. Ye see?"
+
+The editor did not see fit to oppose any argument to this phenomenal
+simplicity, and Mr. Dimmidge, after settling his bill with the foreman,
+and enjoining the editor to the strictest secrecy regarding the origin
+of the "personal notice," took up his gun and departed, leaving the
+treasury of the "Clarion" unprecedentedly enriched, and the editor to
+his proofs.
+
+The paper duly appeared the next morning with the column advertisement,
+the personal notice, and the weighty editorial on the wagon road. There
+was a singular demand for the paper, the edition was speedily exhausted,
+and the editor was proportionately flattered, although he was surprised
+to receive neither praise nor criticism from his subscribers. Before
+evening, however, he learned to his astonishment that the excitement was
+caused by the column advertisement. Nobody knew Mr. Dimmidge, nor his
+domestic infelicities, and the editor and foreman, being equally in the
+dark, took refuge in a mysterious and impressive evasion of all inquiry.
+Never since the last San Francisco Vigilance Committee had the office
+been so besieged. The editor, foreman, and even the apprentice, were
+buttonholed and "treated" at the bar, but to no effect. All that could
+be learned was that it was a bona fide advertisement, for which one
+hundred dollars had been received! There were great discussions and
+conflicting theories as to whether the value of the wife, or the
+husband's anxiety to get rid of her, justified the enormous expense and
+ostentatious display. She was supposed to be an exceedingly beautiful
+woman by some, by others a perfect Sycorax; in one breath Mr. Dimmidge
+was a weak, uxorious spouse, wasting his substance on a creature who did
+not care for him, and in another a maddened, distracted, henpecked man,
+content to purchase peace and rest at any price. Certainly, never was
+advertisement more effective in its publicity, or cheaper in proportion
+to the circulation it commanded. It was copied throughout the whole
+Pacific slope; mighty San Francisco papers described its size and
+setting under the attractive headline, "How they Advertise a Wife in the
+Mountains!" It reappeared in the Eastern journals, under the title of
+"Whimsicalities of the Western Press." It was believed to have crossed
+to England as a specimen of "Transatlantic Savagery." The real editor
+of the "Clarion" awoke one morning, in San Francisco, to find his paper
+famous. Its advertising columns were eagerly sought for; he at once
+advanced the rates. People bought successive issues to gaze upon this
+monumental record of extravagance. A singular idea, which, however,
+brought further fortune to the paper, was advanced by an astute critic
+at the Eureka Saloon. "My opinion, gentlemen, is that the whole blamed
+thing is a bluff! There ain't no Mr. Dimmidge; there ain't no Mrs.
+Dimmidge; there ain't no desertion! The whole rotten thing is an
+ADVERTISEMENT o' suthin'! Ye'll find afore ye get through with it
+that that there wife won't come back until that blamed husband buys
+Somebody's Soap, or treats her to Somebody's particular Starch or Patent
+Medicine! Ye jest watch and see!" The idea was startling, and seized
+upon the mercantile mind. The principal merchant of the town, and
+purveyor to the mining settlements beyond, appeared the next morning at
+the office of the "Clarion." "Ye wouldn't mind puttin' this 'ad' in
+a column alongside o' the Dimmidge one, would ye?" The young editor
+glanced at it, and then, with a serpent-like sagacity, veiled, however,
+by the suavity of the dove, pointed out that the original advertiser
+might think it called his bona fides into question and withdraw his
+advertisement. "But if we secured you by an offer of double the amount
+per column?" urged the merchant. "That," responded the locum tenens,
+"was for the actual editor and proprietor in San Francisco to determine.
+He would telegraph." He did so. The response was, "Put it in." Whereupon
+in the next issue, side by side with Mr. Dimmidge's protracted warning,
+appeared a column with the announcement, in large letters, "WE HAVEN'T
+LOST ANY WIFE, but WE are prepared to furnish the following goods at
+a lower rate than any other advertiser in the county," followed by the
+usual price list of the merchant's wares. There was an unprecedented
+demand for that issue. The reputation of the "Clarion," both as a shrewd
+advertising medium and a comic paper, was established at once. For a few
+days the editor waited with some apprehension for a remonstrance from
+the absent Dimmidge, but none came. Whether Mr. Dimmidge recognized that
+this new advertisement gave extra publicity to his own, or that he was
+already on the track of the fugitive, the editor did not know. The
+few curious citizens who had, early in the excitement, penetrated
+the settlement of the English miners twenty miles away in search of
+information, found that Mr. Dimmidge had gone away, and that Mrs.
+Dimmidge had NEVER resided there with him!
+
+Six weeks passed. The limit of Mr. Dimmidge's advertisement had been
+reached, and, as it was not renewed, it had passed out of the pages
+of the "Clarion," and with it the merchant's advertisement in the next
+column. The excitement had subsided, although its influence was still
+felt in the circulation of the paper and its advertising popularity. The
+temporary editor was also nearing the limit of his incumbency, but had
+so far participated in the good fortune of the "Clarion" as to receive
+an offer from one of the San Francisco dailies.
+
+It was a warm night, and he was alone in his sanctum. The rest of the
+building was dark and deserted, and his solitary light, flashing out
+through the open window, fell upon the nearer pines and was lost in the
+dark, indefinable slope below. He had reached the sanctum by the
+rear, and a door which he also left open to enjoy the freshness of
+the aromatic air. Nor did it in the least mar his privacy. Rather the
+solitude of the great woods without seemed to enter through that
+door and encompassed him with its protecting loneliness. There was
+occasionally a faint "peep" in the scant eaves, or a "pat-pat," ending
+in a frightened scurry across the roof, or the slow flap of a heavy
+wing in the darkness below. These gentle disturbances did not, however,
+interrupt his work on "The True Functions of the County Newspaper," the
+editorial on which he was engaged.
+
+Presently a more distinct rustling against the straggling blackberry
+bushes beside the door attracted his attention. It was followed by a
+light tapping against the side of the house. The editor started and
+turned quickly towards the open door. Two outside steps led to the
+ground. Standing upon the lower one was a woman. The upper part of her
+figure, illuminated by the light from the door, was thrown into greater
+relief by the dark background of the pines. Her face was unknown to
+him, but it was a pleasant one, marked by a certain good-humored
+determination.
+
+"May I come in?" she said confidently.
+
+"Certainly," said the editor. "I am working here alone because it is
+so quiet." He thought he would precipitate some explanation from her by
+excusing himself.
+
+"That's the reason why I came," she said, with a quiet smile.
+
+She came up the next step and entered the room. She was plainly but
+neatly dressed, and now that her figure was revealed he saw that she was
+wearing a linsey-woolsey riding-skirt, and carried a serviceable rawhide
+whip in her cotton-gauntleted hand. She took the chair he offered her
+and sat down sideways on it, her whip hand now also holding up her
+skirt, and permitting a hem of clean white petticoat and a smart,
+well-shaped boot to be seen.
+
+"I don't remember to have had the pleasure of seeing you in Calaveras
+before," said the editor tentatively.
+
+"No. I never was here before," she said composedly, "but you've heard
+enough of me, I reckon. I'm Mrs. Dimmidge." She threw one hand over
+the back of the chair, and with the other tapped her riding-whip on the
+floor.
+
+The editor started. Mrs. Dimmidge! Then she was not a myth. An absurd
+similarity between her attitude with the whip and her husband's entrance
+with his gun six weeks before forced itself upon him and made her an
+invincible presence.
+
+"Then you have returned to your husband?" he said hesitatingly.
+
+"Not much!" she returned, with a slight curl of her lip.
+
+"But you read his advertisement?"
+
+"I saw that column of fool nonsense he put in your paper--ef that's
+what you mean," she said with decision, "but I didn't come here to see
+HIM--but YOU."
+
+The editor looked at her with a forced smile, but a vague misgiving. He
+was alone at night in a deserted part of the settlement, with a plump,
+self-possessed woman who had a contralto voice, a horsewhip, and--he
+could not help feeling--an evident grievance.
+
+"To see me?" he repeated, with a faint attempt at gallantry. "You are
+paying me a great compliment, but really"--
+
+"When I tell you I've come three thousand miles from Kansas straight
+here without stopping, ye kin reckon it's so," she replied firmly.
+
+"Three thousand miles!" echoed the editor wonderingly.
+
+"Yes. Three thousand miles from my own folks' home in Kansas, where six
+years ago I married Mr. Dimmidge,--a British furriner as could scarcely
+make himself understood in any Christian language! Well, he got round
+me and dad, allowin' he was a reg'lar out-and-out profeshnal miner,--had
+lived in mines ever since he was a boy; and so, not knowin' what kind o'
+mines, and dad just bilin' over with the gold fever, we were married and
+kem across the plains to Californy. He was a good enough man to look at,
+but it warn't three months before I discovered that he allowed a wife
+was no better nor a nigger slave, and he the master. That made me open
+my eyes; but then, as he didn't drink, and didn't gamble, and didn't
+swear, and was a good provider and laid by money, why I shifted along
+with him as best I could. We drifted down the first year to Sonora, at
+Red Dog, where there wasn't another woman. Well, I did the nigger slave
+business,--never stirring out o' the settlement, never seein' a town
+or a crowd o' decent people,--and he did the lord and master! We played
+that game for two years, and I got tired. But when at last he allowed
+he'd go up to Elktown Hill, where there was a passel o' his countrymen
+at work, with never a sign o' any other folks, and leave me alone at Red
+Dog until he fixed up a place for me at Elktown Hill,--I kicked! I gave
+him fair warning! I did as other nigger slaves did,--I ran away!"
+
+A recollection of the wretched woodcut which Mr. Dimmidge had selected
+to personify his wife flashed upon the editor with a new meaning.
+Yet perhaps she had not seen it, and had only read a copy of the
+advertisement. What could she want? The "Calaveras Clarion," although a
+"Palladium" and a "Sentinel upon the Heights of Freedom" in reference to
+wagon roads, was not a redresser of domestic wrongs,--except through its
+advertising columns! Her next words intensified that suggestion.
+
+"I've come here to put an advertisement in your paper."
+
+The editor heaved a sigh of relief, as once before. "Certainly," he said
+briskly. "But that's another department of the paper, and the printers
+have gone home. Come to-morrow morning early."
+
+"To-morrow morning I shall be miles away," she said decisively,
+"and what I want done has got to be done NOW! I don't want to see no
+printers; I don't want ANYBODY to know I've been here but you. That's
+why I kem here at night, and rode all the way from Sawyer's Station,
+and wouldn't take the stage-coach. And when we've settled about the
+advertisement, I'm going to mount my horse, out thar in the bushes, and
+scoot outer the settlement."
+
+"Very good," said the editor resignedly. "Of course I can deliver your
+instructions to the foreman. And now--let me see--I suppose you wish to
+intimate in a personal notice to your husband that you've returned."
+
+"Nothin' o' the kind!" said Mrs. Dimmidge coolly. "I want to placard him
+as he did me. I've got it all written out here. Sabe?"
+
+She took from her pocket a folded paper, and spreading it out on the
+editor's desk, with a certain pride of authorship read as follows:--
+
+"Whereas my husband, Micah J. Dimmidge, having given out that I have
+left his bed and board,--the same being a bunk in a log cabin and pork
+and molasses three times a day,--and having advertised that he'd pay
+no debts of MY contractin',--which, as thar ain't any, might be easier
+collected than debts of his own contractin',--this is to certify that
+unless he returns from Elktown Hill to his only home in Sonora in one
+week from date, payin' the cost of this advertisement, I'll know the
+reason why.--Eliza Jane Dimmidge."
+
+"Thar," she added, drawing a long breath, "put that in a column of the
+'Clarion,' same size as the last, and let it work, and that's all I want
+of you."
+
+"A column?" repeated the editor. "Do you know the cost is very
+expensive, and I COULD put it in a single paragraph?"
+
+"I reckon I kin pay the same as Mr. Dimmidge did for HIS," said the lady
+complacently. "I didn't see your paper myself, but the paper as copied
+it--one of them big New York dailies--said that it took up a whole
+column."
+
+The editor breathed more freely; she had not seen the infamous woodcut
+which her husband had selected. At the same moment he was struck with a
+sense of retribution, justice, and compensation.
+
+"Would you," he asked hesitatingly,--"would you like it illustrated--by
+a cut?"
+
+"With which?"
+
+"Wait a moment; I'll show you."
+
+He went into the dark composing-room, lit a candle, and rummaging in a
+drawer sacred to weather-beaten, old-fashioned electrotyped advertising
+symbols of various trades, finally selected one and brought it to Mrs.
+Dimmidge. It represented a bare and exceedingly stalwart arm wielding a
+large hammer.
+
+"Your husband being a miner,--a quartz miner,--would that do?" he asked.
+(It had been previously used to advertise a blacksmith, a gold-beater,
+and a stone-mason.)
+
+The lady examined it critically.
+
+"It does look a little like Micah's arm," she said meditatively.
+"Well--you kin put it in."
+
+The editor was so well pleased with his success that he must needs make
+another suggestion. "I suppose," he said ingenuously, "that you don't
+want to answer the 'Personal'?"
+
+"'Personal'?" she repeated quickly, "what's that? I ain't seen no
+'Personal.'" The editor saw his blunder. She, of course, had never seen
+Mr. Dimmidge's artful "Personal;" THAT the big dailies naturally had not
+noticed nor copied. But it was too late to withdraw now. He brought
+out a file of the "Clarion," and snipping out the paragraph with his
+scissors, laid it before the lady.
+
+She stared at it with wrinkled brows and a darkening face.
+
+"And THIS was in the same paper?--put in by Mr. Dimmidge?" she asked
+breathlessly.
+
+The editor, somewhat alarmed, stammered "Yes." But the next moment he
+was reassured. The wrinkles disappeared, a dozen dimples broke out where
+they had been, and the determined, matter-of-fact Mrs. Dimmidge burst
+into a fit of rosy merriment. Again and again she laughed, shaking
+the building, startling the sedate, melancholy woods beyond, until the
+editor himself laughed in sheer vacant sympathy.
+
+"Lordy!" she said at last, gasping, and wiping the laughter from her wet
+eyes. "I never thought of THAT."
+
+"No," explained the editor smilingly; "of course you didn't. Don't you
+see, the papers that copied the big advertisement never saw that little
+paragraph, or if they did, they never connected the two together."
+
+"Oh, it ain't that," said Mrs. Dimmidge, trying to regain her composure
+and holding her sides. "It's that blessed DEAR old dunderhead of a
+Dimmidge I'm thinking of. That gets me. I see it all now. Only, sakes
+alive! I never thought THAT of him. Oh, it's just too much!" and she
+again relapsed behind her handkerchief.
+
+"Then I suppose you don't want to reply to it," said the editor.
+
+Her laughter instantly ceased. "Don't I?" she said, wiping her face into
+its previous complacent determination. "Well, young man, I reckon that's
+just what I WANT to do! Now, wait a moment; let's see what he said,"
+she went on, taking up and reperusing the "Personal" paragraph. "Well,
+then," she went on, after a moment's silent composition with moving
+lips, "you just put these lines in."
+
+The editor took up his pencil.
+
+"To Mr. J. D. Dimmidge.--Hope you're still on R. B.'s tracks. Keep
+there!--E. J. D."
+
+The editor wrote down the line, and then, remembering Mr. Dimmidge's
+voluntary explanation of HIS "Personal," waited with some confidence for
+a like frankness from Mrs. Dimmidge. But he was mistaken.
+
+"You think that he--R. B.--or Mr. Dimmidge--will understand this?" he at
+last asked tentatively. "Is it enough?"
+
+"Quite enough," said Mrs. Dimmidge emphatically. She took a roll of
+greenbacks from her pocket, selected a hundred-dollar bill and then a
+five, and laid them before the editor. "Young man," she said, with a
+certain demure gravity, "you've done me a heap o' good. I never spent
+money with more satisfaction than this. I never thought much o' the
+'power o' the Press,' as you call it, afore. But this has been a right
+comfortable visit, and I'm glad I ketched you alone. But you understand
+one thing: this yer visit, and WHO I am, is betwixt you and me only."
+
+"Of course I must say that the advertisement was AUTHORIZED," returned
+the editor. "I'm only the temporary editor. The proprietor is away."
+
+"So much the better," said the lady complacently. "You just say you
+found it on your desk with the money; but don't you give me away."
+
+"I can promise you that the secret of your personal visit is safe with
+me," said the young man, with a bow, as Mrs. Dimmidge rose. "Let me see
+you to your horse," he added. "It's quite dark in the woods."
+
+"I can see well enough alone, and it's just as well you shouldn't know
+HOW I kem or HOW I went away. Enough for you to know that I'll be miles
+away before that paper comes out. So stay where you are."
+
+She pressed his hand frankly and firmly, gathered up her riding-skirt,
+slipped backwards to the door, and the next moment rustled away into the
+darkness.
+
+Early the next morning the editor handed Mrs. Dimmidge's advertisement,
+and the woodcut he had selected, to his foreman. He was purposely brief
+in his directions, so as to avoid inquiry, and retired to his sanctum.
+In the space of a few moments the foreman entered with a slight
+embarrassment of manner.
+
+"You'll excuse my speaking to you, sir," he said, with a singular
+mixture of humility and cunning. "It's no business of mine, I know; but
+I thought I ought to tell you that this yer kind o' thing won't pay any
+more,--it's about played out!"
+
+"I don't think I understand you," said the editor loftily, but with
+an inward misgiving. "You don't mean to say that a regular, actual
+advertisement"--
+
+"Of course, I know all that," said the foreman, with a peculiar smile;
+"and I'm ready to back you up in it, and so's the boy; but it won't
+pay."
+
+"It HAS paid a hundred and five dollars," said the editor, taking the
+notes from his pocket; "so I'd advise you to simply attend to your duty
+and set it up."
+
+A look of surprise, followed, however, by a kind of pitying smile,
+passed over the foreman's face. "Of course, sir, THAT'S all right, and
+you know your own business; but if you think that the new advertisement
+will pay this time as the other one did, and whoop up another column
+from an advertiser, I'm afraid you'll slip up. It's a little 'off color'
+now,--not 'up to date,'--if it ain't a regular 'back number,' as you'll
+see."
+
+"Meantime I'll dispense with your advice," said the editor curtly, "and
+I think you had better let our subscribers and advertisers do the same,
+or the 'Clarion' might also be obliged to dispense with your SERVICES."
+
+"I ain't no blab," said the foreman, in an aggrieved manner, "and I
+don't intend to give the show away even if it don't PAY. But I thought
+I'd tell you, because I know the folks round here better than you do."
+
+He was right. No sooner had the advertisement appeared than the editor
+found that everybody believed it to be a sheer invention of his own to
+"once more boom" the "Clarion." If they had doubted MR. Dimmidge, they
+utterly rejected MRS. Dimmidge as an advertiser! It was a stale joke
+that nobody would follow up; and on the heels of this came a letter from
+the editor-in-chief.
+
+
+MY DEAR BOY,--You meant well, I know, but the second Dimmidge "ad" was
+a mistake. Still, it was a big bluff of yours to show the money, and I
+send you back your hundred dollars, hoping you won't "do it again."
+Of course you'll have to keep the advertisement in the paper for two
+issues, just as if it were a real thing, and it's lucky that there's
+just now no pressure in our columns. You might have told a better story
+than that hogwash about your finding the "ad" and a hundred dollars
+lying loose on your desk one morning. It was rather thin, and I don't
+wonder the foreman kicked.
+
+
+The young editor was in despair. At first he thought of writing to Mrs.
+Dimmidge at the Elktown Post-Office, asking her to relieve him of his
+vow of secrecy; but his pride forbade. There was a humorous concern, not
+without a touch of pity, in the faces of his contributors as he passed;
+a few affected to believe in the new advertisement, and asked him vague,
+perfunctory questions about it. His position was trying, and he was not
+sorry when the term of his engagement expired the next week, and he left
+Calaveras to take his new position on the San Francisco paper.
+
+He was standing in the saloon of the Sacramento boat when he felt a
+sudden heavy pressure on his shoulder, and looking round sharply, beheld
+not only the black-bearded face of Mr. Dimmidge, lit up by a smile, but
+beside it the beaming, buxom face of Mrs. Dimmidge, overflowing with
+good-humor. Still a little sore from his past experience, he was about
+to address them abruptly, when he was utterly vanquished by the hearty
+pressure of their hands and the unmistakable look of gratitude in their
+eyes.
+
+"I was just saying to 'Lizy Jane," began Mr. Dimmidge breathlessly,
+"if I could only meet that young man o' the 'Clarion' what brought us
+together again"--
+
+"You'd be willin' to pay four times the amount we both paid him,"
+interpolated the laughing Mrs. Dimmidge.
+
+"But I didn't bring you together," burst out the dazed young man, "and
+I'd like to know, in the name of Heaven, what brought you together now?"
+
+"Don't you see, lad," said the imperturbable Mr. Dimmidge, "'Lizy Jane
+and myself had qua'lled, and we just unpacked our fool nonsense in your
+paper and let the hull world know it! And we both felt kinder skeert and
+shamed like, and it looked such small hogwash, and of so little account,
+for all the talk it made, that we kinder felt lonely as two separated
+fools that really ought to share their foolishness together."
+
+"And that ain't all," said Mrs. Dimmidge, with a sly glance at her
+spouse, "for I found out from that 'Personal' you showed me that this
+particular old fool was actooally jealous!--JEALOUS!"
+
+"And then?" said the editor impatiently.
+
+"And then I KNEW he loved me all the time."
+
+
+
+
+THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+
+
+Even to the eye of the most inexperienced traveler there was no doubt
+that Buena Vista was a "played-out" mining camp. There, seamed and
+scarred by hydraulic engines, was the old hillside, over whose denuded
+surface the grass had begun to spring again in fitful patches; there
+were the abandoned heaps of tailings already blackened by sun and rain,
+and worn into mounds like ruins of masonry; there were the waterless
+ditches, like giant graves, and the pools of slumgullion, now dried into
+shining, glazed cement. There were two or three wooden "stores," from
+which the windows and doors had been taken and conveyed to the newer
+settlement of Wynyard's Gulch. Four or five buildings that still were
+inhabited--the blacksmith's shop, the post-office, a pioneer's
+cabin, and the old hotel and stage-office--only accented the general
+desolation. The latter building had a remoteness of prosperity far
+beyond the others, having been a wayside Spanish-American posada, with
+adobe walls of two feet in thickness, that shamed the later shells of
+half-inch plank, which were slowly warping and cracking like dried pods
+in the oven-like heat.
+
+The proprietor of this building, Colonel Swinger, had been looked
+upon by the community as a person quite as remote, old-fashioned, and
+inconsistent with present progress as the house itself. He was an old
+Virginian, who had emigrated from his decaying plantation on the James
+River only to find the slaves, which he had brought with him, freed men
+when they touched Californian soil; to be driven by Northern progress
+and "smartness" out of the larger cities into the mountains, to fix
+himself at last, with the hopeless fatuity of his race, upon an already
+impoverished settlement; to sink his scant capital in hopeless shafts
+and ledges, and finally to take over the decaying hostelry of Buena
+Vista, with its desultory custom and few, lingering, impecunious guests.
+Here, too, his old Virginian ideas of hospitality were against his
+financial success; he could not dun nor turn from his door those
+unfortunate prospectors whom the ebbing fortunes of Buena Vista had left
+stranded by his side.
+
+Colonel Swinger was sitting in a wicker-work rocking-chair on the
+veranda of his hotel--sipping a mint julep which he held in his hand,
+while he gazed into the dusty distance. Nothing could have convinced him
+that he was not performing a serious part of his duty as hotel-keeper
+in this attitude, even though there were no travelers expected, and the
+road at this hour of the day was deserted. On a bench at his side Larry
+Hawkins stretched his lazy length,--one foot dropped on the veranda,
+and one arm occasionally groping under the bench for his own tumbler
+of refreshment. Apart from this community of occupation, there was
+apparently no interchange of sentiment between the pair. The silence
+had continued for some moments, when the colonel put down his glass and
+gazed earnestly into the distance.
+
+"Seein' anything?" remarked the man on the bench, who had sleepily
+regarded him.
+
+"No," said the colonel, "that is--it's only Dick Ruggles crossin' the
+road."
+
+"Thought you looked a little startled, ez if you'd seen that ar
+wanderin' stranger."
+
+"When I see that wandering stranger, sah," said the colonel decisively,
+"I won't be sittin' long in this yer chyar. I'll let him know in about
+ten seconds that I don't harbor any vagrants prowlin' about like poor
+whites or free niggers on my propahty, sah!"
+
+"All the same, I kinder wish ye did see him, for you'd be settled in
+YOUR mind and I'd be easier in MINE, ef you found out what he was doin'
+round yer, or ye had to admit that it wasn't no LIVIN' man."
+
+"What do you mean?" said the colonel, testily facing around in his
+chair.
+
+His companion also altered his attitude by dropping his other foot
+to the floor, sitting up, and leaning lazily forward with his hands
+clasped.
+
+"Look yer, colonel. When you took this place, I felt I didn't have no
+call to tell ye all I know about it, nor to pizen yer mind by any darned
+fool yarns I mout hev heard. Ye know it was one o' them old Spanish
+haciendas?"
+
+"I know," said the colonel loftily, "that it was held by a grant from
+Charles the Fifth of Spain, just as my propahty on the James River was
+given to my people by King James of England, sah!"
+
+"That ez as may be," returned his companion, in lazy indifference;
+"though I reckon that Charles the Fifth of Spain and King James of
+England ain't got much to do with what I'm goin' to tell ye. Ye see, I
+was here long afore YOUR time, or any of the boys that hev now cleared
+out; and at that time the hacienda belonged to a man named Juan
+Sobriente. He was that kind o' fool that he took no stock in mining.
+When the boys were whoopin' up the place and finding the color
+everywhere, and there was a hundred men working down there in the gulch,
+he was either ridin' round lookin' up the wild horses he owned, or
+sittin' with two or three lazy peons and Injins that was fed and looked
+arter by the priests. Gosh! now I think of it, it was mighty like YOU
+when you first kem here with your niggers. That's curious, too, ain't
+it?"
+
+He had stopped, gazing with an odd, superstitious wonderment at the
+colonel, as if overcome by this not very remarkable coincidence.
+The colonel, overlooking or totally oblivious to its somewhat
+uncomplimentary significance, simply said, "Go on. What about him?"
+
+"Well, ez I was sayin', he warn't in it nohow, but kept on his reg'lar
+way when the boom was the biggest. Some of the boys allowed it was
+mighty oncivil for him to stand off like that, and others--when he
+refused a big pile for his hacienda and the garden, that ran right into
+the gold-bearing ledge--war for lynching him and driving him outer the
+settlement. But as he had a pretty darter or niece livin' with him,
+and, except for his partickler cussedness towards mining, was kinder
+peaceable and perlite, they thought better of it. Things went along like
+this, until one day the boys noticed--particklerly the boys that had
+slipped up on their luck--that old man Sobriente was gettin' rich,--had
+stocked a ranch over on the Divide, and had given some gold candlesticks
+to the mission church. That would have been only human nature and
+business, ef he'd had any during them flush times; but he hadn't. This
+kinder puzzled them. They tackled the peons,--his niggers,--but it was
+all 'No sabe.' They tackled another man,--a kind of half-breed Kanaka,
+who, except the priest, was the only man who came to see him, and was
+supposed to be mighty sweet on the darter or niece,--but they didn't
+even get the color outer HIM. Then the first thing we knowed was that
+old Sobriente was found dead in the well!"
+
+"In the well, sah!" said the colonel, starting up. "The well on my
+propahty?"
+
+"No," said his companion. "The old well that was afterwards shut up.
+Yours was dug by the last tenant, Jack Raintree, who allowed that he
+didn't want to 'take any Sobriente in his reg'lar whiskey and water.'
+Well, the half-breed Kanaka cleared out after the old man's death, and
+so did that darter or niece; and the church, to whom old Sobriente had
+left this house, let it to Raintree for next to nothin'."
+
+"I don't see what all that has got to do with that wandering tramp,"
+said the colonel, who was by no means pleased with this history of his
+property.
+
+"I'll tell ye. A few days after Raintree took it over, he was lookin'
+round the garden, which old Sobriente had always kept shut up agin
+strangers, and he finds a lot of dried-up 'slumgullion'* scattered all
+about the borders and beds, just as if the old man had been using it for
+fertilizing. Well, Raintree ain't no fool; he allowed the old man wasn't
+one, either; and he knew that slumgullion wasn't worth no more than mud
+for any good it would do the garden. So he put this yer together with
+Sobriente's good luck, and allowed to himself that the old coyote had
+been secretly gold-washin' all the while he seemed to be standin' off
+agin it! But where was the mine? Whar did he get the gold? That's what
+got Raintree. He hunted all over the garden, prospected every part of
+it,--ye kin see the holes yet,--but he never even got the color!"
+
+ * That is, a viscid cement-like refuse of gold-washing.
+
+He paused, and then, as the colonel made an impatient gesture, he went
+on.
+
+"Well, one night just afore you took the place, and when Raintree was
+gettin' just sick of it, he happened to be walkin' in the garden. He was
+puzzlin' his brain agin to know how old Sobriente made his pile, when
+all of a suddenst he saw suthin' a-movin' in the brush beside the house.
+He calls out, thinkin' it was one of the boys, but got no answer. Then
+he goes to the bushes, and a tall figger, all in black, starts out afore
+him. He couldn't see any face, for its head was covered with a hood, but
+he saw that it held suthin' like a big cross clasped agin its breast.
+This made him think it was one them priests, until he looks agin and
+sees that it wasn't no cross it was carryin,' but a PICKAXE! He makes
+a jump towards it, but it vanished! He traipsed over the hull
+garden,--went though ev'ry bush,--but it was clean gone. Then the hull
+thing flashed upon him with a cold shiver. The old man bein' found dead
+in the well! the goin' away of the half-breed and the girl! the findin'
+o' that slumgullion! The old man HAD made a strike in that garden, the
+half-breed had discovered his secret and murdered him, throwin' him down
+the well! It war no LIVIN' man that he had seen, but the ghost of old
+Sobriente!"
+
+The colonel emptied the remaining contents of his glass at a single
+gulp, and sat up. "It's my opinion, sah, that Raintree had that night
+more than his usual allowance of corn-juice on board; and it's only
+a wonder, sah, that he didn't see a few pink alligators and sky-blue
+snakes at the same time. But what's this got to do with that wanderin'
+tramp?"
+
+"They're all the same thing, colonel, and in my opinion that there tramp
+ain't no more alive than that figger was."
+
+"But YOU were the one that saw this tramp with your own eyes," retorted
+the colonel quickly, "and you never before allowed it was a spirit!"
+
+"Exactly! I saw it whar a minit afore nothin' had been standin', and a
+minit after nothin' stood," said Larry Hawkins, with a certain serious
+emphasis; "but I warn't goin' to say it to ANYBODY, and I warn't goin'
+to give you and the hacienda away. And ez nobody knew Raintree's story,
+I jest shut up my head. But you kin bet your life that the man I saw
+warn't no livin' man!"
+
+"We'll see, sah!" said the colonel, rising from his chair with his
+fingers in the armholes of his nankeen waistcoat, "ef he ever intrudes
+on my property again. But look yar! don't ye go sayin' anything of this
+to Polly,--you know what women are!"
+
+A faint color came into Larry's face; an animation quite different to
+the lazy deliberation of his previous monologue shone in his eyes, as
+he said, with a certain rough respect he had not shown before to his
+companion, "That's why I'm tellin' ye, so that ef SHE happened to see
+anything and got skeert, ye'd know how to reason her out of it."
+
+"'Sh!" said the colonel, with a warning gesture.
+
+A young girl had just appeared in the doorway, and now stood leaning
+against the central pillar that supported it, with one hand above her
+head, in a lazy attitude strongly suggestive of the colonel's Southern
+indolence, yet with a grace entirely her own. Indeed, it overcame the
+negligence of her creased and faded yellow cotton frock and unbuttoned
+collar, and suggested--at least to the eyes of ONE man--the curving and
+clinging of the jasmine vine against the outer column of the veranda.
+Larry Hawkins rose awkwardly to his feet.
+
+"Now what are you two men mumblin' and confidin' to each other? You look
+for all the world like two old women gossips," she said, with languid
+impertinence.
+
+It was easy to see that a privileged and recognized autocrat spoke.
+No one had ever questioned Polly Swinger's right to interrupting,
+interfering, and saucy criticisms. Secure in the hopeless or chivalrous
+admiration of the men around her, she had repaid it with a frankness
+that scorned any coquetry; with an indifference to the ordinary feminine
+effect or provocation in dress or bearing that was as natural as it was
+invincible. No one had ever known Polly to "fix up" for anybody, yet
+no one ever doubted the effect, if she had. No one had ever rebuked her
+charming petulance, or wished to.
+
+Larry gave a weak, vague laugh. Colonel Swinger as ineffectively assumed
+a mock parental severity. "When you see two gentlemen, miss, discussin'
+politics together, it ain't behavin' like a lady to interrupt. Better
+run away and tidy yourself before the stage comes."
+
+The young lady replied to the last innuendo by taking two spirals of
+soft hair, like "corn silk," from her oval cheek, wetting them with
+her lips, and tucking them behind her ears. Her father's ungentlemanly
+suggestion being thus disposed of, she returned to her first charge.
+
+"It ain't no politics; you ain't been swearing enough for THAT! Come,
+now! It's the mysterious stranger ye've been talking about!"
+
+Both men stared at her with unaffected concern.
+
+"What do YOU know about any mysterious stranger?" demanded her father.
+
+"Do you suppose you men kin keep a secret," scoffed Polly. "Why, Dick
+Ruggles told me how skeert ye all were over an entire stranger, and he
+advised me not to wander down the road after dark. I asked him if he
+thought I was a pickaninny to be frightened by bogies, and that if
+he hadn't a better excuse for wantin' 'to see me home' from the Injin
+spring, he might slide."
+
+Larry laughed again, albeit a little bitterly, for it seemed to him that
+the excuse was fully justified; but the colonel said promptly, "Dick's
+a fool, and you might have told him there were worse things to be met on
+the road than bogies. Run away now, and see that the niggers are on hand
+when the stage comes."
+
+Two hours later the stage came with a clatter of hoofs and a cloud of
+red dust, which precipitated itself and a dozen thirsty travelers
+upon the veranda before the hotel bar-room; it brought also the usual
+"express" newspapers and much talk to Colonel Swinger, who always
+received his guests in a lofty personal fashion at the door, as he might
+have done in his old Virginian home; but it brought likewise--marvelous
+to relate--an ACTUAL GUEST, who had two trunks and asked for a room! He
+was evidently a stranger to the ways of Buena Vista, and particularly
+to those of Colonel Swinger, and at first seemed inclined to resent the
+social attitude of his host, and his frank and free curiosity. When he,
+however, found that Colonel Swinger was even better satisfied to give
+an account of HIS OWN affairs, his family, pedigree, and his present
+residence, he began to betray some interest. The colonel told him
+all the news, and would no doubt have even expatiated on his ghostly
+visitant, had he not prudently concluded that his guest might decline to
+remain in a haunted inn. The stranger had spoken of staying a week; he
+had some private mining speculations to watch at Wynyard's Gulch,--the
+next settlement, but he did not care to appear openly at the "Gulch
+Hotel." He was a man of thirty, with soft, pleasing features and a
+singular litheness of movement, which, combined with a nut-brown, gypsy
+complexion, at first suggested a foreigner. But his dialect, to the
+colonel's ears, was distinctly that of New England, and to this was
+added a puritanical and sanctimonious drawl. "He looked," said the
+colonel in after years, "like a blank light mulatter, but talked like a
+blank Yankee parson." For all that, he was acceptable to his host, who
+may have felt that his reminiscences of his plantation on the James
+River were palling on Buena Vista ears, and was glad of his new auditor.
+It was an advertisement, too, of the hotel, and a promise of its future
+fortunes. "Gentlemen having propahty interests at the Gulch, sah, prefer
+to stay at Buena Vista with another man of propahty, than to trust to
+those new-fangled papah-collared, gingerbread booths for traders that
+they call 'hotels' there," he had remarked to some of "the boys." In his
+preoccupation with the new guest, he also became a little neglectful
+of his old chum and dependent, Larry Hawkins. Nor was this the only
+circumstance that filled the head of that shiftless loyal retainer
+of the colonel with bitterness and foreboding. Polly Swinger--the
+scornfully indifferent, the contemptuously inaccessible, the coldly
+capricious and petulant--was inclined to be polite to the stranger!
+
+The fact was that Polly, after the fashion of her sex, took it into
+her pretty head, against all consistency and logic, suddenly to make
+an exception to her general attitude towards mankind in favor of one
+individual. The reason-seeking masculine reader will rashly conclude
+that this individual was the CAUSE as well as the object; but I am
+satisfied that every fair reader of these pages will instinctively know
+better. Miss Polly had simply selected the new guest, Mr. Starbuck, to
+show OTHERS, particularly Larry Hawkins, what she COULD do if she were
+inclined to be civil. For two days she "fixed up" her distracting hair
+at him so that its silken floss encircled her head like a nimbus; she
+tucked her oval chin into a white fichu instead of a buttonless collar;
+she appeared at dinner in a newly starched yellow frock! She talked
+to him with "company manners;" said she would "admire to go to San
+Francisco," and asked if he knew her old friends the Fauquier girls
+from "Faginia." The colonel was somewhat disturbed; he was glad that his
+daughter had become less negligent of her personal appearance; he could
+not but see, with the others, how it enhanced her graces; but he was,
+with the others, not entirely satisfied with her reasons. And he could
+not help observing--what was more or less patent to ALL--that Starbuck
+was far from being equally responsive to her attentions, and at times
+was indifferent and almost uncivil. Nobody seemed to be satisfied with
+Polly's transformation but herself.
+
+But eventually she was obliged to assert herself. The third evening
+after Starbuck's arrival she was going over to the cabin of Aunt Chloe,
+who not only did the washing for Buena Vista, but assisted Polly in
+dressmaking. It was not far, and the night was moonlit. As she crossed
+the garden she saw Starbuck moving in the manzanita bushes beyond; a
+mischievous light came into her eyes; she had not EXPECTED to meet him,
+but she had seen him go out, and there were always POSSIBILITIES. To her
+surprise, however, he merely lifted his hat as she passed, and
+turned abruptly in another direction. This was more than the little
+heart-breaker of Buena Vista was accustomed to!
+
+"Oh, Mr. Starbuck!" she called, in her laziest voice.
+
+He turned almost impatiently.
+
+"Since you're so civil and pressing, I thought I'd tell you I was just
+runnin' over to Aunt Chloe's," she said dryly.
+
+"I should think it was hardly the proper thing for a young lady to do
+at this time of night," he said superciliously. "But you know best,--you
+know the people here."
+
+Polly's cheeks and eyes flamed. "Yes, I reckon I do," she said crisply;
+"it's only a STRANGER here would think of being rude. Good-night, Mr.
+Starbuck!"
+
+She tripped away after this Parthian shot, yet feeling, even in her
+triumph, that the conceited fool seemed actually relieved at her
+departure! And for the first time she now thought that she had seen
+something in his face that she did not like! But her lazy independence
+reasserted itself soon, and half an hour later, when she had left Aunt
+Chloe's cabin, she had regained her self-esteem. Yet, to avoid meeting
+him again, she took a longer route home, across the dried ditch and over
+the bluff, scarred by hydraulics, and so fell, presently, upon the old
+garden at the point where it adjoined the abandoned diggings. She was
+quite sure she had escaped a meeting with Starbuck, and was gliding
+along under the shadow of the pear-trees, when she suddenly stopped. An
+indescribable terror overcame her as she stared at a spot in the garden,
+perfectly illuminated by the moonlight not fifty yards from where she
+stood. For she saw on its surface a human head--a man's head!--seemingly
+on the level of the ground, staring in her direction. A hysterical laugh
+sprang from her lips, and she caught at the branches above her or
+she would have fallen! Yet in that moment the head had vanished! The
+moonlight revealed the empty garden,--the ground she had gazed at,--but
+nothing more!
+
+She had never been superstitious. As a child she had heard the negroes
+talk of "the hants,"--that is, "the HAUNTS" or spirits,--but had
+believed it a part of their ignorance, and unworthy a white child,--the
+daughter of their master! She had laughed with Dick Ruggles over the
+illusions of Larry, and had shared her father's contemptuous disbelief
+of the wandering visitant being anything but a living man; yet she would
+have screamed for assistance now, only for the greater fear of making
+her weakness known to Mr. Starbuck, and being dependent upon him for
+help. And with it came the sudden conviction that HE had seen this awful
+vision, too. This would account for his impatience of her presence and
+his rudeness. She felt faint and giddy. Yet after the first shock had
+passed, her old independence and pride came to her relief. She would go
+to the spot and examine it. If it were some trick or illusion, she would
+show her superiority and have the laugh on Starbuck. She set her white
+teeth, clenched her little hands, and started out into the moonlight.
+But alas! for women's weakness. The next moment she uttered a scream and
+almost fell into the arms of Mr. Starbuck, who had stepped out of the
+shadows beside her.
+
+"So you see you HAVE been frightened," he said, with a strange, forced
+laugh; "but I warned you about going out alone!"
+
+Even in her fright she could not help seeing that he, too, seemed pale
+and agitated, at which she recovered her tongue and her self-possession.
+
+"Anybody would be frightened by being dogged about under the trees," she
+said pertly.
+
+"But you called out before you saw me," he said bluntly, "as if
+something had frightened you. That was WHY I came towards you."
+
+She knew it was the truth; but as she would not confess to her vision,
+she fibbed outrageously.
+
+"Frightened," she said, with pale but lofty indignation. "What was there
+to frighten me? I'm not a baby, to think I see a bogie in the dark!"
+This was said in the faint hope that HE had seen something too. If it
+had been Larry or her father who had met her, she would have confessed
+everything.
+
+"You had better go in," he said curtly. "I will see you safe inside the
+house."
+
+She demurred at this, but as she could not persist in her first bold
+intention of examining the locality of the vision without admitting its
+existence, she permitted him to walk with her to the house, and then at
+once fled to her own room. Larry and her father noticed their entrance
+together and their agitated manner, and were uneasy. Yet the colonel's
+paternal pride and Larry's lover's respect kept the two men from
+communicating their thoughts to each other.
+
+"The confounded pup has been tryin' to be familiar, and Polly's set him
+down," thought Larry, with glowing satisfaction.
+
+"He's been trying some of his sanctimonious Yankee abolition talk on
+Polly, and she shocked him!" thought the colonel exultingly.
+
+But poor Polly had other things to think of in the silence of her room.
+Another woman would have unburdened herself to a confidante; but
+Polly was too loyal to her father to shatter his beliefs, and too
+high-spirited to take another and a lesser person into her confidence.
+She was certain that Aunt Chloe would be full of sympathetic belief and
+speculations, but she would not trust a nigger with what she couldn't
+tell her own father. For Polly really and truly believed that she had
+seen a ghost, no doubt the ghost of the murdered Sobriente, according
+to Larry's story. WHY he should appear with only his head above ground
+puzzled her, although it suggested the Catholic idea of purgatory, and
+he was a Catholic! Perhaps he would have risen entirely but for that
+stupid Starbuck's presence; perhaps he had a message for HER alone. The
+idea pleased Polly, albeit it was a "fearful joy" and attended with some
+cold shivering. Naturally, as a gentleman, he would appear to HER--the
+daughter of a gentleman--the successor to his house--rather than to
+a Yankee stranger. What was she to do? For once her calm nerves were
+strangely thrilled; she could not think of undressing and going to
+bed, and two o'clock surprised her, still meditating, and occasionally
+peeping from her window upon the moonlit but vacant garden. If she saw
+him again, would she dare to go down alone? Suddenly she started to
+her feet with a beating heart! There was the unmistakable sound of a
+stealthy footstep in the passage, coming towards her room. Was it he? In
+spite of her high resolves she felt that if the door opened she should
+scream! She held her breath--the footsteps came nearer--were before her
+door--and PASSED!
+
+Then it was that the blood rushed back to her cheek with a flush of
+indignation. Her room was at the end of the passage; there was nothing
+beyond but a private staircase, long disused, except by herself, as a
+short cut through the old patio to the garden. No one else knew of
+it, and no one else had the right of access to it! This insolent human
+intrusion--as she was satisfied it was now--overcame her fear, and
+she glided to the door. Opening it softly, she could hear the stealthy
+footsteps descending. She darted back, threw a shawl over her head and
+shoulders, and taking the small Derringer pistol which it had always
+been part of her ostentatious independence to place at her bed-head,
+she as stealthily followed the intruder. But the footsteps had died
+away before she reached the patio, and she saw only the small deserted,
+grass-grown courtyard, half hidden in shadows, in whose centre stood the
+fateful and long sealed-up well! A shudder came over her at again being
+brought into contact with the cause of her frightful vision, but as her
+eyes became accustomed to the darkness, she saw something more real and
+appalling! The well was no longer sealed! Fragments of bricks and boards
+lay around it! One end of a rope, coiled around it like a huge snake,
+descended its foul depths; and as she gazed with staring eyes, the
+head and shoulders of a man emerged slowly from it! But it was NOT the
+ghostly apparition of last evening, and her terror changed to scorn and
+indignation as she recognized the face of Starbuck!
+
+Their eyes met; an oath broke from his lips. He made a movement to
+spring from the well, but as the girl started back, the pistol held
+in her hand was discharged aimlessly in the air, and the report echoed
+throughout the courtyard. With a curse Starbuck drew back, instantly
+disappeared in the well, and Polly fell fainting on the steps. When she
+came to, her father and Larry were at her side. They had been alarmed
+at the report, and had rushed quickly to the patio, but not in time to
+prevent the escape of Starbuck and his accomplice. By the time she had
+recovered her consciousness, they had learned the full extent of that
+extraordinary revelation which she had so innocently precipitated.
+Sobriente's well had really concealed a rich gold ledge,--actually
+tunneled and galleried by him secretly in the past,--and its only other
+outlet was an opening in the garden hidden by a stone which turned on a
+swivel. Its existence had been unknown to Sobriente's successor, but
+was known to the Kanaka who had worked with Sobriente, who fled with
+his daughter after the murder, but who no doubt was afraid to return
+and work the mine. He had imparted the secret to Starbuck, another
+half-breed, son of a Yankee missionary and Hawaiian wife, who had
+evidently conceived this plan of seeking Buena Vista with an accomplice,
+and secretly removing such gold as was still accessible. The accomplice,
+afterwards identified by Larry as the wandering tramp, failed to
+discover the secret entrance FROM the garden, and Starbuck was
+consequently obliged to attempt it from the hotel--for which purpose
+he had introduced himself as a boarder--by opening the disused well
+secretly at night. These facts were obtained from papers found in the
+otherwise valueless trunks, weighted with stones for ballast, which
+Starbuck had brought to the hotel to take away his stolen treasure in,
+but which he was obliged to leave in his hurried flight. The attempt
+would have doubtless succeeded but for Polly's courageous and timely
+interference!
+
+And now that they had told her ALL, they only wanted to know what had
+first excited HER suspicions, and driven her to seek the well as the
+object of Starbuck's machinations? THEY had noticed her manner when she
+entered the house that night, and Starbuck's evident annoyance. Had she
+taxed him with her suspicions, and so discovered a clue?
+
+It was a terrible temptation to Polly to pose as a more perfect heroine,
+and one may not blame her if she did not rise entirely superior to it.
+Her previous belief, that the head of the accomplice at the opening of
+the garden was that of a GHOST, she now felt was certainly in the way,
+as was also her conduct to Starbuck, whom she believed to be equally
+frightened, and whom she never once suspected! So she said, with a
+certain lofty simplicity, that there were SOME THINGS which she really
+did not care to talk about, and Larry and her father left her that night
+with the firm conviction that the rascal Starbuck had tried to tempt her
+to fly with him and his riches, and had been crushingly foiled. Polly
+never denied this, and once, in later days, when admiringly taxed with
+it by Larry, she admitted with dove-like simplicity that she MAY have
+been too foolishly polite to her father's guest for the sake of her
+father's hotel.
+
+However, all this was of small account to the thrilling news of a new
+discovery and working of the "old gold ledge" at Buena Vista! As the
+three kept their secret from the world, the discovery was accepted in
+the neighborhood as the result of careful examination and prospecting on
+the part of Colonel Swinger and his partner Larry Hawkins. And when
+the latter gentleman afterwards boldly proposed to Polly Swinger, she
+mischievously declared that she accepted him only that the secret might
+not go "out of the family."
+
+
+
+
+LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+
+
+It was at best merely a rocky trail winding along a shelf of the eastern
+slope of the Santa Cruz range, yet the only road between the sea and the
+inland valley. The hoof-prints of a whole century of zigzagging mules
+were impressed on the soil, regularly soaked by winter rains and dried
+by summer suns during that period; the occasional ruts of heavy,
+rude, wooden wheels--long obsolete--were still preserved and visible.
+Weather-worn boulders and ledges, lying in the unclouded glare of an
+August sky, radiated a quivering heat that was intolerable, even while
+above them the masts of gigantic pines rocked their tops in the cold
+southwestern trades from the unseen ocean beyond. A red, burning dust
+lay everywhere, as if the heat were slowly and visibly precipitating
+itself.
+
+The creaking of wheels and axles, the muffled plunge of hoofs, and the
+cough of a horse in the dust thus stirred presently broke the profound
+woodland silence. Then a dirty white canvas-covered emigrant wagon
+slowly arose with the dust along the ascent. It was travel-stained and
+worn, and with its rawboned horses seemed to have reached the last
+stage of its journey and fitness. The only occupants, a man and a girl,
+appeared to be equally jaded and exhausted, with the added querulousness
+of discontent in their sallow and badly nourished faces. Their voices,
+too, were not unlike the creaking they had been pitched to overcome, and
+there was an absence of reserve and consciousness in their speech, which
+told pathetically of an equal absence of society.
+
+"It's no user talkin'! I tell ye, ye hain't got no more sense than a
+coyote! I'm sick and tired of it, doggoned if I ain't! Ye ain't no more
+use nor a hossfly,--and jest ez hinderin'! It was along o' you that we
+lost the stock at Laramie, and ef ye'd bin at all decent and takin',
+we'd hev had kempany that helped, instead of laggin' on yere alone!"
+
+"What did ye bring me for?" retorted the girl shrilly. "I might hev
+stayed with Aunt Marty. I wasn't hankerin' to come."
+
+"Bring ye for?" repeated her father contemptuously; "I reckoned ye might
+he o' some account here, whar wimmin folks is skeerce, in the way o'
+helpin',--and mebbe gettin' yer married to some likely feller. Mighty
+much chance o' that, with yer yaller face and skin and bones."
+
+"Ye can't blame me for takin' arter you, dad," she said, with a shrill
+laugh, but no other resentment of his brutality.
+
+"Ye want somebody to take arter you--with a club," he retorted angrily.
+"Ye hear! Wot's that ye're doin' now?"
+
+She had risen and walked to the tail of the wagon. "Goin' to get out and
+walk. I'm tired o' bein' jawed at."
+
+She jumped into the road. The act was neither indignant nor vengeful;
+the frequency of such scenes had blunted their sting. She was probably
+"tired" of the quarrel, and ended it rudely. Her father, however, let
+fly a Parthian arrow.
+
+"Ye needn't think I'm goin' to wait for ye, ez I hev! Ye've got to keep
+tetch with the team, or get left. And a good riddance of bad rubbidge."
+
+In reply the girl dived into the underwood beside the trail, picked a
+wild berry or two, stripped a wand of young hazel she had broken off,
+and switching it at her side, skipped along on the outskirts of the
+wood and ambled after the wagon. Seen in the full, merciless glare of a
+Californian sky, she justified her father's description; thin and bony,
+her lank frame outstripped the body of her ragged calico dress, which
+was only kept on her shoulders by straps,--possibly her father's
+cast-off braces. A boy's soft felt hat covered her head, and shadowed
+her only notable feature, a pair of large dark eyes, looking larger for
+the hollow temples which narrowed the frame in which they were set.
+
+So long as the wagon crawled up the ascent the girl knew she could
+easily keep up with it, or even distance the tired horses. She made one
+or two incursions into the wood, returning like an animal from quest of
+food, with something in her mouth, which she was tentatively chewing,
+and once only with some inedible mandrono berries, plucked solely for
+their brilliant coloring. It was very hot and singularly close; the
+higher current of air had subsided, and, looking up, a singular haze
+seemed to have taken its place between the treetops. Suddenly she heard
+a strange, rumbling sound; an odd giddiness overtook her, and she was
+obliged to clutch at a sapling to support herself; she laughed vacantly,
+though a little frightened, and looked vaguely towards the summit of the
+road; but the wagon had already disappeared. A strange feeling of
+nausea then overcame her; she spat out the leaves she had been chewing,
+disgustedly. But the sensation as quickly passed, and she once more
+sought the trail and began slowly to follow the tracks of the wagon. The
+air blew freshly, the treetops began again to rock over her head, and
+the incident was forgotten.
+
+Presently she paused; she must have missed the trail, for the wagon
+tracks had ended abruptly before a large boulder that lay across the
+mountain trail. She dipped into the woods again; here there were other
+wagon tracks that confused her. It was like her dogged, stupid father
+to miss the trail; she felt a gleam of malicious satisfaction at his
+discomfiture. Sooner or later, he would have to retrace his steps and
+virtually come back for her! She took up a position where two rough
+wheel ruts and tracks intersected each other, one of which must be
+the missing trail. She noticed, too, the broader hoof-prints of cattle
+without the following wheel ruts, and instead of traces, the long smooth
+trails made by the dragging of logs, and knew by these tokens that she
+must be near the highway or some woodman's hut or ranch. She began to be
+thirsty, and was glad, presently, when her quick, rustic ear caught
+the tinkling of water. Yet it was not so easy to discover, and she was
+getting footsore and tired again before she found it, some distance
+away, in a gully coming from a fissure in a dislocated piece of outcrop.
+It was beautifully clear, cold, and sparkling, with a slightly sweetish
+taste, yet unlike the brackish "alkali" of the plains. It refreshed and
+soothed her greatly, so much that, reclining against a tree, but where
+she would be quite visible from the trail, her eyes closed dreamily, and
+presently she slept.
+
+When she awoke, the shafts of sunlight were striking almost level into
+her eyes. She must have slept two hours. Her father had not returned;
+she knew the passage of the wagon would have awakened her. She began to
+feel strange, but not yet alarmed; it was only the uncertainty that made
+her uneasy. Had her father really gone on by some other trail? Or had he
+really hurried on and left her, as he said he would? The thought
+brought an odd excitement to her rather than any fear. A sudden sense of
+freedom, as if some galling chain had dropped from her, sent a singular
+thrill through her frame. Yet she felt confused with her independence,
+not knowing what to do with it, and momentarily dazzled with the
+possible gift.
+
+At this moment she heard voices, and the figures of two men appeared on
+the trail.
+
+They were talking earnestly, and walking as if familiar with the spot,
+yet gazing around them as if at some novelty of the aspect.
+
+"And look there," said one; "there has been some serious disturbance of
+that outcrop," pointing in the direction of the spring; "the lower
+part has distinctly subsided." He spoke with a certain authority, and
+dominance of position, and was evidently the superior, as he was the
+elder of the two, although both were roughly dressed.
+
+"Yes, it does kinder look as if it had lost its holt, like the ledge
+yonder."
+
+"And you see I am right; the movement was from east to west," continued
+the elder man.
+
+The girl could not comprehend what they said, and even thought them
+a little silly. But she advanced towards them; at which they stopped
+short, staring at her. With feminine instinct she addressed the more
+important one:--
+
+"Ye ain't passed no wagon nor team goin' on, hev ye?"
+
+"What sort of wagon?" said the man.
+
+"Em'grant wagon, two yaller hosses. Old man--my dad--drivin'." She added
+the latter kinship as a protecting influence against strangers, in spite
+of her previous independence.
+
+The men glanced at each other.
+
+"How long ago?"
+
+The girl suddenly remembered that she had slept two hours.
+
+"Sens noon," she said hesitatingly.
+
+"Since the earthquake?"
+
+"Wot's that?"
+
+The man came impatiently towards her. "How did you come here?"
+
+"Got outer the wagon to walk. I reckon dad missed the trail, and hez got
+off somewhere where I can't find him."
+
+"What trail was he on,--where was he going?"
+
+"Sank Hozay,* I reckon. He was goin' up the grade--side o' the hill; he
+must hev turned off where there's a big rock hangin' over."
+
+ * San Jose.
+
+"Did you SEE him turn off?"
+
+"No."
+
+The second man, who was in hearing distance, had turned away, and was
+ostentatiously examining the sky and the treetops; the man who had
+spoken to her joined him, and they said something in a low voice. They
+turned again and came slowly towards her. She, from some obscure sense
+of imitation, stared at the treetops and the sky as the second man had
+done. But the first man now laid his hand kindly on her shoulder and
+said, "Sit down."
+
+Then they told her there had been an earthquake so strong that it had
+thrown down a part of the hillside, including the wagon trail. That a
+wagon team and driver, such as she had described, had been carried down
+with it, crushed to fragments, and buried under a hundred feet of rock
+in the gulch below. A party had gone down to examine, but it would be
+weeks perhaps before they found it, and she must be prepared for the
+worst. She looked at them vaguely and with tearless eyes.
+
+"Then ye reckon dad's dead?"
+
+"We fear it."
+
+"Then wot's a-goin' to become o' me?" she said simply.
+
+They glanced again at each other. "Have you no friends in California?"
+said the elder man.
+
+"Nary one."
+
+"What was your father going to do?"
+
+"Dunno. I reckon HE didn't either."
+
+"You may stay here for the present," said the elder man meditatively.
+"Can you milk?"
+
+The girl nodded. "And I suppose you know something about looking after
+stock?" he continued.
+
+The girl remembered that her father thought she didn't, but this was no
+time for criticism, and she again nodded.
+
+"Come with me," said the older man, rising. "I suppose," he added,
+glancing at her ragged frock, "everything you have is in the wagon."
+
+She nodded, adding with the same cold naivete, "It ain't much!"
+
+They walked on, the girl following; at times straying furtively on
+either side, as if meditating an escape in the woods,--which indeed
+had once or twice been vaguely in her thoughts,--but chiefly to avoid
+further questioning and not to hear what the men said to each other. For
+they were evidently speaking of her, and she could not help hearing
+the younger repeat her words, "Wot's agoin' to become o' me?" with
+considerable amusement, and the addition: "She'll take care of herself,
+you bet! I call that remark o' hers the richest thing out."
+
+"And I call the state of things that provoked it--monstrous!" said the
+elder man grimly. "You don't know the lives of these people."
+
+Presently they came to an open clearing in the forest, yet so incomplete
+that many of the felled trees, partly lopped of their boughs, still
+lay where they had fallen. There was a cabin or dwelling of unplaned,
+unpainted boards; very simple in structure, yet made in a workmanlike
+fashion, quite unlike the usual log cabin she had seen. This made her
+think that the elder man was a "towny," and not a frontiersman like the
+other.
+
+As they approached the cabin the elder man stopped, and turning to her,
+said:--
+
+"Do you know Indians?"
+
+The girl started, and then recovering herself with a quick laugh:
+"G'lang!--there ain't any Injins here!"
+
+"Not the kind YOU mean; these are very peaceful. There's a squaw here
+whom you will"--he stopped, hesitated as he looked critically at the
+girl, and then corrected himself--"who will help you."
+
+He pushed open the cabin door and showed an interior, equally simple but
+well joined and fitted,--a marvel of neatness and finish to the frontier
+girl's eye. There were shelves and cupboards and other conveniences, yet
+with no ostentation of refinement to frighten her rustic sensibilities.
+
+Then he pushed open another door leading into a shed and called "Waya."
+A stout, undersized Indian woman, fitted with a coarse cotton gown, but
+cleaner and more presentable than the girl's one frock, appeared in the
+doorway. "This is Waya, who attends to the cooking and cleaning," he
+said; "and by the way, what is your name?"
+
+"Libby Jones."
+
+He took a small memorandum book and a "stub" of pencil from his pocket.
+"Elizabeth Jones," he said, writing it down. The girl interposed a long
+red hand.
+
+"No," she interrupted sharply, "not Elizabeth, but Libby, short for
+Lib'rty."
+
+"Liberty?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Liberty Jones, then. Well, Waya, this is Miss Jones, who will look
+after the cows and calves--and the dairy." Then glancing at her torn
+dress, he added: "You'll find some clean things in there, until I can
+send up something from San Jose. Waya will show you."
+
+Without further speech he turned away with the other man. When they were
+some distance from the cabin, the younger remarked:--
+
+"More like a boy than a girl, ain't she?"
+
+"So much the better for her work," returned the elder grimly.
+
+"I reckon! I was only thinkin' she didn't han'some much either as a boy
+or girl, eh, doctor?" he pursued.
+
+"Well! as THAT won't make much difference to the cows, calves, or the
+dairy, it needn't trouble US," returned the doctor dryly. But here a
+sudden outburst of laughter from the cabin made them both turn in that
+direction. They were in time to see Liberty Jones dancing out of the
+cabin door in a large cotton pinafore, evidently belonging to the
+squaw, who was following her with half-laughing, half-frightened
+expostulations. The two men stopped and gazed at the spectacle.
+
+"Don't seem to be takin' the old man's death very pow'fully," said the
+younger, with a laugh.
+
+"Quite as much as he deserved, I daresay," said the doctor curtly. "If
+the accident had happened to HER, he would have whined and whimpered to
+us for the sake of getting something, but have been as much relieved,
+you may be certain. SHE'S too young and too natural to be a hypocrite
+yet."
+
+Suddenly the laughter ceased and Liberty Jones's voice arose, shrill
+but masterful: "Thar, that'll do! Quit now! You jest get back to your
+scrubbin'--d'ye hear? I'm boss o' this shanty, you bet!"
+
+The doctor turned with a grim smile to his companion. "That's the only
+thing that bothered me, and I've been waiting for. She's settled it.
+She'll do. Come."
+
+They turned away briskly through the wood. At the end of half an hour's
+walk they found the team that had brought them there in waiting, and
+drove towards San Jose. It was nearly ten miles before they passed
+another habitation or trace of clearing. And by this time night had
+fallen upon the cabin they had left, and upon the newly made orphan and
+her Indian companion, alone and contented in that trackless solitude.
+
+*****
+
+Liberty Jones had been a year at the cabin. In that time she had learned
+that her employer's name was Doctor Ruysdael, that he had a lucrative
+practice in San Jose, but had also "taken up" a league or two of wild
+forest land in the Santa Cruz range, which he preserved and held after
+a fashion of his own, which gave him the reputation of being a "crank"
+among the very few neighbors his vast possessions permitted, and the
+equally few friends his singular tastes allowed him. It was believed
+that a man owning such an enormous quantity of timber land, who should
+refuse to set up a sawmill and absolutely forbid the felling of trees;
+who should decline to connect it with the highway to Santa Cruz, and
+close it against improvement and speculation, had given sufficient
+evidence of his insanity; but when to this was added the rumor that he
+himself was not only devoid of the human instinct of hunting the wild
+animals with which his domain abounded, but that he held it so sacred to
+their use as to forbid the firing of a gun within his limits, and that
+these restrictions were further preserved and "policed" by the scattered
+remnants of a band of aborigines,--known as "digger Injins,"--it was
+seriously hinted that his eccentricity had acquired a political and
+moral significance, and demanded legislative interference. But the
+doctor was a rich man, a necessity to his patients, a good marksman,
+and, it was rumored, did not include his fellow men among the animals he
+had a distaste for killing.
+
+Of all this, however, Liberty knew little and cared less. The solitude
+appealed to her sense of freedom; she did not "hanker" after a society
+she had never known. At the end of the first week, when the doctor
+communicated to her briefly, by letter, the convincing proofs of the
+death of her father and his entombment beneath the sunken cliff, she
+accepted the fact without comment or apparent emotion. Two months
+later, when her only surviving relative, "Aunt Marty," of Missouri,
+acknowledged the news--communicated by Doctor Ruysdael--with Scriptural
+quotations and the cheerful hope that it "would be a lesson to her"
+and she would "profit in her new place," she left her aunt's letter
+unanswered.
+
+She looked after the cows and calves with an interest that was almost
+possessory, patronized and played with the squaw,--yet made her feel
+her inferiority,--and moved among the peaceful aborigines with
+the domination of a white woman and a superior. She tolerated the
+half-monthly visits of "Jim Hoskins," the young companion of the doctor,
+who she learned was the doctor's factor and overseer of the property,
+who lived seven miles away on an agricultural clearing, and whose
+control of her actions was evidently limited by the doctor,--for the
+doctor's sake alone. Nor was Mr. Hoskins inclined to exceed those
+limits. He looked upon her as something abnormal,--a "crank" as
+remarkable in her way as her patron was in his, neuter of sex and vague
+of race, and he simply restricted his supervision to the bringing
+and taking of messages. She remained sole queen of the domain. A rare
+straggler from the main road, penetrating this seclusion, might have
+scarcely distinguished her from Waya, in her coarse cotton gown and
+slouched hat, except for the free stride which contrasted with her
+companion's waddle. Once, in following an estrayed calf, she had
+crossed the highway and been saluted by a passing teamster in the digger
+dialect; yet the mistake left no sting in her memory. And, like the
+digger, she shrank from that civilization which had only proved a hard
+taskmaster.
+
+The sole touch of human interest she had in her surroundings was in the
+rare visits of the doctor and his brief but sincere commendation of
+her rude and rustic work. It is possible that the strange, middle-aged,
+gray-haired, intellectual man, whose very language was at times
+mysterious and unintelligible to her, and whose suggestion of power awed
+her, might have touched some untried filial chord in her being. Although
+she felt that, save for absolute freedom, she was little more to him
+than she had been to her father, yet he had never told her she had
+"no sense," that she was "a hindrance," and he had even praised her
+performance of her duties. Eagerly as she looked for his coming, in
+his actual presence she felt a singular uneasiness of which she was not
+entirely ashamed, and if she was relieved at his departure, it none
+the less left her to a delightful memory of him, a warm sense of his
+approval, and a fierce ambition to be worthy of it, for which she would
+have sacrificed herself or the other miserable retainers about her, as a
+matter of course. She had driven Waya and the other squaws far along
+the sparse tableland pasture in search of missing stock; she herself
+had lain out all night on the rocks beside an ailing heifer. Yet, while
+satisfied to earn his praise for the performance of her duty, for some
+feminine reason she thought more frequently of a casual remark he had
+made on his last visit: "You are stronger and more healthy in this
+air," he had said, looking critically into her face. "We have got that
+abominable alkali out of your system, and wholesome food will do the
+rest." She was not sure she had quite understood him, but she remembered
+that she had felt her face grow hot when he spoke,--perhaps because she
+had not understood him.
+
+His next visit was a day or two delayed, and in her anxiety she had
+ventured as far as the highway to earnestly watch for his coming. From
+her hiding-place in the underwood she could see the team and Jim Hoskins
+already waiting for him. Presently she saw him drive up to the trail
+in a carryall with a party of ladies and gentlemen. He alighted, bade
+"Good-by" to the party, and the team turned to retrace its course. But
+in that single moment she had been struck and bewildered by what
+seemed to her the dazzlingly beautiful apparel of the women, and their
+prettiness. She felt a sudden consciousness of her own coarse, shapeless
+calico gown, her straggling hair, and her felt hat, and a revulsion
+of feeling seized her. She crept like a wounded animal out of the
+underwood, and then ran swiftly and almost fiercely back towards the
+cabin. She ran so fast that for a time she almost kept pace with the
+doctor and Hoskins in the wagon on the distant trail. Then she dived
+into the underwood again, and making a short cut through the
+forest, came at the end of two hours within hailing distance of the
+cabin,--footsore and exhausted, in spite of the strange excitement that
+had driven her back. Here she thought she heard voices--his voice
+among the rest--calling her, but the same singular revulsion of feeling
+hurried her vaguely on again, even while she experienced a foolish
+savage delight in not answering the summons. In this erratic wandering
+she came upon the spring she had found on her first entrance in the
+forest a year ago, and drank feverishly a second time at its trickling
+source. She could see that since her first visit it had worn a great
+hollow below the tree roots and now formed a shining, placid pool. As
+she stooped to look at it, she suddenly observed that it reflected her
+whole figure as in a cruel mirror,--her slouched hat and loosened
+hair, her coarse and shapeless gown, her hollow cheeks and dry yellow
+skin,--in all their hopeless, uncompromising details. She uttered a
+quick, angry, half-reproachful cry, and turned again to fly. But she had
+not gone far before she came upon the hurrying figures and anxious faces
+of the doctor and Hoskins. She stopped, trembling and irresolute.
+
+"Ah," said the doctor, in a tone of frank relief. "Here you are! I was
+getting worried about you. Waya said you had been gone since morning!"
+He stopped and looked at her attentively. "Is anything the matter?"
+
+His evident concern sent a warm glow over her chilly frame, and yet the
+strange sensation remained. "No--no!" she stammered.
+
+Doctor Ruysdael turned to Hoskins. "Go back and tell Waya I've found
+her."
+
+Libby felt that the doctor only wanted to get rid of his companion, and
+became awed again.
+
+"Has anybody been bothering you?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Have the diggers frightened you?"
+
+"No"--with a gesture of contempt.
+
+"Have you and Waya quarreled?"
+
+"Nary"--with a faint, tremulous smile.
+
+He still stared at her, and then dropped his blue eyes musingly. "Are
+you lonely here? Would you rather go to San Jose?"
+
+Like a flash the figures of the two smartly dressed women started up
+before her again, with every detail of their fresh and wholesome finery
+as cruelly distinct as had been her own shapeless ugliness in the mirror
+of the spring. "No! NO!" she broke out vehemently and passionately.
+"Never!"
+
+He smiled gently. "Look here! I'll send you up some books. You
+read--don't you?" She nodded quickly. "Some magazines and papers. Odd I
+never thought of it before," he added half musingly. "Come along to the
+cabin. And," he stopped again and said decisively, "the next time you
+want anything, don't wait for me to come, but write."
+
+A few days after he left she received a package of books,--an odd
+collection of novels, magazines, and illustrated journals of the period.
+She received them eagerly as an evidence of his concern for her, but it
+is to be feared that her youthful nature found little satisfaction in
+the gratification of fancy. Many of the people she read of were strange
+to her; many of the incidents related seemed to her mere lies; some
+tales which treated of people in her own sphere she found profoundly
+uninteresting. In one of the cheaper magazines she chanced upon a
+fashion plate; she glanced eagerly through all the others for a like
+revelation until she got a dozen together, when she promptly relegated
+the remaining literature to a corner and oblivion. The text accompanying
+the plates was in a jargon not always clear, but her instinct supplied
+the rest. She dispatched by Hoskins a note to Doctor Ruysdael: "Please
+send me some brite kalikers and things for sewing. You told me to ask."
+A few days later brought the response in a good-sized parcel.
+
+Yet this did not keep her from her care of the stock nor her rambles in
+the forest; she was quick to utilize her rediscovery of the spring for
+watering the cattle; it was not so far afield as the half-dried creek in
+the canyon, and was a quiet sylvan spot. She ate her frugal midday meal
+there and drank of its waters, and, secure in her seclusion, bathed
+there and made her rude toilet when the cows were driven home. But she
+did not again look into its mirrored surface when it was tranquil!
+
+And so a month passed. But when Doctor Ruysdael was again due at the
+cabin, a letter was brought by Hoskins, with the news that he was called
+away on professional business down the coast, and could not come until
+two weeks later. In the disappointment that overcame her, she did not at
+first notice that Hoskins was gazing at her with a singular expression,
+which was really one of undisguised admiration. Never having seen this
+before in the eyes of any man who looked at her, she referred it to some
+vague "larking" or jocularity, for which she was in no mood.
+
+"Say, Libby! you're gettin' to be a right smart-lookin' gal. Seems to
+agree with ye up here," said Hoskins with an awkward laugh. "Darned ef
+ye ain't lookin' awful purty!"
+
+"G'long!" said Liberty Jones, more than ever convinced of his badinage.
+
+"Fact," said Hoskins energetically. "Why, Doc would tell ye so, too. See
+ef he don't!"
+
+At this Liberty Jones felt her face grow hot. "You jess get!" she said,
+turning away in as much embarrassment as anger. Yet he hovered near
+her with awkward attentions that pleased while it still angered her.
+He offered to go with her to look up the cows; she flatly declined, yet
+with a strange satisfaction in his evident embarrassment. This may have
+lent some animation to her face, for he drew a long breath and said:--
+
+"Don't go pertendin' ye don't know yer purty. Say, let me and you walk
+a bit and have a talk together." But Libby had another idea in her mind
+and curtly dismissed him. Then she ran swiftly to the spring, for the
+words "The Doc will tell ye so, too" were ringing in her ears. The
+doctor who came with the two beautifully dressed women! HE--would tell
+her she was pretty! She had not dared to look at herself in that crystal
+mirror since that dreadful day two months ago. She would now.
+
+It was a pretty place in the cool shade of the giant trees, and the
+hoof-marks of cattle drinking from the run beneath the pool had not
+disturbed the margin of that tranquil sylvan basin. For a moment she
+stood tremulous and uncertain, and then going up to the shining mirror,
+dropped on her knees before it with her thin red hands clasped on her
+lap. Unconsciously she had taken the attitude of prayer; perhaps there
+was something like it in her mind.
+
+And then the light glanced full on the figure that she saw there!
+
+It fell on a full oval face and throat guileless of fleck or stain,
+smooth as a child's and glowing with health; on large dark eyes, no
+longer sunk in their orbits, but filled with an eager, happy light; on
+bared arms now shapely in contour and cushioned with firm flesh; on a
+dazzling smile, the like of which had never been on the face of Liberty
+Jones before!
+
+She rose to her feet, and yet lingered as if loath to part from this
+delightful vision. Then a fear overcame her that it was some trick of
+the water, and she sped swiftly back to the house to consult the little
+mirror which hung in her sleeping-room, but which she had never glanced
+at since the momentous day of the spring. She took it shyly into the
+sunshine, and found that it corroborated the reflection of the spring.
+That night she worked until late at the calico Doctor Ruysdael had sent
+her, and went to bed happy. The next day brought her Hoskins again with
+a feeble excuse of inquiring if she had a letter for the doctor, and
+she was surprised to find that he was reinforced by a stranger from
+Hoskins's farm, who was equally awkward and vaguely admiring. But the
+appearance of the TWO men produced a singular phase in her impressions
+and experience. She was no longer indignant at Hoskins, but she found
+relief in accepting the compliments of the stranger in preference,
+and felt a delight in Hoskins's discomfiture. Waya, promoted to
+the burlesque of a chaperone, grinned with infinite delight and
+understanding.
+
+When at last the day came for the doctor's arrival, he was duly met by
+Hoskins, and as duly informed by that impressible subordinate of the
+great change in Liberty's appearance. But the doctor was far from being
+equally impressed with his factor's story, and indeed showed much more
+interest in the appearance of the stock which they met along the road.
+Once the doctor got out of the wagon to inspect a cow, and particularly
+the coat of a rough draught horse that had been turned out and put under
+Liberty's care. "His skin is like velvet," said the doctor. "The girl
+evidently understands stock, and knows how to keep them in condition."
+
+"I reckon she's beginning to understand herself, too," said Hoskins.
+"Golly! wait till ye see HER."
+
+The doctor DID see her, but with what feelings he did not as frankly
+express. She was not at the cabin when they arrived, but presently
+appeared from the direction of the spring where, for reasons of her
+own, she had evidently made her toilet. Doctor Ruysdael was astounded;
+Hoskins's praise was not exaggerated; and there was an added charm
+that Hoskins was not prepared for. She had put on a gown of her own
+making,--the secret toil of many a long night,--amateurishly fashioned
+from some cheap yellow calico the doctor had sent her, yet fitting her
+wonderfully, and showing every curve of her graceful figure. Unaccented
+by a corset,--an article she had never known,--even the lines of the
+stiff, unyielding calico had a fashion that was nymph-like and suited
+her unfettered limbs. Doctor Ruysdael was profoundly moved. Though a
+philosopher, he was practical. He found himself suddenly confronted not
+only by a beautiful girl, but a problem! It was impossible to keep
+the existence of this woodland nymph from the knowledge of his
+distant neighbors; it was equally impossible for him to assume the
+responsibility of keeping a goddess like this in her present position.
+He had noticed her previous improvement, but had never dreamed that pure
+and wholesome living could in two months work such a miracle. And he
+was to a certain degree responsible, HE had created her,--a beautiful
+Frankenstein, whose lustrous, appealing eyes were even now menacing his
+security and position.
+
+Perhaps she saw trouble and perplexity in the face where she had
+expected admiration and pleasure, for a slight chill went over her as
+he quickly praised the appearance of the stock and spoke of her own
+improvement. But when they were alone, he turned to her abruptly.
+
+"You said you had no wish to go to San Jose?"
+
+"No." Yet she was conscious that her greatest objection had been
+removed, and she colored faintly.
+
+"Listen to me," he said dryly. "You deserve a better position than
+this,--a better home and surroundings than you have here. You are older,
+too,--a woman almost,--and you must look ahead."
+
+A look of mingled fright, reproach, and appeal came into her eloquent
+face. "Yer wantin' to send me away?" she stammered.
+
+"No," he said frankly. "It is you who are GROWING away. This is no
+longer the place for you."
+
+"But I want to stay. I don't wanter go. I am--I WAS happy here."
+
+"But I'm thinking of giving up this place. It takes up too much of my
+time. You must be provided"--
+
+"YOU are going away?" she said passionately.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Take me with you. I'll go anywhere!--to San Jose---wherever you go.
+Don't turn me off as dad did, for I'll foller you as I never followed
+dad. I'll go with you--or I'll die!"
+
+There was neither fear nor shame in her words; it was the outspoken
+instinct of the animal he had been rearing; he was convinced and
+appalled by it.
+
+"I am returning to San Jose at once," he said gravely. "You shall go
+with me--FOR THE PRESENT! Get yourself ready!"
+
+He took her to San Jose, and temporarily to the house of a patient,--a
+widow lady,--while he tried, alone, to grapple with the problem that now
+confronted him. But that problem became more complicated at the end of
+the third day, by Liberty Jones falling suddenly and alarmingly ill.
+The symptoms were so grave that the doctor, in his anxiety, called in
+a brother physician in consultation. When the examination was over, the
+two men withdrew and stared at each other.
+
+"Of course there is no doubt that the symptoms all point to slow
+arsenical poisoning," said the consulting doctor.
+
+"Yes," said Ruysdael quickly, "yet it is utterly inexplicable, both as
+to motive and opportunity."
+
+"Humph!" said the other grimly, "young ladies take arsenic in minute
+doses to improve the complexion and promote tissue, forgetting that the
+effects are cumulative when they stop suddenly. Your young friend has
+'sworn off' too quickly."
+
+"But it is impossible," said Doctor Ruysdael impatiently. "She is a mere
+child--a country girl--ignorant of such habits."
+
+"Humph! the peasants in the Tyrol try it on themselves after noticing
+the effect on the coats of cattle."
+
+Doctor Ruysdael started. A recollection of the sleek draught horse
+flashed upon him. He rose and hastily re-entered the patient's room. In
+a few moments he returned. "Do you think I could remove her at once to
+the mountains?" he said gravely.
+
+"Yes, with care and a return to graduated doses of the same poison; you
+know it's the only remedy just now," answered the other.
+
+By noon the next day the doctor and his patient had returned to the
+cabin, but Ruysdael himself carried the helpless Liberty Jones to the
+spring and deposited her gently beside it. "You may drink now," he said
+gravely.
+
+The girl did so eagerly, apparently imbibing new strength from the
+sparkling water. The doctor meanwhile coolly filled a phial from the
+same source, and made a hasty test of the contents by the aid of some
+other phials from his case. The result seemed to satisfy him. Then he
+said gravely:
+
+"And THIS is the spring you had discovered?"
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"And you and the cattle have daily used it?"
+
+She nodded again wonderingly. Then she caught his hand appealingly.
+
+"You won't send me away?"
+
+He smiled oddly as he glanced from the waters of the hill to the
+brimming eyes. "No."
+
+"No-r," tremulously, "go away--yourself?"
+
+The doctor looked this time only into her eyes. There was a tremendous
+idea in his own, which seemed in some way to have solved that dreadful
+problem.
+
+"No! We will stay here TOGETHER."
+
+*****
+
+Six months later there was a paragraph in the San Francisco press: "The
+wonderful Arsenical Spring in the Santa Cruz Mountain, known as 'Liberty
+Spring,' discovered by Doctor Ruysdael, has proved such a remarkable
+success that we understand the temporary huts for patients are to be
+shortly replaced by a magnificent Spa Hotel worthy of the spot, and the
+eligible villa sites it has brought into the market. It will be a source
+of pleasure to all to know that the beautiful nymph--a worthy successor
+to the far-famed 'Elise' of the German 'Brunnen'--who has administered
+the waters to so many grateful patients will still be in attendance,
+although it is rumored that she is shortly to become the wife of the
+distinguished discoverer."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation and Other
+Stories, by Bret Harte
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+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+by
+
+Bret Harte
+
+
+From: "ARGONAUT EDITION" OF THE WORKS OF BRET HARTE, VOL. 12.
+
+P. F. COLLIER & SON
+
+NEW YORK
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+
+AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+
+DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+
+WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT "JULES'"
+
+THE BOOM IN THE "CALAVERAS CLARION"
+
+THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+
+LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+
+
+
+
+MR. JACK HAMLIN'S MEDIATION
+
+
+At nightfall it began to rain. The wind arose too, and also began
+to buffet a small, struggling, nondescript figure, creeping along
+the trail over the rocky upland meadow towards Rylands's rancho.
+At times its head was hidden in what appeared to be wings thrown
+upward from its shoulders; at times its broad-brimmed hat was
+cocked jauntily on one side, and again the brim was fixed over the
+face like a visor. At one moment a drifting misshapen mass of
+drapery, at the next its vague garments, beaten back hard against
+the figure, revealed outlines far too delicate for that rude
+enwrapping. For it was Mrs. Rylands herself, in her husband's hat
+and her "hired man's" old blue army overcoat, returning from the
+post-office two miles away. The wind continued its aggression
+until she reached the front door of her newly plastered farmhouse,
+and then a heavier blast shook the pines above the low-pitched,
+shingled roof, and sent a shower of arrowy drops after her like a
+Parthian parting, as she entered. She threw aside the overcoat and
+hat, and somewhat inconsistently entered the sitting-room, to walk
+to the window and look back upon the path she had just traversed.
+The wind and the rain swept down a slope, half meadow, half
+clearing,--a mile away,--to a fringe of sycamores. A mile further
+lay the stage road, where, three hours later, her husband would
+alight on his return from Sacramento. It would be a long wet walk
+for Joshua Rylands, as their only horse had been borrowed by a
+neighbor.
+
+In that fading light Mrs. Rylands's oval cheek was shining still
+from the raindrops, but there was something in the expression of
+her worried face that might have as readily suggested tears. She
+was strikingly handsome, yet quite as incongruous an ornament to
+her surroundings as she had been to her outer wrappings a moment
+ago. Even the clothes she now stood in hinted an inadaptibility to
+the weather--the house--the position she occupied in it. A figured
+silk dress, spoiled rather than overworn, was still of a quality
+inconsistent with her evident habits, and the lace-edged petticoat
+that peeped beneath it was draggled with mud and unaccustomed
+usage. Her glossy black hair, which had been tossed into curls in
+some foreign fashion, was now wind-blown into a burlesque of it.
+This incongruity was still further accented by the appearance of
+the room she had entered. It was coldly and severely furnished,
+making the chill of the yet damp white plaster unpleasantly
+obvious. A black harmonium organ stood in one corner, set out with
+black and white hymn-books; a trestle-like table contained a large
+Bible; half a dozen black, horsehair-cushioned chairs stood,
+geometrically distant, against the walls, from which hung four
+engravings of "Paradise Lost" in black mourning frames; some dried
+ferns and autumn leaves stood in a vase on the mantelpiece, as if
+the chill of the room had prematurely blighted them. The coldly
+glittering grate below was also decorated with withered sprays, as
+if an attempt had been made to burn them, but was frustrated
+through damp. Suddenly recalled to a sense of her wet boots and
+the new carpet, she hurriedly turned away, crossed the hall into
+the dining-room, and thence passed into the kitchen. The "hired
+girl," a large-boned Missourian, a daughter of a neighboring
+woodman, was peeling potatoes at the table. Mrs. Rylands drew a
+chair before the kitchen stove, and put her wet feet on the hob.
+
+"I'll bet a cooky, Mess Rylands, you've done forgot the vanillar,"
+said the girl, with a certain domestic and confidential familiarity.
+
+Mrs. Rylands started guiltily. She made a miserable feint of
+looking in her lap and on the table. "I'm afraid I did, Jane, if I
+didn't bring it in HERE."
+
+"That you didn't," returned Jane. "And I reckon ye forgot that 'ar
+pepper-sauce for yer husband."
+
+Mrs. Rylands looked up with piteous contrition. "I really don't
+know what's the matter with me. I certainly went into the shop,
+and had it on my list,--and--really"--
+
+Jane evidently knew her mistress, and smiled with superior
+toleration. "It's kinder bewilderin' goin' in them big shops, and
+lookin' round them stuffed shelves." The shop at the cross roads
+and post-office was 14 x 14, but Jane was nurtured on the plains.
+"Anyhow," she added good-humoredly, "the expressman is sure to look
+in as he goes by, and you've time to give him the order."
+
+"But is he SURE to come?" asked Mrs. Rylands anxiously. "Mr.
+Rylands will be so put out without his pepper-sauce."
+
+"He's sure to come ef he knows you're here. Ye kin always
+kalkilate on that."
+
+"Why?" said Mrs. Rylands abstractedly.
+
+"Why? 'cause he just can't keep his eyes off ye! That's why he
+comes every day,--'tain't jest for trade!"
+
+This was quite true, not only of the expressman, but of the butcher
+and baker, and the "candlestick-maker," had there been so advanced
+a vocation at the cross roads. All were equally and curiously
+attracted by her picturesque novelty. Mrs. Rylands knew this
+herself, but without vanity or coquettishness. Possibly that was
+why the other woman told her. She only slightly deepened the lines
+of discontent in her cheek and said abstractedly, "Well, when he
+comes, YOU ask him."
+
+She dried her shoes, put on a pair of slippers that had a faded
+splendor about them, and went up to her bedroom. Here she
+hesitated for some time between the sewing-machine and her
+knitting-needles, but finally settled upon the latter, and a pair
+of socks for her husband which she had begun a year ago. But she
+presently despaired of finishing them before he returned, three
+hours hence, and so applied herself to the sewing-machine. For a
+little while its singing hum was heard between the blasts that
+shook the house, but the thread presently snapped, and the machine
+was put aside somewhat impatiently, with a discontented drawing of
+the lines around her handsome mouth. Then she began to "tidy" the
+room, putting a great many things away and bringing out a great
+many more, a process that was necessarily slow, owing to her
+falling into attitudes of minute inspection of certain articles of
+dress, with intervals of trying them on, and observing their effect
+in her mirror. This kind of interruption also occurred while she
+was putting away some books that were lying about on chairs and
+tables, stopping midway to open their pages, becoming interested,
+and quite finishing one chapter, with the book held close against
+the window to catch the fading light of day. The feminine reader
+will gather from this that Mrs. Rylands, though charming, was not
+facile in domestic duties. She had just glanced at the clock, and
+lit the candle to again set herself to work, and thus bridge over
+the two hours more of waiting, when there came a tap at the door.
+She opened it to Jane.
+
+"There's an entire stranger downstairs, ez hez got a lame hoss and
+wants to borry a fresh one."
+
+"We have none, you know," said Mrs. Rylands, a little impatiently.
+
+"Thet's what I told him. Then he wanted to know ef he could lie by
+here till he could get one or fix up his own hoss."
+
+"As you like; you know if you can manage it," said Mrs. Rylands, a
+little uneasily. "When Mr. Rylands comes you can arrange it
+between you. Where is he now?"
+
+"In the kitchen."
+
+"The kitchen!" echoed Mrs. Rylands.
+
+"Yes, ma'am, I showed him into the parlor, but he kinder shivered
+his shoulders, and reckoned ez how he'd go inter the kitchen. Ye
+see, ma'am, he was all wet, and his shiny big boots was sloppy.
+But he ain't one o' the stuck-up kind, and he's willin' to make
+hisself cowf'ble before the kitchen stove."
+
+"Well, then, he don't want ME," said Mrs. Rylands, with a relieved
+voice.
+
+"Yes'm," said Jane, apparently equally relieved. "Only, I thought
+I'd just tell you."
+
+A few minutes later, in crossing the upper hall, Mrs. Rylands heard
+Jane's voice from the kitchen raised in rustic laughter. Had she
+been satirically inclined, she might have understood Jane's
+willingness to relieve her mistress of the duty of entertaining the
+stranger; had she been philosophical, she might have considered the
+girl's dreary, monotonous life at the rancho, and made allowance
+for her joy at this rare interruption of it. But I fear that Mrs.
+Rylands was neither satirical nor philosophical, and presently,
+when Jane reentered, with color in her alkaline face, and light in
+her huckleberry eyes, and said she was going over to the cattle-
+sheds in the "far pasture," to see if the hired man didn't know of
+some horse that could be got for the stranger, Mrs. Rylands felt a
+little bitterness in the thought that the girl would have scarcely
+volunteered to go all that distance in the rain for HER. Yet, in a
+few moments she forgot all about it, and even the presence of her
+guest in the house, and in one of her fitful abstracted employments
+passed through the dining-room into the kitchen, and had opened the
+door with an "Oh, Jane!" before she remembered her absence.
+
+The kitchen, lit by a single candle, could be only partly seen by
+her as she stood with her hand on the lock, although she herself
+was plainly visible. There was a pause, and then a quiet, self-
+possessed, yet amused, voice answered:--
+
+"My name isn't Jane, and if you're the lady of the house, I reckon
+yours wasn't ALWAYS Rylands."
+
+At the sound of the voice Mrs. Rylands threw the door wide open,
+and as her eyes fell upon the speaker--her unknown guest--she
+recoiled with a little cry, and a white, startled face. Yet the
+stranger was young and handsome, dressed with a scrupulousness and
+elegance which even the stress of travel had not deranged, and he
+was looking at her with a smile of recognition, mingled with that
+careless audacity and self-possession which seemed to be the
+characteristic of his face.
+
+"Jack Hamlin!" she gasped.
+
+"That's me, all the time," he responded easily, "and YOU'RE Nell
+Montgomery!"
+
+"How did you know I was here? Who told you?" she said impetuously.
+
+"Nobody! never was so surprised in my life! When you opened that
+door just now you might have knocked me down with a feather." Yet
+he spoke lazily, with an amused face, and looked at her without
+changing his position.
+
+"But you MUST have known SOMETHING! It was no mere accident," she
+went on vehemently, glancing around the room.
+
+"That's where you slip up, Nell," said Hamlin imperturbably. "It
+WAS an accident and a bad one. My horse lamed himself coming down
+the grade. I sighted the nearest shanty, where I thought I might
+get another horse. It happened to be this." For the first time he
+changed his attitude, and leaned back contemplatively in his chair.
+
+She came towards him quickly. "You didn't use to lie, Jack," she
+said hesitatingly.
+
+"Couldn't afford it in my business,--and can't now," said Jack
+cheerfully. "But," he added curiously, as if recognizing something
+in his companion's agitation, and lifting his brown lashes to her,
+the window, and the ceiling, "what's all this about? What's your
+little game here?"
+
+"I'm married," she said, with nervous intensity,--"married, and
+this is my husband's house!"
+
+"Not married straight out!--regularly fixed?"
+
+"Yes," she said hurriedly.
+
+"One of the boys? Don't remember any Rylands. SPELTER used to be
+very sweet on you,--but Spelter mightn't have been his real name?"
+
+"None of our lot! No one you ever knew; a--a straight out, square
+man," she said quickly.
+
+"I say, Nell, look here! You ought to have shown up your cards
+without even a call. You ought to have told him that you danced at
+the Casino."
+
+"I did."
+
+"Before he asked you to marry him?"
+
+"Before."
+
+Jack got up from his chair, put his hands in his pockets, and
+looked at her curiously. This Nell Montgomery, this music-hall
+"dance and song girl," this girl of whom so much had been SAID and
+so little PROVED! Well, this was becoming interesting.
+
+"You don't understand," she said, with nervous feverishness; "you
+remember after that row I had with Jim, that night the manager gave
+us a supper,--when he treated me like a dog?"
+
+"He did that," interrupted Jack.
+
+"I felt fit for anything," she said, with a half-hysterical laugh,
+that seemed voiced, however, to check some slumbering memory. "I'd
+have cut my throat or his, it didn't matter which"--
+
+"It mattered something to us, Nell," put in Jack again, with polite
+parenthesis; "don't leave US out in the cold."
+
+"I started from 'Frisco that night on the boat ready to fling
+myself into anything--or the river!" she went on hurriedly. "There
+was a man in the cabin who noticed me, and began to hang around. I
+thought he knew who I was,--had seen me on the posters; and as I
+didn't feel like foolin', I told him so. But he wasn't that kind.
+He said he saw I was in trouble and wanted me to tell him all."
+
+Mr. Hamlin regarded her cheerfully. "And you told him," he said,
+"how you had once run away from your childhood's happy home to go
+on the stage! How you always regretted it, and would have gone
+back but that the doors were shut forever against you! How you
+longed to leave, but the wicked men and women around you always"--
+
+"I didn't!" she burst out, with sudden passion; "you know I didn't.
+I told him everything: who I was, what I had done, what I expected
+to do again. I pointed out the men--who were sitting there,
+whispering and grinning at us, as if they were in the front row of
+the theatre--and said I knew them all, and they knew me. I never
+spared myself a thing. I said what people said of me, and didn't
+even care to say it wasn't true!"
+
+"Oh, come!" protested Jack, in perfunctory politeness.
+
+"He said he liked me for telling the truth, and not being ashamed
+to do it! He said the sin was in the false shame and the hypocrisy;
+for that's the sort of man he is, you see, and that's like him
+always! He asked if I would marry him--out of hand--and do my best
+to be his lawful wife. He said he wanted me to think it over and
+sleep on it, and to-morrow he would come and see me for an answer.
+I slipped off the boat at 'Frisco, and went alone to a hotel where I
+wasn't known. In the morning I didn't know whether he'd keep his
+word or I'd keep mine. But he came! He said he'd marry me that
+very day, and take me to his farm in Santa Clara. I agreed. I
+thought it would take me out of everybody's knowledge, and they'd
+think me dead! We were married that day, before a regular
+clergyman. I was married under my own name,"--she stopped and
+looked at Jack, with a hysterical laugh,--"but he made me write
+underneath it, 'known as Nell Montgomery;' for he said HE wasn't
+ashamed of it, nor should I be."
+
+"Does he wear long hair and stick straws in it?" said Hamlin
+gravely. "Does he 'hear voices' and have 'visions'?"
+
+"He's a shrewd, sensible, hard-working man,--no more mad than you
+are, nor as mad as I was the day I married him. He's lived up to
+everything he's said." She stopped, hesitated in her quick,
+nervous speech; her lip quivered slightly, but she recalled
+herself, and looking imploringly, yet hopelessly, at Jack, gasped,
+"And that's what's the matter!"
+
+Jack fixed his eyes keenly upon her. "And you?" he said curtly.
+
+"I?" she repeated wonderingly.
+
+"Yes, what have YOU done?" he said, with sudden sharpness.
+
+The wonder was so apparent in her eyes that his keen glance
+softened. "Why," she said bewilderingly, "I have been his dog, his
+slave,--as far as he would let me. I have done everything; I have
+not been out of the house until he almost drove me out. I have
+never wanted to go anywhere or see any one; but he has always
+insisted upon it. I would have been willing to slave here, day and
+night, and have been happy. But he said I must not seem to be
+ashamed of my past, when he is not. I would have worn common
+homespun clothes and calico frocks, and been glad of it, but he
+insists upon my wearing my best things, even my theatre things; and
+as he can't afford to buy more, I wear these things I had. I know
+they look beastly here, and that I'm a laughing-stock, and when I
+go out I wear almost anything to try and hide them; but," her lip
+quivered dangerously again, "he wants me to do it, and it pleases
+him."
+
+Jack looked down. After a pause he lifted his lashes towards her
+draggled skirt, and said in an easier, conversational tone, "Yes!
+I thought I knew that dress. I gave it to you for that walking
+scene in 'High Life,' didn't I?"
+
+"No," she said quickly, "it was the blue one with silver trimming,--
+don't you remember? I tried to turn it the first year I was
+married, but it never looked the same."
+
+"It was sweetly pretty," said Jack encouragingly, "and with that
+blue hat lined with silver, it was just fetching! Somehow I don't
+quite remember this one," and he looked at it critically.
+
+"I had it at the races in '58, and that supper Judge Boompointer
+gave us at 'Frisco where Colonel Fish upset the table trying to get
+at Jim. Do you know," she said, with a little laugh, "it's got the
+stains of the champagne on it yet; it never would come off. See!"
+and she held the candle with great animation to the breadth of silk
+before her.
+
+"And there's more of it on the sleeve," said Jack; "isn't there?"
+
+Mrs. Rylands looked reproachfully at Jack.
+
+"That isn't champagne; don't you know what it is?"
+
+"No!"
+
+"It's blood," she said gravely; "when that Mexican cut poor Ned so
+bad,--don't you remember? I held his head upon my arm while you
+bandaged him." She heaved a little sigh, and then added, with a
+faint laugh, "That's the worst thing about the clothes of a girl in
+the profession, they get spoiled or stained before they wear out."
+
+This large truth did not seem to impress Mr. Hamlin. "Why did you
+leave Santa Clara?" he said abruptly, in his previous critical
+tone.
+
+"Because of the folks there. They were standoffish and ugly. You
+see, Josh"--
+
+"Who?"
+
+"Josh Rylands!--HIM! He told everybody who I was, even those who
+had never seen me in the bills,--how good I was to marry him, how
+he had faith in me and wasn't ashamed,--until they didn't believe
+we were married at all. So they looked another way when they met
+us, and didn't call. And all the while I was glad they didn't, but
+he wouldn't believe it, and allowed I was pining on account of it."
+
+"And were you?"
+
+"I swear to God, Jack, I'd have been content, and more, to have
+been just there with him, seein' nobody, letting every one believe
+I was dead and gone, but he said it was wrong, and weak! Maybe it
+was," she added, with a shy, interrogating look at Jack, of which,
+however, he took no notice. "Then when he found they wouldn't
+call, what do you think he did?"
+
+"Beat you, perhaps," suggested Jack cheerfully.
+
+"He never did a thing to me that wasn't straight out, square, and
+kind," she said, half indignantly, half hopelessly. "He thought if
+HIS kind of people wouldn't see me, I might like to see my own
+sort. So without saying anything to me, he brought down, of all
+things! Tinkie Clifford, she that used to dance in the cheap
+variety shows at 'Frisco, and her particular friend, Captain Sykes.
+It would have just killed you, Jack," she said, with a sudden
+hysteric burst of laughter, "to have seen Josh, in his square,
+straight-out way, trying to be civil and help things along. But,"
+she went on, as suddenly relapsing into her former attitude of
+worried appeal, "I couldn't stand it, and when she got to talking
+free and easy before Josh, and Captain Sykes to guzzling champagne,
+she and me had a row. She allowed I was putting on airs, and I
+made her walk, in spite of Josh."
+
+"And Josh seemed to like it," said Hamlin carelessly. "Has he seen
+her since?"
+
+"No; I reckon he's cured of asking that kind of company for me.
+And then we came here. But I persuaded him not to begin by going
+round telling people who I was,--as he did the last time,--but to
+leave it to folks to find out if they wanted to, and he gave in.
+Then he let me fix up this house and furnish it my own way, and I
+did!"
+
+"Do you mean to say that YOU fixed up that family vault of a
+sitting-room?" said Jack, in horror.
+
+"Yes, I didn't want any fancy furniture or looking-glasses, and
+such like, to attract folks, nor anything to look like the old
+times. I don't think any of the boys would care to come here. And
+I got rid of a lot of sporting travelers, 'wild-cat' managers, and
+that kind of tramp in this way. But"-- She hesitated, and her
+face fell again.
+
+"But what?" said Jack.
+
+"I don't think that Josh likes it either. He brought home the
+other day 'My Johnny is a Shoemakiyure,' and wanted me to try it on
+the organ. But it reminded me how we used to get just sick of
+singing it on and off the boards, and I couldn't touch it. He
+wanted me to go to the circus that was touring over at the cross
+roads, but it was the old Flanigin's circus, you know, the one
+Gussie Riggs used to ride in, with its old clown and its old
+ringmaster and the old 'wheezes,' and I chucked it."
+
+"Look here," said Jack, rising and surveying Mrs. Rylands
+critically. "If you go on at this gait, I'll tell you what that
+man of yours will do. He'll bolt with some of your old friends!"
+
+She turned a quick, scared face upon him for an instant. But only
+for an instant. Her hysteric little laugh returned, at once,
+followed by her weary, worried look. "No, Jack, you don't know
+him! If it was only that! He cares only for me in his own way,--
+and," she stammered as she went on, "I've no luck in making him
+happy."
+
+She stopped. The wind shook the house and fired a volley of rain
+against the windows. She took advantage of it to draw a torn lace-
+edged handkerchief from her pocket behind, and keeping the tail of
+her eyes in a frightened fashion on Jack, applied the handkerchief
+furtively, first to her nose, and then to her eyes.
+
+"Don't do that," said Jack fastidiously, "it's wet enough outside."
+Nevertheless, he stood up and gazed at her.
+
+"Well," he began.
+
+She timidly drew nearer to him, and took a seat on the kitchen
+table, looking up wistfully into his eyes.
+
+"Well," resumed Jack argumentatively, "if he won't 'chuck' you, why
+don't you 'chuck' HIM?"
+
+She turned quite white, and suddenly dropped her eyes. "Yes," she
+said, almost inaudibly, "lots of girls would do that."
+
+"I don't mean go back to your old life," continued Jack. "I reckon
+you've had enough of that. But get into some business, you know,
+like other women. A bonnet shop, or a candy shop for children,
+see? I'll help start you. I've got a couple of hundred, if not in
+my own pocket in somebody's else, just burning to be used! And
+then you can look about you; and perhaps some square business man
+will turn up and you can marry him. You know you can't live this
+way, nohow. It's killing you; it ain't fair on you, nor on Rylands
+either."
+
+"No," she said quickly, "it ain't fair on HIM. I know it, I know
+it isn't, I know it isn't," she repeated, "only"-- She stopped.
+
+"Only what?" said Jack impatiently.
+
+She did not speak. After a pause she picked up the rolling-pin
+from the table and began absently rolling it down her lap to her
+knee, as if pressing out the stained silk skirt. "Only," she
+stammered, slowly rolling the pin handles in her open palms, "I--I
+can't leave Josh."
+
+"Why can't you?" said Jack quickly.
+
+"Because--because--I," she went on, with a quivering lip, working
+the rolling-pin heavily down her knee as if she were crushing her
+answer out of it,--"because--I--love him!"
+
+There was a pause, a dash of rain against the window, and another
+dash from her eyes upon her hands, the rolling-pin, and the skirts
+she had gathered up hastily, as she cried, "O Jack! Jack! I never
+loved anybody like him! I never knew what love was! I never knew
+a man like him before! There never WAS one before!"
+
+To this large, comprehensive, and passionate statement Mr. Jack
+Hamlin made no reply. An audacity so supreme had conquered his.
+He walked to the window, looked out upon the dark, rain-filmed pane
+that, however, reflected no equal change in his own dark eyes, and
+then returned and walked round the kitchen table. When he was at
+her back, without looking at her, he reached out his hand, took her
+passive one that lay on the table in his, grasped it heartily for a
+single moment, laid it gently down, and returned around the table,
+where he again confronted her cheerfully face to face.
+
+"You'll make the riffle yet," he said quietly. "Just now I don't
+see what I could do, or where I could chip in your little game; but
+if I DO, or you do, count me in and let me know. You know where to
+write,--my old address at Sacramento." He walked to the corner,
+took up his still wet serape, threw it over his shoulders, and
+picked up his broad-brimmed riding-hat.
+
+"You're not going, Jack?" she said hesitatingly, as she rubbed her
+wet eyes into a consciousness of his movements. "You'll wait to
+see HIM? He'll be here in an hour."
+
+"I've been here too long already," said Jack. "And the less you
+say about my calling, even accidentally, the better. Nobody will
+believe it,--YOU didn't yourself. In fact, unless you see how I
+can help you, the sooner you consider us all dead and buried, the
+sooner your luck will change. Tell your girl I've found my own
+horse so much better that I have pushed on with him, and give her
+that."
+
+He threw a gold coin on the table.
+
+"But your horse is still lame," she said wonderingly. "What will
+you do in this storm?"
+
+"Get into the cover of the next wood and camp out. I've done it
+before."
+
+"But, Jack!"
+
+He suddenly made a slight gesture of warning. His quick ear had
+caught the approach of footsteps along the wet gravel outside. A
+mischievous light slid into his dark eyes as he coolly moved
+backward to the door and, holding it open, said, in a remarkably
+clear and distinct voice:--
+
+"Yes, as you say, society is becoming very mixed and frivolous
+everywhere, and you'd scarcely know San Francisco now. So
+delighted, however, to have made your acquaintance, and regret my
+business prevents my waiting to see your good husband. So odd that
+I should have known your Aunt Jemima! But, as you say, the world
+is very small, after all. I shall tell the deacon how well you are
+looking,--in spite of the kitchen smoke in your eyes. Good-by! A
+thousand thanks for your hospitality."
+
+And Jack, bowing profoundly to the ground, backed out upon Jane,
+the hired man, and the expressman, treading, I grieve to say, with
+some deliberation upon the toes of the two latter, in order,
+possibly, that in their momentary pain and discomposure they might
+not scan too closely the face of this ingenious gentleman, as he
+melted into the night and the storm.
+
+Jane entered, with a slight toss of her head.
+
+"Here's your expressman,--ef you're wantin' him NOW."
+
+Mrs. Rylands was too preoccupied to notice her handmaiden's
+significant emphasis, as she indicated a fresh-looking, bashful
+young fellow, whose confusion was evidently heightened by the
+unexpected egress of Mr. Hamlin, and the point-blank presence of
+the handsome Mrs. Rylands.
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Mrs. Rylands quickly. "So kind of him to
+oblige us. Give him the order, Jane, please."
+
+She turned to escape from the kitchen and these new intruders, when
+her eye fell upon the coin left by Mr. Hamlin. "The gentleman
+wished you to take that for your trouble, Jane," she said hastily,
+pointing to it, and passed out.
+
+Jane cast a withering look after her retreating skirts, and picking
+the coin from the table, turned to the hired man. "Run to the
+stable after that dandified young feller, Dick, and hand that back
+to him. Ye kin say that Jane Mackinnon don't run arrants fur
+money, nor play gooseberry to other folks fur fun."
+
+
+PART II
+
+
+Mr. Joshua Rylands had, according to the vocabulary of his class,
+"found grace" at the age of sixteen, while still in the spiritual
+state of "original sin" and the political one of Missouri. He had
+not indeed found it by persistent youthful seeking or spiritual
+insight, but somewhat violently and turbulently at a camp-meeting.
+A village boy, naturally gentle and impressible, with an original
+character,--limited, however, in education and experience,--he had,
+after his first rustic debauch with some vulgar companions, fallen
+upon the camp-meeting in reckless audacity; and instead of being
+handed over to the district constable, was taken in and placed upon
+"the anxious bench," "rastled with," and exhorted by a strong
+revivalist preacher, "convicted of sin," and--converted! It is
+doubtful if the shame of a public arrest and legal punishment would
+have impressed his youthful spirit as much as did this spiritual
+examination and trial, in which he himself became accuser.
+Howbeit, its effect, though punitive, was also exemplary. He at
+once cast off his evil companions; remaining faithful to his
+conversion, in spite of their later "backslidings." When, after
+the Western fashion, the time came for him to forsake his father's
+farm and seek a new "quarter section" on some more remote frontier,
+he carried into that secluded, lonely, half-monkish celibacy of
+pioneer life--which has been the foundation of so much strong
+Western character--more than the usual religious feeling. At once
+industrious and adventurous, he lived by "the Word," as he called
+it, and Nature as he knew it,--tempted by none of the vices or
+sentiments of civilization. When he finally joined the Californian
+emigration, it was not as a gold-seeker, but as a discoverer of new
+agricultural fields; if the hardship was as great and the rewards
+fewer, he nevertheless knew that he retained his safer isolation
+and independence of spirit. Vice and civilization were to him
+synonymous terms; it was the natural condition of the worldly and
+unregenerate. Such was the man who chanced to meet "Nell
+Montgomery, the Pearl of the Variety Stage," on the Sacramento
+boat, in one of his forced visits to civilization. Without knowing
+her in her profession, her frank exposition of herself did not
+startle him; he recognized it, accepted it, and strove to convert
+it. And as long as this daughter of Folly forsook her evil ways
+for him, it was a triumph in which there was no shame, and might be
+proclaimed from the housetop. When his neighbors thought
+differently, and avoided them, he saw no inconsistency in bringing
+his wife's old friends to divert her: she might in time convert
+THEM. He had no more fear of her returning to their ways than he
+had of himself "backsliding." Narrow as was his creed, he had none
+of the harshness nor pessimism of the bigot. With the keenest
+self-scrutiny, his credulity regarding others was touching.
+
+The storm was still raging when he alighted that evening from the
+up coach at the trail nearest his house. Although incumbered with
+a heavy carpet-bag, he started resignedly on his two-mile tramp
+without begrudging the neighborly act of his wife which had
+deprived him of his horse. It was "like her" to do these things in
+her good-humored abstraction, an abstraction, however, that
+sometimes worried him, from the fear that it indicated some
+unhappiness with her present lot. He was longing to rejoin her
+after his absence of three days, the longest time they had been
+separated since their marriage, and he hurried on with a certain
+lover-like excitement, quite new to his usually calm and temperate
+blood.
+
+Struggling with the storm and darkness, but always with the happy
+consciousness of drawing nearer to her in that struggle, he labored
+on, finding his perilous way over the indistinguishable trail by
+certain landmarks in the distance, visible only to his pioneer eye.
+That heavier shadow to the right was not the hillside, but the
+SLOPE to the distant hill; that low, regular line immediately
+before him was not a fence or wall, but the line of distant
+gigantic woods, a mile from his home. Yet as he began to descend
+the slope towards the wood, he stopped and rubbed his eyes. There
+was distinctly a light in it. His first idea was that he had lost
+the trail and was nearing the woodman Mackinnon's cabin. But a
+more careful scrutiny revealed to him that it was really the wood,
+and the light was a camp-fire. It was a rough night for camping
+out, but they were probably some belated prospectors.
+
+When he had reached the fringe of woodland, he could see quite
+plainly that the fire was built beside one of the large pines, and
+that the little encampment, which looked quite comfortable and
+secluded from the storm-beaten trail, was occupied apparently by a
+single figure. By the good glow of the leaping fire, that figure
+standing erect before it, elegantly shaped, in the graceful folds
+of a serape, looked singularly romantic and picturesque, and
+reminded Joshua Rylands--whose ideas of art were purely reminiscent
+of boyish reading--of some picture in a novel. The heavy black
+columns of the pines, glancing out of the concave shadow, also
+seemed a fitting background to what might have been a scene in a
+play. So strongly was he impressed by it that but for his anxiety
+to reach his home, still a mile distant, and the fact that he was
+already late, he would have penetrated the wood and the seclusion
+of the stranger with an offer of hospitality for the night. The
+man, however, was evidently capable of taking care of himself, and
+the outline of a tethered horse was faintly visible under another
+tree. It might be a surveyor or engineer,--the only men of a
+better class who were itinerant.
+
+But another and even greater surprise greeted him as he toiled up
+the rocky slope towards his farmhouse. The windows of the sitting-
+room, which were usually blank and black by night, were glittering
+with unfamiliar light. Like most farmers, he seldom used the room
+except for formal company, his wife usually avoiding it, and even
+he himself now preferred the dining-room or the kitchen. His first
+suggestion that his wife had visitors gave him a sense of pleasure
+on her account, mingled, however, with a slight uneasiness of his
+own which he could not account for. More than that, as he
+approached nearer he could hear the swell of the organ above the
+roar of the swaying pines, and the cadences were not of a
+devotional character. He hesitated for a moment, as he had
+hesitated at the fire in the woods; yet it was surely his own
+house! He hurried to the door, opened it; not only the light of
+the sitting-room streamed into the hall, but the ruddier glow of an
+actual fire in the disused grate! The familiar dark furniture had
+been rearranged to catch some of the glow and relieve its
+sombreness. And his wife, rising from the music-stool, was the
+room's only occupant!
+
+Mrs. Rylands gazed anxiously and timidly at her husband's
+astonished face, as he threw off his waterproof and laid down his
+carpet-bag. Her own face was a little flurried with excitement,
+and his, half hidden in his tawny beard, and, possibly owing to his
+self-introspective nature, never spontaneously sympathetic, still
+expressed only wonder! Mrs. Rylands was a little frightened. It
+is sometimes dangerous to meddle with a man's habits, even when he
+has grown weary of them.
+
+"I thought," she began hesitatingly, "that it would be more
+cheerful for you in here, this stormy evening. I thought you might
+like to put your wet things to dry in the kitchen, and we could sit
+here together, after supper, alone."
+
+I am afraid that Mrs. Rylands did not offer all her thoughts. Ever
+since Mr. Hamlin's departure she had been uneasy and excited,
+sometimes falling into fits of dejection, and again lighting up
+into hysterical levity; at other times carefully examining her
+wardrobe, and then with a sudden impulse rushing downstairs again
+to give orders for her husband's supper, and to make the
+extraordinary changes in the sitting-room already noted. Only a
+few moments before he arrived, she had covertly brought down a
+piece of music, and put aside the hymn-books, and taken, with a
+little laugh, a pack of cards from her pocket, which she placed
+behind the already dismantled vase on the chimney.
+
+"I reckoned you had company, Ellen," he said gravely, kissing her.
+
+"No," she said quickly. "That is," she stopped with a sudden surge
+of color in her face that startled her, "there was--a man--here, in
+the kitchen--who had a lame horse, and who wanted to get a fresh
+one. But he went away an hour ago. And he wasn't in this room--at
+least, after it was fixed up. So I've had no company."
+
+She felt herself again blushing at having blushed, and a little
+terrified. There was no reason for it. But for Jack's warning,
+she would have been quite ready to tell her husband all. She had
+never blushed before him over her past life; why she should now
+blush over seeing Jack, of all people! made her utter a little
+hysterical laugh. I am afraid that this experienced little woman
+took it for granted that her husband knew that if Jack or any man
+had been there as a clandestine lover, she would not have blushed
+at all. Yet with all her experience, she did not know that she had
+blushed simply because it was to Jack that she had confessed that
+she loved the man before her. Her husband noted the blush as part
+of her general excitement. He permitted her to drag him into the
+room and seat him before the hearth, where she sank down on one
+knee to pull off his heavy rubber boots. But he waved her aside at
+this, pulled them off with his own hands, and let her take them to
+the kitchen and bring back his slippers. By this time a smile had
+lighted up his hard face. The room was certainly more comfortable
+and cheerful. Still he was a little worried; was there not in
+these changes a falling away from the grace of self-abnegation
+which she had so sedulously practiced?
+
+When supper was served by Jane, in the dull dining-room, Mr.
+Rylands, had he not been more engaged in these late domestic
+changes, might have noticed that the Missouri girl waited upon him
+with a certain commiserating air that was remarkable by its
+contrast with the frigid ceremonious politeness with which she
+attended her mistress. It had not escaped Mrs. Rylands, however,
+who ever since Jack's abrupt departure had noticed this change in
+the girl's demeanor to herself, and with a woman's intuitive
+insight of another woman, had fathomed it. The comfortable tete-a-
+tete with Jack, which Jane had looked forward to, Mrs. Rylands had
+anticipated herself, and then sent him off! When Joshua thanked
+his wife for remembering the pepper-sauce, and Mrs. Rylands
+pathetically admitted her forgetfulness, the head-toss which Jane
+gave as she left the room was too marked to be overlooked by him.
+Mrs. Rylands gave a hysterical little laugh. "I am afraid Jane
+doesn't like my sending away the expressman just after I had also
+dismissed the stranger whom she had taken a fancy to, and left her
+without company," she said unwisely.
+
+Mr. Rylands did not laugh. "I reckon," he returned slowly, "that
+Jane must feel kinder lonely; she bears all the burden of our bein'
+outer the world, without any of our glory in the cause of it."
+
+Nevertheless, when supper was over, and the pair were seated in the
+sitting-room before the fire, this episode was forgotten. Mrs.
+Rylands produced her husband's pipe and tobacco-pouch. He looked
+around the formal walls and hesitated. He had been in the habit of
+smoking in the kitchen.
+
+"Why not here?" said Mrs. Rylands, with a sudden little note of
+decision. "Why should we keep this room only for company that
+don't come? I call it silly."
+
+This struck Mr. Rylands as logical. Besides, undoubtedly the fire
+had mellowed the room. After a puff or two he looked at his wife
+musingly. "Couldn't you make yourself one of them cigarettys, as
+they call 'em? Here's the tobacco, and I'll get you the paper."
+
+"I COULD," she said tentatively. Then suddenly, "What made you
+think of it? You never saw ME smoke!"
+
+"No," said Rylands, "but that lady, your old friend, Miss Clifford,
+does, and I thought you might be hankering after it."
+
+"How do you know Tinkie Clifford smokes?" said Mrs. Rylands quickly.
+
+"She lit a cigaretty that day she called."
+
+"I hate it," said Mrs. Rylands shortly.
+
+Mr. Rylands nodded approval, and puffed meditatively.
+
+"Josh, have you seen that girl since?"
+
+"No," said Joshua.
+
+"Nor any other girl like her?"
+
+"No," said Joshua wonderingly. "You see I only got to know her on
+your account, Ellen, that she might see you."
+
+"Well, don't you do it any more! None of 'em! Promise me!" She
+leaned forward eagerly in her chair.
+
+"But Ellen,"--her husband began gravely.
+
+"I know what you're going to say, but they can't do me any good,
+and you can't do them any good as you did ME, so there!"
+
+Mr. Rylands was silent, and smiled meditatively.
+
+"Josh!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"When you met me that night on the Sacramento boat, and looked at
+me, did you--did I," she hesitated,--"did you look at me because I
+had been crying?"
+
+"I thought you were troubled in spirit, and looked so."
+
+"I suppose I looked worried, of course; I had no time to change or
+even fix my hair; I had on that green dress, and it NEVER was
+becoming. And you only spoke to me on account of my awful looks?"
+
+"I saw only your wrestling soul, Ellen, and I thought you needed
+comfort and help."
+
+She was silent for a moment, and then, leaning forward, picked up
+the poker and began to thrust it absently between the bars.
+
+"And if it had been some other girl crying and looking awful, you'd
+have spoken to her all the same?"
+
+This was a new idea to Mr. Rylands, but with most men logic is
+supreme. "I suppose I would," he said slowly.
+
+"And married her?" She rattled the bars of the grate with the
+poker as if to drown the inevitable reply.
+
+Mr. Rylands loved the woman before him, but it pleased him to think
+that he loved truth better. "If it had been necessary to her
+salvation, yes," he said.
+
+"Not Tinkie?" she said suddenly.
+
+"SHE never would have been in your contrite condition."
+
+"Much you know! Girls like that can cry as well as laugh, just as
+they want to. Well! I suppose I DID look horrid." Nevertheless,
+she seemed to gain some gratification from her husband's reply, and
+changed the subject as if fearful of losing that satisfaction by
+further questioning.
+
+"I tried some of those songs you brought, but I don't think they go
+well with the harmonium," she said, pointing to some music on its
+rack, "except one. Just listen." She rose, and with the same
+nervous quickness she had shown before, went to the instrument and
+began to sing and play. There was a hopeless incongruity between
+the character of the instrument and the spirit of the song. Mrs.
+Rylands's voice was rather forced and crudely trained, but Joshua
+Rylands, sitting there comfortably slippered by the fire and
+conscious of the sheeted rain against the window, felt it good.
+Presently he arose, and lounging heavily over to the fair
+performer, leaned down and imprinted a kiss on the labyrinthine
+fringes of her hair. At which Mrs. Rylands caught blindly at his
+hand nearest her, and without lifting her other hand from the keys,
+or her eyes from the music, said tentatively:--
+
+"You know there's a chorus just here! Why can't you try it with
+me?"
+
+Mr. Rylands hesitated a moment, then, with a preliminary cough,
+lifted a voice as crude as hers, but powerful through much camp-
+meeting exercise, and roared a chorus which was remarkable chiefly
+for requiring that archness and playfulness in execution which he
+lacked. As the whole house seemed to dilate with the sound, and
+the wind outside to withhold its fury, Mr. Rylands felt that
+physical delight which children feel in personal outcry, and was
+grateful to his wife for the opportunity. Laying his hand
+affectionately on her shoulder, he noticed for the first time that
+she was in a kind of evening-dress, and that her delicate white
+shoulder shone through the black lace that enveloped it.
+
+For an instant Mr. Rylands was shocked at this unwonted exposure.
+He had never seen his wife in evening-dress before. It was true
+they were alone, and in their own sitting-room, but the room was
+still invested with that formality and publicity which seemed to
+accent this indiscretion. The simple-minded frontier man's mind
+went back to Jane, to the hired man, to the expressman, the
+stranger, all of whom might have noticed it also.
+
+"You have a new dress," he said slowly, "have you worn it all day?"
+
+"No," she said, with a timid smile. "I only put it on just before
+you came. It's the one I used to wear in the ballroom scene in
+'Gay Times in 'Frisco.' You don't know it, I know. I thought I
+would wear it tonight, and then," she suddenly grasped his hand,
+"you'll let me put all these things away forever! Won't you, Josh?
+I've seen such nice pretty calico at the store to-day, and I can
+make up one or two home dresses, like Jane's, only better fitting,
+of course. In fact, I asked them to send the roll up here to-
+morrow for you to see."
+
+Mr. Rylands felt relieved. Perhaps his views had changed about the
+moral effect of her retaining these symbols of her past, for he
+consented to the calico dresses, not, however, without an inward
+suspicion that she would not look so well in them, and that the one
+she had on was more becoming.
+
+Meantime she tried another piece of music. It was equally
+incongruous and slightly Bacchantic.
+
+"There used to be a mighty pretty dance went to that," she said,
+nodding her head in time with the music, and assisting the heavily
+spasmodic attempts of the instrument with the pleasant levity of
+her voice. "I used to do it."
+
+"Ye might try it now, Ellen," suggested her husband, with a half-
+frightened, half-amused tolerance.
+
+"YOU play, then," said Mrs. Rylands quickly, offering her seat to
+him.
+
+Mr. Rylands sat down to the harmonium, as Mrs. Rylands briskly
+moved the table and chairs against the wall. Mr. Rylands played
+slowly and strenuously, as from a conscientious regard of the
+instrument. Mrs. Rylands stood in the centre of the floor, making
+a rather pretty, animated picture, as she again stimulated the
+heavy harmonium swell not only with her voice but her hands and
+feet. Presently she began to skip.
+
+I should warn the reader here that this was before the "shawl" or
+"skirt" dancing was in vogue, and I am afraid that pretty Mrs.
+Rylands's performances would now be voted slow. Her silk skirt and
+frilled petticoat were lifted just over her small ankles and tiny
+bronze-kid shoes. In the course of a pirouette or two, there was a
+slight further revelation of blue silk stockings and some delicate
+embroidery, but really nothing more than may be seen in the sweep
+of a modern waltz. Suddenly the music ceased. Mr. Rylands had
+left the harmonium and walked over to the hearth. Mrs. Rylands
+stopped, and came towards him with a flushed, anxious face.
+
+"It don't seem to go right, does it?" she said, with her nervous
+laugh. "I suppose I'm getting too old now, and I don't quite
+remember it."
+
+"Better forget it altogether," he replied gravely. He stopped at
+seeing a singular change in her face, and added awkwardly, "When I
+told you I didn't want you to be ashamed of your past, nor to try
+to forget what you were, I didn't mean such things as that!"
+
+"What did you mean?" she said timidly.
+
+The truth was that Mr. Rylands did not know. He had known this
+sort of thing only in the abstract. He had never had the least
+acquaintance with the class to which his wife had belonged, nor
+known anything of their methods. It was a revelation to him now,
+in the woman he loved, and who was his wife. He was not shocked so
+much as he was frightened.
+
+"You shall have the dress to-morrow, Ellen," he said gently, "and
+you can put away these gewgaws. You don't need to look like Tinkie
+Clifford."
+
+He did not see the look of triumph that lit up her eye, but added,
+"Go on and play."
+
+She sat down obediently to the instrument. He watched her for a
+few moments from the toe of her kid slipper on the pedals to the
+swell of her shoulders above the keyboard, with a strange,
+abstracted face. Presently she stopped and came over to him.
+
+"And when I've got these nice calico frocks, and you can't tell me
+from Jane, and I'm a good housekeeper, and settle down to be a
+farmer's wife, maybe I'll have a secret to tell you."
+
+"A secret?" he repeated gravely. "Why not now?"
+
+Her face was quite aglow with excitement and a certain timid
+mischief as she laughed: "Not while you are so solemn. It can
+wait."
+
+He looked at his watch. "I must give some orders to Jim about the
+stock before he turns in," he said.
+
+"He's gone to the stables already," said Mrs. Rylands.
+
+"No matter; I can go there and find him."
+
+"Shall I bring your boots?" she said quickly.
+
+"I'll put them on when I pass through the kitchen. I won't be long
+away. Now go to bed. You are looking tired," he said gently, as
+he gazed at the drawn lines about her eyes and mouth. Her former
+pretty color struck him also as having changed of late, and as
+being irregular and inharmonious.
+
+As Mrs. Rylands obediently ascended the stairs she heaved a faint
+sigh, her only recognition of her husband's criticism. He turned
+and passed quickly into the kitchen. He wanted to be alone to
+collect his thoughts. But he was surprised to find Jane still
+there, sitting bolt upright in a chair in the corner. Apparently
+she had been expecting him, for as he entered she stood up, and
+wiped her cheek and mouth with one hand, as if to compress her lips
+the more tightly.
+
+"I reckoned," she began, "that unless you war for forgettin'
+everythin' in these yer goings on, ye'd be passin' through here to
+tend to your stock. I've got a word to say to ye, Mr. Rylands.
+When I first kem over here to help, I got word from the folks
+around that your wife afore you married her was just one o' them
+bally dancers. Well, that was YOUR lookout, not mine! Jane
+Mackinnon ain't the kind to take everybody's sayin' as gospil, but
+she kalkilates to treat folks ez she finds 'em. When she finds 'em
+lyin' and deceivin'; when she finds em purtendin' one thing and
+doin' another; when she finds 'em makin' fools tumble to 'em;
+playing soots on their own husbands, and turnin' an honest house
+into a music-hall and a fandango shop, she kicks! You hear me!
+Jane Mackinnon kicks!"
+
+"What do you mean?" said Mr. Rylands sternly.
+
+"I mean," said Miss Mackinnon, striking her hips with the back of
+her hands smartly, and accenting each word that dropped like a
+bullet from her mouth with an additional blow,--"I--mean--that--
+your--wife--had--one--of--her--old--hangers-on--from--'Frisco--
+here--in--this--very--kitchen--all--the--arternoon; there! I mean
+that whiles she was waitin' here for you, she was canoodlin' and
+cryin' over old times with him! I saw her myself through the
+winder. That's what I mean, Mr. Joshua Rylands."
+
+"It's false! She had some poor stranger here with a lame horse.
+She told me so herself."
+
+Jane Mackinnon laughed shrilly.
+
+"Did she tell you that the poor stranger was young and pretty-
+faced, with black moustarches? that his store clothes must have
+cost a fortin, saying nothing of his gold-lined, broadcloth
+sarrapper? Did she say that his horse was so lame that when I went
+to get another he wouldn't WAIT for it? Did she tell you WHO he
+was?"
+
+"No, she did not know," said Rylands sternly, but with a whitening
+face.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you! The gambler, the shooter!--the man whose
+name is black enough to stain any woman he knows. Jim recognized
+him like a shot; he sez, the moment he clapped eyes on him at the
+door, 'Dod blasted, if it ain't Jack Hamlin!'"
+
+Little as Mr. Rylands knew of the world, he had heard that name.
+But it was not THAT he was thinking of. He was thinking of the
+camp-fire in the wood, the handsome figure before it, the tethered
+horse. He was thinking of the lighted sitting-room, the fire, his
+wife's bare shoulders, her slippers, stockings, and the dance. He
+saw it all,--a lightning-flash to his dull imagination. The room
+seemed to expand and then grow smaller, the figure of Jane to sway
+backwards and forwards before him. He murmured the name of God
+with lips that were voiceless, caught at the kitchen table to
+steady himself, held it till he felt his arms grow rigid, and then
+recovered himself,--white, cold, and sane.
+
+"Speak a word of this to HER," he said deliberately, "enter her
+room while I'm gone, even leave the kitchen before I come back, and
+I'll throw you into the road. Tell that hired man, if he dares to
+breathe it to a soul I'll strangle him."
+
+The unlooked-for rage of this quiet, God-fearing man, and dupe, as
+she believed, was terrible, but convincing. She shrank back into
+the corner as he coolly drew on his boots and waterproof, and
+without another word left the house.
+
+He knew what he was going to do as well as if it had been ordained
+for him. He knew he would find the young man in the wood; for
+whatever were the truth of the other stories, he and the visitor
+were identical; he had seen him with his own eyes. He would
+confront him face to face and know all; and until then, he could
+not see his wife again. He walked on rapidly, but without
+feverishness or mental confusion. He saw his duty plainly,--if
+Ellen had "backslidden," he must give her another trial. These
+were his articles of faith. He should not put her away; but she
+should nevermore be wife to him. It was HE who had tempted her, it
+was true; perhaps God would forgive her for that reason, but HE
+could never love her again.
+
+The fury of the storm had somewhat abated as he reached the wood.
+The fire was still there, but no longer a leaping flame. A dull
+glow in the darkness of the forest aisles was all that indicated
+its position. Rylands at once plunged in that direction; he was
+near enough to see the red embers when he heard a sharp click, and
+a voice called:--
+
+"Hold up!"
+
+Mr. Hamlin was a light sleeper. The crackle of underbrush had been
+enough to disturb him. The voice was his; the click was the
+cocking of his revolver.
+
+Rylands was no coward, but halted diplomatically.
+
+"Now, then," said Mr. Hamlin's voice, "a little more this way, IN
+THE LIGHT, if you please!"
+
+Rylands moved as directed, and saw Mr. Hamlin lying before the
+fire, resting easily on one hand, with his revolver in the other.
+
+"Thank you!" said Jack. "Excuse my precautions, but it is night,
+and this is, for the present, my bedroom."
+
+"My name is Rylands; you called at my house this afternoon and saw
+my wife," said Rylands slowly.
+
+"I did," said Hamlin. "It was mighty kind of you to return my call
+so soon, but I didn't expect it."
+
+"I reckon not. But I know who you are, and that you are an old
+associate of hers, in the days of her sin and unregeneration. I
+want you to answer me, before God and man, what was your purpose in
+coming there to-day?"
+
+"Look here! I don't think it's necessary to drag in strangers to
+hear my answer," said Jack, lying down again, "but I came to borrow
+a horse."
+
+"Is that the truth?"
+
+Jack got upon his feet very solemnly, put on his hat, drew down his
+waistcoat, and approached Mr. Rylands with his hands in his pockets.
+
+"Mr. Rylands," he said, with great suavity of manner, "this is the
+second time today that I have had the honor of having my word
+doubted by your family. Your wife was good enough to question my
+assertion that I didn't know that she was living here, but that was
+a woman's vanity. You have no such excuse. There is my horse
+yonder, lame, as you may see. I didn't lame him for the sake of
+seeing your wife nor you."
+
+There was that in Mr. Hamlin's audacity and perfect self-possession
+which, even while it irritated, never suggested deceit. He was too
+reckless of consequence to lie. Mr. Rylands was staggered and half
+convinced. Nevertheless, he hesitated.
+
+"Dare you tell me everything that happened between my wife and you?"
+
+"Dare you listen?" said Mr. Hamlin quietly.
+
+Mr. Rylands turned a little white. After a moment he said:--
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Good!" said Mr. Hamlin. "I like your grit, though I don't mind
+telling you it's the ONLY thing I like about you. Sit down. Well,
+I haven't seen Nell Montgomery for three years until I met her as
+your wife, at your house. She was surprised as I was, and
+frightened as I wasn't. She spent the whole interview in telling
+me the history of her marriage and her life with you, and nothing
+more. I cannot say that it was remarkably entertaining, or that
+she was as amusing as your wife as she was as Nell Montgomery, the
+variety actress. When she had finished, I came away."
+
+Mr. Rylands, who had seated himself, made a movement as if to rise.
+But Mr. Hamlin laid his hand on his knee.
+
+"I asked you if you dared to listen. I have something myself to
+say of that interview. I found your wife wearing the old dresses
+that other men had given her, and she said she wore them because
+she thought it pleased you. I found that you, who are questioning
+my calling upon her, had already got the worst of her old chums to
+visit her without asking her consent; I found that instead of being
+the first one to lie for her and hide her, you were the first one
+to tell anybody her history, just because you thought it was to the
+glory of God generally, and of Joshua Rylands in particular."
+
+"A man's motives are his own," stammered Rylands.
+
+"Sorry you didn't see it when you questioned mine just now," said
+Jack coolly.
+
+"Then she complained to you?" said Rylands hesitatingly.
+
+"I didn't say that," said Jack shortly.
+
+"But you found her unhappy?"
+
+"Damnably."
+
+"And you advised her"--said Rylands tentatively.
+
+"I advised her to chuck you and try to get a better husband." He
+paused, and then added, with a disgusted laugh, "but she didn't
+tumble to it, for a d----d silly reason."
+
+"What reason?" said Rylands hurriedly.
+
+"Said she LOVED you," returned Jack, kicking a brand back into the
+fire. Mr. Rylands's white cheeks flamed out suddenly like the
+brand. Seeing which, Jack turned upon him deliberately.
+
+"Mr. Joshua Rylands, I've seen many fools in my time. I've seen
+men holding four aces backed down because they thought they KNEW
+the other man had a royal flush! I've seen a man sell his claim
+for a wild-cat share, with the gold lying a foot below him in the
+ground he walked on. I've seen a dead shot shoot wild because he
+THOUGHT he saw something in the other man's eye. I've seen a heap
+of God-forsaken fools, but I never saw one before who claimed God
+as a pal. You've got a wife a d----d sight truer to you for what
+you call her 'sin,' than you've ever been to her, with all your
+d----d salvation! And as you couldn't make her otherwise, though
+you've tried to hard enough, it seems to me that for square
+downright chuckle-headedness, you can take the cake! Good-night!
+Now, run away and play! You're making me tired."
+
+"One moment," said Mr. Rylands awkwardly and hurriedly. "I may
+have wronged you; I was mistaken. Won't you come back with me and
+accept my--our--hospitality?"
+
+"Not much," said Jack. "I left your house because I thought it
+better for you and her that no one should know of my being there."
+
+"But you were already recognized," said Mr. Rylands. "It was Jane
+who lied about you, and your return with me will confute her
+slanders."
+
+"Who?" asked Jack.
+
+"Jane, our hired girl."
+
+Mr. Hamlin uttered an indescribable laugh.
+
+"That's just as well! You simply tell Jane you SAW me; that I was
+greatly shocked at what she said, but that I forgive her. I don't
+think she'll say any more."
+
+
+Strange to add, Mr. Hamlin's surmise was correct. Mr. Rylands
+found Jane still in the kitchen alone, terrified, remorseful, yet
+ever after silent on the subject. Stranger still, the hired man
+became equally uncommunicative. Mrs. Rylands, attributing her
+husband's absence only to care of the stock, had gone to bed in a
+feverish condition, and Mr. Rylands did not deem it prudent to tell
+her of his interview. The next day she sent for the doctor, and it
+was deemed necessary for her to keep her bed for a few days. Her
+husband was singularly attentive and considerate during that time,
+and it was probable that Mrs. Rylands seized that opportunity to
+tell him the secret she spoke of the night before. Whatever it
+was,--for it was not generally known for a few months later,--it
+seemed to draw them closer together, imparted a protecting dignity
+to Joshua Rylands, which took the place of his former selfish
+austerity, gave them a future to talk of confidentially, hopefully,
+and sometimes foolishly, which took the place of their more foolish
+past, and when the roll of calico came from the cross roads, it
+contained also a quantity of fine linen, laces, small caps, and
+other trifles, somewhat in contrast to the more homely materials
+ordered.
+
+And when three months were past, the sitting-room was often lit up
+and made cheerful, particularly on that supreme occasion when, with
+a great deal of enthusiasm, all the women of the countryside
+flocked to see Mrs. Rylands and her first baby. And a more
+considerate and devoted couple than the father and mother they had
+never known.
+
+
+
+THE MAN AT THE SEMAPHORE
+
+
+In the early days of the Californian immigration, on the extremest
+point of the sandy peninsula, where the bay of San Francisco
+debouches into the Pacific, there stood a semaphore telegraph.
+Tossing its black arms against the sky,--with its back to the
+Golden Gate and that vast expanse of sea whose nearest shore was
+Japan,--it signified to another semaphore further inland the "rigs"
+of incoming vessels, by certain uncouth signs, which were again
+passed on to Telegraph Hill, San Francisco, where they reappeared
+on a third semaphore, and read to the initiated "schooner," "brig"
+"ship," or "steamer." But all homesick San Francisco had learned
+the last sign, and on certain days of the month every eye was
+turned to welcome those gaunt arms widely extended at right angles,
+which meant "sidewheel steamer" (the only steamer which carried the
+mails) and "letters from home." In the joyful reception accorded
+to that herald of glad tidings, very few thought of the lonely
+watcher on the sand dunes who dispatched them, or even knew of that
+desolate Station.
+
+For desolate it was beyond description. The Presidio, with its
+voiceless, dismounted cannon and empty embrasures hidden in a
+hollow, and the Mission Dolores, with its crumbling walls and
+belfry tower lost in another, made the ultima thule of all San
+Francisco wandering. The Cliff house and Fort Point did not then
+exist; from Black Point the curving line of shore of "Yerba Buena"--
+or San Francisco--showed only a stretch of glittering wind-swept
+sand dunes, interspersed with straggling gullies of half-buried
+black "scrub oak." The long six months' summer sun fiercely beat
+upon it from the cloudless sky above; the long six months' trade
+winds fiercely beat upon it from the west; the monotonous roll-call
+of the long Pacific surges regularly beat upon it from the sea.
+Almost impossible to face by day through sliding sands and
+buffeting winds, at night it was impracticable through the dense
+sea-fog that stole softly through the Golden Gate at sunset.
+Thence, until morning, sea and shore were a trackless waste,
+bounded only by the warning thunders of the unseen sea. The
+station itself, a rudely built cabin, with two windows,--one
+furnished with a telescope,--looked like a heap of driftwood, or a
+stranded wreck left by the retiring sea; the semaphore--the only
+object for leagues--lifted above the undulating dunes, took upon
+itself various shapes, more or less gloomy, according to the hour
+or weather,--a blasted tree, the masts and clinging spars of a
+beached ship, a dismantled gallows; or, with the background of a
+golden sunset across the Gate, and its arms extended at right
+angles, to a more hopeful fancy it might have seemed the missionary
+Cross, which the enthusiast Portala lifted on that heathen shore a
+hundred years before.
+
+Not that Dick Jarman--the solitary station keeper--ever indulged
+this fancy. An escaped convict from one of her Britannic Majesty's
+penal colonies, a "stowaway" in the hold of an Australian ship, he
+had landed penniless in San Francisco, fearful of contact with his
+more honest countrymen already there, and liable to detection at
+any moment. Luckily for him, the English immigration consisted
+mainly of gold-seekers en route to Sacramento and the southern
+mines. He was prudent enough to resist the temptation to follow
+them, and accepted the post of semaphore keeper,--the first work
+offered him,--which the meanest immigrant, filled with dreams of
+gold, would have scorned. His employers asked him no questions,
+and demanded no references; his post could be scarcely deemed one
+of trust,--there was no property for him to abscond with but the
+telescope; he was removed from temptation and evil company in his
+lonely waste; his duties were as mechanical as the instrument he
+worked, and interruption of them would be instantly known at San
+Francisco. For this he would receive his board and lodging and
+seventy-five dollars a month,--a sum to be ridiculed in those
+"flush days," but which seemed to the broken-spirited and half-
+famished stowaway a princely independence.
+
+And then there was rest and security! He was free from that
+torturing anxiety and fear of detection which had haunted him night
+and day for three months. The ceaseless vigilance and watchful
+dread he had known since his escape, he could lay aside now. The
+rude cabin on the sand dune was to him as the long-sought cave to
+some hunted animal. It seemed impossible that any one would seek
+him there. He was spared alike the contact of his enemies or the
+shame of recognizing even a friendly face, until by each he would
+be forgotten. From his coign of vantage on that desolate waste,
+and with the aid of his telescope, no stranger could approach
+within two or three miles of his cabin without undergoing his
+scrutiny. And at the worst, if he was pursued here, before him was
+the trackless shore and the boundless sea!
+
+And at times there was a certain satisfaction in watching, unseen
+and in perfect security, the decks of passing ships. With the aid
+of his glass he could mingle again with the world from which he was
+debarred, and gloomily wonder who among those passengers knew their
+solitary watcher, or had heard of his deeds; it might have made him
+gloomier had he known that in those eager faces turned towards the
+golden haven there was little thought of anything but themselves.
+He tried to read in faces on board the few outgoing ships the
+record of their success with a strange envy. They were returning
+home! HOME! For sometimes--but seldom--he thought of his own home
+and his past. It was a miserable past of forgery and embezzlement
+that had culminated a career of youthful dissipation and self-
+indulgence, and shut him out, forever, from the staid old English
+cathedral town where he was born. He knew that his relations
+believed and wished him dead. He thought of this past with little
+pleasure, but with little remorse. Like most of his stamp, he
+believed it was ill-luck, chance, somebody else's fault, but never
+his own responsible action. He would not repent; he would be wiser
+only. And he would not be retaken--alive!
+
+Two or three months passed in this monotonous duty, in which he
+partly recovered his strength and his nerves. He lost his furtive,
+restless, watchful look; the bracing sea air and the burning sun
+put into his face the healthy tan and the uplifted frankness of a
+sailor. His eyes grew keener from long scanning of the horizon; he
+knew where to look for sails, from the creeping coastwise schooner
+to the far-rounding merchantman from Cape Horn. He knew the faint
+line of haze that indicated the steamer long before her masts and
+funnels became visible. He saw no soul except the solitary boatman
+of the little "plunger," who landed his weekly provisions at a
+small cove hard by. The boatman thought his secretiveness and
+reticence only the surliness of his nation, and cared little for a
+man who never asked for the news, and to whom he brought no
+letters. The long nights which wrapped the cabin in sea-fog, and
+at first seemed to heighten the exile's sense of security, by
+degrees, however, became monotonous, and incited an odd restlessness,
+which he was wont to oppose by whiskey,--allowed as a part of his
+stores,--which, while it dulled his sensibilities, he, however,
+never permitted to interfere with his mechanical duties.
+
+He had been there five months, and the hills on the opposite shore
+between Tamalpais were already beginning to show their russet
+yellow sides. One bright morning he was watching the little fleet
+of Italian fishing-boats hovering in the bay. This was always a
+picturesque spectacle, perhaps the only one that relieved the
+general monotony of his outlook. The quaint lateen sails of dull
+red, or yellow, showing against the sparkling waters, and the red
+caps or handkerchiefs of the fishermen, might have attracted even a
+more abstracted man. Suddenly one of the larger boats tacked, and
+made directly for the little cove where his weekly plunger used to
+land. In an instant he was alert and suspicious. But a close
+examination of the boat through his glass satisfied him that it
+contained, in addition to the crew, only two or three women,
+apparently the family of the fishermen. As it ran up on the beach
+and the entire party disembarked he could see it was merely a
+careless, peaceable invasion, and he thought no more about it. The
+strangers wandered about the sands, gesticulating and laughing;
+they brought a pot ashore, built a fire, and cooked a homely meal.
+He could see that from time to time the semaphore--evidently a
+novelty to them--had attracted their attention; and having occasion
+to signal the arrival of a bark, the working of the uncouth arms of
+the instrument drew the children in half-frightened curiosity
+towards it, although the others held aloof, as if fearful of
+trespassing upon some work of the government, no doubt secretly
+guarded by the police. A few mornings later he was surprised to
+see upon the beach, near the same locality, a small heap of lumber
+which had evidently been landed in the early morning fog. The next
+day an old tent appeared on the spot, and the men, evidently
+fishermen, began the erection of a rude cabin beside it. Jarman
+had been long enough there to know that it was government land, and
+that these manifestly humble "squatters" upon it would not be
+interfered with for some time to come. He began to be uneasy
+again; it was true they were fully half a mile from him, and they
+were foreigners; but might not their reckless invasion of the law
+attract others, in this lawless country, to do the same? It ought
+to be stopped. For once Richard Jarman sided with legal authority.
+
+But when the cabin was completed, it was evident from what he saw
+of its rude structure that it was only a temporary shelter for the
+fisherman's family and the stores, and refitting of the fishing-
+boat, more convenient to them than the San Francisco wharves. The
+beach was utilized for the mending of nets and sails, and thus
+became half picturesque. In spite of the keen northwestern trades,
+the cloudless, sunshiny mornings tempted these southerners back to
+their native al fresco existence; they not only basked in the sun,
+but many of their household duties, and even the mysteries of their
+toilet, were performed in the open air. They did not seem to care
+to penetrate into the desolate region behind them; their half-
+amphibious habit kept them near the water's edge, and Richard
+Jarman, after taking his limited walks for the first few mornings
+in another direction, found it no longer necessary to avoid the
+locality, and even forgot their propinquity.
+
+But one morning, as the fog was clearing away and the sparkle of
+the distant sea was beginning to show from his window, he rose from
+his belated breakfast to fetch water from the "breaker" outside,
+which had to be replenished weekly from Sancelito, as there was no
+spring in his vicinity. As he opened the door, he was inexpressibly
+startled by the figure of a young woman standing in front of it,
+who, however, half fearfully, half laughingly withdrew before him.
+But his own manifest disturbance apparently gave her courage.
+
+"I jess was looking at that thing," she said bashfully, pointing to
+the semaphore.
+
+He was still more astonished, for, looking at her dark eyes and
+olive complexion, he had expected her to speak Italian or broken
+English. And, possibly because for a long time he had seen and
+known little of women, he was quite struck with her good looks. He
+hesitated, stammered, and then said:--
+
+"Won't you come in?"
+
+She drew back still farther and made a rapid gesture of negation
+with her head, her hand, and even her whole lithe figure. Then she
+said, with a decided American intonation:--
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Why not?" said Jarman mechanically.
+
+The girl sidled up against the cabin, keeping her eyes fixed on
+Jarman with a certain youthful shrewdness.
+
+"Oh, you know!" she said.
+
+"I really do not. Tell me why."
+
+She drew herself up against the wall a little proudly, though still
+youthfully, with her hands behind her.
+
+"I ain't that kind of girl," she said simply.
+
+The blood rushed to Jarman's checks. Dissipated and abandoned as
+his life had been, small respecter of women as he was, he was
+shocked and shamed. Knowing too, as he did, how absorbed he was in
+other things, he was indignant, because not guilty.
+
+"Do as you please, then," he said shortly, and reentered the cabin.
+But the next moment he saw his error in betraying an irritation
+that was open to misconstruction. He came out again, scarcely
+looking at the girl, who was lounging away.
+
+"Do you want me to explain to you how the thing works?" he said
+indifferently. "I can't show you unless a ship comes in."
+
+The girl's eyes brightened softly as she turned to him.
+
+"Do tell me," she said, with an anticipatory smile and flash of
+white teeth. "Won't you?"
+
+She certainly was very pretty and simple, in spite of her late
+speech. Jarman briefly explained to her the movements of the
+semaphore arms and their different significance. She listened with
+her capped head a little on one side like an attentive bird, and
+her arms unconsciously imitating the signs. Certainly, for all
+that she SPOKE like an American, her gesticulation was Italian.
+
+"And then," she said triumphantly when he paused, "when the sailors
+see that sign up they know they are coming in the harbor."
+
+Jarman smiled, as he had not smiled since he had been there. He
+corrected this mistake of her eager haste to show her intelligence,
+and, taking the telescope, pointed out the other semaphore,--a thin
+black outline on a distant inland hill. He then explained how HIS
+signs were repeated by that instrument to San Francisco.
+
+"My! Why, I always allowed that was only the cross stuck up in the
+Lone Mountain Cemetery," she said.
+
+"You are a Catholic?"
+
+"I reckon."
+
+"And you are an Italian?"
+
+"Father is, but mother was a 'Merikan, same as me. Mother's dead."
+
+"And your father is the fisherman yonder?"
+
+"Yes,--but," with a look of pride, "he's got the biggest boat of
+any."
+
+"And only you and your family are ashore here?"
+
+"Yes, and sometimes Mark." She laughed an odd little laugh.
+
+"Mark? Who's he?" he asked quickly.
+
+He had not noticed the sudden coquettish pose and half-affected
+bashfulness of the girl; he was thinking only of the possibility of
+detection by strangers.
+
+"Oh, he is Marco Franti, but I call him 'Mark.' It's the same
+name, you know, and it makes him mad," said the girl, with the same
+suggestion of archness and coquetry.
+
+But all this was lost on Jarman.
+
+"Oh, another Italian," he said, relieved. She turned away a little
+awkwardly when he added, "But you haven't told me YOUR name, you
+know."
+
+"Cara."
+
+"Cara,--that's 'dear' in Italian, isn't it?" he said, with a
+reminiscence of the opera and a half smile.
+
+"Yes," she said a little scornfully, "but it means Carlotta,--
+Charlotte, you know. Some girls call me Charley," she said
+hurriedly.
+
+"I see--Cara--or Carlotta Franti."
+
+To his surprise she burst into a peal of laughter.
+
+"I reckon not YET. Franti is Mark's name, not mine. Mine is
+Murano,--Carlotta Murano. Good-by." She moved away, then stopped
+suddenly and said, "I'm comin' again some time when the thing is
+working," and with a nod of her head, ran away. He looked after
+her; could see the outlines of her youthful figure in her slim
+cotton gown,--limp and clinging in the damp sea air, and the sudden
+revelation of her bare ankles thrust stockingless into canvas
+shoes.
+
+He went back into his cabin, when presently his attention was
+engrossed by an incoming vessel. He made the signals, half
+expecting, almost hoping, that the girl would return to watch him.
+But her figure was already lost in the sand dunes. Yet he fancied
+he still heard the echoes of her voice and his own in this cabin
+which had so long been dumb and voiceless, and he now started at
+every sound. For the first time he became aware of the dreadful
+disorder and untidiness of its uninvaded privacy. He could
+scarcely believe he had been living with his stove, his bed, and
+cooking utensils all in one corner of the barnlike room, and he
+began to put them "to rights" in a rough, hard formality, strongly
+suggestive of his convict experience. He rolled up his blankets
+into a hard cylinder at the head of his cot. He scraped out his
+kettles and saucepans, and even "washed down" the floor, afterwards
+sprinkling clean dry sand, hot with the noonday sunshine, on its
+half-dried boards. In arranging these domestic details he had to
+change the position of a little mirror; and glancing at it for the
+first time in many days, he was dissatisfied with his straggling
+beard,--grown during his voyage from Australia,--and although he
+had retained it as a disguise, he at once shaved it off, leaving
+only a mustache, and revealing a face from which a healthier life
+and out-of-door existence had removed the last traces of vice and
+dissipation. But he did not know it.
+
+All the next day he thought of his fair visitor, and found himself
+often repeating her odd remark that she was "not that kind of
+girl," with a smile that was alternately significant or vacant.
+Evidently she could take care of herself, he thought, although her
+very good looks no doubt had exposed her to the rude attentions of
+fishermen or the common drift of San Francisco wharves. Perhaps
+this was why her father brought her here. When the day passed and
+she came not, he began vaguely to wonder if he had been rude to
+her. Perhaps he had taken her simple remark too seriously; perhaps
+she had expected he would only laugh, and had found him dull and
+stupid. Perhaps he had thrown away an opportunity. An opportunity
+for what? To renew his old life and habits? No, no! The horrors
+of his recent imprisonment and escape were still too fresh in his
+memory; he was not safe yet. Then he wondered if he had not grown
+spiritless and pigeon-livered in his solitude and loneliness. The
+next day he searched for her with his glass, and saw her playing
+with one of the children on the beach,--a very picture of child or
+nymphlike innocence. Perhaps it was because she was not "that kind
+of girl" that she had attracted him. He laughed bitterly. Yes;
+that was very funny; he, an escaped convict, drawn towards honest,
+simple innocence! Yet he knew--he was positive--he had not thought
+of any ill when he spoke to her. He took a singular, a ridiculous
+pride in and credit to himself for that. He repeated it incessantly
+to himself. Then what made her angry? Himself! The devil! Did he
+carry, then, the record of his past life forever in his face--in his
+speech--in his manners? The thought made him sullen. The next day
+he would not look towards the shore; it was wonderful what
+excitement and satisfaction he got out of that strange act of
+self-denial; it made the day seem full that had been so vacant
+before; yet he could not tell why or wherefore. He felt injured,
+but he rather liked it. Yet in the night he was struck with the
+idea that she might have gone back to San Francisco, and he lay
+awake longing for the morning light to satisfy him. Yet when the
+fog cleared, and from a nearer point, behind a sand dune, he
+discovered, by the aid of his glass, that she was seated on the
+sun-warmed sands combing out her long hair like a mermaid, he
+immediately returned to the cabin, and that morning looked no more
+that way. In the afternoon, there being no sails in sight, he
+turned aside from the bay and walked westward towards the ocean,
+halting only at the league-long line of foam which marked the
+breaking Pacific surges. Here he was surprised to see a little
+child, half-naked, following barefooted the creeping line of spume,
+or running after the detached and quivering scraps of foam that
+chased each other over the wet sand, and only a little further on,
+to come upon Cara herself, sitting with her elbows on her knees and
+her round chin in her hands, apparently gazing over the waste of
+waters before her. A sudden and inexplicable shyness overtook him.
+He hesitated, and stepped half-hidden in a gully between the sand
+dunes.
+
+As yet he had not been observed; the young girl called to the child
+and, suddenly rising, threw off her red cap and shawl and quietly
+began to disrobe herself. A couple of coarse towels were at her
+feet. Jarman instantly comprehended that she was going to bathe
+with the child. She undoubtedly knew as well as he did that she
+was safe in that solitude; that no one could intrude upon her
+privacy from the bay shore, nor from the desolate inland trail to
+the sea, without her knowledge. Of his own contiguity she had
+evidently taken no thought, believing him safely housed in his
+cabin beside the semaphore. She lifted her hands, and with a
+sudden movement shook out her long hair and let it fall down her
+back at the same moment that her unloosened blouse began to slip
+from her shoulders. Richard Jarman turned quickly and walked
+noiselessly and rapidly away, until the little hillock had shut out
+the beach.
+
+His retreat was as sudden, unreasoning, and unpremeditated as his
+intrusion. It was not like himself, he knew, and yet it was as
+perfectly instinctive and natural as if he had intruded upon a
+sister. In the South Seas he had seen native girls diving beside
+the vessels for coins, but they had provoked no such instinct as
+that which possessed him now. More than that, he swept a quick,
+wrathful glance along the horizon on either side, and then,
+mounting a remote hillock which still hid him from the beach, he
+sat there and kept watch and ward. From time to time the strong
+sea-breeze brought him the sound of infantine screams and shouts of
+girlish laughter from the unseen shore; he only looked the more
+keenly and suspiciously for any wandering trespasser, and did not
+turn his head. He lay there nearly half an hour, and when the
+sounds had ceased, rose and made his way slowly back to the cabin.
+He had not gone many yards before he heard the twitter of voices
+and smothered laughter behind him. He turned; it was Cara and the
+child,--a girl of six or seven. Cara's face was rosy,--possibly
+from her bath, and possibly from some shame-faced consciousness.
+He slackened his pace, and as they ranged beside him said, "Good-
+morning!"
+
+"Lord!" said Cara, stifling another laugh, "we didn't know you were
+around; we thought you were always 'tending your telegraph, didn't
+we, Lucy?" (to the child, who was convulsed with mirth and
+sheepishness). "Why, we've been taking a wash in the sea." She
+tried to gather up her long hair, which had been left to stray over
+her shoulders and dry in the sunlight, and even made a slight
+pretense of trying to conceal the wet towels they were carrying.
+
+Jarman did not laugh. "If you had told me," he said gravely, "I
+could have kept watch for you with my glass while you were there.
+I could see further than you."
+
+"Tould you see US?" asked the little girl, with hopeful vivacity.
+
+"No!" said Jarman, with masterly evasion. "There are little
+sandhills between this and the beach."
+
+"Then how tould other people see us?" persisted the child.
+
+Jarman could see that the older girl was evidently embarrassed, and
+changed the subject. "I sometimes go out," he said, "when I can
+see there are no vessels in sight, and I take ray glass with me. I
+can always get back in time to make signals. I thought, in fact,"
+he said, glancing at Cara's brightening face, "that I might get as
+far as your house on the shore some day." To his surprise, her
+embarrassment suddenly seemed to increase, although she had looked
+relieved before, and she did not reply. After a moment she said
+abruptly:--
+
+"Did you ever see the sea-lions?"
+
+"No," said Jarman.
+
+"Not the big ones on Seal Rock, beyond the cliffs?" continued the
+girl, in real astonishment.
+
+"No," repeated Jarman. "I never walked in that direction." He
+vaguely remembered that they were a curiosity which sometimes
+attracted parties thither, and for that reason he had avoided the
+spot.
+
+"Why, I have sailed all around the rock in father's boat,"
+continued Cara, with importance. "That's the best way to see 'em,
+and folks from Frisco sometimes takes a sail out there just on
+purpose,--it's too sandy to walk or drive there. But it's only a
+step from here. Look here!" she said suddenly, and frankly opening
+her fine eyes upon him. "I'm going to take Lucy there to-morrow,
+and I'll show you." Jarman felt his cheeks flush quickly with a
+pleasure that embarrassed him. "It won't take long," added Cara,
+mistaking his momentary hesitation, "and you can leave your
+telegraph alone. Nobody will be there, so no one will see you and
+nobody know it."
+
+He would have gone then, anyway, he knew, yet in his absurd self-
+consciousness he was glad that her last suggestion had relieved him
+of a sense of reckless compliance. He assented eagerly, when with
+a wave of her hand, a flash of her white teeth, and the same
+abruptness she had shown at their last parting, she caught Lucy by
+the arm and darted away in a romping race to her dwelling. Jarman
+started after her. He had not wanted to go to her father's house
+particularly, but why was SHE evidently as averse to it? With the
+subtle pleasure that this admission gave him there was a faint
+stirring of suspicion.
+
+It was gone when he found her and Lucy the next morning, radiant
+with the sunshine, before his door. The restraint of their
+previous meetings had been removed in some mysterious way, and they
+chatted gayly as they walked towards the cliffs. She asked him
+frankly many questions about himself, why he had come there, and if
+he "wasn't lonely;" she answered frankly--I fear much more frankly
+than he answered her--the many questions he asked her about herself
+and her friends. When they reached the cliffs they descended to
+the beach, which they found deserted. Before them--it seemed
+scarce a pistol shot from the shore arose a high, broad rock,
+beaten at its base by the long Pacific surf, on which a number of
+shapeless animals were uncouthly disporting. This was Seal Rock,
+the goal of their journey.
+
+Yet after a few moments they no longer looked at it, but seated on
+the sand, with Lucy gathering shells at the water's edge, they
+continued their talk. Presently the talk became eager confidences,
+and then,--there were long and dangerous lapses of silence, when
+both were fain to make perfunctory talk with Lucy on the beach.
+After one of those silences Jarman said:--
+
+"Do you know I rather thought yesterday you didn't want me to come
+to your father's house. Why was that?"
+
+"Because Marco was there," said the girl frankly.
+
+"What had HE to do with it?" said Jarman abruptly.
+
+"He wants to marry me."
+
+"And do you want to marry HIM?" said Jarman quickly.
+
+"No," said the girl passionately.
+
+"Why don't you get rid of him, then?"
+
+"I can't, he's hiding here,--he's father's friend."
+
+"Hiding? What's he been doing?"
+
+"Stealing. Stealing gold-dust from miners. I never cared for him
+anyway. And I hate a thief!"
+
+She looked up quickly. Jarman had risen to his feet, his face
+turned to sea.
+
+"What are you looking at?" she said wonderingly.
+
+"A ship," said Jarman, in a strange, hoarse voice. "I must hurry
+back and signal. I'm afraid I haven't even time to walk with you,--
+I must run for it. Good-by!"
+
+He turned without offering his hand and ran hurriedly in the
+direction of the semaphore.
+
+Cara, discomfited, turned her black eyes to the sea. But it seemed
+empty as before, no sail, no ship on the horizon line, only a
+little schooner slowly beating out of the Gate. Ah, well! It no
+doubt was there,--that sail,--though she could not see it; how keen
+and far-seeing his handsome, honest eyes were! She heaved a little
+sigh, and, calling Lucy to her side, began to make her way homeward.
+But she kept her eyes on the semaphore; it seemed to her the next
+thing to seeing him,--this man she was beginning to love. She waited
+for the gaunt arms to move with the signal of the vessel he had
+seen. But, strange to say, it was motionless. He must have been
+mistaken.
+
+All this, however, was driven from her mind in the excitement that
+she found on her return thrilling her own family. They had been
+warned that a police boat with detectives on board had been
+dispatched from San Francisco to the cove. Luckily, they had
+managed to convey the fugitive Franti on board a coastwise
+schooner,--Cara started as she remembered the one she had seen
+beating out of the Gate,--and he was now safe from pursuit. Cara
+felt relieved; at the same time she felt a strange joy at her
+heart, which sent the conscious blood to her cheek. She was not
+thinking of the escaped Marco, but of Jarman. Later, when the
+police boat arrived,--whether the detectives had been forewarned of
+Marco's escape or not,--they contented themselves with a formal
+search of the little fishing-hut and departed. But their boat
+remained lying off the shore.
+
+That night Cara tossed sleeplessly on her bed; she was sorry she
+had ever spoken of Marco to Jarman. It was unnecessary now;
+perhaps he disbelieved her and thought she loved Marco; perhaps
+that was the reason of his strange and abrupt leave-taking that
+afternoon. She longed for the next day, she could tell him
+everything now.
+
+Towards morning she slept fitfully, but was awakened by the sound
+of voices on the sands outside the hut. Its flimsy structure,
+already warped by the fierce day-long sun, allowed her through
+chinks and crevices not only to recognize the voices of the
+detectives, but to hear distinctly what they said. Suddenly the
+name of Jarman struck upon her ear. She sat upright in bed,
+breathless.
+
+"Are you sure it's the same man?" asked a second voice.
+
+"Perfectly," answered the first. "He was tracked to 'Frisco, but
+disappeared the day he landed. We knew from our agents that he
+never left the bay. And when we found that somebody answering his
+description got the post of telegraph operator out here, we knew
+that we had spotted our man and the L250 sterling offered for his
+capture."
+
+"But that was five months ago. Why didn't you take him then?"
+
+"Couldn't! For we couldn't hold him without the extradition papers
+from Australia. We sent for 'em; they're due to-day or to-morrow
+on the mail steamer."
+
+"But he might have got away at any time?"
+
+"He couldn't without our knowing it. Don't you see? Every time
+the signals went up, we in San Francisco knew he was at his post.
+We had him safe, out here on these sandhills, as if he'd been under
+lock and key in 'Frisco. He was his own keeper, and reported to
+us."
+
+"But since you're here and expect the papers to-morrow, why don't
+you 'cop' him now?"
+
+"Because there isn't a judge in San Francisco that would hold him a
+moment unless he had those extradition papers before him. He'd be
+discharged, and escape."
+
+"Then what are you going to do?"
+
+"As soon as the steamer is signaled in 'Frisco, we'll board her in
+the bay, get the papers, and drop down upon him."
+
+"I see; and as HE'S the signal man, the darned fool"--
+
+"Will give the signal himself."
+
+The laugh that followed was so cruel that the young girl shuddered.
+But the next moment she slipped from the bed, erect, pale, and
+determined.
+
+The voices seemed gradually to retreat. She dressed herself
+hurriedly, and passed noiselessly through the room of her still
+sleeping parent, and passed out. A gray fog was lifting slowly
+over the sands and sea, and the police boat was gone. She no
+longer hesitated, but ran quickly in the direction of Jarman's
+cabin. As she ran, her mind seemed to be swept clear of all
+illusion and fancy; she saw plainly everything that had happened;
+she knew the mystery of Jarman's presence here,--the secret of his
+life,--the dreadful cruelty of her remark to him,--the man that she
+knew now she loved. The sun was painting the black arms of the
+semaphore as she toiled over the last stretch of sand and knocked
+loudly at the door. There was no reply. She knocked again; the
+cabin was silent. Had he already fled?--and without seeing her and
+knowing all! She tried the handle of the door; it yielded; she
+stepped boldly into the room, with his name upon her lips. He was
+lying fully dressed upon his couch. She ran eagerly to his side
+and stopped. It needed only a single glance at his congested face,
+his lips parted with his heavy breath, to see that the man was
+hopelessly, helplessly drunk!
+
+Yet even then, without knowing that it was her thoughtless speech
+which had driven him to seek this foolish oblivion of remorse and
+sorrow, she saw only his HELPLESSNESS. She tried in vain to rouse
+him; he only muttered a few incoherent words and sank back again.
+She looked despairingly around. Something must be done; the
+steamer might be visible at any moment. Ah, yes,--the telescope!
+She seized it and swept the horizon. There was a faint streak of
+haze against the line of sea and sky, abreast the Golden Gate. He
+had once told her what it meant. It WAS the steamer! A sudden
+thought leaped into her clear and active brain. If the police boat
+should chance to see that haze too, and saw no warning signal from
+the semaphore, they would suspect something. That signal must be
+made, BUT NOT THE RIGHT ONE! She remembered quickly how he had
+explained to her the difference between the signals for a coasting
+steamer and the one that brought the mails. At that distance the
+police boat could not detect whether the semaphore's arms were
+extended to perfect right angles for the mail steamer, or if the
+left arm slightly deflected for a coasting steamer. She ran out to
+the windlass and seized the crank. For a moment it defied her
+strength; she redoubled her efforts: it began to creak and groan,
+the great arms were slowly uplifted, and the signal made.
+
+But the familiar sounds of the moving machinery had pierced through
+Jarman's sluggish consciousness as no other sound in heaven or
+earth could have done, and awakened him to the one dominant sense
+he had left,--the habit of duty. She heard him roll from the bed
+with an oath, stumble to the door, and saw him dash forward with an
+affrighted face, and plunge his head into a bucket of water. He
+emerged from it pale and dripping, but with the full light of
+reason and consciousness in his eyes. He started when he saw her;
+even then she would have fled, but he caught her firmly by the
+wrist.
+
+Then with a hurried, trembling voice she told him all and
+everything. He listened in silence, and only at the end raised her
+hand gravely to his lips.
+
+"And now," she added tremulously, "you must fly--quick--at once; or
+it will be too late!"
+
+But Richard Jarman walked slowly to the door of his cabin, still
+holding her hand, and said quietly, pointing to his only chair:--
+
+"Sit down; we must talk first."
+
+What they said was never known, but a few moments later they left
+the cabin, Jarman carrying in a small bag all his possessions, and
+Cara leaning on his arm. An hour later the priest of the Mission
+Dolores was called upon to unite in matrimony a frank, honest-
+looking sailor and an Italian gypsy-looking girl. There were many
+hasty unions in those days, and the Holy Church was only too glad
+to be able to give them its legal indorsement. But the good Padre
+was a little sorry for the honest sailor, and gave the girl some
+serious advice.
+
+The San Francisco papers the next morning threw some dubious light
+upon the matter in a paragraph headed, "Another Police Fiasco."
+
+"We understand that the indefatigable police of San Francisco,
+after ascertaining that Marco Franti, the noted gold-dust thief,
+was hiding on the shore near the Presidio, proceeded there with
+great solemnity, and arrived, as usual, a few hours after their man
+had escaped. But the climax of incapacity was reached when, as it
+is alleged, the sweetheart of the absconding Franti, and daughter
+of a brother fisherman, eloped still later, and joined her lover
+under the very noses of the police. The attempt of the detectives
+to excuse themselves at headquarters by reporting that they were
+also on the track of an alleged escaped Sydney Duck was received
+with the derision and skepticism it deserved, as it seemed that
+these worthies mistook the mail steamer, which they should have
+boarded to get certain extradition papers, for a coasting steamer."
+
+ . . . . . .
+
+It was not until four years later that Murano was delighted to
+recognize in the husband of his long-lost daughter a very rich
+cattle-owner in Southern California, called Jarman; but he never
+knew that he had been an escaped convict from Sydney, who had
+lately received a full pardon through the instrumentality of divers
+distinguished people in Australia.
+
+
+
+AN ESMERALDA OF ROCKY CANYON
+
+
+It is to be feared that the hero of this chronicle began life as an
+impostor. He was offered to the credulous and sympathetic family
+of a San Francisco citizen as a lamb, who, unless bought as a
+playmate for the children, would inevitably pass into the butcher's
+hands. A combination of refined sensibility and urban ignorance of
+nature prevented them from discerning certain glaring facts that
+betrayed his caprid origin. So a ribbon was duly tied round his
+neck, and in pleasing emulation of the legendary "Mary," he was
+taken to school by the confiding children. Here, alas the fraud
+was discovered, and history was reversed by his being turned out by
+the teacher, because he was NOT "a lamb at school." Nevertheless,
+the kind-hearted mother of the family persisted in retaining him,
+on the plea that he might yet become "useful." To her husband's
+feeble suggestion of "gloves," she returned a scornful negative,
+and spoke of the weakly infant of a neighbor, who might later
+receive nourishment from this providential animal. But even this
+hope was destroyed by the eventual discovery of his sex. Nothing
+remained now but to accept him as an ordinary kid, and to find
+amusement in his accomplishments,--eating, climbing, and butting.
+It must be confessed that these were of a superior quality; a
+capacity to eat everything from a cambric handkerchief to an
+election poster, an agility which brought him even to the roofs of
+houses, and a power of overturning by a single push the chubbiest
+child who opposed him, made him a fearful joy to the nursery. This
+last quality was incautiously developed in him by a negro boy-
+servant, who, later, was hurriedly propelled down a flight of
+stairs by his too proficient scholar. Having once tasted victory,
+"Billy" needed no further incitement to his performances. The
+small wagon which he sometimes consented to draw for the benefit of
+the children never hindered his attempts to butt the passer-by. On
+the contrary, on well-known scientific principles he added the
+impact of the bodies of the children projected over his head in his
+charge, and the infelicitous pedestrian found himself not only
+knocked off his legs by Billy, but bombarded by the whole nursery.
+
+Delightful as was this recreation to juvenile limbs, it was felt to
+be dangerous to the adult public. Indignant protestations were
+made, and as Billy could not be kept in the house, he may be said
+to have at last butted himself out of that sympathetic family and
+into a hard and unfeeling world. One morning he broke his tether
+in the small back yard. For several days thereafter he displayed
+himself in guilty freedom on the tops of adjacent walls and
+outhouses. The San Francisco suburb where his credulous protectors
+lived was still in a volcanic state of disruption, caused by the
+grading of new streets through rocks and sandhills. In consequence
+the roofs of some houses were on the level of the doorsteps of
+others, and were especially adapted to Billy's performances. One
+afternoon, to the admiring and perplexed eyes of the nursery, he
+was discovered standing on the apex of a neighbor's new Elizabethan
+chimney, on a space scarcely larger than the crown of a hat, calmly
+surveying the world beneath him. High infantile voices appealed to
+him in vain; baby arms were outstretched to him in hopeless
+invitation; he remained exalted and obdurate, like Milton's hero,
+probably by his own merit "raised to that bad eminence." Indeed,
+there was already something Satanic in his budding horns and
+pointed mask as the smoke curled softly around him. Then he
+appropriately vanished, and San Francisco knew him no more. At the
+same time, however, one Owen M'Ginnis, a neighboring sandhill
+squatter, also disappeared, leaving San Francisco for the southern
+mines, and he was said to have taken Billy with him,--for no
+conceivable reason except for companionship. Howbeit, it was the
+turning-point of Billy's career; such restraint as kindness,
+civilization, or even policemen had exercised upon his nature was
+gone. He retained, I fear, a certain wicked intelligence, picked
+up in San Francisco with the newspapers and theatrical and election
+posters he had consumed. He reappeared at Rocky Canyon among the
+miners as an exceedingly agile chamois, with the low cunning of a
+satyr. That was all that civilization had done for him!
+
+If Mr. M'Ginnis had fondly conceived that he would make Billy
+"useful," as well as companionable, he was singularly mistaken.
+Horses and mules were scarce in Rocky Canyon, and he attempted to
+utilize Billy by making him draw a small cart, laden with
+auriferous earth, from his claim to the river. Billy, rapidly
+gaining strength, was quite equal to the task, but alas! not his
+inborn propensity. An incautious gesture from the first passing
+miner Billy chose to construe into the usual challenge. Lowering
+his head, from which his budding horns had been already pruned by
+his master, he instantly went for his challenger, cart and all.
+Again the scientific law already pointed out prevailed. With the
+shock of the onset the entire contents of the cart arose and poured
+over the astonished miner, burying him from sight. In any other
+but a Californian mining-camp such a propensity in a draught animal
+would have been condemned, on account of the damage and suffering
+it entailed, but in Rocky Canyon it proved unprofitable to the
+owner from the very amusement and interest it excited. Miners lay
+in wait for Billy with a "greenhorn," or new-comer, whom they would
+put up to challenge the animal by some indiscreet gesture. In this
+way hardly a cartload of "pay-gravel" ever arrived safely at its
+destination, and the unfortunate M'Ginnis was compelled to withdraw
+Billy as a beast of burden. It was whispered that so great had his
+propensity become, under repeated provocation, that M'Ginnis
+himself was no longer safe. Going ahead of his cart one day to
+remove a fallen bough from the trail, Billy construed the act of
+stooping into a playful challenge from his master,--with the
+inevitable result.
+
+The next day M'Ginnis appeared with a wheelbarrow, but without
+Billy. From that day he was relegated to the rocky crags above the
+camp, from whence he was only lured occasionally by the mischievous
+miners, who wished to exhibit his peculiar performances. For
+although Billy had ample food and sustenance among the crags, he
+had still a civilized longing for posters; and whenever a circus, a
+concert, or a political meeting was "billed" in the settlement, he
+was on hand while the paste was yet fresh and succulent. In this
+way it was averred that he once removed a gigantic theatre bill
+setting forth the charms of the "Sacramento Pet," and being caught
+in the act by the advance agent, was pursued through the main
+street, carrying the damp bill on his horns, eventually affixing
+it, after his own peculiar fashion, on the back of Judge
+Boompointer, who was standing in front of his own court-house.
+
+In connection with the visits of this young lady another story
+concerning Billy survives in the legends of Rocky Canyon. Colonel
+Starbottle was at that time passing through the settlement on
+election business, and it was part of his chivalrous admiration for
+the sex to pay a visit to the pretty actress. The single waiting-
+room of the little hotel gave upon the veranda, which was also
+level with the street. After a brief yet gallant interview, in
+which he oratorically expressed the gratitude of the settlement
+with old-fashioned Southern courtesy, Colonel Starbottle lifted the
+chubby little hand of the "Pet" to his lips, and, with a low bow,
+backed out upon the veranda. But the Pet was astounded by his
+instant reappearance, and by his apparently casting himself
+passionately and hurriedly at her feet! It is needless to say that
+he was followed closely by Billy, who from the street had casually
+noticed him, and construed his novel exit into an ungentlemanly
+challenge.
+
+Billy's visits, however, became less frequent, and as Rocky Canyon
+underwent the changes incidental to mining settlements, he was
+presently forgotten in the invasion of a few Southwestern families,
+and the adoption of amusements less practical and turbulent than he
+had afforded. It was alleged that he was still seen in the more
+secluded fastnesses of the mountains, having reverted to a wild
+state, and it was suggested by one or two of the more adventurous
+that he might yet become edible, and a fair object of chase. A
+traveler through the Upper Pass of the canyon related how he had
+seen a savage-looking, hairy animal like a small elk perched upon
+inaccessible rocks, but always out of gunshot. But these and other
+legends were set at naught and overthrown by an unexpected incident.
+
+The Pioneer Coach was toiling up the long grade towards Skinners
+Pass when Yuba Bill suddenly pulled up, with his feet on the brake.
+
+"Jimminy!" he ejaculated, drawing a deep breath.
+
+The startled passenger beside him on the box followed the direction
+of his eyes. Through an opening in the wayside pines he could see,
+a few hundred yards away, a cuplike hollow in the hillside of the
+vividest green. In the centre a young girl of fifteen or sixteen
+was dancing and keeping step to the castanet "click" of a pair of
+"bones," such as negro minstrels use, held in her hands above her
+head. But, more singular still, a few paces before her a large
+goat, with its neck roughly wreathed with flowers and vines, was
+taking ungainly bounds and leaps in imitation of its companion.
+The wild background of the Sierras, the pastoral hollow, the
+incongruousness of the figures, and the vivid color of the girl's
+red flannel petticoat showing beneath her calico skirt, that had
+been pinned around her waist, made a striking picture, which by
+this time had attracted all eyes. Perhaps the dancing of the girl
+suggested a negro "break-down" rather than any known sylvan
+measure; but all this, and even the clatter of the bones, was made
+gracious by the distance.
+
+"Esmeralda! by the living Harry!" shouted the excited passenger on
+the box.
+
+Yuba Bill took his feet off the brake, and turned a look of deep
+scorn upon his companion as he gathered the reins again.
+
+"It's that blanked goat, outer Rocky Canyon beyond, and Polly
+Harkness! How did she ever come to take up with HIM?"
+
+Nevertheless, as soon as the coach reached Rocky Canyon, the story
+was quickly told by the passengers, corroborated by Yuba Bill, and
+highly colored by the observer on the box-seat. Harkness was known
+to be a new-comer who lived with his wife and only daughter on the
+other side of Skinners Pass. He was a "logger" and charcoal-
+burner, who had eaten his way into the serried ranks of pines below
+the pass, and established in these efforts an almost insurmountable
+cordon of fallen trees, stripped bark, and charcoal pits around the
+clearing where his rude log hut stood,--which kept his seclusion
+unbroken. He was said to be a half-savage mountaineer from Georgia,
+in whose rude fastnesses he had distilled unlawful whiskey, and that
+his tastes and habits unfitted him for civilization. His wife
+chewed and smoked; he was believed to make a fiery brew of his own
+from acorns and pine nuts; he seldom came to Rocky Canyon except for
+provisions; his logs were slipped down a "shoot" or slide to the
+river, where they voyaged once a month to a distant mill, but HE did
+not accompany them. The daughter, seldom seen at Rocky Canyon, was
+a half-grown girl, brown as autumn fern, wild-eyed, disheveled, in a
+homespun skirt, sunbonnet, and boy's brogans. Such were the plain
+facts which skeptical Rocky Canyon opposed to the passengers'
+legends. Nevertheless, some of the younger miners found it not out
+of their way to go over Skinners Pass on the journey to the river,
+but with what success was not told. It was said, however, that a
+celebrated New York artist, making a tour of California, was on the
+coach one day going through the pass, and preserved the memory of
+what he saw there in a well-known picture entitled "Dancing Nymph
+and Satyr," said by competent critics to be "replete with the study
+of Greek life." This did not affect Rocky Canyon, where the study
+of mythology was presumably displaced by an experience of more
+wonderful flesh-and-blood people, but later it was remembered with
+some significance.
+
+Among the improvements already noted, a zinc and wooden chapel had
+been erected in the main street, where a certain popular revivalist
+preacher of a peculiar Southwestern sect regularly held exhortatory
+services. His rude emotional power over his ignorant fellow-
+sectarians was well known, while curiosity drew others. His effect
+upon the females of his flock was hysterical and sensational.
+Women prematurely aged by frontier drudgery and child-bearing,
+girls who had known only the rigors and pains of a half-equipped,
+ill-nourished youth in their battling with the hard realities of
+nature around them, all found a strange fascination in the
+extravagant glories and privileges of the unseen world he pictured
+to them, which they might have found in the fairy tales and nursery
+legends of civilized children, had they known them. Personally he
+was not attractive; his thin pointed face, and bushy hair rising on
+either side of his square forehead in two rounded knots, and his
+long, straggling, wiry beard dropping from a strong neck and
+shoulders, were indeed of a common Southwestern type; yet in him
+they suggested something more. This was voiced by a miner who
+attended his first service, and as the Reverend Mr. Withholder rose
+in the pulpit, the former was heard to audibly ejaculate, "Dod
+blasted!--if it ain't Billy!" But when on the following Sunday, to
+everybody's astonishment, Polly Harkness, in a new white muslin
+frock and broad-brimmed Leghorn hat, appeared before the church
+door with the real Billy, and exchanged conversation with the
+preacher, the likeness was appalling.
+
+I grieve to say that the goat was at once christened by Rocky
+Canyon as "The Reverend Billy," and the minister himself was
+Billy's "brother." More than that, when an attempt was made by
+outsiders, during the service, to inveigle the tethered goat into
+his old butting performances, and he took not the least notice of
+their insults and challenges, the epithet "blanked hypocrite" was
+added to his title.
+
+Had he really reformed? Had his pastoral life with his nymph-like
+mistress completely cured him of his pugnacious propensity, or had
+he simply found it was inconsistent with his dancing, and seriously
+interfered with his "fancy steps"? Had he found tracts and hymn-
+books were as edible as theatre posters? These were questions that
+Rocky canyon discussed lightly, although there was always the more
+serious mystery of the relations of the Reverend Mr. Withholder,
+Polly Harkness, and the goat towards each other. The appearance of
+Polly at church was no doubt due to the minister's active canvass
+of the districts. But had he ever heard of Polly's dancing with
+the goat? And where in this plain, angular, badly dressed Polly
+was hidden that beautiful vision of the dancing nymph which had
+enthralled so many? And when had Billy ever given any suggestion
+of his Terpsichorean abilities--before or since? Were there any
+"points" of the kind to be discerned in him now? None! Was it not
+more probable that the Reverend Mr. Withholder had himself been
+dancing with Polly, and been mistaken for the goat? Passengers who
+could have been so deceived with regard to Polly's beauty might
+have as easily mistaken the minister for Billy. About this time
+another incident occurred which increased the mystery.
+
+The only male in the settlement who apparently dissented from the
+popular opinion regarding Polly was a new-comer, Jack Filgee.
+While discrediting her performance with the goat,--which he had
+never seen,--he was evidently greatly prepossessed with the girl
+herself. Unfortunately, he was equally addicted to drinking, and
+as he was exceedingly shy and timid when sober, and quite
+unpresentable at other times, his wooing, if it could be so called,
+progressed but slowly. Yet when he found that Polly went to
+church, he listened so far to the exhortations of the Reverend Mr.
+Withholder as to promise to come to "Bible class" immediately after
+the Sunday service. It was a hot afternoon, and Jack, who had kept
+sober for two days, incautiously fortified himself for the ordeal
+by taking a drink before arriving. He was nervously early, and
+immediately took a seat in the empty church near the open door.
+The quiet of the building, the drowsy buzzing of flies, and perhaps
+the soporific effect of the liquor caused his eyes to close and his
+head to fall forward on his breast repeatedly. He was recovering
+himself for the fourth time when he suddenly received a violent
+cuff on the ear, and was knocked backward off the bench on which he
+was sitting. That was all he knew.
+
+He picked himself up with a certain dignity, partly new to him, and
+partly the result of his condition, and staggered, somewhat bruised
+and disheveled, to the nearest saloon. Here a few frequenters who
+had seen him pass, who knew his errand and the devotion to Polly
+which had induced it, exhibited a natural concern.
+
+"How's things down at the gospel shop?" said one. "Look as ef
+you'd been wrastlin' with the Sperit, Jack!"
+
+"Old man must hev exhorted pow'ful," said another, glancing at his
+disordered Sunday attire.
+
+"Ain't be'n hevin' a row with Polly? I'm told she slings an awful
+left."
+
+Jack, instead of replying, poured out a dram of whiskey, drank it,
+and putting down his glass, leaned heavily against the counter as
+he surveyed his questioners with a sorrow chastened by reproachful
+dignity.
+
+"I'm a stranger here, gentlemen," he said slowly "ye've known me
+only a little; but ez ye've seen me both blind drunk and sober, I
+reckon ye've caught on to my gin'ral gait! Now I wanter put it to
+you, ez fair-minded men, ef you ever saw me strike a parson?"
+
+"No," said a chorus of sympathetic voices. The barkeeper, however,
+with a swift recollection of Polly and the Reverend Withholder, and
+some possible contingent jealousy in Jack, added prudently, "Not
+yet."
+
+The chorus instantly added reflectively, "Well, no not yet."
+
+"Did ye ever," continued Jack solemnly, "know me to cuss, sass,
+bully-rag, or say anything agin parsons, or the church?"
+
+"No," said the crowd, overthrowing prudence in curiosity, "ye never
+did,--we swear it! And now, what's up?"
+
+"I ain't what you call 'a member in good standin','" he went on,
+artistically protracting his climax. "I ain't be'n convicted o'
+sin; I ain't 'a meek an' lowly follower;' I ain't be'n exactly what
+I orter be'n; I hevn't lived anywhere up to my lights; but is thet
+a reason why a parson should strike me?"
+
+"Why? What? When did he? Who did?" asked the eager crowd, with
+one voice.
+
+Jack then painfully related how he had been invited by the Reverend
+Mr. Withholder to attend the Bible class. How he had arrived
+early, and found the church empty. How he had taken a seat near
+the door to be handy when the parson came. How he just felt
+"kinder kam and good," listenin' to the flies buzzing, and must
+have fallen asleep,--only he pulled himself up every time,--though,
+after all, it warn't no crime to fall asleep in an empty church!
+How "all of a suddent" the parson came in, "give him a clip side o'
+the head," and knocked him off the bench, and left him there!
+
+"But what did he SAY?" queried the crowd.
+
+"Nuthin'. Afore I could get up, he got away."
+
+"Are you sure it was him?" they asked. "You know you SAY you was
+asleep."
+
+"Am I sure?" repeated Jack scornfully. "Don't I know thet face and
+beard? Didn't I feel it hangin' over me?"
+
+"What are you going to do about it?" continued the crowd eagerly.
+
+"Wait till he comes out--and you'll see," said Jack, with dignity.
+
+This was enough for the crowd; they gathered excitedly at the door,
+where Jack was already standing, looking towards the church. The
+moments dragged slowly; it might be a long meeting. Suddenly the
+church door opened and a figure appeared, looking up and down the
+street. Jack colored--he recognized Polly--and stepped out into
+the road. The crowd delicately, but somewhat disappointedly, drew
+back in the saloon. They did not care to interfere in THAT sort of
+thing.
+
+Polly saw him, and came hurriedly towards him. She was holding
+something in her hand.
+
+"I picked this up on the church floor," she said shyly, "so I
+reckoned you HAD be'n there,--though the parson said you hadn't,--
+and I just excused myself and ran out to give it ye. It's yourn,
+ain't it?" She held up a gold specimen pin, which he had put on in
+honor of the occasion. "I had a harder time, though, to git this
+yer,--it's yourn too,--for Billy was laying down in the yard, back
+o' the church, and just comf'bly swallerin' it."
+
+"Who?" said Jack quickly.
+
+"Billy,--my goat."
+
+Jack drew a long breath, and glanced back at the saloon. "Ye ain't
+goin' back to class now, are ye?" he said hurriedly. "Ef you ain't,
+I'll--I'll see ye home."
+
+"I don't mind," said Polly demurely, "if it ain't takin' ye outer
+y'ur way."
+
+Jack offered his arm, and hurrying past the saloon, the happy pair
+were soon on the road to Skinners Pass.
+
+
+Jack did not, I regret to say, confess his blunder, but left the
+Reverend Mr. Withholder to remain under suspicion of having
+committed an unprovoked assault and battery. It was characteristic
+of Rocky Canyon, however, that this suspicion, far from injuring
+his clerical reputation, incited a respect that had been hitherto
+denied him. A man who could hit out straight from the shoulder
+had, in the language of the critics, "suthin' in him." Oddly
+enough, the crowd that had at first sympathized with Jack now began
+to admit provocations. His subsequent silence, a disposition when
+questioned on the subject to smile inanely, and, later, when
+insidiously asked if he had ever seen Polly dancing with the goat,
+his bursting into uproarious laughter completely turned the current
+of opinion against him. The public mind, however, soon became
+engrossed by a more interesting incident.
+
+The Reverend Mr. Withholder had organized a series of Biblical
+tableaux at Skinnerstown for the benefit of his church.
+Illustrations were to be given of "Rebecca at the Well," "The
+Finding of Moses," "Joseph and his Brethren;" but Rocky Canyon was
+more particularly excited by the announcement that Polly Harkness
+would personate "Jephthah's Daughter." On the evening of the
+performance, however, it was found that this tableau had been
+withdrawn and another substituted, for reasons not given. Rocky
+Canyon, naturally indignant at this omission to represent native
+talent, indulged in a hundred wild surmises. But it was generally
+believed that Jack Filgee's revengeful animosity to the Reverend
+Mr. Withholder was at the bottom of it. Jack, as usual, smiled
+inanely, but nothing was to be got from him. It was not until a
+few days later, when another incident crowned the climax of these
+mysteries, that a full disclosure came from his lips.
+
+One morning a flaming poster was displayed at Rocky Canyon, with a
+charming picture of the "Sacramento Pet" in the briefest of skirts,
+disporting with a tambourine before a goat garlanded with flowers,
+who bore, however, an undoubted likeness to Billy. The text in
+enormous letters, and bristling with points of admiration, stated
+that the "Pet" would appear as "Esmeralda," assisted by a performing
+goat, especially trained by the gifted actress. The goat would
+dance, play cards, and perform those tricks of magic familiar to the
+readers of Victor Hugo's beautiful story of the "Hunchback of Notre
+Dame," and finally knock down and overthrow the designing seducer,
+Captain Phoebus. The marvelous spectacle would be produced under
+the patronage of the Hon. Colonel Starbottle and the Mayor of
+Skinnerstown.
+
+As all Rocky Canyon gathered open-mouthed around the poster, Jack
+demurely joined the group. Every eye was turned upon him.
+
+"It don't look as if yer Polly was in THIS show, any more than she
+was in the tablows," said one, trying to conceal his curiosity
+under a slight sneer. "She don't seem to be doin' any dancin'!"
+
+"She never DID any dancin'," said Jack, with a smile.
+
+"Never DID! Then what was all these yarns about her dancin' up at
+the pass?"
+
+"It was the Sacramento Pet who did all the dancin'; Polly only LENT
+the goat. Ye see, the Pet kinder took a shine to Billy arter he
+bowled Starbottle over thet day at the hotel, and she thought she
+might teach him tricks. So she DID, doing all her teachin' and
+stage-rehearsin' up there at the pass, so's to be outer sight, and
+keep this thing dark. She bribed Polly to lend her the goat and
+keep her secret, and Polly never let on a word to anybody but me."
+
+"Then it was the Pet that Yuba Bill saw dancin' from the coach?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And that yer artist from New York painted as an 'Imp and Satire'?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then that's how Polly didn't show up in them tablows at
+Skinnerstown? It was Withholder who kinder smelt a rat, eh? and
+found out it was only a theayter gal all along that did the
+dancin'?"
+
+"Well, you see," said Jack, with affected hesitation, "thet's
+another yarn. I don't know mebbe ez I oughter tell it. Et ain't
+got anything to do with this advertisement o' the Pet, and might be
+rough on old man Withholder! Ye mustn't ask me, boys."
+
+But there was that in his eye, and above all in this lazy
+procrastination of the true humorist when he is approaching his
+climax, which rendered the crowd clamorous and unappeasable. They
+WOULD have the story!
+
+Seeing which, Jack leaned back against a rock with great gravity,
+put his hands in his pockets, looked discontentedly at the ground,
+and began: "You see, boys, old Parson Withholder had heard all
+these yarns about Polly and thet trick-goat, and he kinder reckoned
+that she might do for some one of his tablows. So he axed her if
+she'd mind standin' with the goat and a tambourine for Jephthah's
+Daughter, at about the time when old Jeph comes home, sailin' in
+and vowin' he'll kill the first thing he sees,--jest as it is in
+the Bible story. Well, Polly didn't like to say it wasn't HER that
+performed with the goat, but the Pet, for thet would give the Pet
+dead away; so Polly agrees to come thar with the goat and rehearse
+the tablow. Well, Polly's thar, a little shy; and Billy,--you bet
+HE'S all there, and ready for the fun; but the darned fool who
+plays Jephthah ain't worth shucks, and when HE comes in he does
+nothin' but grin at Polly and seem skeert at the goat. This makes
+old Withholder jest wild, and at last he goes on the platform
+hisself to show them how the thing oughter be done. So he comes
+bustlin' and prancin' in, and ketches sight o' Polly dancin' in
+with the goat to welcome him; and then he clasps his hands--so--and
+drops on his knees, and hangs down his head--so--and sez, 'Me
+chyld! me vow! Oh, heavens!' But jest then Billy--who's gettin'
+rather tired o' all this foolishness--kinder slues round on his
+hind legs, and ketches sight o' the parson!" Jack paused a moment,
+and thrusting his hands still deeper in his pockets, said lazily,
+"I don't know if you fellers have noticed how much old Withholder
+looks like Billy?"
+
+There was a rapid and impatient chorus of "Yes! yes!" and "Go on!"
+
+"Well," continued Jack, "when Billy sees Withholder kneelin' thar
+with his head down, he gives a kind o' joyous leap and claps his
+hoofs together, ez much ez to say, 'I'm on in this scene,' drops
+his own head, and jest lights out for the parson!"
+
+"And butts him clean through the side scenes into the street,"
+interrupted a delighted auditor.
+
+But Jack's face never changed. "Ye think so?" he said gravely.
+"But thet's jest whar ye slip up; and thet's jest whar Billy
+slipped up!" he added slowly. "Mebbe ye've noticed, too, thet the
+parson's built kinder solid about the head and shoulders. It
+mought hev be'n thet, or thet Billy didn't get a fair start, but
+thet goat went down on his fore legs like a shot, and the parson
+gave one heave, and jest scooted him off the platform! Then the
+parson reckoned thet this yer 'tablow' had better be left out, as
+thar didn't seem to be any other man who could play Jephthah, and
+it wasn't dignified for HIM to take the part. But the parson
+allowed thet it might be a great moral lesson to Billy!"
+
+And it WAS, for from that moment Billy never attempted to butt
+again. He performed with great docility later on in the Pet's
+engagement at Skinnerstown; he played a distinguished role
+throughout the provinces; he had had the advantages of Art from
+"the Pet," and of Simplicity from Polly, but only Rocky Canyon knew
+that his real education had come with his first rehearsal with the
+Reverend Mr. Withholder.
+
+
+
+DICK SPINDLER'S FAMILY CHRISTMAS
+
+
+There was surprise and sometimes disappointment in Rough and Ready,
+when it was known that Dick Spindler intended to give a "family"
+Christmas party at his own house. That he should take an early
+opportunity to celebrate his good fortune and show hospitality was
+only expected from the man who had just made a handsome "strike" on
+his claim; but that it should assume so conservative, old-
+fashioned, and respectable a form was quite unlooked-for by Rough
+and Ready, and was thought by some a trifle pretentious. There
+were not half-a-dozen families in Rough and Ready; nobody ever knew
+before that Spindler had any relations, and this "ringing in" of
+strangers to the settlement seemed to indicate at least a lack of
+public spirit. "He might," urged one of his critics, "hev given
+the boys,--that had worked alongside o' him in the ditches by day,
+and slung lies with him around the camp-fire by night,--he might
+hev given them a square 'blow out,' and kep' the leavin's for his
+old Spindler crew, just as other families do. Why, when old man
+Scudder had his house-raisin' last year, his family lived for a
+week on what was left over, arter the boys had waltzed through the
+house that night,--and the Scudders warn't strangers, either." It
+was also evident that there was an uneasy feeling that Spindler's
+action indicated an unhallowed leaning towards the minority of
+respectability and exclusiveness, and a desertion--without the
+excuse of matrimony--of the convivial and independent bachelor
+majority of Rough and Ready.
+
+"Ef he was stuck after some gal and was kinder looking ahead, I'd
+hev understood it," argued another critic.
+
+"Don't ye be too sure he ain't," said Uncle Jim Starbuck gloomily.
+"Ye'll find that some blamed woman is at the bottom of this yer
+'family' gathering. That and trouble ez almost all they're made
+for!"
+
+There happened to be some truth in this dark prophecy, but none of
+the kind that the misogynist supposed. In fact, Spindler had
+called a few evenings before at the house of the Rev. Mr. Saltover,
+and Mrs. Saltover, having one of her "Saleratus headaches," had
+turned him over to her widow sister, Mrs. Huldy Price, who
+obediently bestowed upon him that practical and critical attention
+which she divided with the stocking she was darning. She was a
+woman of thirty-five, of singular nerve and practical wisdom, who
+had once smuggled her wounded husband home from a border affray,
+calmly made coffee for his deceived pursuers while he lay hidden in
+the loft, walked four miles for that medical assistance which
+arrived too late to save him, buried him secretly in his own
+"quarter section," with only one other witness and mourner, and so
+saved her position and property in that wild community, who
+believed he had fled. There was very little of this experience to
+be traced in her round, fresh-colored brunette cheek, her calm
+black eyes, set in a prickly hedge of stiff lashes, her plump
+figure, or her frank, courageous laugh. The latter appeared as a
+smile when she welcomed Mr. Spindler. "She hadn't seen him for a
+coon's age," but "reckoned he was busy fixin' up his new house."
+
+"Well, yes," said Spindler, with a slight hesitation, "ye see, I'm
+reckonin' to hev a kinder Christmas gatherin' of my"--he was about
+to say "folks," but dismissed it for "relations," and finally
+settled upon "relatives" as being more correct in a preacher's
+house.
+
+Mrs. Price thought it a very good idea. Christmas was the natural
+season for the family to gather to "see who's here and who's there,
+who's gettin' on and who isn't, and who's dead and buried. It was
+lucky for them who were so placed that they could do so and be
+joyful." Her invincible philosophy probably carried her past any
+dangerous recollections of the lonely grave in Kansas, and holding
+up the stocking to the light, she glanced cheerfully along its
+level to Mr. Spindler's embarrassed face by the fire.
+
+"Well, I can't say much ez to that," responded Spindler, still
+awkwardly, "for you see I don't know much about it anyway."
+
+"How long since you've seen 'em?" asked Mrs. Price, apparently
+addressing herself to the stocking.
+
+Spindler gave a weak laugh. "Well, you see, ef it comes to that,
+I've never seen 'em!"
+
+Mrs. Price put the stocking in her lap and opened her direct eyes
+on Spindler. "Never seen 'em?" she repeated. "Then, they're not
+near relations?"
+
+"There are three cousins," said Spindler, checking them off on his
+fingers, "a half-uncle, a kind of brother-in-law,--that is, the
+brother of my sister-in-law's second husband,--and a niece. That's
+six."
+
+"But if you've not seen them, I suppose they've corresponded with
+you?" said Mrs. Price.
+
+"They've nearly all of 'em written to me for money, seeing my name
+in the paper ez hevin' made a strike," returned Spindler simply;
+"and hevin' sent it, I jest know their addresses."
+
+"Oh!" said Mrs. Price, returning to the stocking.
+
+Something in the tone of her ejaculation increased Spindler's
+embarrassment, but it also made him desperate. "You see, Mrs.
+Price," he blurted out, "I oughter tell ye that I reckon they are
+the folks that 'hevn't got on,' don't you see, and so it seemed
+only the square thing for me, ez had 'got on,' to give them a sort
+o' Christmas festival. Suthin', don't ye know, like what your
+brother-in-law was sayin' last Sunday in the pulpit about this yer
+peace and goodwill 'twixt man and man."
+
+Mrs. Price looked again at the man before her. His sallow,
+perplexed face exhibited some doubt, yet a certain determination,
+regarding the prospect the quotation had opened to him. "A very
+good idea, Mr. Spindler, and one that does you great credit," she
+said gravely.
+
+"I'm mighty glad to hear you say so, Mrs. Price," he said, with an
+accent of great relief, "for I reckoned to ask you a great favor!
+You see," he fell into his former hesitation, "that is--the fact
+is--that this sort o' thing is rather suddent to me,--a little
+outer my line, don't you see, and I was goin' to ask ye ef you'd
+mind takin' the hull thing in hand and runnin it for me."
+
+"Running it for you," said Mrs. Price, with a quick eye-shot from
+under the edge of her lashes. "Man alive! What are you thinking
+of?"
+
+"Bossin' the whole job for me," hurried on Spindler, with nervous
+desperation. "Gettin' together all the things and makin' ready for
+'em,--orderin' in everythin' that's wanted, and fixin' up the
+rooms,--I kin step out while you're doin' it,--and then helpin' me
+receivin' 'em, and sittin' at the head o' the table, you know,--
+like ez ef you was the mistress."
+
+"But," said Mrs. Price, with her frank laugh, "that's the duty of
+one of your relations,--your niece, for instance,--or cousin, if
+one of them is a woman."
+
+"But," persisted Spindler, "you see, they're strangers to me; I
+don't know 'em, and I do you. You'd make it easy for 'em,--and for
+me,--don't you see? Kinder introduce 'em,--don't you know? A
+woman of your gin'ral experience would smooth down all them little
+difficulties," continued Spindler, with a vague recollection of the
+Kansas story, "and put everybody on velvet. Don't say 'No,' Mrs.
+Price! I'm just kalkilatin' on you."
+
+Sincerity and persistency in a man goes a great way with even the
+best of women. Mrs. Price, who had at first received Spindler's
+request as an amusing originality, now began to incline secretly
+towards it. And, of course, began to suggest objections.
+
+"I'm afraid it won't do," she said thoughtfully, awakening to the
+fact that it would do and could be done. "You see, I've promised
+to spend Christmas at Sacramento with my nieces from Baltimore.
+And then there's Mrs. Saltover and my sister to consult."
+
+But here Spindler's simple face showed such signs of distress that
+the widow declared she would "think it over,"--a process which the
+sanguine Spindler seemed to consider so nearly akin to talking it
+over that Mrs. Price began to believe it herself, as he hopefully
+departed.
+
+She "thought it over" sufficiently to go to Sacramento and excuse
+herself to her nieces. But here she permitted herself to "talk it
+over," to the infinite delight of those Baltimore girls, who
+thought this extravaganza of Spindler's "so Californian and
+eccentric!" So that it was not strange that presently the news
+came back to Rough and Ready, and his old associates learned for
+the first time that he had never seen his relatives, and that they
+would be doubly strangers. This did not increase his popularity;
+neither, I grieve to say, did the intelligence that his relatives
+were probably poor, and that the Reverend Mr. Saltover had approved
+of his course, and had likened it to the rich man's feast, to which
+the halt and blind were invited. Indeed, the allusion was supposed
+to add hypocrisy and a bid for popularity to Spindler's defection,
+for it was argued that he might have feasted "Wall-eyed Joe" or
+"Tangle-foot Billy,"--who had once been "chawed" by a bear while
+prospecting,--if he had been sincere. Howbeit, Spindler's faith
+was oblivious to these criticisms, in his joy at Mr. Saltover's
+adhesion to his plans and the loan of Mrs. Price as a hostess. In
+fact, he proposed to her that the invitation should also convey
+that information in the expression, "by the kind permission of the
+Rev. Mr. Saltover," as a guarantee of good faith, but the widow
+would have none of it. The invitations were duly written and
+dispatched.
+
+"Suppose," suggested Spindler, with a sudden lugubrious
+apprehension,--"suppose they shouldn't come?"
+
+"Have no fear of that," said Mrs. Price, with a frank laugh.
+
+"Or ef they was dead," continued Spindler.
+
+"They couldn't all be dead," said the widow cheerfully.
+
+"I've written to another cousin by marriage," said Spindler
+dubiously, "in case of accident; I didn't think of him before,
+because he was rich."
+
+"And have you ever seen him either, Mr. Spindler?" asked the widow,
+with a slight mischievousness.
+
+"Lordy! No!" he responded, with unaffected concern.
+
+Only one mistake was made by Mrs. Price in her arrangements for the
+party. She had noticed what the simple-minded Spindler could never
+have conceived,--the feeling towards him held by his old associates,
+and had tactfully suggested that a general invitation should be
+extended to them in the evening.
+
+"You can have refreshments, you know, too, after the dinner, and
+games and music."
+
+"But," said the unsophisticated host, "won't the boys think I'm
+playing it rather low down on them, so to speak, givin' 'em a kind
+o' second table, as ef it was the tailings after a strike?"
+
+"Nonsense," said Mrs. Price, with decision. "It's quite
+fashionable in San Francisco, and just the thing to do."
+
+To this decision Spindler, in his blind faith in the widow's
+management, weakly yielded. An announcement in the "Weekly Banner"
+that, "On Christmas evening Richard Spindler, Esq., proposed to
+entertain his friends and fellow citizens at an 'at home,' in his
+own residence," not only widened the breach between him and the
+"boys," but awakened an active resentment that only waited for an
+outlet. It was understood that they were all coming; but that they
+should have "some fun out of it" which might not coincide with
+Spindler's nor his relatives' sense of humor seemed a foregone
+conclusion.
+
+Unfortunately, too, subsequent events lent themselves to this irony
+of the situation.
+
+He was so obviously sincere in his intent, and, above all, seemed
+to place such a pathetic reliance on her judgment, that she
+hesitated to let him know the shock his revelation had given her.
+And what might his other relations prove to be? Good Lord! Yet,
+oddly enough, she was so prepossessed by him, and so fascinated by
+his very Quixotism, that it was perhaps for these complex reasons
+that she said a little stiffly:--
+
+"One of these cousins, I see, is a lady, and then there is your
+niece. Do you know anything about them, Mr. Spindler?"
+
+His face grew serious. "No more than I know of the others," he
+said apologetically. After a moment's hesitation he went on: "Now
+you speak of it, it seems to me I've heard that my niece was
+di-vorced. But," he added, brightening up, "I've heard that she
+was popular."
+
+Mrs. Price gave a short laugh, and was silent for a few minutes.
+Then this sublime little woman looked up at him. What he might
+have seen in her eyes was more than he expected, or, I fear,
+deserved. "Cheer up, Mr. Spindler," she said manfully. "I'll see
+you through this thing, don't you mind! But don't you say anything
+about--about--this Vigilance Committee business to anybody. Nor
+about your niece--it was your niece, wasn't it?--being divorced.
+Charley (the late Mr. Price) had a queer sort of sister, who--but
+that's neither here nor there! And your niece mayn't come, you
+know; or if she does, you ain't bound to bring her out to the
+general company."
+
+At parting, Spindler, in sheer gratefulness, pressed her hand, and
+lingered so long over it that a little color sprang into the
+widow's brown cheek. Perhaps a fresh courage sprang into her
+heart, too, for she went to Sacramento the next day, previously
+enjoining Spindler on no account to show any answers he might
+receive. At Sacramento her nieces flew to her with confidences.
+
+"We so wanted to see you, Aunt Huldy, for we've heard something so
+delightful about your funny Christmas Party!" Mrs. Price's heart
+sank, but her eyes snapped. "Only think of it! One of Mr.
+Spindler's long-lost relatives--a Mr. Wragg--lives in this hotel,
+and papa knows him. He's a sort of half-uncle, I believe, and he's
+just furious that Spindler should have invited him. He showed papa
+the letter; said it was the greatest piece of insolence in the
+world; that Spindler was an ostentatious fool, who had made a
+little money and wanted to use him to get into society; and the fun
+of the whole thing was that this half-uncle and whole brute is
+himself a parvenu,--a vulgar, ostentatious creature, who was only
+a"--
+
+"Never mind what he was, Kate," interrupted Mrs. Price hastily. "I
+call his conduct a shame."
+
+"So do we," said both girls eagerly. After a pause Kate clasped
+her knees with her locked fingers, and rocking backwards and
+forwards, said, "Milly and I have got an idea, and don't you say
+'No' to it. We've had it ever since that brute talked in that way.
+Now, through him, we know more about this Mr. Spindler's family
+connections than you do; and we know all the trouble you and he'll
+have in getting up this party. You understand? Now, we first want
+to know what Spindler's like. Is he a savage, bearded creature,
+like the miners we saw on the boat?"
+
+Mrs. Price said that, on the contrary, he was very gentle, soft-
+spoken, and rather good-looking.
+
+"Young or old?"
+
+"Young,--in fact, a mere boy, as you may judge from his actions,"
+returned Mrs. Price, with a suggestive matronly air.
+
+Kate here put up a long-handled eyeglass to her fine gray eyes,
+fitted it ostentatiously over her aquiline nose, and then said, in
+a voice of simulated horror, "Aunt Huldy,--this revelation is
+shocking!"
+
+Mrs. Price laughed her usual frank laugh, albeit her brown cheek
+took upon it a faint tint of Indian red. "If that's the wonderful
+idea you girls have got, I don't see how it's going to help
+matters," she said dryly.
+
+"No, that's not it? We really have an idea. Now look here."
+
+Mrs. Price "looked here." This process seemed to the superficial
+observer to be merely submitting her waist and shoulders to the
+arms of her nieces, and her ears to their confidential and coaxing
+voices.
+
+Twice she said "it couldn't be thought of," and "it was
+impossible;" once addressed Kate as "You limb!" and finally said
+that she "wouldn't promise, but might write!"
+
+ . . . . . .
+
+It was two days before Christmas. There was nothing in the air,
+sky, or landscape of that Sierran slope to suggest the season to
+the Eastern stranger. A soft rain had been dropping for a week on
+laurel, pine, and buckeye, and the blades of springing grasses and
+shyly opening flowers. Sedate and silent hillsides that had grown
+dumb and parched towards the end of the dry season became gently
+articulate again; there were murmurs in hushed and forgotten
+canyons, the leap and laugh of water among the dry bones of dusty
+creeks, and the full song of the larger forks and rivers.
+Southwest winds brought the warm odor of the pine sap swelling in
+the forest, or the faint, far-off spice of wild mustard springing
+in the lower valleys. But, as if by some irony of Nature, this
+gentle invasion of spring in the wild wood brought only disturbance
+and discomfort to the haunts and works of man. The ditches were
+overflowed, the fords of the Fork impassable, the sluicing adrift,
+and the trails and wagon roads to Rough and Ready knee-deep in mud.
+The stage-coach from Sacramento, entering the settlement by the
+mountain highway, its wheels and panels clogged and crusted with an
+unctuous pigment like mud and blood, passed out of it through the
+overflowed and dangerous ford, and emerged in spotless purity,
+leaving its stains behind with Rough and Ready. A week of enforced
+idleness on the river "Bar" had driven the miners to the more
+comfortable recreation of the saloon bar, its mirrors, its florid
+paintings, its armchairs, and its stove. The steam of their wet
+boots and the smoke of their pipes hung over the latter like the
+sacrificial incense from an altar. But the attitude of the men was
+more critical and censorious than contented, and showed little of
+the gentleness of the weather or season.
+
+"Did you hear if the stage brought down any more relations of
+Spindler's?"
+
+The barkeeper, to whom this question was addressed, shifted his
+lounging position against the bar and said, "I reckon not, ez far
+ez I know."
+
+"And that old bloat of a second cousin--that crimson beak--what kem
+down yesterday,--he ain't bin hangin' round here today for his
+reg'lar pizon?"
+
+"No," said the barkeeper thoughtfully, "I reckon Spindler's got him
+locked up, and is settin' on him to keep him sober till after
+Christmas, and prevent you boys gettin' at him."
+
+"He'll have the jimjams before that," returned the first speaker;
+"and how about that dead beat of a half-nephew who borrowed twenty
+dollars of Yuba Bill on the way down, and then wanted to get off at
+Shootersvilie, but Bill wouldn't let him, and scooted him down to
+Spindler's and collected the money from Spindler himself afore he'd
+give him up?"
+
+"He's up thar with the rest of the menagerie," said the barkeeper,
+"but I reckon that Mrs. Price hez bin feedin' him up. And ye know
+the old woman--that fifty-fifth cousin by marriage--whom Joe
+Chandler swears he remembers ez an old cook for a Chinese
+restaurant in Stockton,--darn my skin ef that Mrs. Price hasn't
+rigged her out in some fancy duds of her own, and made her look
+quite decent."
+
+A deep groan here broke from Uncle Jim Starbuck.
+
+"Didn't I tell ye?" he said, turning appealingly to the others.
+"It's that darned widow that's at the bottom of it all! She first
+put Spindler up to givin' the party, and now, darn my skin, ef she
+ain't goin to fix up these ragamuffins and drill 'em so we can't
+get any fun outer 'em after all! And it's bein' a woman that's
+bossin' the job, and not Spindler, we've got to draw things mighty
+fine and not cut up too rough, or some of the boys will kick."
+
+"You bet," said a surly but decided voice in the crowd.
+
+"And," said another voice, "Mrs. Price didn't live in 'Bleeding
+Kansas' for nothing."
+
+"Wot's the programme you've settled on, Uncle Jim?" said the
+barkeeper lightly, to check what seemed to promise a dangerous
+discussion.
+
+"Well," said Starbuck, "we kalkilate to gather early Christmas
+night in Hooper's Hollow and rig ourselves up Injun fashion, and
+then start for Spindler's with pitch-pine torches, and have a
+'torchlight dance' around the house; them who does the dancin' and
+yellin' outside takin' their turn at goin' in and hevin' refreshment.
+Jake Cooledge, of Boston, sez if anybody objects to it, we've only
+got to say we're 'Mummers of the Olden Times,' sabe? Then, later,
+we'll have 'Them Sabbath Evening Bells' performed on prospectin'
+pans by the band. Then, at the finish, Jake Cooledge is goin' to
+give one of his surkastic speeches,--kinder welcomin' Spindler's
+family to the Free Openin' o' Spindler's Almshouse and Reformatory."
+He paused, possibly for that approbation which, however, did not
+seem to come spontaneously. "It ain't much," he added apologetically,
+"for we're hampered by women; but we'll add to the programme ez we
+see how things pan out. Ye see, from what we can hear, all of
+Spindler's relations ain't on hand yet! We've got to wait, like in
+elckshun times, for 'returns from the back counties.' Hello! What's
+that?"
+
+It was the swish and splutter of hoofs on the road before the door.
+The Sacramento coach! In an instant every man was expectant, and
+Starbuck darted outside on the platform. Then there was the usual
+greeting and bustle, the hurried ingress of thirsty passengers into
+the saloon, and a pause. Uncle Jim returned, excitedly and
+pantingly. "Look yer, boys! Ef this ain't the richest thing out!
+They say there's two more relations o' Spindler's on the coach,
+come down as express freight, consigned,--d'ye hear?--consigned to
+Spindler!"
+
+"Stiffs, in coffins?" suggested an eager voice.
+
+"I didn't get to hear more. But here they are."
+
+There was the sudden irruption of a laughing, curious crowd into
+the bar-room, led by Yuba Bill, the driver. Then the crowd parted,
+and out of their midst stepped two children, a boy and a girl, the
+oldest apparently of not more than six years, holding each other's
+hands. They were coarsely yet cleanly dressed, and with a certain
+uniform precision that suggested formal charity. But more
+remarkable than all, around the neck of each was a little steel
+chain, from which depended the regular check and label of the
+powerful Express Company, Wells; Fargo & Co., and the words: "To
+Richard Spindler." "Fragile." "With great care." "Collect on
+delivery." Occasionally their little hands went up automatically
+and touched their labels, as if to show them. They surveyed the
+crowd, the floor, the gilded bar, and Yuba Bill without fear and
+without wonder. There was a pathetic suggestion that they were
+accustomed to this observation.
+
+"Now, Bobby," said Yuba Bill, leaning back against the bar, with an
+air half-paternal, half-managerial, "tell these gents how you came
+here."
+
+"By Wellth, Fargoth Expreth," lisped Bobby.
+
+"Whar from?"
+
+"Wed Hill, Owegon."
+
+"Red Hill, Oregon? Why, it's a thousand miles from here," said a
+bystander.
+
+"I reckon," said Yuba Bill coolly, "they kem by stage to Portland,
+by steamer to 'Frisco, steamer again to Stockton, and then by stage
+over the whole line. Allers by Wells, Fargo & Co.'s Express, from
+agent to agent, and from messenger to messenger. Fact! They ain't
+bin tetched or handled by any one but the Kempany's agents; they
+ain't had a line or direction except them checks around their necks!
+And they've wanted for nothin' else. Why, I've carried heaps o'
+treasure before, gentlemen, and once a hundred thousand dollars in
+greenbacks, but I never carried anythin' that was watched and
+guarded as them kids! Why, the division inspector at Stockton
+wanted to go with 'em over the line; but Jim Bracy, the messenger,
+said he'd call it a reflection on himself and resign, ef they
+didn't give 'em to him with the other packages! Ye had a pretty
+good time, Bobby, didn't ye? Plenty to eat and drink, eh?"
+
+The two children laughed a little weak laugh, turned each other
+bashfully around, and then looked up shyly at Yuba Bill and said,
+"Yeth."
+
+"Do you know where you are goin'?" asked Starbuck, in a constrained
+voice.
+
+It was the little girl who answered quickly and eagerly:--
+
+"Yes, to Krissmass and Sandy Claus."
+
+"To what?" asked Starbuck.
+
+Here the boy interposed with a superior air:--
+
+"Thee meanth Couthin Dick. He'th got Krithmath."
+
+"Where's your mother?"
+
+"Dead."
+
+"And your father?"
+
+"In orthpittal."
+
+There was a laugh somewhere on the outskirts of the crowd. Every
+one faced angrily in that direction, but the laugher had disappeared.
+Yuba Bill, however, sent his voice after him. "Yes, in hospital!
+Funny, ain't it?--amoosin' place! Try it. Step over here, and in
+five minutes, by the living Hoky, I'll qualify you for admission,
+and not charge you a cent!" He stopped, gave a sweeping glance of
+dissatisfaction around him, and then, leaning back against the bar,
+beckoned to some one near the door, and said in a disgusted tone,
+"You tell these galoots how it happened, Bracy. They make me sick!"
+
+Thus appealed to, Bracy, the express messenger, stepped forward in
+Yuba Bill's place.
+
+"It's nothing particular, gentlemen," he said, with a laugh, "only
+it seems that some man called Spindler, who lives about here, sent
+an invitation to the father of these children to bring his family
+to a Christmas party. It wasn't a bad sort of thing for Spindler
+to do, considering that they were his poor relations, though they
+didn't know him from Adam,--was it?" He paused; several of the
+bystanders cleared their throats, but said nothing. "At least,"
+resumed Bracy, "that's what the boys up at Red Hill, Oregon,
+thought, when they heard of it. Well, as the father was in
+hospital with a broken leg, and the mother only a few weeks dead,
+the boys thought it mighty rough on these poor kids if they were
+done out of their fun because they had no one to bring them. The
+boys couldn't afford to go themselves, but they got a little money
+together, and then got the idea of sendin' 'em by express. Our
+agent at Red Hill tumbled to the idea at once; but he wouldn't take
+any money in advance, and said he would send 'em 'C. O. D.' like
+any other package. And he did, and here they are! That's all!
+And now, gentlemen, as I've got to deliver them personally to this
+Spindler, and get his receipt and take off their checks, I reckon
+we must toddle. Come, Bill, help take 'em up!"
+
+"Hold on!" said a dozen voices. A dozen hands were thrust into a
+dozen pockets; I grieve to say some were regretfully withdrawn
+empty, for it was a hard season in Rough and Ready. But the
+expressman stepped before them, with warning, uplifted hand.
+
+"Not a cent, boys,--not a cent! Wells, Fargo's Express Company
+don't undertake to carry bullion with those kids, at least on the
+same contract!" He laughed, and then looking around him, said
+confidentially in a lower voice, which, however, was quite audible
+to the children, "There's as much as three bags of silver in
+quarter and half dollars in my treasure box in the coach that has
+been poured, yes, just showered upon them, ever since they started,
+and have been passed over from agent to agent and messenger to
+messenger,--enough to pay their passage from here to China! It's
+time to say quits now. But bet your life, they are not going to
+that Christmas party poor!"
+
+He caught up the boy, as Yuba Bill lifted the little girl to his
+shoulder, and both passed out. Then one by one the loungers in the
+bar-room silently and awkwardly followed, and when the barkeeper
+turned back from putting away his decanters and glasses, to his
+astonishment the room was empty.
+
+ . . . . . .
+
+Spindler's house, or "Spindler's Splurge," as Rough and Ready chose
+to call it, stood above the settlement, on a deforested hillside,
+which, however, revenged itself by producing not enough vegetation
+to cover even the few stumps that were ineradicable. A large
+wooden structure in the pseudo-classic style affected by Westerners,
+with an incongruous cupola, it was oddly enough relieved by a still
+more incongruous veranda extending around its four sides, upheld by
+wooden Doric columns, which were already picturesquely covered with
+flowering vines and sun-loving roses. Mr. Spindler had trusted the
+furnishing of its interior to the same contractor who had
+upholstered the gilded bar-room of the Eureka Saloon, and who had
+apparently bestowed the same design and material, impartially, on
+each. There were gilded mirrors all over the house and chilly
+marble-topped tables, gilt plaster Cupids in the corners, and
+stuccoed lions "in the way" everywhere. The tactful hands of Mrs.
+Price had screened some of these with seasonable laurels, fir
+boughs, and berries, and had imparted a slight Christmas flavor to
+the house. But the greater part of her time had been employed in
+trying to subdue the eccentricities of Spindler's amazing relations;
+in tranquilizing Mrs. "Aunt" Martha Spindler,--the elderly cook
+before alluded to,--who was inclined to regard the gilded splendors
+of the house as indicative of dangerous immorality; in restraining
+"Cousin" Morley Hewlett from considering the dining-room buffet as a
+bar for "intermittent refreshment;" and in keeping the weak-minded
+nephew, Phinney Spindler, from shooting at bottles from the veranda,
+wearing his uncle's clothes, or running up an account in his uncle's
+name for various articles at the general stores. Yet the
+unlooked-for arrival of the two children had been the one great
+compensation and diversion for her. She wrote at once to her nieces
+a brief account of her miraculous deliverance. "I think these poor
+children dropped from the skies here to make our Christmas party
+possible, to say nothing of the sympathy they have created in Rough
+and Ready for Spindler. He is going to keep them as long as he can,
+and is writing to the father. Think of the poor little tots
+traveling a thousand miles to 'Krissmass,' as they call it!--though
+they were so well cared for by the messengers that their little
+bodies were positively stuffed like quails. So, you see, dear, we
+will be able to get along without airing your famous idea. I'm
+sorry, for I know you're just dying to see it all."
+
+Whatever Kate's "idea" might have been, there certainly seemed now
+no need of any extraneous aid to Mrs. Price's management.
+Christmas came at last, and the dinner passed off without serious
+disaster. But the ordeal of the reception of Rough and Ready was
+still to come. For Mrs. Price well knew that although "the boys"
+were more subdued, and, indeed, inclined to sympathize with their
+host's uncouth endeavor, there was still much in the aspect of
+Spindler's relations to excite their sense of the ludicrous.
+
+But here Fortune again favored the house of Spindler with a
+dramatic surprise, even greater than the advent of the children had
+been. In the change that had come over Rough and Ready, "the boys"
+had decided, out of deference to the women and children, to omit
+the first part of their programme, and had approached and entered
+the house as soberly and quietly as ordinary guests. But before
+they had shaken hands with the host and hostess, and seen the
+relations, the clatter of wheels was heard before the open door,
+and its lights flashed upon a carriage and pair,--an actual private
+carriage,--the like of which had not been seen since the governor
+of the State had come down to open the new ditch! Then there was a
+pause, the flash of the carriage lamps upon white silk, the light
+tread of a satin foot on the veranda and in the hall, and the
+entrance of a vision of loveliness! Middle-aged men and old
+dwellers of cities remembered their youth; younger men bethought
+themselves of Cinderella and the Prince! There was a thrill and a
+hush as this last guest--a beautiful girl, radiant with youth and
+adornment--put a dainty glass to her sparkling eye and advanced
+familiarly, with outstretched hand, to Dick Spindler. Mrs. Price
+gave a single gasp, and drew back speechless.
+
+"Uncle Dick," said a laughing contralto voice, which, indeed,
+somewhat recalled Mrs. Price's own, in its courageous frankness, "I
+am so delighted to come, even if a little late, and so sorry that
+Mr. M'Kenna could not come on account of business."
+
+Everybody listened eagerly, but none more eagerly and surprisingly
+than the host himself. M'Kenna! The rich cousin who had never
+answered the invitation! And Uncle Dick! This, then, was his
+divorced niece! Yet even in his astonishment he remembered that of
+course no one but himself and Mrs. Price knew it,--and that lady
+had glanced discreetly away.
+
+"Yes," continued the half-niece brightly. "I came from Sacramento
+with some friends to Shootersville, and from thence I drove here;
+and though I must return to-night, I could not forego the pleasure
+of coming, if it was only for an hour or two, to answer the
+invitation of the uncle I have not seen for years." She paused,
+and, raising her glasses, turned a politely questioning eye towards
+Mrs. Price. "One of our relations?" she said smilingly to Spindler.
+
+"No," said Spindler, with some embarrassment, "a--a friend!"
+
+The half-niece extended her hand. Mrs. Price took it.
+
+But the fair stranger,--what she did and said were the only things
+remembered in Rough and Ready on that festive occasion; no one
+thought of the other relations; no one recalled them nor their
+eccentricities; Spindler himself was forgotten. People only
+recollected how Spindler's lovely niece lavished her smiles and
+courtesies on every one, and brought to her feet particularly the
+misogynist Starbuck and the sarcastic Cooledge, oblivious of his
+previous speech; how she sat at the piano and sang like an angel,
+hushing the most hilarious and excited into sentimental and even
+maudlin silence; how, graceful as a nymph, she led with "Uncle
+Dick" a Virginia reel until the whole assembly joined, eager for a
+passing touch of her dainty hand in its changes; how, when two
+hours had passed,--all too swiftly for the guests,--they stood with
+bared heads and glistening eyes on the veranda to see the fairy
+coach whirl the fairy princess away! How--but this incident was
+never known to Rough and Ready.
+
+It happened in the sacred dressing-room, where Mrs. Price was
+cloaking with her own hands the departing half-niece of Mr.
+Spindler. Taking that opportunity to seize the lovely relative by
+the shoulders and shake her violently, she said: "Oh, yes, and it's
+all very well for you, Kate, you limb! For you're going away, and
+will never see Rough and Ready and poor Spindler again. But what
+am I to do, miss? How am I to face it out? For you know I've got
+to tell him at least that you're no half-niece of his!"
+
+"Have you?" said the young lady.
+
+"Have I?" repeated the widow impatiently. "Have I? Of course I
+have! What are you thinking of?"
+
+"I was thinking, aunty," said the girl audaciously, "that from what
+I've seen and heard to-night, if I'm not his half-niece now, it's
+only a question of time! So you'd better wait. Good-night, dear."
+
+And, really,--it turned out that she was right!
+
+
+
+WHEN THE WATERS WERE UP AT "JULES'"
+
+
+When the waters were up at "Jules'" there was little else up on
+that monotonous level. For the few inhabitants who calmly and
+methodically moved to higher ground, camping out in tents until the
+flood had subsided, left no distracting wreckage behind them. A
+dozen half-submerged log cabins dotted the tranquil surface of the
+waters, without ripple or disturbance, looking in the moonlight
+more like the ruins of centuries than of a few days. There was no
+current to sap their slight foundations or sweep them away; nothing
+stirred that silent lake but the occasional shot-like indentations
+of a passing raindrop, or, still more rarely, a raft, made of a
+single log, propelled by some citizen on a tour of inspection of
+his cabin roof-tree, where some of his goods were still stored.
+There was no sense of terror in this bland obliteration of the
+little settlement; the ruins of a single burnt-up cabin would have
+been more impressive than this stupid and even grotesquely placid
+effect of the rival destroying element. People took it naturally;
+the water went as it had come,--slowly, impassively, noiselessly; a
+few days of fervid Californian sunshine dried the cabins, and in a
+week or two the red dust lay again as thickly before their doors as
+the winter mud had lain. The waters of Rattlesnake Creek dropped
+below its banks, the stage-coach from Marysville no longer made a
+detour of the settlement. There was even a singular compensation
+to this amicable invasion; the inhabitants sometimes found gold in
+those breaches in the banks made by the overflow. To wait for the
+"old Rattlesnake sluicing" was a vernal hope of the trusting miner.
+
+The history of "Jules'," however, was once destined to offer a
+singular interruption of this peaceful and methodical process. The
+winter of 1859-60 was an exceptional one. But little rain had
+fallen in the valleys, although the snow lay deep in the high
+Sierras. Passes were choked, ravines filled, and glaciers found on
+their slopes. And when the tardy rains came with the withheld
+southwesterly "trades," the regular phenomenon recurred; Jules'
+Flat silently, noiselessly, and peacefully went under water; the
+inhabitants moved to the higher ground, perhaps a little more
+expeditiously from an impatience born of the delay. The stagecoach
+from Marysville made its usual detour and stopped before the
+temporary hotel, express offices, and general store of "Jules',"
+under canvas, bark, and the limp leaves of a spreading alder. It
+deposited a single passenger,--Miles Hemmingway, of San Francisco,
+but originally of Boston,--the young secretary of a mining company,
+dispatched to report upon the alleged auriferous value of "Jules'."
+Of this he had been by no means impressed as he looked down upon
+the submerged cabins from the box-seat of the coach and listened to
+the driver's lazy recital of the flood, and of the singularly
+patient acceptance of it by the inhabitants.
+
+It was the old story of the southwestern miner's indolence and
+incompetency,--utterly distasteful to his northern habits of
+thought and education. Here was their old fatuous endurance of
+Nature's wild caprices, without that struggle against them which
+brought others strength and success; here was the old philosophy
+which accepted the prairie fire and cyclone, and survived them
+without advancement, yet without repining. Perhaps in different
+places and surroundings a submission so stoic might have impressed
+him; in gentlemen who tucked their dirty trousers in their muddy
+boots and lived only for the gold they dug, it did not seem to him
+heroic. Nor was he mollified as he stood beside the rude
+refreshment bar--a few planks laid on trestles--and drank his
+coffee beneath the dripping canvas roof, with an odd recollection
+of his boyhood and an inclement Sunday-school picnic. Yet these
+men had been living in this shiftless fashion for three weeks! It
+exasperated him still more to think that he might have to wait
+there a few days longer for the water to subside sufficiently for
+him to make his examination and report. As he took a proffered
+seat on a candle-box, which tilted under him, and another survey of
+the feeble makeshifts around him, his irascibility found vent.
+
+"Why, in the name of God, didn't you, after you had been flooded
+out ONCE, build your cabins PERMANENTLY on higher ground?"
+
+Although the tone of his voice was more disturbing than his
+question, it pleased one of the loungers to affect to take it
+literally.
+
+"Well, ez you've put it that way,--'in the name of God!'"--returned
+the man lazily, "it mout hev struck us that ez HE was bossin' the
+job, so to speak, and handlin' things round here generally, we
+might leave it to Him. It wasn't OUR flood to monkey with."
+
+"And as He didn't coven-ant, so to speak, to look arter this higher
+ground 'speshally, and make an Ararat of it for us, ez far ez we
+could see, we didn't see any reason for SETTLIN' yer," put in a
+second speaker, with equal laziness.
+
+The secretary saw his mistake instantly, and had experience enough
+of Western humor not to prolong the disadvantage of his unfortunate
+adjuration. He colored slightly and said, with a smile, "You know
+what I mean; you could have protected yourselves better. A levee
+on the bank would have kept you clear of the highest watermark."
+
+"Hey you ever heard WHAT the highest watermark was?" said the first
+speaker, turning to another of the loungers without looking at the
+secretary.
+
+"Never heard it,--didn't know there was a limit before," responded
+the man.
+
+The first speaker turned back to the secretary. "Did you ever know
+what happened at 'Bulger's,' on the North Fork? They had one o'
+them levees."
+
+"No. What happened?" asked the secretary impatiently.
+
+"They was fixed suthin' like us," returned the first speaker.
+"THEY allowed they'd build a levee above THEIR highest watermark,
+and did. It worked like a charm at first; but the water hed to go
+somewhere, and it kinder collected at the first bend. Then it
+sorter raised itself on its elbows one day, and looked over the
+levee down upon whar some of the boys was washin' quite comf'ble.
+Then it paid no sorter attention to the limit o' that high
+watermark, but went six inches better! Not slow and quiet like ez
+it useter to, ez it does HERE, kinder fillin' up from below, but
+went over with a rush and a current, hevin' of course the whole
+height of the levee to fall on t'other side where the boys were
+sluicing." He paused, and amidst a profound silence added, "They
+say that 'Bulger's' was scattered promiscuous-like all along the
+fort for five miles. I only know that one of his mules and a
+section of sluicing was picked up at Red Flat, eight miles away!"
+
+Mr. Hemmingway felt that there WAS an answer to this, but, being
+wise, also felt that it would be unavailing. He smiled politely
+and said nothing, at which the first speaker turned to him:--
+
+"Thar ain't anything to see to-day, but to-morrow, ez things go,
+the water oughter be droppin'. Mebbe you'd like to wash up now and
+clean yourself," he added, with a glance at Hemmingway's small
+portmanteau. "Ez we thought you'd likely be crowded here, we've
+rigged up a corner for you at Stanton's shanty with the women."
+
+The young man's cheek flushed slightly at some possible irony in
+this, and he protested with considerable stress that he was quite
+ready "to rough it" where he was.
+
+"I reckon it's already fixed," returned the man decisively, "so
+you'd better come and I'll show you the way."
+
+"One moment," said Hemmingway, with a smile; "my credentials are
+addressed to the manager of the Boone Ditch Company at 'Jules'.'
+Perhaps I ought to see him first."
+
+"All right; he's Stanton."
+
+"And"--hesitated the secretary, "YOU, who appear to understand the
+locality so well,--I trust I may have the pleasure"--
+
+"Oh, I'm Jules."
+
+The secretary was a little startled and amused. So "Jules" was a
+person, and not a place!
+
+"Then you're a pioneer?" asked Hemmingway, a little less
+dictatorially, as they passed out under the dripping trees.
+
+"I struck this creek in the fall of '49, comin' over Livermore's
+Pass with Stanton," returned Jules, with great brevity of speech
+and deliberate tardiness of delivery. "Sent for my wife and two
+children the next year; wife died same winter, change bein' too
+sudden for her, and contractin' chills and fever at Sweetwater.
+When I kem here first thar wasn't six inches o' water in the creek;
+out there was a heap of it over there where you see them yallowish-
+green patches and strips o' brush and grass; all that war water
+then, and all that growth hez sprung up since."
+
+Hemmingway looked around him. The "higher ground" where they stood
+was in reality only a mound-like elevation above the dead level of
+the flat, and the few trees were merely recent young willows and
+alders. The area of actual depression was much greater than he had
+imagined, and its resemblance to the bed of some prehistoric inland
+sea struck him forcibly. A previous larger inundation than Jules'
+brief experience had ever known had been by no means improbable.
+His cheek reddened at his previous hasty indictment of the
+settlers' ignorance and shiftlessness, and the thought that he had
+probably committed his employers to his own rash confidence and
+superiority of judgment. However, there was no evidence that this
+diluvial record was not of the remote past. He smiled again with
+greater security as he thought of the geological changes that had
+since tempered these cataclysms, and the amelioration brought by
+settlement and cultivation. Nevertheless, he would make a thorough
+examination to-morrow.
+
+Stanton's cabin was the furthest of these temporary habitations,
+and was partly on the declivity which began to slope to the river's
+bank. It was, like the others, a rough shanty of unplaned boards,
+but, unlike the others, it had a base of logs laid lengthwise on
+the ground and parallel with each other, on which the flooring and
+structure were securely fastened. This gave it the appearance of a
+box slid on runners, or a Noah's Ark whose bulk had been reduced.
+Jules explained that the logs, laid in that manner, kept the shanty
+warmer and free from damp. In reply to Hemmingway's suggestion
+that it was a great waste of material, Jules simply replied that
+the logs were the "flotsam and jetsam" of the creek from the
+overflowed mills below.
+
+Hemmingway again smiled. It was again the old story of Western
+waste and prodigality. Accompanied by Jules, however, he climbed
+up the huge, slippery logs which made a platform before the door,
+and entered.
+
+The single room was unequally divided; the larger part containing
+three beds, by day rolled in a single pile in one corner to make
+room for a table and chairs. A few dresses hanging from nails on
+the wall showed that it was the women's room. The smaller
+compartment was again subdivided by a hanging blanket, behind which
+was a rude bunk or berth against the wall, a table made of a
+packing-box, containing a tin basin and a can of water. This was
+his apartment.
+
+"The women-folks are down the creek, bakin', to-day," said Jules
+explanatorily; "but I reckon that one of 'em will be up here in a
+jiffy to make supper, so you just take it easy till they come.
+I've got to meander over to the claim afore I turn in, but you just
+lie by to-night and take a rest."
+
+He turned away, leaving Hemmingway standing in the doorway still
+distraught and hesitating. Nor did the young man recognize the
+delicacy of Jules' leave-taking until he had unstrapped his
+portmanteau and found himself alone, free to make his toilet,
+unembarrassed by company. But even then he would have preferred
+the rough companionship of the miners in the common dormitory of
+the general store to this intrusion upon the half-civilization of
+the women, their pitiable little comforts and secret makeshifts.
+His disgust of his own indecision which brought him there naturally
+recoiled in the direction of his host and hostesses, and after a
+hurried ablution, a change of linen, and an attempt to remove the
+stains of travel from his clothes, he strode out impatiently into
+the open air again.
+
+It was singularly mild even for the season. The southwest trades
+blew softly, and whispered to him of San Francisco and the distant
+Pacific, with its long, steady swell. He turned again to the
+overflowed Flat beneath him, and the sluggish yellow water that
+scarcely broke a ripple against the walls of the half-submerged
+cabins. And this was the water for whose going down they were
+waiting with an immobility as tranquil as the waters themselves!
+What marvelous incompetency,--or what infinite patience! He knew,
+of course, their expected compensation in this "ground sluicing" at
+Nature's own hand; the long rifts in the banks of the creek which
+so often showed "the color" in the sparkling scales of river gold
+disclosed by the action of the water; the heaps of reddish mud left
+after its subsidence around the walls of the cabins,--a deposit
+that often contained a treasure a dozen times more valuable than
+the cabin itself! And then he heard behind him a laugh, a short
+and panting breath, and turning, beheld a young woman running
+towards him.
+
+In his first astounded sight of her, in her limp nankeen sunbonnet,
+thrown back from her head by the impetus of her flight, he saw only
+too much hair, two much white teeth, too much eye-flash, and, above
+all,--as it appeared to him,--too much confidence in the power of
+these qualities. Even as she ran, it seemed to him that she was
+pulling down ostentatiously the rolled-up sleeves of her pink
+calico gown over her shapely arms. I am inclined to think that the
+young gentleman's temper was at fault, and his conclusion hasty; a
+calmer observer would have detected nothing of this in her frankly
+cheerful voice. Nevertheless, her evident pleasure in the meeting
+seemed to him only obtrusive coquetry.
+
+"Lordy! I reckoned to git here afore you'd get through fixin' up,
+and in time to do a little prinkin' myself, and here you're out
+already." She laughed, glancing at his clean shirt and damp hair.
+"But all the same, we kin have a talk, and you kin tell me all the
+news afore the other wimmen get up here. It's a coon's age since I
+was at Sacramento and saw anybody or anything." She stopped and,
+instinctively detecting some vague reticence in the man before her,
+said, still laughing, "You're Mr. Hemmingway, ain't you?"
+
+Hemmingway took off his hat quickly, with a slight start at his
+forgetfulness. "I beg your pardon; yes, certainly."
+
+"Aunty Stanton thought it was 'Hummingbird,'" said the girl, with a
+laugh, "but I reckoned not. I'm Jinney Jules, you know; folks call
+me 'J. J.' It wouldn't do for a Hummingbird and a Jay Jay to be in
+the same camp, would it? It would be just TOO funny!"
+
+Hemmingway did not find the humor of this so singularly exhaustive,
+but he was already beginning to be ashamed of his attitude towards
+her. "I'm very sorry to be giving you all this trouble by my
+intrusion, for I was quite willing to stay at the store yonder.
+Indeed," he added, with a burst of frankness quite as sincere as
+her own, "if you think your father will not be offended, I would
+gladly go there now."
+
+If he still believed in her coquetry and vanity, he would have been
+undeceived and crushed by the equal and sincere frankness with
+which she met this ungallant speech.
+
+"No! I reckon he wouldn't care, if you'd be as comf'ble and fit
+for to-morrow. But ye WOULDN'T," she said reflectively. "The boys
+thar sit up late over euchre, and swear a heap, and Simpson, who'd
+sleep alongside of ye, snores pow'ful, I've heard. Aunty Stanton
+kin do her level at that, too, and they say"--with a laugh--"that I
+kin, too, but you're away off in that corner, and it won't reach
+you. So, takin' it all, by the large, you'd better stay whar ye
+are. We wimmen, that is, the most of us, will be off and away down
+to Rattlesnake Bar shoppin' afore sun up, so ye'll sleep ez long ez
+ye want to, and find yer breakfast ready when ye wake. So I'll
+jest set to and get ye some supper, and ye kin tell me all the
+doin's in Sacramento and 'Frisco while I'm workin'."
+
+In spite of her unconscious rebuff to his own vanity, Hemmingway
+felt a sense of relief and less constraint in his relations to this
+decidedly provincial hostess.
+
+"Can I help you in any way?" he asked eagerly.
+
+"Well, ye MIGHT bring me an armful o' wood from the pile under the
+alders, ef ye ain't afraid o' dirtyin' your coat," she said
+tentatively.
+
+Mr. Hemmingway was not afraid; he declared himself delighted. He
+brought a generous armful of small cut willow boughs, and deposited
+them before a small stove, which seemed a temporary substitute for
+the usual large adobe chimney that generally occupied the entire
+gable of a miner's cabin. An elbow and short length of stovepipe
+carried the smoke through the cabin side. But he also noticed that
+his fair companion had used the interval to put on a pair of white
+cuffs and a collar. However, she brushed the green moss from his
+sleeve with some toweling, and although this operation brought her
+so near to him that her breath--as soft and warm as the southwest
+trades--stirred his hair, it was evident that this contiguity was
+only frontier familiarity, as far removed from conscious coquetry
+as it was, perhaps, from educated delicacy.
+
+"The boys gin'rally kem to take up enough wood for me to begin
+with," she said, "but I reckon they didn't know I was comin' up so
+soon."
+
+Hemmingway's distrust returned a little at this obvious suggestion
+that he was only a substitute for their general gallantry, but he
+smiled and said somewhat bluntly, "I don't suppose you lack for
+admirers here."
+
+The girl, however, took him literally. "Lordy, no! Me and Mamie
+Robinson are the only girls for fifteen miles along the creek.
+ADMIRIN'! I call it jest PESTERIN' sometimes! I reckon I'll hev
+to keep a dog!"
+
+Hemmingway shivered. Yes, she was not only conscious, but spoilt
+already. He pictured to himself the uncouth gallantries of the
+settlement, the provincial badinage, the feeble rivalries of the
+young men whom he had seen at the general store. Undoubtedly this
+was what she was expecting in HIM!
+
+"Well," she said, turning from the fire she had kindled, "while I'm
+settin' the table, tell me what's a-doin' in Sacramento! I reckon
+you've got heaps of lady friends thar,--I'm told there's lots of
+fashions just from the States."
+
+"I'm afraid I don't know enough of them to interest you," he said
+dryly.
+
+"Go on and talk," she replied. "Why, when Tom Flynn kem back from
+Sacramento, and he warn't thar more nor a week, he jest slung yarns
+about his doin's thar to last the hull rainy season."
+
+Half amused and half annoyed, Hemmingway seated himself on the
+little platform beside the open door, and began a conscientious
+description of the progress of Sacramento, its new buildings,
+hotels, and theatres, as it had struck him on his last visit. For
+a while he was somewhat entertained by the girl's vivacity and
+eager questioning, but presently it began to pall. He continued,
+however, with a grim sense of duty, and partly as a reason for
+watching her in her household duties. Certainly she was graceful!
+Her tall, lithe, but beautifully moulded figure, even in its
+characteristic southwestern indolence, fell into poses as
+picturesque as they were unconscious. She lifted the big molasses-
+can from its shelf on the rafters with the attitude of a Greek
+water-bearer. She upheaved the heavy flour-sack to the same secure
+shelf with the upraised palms of an Egyptian caryatid. Suddenly
+she interrupted Hemmingway's perfunctory talk with a hearty laugh.
+He started, looked up from his seat on the platform, and saw that
+she was standing over him and regarding him with a kind of
+mischievous pity.
+
+"Look here," she said, "I reckon that'll do! You kin pull up
+short! I kin see what's the matter with you; you're jest plumb
+tired, tuckered out, and want to turn in! So jest you sit that
+quiet until I get supper ready and never mind me." In vain
+Hemmingway protested, with a rising color. The girl only shook her
+head. "Don't tell me! You ain't keering to talk, and you're only
+playin' Sacramento statistics on me," she retorted, with unfeigned
+cheerfulness. "Anyhow, here's the wimmen comin', and supper is
+ready."
+
+There was a sound of weary, resigned ejaculations and pantings, and
+three gaunt women in lustreless alpaca gowns appeared before the
+cabin. They seemed prematurely aged and worn with labor, anxiety,
+and ill nourishment. Doubtless somewhere in these ruins a flower
+like Jay Jules had once flourished; doubtless somewhere in that
+graceful nymph herself the germ of this dreary maturity was hidden.
+Hemmingway welcomed them with a seriousness equal to their own.
+The supper was partaken with the kind of joyless formality which in
+the southwest is supposed to indicate deep respect, even the
+cheerful Jay falling under the influence, and it was with a feeling
+of relief that at last the young man retired to his fenced-off
+corner for solitude and repose. He gathered, however, that before
+"sun up" the next morning the elder women were going to Rattlesnake
+Bar for the weekly shopping, leaving Jay as before to prepare his
+breakfast and then join them later. It was already a change in his
+sentiments to find himself looking forward to that tete-a-tete with
+the young girl, as a chance of redeeming his character in her eyes.
+He was beginning to feel he had been stupid, unready, and withal
+prejudiced. He undressed himself in his seclusion, broken only by
+the monotonous voices in the adjoining apartment. From time to
+time he heard fragments and scraps of their conversation, always in
+reference to affairs of the household and settlement, but never of
+himself,--not even the suggestion of a prudent lowering of their
+voices,--and fell asleep. He woke up twice in the night with a
+sensation of cold so marked and distinct from his experience of the
+early evening, that he was fain to pile his clothes over his
+blankets to keep warm. He fell asleep again, coming once more to
+consciousness with a sense of a slight jar, but relapsing again
+into slumber for he knew not how long. Then he was fully awakened
+by a voice calling him, and, opening his eyes, beheld the blanket
+partition put aside, and the face of Jay thrust forward. To his
+surprise it wore a look of excited astonishment dominated by
+irrepressible laughter.
+
+"Get up quick as you kin," she said gaspingly; "this is about the
+killingest thing that ever happened!"
+
+She disappeared, but he could still hear her laughing, and to his
+utter astonishment with her disappearance the floor seemed to
+change its level. A giddy feeling seized him; he put his feet to
+the floor; it was unmistakably wet and oozing. He hurriedly
+clothed himself, still accompanied by the strange feeling of
+oscillation and giddiness, and passed though the opening into the
+next room. Again his step produced the same effect upon the floor,
+and he actually stumbled against her shaking figure, as she wiped
+the tears of uncontrollable mirth from her eyes with her apron.
+The contact seemed to upset her remaining gravity. She dropped
+into a chair, and, pointing to the open door, gasped, "Look thar!
+Lordy! How's that for high?" threw her apron over her head, and
+gave way to an uproarious fit of laughter.
+
+Hemmingway turned to the open door. A lake was before him on the
+level of the cabin. He stepped forward on the platform; the water
+was right and left, all around him. The platform dipped slightly
+to his step. The cabin was afloat,--afloat upon its base of logs
+like a raft, the whole structure upheld by the floor on which the
+logs were securely fastened. The high ground had disappeared--the
+river--its banks the green area beyond. They, and THEY alone, were
+afloat upon an inland sea.
+
+He turned an astounded and serious face upon her mirth. "When did
+it happen?" he demanded. She checked her laugh, more from a sense
+of polite deference to his mood than any fear, and said quietly,
+"That gets me. Everything was all right two hours ago when the
+wimmen left. It was too early to get your breakfast and rouse ye
+out, and I felt asleep, I reckon, until I felt a kind o' slump and
+a jar." Hemmingway remembered his own half-conscious sensation.
+"Then I got up and saw we was adrift. I didn't waken ye, for I
+thought it was only a sort of wave that would pass. It wasn't
+until I saw we were movin' and the hull rising ground gettin' away,
+that I thought o' callin' ye."
+
+He thought of the vanished general store, of her father, the
+workers on the bank, the helpless women on their way to the Bar,
+and turned almost savagely on her.
+
+"But the others,--where are they?" he said indignantly. "Do you
+call that a laughing matter?"
+
+She stopped at the sound of his voice as at a blow. Her face
+hardened into immobility, yet when she replied it was with the
+deliberate indolence of her father. "The wimmen are up on the
+hills by this time. The boys hev bin drowned out many times afore
+this and got clear off, on sluice boxes and timber, without
+squealing. Tom Flynn went down ten miles to Sayer's once on two
+bar'ls, and I never heard that HE was cryin' when they picked him
+up."
+
+A flush came to Hemmingway's cheek, but with it a gleam of
+intelligence. Of course the inundation was known to them FIRST,
+and there was the wreckage to support them. They had clearly saved
+themselves. If they had abandoned the cabin, it was because they
+knew its security, perhaps had even seen it safely adrift.
+
+"Has this ever happened to the cabin before?" he asked, as he
+thought of its peculiar base.
+
+"No."
+
+He looked at the water again. There was a decided current. The
+overflow was evidently no part of the original inundation. He put
+his hand in the water. It was icy cold. Yes, he understood it
+now. It was the sudden melting of snow in the Sierras which had
+brought this volume down the canyon. But was there more still to
+come?
+
+"Have you anything like a long pole or stick in the cabin?"
+
+"Nary," said the girl, opening her big eyes and shaking her head
+with a simulation of despair, which was, however, flatly contradicted
+by her laughing mouth.
+
+"Nor any cord or twine?" he continued.
+
+She handed him a ball of coarse twine.
+
+"May I take a couple of these hooks?" he asked, pointing to some
+rough iron hooks in the rafters, on which bacon and jerked beef
+were hanging.
+
+She nodded. He dislodged the hooks, greased them with the bacon
+rind, and affixed them to the twine.
+
+"Fishin'?" she asked demurely.
+
+"Exactly," he replied gravely.
+
+He threw the line in the water. It slackened at about six feet,
+straightened, and became taut at an angle, and then dragged. After
+one or two sharp jerks he pulled it up. A few leaves and grasses
+were caught in the hooks. He examined them attentively.
+
+"We're not in the creek," he said, "nor in the old overflow.
+There's no mud or gravel on the hooks, and these grasses don't grow
+near water."
+
+"Now, that's mighty cute of you," she said admiringly, as she knelt
+beside him on the platform. "Let's see what you've caught. Look
+yer!" she added, suddenly lifting a limp stalk, "that's 'old man,'
+and thar ain't a scrap of it grows nearer than Springer's Rise,--
+four miles from home."
+
+"Are you sure?" he asked quickly.
+
+"Sure as pop! I used to go huntin' it for smellidge."
+
+"For what?" he said, with a bewildered smile.
+
+"For this,"--she thrust the leaves to his nose and then to her own
+pink nostrils; "for--for"--she hesitated, and then with a
+mischievous simulation of correctness added, "for the perfume."
+
+He looked at her admiringly. For all her five feet ten inches,
+what a mere child she was, after all! What a fool he was to have
+taken a resentful attitude towards her! How charming and graceful
+she looked, kneeling there beside him!
+
+"Tell me," he said suddenly, in a gentler voice, "what were you
+laughing at just now?"
+
+Her brown eyes wavered for a moment, and then brimmed with
+merriment. She threw herself sideways, in a leaning posture,
+supporting herself on one arm, while with her other hand she slowly
+drew out her apron string, as she said, in a demure voice:--
+
+"Well, I reckoned it was jest too killin' to think of you, who
+didn't want to talk to me, and would hev given your hull pile to
+hev skipped out o' this, jest stuck here alongside o' me, whether
+you would or no, for Lord knows how long!"
+
+"But that was last night," he said, in a tone of raillery. "I was
+tired, and you said so yourself, you know. But I'm ready to talk
+now. What shall I tell you?"
+
+"Anything," said the girl, with a laugh.
+
+"What I am thinking of?" he said, with frankly admiring eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Everything?"
+
+"Yes, everything." She stopped, and leaning forward, suddenly
+caught the brim of his soft felt hat, and drawing it down smartly
+over his audacious eyes, said, "Everything BUT THAT."
+
+It was with some difficulty and some greater embarrassment that he
+succeeded in getting his eyes free again. When he did so, she had
+risen and entered the cabin. Disconcerted as he was, he was
+relieved to see that her expression of amusement was unchanged.
+Was her act a piece of rustic coquetry, or had she resented his
+advances? Nor did her next words settle the question.
+
+"Ye kin do yer nice talk and philanderin' after we've settled whar
+we are, what we're goin', and what's goin' to happen. Jest now it
+'pears to me that ez these yere logs are the only thing betwixt us
+and 'kingdom come,' ye'd better be hustlin' round with a few spikes
+to clinch 'em to the floor."
+
+She handed him a hammer and a few spikes. He obediently set to
+work, with little confidence, however, in the security of the
+fastening. There was neither rope nor chain for lashing the logs
+together; a stronger current and a collision with some submerged
+stump or wreckage would loosen them and wreck the cabin. But he
+said nothing. It was the girl who broke the silence.
+
+"What's your front name?"
+
+"Miles."
+
+"MILES,--that's a funny name. I reckon that's why you war so FAR
+OFF and DISTANT at first."
+
+Mr. Hemmingway thought this very witty, and said so. "But," he
+added, "when I was a little nearer a moment ago, you stopped me."
+
+"But you was moving faster than the shanty was. I reckon you don't
+take that gait with your lady friends at Sacramento! However, you
+kin talk now."
+
+"But you forget I don't know 'where we are,' nor 'what's going to
+happen.'"
+
+"But I do," she said quietly. "In a couple of hours we'll be
+picked up, so you'll be free again."
+
+Something in the confidence of her manner made him go to the door
+again and look out. There was scarcely any current now, and the
+cabin seemed motionless. Even the wind, which might have acted
+upon it, was wanting. They were apparently in the same position as
+before, but his sounding-line showed that the water was slightly
+falling. He came back and imparted the fact with a certain
+confidence born of her previous praise of his knowledge. To his
+surprise she only laughed and said lazily, "We'll be all right, and
+you'll be free, in about two hours."
+
+"I see no sign of it," he said, looking through the door again.
+
+"That's because you're looking in the water and the sky and the mud
+for it," she said, with a laugh. "I reckon you've been trained to
+watch them things a heap better than to study the folks about
+here."
+
+"I daresay you're right," said Hemmingway cheerfully, "but I don't
+clearly see what the folks about here have to do with our situation
+just now."
+
+"You'll see," she said, with a smile of mischievous mystery. "All
+the same," she added, with a sudden and dangerous softness in her
+eyes, "I ain't sayin' that YOU ain't kinder right neither."
+
+An hour ago he would have laughed at the thought that a mere look
+and sentence like this from the girl could have made his heart
+beat. "Then I may go on and talk?"
+
+She smiled, but her eyes said, "Yes," plainly.
+
+He turned to take a chair near her. Suddenly the cabin trembled,
+there was a sound of scraping, a bump, and then the whole structure
+tilted to one side and they were both thrown violently towards the
+corner, with a swift inrush of water. Hemmingway quickly caught
+the girl by the waist; she clung to him instinctively, yet still
+laughing, as with a desperate effort he succeeded in dragging her
+to the upper side of the slanting cabin, and momentarily restoring
+its equilibrium. They remained for an instant breathless. But in
+that instant he had drawn her face to his and kissed her.
+
+She disengaged herself gently with neither excitement nor emotion,
+and pointing to the open door said, "Look there!"
+
+Two of the logs which formed the foundation of their floor were
+quietly floating in the water before the cabin! The submerged
+obstacle or snag which had torn them from their fastening was still
+holding the cabin fast. Hemmingway saw the danger. He ran along
+the narrow ledge to the point of contact and unhesitatingly leaped
+into the icy cold water. It reached his armpits before his feet
+struck the obstacle,--evidently a stump with a projecting branch.
+Bracing himself against it, he shoved off the cabin. But when he
+struck out to follow it, he found that the log nearest him was
+loose and his grasp might tear it away. At the same moment,
+however, a pink calico arm fluttered above his head, and a strong
+grasp seized his coat collar. The cabin half revolved as the girl
+dragged him into the open door.
+
+"You bantam!" she said, with a laugh, "why didn't you let ME do
+that? I'm taller than you! But," she added, looking at his
+dripping clothes and dragging out a blanket from the corner, "I
+couldn't dry myself as quick as you kin!" To her surprise,
+however, Hemmingway tossed the blanket aside, and pointing to the
+floor, which was already filmed with water, ran to the still warm
+stove, detached it from its pipe, and threw it overboard. The sack
+of flour, bacon, molasses, and sugar, and all the heavier articles
+followed it into the stream. Relieved of their weight the cabin
+base rose an inch or two higher. Then he sat down and said,
+"There! that may keep us afloat for that 'couple of hours' you
+speak of. So I suppose I may talk now!"
+
+"Ye haven't no time," she said, in a graver voice. "It won't be as
+long as a couple of hours now. Look over thar!"
+
+He looked where she pointed across the gray expanse of water. At
+first he could see nothing. Presently he saw a mere dot on its
+face which at times changed to a single black line.
+
+"It's a log, like these," he said.
+
+"It's no log. It's an Injun dug-out*--comin' for me."
+
+
+* A canoe made from a hollowed log.
+
+
+"Your father?" he said joyfully.
+
+She smiled pityingly. "It's Tom Flynn. Father's got suthin' else
+to look arter. Tom Flynn hasn't."
+
+"And who's Tom Flynn?" he asked, with an odd sensation.
+
+"The man I'm engaged to," she said gravely, with a slight color.
+
+The rose that blossomed on her cheek faded in his. There was a
+moment of silence. Then he said frankly, "I owe you some apology.
+Forgive my folly and impertinence a moment ago. How could I have
+known this?"
+
+"You took no more than you deserved, or that Tom would have
+objected to," she said, with a little laugh. "You've been mighty
+kind and handy."
+
+She held out her hand; their fingers closed together in a frank
+pressure. Then his mind went back to his work, which he had
+forgotten,--to his first impressions of the camp and of her. They
+both stood silent, watching the canoe, now quite visible, and the
+man that was paddling it, with an intensity that both felt was
+insincere.
+
+"I'm afraid," he said, with a forced laugh, "that I was a little
+too hasty in disposing of your goods and possessions. We could
+have kept afloat a little longer."
+
+"It's all the same," she said, with a slight laugh; "it's jest as
+well we didn't look too comf'ble--to HIM."
+
+He did not reply; he did not dare to look at her. Yes! It was the
+same coquette he had seen last night. His first impressions were
+correct.
+
+The canoe came on rapidly now, propelled by a powerful arm. In a
+few moments it was alongside, and its owner leaped on the platform.
+It was the gentleman with his trousers tucked in his boots, the
+second voice in the gloomy discussion in the general store last
+evening. He nodded simply to the girl, and shook Hemmingway's hand
+warmly.
+
+Then he made a hurried apology for his delay: it was so difficult
+to find "the lay" of the drifted cabin. He had struck out first
+for the most dangerous spot,--the "old clearing," on the right
+bank, with its stumps and new growths,--and it seemed he was right.
+And all the rest were safe, and "nobody was hurt."
+
+"All the same, Tom," she said, when they were seated and paddling
+off again, "you don't know HOW NEAR YOU CAME TO LOSING ME." Then
+she raised her beautiful eyes and looked significantly, not at HIM,
+but at Hemmingway.
+
+When the water was down at "Jules'" the next day, they found
+certain curious changes and some gold, and the secretary was able
+to make a favorable report. But he made none whatever of his
+impressions "when the water was up at 'Jules','" though he often
+wondered if they were strictly trustworthy.
+
+
+
+THE BOOM IN THE "CALAVERAS CLARION"
+
+
+The editorial sanctum of the "Calaveras Clarion" opened upon the
+"composing-room" of that paper on the one side, and gave apparently
+upon the rest of Calaveras County upon the other. For, situated on
+the very outskirts of the settlement and the summit of a very steep
+hill, the pines sloped away from the editorial windows to the long
+valley of the South Fork and--infinity. The little wooden building
+had invaded Nature without subduing it. It was filled night and
+day with the murmur of pines and their fragrance. Squirrels
+scampered over its roof when it was not preoccupied by woodpeckers,
+and a printer's devil had once seen a nest-building blue jay enter
+the composing window, flutter before one of the slanting type-cases
+with an air of deliberate selection, and then fly off with a vowel
+in its bill.
+
+Amidst these sylvan surroundings the temporary editor of the
+"Clarion" sat at his sanctum, reading the proofs of an editorial.
+As he was occupying that position during a six weeks' absence of
+the bona fide editor and proprietor, he was consequently reading
+the proof with some anxiety and responsibility. It had been
+suggested to him by certain citizens that the "Clarion" needed a
+firmer and more aggressive policy towards the Bill before the
+Legislature for the wagon road to the South Fork. Several Assembly
+men had been "got at" by the rival settlement of Liberty Hill, and
+a scathing exposure and denunciation of such methods was necessary.
+The interests of their own township were also to be "whooped up."
+All this had been vigorously explained to him, and he had grasped
+the spirit, if not always the facts, of his informants. It is to
+be feared, therefore, that he was perusing his article more with
+reference to its vigor than his own convictions. And yet he was
+not so greatly absorbed as to be unmindful of the murmur of the
+pines without, his half-savage environment, and the lazy talk of
+his sole companions,--the foreman and printer in the adjoining
+room.
+
+"Bet your life! I've always said that a man INSIDE a newspaper
+office could hold his own agin any outsider that wanted to play
+rough or tried to raid the office! Thar's the press, and thar's
+the printin' ink and roller! Folks talk a heap o' the power o' the
+Press!--I tell ye, ye don't half know it. Why, when old Kernel
+Fish was editin' the 'Sierra Banner,' one o' them bullies that he'd
+lampooned in the 'Banner' fought his way past the Kernel in the
+office, into the composin'-room, to wreck everythin' and 'pye' all
+the types. Spoffrel--ye don't remember Spoffrel?--little red-
+haired man?--was foreman. Spoffrel fended him off with the roller
+and got one good dab inter his eyes that blinded him, and then
+Spoffrel sorter skirmished him over to the press,--a plain lever
+just like ours,--whar the locked-up form of the inside was still
+a-lyin'! Then, quick as lightnin', Spoffrel tilts him over agin it,
+and HE throws out his hand and ketches hold o' the form to steady
+himself, when Spoffrel just runs the form and the hand under the
+press and down with the lever! And that held the feller fast as
+grim death! And when at last he begs off, and Spoff lets him
+loose, the hull o' that 'ere lampooning article he objected to was
+printed right onto the skin o' his hand! Fact, and it wouldn't
+come off, either."
+
+"Gosh, but I'd like to hev seen it," said the printer. "There
+ain't any chance, I reckon, o' such a sight here. The boss don't
+take no risks lampoonin', and he" (the editor knew he was being
+indicated by some unseen gesture of the unseen workman) "ain't that
+style."
+
+"Ye never kin tell," said the foreman didactically, "what might
+happen! I've known editors to get into a fight jest for a little
+innercent bedevilin' o' the opposite party. Sometimes for a
+misprint. Old man Pritchard of the 'Argus' oncet had a hole blown
+through his arm because his proofreader had called Colonel
+Starbottle's speech an 'ignominious' defense, when the old man hed
+written 'ingenuous' defense."
+
+The editor paused in his proof-reading. He had just come upon the
+sentence: "We cannot congratulate Liberty Hill--in its superior
+elevation--upon the ignominious silence of the representative of
+all Calaveras when this infamous Bill was introduced." He referred
+to his copy. Yes! He had certainly written "ignominious,"--that
+was what his informants had suggested. But was he sure they were
+right? He had a vague recollection, also, that the representative
+alluded to--Senator Bradley--had fought two duels, and was a "good"
+though somewhat impulsive shot! He might alter the word to
+"ingenuous" or "ingenious," either would be finely sarcastic, but
+then--there was his foreman, who would detect it! He would wait
+until he had finished the entire article. In that occupation he
+became oblivious of the next room, of a silence, a whispered
+conversation, which ended with a rapping at the door and the
+appearance of the foreman in the doorway.
+
+"There's a man in the office who wants to see the editor," he said.
+
+"Show him in," replied the editor briefly. He was, however,
+conscious that there was a singular significance in his foreman's
+manner, and an eager apparition of the other printer over the
+foreman's shoulder.
+
+"He's carryin' a shot-gun, and is a man twice as big as you be,"
+said the foreman gravely.
+
+The editor quickly recalled his own brief and as yet blameless
+record in the "Clarion." "Perhaps," he said tentatively, with a
+gentle smile, "he's looking for Captain Brush" (the absent editor).
+
+"I told him all that," said the foreman grimly, "and he said he
+wanted to see the man in charge."
+
+In proportion as the editor's heart sank his outward crest arose.
+"Show him in," he said loftily.
+
+"We KIN keep him out," suggested the foreman, lingering a moment;
+"me and him," indicating the expectant printer behind him, "is
+enough for that."
+
+"Show him up," repeated the editor firmly.
+
+The foreman withdrew; the editor seated himself and again took up
+his proof. The doubtful word "ignominious" seemed to stand out of
+the paragraph before him; it certainly WAS a strong expression! He
+was about to run his pencil through it when he heard the heavy step
+of his visitor approaching. A sudden instinct of belligerency took
+possession of him, and he wrathfully threw the pencil down.
+
+The burly form of the stranger blocked the doorway. He was dressed
+like a miner, but his build and general physiognomy were quite
+distinct from the local variety. His upper lip and chin were
+clean-shaven, still showing the blue-black roots of the beard which
+covered the rest of his face and depended in a thick fleece under
+his throat. He carried a small bundle tied up in a silk
+handkerchief in one hand, and a "shot-gun" in the other, perilously
+at half-cock. Entering the sanctum, he put down his bundle and
+quietly closed the door behind him. He then drew an empty chair
+towards him and dropped heavily into it with his gun on his knees.
+The editor's heart dropped almost as heavily, although he quite
+composedly held out his hand.
+
+"Shall I relieve you of your gun?"
+
+"Thank ye, lad--noa. It's moor coomfortable wi' me, and it's main
+dangersome to handle on the half-cock. That's why I didn't leave
+'im on the horse outside!"
+
+At the sound of his voice and occasional accent a flash of
+intelligence relieved the editor's mind. He remembered that twenty
+miles away, in the illimitable vista from his windows, lay a
+settlement of English north-country miners, who, while faithfully
+adopting the methods, customs, and even slang of the Californians,
+retained many of their native peculiarities. The gun he carried on
+his knee, however, was evidently part of the Californian imitation.
+
+"Can I do anything for you?" said the editor blandly.
+
+"Ay! I've coom here to bill ma woife."
+
+"I--don't think I understand," hesitated the editor, with a smile.
+
+"I've coom here to get ye to put into your paaper a warnin', a
+notiss, that onless she returns to my house in four weeks, I'll
+have nowt to do wi' her again."
+
+"Oh!" said the editor, now perfectly reassured, "you want an
+advertisement? That's the business of the foreman; I'll call him."
+He was rising from his seat when the stranger laid a heavy hand on
+his shoulder and gently forced him down again.
+
+"Noa, lad! I don't want noa foreman nor understrappers to take
+this job. I want to talk it over wi' you. Sabe? My woife she bin
+up and awaa these six months. We had a bit of difference, that
+ain't here nor there, but she skedaddled outer my house. I want to
+give her fair warning, and let her know I ain't payin' any debts o'
+hers arter this notiss, and I ain't takin' her back arter four
+weeks from date."
+
+"I see," said the editor glibly. "What's your wife's name?"
+
+"Eliza Jane Dimmidge."
+
+"Good," continued the editor, scribbling on the paper before him;
+"something like this will do: 'Whereas my wife, Eliza Jane
+Dimmidge, having left my bed and board without just cause or
+provocation, this is to give notice that I shall not be responsible
+for any debts of her contracting on or after this date.'"
+
+"Ye must be a lawyer," said Mr. Dimmidge admiringly.
+
+It was an old enough form of advertisement, and the remark showed
+incontestably that Mr. Dimmidge was not a native; but the editor
+smiled patronizingly and went on: "'And I further give notice that
+if she does not return within the period of four weeks from this
+date, I shall take such proceedings for relief as the law affords.'"
+
+"Coom, lad, I didn't say THAT."
+
+"But you said you wouldn't take her back."
+
+"Ay."
+
+"And you can't prevent her without legal proceedings. She's your
+wife. But you needn't take proceedings, you know. It's only a
+warning."
+
+Mr. Dimmidge nodded approvingly. "That's so."
+
+"You'll want it published for four weeks, until date?" asked the
+editor.
+
+"Mebbe longer, lad."
+
+The editor wrote "till forbid" in the margin of the paper and
+smiled.
+
+"How big will it be?" said Mr. Dimmidge.
+
+The editor took up a copy of the "Clarion" and indicated about an
+inch of space. Mr. Dimmidge's face fell.
+
+"I want it bigger,--in large letters, like a play-card," he said.
+"That's no good for a warning."
+
+"You can have half a column or a whole column if you like," said
+the editor airily.
+
+"I'll take a whole one," said Mr. Dimmidge simply.
+
+The editor laughed. "Why! it would cost you a hundred dollars."
+
+"I'll take it," repeated Mr. Dimmidge.
+
+"But," said the editor gravely, "the same notice in a small space
+will serve your purpose and be quite legal."
+
+"Never you mind that, lad! It's the looks of the thing I'm arter,
+and not the expense. I'll take that column."
+
+The editor called in the foreman and showed him the copy. "Can you
+display that so as to fill a column?"
+
+The foreman grasped the situation promptly. It would be big
+business for the paper. "Yes," he said meditatively, "that bold-
+faced election type will do it."
+
+Mr. Dimmidge's face brightened. The expression "bold-faced"
+pleased him. "That's it! I told you. I want to bill her in a
+portion of the paper."
+
+"I might put in a cut," said the foreman suggestively; "something
+like this." He took a venerable woodcut from the case. I grieve
+to say it was one which, until the middle of the present century,
+was common enough in the newspaper offices in the Southwest. It
+showed the running figure of a negro woman carrying her personal
+property in a knotted handkerchief slung from a stick over her
+shoulder, and was supposed to represent "a fugitive slave."
+
+Mr. Dimmidge's eyes brightened. "I'll take that, too. It's a
+little dark-complected for Mrs. P., but it will do. Now roon away,
+lad," he said to the foreman, as he quietly pushed him into the
+outer office again and closed the door. Then, facing the surprised
+editor, he said, "Theer's another notiss I want ye to put in your
+paper; but that's atween US. Not a word to THEM," he indicated the
+banished foreman with a jerk of his thumb. "Sabe? I want you to
+put this in another part o' your paper, quite innocent-like, ye
+know." He drew from his pocket a gray wallet, and taking out a
+slip of paper read from it gravely, "'If this should meet the eye
+of R. B., look out for M. J. D. He is on your track. When this
+you see write a line to E. J. D., Elktown Post Office.' I want
+this to go in as 'Personal and Private'--sabe?--like them notisses
+in the big 'Frisco papers."
+
+"I see," said the editor, laying it aside. "It shall go in the
+same issue in another column."
+
+Apparently Mr. Dimmidge expected something more than this reply,
+for after a moment's hesitation he said with an odd smile:
+
+"Ye ain't seein' the meanin' o' that, lad?"
+
+"No," said the editor lightly; "but I suppose R. B. does, and it
+isn't intended that any one else should."
+
+"Mebbe it is, and mebbe it isn't," said Mr. Dimmidge, with a self-
+satisfied air. "I don't mind saying atween us that R. B. is the
+man as I've suspicioned as havin' something to do with my wife
+goin' away; and ye see, if he writes to E. J. D.--that's my wife's
+initials--at Elktown, I'LL get that letter and so make sure."
+
+"But suppose your wife goes there first, or sends?"
+
+"Then I'll ketch her or her messenger. Ye see?"
+
+The editor did not see fit to oppose any argument to this phenomenal
+simplicity, and Mr. Dimmidge, after settling his bill with the
+foreman, and enjoining the editor to the strictest secrecy regarding
+the origin of the "personal notice," took up his gun and departed,
+leaving the treasury of the "Clarion" unprecedentedly enriched, and
+the editor to his proofs.
+
+The paper duly appeared the next morning with the column
+advertisement, the personal notice, and the weighty editorial on
+the wagon road. There was a singular demand for the paper, the
+edition was speedily exhausted, and the editor was proportionately
+flattered, although he was surprised to receive neither praise nor
+criticism from his subscribers. Before evening, however, he
+learned to his astonishment that the excitement was caused by the
+column advertisement. Nobody knew Mr. Dimmidge, nor his domestic
+infelicities, and the editor and foreman, being equally in the
+dark, took refuge in a mysterious and impressive evasion of all
+inquiry. Never since the last San Francisco Vigilance Committee
+had the office been so besieged. The editor, foreman, and even the
+apprentice, were buttonholed and "treated" at the bar, but to no
+effect. All that could be learned was that it was a bona fide
+advertisement, for which one hundred dollars had been received!
+There were great discussions and conflicting theories as to whether
+the value of the wife, or the husband's anxiety to get rid of her,
+justified the enormous expense and ostentatious display. She was
+supposed to be an exceedingly beautiful woman by some, by others a
+perfect Sycorax; in one breath Mr. Dimmidge was a weak, uxorious
+spouse, wasting his substance on a creature who did not care for
+him, and in another a maddened, distracted, henpecked man, content
+to purchase peace and rest at any price. Certainly, never was
+advertisement more effective in its publicity, or cheaper in
+proportion to the circulation it commanded. It was copied
+throughout the whole Pacific slope; mighty San Francisco papers
+described its size and setting under the attractive headline, "How
+they Advertise a Wife in the Mountains!" It reappeared in the
+Eastern journals, under the title of "Whimsicalities of the Western
+Press." It was believed to have crossed to England as a specimen
+of "Transatlantic Savagery." The real editor of the "Clarion"
+awoke one morning, in San Francisco, to find his paper famous. Its
+advertising columns were eagerly sought for; he at once advanced
+the rates. People bought successive issues to gaze upon this
+monumental record of extravagance. A singular idea, which,
+however, brought further fortune to the paper, was advanced by an
+astute critic at the Eureka Saloon. "My opinion, gentlemen, is
+that the whole blamed thing is a bluff! There ain't no Mr.
+Dimmidge; there ain't no Mrs. Dimmidge; there ain't no desertion!
+The whole rotten thing is an ADVERTISEMENT o' suthin'! Ye'll find
+afore ye get through with it that that there wife won't come back
+until that blamed husband buys Somebody's Soap, or treats her to
+Somebody's particular Starch or Patent Medicine! Ye jest watch and
+see!" The idea was startling, and seized upon the mercantile mind.
+The principal merchant of the town, and purveyor to the mining
+settlements beyond, appeared the next morning at the office of the
+"Clarion." "Ye wouldn't mind puttin' this 'ad' in a column
+alongside o' the Dimmidge one, would ye?" The young editor glanced
+at it, and then, with a serpent-like sagacity, veiled, however, by
+the suavity of the dove, pointed out that the original advertiser
+might think it called his bona fides into question and withdraw his
+advertisement. "But if we secured you by an offer of double the
+amount per column?" urged the merchant. "That," responded the
+locum tenens, "was for the actual editor and proprietor in San
+Francisco to determine. He would telegraph." He did so. The
+response was, "Put it in." Whereupon in the next issue, side by
+side with Mr. Dimmidge's protracted warning, appeared a column with
+the announcement, in large letters, "WE HAVEN'T LOST ANY WIFE, but
+WE are prepared to furnish the following goods at a lower rate than
+any other advertiser in the county," followed by the usual price
+list of the merchant's wares. There was an unprecedented demand
+for that issue. The reputation of the "Clarion," both as a shrewd
+advertising medium and a comic paper, was established at once. For
+a few days the editor waited with some apprehension for a
+remonstrance from the absent Dimmidge, but none came. Whether Mr.
+Dimmidge recognized that this new advertisement gave extra
+publicity to his own, or that he was already on the track of the
+fugitive, the editor did not know. The few curious citizens who
+had, early in the excitement, penetrated the settlement of the
+English miners twenty miles away in search of information, found
+that Mr. Dimmidge had gone away, and that Mrs. Dimmidge had NEVER
+resided there with him!
+
+Six weeks passed. The limit of Mr. Dimmidge's advertisement had
+been reached, and, as it was not renewed, it had passed out of the
+pages of the "Clarion," and with it the merchant's advertisement in
+the next column. The excitement had subsided, although its
+influence was still felt in the circulation of the paper and its
+advertising popularity. The temporary editor was also nearing the
+limit of his incumbency, but had so far participated in the good
+fortune of the "Clarion" as to receive an offer from one of the San
+Francisco dailies.
+
+It was a warm night, and he was alone in his sanctum. The rest of
+the building was dark and deserted, and his solitary light,
+flashing out through the open window, fell upon the nearer pines
+and was lost in the dark, indefinable slope below. He had reached
+the sanctum by the rear, and a door which he also left open to
+enjoy the freshness of the aromatic air. Nor did it in the least
+mar his privacy. Rather the solitude of the great woods without
+seemed to enter through that door and encompassed him with its
+protecting loneliness. There was occasionally a faint "peep" in
+the scant eaves, or a "pat-pat," ending in a frightened scurry
+across the roof, or the slow flap of a heavy wing in the darkness
+below. These gentle disturbances did not, however, interrupt his
+work on "The True Functions of the County Newspaper," the editorial
+on which he was engaged.
+
+Presently a more distinct rustling against the straggling blackberry
+bushes beside the door attracted his attention. It was followed by
+a light tapping against the side of the house. The editor started
+and turned quickly towards the open door. Two outside steps led to
+the ground. Standing upon the lower one was a woman. The upper
+part of her figure, illuminated by the light from the door, was
+thrown into greater relief by the dark background of the pines. Her
+face was unknown to him, but it was a pleasant one, marked by a
+certain good-humored determination.
+
+"May I come in?" she said confidently.
+
+"Certainly," said the editor. "I am working here alone because it
+is so quiet." He thought he would precipitate some explanation
+from her by excusing himself.
+
+"That's the reason why I came," she said, with a quiet smile.
+
+She came up the next step and entered the room. She was plainly
+but neatly dressed, and now that her figure was revealed he saw
+that she was wearing a linsey-woolsey riding-skirt, and carried a
+serviceable rawhide whip in her cotton-gauntleted hand. She took
+the chair he offered her and sat down sideways on it, her whip hand
+now also holding up her skirt, and permitting a hem of clean white
+petticoat and a smart, well-shaped boot to be seen.
+
+"I don't remember to have had the pleasure of seeing you in
+Calaveras before," said the editor tentatively.
+
+"No. I never was here before," she said composedly, "but you've
+heard enough of me, I reckon. I'm Mrs. Dimmidge." She threw one
+hand over the back of the chair, and with the other tapped her
+riding-whip on the floor.
+
+The editor started. Mrs. Dimmidge! Then she was not a myth. An
+absurd similarity between her attitude with the whip and her
+husband's entrance with his gun six weeks before forced itself upon
+him and made her an invincible presence.
+
+"Then you have returned to your husband?" he said hesitatingly.
+
+"Not much!" she returned, with a slight curl of her lip.
+
+"But you read his advertisement?"
+
+"I saw that column of fool nonsense he put in your paper--ef that's
+what you mean," she said with decision, "but I didn't come here to
+see HIM--but YOU."
+
+The editor looked at her with a forced smile, but a vague misgiving.
+He was alone at night in a deserted part of the settlement, with a
+plump, self-possessed woman who had a contralto voice, a horsewhip,
+and--he could not help feeling--an evident grievance.
+
+"To see me?" he repeated, with a faint attempt at gallantry. "You
+are paying me a great compliment, but really"--
+
+"When I tell you I've come three thousand miles from Kansas straight
+here without stopping, ye kin reckon it's so," she replied firmly.
+
+"Three thousand miles!" echoed the editor wonderingly.
+
+"Yes. Three thousand miles from my own folks' home in Kansas,
+where six years ago I married Mr. Dimmidge,--a British furriner as
+could scarcely make himself understood in any Christian language!
+Well, he got round me and dad, allowin' he was a reg'lar out-and-
+out profeshnal miner,--had lived in mines ever since he was a boy;
+and so, not knowin' what kind o' mines, and dad just bilin' over
+with the gold fever, we were married and kem across the plains to
+Californy. He was a good enough man to look at, but it warn't
+three months before I discovered that he allowed a wife was no
+better nor a nigger slave, and he the master. That made me open my
+eyes; but then, as he didn't drink, and didn't gamble, and didn't
+swear, and was a good provider and laid by money, why I shifted
+along with him as best I could. We drifted down the first year to
+Sonora, at Red Dog, where there wasn't another woman. Well, I did
+the nigger slave business,--never stirring out o' the settlement,
+never seein' a town or a crowd o' decent people,--and he did the
+lord and master! We played that game for two years, and I got
+tired. But when at last he allowed he'd go up to Elktown Hill,
+where there was a passel o' his countrymen at work, with never a
+sign o' any other folks, and leave me alone at Red Dog until he
+fixed up a place for me at Elktown Hill,--I kicked! I gave him
+fair warning! I did as other nigger slaves did,--I ran away!"
+
+A recollection of the wretched woodcut which Mr. Dimmidge had
+selected to personify his wife flashed upon the editor with a new
+meaning. Yet perhaps she had not seen it, and had only read a copy
+of the advertisement. What could she want? The "Calaveras
+Clarion," although a "Palladium" and a "Sentinel upon the Heights
+of Freedom" in reference to wagon roads, was not a redresser of
+domestic wrongs,--except through its advertising columns! Her next
+words intensified that suggestion.
+
+"I've come here to put an advertisement in your paper."
+
+The editor heaved a sigh of relief, as once before. "Certainly,"
+he said briskly. "But that's another department of the paper, and
+the printers have gone home. Come to-morrow morning early."
+
+"To-morrow morning I shall be miles away," she said decisively,
+"and what I want done has got to be done NOW! I don't want to see
+no printers; I don't want ANYBODY to know I've been here but you.
+That's why I kem here at night, and rode all the way from Sawyer's
+Station, and wouldn't take the stage-coach. And when we've settled
+about the advertisement, I'm going to mount my horse, out thar in
+the bushes, and scoot outer the settlement."
+
+"Very good," said the editor resignedly. "Of course I can deliver
+your instructions to the foreman. And now--let me see--I suppose
+you wish to intimate in a personal notice to your husband that
+you've returned."
+
+"Nothin' o' the kind!" said Mrs. Dimmidge coolly. "I want to
+placard him as he did me. I've got it all written out here.
+Sabe?"
+
+She took from her pocket a folded paper, and spreading it out on
+the editor's desk, with a certain pride of authorship read as
+follows:--
+
+"Whereas my husband, Micah J. Dimmidge, having given out that I
+have left his bed and board,--the same being a bunk in a log cabin
+and pork and molasses three times a day,--and having advertised
+that he'd pay no debts of MY contractin',--which, as thar ain't
+any, might be easier collected than debts of his own contractin',--
+this is to certify that unless he returns from Elktown Hill to his
+only home in Sonora in one week from date, payin' the cost of this
+advertisement, I'll know the reason why.--Eliza Jane Dimmidge."
+
+"Thar," she added, drawing a long breath, "put that in a column of
+the 'Clarion,' same size as the last, and let it work, and that's
+all I want of you."
+
+"A column?" repeated the editor. "Do you know the cost is very
+expensive, and I COULD put it in a single paragraph?"
+
+"I reckon I kin pay the same as Mr. Dimmidge did for HIS," said the
+lady complacently. "I didn't see your paper myself, but the paper
+as copied it--one of them big New York dailies--said that it took
+up a whole column."
+
+The editor breathed more freely; she had not seen the infamous
+woodcut which her husband had selected. At the same moment he was
+struck with a sense of retribution, justice, and compensation.
+
+"Would you," he asked hesitatingly,--"would you like it illustrated--
+by a cut?"
+
+"With which?"
+
+"Wait a moment; I'll show you."
+
+He went into the dark composing-room, lit a candle, and rummaging
+in a drawer sacred to weather-beaten, old-fashioned electrotyped
+advertising symbols of various trades, finally selected one and
+brought it to Mrs. Dimmidge. It represented a bare and exceedingly
+stalwart arm wielding a large hammer.
+
+"Your husband being a miner,--a quartz miner,--would that do?" he
+asked. (It had been previously used to advertise a blacksmith, a
+gold-beater, and a stone-mason.)
+
+The lady examined it critically.
+
+"It does look a little like Micah's arm," she said meditatively.
+"Well--you kin put it in."
+
+The editor was so well pleased with his success that he must needs
+make another suggestion. "I suppose," he said ingenuously, "that
+you don't want to answer the 'Personal'?"
+
+"'Personal'?" she repeated quickly, "what's that? I ain't seen no
+'Personal.'" The editor saw his blunder. She, of course, had
+never seen Mr. Dimmidge's artful "Personal;" THAT the big dailies
+naturally had not noticed nor copied. But it was too late to
+withdraw now. He brought out a file of the "Clarion," and snipping
+out the paragraph with his scissors, laid it before the lady.
+
+She stared at it with wrinkled brows and a darkening face.
+
+"And THIS was in the same paper?--put in by Mr. Dimmidge?" she
+asked breathlessly.
+
+The editor, somewhat alarmed, stammered "Yes." But the next moment
+he was reassured. The wrinkles disappeared, a dozen dimples broke
+out where they had been, and the determined, matter-of-fact Mrs.
+Dimmidge burst into a fit of rosy merriment. Again and again she
+laughed, shaking the building, startling the sedate, melancholy
+woods beyond, until the editor himself laughed in sheer vacant
+sympathy.
+
+"Lordy!" she said at last, gasping, and wiping the laughter from
+her wet eyes. "I never thought of THAT."
+
+"No," explained the editor smilingly; "of course you didn't. Don't
+you see, the papers that copied the big advertisement never saw
+that little paragraph, or if they did, they never connected the two
+together."
+
+"Oh, it ain't that," said Mrs. Dimmidge, trying to regain her
+composure and holding her sides. "It's that blessed DEAR old
+dunderhead of a Dimmidge I'm thinking of. That gets me. I see it
+all now. Only, sakes alive! I never thought THAT of him. Oh,
+it's just too much!" and she again relapsed behind her handkerchief.
+
+"Then I suppose you don't want to reply to it," said the editor.
+
+Her laughter instantly ceased. "Don't I?" she said, wiping her
+face into its previous complacent determination. "Well, young man,
+I reckon that's just what I WANT to do! Now, wait a moment; let's
+see what he said," she went on, taking up and reperusing the
+"Personal" paragraph. "Well, then," she went on, after a moment's
+silent composition with moving lips, "you just put these lines in."
+
+The editor took up his pencil.
+
+"To Mr. J. D. Dimmidge.--Hope you're still on R. B.'s tracks. Keep
+there!--E. J. D."
+
+The editor wrote down the line, and then, remembering Mr. Dimmidge's
+voluntary explanation of HIS "Personal," waited with some confidence
+for a like frankness from Mrs. Dimmidge. But he was mistaken.
+
+"You think that he--R. B.--or Mr. Dimmidge--will understand this?"
+he at last asked tentatively. "Is it enough?"
+
+"Quite enough," said Mrs. Dimmidge emphatically. She took a roll
+of greenbacks from her pocket, selected a hundred-dollar bill and
+then a five, and laid them before the editor. "Young man," she
+said, with a certain demure gravity, "you've done me a heap o'
+good. I never spent money with more satisfaction than this. I
+never thought much o' the 'power o' the Press,' as you call it,
+afore. But this has been a right comfortable visit, and I'm glad I
+ketched you alone. But you understand one thing: this yer visit,
+and WHO I am, is betwixt you and me only."
+
+"Of course I must say that the advertisement was AUTHORIZED,"
+returned the editor. "I'm only the temporary editor. The
+proprietor is away."
+
+"So much the better," said the lady complacently. "You just say
+you found it on your desk with the money; but don't you give me
+away."
+
+"I can promise you that the secret of your personal visit is safe
+with me," said the young man, with a bow, as Mrs. Dimmidge rose.
+"Let me see you to your horse," he added. "It's quite dark in the
+woods."
+
+"I can see well enough alone, and it's just as well you shouldn't
+know HOW I kem or HOW I went away. Enough for you to know that
+I'll be miles away before that paper comes out. So stay where you
+are."
+
+She pressed his hand frankly and firmly, gathered up her riding-
+skirt, slipped backwards to the door, and the next moment rustled
+away into the darkness.
+
+Early the next morning the editor handed Mrs. Dimmidge's
+advertisement, and the woodcut he had selected, to his foreman. He
+was purposely brief in his directions, so as to avoid inquiry, and
+retired to his sanctum. In the space of a few moments the foreman
+entered with a slight embarrassment of manner.
+
+"You'll excuse my speaking to you, sir," he said, with a singular
+mixture of humility and cunning. "It's no business of mine, I
+know; but I thought I ought to tell you that this yer kind o' thing
+won't pay any more,--it's about played out!"
+
+"I don't think I understand you," said the editor loftily, but with
+an inward misgiving. "You don't mean to say that a regular, actual
+advertisement"--
+
+"Of course, I know all that," said the foreman, with a peculiar
+smile; "and I'm ready to back you up in it, and so's the boy; but
+it won't pay."
+
+"It HAS paid a hundred and five dollars," said the editor, taking
+the notes from his pocket; "so I'd advise you to simply attend to
+your duty and set it up."
+
+A look of surprise, followed, however, by a kind of pitying smile,
+passed over the foreman's face. "Of course, sir, THAT'S all right,
+and you know your own business; but if you think that the new
+advertisement will pay this time as the other one did, and whoop up
+another column from an advertiser, I'm afraid you'll slip up. It's
+a little 'off color' now,--not 'up to date,'--if it ain't a regular
+'back number,' as you'll see."
+
+"Meantime I'll dispense with your advice," said the editor curtly,
+"and I think you had better let our subscribers and advertisers do
+the same, or the 'Clarion' might also be obliged to dispense with
+your SERVICES."
+
+"I ain't no blab," said the foreman, in an aggrieved manner, "and I
+don't intend to give the show away even if it don't PAY. But I
+thought I'd tell you, because I know the folks round here better
+than you do."
+
+He was right. No sooner had the advertisement appeared than the
+editor found that everybody believed it to be a sheer invention of
+his own to "once more boom" the "Clarion." If they had doubted
+MR. Dimmidge, they utterly rejected MRS. Dimmidge as an advertiser!
+It was a stale joke that nobody would follow up; and on the heels of
+this came a letter from the editor-in-chief.
+
+
+MY DEAR BOY,--You meant well, I know, but the second Dimmidge "ad"
+was a mistake. Still, it was a big bluff of yours to show the
+money, and I send you back your hundred dollars, hoping you won't
+"do it again." Of course you'll have to keep the advertisement in
+the paper for two issues, just as if it were a real thing, and it's
+lucky that there's just now no pressure in our columns. You might
+have told a better story than that hogwash about your finding the
+"ad" and a hundred dollars lying loose on your desk one morning.
+It was rather thin, and I don't wonder the foreman kicked.
+
+
+The young editor was in despair. At first he thought of writing to
+Mrs. Dimmidge at the Elktown Post-Office, asking her to relieve him
+of his vow of secrecy; but his pride forbade. There was a humorous
+concern, not without a touch of pity, in the faces of his
+contributors as he passed; a few affected to believe in the new
+advertisement, and asked him vague, perfunctory questions about it.
+His position was trying, and he was not sorry when the term of his
+engagement expired the next week, and he left Calaveras to take his
+new position on the San Francisco paper.
+
+He was standing in the saloon of the Sacramento boat when he felt a
+sudden heavy pressure on his shoulder, and looking round sharply,
+beheld not only the black-bearded face of Mr. Dimmidge, lit up by a
+smile, but beside it the beaming, buxom face of Mrs. Dimmidge,
+overflowing with good-humor. Still a little sore from his past
+experience, he was about to address them abruptly, when he was
+utterly vanquished by the hearty pressure of their hands and the
+unmistakable look of gratitude in their eyes.
+
+"I was just saying to 'Lizy Jane," began Mr. Dimmidge breathlessly,
+"if I could only meet that young man o' the 'Clarion' what brought
+us together again"--
+
+"You'd be willin' to pay four times the amount we both paid him,"
+interpolated the laughing Mrs. Dimmidge.
+
+"But I didn't bring you together," burst out the dazed young man,
+"and I'd like to know, in the name of Heaven, what brought you
+together now?"
+
+"Don't you see, lad," said the imperturbable Mr. Dimmidge, "'Lizy
+Jane and myself had qua'lled, and we just unpacked our fool
+nonsense in your paper and let the hull world know it! And we both
+felt kinder skeert and shamed like, and it looked such small
+hogwash, and of so little account, for all the talk it made, that
+we kinder felt lonely as two separated fools that really ought to
+share their foolishness together."
+
+"And that ain't all," said Mrs. Dimmidge, with a sly glance at her
+spouse, "for I found out from that 'Personal' you showed me that
+this particular old fool was actooally jealous!--JEALOUS!"
+
+"And then?" said the editor impatiently.
+
+"And then I KNEW he loved me all the time."
+
+
+
+THE SECRET OF SOBRIENTE'S WELL
+
+
+Even to the eye of the most inexperienced traveler there was no
+doubt that Buena Vista was a "played-out" mining camp. There,
+seamed and scarred by hydraulic engines, was the old hillside, over
+whose denuded surface the grass had begun to spring again in fitful
+patches; there were the abandoned heaps of tailings already
+blackened by sun and rain, and worn into mounds like ruins of
+masonry; there were the waterless ditches, like giant graves, and
+the pools of slumgullion, now dried into shining, glazed cement.
+There were two or three wooden "stores," from which the windows and
+doors had been taken and conveyed to the newer settlement of
+Wynyard's Gulch. Four or five buildings that still were inhabited--
+the blacksmith's shop, the post-office, a pioneer's cabin, and the
+old hotel and stage-office--only accented the general desolation.
+The latter building had a remoteness of prosperity far beyond the
+others, having been a wayside Spanish-American posada, with adobe
+walls of two feet in thickness, that shamed the later shells of
+half-inch plank, which were slowly warping and cracking like dried
+pods in the oven-like heat.
+
+The proprietor of this building, Colonel Swinger, had been looked
+upon by the community as a person quite as remote, old-fashioned,
+and inconsistent with present progress as the house itself. He was
+an old Virginian, who had emigrated from his decaying plantation on
+the James River only to find the slaves, which he had brought with
+him, freed men when they touched Californian soil; to be driven by
+Northern progress and "smartness" out of the larger cities into the
+mountains, to fix himself at last, with the hopeless fatuity of his
+race, upon an already impoverished settlement; to sink his scant
+capital in hopeless shafts and ledges, and finally to take over the
+decaying hostelry of Buena Vista, with its desultory custom and
+few, lingering, impecunious guests. Here, too, his old Virginian
+ideas of hospitality were against his financial success; he could
+not dun nor turn from his door those unfortunate prospectors whom
+the ebbing fortunes of Buena Vista had left stranded by his side.
+
+Colonel Swinger was sitting in a wicker-work rocking-chair on the
+veranda of his hotel--sipping a mint julep which he held in his
+hand, while he gazed into the dusty distance. Nothing could have
+convinced him that he was not performing a serious part of his duty
+as hotel-keeper in this attitude, even though there were no
+travelers expected, and the road at this hour of the day was
+deserted. On a bench at his side Larry Hawkins stretched his lazy
+length,--one foot dropped on the veranda, and one arm occasionally
+groping under the bench for his own tumbler of refreshment. Apart
+from this community of occupation, there was apparently no
+interchange of sentiment between the pair. The silence had
+continued for some moments, when the colonel put down his glass and
+gazed earnestly into the distance.
+
+"Seein' anything?" remarked the man on the bench, who had sleepily
+regarded him.
+
+"No," said the colonel, "that is--it's only Dick Ruggles crossin'
+the road."
+
+"Thought you looked a little startled, ez if you'd seen that ar
+wanderin' stranger."
+
+"When I see that wandering stranger, sah," said the colonel
+decisively, "I won't be sittin' long in this yer chyar. I'll let
+him know in about ten seconds that I don't harbor any vagrants
+prowlin' about like poor whites or free niggers on my propahty,
+sah!"
+
+"All the same, I kinder wish ye did see him, for you'd be settled
+in YOUR mind and I'd be easier in MINE, ef you found out what he
+was doin' round yer, or ye had to admit that it wasn't no LIVIN'
+man."
+
+"What do you mean?" said the colonel, testily facing around in his
+chair.
+
+His companion also altered his attitude by dropping his other foot
+to the floor, sitting up, and leaning lazily forward with his hands
+clasped.
+
+"Look yer, colonel. When you took this place, I felt I didn't have
+no call to tell ye all I know about it, nor to pizen yer mind by
+any darned fool yarns I mout hev heard. Ye know it was one o' them
+old Spanish haciendas?"
+
+"I know," said the colonel loftily, "that it was held by a grant
+from Charles the Fifth of Spain, just as my propahty on the James
+River was given to my people by King James of England, sah!"
+
+"That ez as may be," returned his companion, in lazy indifference;
+"though I reckon that Charles the Fifth of Spain and King James of
+England ain't got much to do with what I'm goin' to tell ye. Ye
+see, I was here long afore YOUR time, or any of the boys that hev
+now cleared out; and at that time the hacienda belonged to a man
+named Juan Sobriente. He was that kind o' fool that he took no
+stock in mining. When the boys were whoopin' up the place and
+finding the color everywhere, and there was a hundred men working
+down there in the gulch, he was either ridin' round lookin' up the
+wild horses he owned, or sittin' with two or three lazy peons and
+Injins that was fed and looked arter by the priests. Gosh! now I
+think of it, it was mighty like YOU when you first kem here with
+your niggers. That's curious, too, ain't it?"
+
+He had stopped, gazing with an odd, superstitious wonderment at the
+colonel, as if overcome by this not very remarkable coincidence.
+The colonel, overlooking or totally oblivious to its somewhat
+uncomplimentary significance, simply said, "Go on. What about
+him?"
+
+"Well, ez I was sayin', he warn't in it nohow, but kept on his
+reg'lar way when the boom was the biggest. Some of the boys
+allowed it was mighty oncivil for him to stand off like that, and
+others--when he refused a big pile for his hacienda and the garden,
+that ran right into the gold-bearing ledge--war for lynching him
+and driving him outer the settlement. But as he had a pretty
+darter or niece livin' with him, and, except for his partickler
+cussedness towards mining, was kinder peaceable and perlite, they
+thought better of it. Things went along like this, until one day
+the boys noticed--particklerly the boys that had slipped up on
+their luck--that old man Sobriente was gettin' rich,--had stocked a
+ranch over on the Divide, and had given some gold candlesticks to
+the mission church. That would have been only human nature and
+business, ef he'd had any during them flush times; but he hadn't.
+This kinder puzzled them. They tackled the peons,--his niggers,--
+but it was all 'No sabe.' They tackled another man,--a kind of
+half-breed Kanaka, who, except the priest, was the only man who
+came to see him, and was supposed to be mighty sweet on the darter
+or niece,--but they didn't even get the color outer HIM. Then the
+first thing we knowed was that old Sobriente was found dead in the
+well!"
+
+"In the well, sah!" said the colonel, starting up. "The well on my
+propahty?"
+
+"No," said his companion. "The old well that was afterwards shut
+up. Yours was dug by the last tenant, Jack Raintree, who allowed
+that he didn't want to 'take any Sobriente in his reg'lar whiskey
+and water.' Well, the half-breed Kanaka cleared out after the old
+man's death, and so did that darter or niece; and the church, to
+whom old Sobriente had left this house, let it to Raintree for next
+to nothin'."
+
+"I don't see what all that has got to do with that wandering
+tramp," said the colonel, who was by no means pleased with this
+history of his property.
+
+"I'll tell ye. A few days after Raintree took it over, he was
+lookin' round the garden, which old Sobriente had always kept shut
+up agin strangers, and he finds a lot of dried-up 'slumgullion'*
+scattered all about the borders and beds, just as if the old man
+had been using it for fertilizing. Well, Raintree ain't no fool;
+he allowed the old man wasn't one, either; and he knew that
+slumgullion wasn't worth no more than mud for any good it would do
+the garden. So he put this yer together with Sobriente's good
+luck, and allowed to himself that the old coyote had been secretly
+gold-washin' all the while he seemed to be standin' off agin it!
+But where was the mine? Whar did he get the gold? That's what got
+Raintree. He hunted all over the garden, prospected every part of
+it,--ye kin see the holes yet,--but he never even got the color!"
+
+
+* That is, a viscid cement-like refuse of gold-washing.
+
+
+He paused, and then, as the colonel made an impatient gesture, he
+went on.
+
+"Well, one night just afore you took the place, and when Raintree
+was gettin' just sick of it, he happened to be walkin' in the
+garden. He was puzzlin' his brain agin to know how old Sobriente
+made his pile, when all of a suddenst he saw suthin' a-movin' in
+the brush beside the house. He calls out, thinkin' it was one of
+the boys, but got no answer. Then he goes to the bushes, and a
+tall figger, all in black, starts out afore him. He couldn't see
+any face, for its head was covered with a hood, but he saw that it
+held suthin' like a big cross clasped agin its breast. This made
+him think it was one them priests, until he looks agin and sees
+that it wasn't no cross it was carryin,' but a PICKAXE! He makes a
+jump towards it, but it vanished! He traipsed over the hull
+garden,--went though ev'ry bush,--but it was clean gone. Then the
+hull thing flashed upon him with a cold shiver. The old man bein'
+found dead in the well! the goin' away of the half-breed and the
+girl! the findin' o' that slumgullion! The old man HAD made a
+strike in that garden, the half-breed had discovered his secret and
+murdered him, throwin' him down the well! It war no LIVIN' man
+that he had seen, but the ghost of old Sobriente!"
+
+The colonel emptied the remaining contents of his glass at a single
+gulp, and sat up. "It's my opinion, sah, that Raintree had that
+night more than his usual allowance of corn-juice on board; and
+it's only a wonder, sah, that he didn't see a few pink alligators
+and sky-blue snakes at the same time. But what's this got to do
+with that wanderin' tramp?"
+
+"They're all the same thing, colonel, and in my opinion that there
+tramp ain't no more alive than that figger was."
+
+"But YOU were the one that saw this tramp with your own eyes,"
+retorted the colonel quickly, "and you never before allowed it was
+a spirit!"
+
+"Exactly! I saw it whar a minit afore nothin' had been standin',
+and a minit after nothin' stood," said Larry Hawkins, with a
+certain serious emphasis; "but I warn't goin' to say it to ANYBODY,
+and I warn't goin' to give you and the hacienda away. And ez
+nobody knew Raintree's story, I jest shut up my head. But you kin
+bet your life that the man I saw warn't no livin' man!"
+
+"We'll see, sah!" said the colonel, rising from his chair with his
+fingers in the armholes of his nankeen waistcoat, "ef he ever
+intrudes on my property again. But look yar! don't ye go sayin'
+anything of this to Polly,--you know what women are!"
+
+A faint color came into Larry's face; an animation quite different
+to the lazy deliberation of his previous monologue shone in his
+eyes, as he said, with a certain rough respect he had not shown
+before to his companion, "That's why I'm tellin' ye, so that ef SHE
+happened to see anything and got skeert, ye'd know how to reason
+her out of it."
+
+"'Sh!" said the colonel, with a warning gesture.
+
+A young girl had just appeared in the doorway, and now stood
+leaning against the central pillar that supported it, with one hand
+above her head, in a lazy attitude strongly suggestive of the
+colonel's Southern indolence, yet with a grace entirely her own.
+Indeed, it overcame the negligence of her creased and faded yellow
+cotton frock and unbuttoned collar, and suggested--at least to the
+eyes of ONE man--the curving and clinging of the jasmine vine
+against the outer column of the veranda. Larry Hawkins rose
+awkwardly to his feet.
+
+"Now what are you two men mumblin' and confidin' to each other?
+You look for all the world like two old women gossips," she said,
+with languid impertinence.
+
+It was easy to see that a privileged and recognized autocrat spoke.
+No one had ever questioned Polly Swinger's right to interrupting,
+interfering, and saucy criticisms. Secure in the hopeless or
+chivalrous admiration of the men around her, she had repaid it with
+a frankness that scorned any coquetry; with an indifference to the
+ordinary feminine effect or provocation in dress or bearing that
+was as natural as it was invincible. No one had ever known Polly
+to "fix up" for anybody, yet no one ever doubted the effect, if she
+had. No one had ever rebuked her charming petulance, or wished to.
+
+Larry gave a weak, vague laugh. Colonel Swinger as ineffectively
+assumed a mock parental severity. "When you see two gentlemen,
+miss, discussin' politics together, it ain't behavin' like a lady
+to interrupt. Better run away and tidy yourself before the stage
+comes."
+
+The young lady replied to the last innuendo by taking two spirals
+of soft hair, like "corn silk," from her oval cheek, wetting them
+with her lips, and tucking them behind her ears. Her father's
+ungentlemanly suggestion being thus disposed of, she returned to
+her first charge.
+
+"It ain't no politics; you ain't been swearing enough for THAT!
+Come, now! It's the mysterious stranger ye've been talking about!"
+
+Both men stared at her with unaffected concern.
+
+"What do YOU know about any mysterious stranger?" demanded her
+father.
+
+"Do you suppose you men kin keep a secret," scoffed Polly. "Why,
+Dick Ruggles told me how skeert ye all were over an entire
+stranger, and he advised me not to wander down the road after dark.
+I asked him if he thought I was a pickaninny to be frightened by
+bogies, and that if he hadn't a better excuse for wantin' 'to see
+me home' from the Injin spring, he might slide."
+
+Larry laughed again, albeit a little bitterly, for it seemed to him
+that the excuse was fully justified; but the colonel said promptly,
+"Dick's a fool, and you might have told him there were worse things
+to be met on the road than bogies. Run away now, and see that the
+niggers are on hand when the stage comes."
+
+Two hours later the stage came with a clatter of hoofs and a cloud
+of red dust, which precipitated itself and a dozen thirsty
+travelers upon the veranda before the hotel bar-room; it brought
+also the usual "express" newspapers and much talk to Colonel
+Swinger, who always received his guests in a lofty personal fashion
+at the door, as he might have done in his old Virginian home; but
+it brought likewise--marvelous to relate--an ACTUAL GUEST, who had
+two trunks and asked for a room! He was evidently a stranger to
+the ways of Buena Vista, and particularly to those of Colonel
+Swinger, and at first seemed inclined to resent the social attitude
+of his host, and his frank and free curiosity. When he, however,
+found that Colonel Swinger was even better satisfied to give an
+account of HIS OWN affairs, his family, pedigree, and his present
+residence, he began to betray some interest. The colonel told him
+all the news, and would no doubt have even expatiated on his
+ghostly visitant, had he not prudently concluded that his guest
+might decline to remain in a haunted inn. The stranger had spoken
+of staying a week; he had some private mining speculations to watch
+at Wynyard's Gulch,--the next settlement, but he did not care to
+appear openly at the "Gulch Hotel." He was a man of thirty, with
+soft, pleasing features and a singular litheness of movement,
+which, combined with a nut-brown, gypsy complexion, at first
+suggested a foreigner. But his dialect, to the colonel's ears, was
+distinctly that of New England, and to this was added a puritanical
+and sanctimonious drawl. "He looked," said the colonel in after
+years, "like a blank light mulatter, but talked like a blank Yankee
+parson." For all that, he was acceptable to his host, who may have
+felt that his reminiscences of his plantation on the James River
+were palling on Buena Vista ears, and was glad of his new auditor.
+It was an advertisement, too, of the hotel, and a promise of its
+future fortunes. "Gentlemen having propahty interests at the
+Gulch, sah, prefer to stay at Buena Vista with another man of
+propahty, than to trust to those new-fangled papah-collared,
+gingerbread booths for traders that they call 'hotels' there," he
+had remarked to some of "the boys." In his preoccupation with the
+new guest, he also became a little neglectful of his old chum and
+dependent, Larry Hawkins. Nor was this the only circumstance that
+filled the head of that shiftless loyal retainer of the colonel
+with bitterness and foreboding. Polly Swinger--the scornfully
+indifferent, the contemptuously inaccessible, the coldly capricious
+and petulant--was inclined to be polite to the stranger!
+
+The fact was that Polly, after the fashion of her sex, took it into
+her pretty head, against all consistency and logic, suddenly to
+make an exception to her general attitude towards mankind in favor
+of one individual. The reason-seeking masculine reader will rashly
+conclude that this individual was the CAUSE as well as the object;
+but I am satisfied that every fair reader of these pages will
+instinctively know better. Miss Polly had simply selected the new
+guest, Mr. Starbuck, to show OTHERS, particularly Larry Hawkins,
+what she COULD do if she were inclined to be civil. For two days
+she "fixed up" her distracting hair at him so that its silken floss
+encircled her head like a nimbus; she tucked her oval chin into a
+white fichu instead of a buttonless collar; she appeared at dinner
+in a newly starched yellow frock! She talked to him with "company
+manners;" said she would "admire to go to San Francisco," and asked
+if he knew her old friends the Fauquier girls from "Faginia." The
+colonel was somewhat disturbed; he was glad that his daughter had
+become less negligent of her personal appearance; he could not but
+see, with the others, how it enhanced her graces; but he was, with
+the others, not entirely satisfied with her reasons. And he could
+not help observing--what was more or less patent to ALL--that
+Starbuck was far from being equally responsive to her attentions,
+and at times was indifferent and almost uncivil. Nobody seemed to
+be satisfied with Polly's transformation but herself.
+
+But eventually she was obliged to assert herself. The third
+evening after Starbuck's arrival she was going over to the cabin of
+Aunt Chloe, who not only did the washing for Buena Vista, but
+assisted Polly in dressmaking. It was not far, and the night was
+moonlit. As she crossed the garden she saw Starbuck moving in the
+manzanita bushes beyond; a mischievous light came into her eyes;
+she had not EXPECTED to meet him, but she had seen him go out, and
+there were always POSSIBILITIES. To her surprise, however, he
+merely lifted his hat as she passed, and turned abruptly in another
+direction. This was more than the little heart-breaker of Buena
+Vista was accustomed to!
+
+"Oh, Mr. Starbuck!" she called, in her laziest voice.
+
+He turned almost impatiently.
+
+"Since you're so civil and pressing, I thought I'd tell you I was
+just runnin' over to Aunt Chloe's," she said dryly.
+
+"I should think it was hardly the proper thing for a young lady to
+do at this time of night," he said superciliously. "But you know
+best,--you know the people here."
+
+Polly's cheeks and eyes flamed. "Yes, I reckon I do," she said
+crisply; "it's only a STRANGER here would think of being rude.
+Good-night, Mr. Starbuck!"
+
+She tripped away after this Parthian shot, yet feeling, even in her
+triumph, that the conceited fool seemed actually relieved at her
+departure! And for the first time she now thought that she had
+seen something in his face that she did not like! But her lazy
+independence reasserted itself soon, and half an hour later, when
+she had left Aunt Chloe's cabin, she had regained her self-esteem.
+Yet, to avoid meeting him again, she took a longer route home,
+across the dried ditch and over the bluff, scarred by hydraulics,
+and so fell, presently, upon the old garden at the point where it
+adjoined the abandoned diggings. She was quite sure she had
+escaped a meeting with Starbuck, and was gliding along under the
+shadow of the pear-trees, when she suddenly stopped. An
+indescribable terror overcame her as she stared at a spot in the
+garden, perfectly illuminated by the moonlight not fifty yards from
+where she stood. For she saw on its surface a human head--a man's
+head!--seemingly on the level of the ground, staring in her
+direction. A hysterical laugh sprang from her lips, and she caught
+at the branches above her or she would have fallen! Yet in that
+moment the head had vanished! The moonlight revealed the empty
+garden,--the ground she had gazed at,--but nothing more!
+
+She had never been superstitious. As a child she had heard the
+negroes talk of "the hants,"--that is, "the HAUNTS" or spirits,--
+but had believed it a part of their ignorance, and unworthy a white
+child,--the daughter of their master! She had laughed with Dick
+Ruggles over the illusions of Larry, and had shared her father's
+contemptuous disbelief of the wandering visitant being anything but
+a living man; yet she would have screamed for assistance now, only
+for the greater fear of making her weakness known to Mr. Starbuck,
+and being dependent upon him for help. And with it came the sudden
+conviction that HE had seen this awful vision, too. This would
+account for his impatience of her presence and his rudeness. She
+felt faint and giddy. Yet after the first shock had passed, her
+old independence and pride came to her relief. She would go to the
+spot and examine it. If it were some trick or illusion, she would
+show her superiority and have the laugh on Starbuck. She set her
+white teeth, clenched her little hands, and started out into the
+moonlight. But alas! for women's weakness. The next moment she
+uttered a scream and almost fell into the arms of Mr. Starbuck, who
+had stepped out of the shadows beside her.
+
+"So you see you HAVE been frightened," he said, with a strange,
+forced laugh; "but I warned you about going out alone!"
+
+Even in her fright she could not help seeing that he, too, seemed
+pale and agitated, at which she recovered her tongue and her self-
+possession.
+
+"Anybody would be frightened by being dogged about under the trees,"
+she said pertly.
+
+"But you called out before you saw me," he said bluntly, "as if
+something had frightened you. That was WHY I came towards you."
+
+She knew it was the truth; but as she would not confess to her
+vision, she fibbed outrageously.
+
+"Frightened," she said, with pale but lofty indignation. "What was
+there to frighten me? I'm not a baby, to think I see a bogie in
+the dark!" This was said in the faint hope that HE had seen
+something too. If it had been Larry or her father who had met her,
+she would have confessed everything.
+
+"You had better go in," he said curtly. "I will see you safe
+inside the house."
+
+She demurred at this, but as she could not persist in her first
+bold intention of examining the locality of the vision without
+admitting its existence, she permitted him to walk with her to the
+house, and then at once fled to her own room. Larry and her father
+noticed their entrance together and their agitated manner, and were
+uneasy. Yet the colonel's paternal pride and Larry's lover's
+respect kept the two men from communicating their thoughts to each
+other.
+
+"The confounded pup has been tryin' to be familiar, and Polly's set
+him down," thought Larry, with glowing satisfaction.
+
+"He's been trying some of his sanctimonious Yankee abolition talk
+on Polly, and she shocked him!" thought the colonel exultingly.
+
+But poor Polly had other things to think of in the silence of her
+room. Another woman would have unburdened herself to a confidante;
+but Polly was too loyal to her father to shatter his beliefs, and
+too high-spirited to take another and a lesser person into her
+confidence. She was certain that Aunt Chloe would be full of
+sympathetic belief and speculations, but she would not trust a
+nigger with what she couldn't tell her own father. For Polly
+really and truly believed that she had seen a ghost, no doubt the
+ghost of the murdered Sobriente, according to Larry's story. WHY
+he should appear with only his head above ground puzzled her,
+although it suggested the Catholic idea of purgatory, and he was a
+Catholic! Perhaps he would have risen entirely but for that stupid
+Starbuck's presence; perhaps he had a message for HER alone. The
+idea pleased Polly, albeit it was a "fearful joy" and attended with
+some cold shivering. Naturally, as a gentleman, he would appear to
+HER--the daughter of a gentleman--the successor to his house--
+rather than to a Yankee stranger. What was she to do? For once
+her calm nerves were strangely thrilled; she could not think of
+undressing and going to bed, and two o'clock surprised her, still
+meditating, and occasionally peeping from her window upon the
+moonlit but vacant garden. If she saw him again, would she dare to
+go down alone? Suddenly she started to her feet with a beating
+heart! There was the unmistakable sound of a stealthy footstep in
+the passage, coming towards her room. Was it he? In spite of her
+high resolves she felt that if the door opened she should scream!
+She held her breath--the footsteps came nearer--were before her
+door--and PASSED!
+
+Then it was that the blood rushed back to her cheek with a flush of
+indignation. Her room was at the end of the passage; there was
+nothing beyond but a private staircase, long disused, except by
+herself, as a short cut through the old patio to the garden. No
+one else knew of it, and no one else had the right of access to it!
+This insolent human intrusion--as she was satisfied it was now--
+overcame her fear, and she glided to the door. Opening it softly,
+she could hear the stealthy footsteps descending. She darted back,
+threw a shawl over her head and shoulders, and taking the small
+Derringer pistol which it had always been part of her ostentatious
+independence to place at her bed-head, she as stealthily followed
+the intruder. But the footsteps had died away before she reached
+the patio, and she saw only the small deserted, grass-grown
+courtyard, half hidden in shadows, in whose centre stood the
+fateful and long sealed-up well! A shudder came over her at again
+being brought into contact with the cause of her frightful vision,
+but as her eyes became accustomed to the darkness, she saw
+something more real and appalling! The well was no longer sealed!
+Fragments of bricks and boards lay around it! One end of a rope,
+coiled around it like a huge snake, descended its foul depths; and
+as she gazed with staring eyes, the head and shoulders of a man
+emerged slowly from it! But it was NOT the ghostly apparition of
+last evening, and her terror changed to scorn and indignation as
+she recognized the face of Starbuck!
+
+Their eyes met; an oath broke from his lips. He made a movement to
+spring from the well, but as the girl started back, the pistol held
+in her hand was discharged aimlessly in the air, and the report
+echoed throughout the courtyard. With a curse Starbuck drew back,
+instantly disappeared in the well, and Polly fell fainting on the
+steps. When she came to, her father and Larry were at her side.
+They had been alarmed at the report, and had rushed quickly to the
+patio, but not in time to prevent the escape of Starbuck and his
+accomplice. By the time she had recovered her consciousness, they
+had learned the full extent of that extraordinary revelation which
+she had so innocently precipitated. Sobriente's well had really
+concealed a rich gold ledge,--actually tunneled and galleried by
+him secretly in the past,--and its only other outlet was an opening
+in the garden hidden by a stone which turned on a swivel. Its
+existence had been unknown to Sobriente's successor, but was known
+to the Kanaka who had worked with Sobriente, who fled with his
+daughter after the murder, but who no doubt was afraid to return
+and work the mine. He had imparted the secret to Starbuck, another
+half-breed, son of a Yankee missionary and Hawaiian wife, who had
+evidently conceived this plan of seeking Buena Vista with an
+accomplice, and secretly removing such gold as was still
+accessible. The accomplice, afterwards identified by Larry as the
+wandering tramp, failed to discover the secret entrance FROM the
+garden, and Starbuck was consequently obliged to attempt it from
+the hotel--for which purpose he had introduced himself as a
+boarder--by opening the disused well secretly at night. These
+facts were obtained from papers found in the otherwise valueless
+trunks, weighted with stones for ballast, which Starbuck had
+brought to the hotel to take away his stolen treasure in, but which
+he was obliged to leave in his hurried flight. The attempt would
+have doubtless succeeded but for Polly's courageous and timely
+interference!
+
+And now that they had told her ALL, they only wanted to know what
+had first excited HER suspicions, and driven her to seek the well
+as the object of Starbuck's machinations? THEY had noticed her
+manner when she entered the house that night, and Starbuck's
+evident annoyance. Had she taxed him with her suspicions, and so
+discovered a clue?
+
+It was a terrible temptation to Polly to pose as a more perfect
+heroine, and one may not blame her if she did not rise entirely
+superior to it. Her previous belief, that the head of the
+accomplice at the opening of the garden was that of a GHOST, she
+now felt was certainly in the way, as was also her conduct to
+Starbuck, whom she believed to be equally frightened, and whom she
+never once suspected! So she said, with a certain lofty
+simplicity, that there were SOME THINGS which she really did not
+care to talk about, and Larry and her father left her that night
+with the firm conviction that the rascal Starbuck had tried to
+tempt her to fly with him and his riches, and had been crushingly
+foiled. Polly never denied this, and once, in later days, when
+admiringly taxed with it by Larry, she admitted with dove-like
+simplicity that she MAY have been too foolishly polite to her
+father's guest for the sake of her father's hotel.
+
+However, all this was of small account to the thrilling news of a
+new discovery and working of the "old gold ledge" at Buena Vista!
+As the three kept their secret from the world, the discovery was
+accepted in the neighborhood as the result of careful examination
+and prospecting on the part of Colonel Swinger and his partner
+Larry Hawkins. And when the latter gentleman afterwards boldly
+proposed to Polly Swinger, she mischievously declared that she
+accepted him only that the secret might not go "out of the family."
+
+
+
+LIBERTY JONES'S DISCOVERY
+
+
+It was at best merely a rocky trail winding along a shelf of the
+eastern slope of the Santa Cruz range, yet the only road between
+the sea and the inland valley. The hoof-prints of a whole century
+of zigzagging mules were impressed on the soil, regularly soaked by
+winter rains and dried by summer suns during that period; the
+occasional ruts of heavy, rude, wooden wheels--long obsolete--were
+still preserved and visible. Weather-worn boulders and ledges,
+lying in the unclouded glare of an August sky, radiated a quivering
+heat that was intolerable, even while above them the masts of
+gigantic pines rocked their tops in the cold southwestern trades
+from the unseen ocean beyond. A red, burning dust lay everywhere,
+as if the heat were slowly and visibly precipitating itself.
+
+The creaking of wheels and axles, the muffled plunge of hoofs, and
+the cough of a horse in the dust thus stirred presently broke the
+profound woodland silence. Then a dirty white canvas-covered
+emigrant wagon slowly arose with the dust along the ascent. It was
+travel-stained and worn, and with its rawboned horses seemed to
+have reached the last stage of its journey and fitness. The only
+occupants, a man and a girl, appeared to be equally jaded and
+exhausted, with the added querulousness of discontent in their
+sallow and badly nourished faces. Their voices, too, were not
+unlike the creaking they had been pitched to overcome, and there
+was an absence of reserve and consciousness in their speech, which
+told pathetically of an equal absence of society.
+
+"It's no user talkin'! I tell ye, ye hain't got no more sense than
+a coyote! I'm sick and tired of it, doggoned if I ain't! Ye ain't
+no more use nor a hossfly,--and jest ez hinderin'! It was along o'
+you that we lost the stock at Laramie, and ef ye'd bin at all
+decent and takin', we'd hev had kempany that helped, instead of
+laggin' on yere alone!"
+
+"What did ye bring me for?" retorted the girl shrilly. "I might
+hev stayed with Aunt Marty. I wasn't hankerin' to come."
+
+"Bring ye for?" repeated her father contemptuously; "I reckoned ye
+might he o' some account here, whar wimmin folks is skeerce, in the
+way o' helpin',--and mebbe gettin' yer married to some likely
+feller. Mighty much chance o' that, with yer yaller face and skin
+and bones."
+
+"Ye can't blame me for takin' arter you, dad," she said, with a
+shrill laugh, but no other resentment of his brutality.
+
+"Ye want somebody to take arter you--with a club," he retorted
+angrily. "Ye hear! Wot's that ye're doin' now?"
+
+She had risen and walked to the tail of the wagon. "Goin' to get
+out and walk. I'm tired o' bein' jawed at."
+
+She jumped into the road. The act was neither indignant nor
+vengeful; the frequency of such scenes had blunted their sting.
+She was probably "tired" of the quarrel, and ended it rudely. Her
+father, however, let fly a Parthian arrow.
+
+"Ye needn't think I'm goin' to wait for ye, ez I hev! Ye've got to
+keep tetch with the team, or get left. And a good riddance of bad
+rubbidge."
+
+In reply the girl dived into the underwood beside the trail, picked
+a wild berry or two, stripped a wand of young hazel she had broken
+off, and switching it at her side, skipped along on the outskirts
+of the wood and ambled after the wagon. Seen in the full,
+merciless glare of a Californian sky, she justified her father's
+description; thin and bony, her lank frame outstripped the body of
+her ragged calico dress, which was only kept on her shoulders by
+straps,--possibly her father's cast-off braces. A boy's soft felt
+hat covered her head, and shadowed her only notable feature, a pair
+of large dark eyes, looking larger for the hollow temples which
+narrowed the frame in which they were set.
+
+So long as the wagon crawled up the ascent the girl knew she could
+easily keep up with it, or even distance the tired horses. She
+made one or two incursions into the wood, returning like an animal
+from quest of food, with something in her mouth, which she was
+tentatively chewing, and once only with some inedible mandrono
+berries, plucked solely for their brilliant coloring. It was very
+hot and singularly close; the higher current of air had subsided,
+and, looking up, a singular haze seemed to have taken its place
+between the treetops. Suddenly she heard a strange, rumbling
+sound; an odd giddiness overtook her, and she was obliged to clutch
+at a sapling to support herself; she laughed vacantly, though a
+little frightened, and looked vaguely towards the summit of the
+road; but the wagon had already disappeared. A strange feeling of
+nausea then overcame her; she spat out the leaves she had been
+chewing, disgustedly. But the sensation as quickly passed, and she
+once more sought the trail and began slowly to follow the tracks of
+the wagon. The air blew freshly, the treetops began again to rock
+over her head, and the incident was forgotten.
+
+Presently she paused; she must have missed the trail, for the wagon
+tracks had ended abruptly before a large boulder that lay across
+the mountain trail. She dipped into the woods again; here there
+were other wagon tracks that confused her. It was like her dogged,
+stupid father to miss the trail; she felt a gleam of malicious
+satisfaction at his discomfiture. Sooner or later, he would have
+to retrace his steps and virtually come back for her! She took up
+a position where two rough wheel ruts and tracks intersected each
+other, one of which must be the missing trail. She noticed, too,
+the broader hoof-prints of cattle without the following wheel ruts,
+and instead of traces, the long smooth trails made by the dragging
+of logs, and knew by these tokens that she must be near the highway
+or some woodman's hut or ranch. She began to be thirsty, and was
+glad, presently, when her quick, rustic ear caught the tinkling of
+water. Yet it was not so easy to discover, and she was getting
+footsore and tired again before she found it, some distance away,
+in a gully coming from a fissure in a dislocated piece of outcrop.
+It was beautifully clear, cold, and sparkling, with a slightly
+sweetish taste, yet unlike the brackish "alkali" of the plains. It
+refreshed and soothed her greatly, so much that, reclining against
+a tree, but where she would be quite visible from the trail, her
+eyes closed dreamily, and presently she slept.
+
+When she awoke, the shafts of sunlight were striking almost level
+into her eyes. She must have slept two hours. Her father had not
+returned; she knew the passage of the wagon would have awakened
+her. She began to feel strange, but not yet alarmed; it was only
+the uncertainty that made her uneasy. Had her father really gone
+on by some other trail? Or had he really hurried on and left her,
+as he said he would? The thought brought an odd excitement to her
+rather than any fear. A sudden sense of freedom, as if some
+galling chain had dropped from her, sent a singular thrill through
+her frame. Yet she felt confused with her independence, not
+knowing what to do with it, and momentarily dazzled with the
+possible gift.
+
+At this moment she heard voices, and the figures of two men
+appeared on the trail.
+
+They were talking earnestly, and walking as if familiar with the
+spot, yet gazing around them as if at some novelty of the aspect.
+
+"And look there," said one; "there has been some serious disturbance
+of that outcrop," pointing in the direction of the spring; "the
+lower part has distinctly subsided." He spoke with a certain
+authority, and dominance of position, and was evidently the
+superior, as he was the elder of the two, although both were roughly
+dressed.
+
+"Yes, it does kinder look as if it had lost its holt, like the
+ledge yonder."
+
+"And you see I am right; the movement was from east to west,"
+continued the elder man.
+
+The girl could not comprehend what they said, and even thought them
+a little silly. But she advanced towards them; at which they
+stopped short, staring at her. With feminine instinct she
+addressed the more important one:--
+
+"Ye ain't passed no wagon nor team goin' on, hev ye?"
+
+"What sort of wagon?" said the man.
+
+"Em'grant wagon, two yaller hosses. Old man--my dad--drivin'."
+She added the latter kinship as a protecting influence against
+strangers, in spite of her previous independence.
+
+The men glanced at each other.
+
+"How long ago?"
+
+The girl suddenly remembered that she had slept two hours.
+
+"Sens noon," she said hesitatingly.
+
+"Since the earthquake?"
+
+"Wot's that?"
+
+The man came impatiently towards her. "How did you come here?"
+
+"Got outer the wagon to walk. I reckon dad missed the trail, and
+hez got off somewhere where I can't find him."
+
+"What trail was he on,--where was he going?"
+
+"Sank Hozay,* I reckon. He was goin' up the grade--side o' the
+hill; he must hev turned off where there's a big rock hangin'
+over."
+
+
+* San Jose.
+
+
+"Did you SEE him turn off?"
+
+"No."
+
+The second man, who was in hearing distance, had turned away, and
+was ostentatiously examining the sky and the treetops; the man who
+had spoken to her joined him, and they said something in a low
+voice. They turned again and came slowly towards her. She, from
+some obscure sense of imitation, stared at the treetops and the sky
+as the second man had done. But the first man now laid his hand
+kindly on her shoulder and said, "Sit down."
+
+Then they told her there had been an earthquake so strong that it
+had thrown down a part of the hillside, including the wagon trail.
+That a wagon team and driver, such as she had described, had been
+carried down with it, crushed to fragments, and buried under a
+hundred feet of rock in the gulch below. A party had gone down to
+examine, but it would be weeks perhaps before they found it, and
+she must be prepared for the worst. She looked at them vaguely and
+with tearless eyes.
+
+"Then ye reckon dad's dead?"
+
+"We fear it."
+
+"Then wot's a-goin' to become o' me?" she said simply.
+
+They glanced again at each other. "Have you no friends in
+California?" said the elder man.
+
+"Nary one."
+
+"What was your father going to do?"
+
+"Dunno. I reckon HE didn't either."
+
+"You may stay here for the present," said the elder man meditatively.
+"Can you milk?"
+
+The girl nodded. "And I suppose you know something about looking
+after stock?" he continued.
+
+The girl remembered that her father thought she didn't, but this
+was no time for criticism, and she again nodded.
+
+"Come with me," said the older man, rising. "I suppose," he added,
+glancing at her ragged frock, "everything you have is in the
+wagon."
+
+She nodded, adding with the same cold naivete, "It ain't much!"
+
+They walked on, the girl following; at times straying furtively on
+either side, as if meditating an escape in the woods,--which indeed
+had once or twice been vaguely in her thoughts,--but chiefly to
+avoid further questioning and not to hear what the men said to each
+other. For they were evidently speaking of her, and she could not
+help hearing the younger repeat her words, "Wot's agoin' to become
+o' me?" with considerable amusement, and the addition: "She'll take
+care of herself, you bet! I call that remark o' hers the richest
+thing out."
+
+"And I call the state of things that provoked it--monstrous!" said
+the elder man grimly. "You don't know the lives of these people."
+
+Presently they came to an open clearing in the forest, yet so
+incomplete that many of the felled trees, partly lopped of their
+boughs, still lay where they had fallen. There was a cabin or
+dwelling of unplaned, unpainted boards; very simple in structure,
+yet made in a workmanlike fashion, quite unlike the usual log cabin
+she had seen. This made her think that the elder man was a
+"towny," and not a frontiersman like the other.
+
+As they approached the cabin the elder man stopped, and turning to
+her, said:--
+
+"Do you know Indians?"
+
+The girl started, and then recovering herself with a quick laugh:
+"G'lang!--there ain't any Injins here!"
+
+"Not the kind YOU mean; these are very peaceful. There's a squaw
+here whom you will"--he stopped, hesitated as he looked critically
+at the girl, and then corrected himself--"who will help you."
+
+He pushed open the cabin door and showed an interior, equally
+simple but well joined and fitted,--a marvel of neatness and finish
+to the frontier girl's eye. There were shelves and cupboards and
+other conveniences, yet with no ostentation of refinement to
+frighten her rustic sensibilities.
+
+Then he pushed open another door leading into a shed and called
+"Waya." A stout, undersized Indian woman, fitted with a coarse
+cotton gown, but cleaner and more presentable than the girl's one
+frock, appeared in the doorway. "This is Waya, who attends to the
+cooking and cleaning," he said; "and by the way, what is your
+name?"
+
+"Libby Jones."
+
+He took a small memorandum book and a "stub" of pencil from his
+pocket. "Elizabeth Jones," he said, writing it down. The girl
+interposed a long red hand.
+
+"No," she interrupted sharply, "not Elizabeth, but Libby, short for
+Lib'rty."
+
+"Liberty?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Liberty Jones, then. Well, Waya, this is Miss Jones, who will
+look after the cows and calves--and the dairy." Then glancing at
+her torn dress, he added: "You'll find some clean things in there,
+until I can send up something from San Jose. Waya will show you."
+
+Without further speech he turned away with the other man. When
+they were some distance from the cabin, the younger remarked:--
+
+"More like a boy than a girl, ain't she?"
+
+"So much the better for her work," returned the elder grimly.
+
+"I reckon! I was only thinkin' she didn't han'some much either as
+a boy or girl, eh, doctor?" he pursued.
+
+"Well! as THAT won't make much difference to the cows, calves, or
+the dairy, it needn't trouble US," returned the doctor dryly. But
+here a sudden outburst of laughter from the cabin made them both
+turn in that direction. They were in time to see Liberty Jones
+dancing out of the cabin door in a large cotton pinafore, evidently
+belonging to the squaw, who was following her with half-laughing,
+half-frightened expostulations. The two men stopped and gazed at
+the spectacle.
+
+"Don't seem to be takin' the old man's death very pow'fully," said
+the younger, with a laugh.
+
+"Quite as much as he deserved, I daresay," said the doctor curtly.
+"If the accident had happened to HER, he would have whined and
+whimpered to us for the sake of getting something, but have been as
+much relieved, you may be certain. SHE'S too young and too natural
+to be a hypocrite yet."
+
+Suddenly the laughter ceased and Liberty Jones's voice arose,
+shrill but masterful: "Thar, that'll do! Quit now! You jest get
+back to your scrubbin'--d'ye hear? I'm boss o' this shanty, you
+bet!"
+
+The doctor turned with a grim smile to his companion. "That's the
+only thing that bothered me, and I've been waiting for. She's
+settled it. She'll do. Come."
+
+They turned away briskly through the wood. At the end of half an
+hour's walk they found the team that had brought them there in
+waiting, and drove towards San Jose. It was nearly ten miles
+before they passed another habitation or trace of clearing. And by
+this time night had fallen upon the cabin they had left, and upon
+the newly made orphan and her Indian companion, alone and contented
+in that trackless solitude.
+
+ . . . . . .
+
+Liberty Jones had been a year at the cabin. In that time she had
+learned that her employer's name was Doctor Ruysdael, that he had a
+lucrative practice in San Jose, but had also "taken up" a league or
+two of wild forest land in the Santa Cruz range, which he preserved
+and held after a fashion of his own, which gave him the reputation
+of being a "crank" among the very few neighbors his vast possessions
+permitted, and the equally few friends his singular tastes allowed
+him. It was believed that a man owning such an enormous quantity of
+timber land, who should refuse to set up a sawmill and absolutely
+forbid the felling of trees; who should decline to connect it with
+the highway to Santa Cruz, and close it against improvement and
+speculation, had given sufficient evidence of his insanity; but when
+to this was added the rumor that he himself was not only devoid of
+the human instinct of hunting the wild animals with which his domain
+abounded, but that he held it so sacred to their use as to forbid
+the firing of a gun within his limits, and that these restrictions
+were further preserved and "policed" by the scattered remnants of a
+band of aborigines,--known as "digger Injins,"--it was seriously
+hinted that his eccentricity had acquired a political and moral
+significance, and demanded legislative interference. But the doctor
+was a rich man, a necessity to his patients, a good marksman, and,
+it was rumored, did not include his fellow men among the animals he
+had a distaste for killing.
+
+Of all this, however, Liberty knew little and cared less. The
+solitude appealed to her sense of freedom; she did not "hanker"
+after a society she had never known. At the end of the first week,
+when the doctor communicated to her briefly, by letter, the
+convincing proofs of the death of her father and his entombment
+beneath the sunken cliff, she accepted the fact without comment or
+apparent emotion. Two months later, when her only surviving
+relative, "Aunt Marty," of Missouri, acknowledged the news--
+communicated by Doctor Ruysdael--with Scriptural quotations and the
+cheerful hope that it "would be a lesson to her" and she would
+"profit in her new place," she left her aunt's letter unanswered.
+
+She looked after the cows and calves with an interest that was
+almost possessory, patronized and played with the squaw,--yet made
+her feel her inferiority,--and moved among the peaceful aborigines
+with the domination of a white woman and a superior. She tolerated
+the half-monthly visits of "Jim Hoskins," the young companion of
+the doctor, who she learned was the doctor's factor and overseer of
+the property, who lived seven miles away on an agricultural
+clearing, and whose control of her actions was evidently limited by
+the doctor,--for the doctor's sake alone. Nor was Mr. Hoskins
+inclined to exceed those limits. He looked upon her as something
+abnormal,--a "crank" as remarkable in her way as her patron was in
+his, neuter of sex and vague of race, and he simply restricted his
+supervision to the bringing and taking of messages. She remained
+sole queen of the domain. A rare straggler from the main road,
+penetrating this seclusion, might have scarcely distinguished her
+from Waya, in her coarse cotton gown and slouched hat, except for
+the free stride which contrasted with her companion's waddle.
+Once, in following an estrayed calf, she had crossed the highway
+and been saluted by a passing teamster in the digger dialect; yet
+the mistake left no sting in her memory. And, like the digger, she
+shrank from that civilization which had only proved a hard
+taskmaster.
+
+The sole touch of human interest she had in her surroundings was in
+the rare visits of the doctor and his brief but sincere commendation
+of her rude and rustic work. It is possible that the strange,
+middle-aged, gray-haired, intellectual man, whose very language was
+at times mysterious and unintelligible to her, and whose suggestion
+of power awed her, might have touched some untried filial chord in
+her being. Although she felt that, save for absolute freedom, she
+was little more to him than she had been to her father, yet he had
+never told her she had "no sense," that she was "a hindrance," and
+he had even praised her performance of her duties. Eagerly as she
+looked for his coming, in his actual presence she felt a singular
+uneasiness of which she was not entirely ashamed, and if she was
+relieved at his departure, it none the less left her to a delightful
+memory of him, a warm sense of his approval, and a fierce ambition
+to be worthy of it, for which she would have sacrificed herself or
+the other miserable retainers about her, as a matter of course. She
+had driven Waya and the other squaws far along the sparse tableland
+pasture in search of missing stock; she herself had lain out all
+night on the rocks beside an ailing heifer. Yet, while satisfied to
+earn his praise for the performance of her duty, for some feminine
+reason she thought more frequently of a casual remark he had made on
+his last visit: "You are stronger and more healthy in this air," he
+had said, looking critically into her face. "We have got that
+abominable alkali out of your system, and wholesome food will do the
+rest." She was not sure she had quite understood him, but she
+remembered that she had felt her face grow hot when he spoke,--
+perhaps because she had not understood him.
+
+His next visit was a day or two delayed, and in her anxiety she had
+ventured as far as the highway to earnestly watch for his coming.
+From her hiding-place in the underwood she could see the team and
+Jim Hoskins already waiting for him. Presently she saw him drive
+up to the trail in a carryall with a party of ladies and gentlemen.
+He alighted, bade "Good-by" to the party, and the team turned to
+retrace its course. But in that single moment she had been struck
+and bewildered by what seemed to her the dazzlingly beautiful
+apparel of the women, and their prettiness. She felt a sudden
+consciousness of her own coarse, shapeless calico gown, her
+straggling hair, and her felt hat, and a revulsion of feeling
+seized her. She crept like a wounded animal out of the underwood,
+and then ran swiftly and almost fiercely back towards the cabin.
+She ran so fast that for a time she almost kept pace with the
+doctor and Hoskins in the wagon on the distant trail. Then she
+dived into the underwood again, and making a short cut through the
+forest, came at the end of two hours within hailing distance of the
+cabin,--footsore and exhausted, in spite of the strange excitement
+that had driven her back. Here she thought she heard voices--his
+voice among the rest--calling her, but the same singular revulsion
+of feeling hurried her vaguely on again, even while she experienced
+a foolish savage delight in not answering the summons. In this
+erratic wandering she came upon the spring she had found on her
+first entrance in the forest a year ago, and drank feverishly a
+second time at its trickling source. She could see that since her
+first visit it had worn a great hollow below the tree roots and now
+formed a shining, placid pool. As she stooped to look at it, she
+suddenly observed that it reflected her whole figure as in a cruel
+mirror,--her slouched hat and loosened hair, her coarse and
+shapeless gown, her hollow cheeks and dry yellow skin,--in all
+their hopeless, uncompromising details. She uttered a quick,
+angry, half-reproachful cry, and turned again to fly. But she had
+not gone far before she came upon the hurrying figures and anxious
+faces of the doctor and Hoskins. She stopped, trembling and
+irresolute.
+
+"Ah," said the doctor, in a tone of frank relief. "Here you are!
+I was getting worried about you. Waya said you had been gone since
+morning!" He stopped and looked at her attentively. "Is anything
+the matter?"
+
+His evident concern sent a warm glow over her chilly frame, and yet
+the strange sensation remained. "No--no!" she stammered.
+
+Doctor Ruysdael turned to Hoskins. "Go back and tell Waya I've
+found her."
+
+Libby felt that the doctor only wanted to get rid of his companion,
+and became awed again.
+
+"Has anybody been bothering you?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Have the diggers frightened you?"
+
+"No"--with a gesture of contempt.
+
+"Have you and Waya quarreled?"
+
+"Nary"--with a faint, tremulous smile.
+
+He still stared at her, and then dropped his blue eyes musingly.
+"Are you lonely here? Would you rather go to San Jose?"
+
+Like a flash the figures of the two smartly dressed women started
+up before her again, with every detail of their fresh and wholesome
+finery as cruelly distinct as had been her own shapeless ugliness
+in the mirror of the spring. "No! NO!" she broke out vehemently
+and passionately. "Never!"
+
+He smiled gently. "Look here! I'll send you up some books. You
+read--don't you?" She nodded quickly. "Some magazines and papers.
+Odd I never thought of it before," he added half musingly. "Come
+along to the cabin. And," he stopped again and said decisively,
+"the next time you want anything, don't wait for me to come, but
+write."
+
+A few days after he left she received a package of books,--an odd
+collection of novels, magazines, and illustrated journals of the
+period. She received them eagerly as an evidence of his concern
+for her, but it is to be feared that her youthful nature found
+little satisfaction in the gratification of fancy. Many of the
+people she read of were strange to her; many of the incidents
+related seemed to her mere lies; some tales which treated of people
+in her own sphere she found profoundly uninteresting. In one of
+the cheaper magazines she chanced upon a fashion plate; she glanced
+eagerly through all the others for a like revelation until she got
+a dozen together, when she promptly relegated the remaining
+literature to a corner and oblivion. The text accompanying the
+plates was in a jargon not always clear, but her instinct supplied
+the rest. She dispatched by Hoskins a note to Doctor Ruysdael:
+"Please send me some brite kalikers and things for sewing. You
+told me to ask." A few days later brought the response in a good-
+sized parcel.
+
+Yet this did not keep her from her care of the stock nor her
+rambles in the forest; she was quick to utilize her rediscovery of
+the spring for watering the cattle; it was not so far afield as the
+half-dried creek in the canyon, and was a quiet sylvan spot. She
+ate her frugal midday meal there and drank of its waters, and,
+secure in her seclusion, bathed there and made her rude toilet when
+the cows were driven home. But she did not again look into its
+mirrored surface when it was tranquil!
+
+And so a month passed. But when Doctor Ruysdael was again due at
+the cabin, a letter was brought by Hoskins, with the news that he
+was called away on professional business down the coast, and could
+not come until two weeks later. In the disappointment that
+overcame her, she did not at first notice that Hoskins was gazing
+at her with a singular expression, which was really one of
+undisguised admiration. Never having seen this before in the eyes
+of any man who looked at her, she referred it to some vague
+"larking" or jocularity, for which she was in no mood.
+
+"Say, Libby! you're gettin' to be a right smart-lookin' gal. Seems
+to agree with ye up here," said Hoskins with an awkward laugh.
+"Darned ef ye ain't lookin' awful purty!"
+
+"G'long!" said Liberty Jones, more than ever convinced of his
+badinage.
+
+"Fact," said Hoskins energetically. "Why, Doc would tell ye so,
+too. See ef he don't!"
+
+At this Liberty Jones felt her face grow hot. "You jess get!" she
+said, turning away in as much embarrassment as anger. Yet he
+hovered near her with awkward attentions that pleased while it
+still angered her. He offered to go with her to look up the cows;
+she flatly declined, yet with a strange satisfaction in his evident
+embarrassment. This may have lent some animation to her face, for
+he drew a long breath and said:--
+
+"Don't go pertendin' ye don't know yer purty. Say, let me and you
+walk a bit and have a talk together." But Libby had another idea
+in her mind and curtly dismissed him. Then she ran swiftly to the
+spring, for the words "The Doc will tell ye so, too" were ringing
+in her ears. The doctor who came with the two beautifully dressed
+women! HE--would tell her she was pretty! She had not dared to
+look at herself in that crystal mirror since that dreadful day two
+months ago. She would now.
+
+It was a pretty place in the cool shade of the giant trees, and the
+hoof-marks of cattle drinking from the run beneath the pool had not
+disturbed the margin of that tranquil sylvan basin. For a moment
+she stood tremulous and uncertain, and then going up to the shining
+mirror, dropped on her knees before it with her thin red hands
+clasped on her lap. Unconsciously she had taken the attitude of
+prayer; perhaps there was something like it in her mind.
+
+And then the light glanced full on the figure that she saw there!
+
+It fell on a full oval face and throat guileless of fleck or stain,
+smooth as a child's and glowing with health; on large dark eyes, no
+longer sunk in their orbits, but filled with an eager, happy light;
+on bared arms now shapely in contour and cushioned with firm flesh;
+on a dazzling smile, the like of which had never been on the face
+of Liberty Jones before!
+
+She rose to her feet, and yet lingered as if loath to part from
+this delightful vision. Then a fear overcame her that it was some
+trick of the water, and she sped swiftly back to the house to
+consult the little mirror which hung in her sleeping-room, but
+which she had never glanced at since the momentous day of the
+spring. She took it shyly into the sunshine, and found that it
+corroborated the reflection of the spring. That night she worked
+until late at the calico Doctor Ruysdael had sent her, and went to
+bed happy. The next day brought her Hoskins again with a feeble
+excuse of inquiring if she had a letter for the doctor, and she was
+surprised to find that he was reinforced by a stranger from
+Hoskins's farm, who was equally awkward and vaguely admiring. But
+the appearance of the TWO men produced a singular phase in her
+impressions and experience. She was no longer indignant at
+Hoskins, but she found relief in accepting the compliments of the
+stranger in preference, and felt a delight in Hoskins's discomfiture.
+Waya, promoted to the burlesque of a chaperone, grinned with
+infinite delight and understanding.
+
+When at last the day came for the doctor's arrival, he was duly met
+by Hoskins, and as duly informed by that impressible subordinate of
+the great change in Liberty's appearance. But the doctor was far
+from being equally impressed with his factor's story, and indeed
+showed much more interest in the appearance of the stock which they
+met along the road. Once the doctor got out of the wagon to
+inspect a cow, and particularly the coat of a rough draught horse
+that had been turned out and put under Liberty's care. "His skin
+is like velvet," said the doctor. "The girl evidently understands
+stock, and knows how to keep them in condition."
+
+"I reckon she's beginning to understand herself, too," said
+Hoskins. "Golly! wait till ye see HER."
+
+The doctor DID see her, but with what feelings he did not as
+frankly express. She was not at the cabin when they arrived, but
+presently appeared from the direction of the spring where, for
+reasons of her own, she had evidently made her toilet. Doctor
+Ruysdael was astounded; Hoskins's praise was not exaggerated; and
+there was an added charm that Hoskins was not prepared for. She
+had put on a gown of her own making,--the secret toil of many a
+long night,--amateurishly fashioned from some cheap yellow calico
+the doctor had sent her, yet fitting her wonderfully, and showing
+every curve of her graceful figure. Unaccented by a corset,--an
+article she had never known,--even the lines of the stiff,
+unyielding calico had a fashion that was nymph-like and suited her
+unfettered limbs. Doctor Ruysdael was profoundly moved. Though a
+philosopher, he was practical. He found himself suddenly
+confronted not only by a beautiful girl, but a problem! It was
+impossible to keep the existence of this woodland nymph from the
+knowledge of his distant neighbors; it was equally impossible for
+him to assume the responsibility of keeping a goddess like this in
+her present position. He had noticed her previous improvement, but
+had never dreamed that pure and wholesome living could in two
+months work such a miracle. And he was to a certain degree
+responsible, HE had created her,--a beautiful Frankenstein, whose
+lustrous, appealing eyes were even now menacing his security and
+position.
+
+Perhaps she saw trouble and perplexity in the face where she had
+expected admiration and pleasure, for a slight chill went over her
+as he quickly praised the appearance of the stock and spoke of her
+own improvement. But when they were alone, he turned to her
+abruptly.
+
+"You said you had no wish to go to San Jose?"
+
+"No." Yet she was conscious that her greatest objection had been
+removed, and she colored faintly.
+
+"Listen to me," he said dryly. "You deserve a better position than
+this,--a better home and surroundings than you have here. You are
+older, too,--a woman almost,--and you must look ahead."
+
+A look of mingled fright, reproach, and appeal came into her
+eloquent face. "Yer wantin' to send me away?" she stammered.
+
+"No," he said frankly. "It is you who are GROWING away. This is
+no longer the place for you."
+
+"But I want to stay. I don't wanter go. I am--I WAS happy here."
+
+"But I'm thinking of giving up this place. It takes up too much of
+my time. You must be provided"--
+
+"YOU are going away?" she said passionately.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Take me with you. I'll go anywhere!--to San Jose---wherever you
+go. Don't turn me off as dad did, for I'll foller you as I never
+followed dad. I'll go with you--or I'll die!"
+
+There was neither fear nor shame in her words; it was the outspoken
+instinct of the animal he had been rearing; be was convinced and
+appalled by it.
+
+"I am returning to San Jose at once," he said gravely. "You shall
+go with me--FOR THE PRESENT! Get yourself ready!"
+
+He took her to San Jose, and temporarily to the house of a patient,--
+a widow lady,--while he tried, alone, to grapple with the problem
+that now confronted him. But that problem became more complicated
+at the end of the third day, by Liberty Jones falling suddenly and
+alarmingly ill. The symptoms were so grave that the doctor, in his
+anxiety, called in a brother physician in consultation. When the
+examination was over, the two men withdrew and stared at each other.
+
+"Of course there is no doubt that the symptoms all point to slow
+arsenical poisoning," said the consulting doctor.
+
+"Yes," said Ruysdael quickly, "yet it is utterly inexplicable, both
+as to motive and opportunity."
+
+"Humph!" said the other grimly, "young ladies take arsenic in
+minute doses to improve the complexion and promote tissue,
+forgetting that the effects are cumulative when they stop suddenly.
+Your young friend has 'sworn off' too quickly."
+
+"But it is impossible," said Doctor Ruysdael impatiently. "She is
+a mere child--a country girl--ignorant of such habits."
+
+"Humph! the peasants in the Tyrol try it on themselves after
+noticing the effect on the coats of cattle."
+
+Doctor Ruysdael started. A recollection of the sleek draught horse
+flashed upon him. He rose and hastily re-entered the patient's
+room. In a few moments he returned. "Do you think I could remove
+her at once to the mountains?" he said gravely.
+
+"Yes, with care and a return to graduated doses of the same poison;
+you know it's the only remedy just now," answered the other.
+
+By noon the next day the doctor and his patient had returned to the
+cabin, but Ruysdael himself carried the helpless Liberty Jones to
+the spring and deposited her gently beside it. "You may drink
+now," he said gravely.
+
+The girl did so eagerly, apparently imbibing new strength from the
+sparkling water. The doctor meanwhile coolly filled a phial from
+the same source, and made a hasty test of the contents by the aid
+of some other phials from his case. The result seemed to satisfy
+him. Then he said gravely:
+
+"And THIS is the spring you had discovered?"
+
+The girl nodded.
+
+"And you and the cattle have daily used it?"
+
+She nodded again wonderingly. Then she caught his hand appealingly.
+
+"You won't send me away?"
+
+He smiled oddly as he glanced from the waters of the hill to the
+brimming eyes. "No."
+
+"No-r," tremulously, "go away--yourself?"
+
+The doctor looked this time only into her eyes. There was a
+tremendous idea in his own, which seemed in some way to have solved
+that dreadful problem.
+
+"No! We will stay here TOGETHER."
+
+ . . . . . .
+
+Six months later there was a paragraph in the San Francisco press:
+"The wonderful Arsenical Spring in the Santa Cruz Mountain, known
+as 'Liberty Spring,' discovered by Doctor Ruysdael, has proved such
+a remarkable success that we understand the temporary huts for
+patients are to be shortly replaced by a magnificent Spa Hotel
+worthy of the spot, and the eligible villa sites it has brought
+into the market. It will be a source of pleasure to all to know
+that the beautiful nymph--a worthy successor to the far-famed
+'Elise' of the German 'Brunnen'--who has administered the waters to
+so many grateful patients will still be in attendance, although it
+is rumored that she is shortly to become the wife of the
+distinguished discoverer."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of Mr. Jack Hamlin's Mediation, by Harte
+
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