MOON-FACE AND OTHER STORIES
by Jack London
contents
1.Moon-Face 2.The Leopard Man’s
Story 3.Local Color 4.Amateur Night 5.The Minions of Midas 6.The Shadow and the Flash 7.All Gold Canyon 8.Planchette
1.MOON-FACE
John Claverhouse was a
moon-faced man. You know the kind, cheek-bones wide apart, chin and forehead
melting into the cheeks to complete the perfect round, and the nose, broad and
pudgy, equidistant from the circumference, flattened against the very centre of
the face like a dough-ball upon the ceiling. Perhaps that is why I hated him,
for truly he had become an offense to my eyes, and I believed the earth to be
cumbered with his presence. Perhaps my mother may have been superstitious of
the moon and looked upon it over the wrong shoulder at the wrong time.
Be that as it may, I hated John Claverhouse. Not that he had done
me what society would consider a wrong or an ill turn. Far from it. The evil
was of a deeper, subtler sort; so elusive, so intangible, as to defy clear,
definite analysis in words. We all experience such things at some period in our
lives. For the first time we see a certain individual, one who the very instant
before we did not dream existed; and yet, at the first moment of meeting, we
say: “I do not like that man.” Why do we not like him? Ah, we do not know why;
we know only that we do not. We have taken a dislike, that is all. And so I
with John Claverhouse.
What right had such a man to be happy? Yet he was an optimist. He
was always gleeful and laughing. All things were always all right, curse him!
Ah I how it grated on my soul that he should be so happy! Other men could
laugh, and it did not bother me. I even used to laugh myself—before I met John
Claverhouse.
But his laugh! It irritated me, maddened me, as nothing else under
the sun could irritate or madden me. It haunted me, gripped hold of me, and
would not let me go. It was a huge, Gargantuan laugh. Waking or sleeping it was
always with me, whirring and jarring across my heart-strings like an enormous
rasp. At break of day it came whooping across the fields to spoil my pleasant
morning revery. Under the aching noonday glare, when the green things drooped
and the birds withdrew to the depths of the forest, and all nature drowsed, his
great “Ha! ha!” and “Ho! ho!” rose up to the sky and challenged the sun. And at
black midnight, from the lonely cross-roads where he turned from town into his
own place, came his plaguey cachinnations to rouse me from my sleep and make me
writhe and clench my nails into my palms.
I went forth privily in the night-time, and turned his cattle into
his fields, and in the morning heard his whooping laugh as he drove them out
again. “It is nothing,” he said; “the poor, dumb beasties are not to be blamed
for straying into fatter pastures.”
He had a dog he called “Mars,” a big, splendid brute, part
deer-hound and part blood-hound, and resembling both. Mars was a great delight
to him, and they were always together. But I bided my time, and one day, when
opportunity was ripe, lured the animal away and settled for him with strychnine
and beefsteak. It made positively no impression on John Claverhouse. His laugh
was as hearty and frequent as ever, and his face as much like the full moon as
it always had been.
Then I set fire to his haystacks and his barn. But the next
morning, being Sunday, he went forth blithe and cheerful.
“Where are you going?” I asked him, as he went by the cross-roads.
“Trout,” he said, and his face beamed like a full moon. “I just
dote on trout.”
Was there ever such an impossible man! His whole harvest had gone
up in his haystacks and barn. It was uninsured, I knew. And yet, in the face of
famine and the rigorous winter, he went out gayly in quest of a mess of trout,
forsooth, because he “doted” on them! Had gloom but rested, no matter how
lightly, on his brow, or had his bovine countenance grown long and serious and
less like the moon, or had he removed that smile but once from off his face, I
am sure I could have forgiven him for existing. But no, he grew only more
cheerful under misfortune.
I insulted him. He looked at me in slow and smiling surprise.
“I fight you? Why?” he asked slowly. And then he laughed. “You are
so funny! Ho! ho! You’ll be the death of me! He! he! he! Oh! Ho! ho! ho!”
What would you? It was past endurance. By the blood of Judas, how
I hated him! Then there was that name—Claverhouse! What a name! Wasn’t it
absurd? Claverhouse! Merciful heaven, WHY Claverhouse? Again and again I asked
myself that question. I should not have minded Smith, or Brown, or Jones—but CLAVERHOUSE!
I leave it to you. Repeat it to yourself—Claverhouse. Just listen to the
ridiculous sound of it—Claverhouse! Should a man live with such a name? I ask
of you. “No,” you say. And “No” said I.
But I bethought me of his mortgage. What of his crops and barn
destroyed, I knew he would be unable to meet it. So I got a shrewd,
close-mouthed, tight-fisted money-lender to get the mortgage transferred to
him. I did not appear but through this agent I forced the foreclosure, and but
few days (no more, believe me, than the law allowed) were given John
Claverhouse to remove his goods and chattels from the premises. Then I strolled
down to see how he took it, for he had lived there upward of twenty years. But
he met me with his saucer-eyes twinkling, and the light glowing and spreading
in his face till it was as a full-risen moon.
“Ha! ha! ha!” he laughed. “The funniest tike, that youngster of
mine! Did you ever hear the like? Let me tell you. He was down playing by the
edge of the river when a piece of the bank caved in and splashed him. ‘O papa!’
he cried; ‘a great big puddle flewed up and hit me.’”
He stopped and waited for me to join him in his infernal glee.
“I don’t see any laugh in it,” I said shortly, and I know my face
went sour.
He regarded me with wonderment, and then came the damnable light,
glowing and spreading, as I have described it, till his face shone soft and
warm, like the summer moon, and then the laugh—“Ha! ha! That’s funny! You don’t
see it, eh? He! he! Ho! ho! ho! He doesn’t see it! Why, look here. You know a
puddle—”
But I turned on my heel and left him. That was the last. I could
stand it no longer. The thing must end right there, I thought, curse him! The
earth should be quit of him. And as I went over the hill, I could hear his
monstrous laugh reverberating against the sky.
Now, I pride myself on doing things neatly, and when I resolved to
kill John Claverhouse I had it in mind to do so in such fashion that I should
not look back upon it and feel ashamed. I hate bungling, and I hate brutality.
To me there is something repugnant in merely striking a man with one’s naked
fist—faugh! it is sickening! So, to shoot, or stab, or club John Claverhouse
(oh, that name!) did not appeal to me. And not only was I impelled to do it
neatly and artistically, but also in such manner that not the slightest
possible suspicion could be directed against me.
To this end I bent my intellect, and, after a week of profound
incubation, I hatched the scheme. Then I set to work. I bought a water spaniel
bitch, five months old, and devoted my whole attention to her training. Had any
one spied upon me, they would have remarked that this training consisted
entirely of one thing—RETRIEVING. I taught the dog, which I called “Bellona,”
to fetch sticks I threw into the water, and not only to fetch, but to fetch at
once, without mouthing or playing with them. The point was that she was to stop
for nothing, but to deliver the stick in all haste. I made a practice of
running away and leaving her to chase me, with the stick in her mouth, till she
caught me. She was a bright animal, and took to the game with such eagerness
that I was soon content.
After that, at the first casual opportunity, I presented Bellona
to John Claverhouse. I knew what I was about, for I was aware of a little
weakness of his, and of a little private sinning of which he was regularly and
inveterately guilty.
“No,” he said, when I placed the end of the rope in his hand. “No,
you don’t mean it.” And his mouth opened wide and he grinned all over his
damnable moon-face.
“I—I kind of thought, somehow, you didn’t like me,” he explained.
“Wasn’t it funny for me to make such a mistake?” And at the thought he held his
sides with laughter.
“What is her name?” he managed to ask between paroxysms.
“Bellona,” I said.
“He! he!” he tittered. “What a funny name.”
I gritted my teeth, for his mirth put them on edge, and snapped
out between them, “She was the wife of Mars, you know.”
Then the light of the full moon began to suffuse his face, until
he exploded with: “That was my other dog. Well, I guess she’s a widow now. Oh!
Ho! ho! E! he! he! Ho!” he whooped after me, and I turned and fled swiftly over
the hill.
The week passed by, and on Saturday evening I said to him, “You go
away Monday, don’t you?”
He nodded his head and grinned.
“Then you won’t have another chance to get a mess of those trout
you just ‘dote’ on.”
But he did not notice the sneer. “Oh, I don’t know,” he chuckled.
“I’m going up to-morrow to try pretty hard.”
Thus was assurance made doubly sure, and I went back to my house
hugging myself with rapture.
Early next morning I saw him go by with a dip-net and gunnysack,
and Bellona trotting at his heels. I knew where he was bound, and cut out by
the back pasture and climbed through the underbrush to the top of the mountain.
Keeping carefully out of sight, I followed the crest along for a couple of
miles to a natural amphitheatre in the hills, where the little river raced down
out of a gorge and stopped for breath in a large and placid rock-bound pool.
That was the spot! I sat down on the croup of the mountain, where I could see
all that occurred, and lighted my pipe.
Ere many minutes had passed, John Claverhouse came plodding up the
bed of the stream. Bellona was ambling about him, and they were in high
feather, her short, snappy barks mingling with his deeper chest-notes. Arrived
at the pool, he threw down the dip-net and sack, and drew from his hip-pocket
what looked like a large, fat candle. But I knew it to be a stick of “giant”;
for such was his method of catching trout. He dynamited them. He attached the
fuse by wrapping the “giant” tightly in a piece of cotton. Then he ignited the
fuse and tossed the explosive into the pool.
Like a flash, Bellona was into the pool after it. I could have
shrieked aloud for joy. Claverhouse yelled at her, but without avail. He pelted
her with clods and rocks, but she swam steadily on till she got the stick of
“giant” in her mouth, when she whirled about and headed for shore. Then, for
the first time, he realized his danger, and started to run. As foreseen and
planned by me, she made the bank and took out after him. Oh, I tell you, it was
great! As I have said, the pool lay in a sort of amphitheatre. Above and below,
the stream could be crossed on stepping-stones. And around and around, up and
down and across the stones, raced Claverhouse and Bellona. I could never have
believed that such an ungainly man could run so fast. But run he did, Bellona
hot-footed after him, and gaining. And then, just as she caught up, he in full
stride, and she leaping with nose at his knee, there was a sudden flash, a
burst of smoke, a terrific detonation, and where man and dog had been the
instant before there was naught to be seen but a big hole in the ground.
“Death from accident while engaged in illegal fishing.” That was
the verdict of the coroner’s jury; and that is why I pride myself on the neat
and artistic way in which I finished off John Claverhouse. There was no
bungling, no brutality; nothing of which to be ashamed in the whole
transaction, as I am sure you will agree. No more does his infernal laugh go
echoing among the hills, and no more does his fat moon-face rise up to vex me.
My days are peaceful now, and my night’s sleep deep.
2.THE LEOPARD MAN’S STORY
He had a dreamy,
far-away look in his eyes, and his sad, insistent voice, gentle-spoken as a
maid’s, seemed the placid embodiment of some deep-seated melancholy. He was the
Leopard Man, but he did not look it. His business in life, whereby he lived,
was to appear in a cage of performing leopards before vast audiences, and to
thrill those audiences by certain exhibitions of nerve for which his employers
rewarded him on a scale commensurate with the thrills he produced.
As I say, he did not look it. He was narrow-hipped,
narrow-shouldered, and anaemic, while he seemed not so much oppressed by gloom
as by a sweet and gentle sadness, the weight of which was as sweetly and gently
borne. For an hour I had been trying to get a story out of him, but he appeared
to lack imagination. To him there was no romance in his gorgeous career, no
deeds of daring, no thrills—nothing but a gray sameness and infinite boredom.
Lions? Oh, yes! he had fought with them. It was nothing. All you
had to do was to stay sober. Anybody could whip a lion to a standstill with an
ordinary stick. He had fought one for half an hour once. Just hit him on the
nose every time he rushed, and when he got artful and rushed with his head
down, why, the thing to do was to stick out your leg. When he grabbed at the
leg you drew it back and hit hint on the nose again. That was all.
With the far-away look in his eyes and his soft flow of words he
showed me his scars. There were many of them, and one recent one where a
tigress had reached for his shoulder and gone down to the bone. I could see the
neatly mended rents in the coat he had on. His right arm, from the elbow down,
looked as though it had gone through a threshing machine, what of the ravage
wrought by claws and fangs. But it was nothing, he said, only the old wounds
bothered him somewhat when rainy weather came on.
Suddenly his face brightened with a recollection, for he was
really as anxious to give me a story as I was to get it.
“I suppose you’ve heard of the lion-tamer who was hated by another
man?” he asked.
He paused and looked pensively at a sick lion in the cage
opposite.
“Got the toothache,” he explained. “Well, the lion-tamer’s big
play to the audience was putting his head in a lion’s mouth. The man who hated
him attended every performance in the hope sometime of seeing that lion crunch
down. He followed the show about all over the country. The years went by and he
grew old, and the lion-tamer grew old, and the lion grew old. And at last one
day, sitting in a front seat, he saw what he had waited for. The lion crunched
down, and there wasn’t any need to call a doctor.”
The Leopard Man glanced casually over his finger nails in a manner
which would have been critical had it not been so sad.
“Now, that’s what I call patience,” he continued, “and it’s my
style. But it was not the style of a fellow I knew. He was a little, thin,
sawed-off, sword-swallowing and juggling Frenchman. De Ville, he called
himself, and he had a nice wife. She did trapeze work and used to dive from
under the roof into a net, turning over once on the way as nice as you please.
“De Ville had a quick temper, as quick as his hand, and his hand
was as quick as the paw of a tiger. One day, because the ring-master called him
a frog-eater, or something like that and maybe a little worse, he shoved him
against the soft pine background he used in his knife-throwing act, so quick
the ring-master didn’t have time to think, and there, before the audience, De
Ville kept the air on fire with his knives, sinking them into the wood all
around the ring-master so close that they passed through his clothes and most
of them bit into his skin.
“The clowns had to pull the knives out to get him loose, for he
was pinned fast. So the word went around to watch out for De Ville, and no one
dared be more than barely civil to his wife. And she was a sly bit of baggage,
too, only all hands were afraid of De Ville.
“But there was one man, Wallace, who was afraid of nothing. He was
the lion-tamer, and he had the self-same trick of putting his head into the
lion’s mouth. He’d put it into the mouths of any of them, though he preferred
Augustus, a big, good-natured beast who could always be depended upon.
“As I was saying, Wallace—‘King’ Wallace we called him—was afraid
of nothing alive or dead. He was a king and no mistake. I’ve seen him drunk,
and on a wager go into the cage of a lion that’d turned nasty, and without a
stick beat him to a finish. Just did it with his fist on the nose.
“Madame de Ville—”
At an uproar behind us the Leopard Man turned quietly around. It
was a divided cage, and a monkey, poking through the bars and around the
partition, had had its paw seized by a big gray wolf who was trying to pull it
off by main strength. The arm seemed stretching out longer end longer like a
thick elastic, and the unfortunate monkey’s mates were raising a terrible din.
No keeper was at hand, so the Leopard Man stepped over a couple of paces, dealt
the wolf a sharp blow on the nose with the light cane he carried, and returned
with a sadly apologetic smile to take up his unfinished sentence as though
there had been no interruption.
“—looked at King Wallace and King Wallace looked at her, while De
Ville looked black. We warned Wallace, but it was no use. He laughed at us, as
he laughed at De Ville one day when he shoved De Ville’s head into a bucket of
paste because he wanted to fight.
“De Ville was in a pretty mess—I helped to scrape him off; but he
was cool as a cucumber and made no threats at all. But I saw a glitter in his
eyes which I had seen often in the eyes of wild beasts, and I went out of my
way to give Wallace a final warning. He laughed, but he did not look so much in
Madame de Ville’s direction after that.
“Several months passed by. Nothing had happened and I was
beginning to think it all a scare over nothing. We were West by that time,
showing in ‘Frisco. It was during the afternoon performance, and the big tent
was filled with women and children, when I went looking for Red Denny, the head
canvas-man, who had walked off with my pocket-knife.
“Passing by one of the dressing tents I glanced in through a hole
in the canvas to see if I could locate him. He wasn’t there, but directly in
front of me was King Wallace, in tights, waiting for his turn to go on with his
cage of performing lions. He was watching with much amusement a quarrel between
a couple of trapeze artists. All the rest of the people in the dressing tent
were watching the same thing, with the exception of De Ville whom I noticed
staring at Wallace with undisguised hatred. Wallace and the rest were all too
busy following the quarrel to notice this or what followed.
“But I saw it through the hole in the canvas. De Ville drew his
handkerchief from his pocket, made as though to mop the sweat from his face
with it (it was a hot day), and at the same time walked past Wallace’s back.
The look troubled me at the time, for not only did I see hatred in it, but I
saw triumph as well.
“‘De Ville will bear watching,’ I said to myself, and I really
breathed easier when I saw him go out the entrance to the circus grounds and
board an electric car for down town. A few minutes later I was in the big tent,
where I had overhauled Red Denny. King Wallace was doing his turn and holding
the audience spellbound. He was in a particularly vicious mood, and he kept the
lions stirred up till they were all snarling, that is, all of them except old
Augustus, and he was just too fat and lazy and old to get stirred up over
anything.
“Finally Wallace cracked the old lion’s knees with his whip and
got him into position. Old Augustus, blinking good-naturedly, opened his mouth
and in popped Wallace’s head. Then the jaws came together, CRUNCH, just like
that.”
The Leopard Man smiled in a sweetly wistful fashion, and the
far-away look came into his eyes.
“And that was the end of King Wallace,” he went on in his sad, low
voice. “After the excitement cooled down I watched my chance and bent over and
smelled Wallace’s head. Then I sneezed.”
“It... it was...?” I queried with halting eagerness.
“Snuff—that De Ville dropped on his hair in the dressing tent. Old
Augustus never meant to do it. He only sneezed.”
3.LOCAL COLOR
“I do not see why you should not turn this immense amount of
unusual information to account,” I told him. “Unlike most men equipped with
similar knowledge, YOU have expression. Your style is—”
“Is sufficiently—er—journalese?” he interrupted suavely.
“Precisely! You could turn a pretty penny.”
But he interlocked his fingers meditatively, shrugged his
shoulders, and dismissed the subject.
“I have tried it. It does not pay.”
“It was paid for and published,” he added, after a pause. “And I
was also honored with sixty days in the Hobo.”
“The Hobo?” I ventured.
“The Hobo—” He fixed his eyes on my Spencer and ran along the
titles while he cast his definition. “The Hobo, my dear fellow, is the name for
that particular place of detention in city and county jails wherein are
assembled tramps, drunks, beggars, and the riff-raff of petty offenders. The
word itself is a pretty one, and it has a history. Hautbois—there’s the French
of it. Haut, meaning high, and bois, wood. In English it becomes hautboy, a
wooden musical instrument of two-foot tone, I believe, played with a double
reed, an oboe, in fact. You remember in ‘Henry IV’—
“‘The case of a treble
hautboy Was a mansion for him, a court.’
“From this to ho-boy is but a step, and for that matter the
English used the terms interchangeably. But—and mark you, the leap paralyzes
one—crossing the Western Ocean, in New York City, hautboy, or ho-boy, becomes
the name by which the night-scavenger is known. In a way one understands its
being born of the contempt for wandering players and musical fellows. But see
the beauty of it! the burn and the brand! The night-scavenger, the pariah, the
miserable, the despised, the man without caste! And in its next incarnation,
consistently and logically, it attaches itself to the American outcast, namely,
the tramp. Then, as others have mutilated its sense, the tramp mutilates its
form, and ho-boy becomes exultantly hobo. Wherefore, the large stone and brick
cells, lined with double and triple-tiered bunks, in which the Law is wont to
incarcerate him, he calls the Hobo. Interesting, isn’t it?”
And I sat back and marvelled secretly at this encyclopaedic-minded
man, this Leith Clay-Randolph, this common tramp who made himself at home in my
den, charmed such friends as gathered at my small table, outshone me with his
brilliance and his manners, spent my spending money, smoked my best cigars, and
selected from my ties and studs with a cultivated and discriminating eye.
He absently walked over to the shelves and looked into Loria’s
“Economic Foundation of Society.”
“I like to talk with you,” he remarked. “You are not indifferently
schooled. You’ve read the books, and your economic interpretation of history,
as you choose to call it” (this with a sneer), “eminently fits you for an
intellectual outlook on life. But your sociologic judgments are vitiated by
your lack of practical knowledge. Now I, who know the books, pardon me,
somewhat better than you, know life, too. I have lived it, naked, taken it up
in both my hands and looked at it, and tasted it, the flesh and the blood of
it, and, being purely an intellectual, I have been biased by neither passion
nor prejudice. All of which is necessary for clear concepts, and all of which
you lack. Ah! a really clever passage. Listen!”
And he read aloud to me in his remarkable style, paralleling the
text with a running criticism and commentary, lucidly wording involved and
lumbering periods, casting side and cross lights upon the subject, introducing
points the author had blundered past and objections he had ignored, catching up
lost ends, flinging a contrast into a paradox and reducing it to a coherent and
succinctly stated truth—in short, flashing his luminous genius in a blaze of
fire over pages erstwhile dull and heavy and lifeless.
It is long since that Leith Clay-Randolph (note the hyphenated
surname) knocked at the back door of Idlewild and melted the heart of Gunda.
Now Gunda was cold as her Norway hills, though in her least frigid moods she
was capable of permitting especially nice-looking tramps to sit on the back
stoop and devour lone crusts and forlorn and forsaken chops. But that a
tatterdemalion out of the night should invade the sanctity of her
kitchen-kingdom and delay dinner while she set a place for him in the warmest
corner, was a matter of such moment that the Sunflower went to see. Ah, the
Sunflower, of the soft heart and swift sympathy! Leith Clay-Randolph threw his
glamour over her for fifteen long minutes, whilst I brooded with my cigar, and
then she fluttered back with vague words and the suggestion of a cast-off suit
I would never miss.
“Surely I shall never miss it,” I said, and I had in mind the dark
gray suit with the pockets draggled from the freightage of many books—books
that had spoiled more than one day’s fishing sport.
“I should advise you, however,” I added, “to mend the pockets
first.”
But the Sunflower’s face clouded. “N—o,” she said, “the black
one.”
“The black one!” This explosively, incredulously. “I wear it quite
often. I—I intended wearing it to-night.”
“You have two better ones, and you know I never liked it, dear,”
the Sunflower hurried on. “Besides, it’s shiny—”
“Shiny!”
“It—it soon will be, which is just the same, and the man is really
estimable. He is nice and refined, and I am sure he—”
“Has seen better days.”
“Yes, and the weather is raw and beastly, and his clothes are
threadbare. And you have many suits—”
“Five,” I corrected, “counting in the dark gray fishing outfit
with the draggled pockets.”
“And he has none, no home, nothing—”
“Not even a Sunflower,”—putting my arm around her,—“wherefore he
is deserving of all things. Give him the black suit, dear—nay, the best one,
the very best one. Under high heaven for such lack there must be compensation!”
“You ARE a dear!” And the Sunflower moved to the door and looked
back alluringly. “You are a PERFECT dear.”
And this after seven years, I marvelled, till she was back again,
timid and apologetic.
“I—I gave him one of your white shirts. He wore a cheap horrid
cotton thing, and I knew it would look ridiculous. And then his shoes were so
slipshod, I let him have a pair of yours, the old ones with the narrow caps—”
“Old ones!”
“Well, they pinched horribly, and you know they did.”
It was ever thus the Sunflower vindicated things.
And so Leith Clay-Randolph came to Idlewild to stay, how long I
did not dream. Nor did I dream how often he was to come, for he was like an
erratic comet. Fresh he would arrive, and cleanly clad, from grand folk who
were his friends as I was his friend, and again, weary and worn, he would creep
up the brier-rose path from the Montanas or Mexico. And without a word, when
his wanderlust gripped him, he was off and away into that great mysterious
underworld he called “The Road.”
“I could not bring myself to leave until I had thanked you, you of
the open hand and heart,” he said, on the night he donned my good black suit.
And I confess I was startled when I glanced over the top of my
paper and saw a lofty-browed and eminently respectable-looking gentleman,
boldly and carelessly at ease. The Sunflower was right. He must have known
better days for the black suit and white shirt to have effected such a
transformation. Involuntarily I rose to my feet, prompted to meet him on equal
ground. And then it was that the Clay-Randolph glamour descended upon me. He
slept at Idlewild that night, and the next night, and for many nights. And he
was a man to love. The Son of Anak, otherwise Rufus the Blue-Eyed, and also
plebeianly known as Tots, rioted with him from brier-rose path to farthest orchard,
scalped him in the haymow with barbaric yells, and once, with pharisaic zeal,
was near to crucifying him under the attic roof beams. The Sunflower would have
loved him for the Son of Anak’s sake, had she not loved him for his own. As for
myself, let the Sunflower tell, in the times he elected to be gone, of how
often I wondered when Leith would come back again, Leith the Lovable. Yet he
was a man of whom we knew nothing. Beyond the fact that he was Kentucky-born,
his past was a blank. He never spoke of it. And he was a man who prided himself
upon his utter divorce of reason from emotion. To him the world spelled itself
out in problems. I charged him once with being guilty of emotion when roaring
round the den with the Son of Anak pickaback. Not so, he held. Could he not
cuddle a sense-delight for the problem’s sake?
He was elusive. A man who intermingled nameless argot with
polysyllabic and technical terms, he would seem sometimes the veriest criminal,
in speech, face, expression, everything; at other times the cultured and
polished gentleman, and again, the philosopher and scientist. But there was
something glimmering; there which I never caught—flashes of sincerity, of real
feeling, I imagined, which were sped ere I could grasp; echoes of the man he once
was, possibly, or hints of the man behind the mask. But the mask he never
lifted, and the real man we never knew.
“But the sixty days with which you were rewarded for your
journalism?” I asked. “Never mind Loria. Tell me.”
“Well, if I must.” He flung one knee over the other with a short
laugh.
“In a town that shall be nameless,” he began, “in fact, a city of
fifty thousand, a fair and beautiful city wherein men slave for dollars and
women for dress, an idea came to me. My front was prepossessing, as fronts go,
and my pockets empty. I had in recollection a thought I once entertained of
writing a reconciliation of Kant and Spencer. Not that they are reconcilable,
of course, but the room offered for scientific satire—”
I waved my hand impatiently, and he broke off.
“I was just tracing my mental states for you, in order to show the
genesis of the action,” he explained. “However, the idea came. What was the
matter with a tramp sketch for the daily press? The Irreconcilability of the
Constable and the Tramp, for instance? So I hit the drag (the drag, my dear
fellow, is merely the street), or the high places, if you will, for a newspaper
office. The elevator whisked me into the sky, and Cerberus, in the guise of an
anaemic office boy, guarded the door. Consumption, one could see it at a
glance; nerve, Irish, colossal; tenacity, undoubted; dead inside the year.
“‘Pale youth,’ quoth I, ‘I pray thee the way to the
sanctum-sanctorum, to the Most High Cock-a-lorum.’
“He deigned to look at me, scornfully, with infinite weariness.
“‘G’wan an’ see the janitor. I don’t know nothin’ about the gas.’
“‘Nay, my lily-white, the editor.’
“‘Wich editor?’ he snapped like a young bullterrier. ‘Dramatic?
Sportin’? Society? Sunday? Weekly? Daily? Telegraph? Local? News? Editorial?
Wich?’
“Which, I did not know. ‘THE Editor,’ I proclaimed stoutly. ‘The
ONLY Editor.’
“‘Aw, Spargo!’ he sniffed.
“‘Of course, Spargo,’ I answered. ‘Who else?’
“‘Gimme yer card,’ says he.
“‘My what?’
“‘Yer card—Say! Wot’s yer business, anyway?’
“And the anaemic Cerberus sized me up with so insolent an eye that
I reached over and took him out of his chair. I knocked on his meagre chest
with my fore knuckle, and fetched forth a weak, gaspy cough; but he looked at
me unflinchingly, much like a defiant sparrow held in the hand.
“‘I am the census-taker Time,’ I boomed in sepulchral tones.
‘Beware lest I knock too loud.’
“‘Oh, I don’t know,’ he sneered.
“Whereupon I rapped him smartly, and he choked and turned
purplish.
“‘Well, whatcher want?’ he wheezed with returning breath.
“‘I want Spargo, the only Spargo.’
“‘Then leave go, an’ I’ll glide an’ see.’
“‘No you don’t, my lily-white.’ And I took a tighter grip on his
collar. ‘No bouncers in mine, understand! I’ll go along.’”
Leith dreamily surveyed the long ash of his cigar and turned to
me. “Do you know, Anak, you can’t appreciate the joy of being the buffoon,
playing the clown. You couldn’t do it if you wished. Your pitiful little
conventions and smug assumptions of decency would prevent. But simply to turn
loose your soul to every whimsicality, to play the fool unafraid of any
possible result, why, that requires a man other than a householder and
law-respecting citizen.
“However, as I was saying, I saw the only Spargo. He was a big,
beefy, red-faced personage, full-jowled and double-chinned, sweating at his
desk in his shirt-sleeves. It was August, you know. He was talking into a
telephone when I entered, or swearing rather, I should say, and the while
studying me with his eyes. When he hung up, he turned to me expectantly.
“‘You are a very busy man,’ I said.
“He jerked a nod with his head, and waited.
“‘And after all, is it worth it?’ I went on. ‘What does life mean
that it should make you sweat? What justification do you find in sweat? Now
look at me. I toil not, neither do I spin—’
“‘Who are you? What are you?’ he bellowed with a suddenness that
was, well, rude, tearing the words out as a dog does a bone.
“‘A very pertinent question, sir,’ I acknowledged. ‘First, I am a
man; next, a down-trodden American citizen. I am cursed with neither
profession, trade, nor expectations. Like Esau, I am pottageless. My residence
is everywhere; the sky is my coverlet. I am one of the dispossessed, a
sansculotte, a proletarian, or, in simpler phraseology addressed to your
understanding, a tramp.’
“‘What the hell—?’
“‘Nay, fair sir, a tramp, a man of devious ways and strange
lodgements and multifarious—’
“‘Quit it!’ he shouted. ‘What do you want?’
“‘I want money.’
“He started and half reached for an open drawer where must have
reposed a revolver, then bethought himself and growled, ‘This is no bank.’
“‘Nor have I checks to cash. But I have, sir, an idea, which, by
your leave and kind assistance, I shall transmute into cash. In short, how does
a tramp sketch, done by a tramp to the life, strike you? Are you open to it? Do
your readers hunger for it? Do they crave after it? Can they be happy without
it?’
“I thought for a moment that he would have apoplexy, but he
quelled the unruly blood and said he liked my nerve. I thanked him and assured
him I liked it myself. Then he offered me a cigar and said he thought he’d do
business with me.
“‘But mind you,’ he said, when he had jabbed a bunch of copy paper
into my hand and given me a pencil from his vest pocket, ‘mind you, I won’t
stand for the high and flighty philosophical, and I perceive you have a
tendency that way. Throw in the local color, wads of it, and a bit of sentiment
perhaps, but no slumgullion about political economy nor social strata or such
stuff. Make it concrete, to the point, with snap and go and life, crisp and
crackling and interesting—tumble?’
“And I tumbled and borrowed a dollar.
“‘Don’t forget the local color!’ he shouted after me through the
door.
“And, Anak, it was the local color that did for me.
“The anaemic Cerberus grinned when I took the elevator. ‘Got the
bounce, eh?’
“‘Nay, pale youth, so lily-white,’ I chortled, waving the copy
paper; ‘not the bounce, but a detail. I’ll be City Editor in three months, and
then I’ll make you jump.’
“And as the elevator stopped at the next floor down to take on a
pair of maids, he strolled over to the shaft, and without frills or verbiage
consigned me and my detail to perdition. But I liked him. He had pluck and was
unafraid, and he knew, as well as I, that death clutched him close.”
“But how could you, Leith,” I cried, the picture of the
consumptive lad strong before me, “how could you treat him so barbarously?”
Leith laughed dryly. “My dear fellow, how often must I explain to
you your confusions? Orthodox sentiment and stereotyped emotion master you. And
then your temperament! You are really incapable of rational judgments.
Cerberus? Pshaw! A flash expiring, a mote of fading sparkle, a dim-pulsing and
dying organism—pouf! a snap of the fingers, a puff of breath, what would you? A
pawn in the game of life. Not even a problem. There is no problem in a
stillborn babe, nor in a dead child. They never arrived. Nor did Cerberus. Now
for a really pretty problem—”
“But the local color?” I prodded him.
“That’s right,” he replied. “Keep me in the running. Well, I took
my handful of copy paper down to the railroad yards (for local color), dangled
my legs from a side-door Pullman, which is another name for a box-car, and ran
off the stuff. Of course I made it clever and brilliant and all that, with my little
unanswerable slings at the state and my social paradoxes, and withal made it
concrete enough to dissatisfy the average citizen.
“From the tramp standpoint, the constabulary of the township was
particularly rotten, and I proceeded to open the eyes of the good people. It is
a proposition, mathematically demonstrable, that it costs the community more to
arrest, convict, and confine its tramps in jail, than to send them as guests,
for like periods of time, to the best hotel. And this I developed, giving the
facts and figures, the constable fees and the mileage, and the court and jail
expenses. Oh, it was convincing, and it was true; and I did it in a lightly
humorous fashion which fetched the laugh and left the sting. The main objection
to the system, I contended, was the defraudment and robbery of the tramp. The
good money which the community paid out for him should enable him to riot in
luxury instead of rotting in dungeons. I even drew the figures so fine as to
permit him not only to live in the best hotel but to smoke two twenty-five-cent
cigars and indulge in a ten-cent shine each day, and still not cost the
taxpayers so much as they were accustomed to pay for his conviction and jail
entertainment. And, as subsequent events proved, it made the taxpayers wince.
“One of the constables I drew to the life; nor did I forget a
certain Sol Glenhart, as rotten a police judge as was to be found between the
seas. And this I say out of a vast experience. While he was notorious in local
trampdom, his civic sins were not only not unknown but a crying reproach to the
townspeople. Of course I refrained from mentioning name or habitat, drawing the
picture in an impersonal, composite sort of way, which none the less blinded no
one to the faithfulness of the local color.
“Naturally, myself a tramp, the tenor of the article was a protest
against the maltreatment of the tramp. Cutting the taxpayers to the pits of
their purses threw them open to sentiment, and then in I tossed the sentiment,
lumps and chunks of it. Trust me, it was excellently done, and the
rhetoric—say! Just listen to the tail of my peroration:
“‘So, as we go mooching along the drag, with a sharp lamp out for
John Law, we cannot help remembering that we are beyond the pale; that our ways
are not their ways; and that the ways of John Law with us are different from
his ways with other men. Poor lost souls, wailing for a crust in the dark, we
know full well our helplessness and ignominy. And well may we repeat after a
stricken brother over-seas: “Our pride it is to know no spur of pride.” Man has
forgotten us; God has forgotten us; only are we remembered by the harpies of
justice, who prey upon our distress and coin our sighs and tears into bright
shining dollars.’
“Incidentally, my picture of Sol Glenhart, the police judge, was
good. A striking likeness, and unmistakable, with phrases tripping along like
this: ‘This crook-nosed, gross-bodied harpy’; ‘this civic sinner, this judicial
highwayman’; ‘possessing the morals of the Tenderloin and an honor which
thieves’ honor puts to shame’; ‘who compounds criminality with shyster-sharks,
and in atonement railroads the unfortunate and impecunious to rotting
cells,’—and so forth and so forth, style sophomoric and devoid of the dignity
and tone one would employ in a dissertation on ‘Surplus Value,’ or ‘The
Fallacies of Marxism,’ but just the stuff the dear public likes.
“‘Humph!’ grunted Spargo when I put the copy in his fist. ‘Swift
gait you strike, my man.’
“I fixed a hypnotic eye on his vest pocket, and he passed out one
of his superior cigars, which I burned while he ran through the stuff. Twice or
thrice he looked over the top of the paper at me, searchingly, but said nothing
till he had finished.
“‘Where’d you work, you pencil-pusher?’ he asked.
“‘My maiden effort,’ I simpered modestly, scraping one foot and
faintly simulating embarrassment.
“‘Maiden hell! What salary do you want?’
“‘Nay, nay,’ I answered. ‘No salary in mine, thank you most to
death. I am a free down-trodden American citizen, and no man shall say my time
is his.’
“‘Save John Law,’ he chuckled.
“‘Save John Law,’ said I.
“‘How did you know I was bucking the police department?’ he
demanded abruptly.
“‘I didn’t know, but I knew you were in training,’ I answered.
‘Yesterday morning a charitably inclined female presented me with three
biscuits, a piece of cheese, and a funereal slab of chocolate cake, all wrapped
in the current Clarion, wherein I noted an unholy glee because the Cowbell’s
candidate for chief of police had been turned down. Likewise I learned the municipal
election was at hand, and put two and two together. Another mayor, and the
right kind, means new police commissioners; new police commissioners means new
chief of police; new chief of police means Cowbell’s candidate; ergo, your turn
to play.’
“He stood up, shook my hand, and emptied his plethoric vest
pocket. I put them away and puffed on the old one.
“‘You’ll do,’ he jubilated. ‘This stuff’ (patting my copy) ‘is the
first gun of the campaign. You’ll touch off many another before we’re done.
I’ve been looking for you for years. Come on in on the editorial.’
“But I shook my head.
“‘Come, now!’ he admonished sharply. ‘No shenanagan! The Cowbell
must have you. It hungers for you, craves after you, won’t be happy till it
gets you. What say?’
“In short, he wrestled with me, but I was bricks, and at the end
of half an hour the only Spargo gave it up.
“‘Remember,’ he said, ‘any time you reconsider, I’m open. No
matter where you are, wire me and I’ll send the ducats to come on at once.’
“I thanked him, and asked the pay for my copy—dope, he called it.
“‘Oh, regular routine,’ he said. ‘Get it the first Thursday after
publication.’
“‘Then I’ll have to trouble you for a few scad until—’
“He looked at me and smiled. ‘Better cough up, eh?’
“‘Sure,’ I said. ‘Nobody to identify me, so make it cash.’
“And cash it was made, thirty plunks (a plunk is a dollar, my dear
Anak), and I pulled my freight... eh?—oh, departed.
“‘Pale youth,’ I said to Cerberus, ‘I am bounced.’ (He grinned
with pallid joy.) ‘And in token of the sincere esteem I bear you, receive this
little—’ (His eyes flushed and he threw up one hand, swiftly, to guard his head
from the expected blow)—‘this little memento.’
“I had intended to slip a fiver into his hand, but for all his
surprise, he was too quick for me.
“‘Aw, keep yer dirt,’ he snarled.
“‘I like you still better,’ I said, adding a second fiver. ‘You
grow perfect. But you must take it.’
“He backed away growling, but I caught him round the neck, roughed
what little wind he had out of him, and left him doubled up with the two fives
in his pocket. But hardly had the elevator started, when the two coins tinkled
on the roof and fell down between the car and the shaft. As luck had it, the
door was not closed, and I put out my hand and caught them. The elevator boy’s
eyes bulged.
“‘It’s a way I have,’ I said, pocketing them.
“‘Some bloke’s dropped ‘em down the shaft,’ he whispered, awed by
the circumstance.
“‘It stands to reason,’ said I.
“‘I’ll take charge of ‘em,’ he volunteered.
“‘Nonsense!’
“‘You’d better turn ‘em over,’ he threatened, ‘or I stop the
works.’
“‘Pshaw!’
“And stop he did, between floors.
“‘Young man,’ I said, ‘have you a mother?’ (He looked serious, as
though regretting his act! and further to impress him I rolled up my right
sleeve with greatest care.) ‘Are you prepared to die?’ (I got a stealthy crouch
on, and put a cat-foot forward.) ‘But a minute, a brief minute, stands between
you and eternity.’ (Here I crooked my right hand into a claw and slid the other
foot up.) ‘Young man, young man,’ I trumpeted, ‘in thirty seconds I shall tear
your heart dripping from your bosom and stoop to hear you shriek in hell.’
“It fetched him. He gave one whoop, the car shot down, and I was
on the drag. You see, Anak, it’s a habit I can’t shake off of leaving vivid
memories behind. No one ever forgets me.
“I had not got to the corner when I heard a familiar voice at my
shoulder:
“‘Hello, Cinders! Which way?’
“It was Chi Slim, who had been with me once when I was thrown off
a freight in Jacksonville. ‘Couldn’t see ‘em fer cinders,’ he described it, and
the monica stuck by me.... Monica? From monos. The tramp nickname.
“‘Bound south,’ I answered. ‘And how’s Slim?’
“‘Bum. Bulls is horstile.’
“‘Where’s the push?’
“‘At the hang-out. I’ll put you wise.’
“‘Who’s the main guy?’
“‘Me, and don’t yer ferget it.’”
The lingo was rippling from Leith’s lips, but perforce I stopped
him. “Pray translate. Remember, I am a foreigner.”
“Certainly,” he answered cheerfully. “Slim is in poor luck. Bull
means policeman. He tells me the bulls are hostile. I ask where the push is,
the gang he travels with. By putting me wise he will direct me to where the
gang is hanging out. The main guy is the leader. Slim claims that distinction.
“Slim and I hiked out to a neck of woods just beyond town, and
there was the push, a score of husky hobos, charmingly located on the bank of a
little purling stream.
“‘Come on, you mugs!’ Slim addressed them. ‘Throw yer feet! Here’s
Cinders, an’ we must do ‘em proud.’
“All of which signifies that the hobos had better strike out and
do some lively begging in order to get the wherewithal to celebrate my return
to the fold after a year’s separation. But I flashed my dough and Slim sent
several of the younger men off to buy the booze. Take my word for it, Anak, it
was a blow-out memorable in Trampdom to this day. It’s amazing the quantity of
booze thirty plunks will buy, and it is equally amazing the quantity of booze
outside of which twenty stiffs will get. Beer and cheap wine made up the card,
with alcohol thrown in for the blowd-in-the-glass stiffs. It was great—an orgy
under the sky, a contest of beaker-men, a study in primitive beastliness. To me
there is something fascinating in a drunken man, and were I a college president
I should institute P.G. psychology courses in practical drunkenness. It would
beat the books and compete with the laboratory.
“All of which is neither here nor there, for after sixteen hours
of it, early next morning, the whole push was copped by an overwhelming array
of constables and carted off to jail. After breakfast, about ten o’clock, we
were lined upstairs into court, limp and spiritless, the twenty of us. And
there, under his purple panoply, nose crooked like a Napoleonic eagle and eyes
glittering and beady, sat Sol Glenhart.
“‘John Ambrose!’ the clerk called out, and Chi Slim, with the ease
of long practice, stood up.
“‘Vagrant, your Honor,’ the bailiff volunteered, and his Honor,
not deigning to look at the prisoner, snapped, ‘Ten days,’ and Chi Slim sat
down.
“And so it went, with the monotony of clockwork, fifteen seconds
to the man, four men to the minute, the mugs bobbing up and down in turn like
marionettes. The clerk called the name, the bailiff the offence, the judge the
sentence, and the man sat down. That was all. Simple, eh? Superb!
“Chi Slim nudged me. ‘Give’m a spiel, Cinders. You kin do it.’
“I shook my head.
“‘G’wan,’ he urged. ‘Give ‘m a ghost story The mugs’ll take it all
right. And you kin throw yer feet fer tobacco for us till we get out.’
“‘L. C. Randolph!’ the clerk called.
“I stood up, but a hitch came in the proceedings. The clerk
whispered to the judge, and the bailiff smiled.
“‘You are a newspaper man, I understand, Mr. Randolph?’ his Honor
remarked sweetly.
“It took me by surprise, for I had forgotten the Cowbell in the
excitement of succeeding events, and I now saw myself on the edge of the pit I
had digged.
“‘That’s yer graft. Work it,’ Slim prompted.
“‘It’s all over but the shouting,’ I groaned back, but Slim,
unaware of the article, was puzzled.
“‘Your Honor,’ I answered, ‘when I can get work, that is my
occupation.’
“‘You take quite an interest in local affairs, I see.’ (Here his
Honor took up the morning’s Cowbell and ran his eye up and down a column I knew
was mine.) ‘Color is good,’ he commented, an appreciative twinkle in his eyes;
‘pictures excellent, characterized by broad, Sargent-like effects. Now this ...
this judge you have depicted ... you, ah, draw from life, I presume?’
“‘Rarely, your I Honor,’ I answered. ‘Composites, ideals, rather
... er, types, I may say.’
“‘But you have color, sir, unmistakable color,’ he continued.
“‘That is splashed on afterward,’ I explained.
“‘This judge, then, is not modelled from life, as one might be led
to believe?’
“‘No, your Honor.’
“‘Ah, I see, merely a type of judicial wickedness?’
“‘Nay, more, your Honor,’ I said boldly, ‘an ideal.’
“‘Splashed with local color afterward? Ha! Good! And may I venture
to ask how much you received for this bit of work?’
“‘Thirty dollars, your Honor.’
“‘Hum, good!’ And his tone abruptly changed. ‘Young man, local
color is a bad thing. I find you guilty of it and sentence you to thirty days’
imprisonment, or, at your pleasure, impose a fine of thirty dollars.’
“‘Alas!’ said I, ‘I spent the thirty dollars in riotous living.’
“‘And thirty days more for wasting your substance.’
“‘Next case!’ said his Honor to the clerk.
“Slim was stunned. ‘Gee!’ he whispered. ‘Gee the push gets ten
days and you get sixty. Gee!’”
Leith struck a match, lighted his dead cigar, and opened the book
on his knees. “Returning to the original conversation, don’t you find, Anak,
that though Loria handles the bipartition of the revenues with scrupulous care,
he yet omits one important factor, namely—”
“Yes,” I said absently; “yes.”
4.AMATEUR NIGHT
The elevator boy smiled
knowingly to himself. When he took her up, he had noted the sparkle in her
eyes, the color in her cheeks. His little cage had quite warmed with the glow
of her repressed eagerness. And now, on the down trip, it was glacier-like. The
sparkle and the color were gone. She was frowning, and what little he could see
of her eyes was cold and steel-gray. Oh, he knew the symptoms, he did. He was
an observer, and he knew it, too, and some day, when he was big enough, he was
going to be a reporter, sure. And in the meantime he studied the procession of
life as it streamed up and down eighteen sky-scraper floors in his elevator
car. He slid the door open for her sympathetically and watched her trip
determinedly out into the street.
There was a robustness in her carriage which came of the soil
rather than of the city pavement. But it was a robustness in a finer than the
wonted sense, a vigorous daintiness, it might be called, which gave an
impression of virility with none of the womanly left out. It told of a heredity
of seekers and fighters, of people that worked stoutly with head and hand, of
ghosts that reached down out of the misty past and moulded and made her to be a
doer of things.
But she was a little angry, and a great deal hurt. “I can guess
what you would tell me,” the editor had kindly but firmly interrupted her
lengthy preamble in the long-looked-forward-to interview just ended. “And you
have told me enough,” he had gone on (heartlessly, she was sure, as she went
over the conversation in its freshness). “You have done no newspaper work. You
are undrilled, undisciplined, unhammered into shape. You have received a
high-school education, and possibly topped it off with normal school or
college. You have stood well in English. Your friends have all told you how cleverly
you write, and how beautifully, and so forth and so forth. You think you can do
newspaper work, and you want me to put you on. Well, I am sorry, but there are
no openings. If you knew how crowded—”
“But if there are no openings,” she had interrupted, in turn, “how
did those who are in, get in? How am I to show that I am eligible to get in?”
“They made themselves indispensable,” was the terse response.
“Make yourself indispensable.”
“But how can I, if I do not get the chance?”
“Make your chance.”
“But how?” she had insisted, at the same time privately deeming
him a most unreasonable man.
“How? That is your business, not mine,” he said conclusively,
rising in token that the interview was at an end. “I must inform you, my dear
young lady, that there have been at least eighteen other aspiring young ladies
here this week, and that I have not the time to tell each and every one of them
how. The function I perform on this paper is hardly that of instructor in a
school of journalism.”
She caught an outbound car, and ere she descended from it she had
conned the conversation over and over again. “But how?” she repeated to
herself, as she climbed the three flights of stairs to the rooms where she and
her sister “bach’ed.” “But how?” And so she continued to put the interrogation,
for the stubborn Scotch blood, though many times removed from Scottish soil,
was still strong in her. And, further, there was need that she should learn
how. Her sister Letty and she had come up from an interior town to the city to
make their way in the world. John Wyman was land-poor. Disastrous business
enterprises had burdened his acres and forced his two girls, Edna and Letty,
into doing something for themselves. A year of school-teaching and of
night-study of shorthand and typewriting had capitalized their city project and
fitted them for the venture, which same venture was turning out anything but
successful. The city seemed crowded with inexperienced stenographers and
typewriters, and they had nothing but their own inexperience to offer. Edna’s
secret ambition had been journalism; but she had planned a clerical position
first, so that she might have time and space in which to determine where and on
what line of journalism she would embark. But the clerical position had not
been forthcoming, either for Letty or her, and day by day their little hoard
dwindled, though the room rent remained normal and the stove consumed coal with
undiminished voracity. And it was a slim little hoard by now.
“There’s Max Irwin,” Letty said, talking it over. “He’s a
journalist with a national reputation. Go and see him, Ed. He knows how, and he
should be able to tell you how.”
“But I don’t know him,” Edna objected.
“No more than you knew the editor you saw to-day.”
“Y-e-s,” (long and judicially), “but that’s different.”
“Not a bit different from the strange men and women you’ll
interview when you’ve learned how,” Letty encouraged.
“I hadn’t looked at it in that light,” Edna conceded. “After all,
where’s the difference between interviewing Mr. Max Irwin for some paper, or
interviewing Mr. Max Irwin for myself? It will be practice, too. I’ll go and
look him up in the directory.”
“Letty, I know I can write if I get the chance,” she announced
decisively a moment later. “I just FEEL that I have the feel of it, if you know
what I mean.”
And Letty knew and nodded. “I wonder what he is like?” she asked
softly.
“I’ll make it my business to find out,” Edna assured her; “and
I’ll let you know inside forty-eight hours.”
Letty clapped her hands. “Good! That’s the newspaper spirit! Make
it twenty-four hours and you are perfect!”
000
“—and I am very sorry to trouble you,” she concluded the statement
of her case to Max Irwin, famous war correspondent and veteran journalist.
“Not at all,” he answered, with a deprecatory wave of the hand.
“If you don’t do your own talking, who’s to do it for you? Now I understand
your predicament precisely. You want to get on the Intelligencer, you want to
get in at once, and you have had no previous experience. In the first place,
then, have you any pull? There are a dozen men in the city, a line from whom
would be an open-sesame. After that you would stand or fall by your own
ability. There’s Senator Longbridge, for instance, and Claus Inskeep the
street-car magnate, and Lane, and McChesney—” He paused, with voice suspended.
“I am sure I know none of them,” she answered despondently.
“It’s not necessary. Do you know any one that knows them? or any
one that knows any one else that knows them?”
Edna shook her head.
“Then we must think of something else,” he went on, cheerfully.
“You’ll have to do something yourself. Let me see.”
He stopped and thought for a moment, with closed eyes and wrinkled
forehead. She was watching him, studying him intently, when his blue eyes
opened with a snap and his face suddenly brightened.
“I have it! But no, wait a minute.”
And for a minute it was his turn to study her. And study her he
did, till she could feel her cheeks flushing under his gaze.
“You’ll do, I think, though it remains to be seen,” he said
enigmatically. “It will show the stuff that’s in you, besides, and it will be a
better claim upon the Intelligencer people than all the lines from all the
senators and magnates in the world. The thing for you is to do Amateur Night at
the Loops.”
“I—I hardly understand,” Edna said, for his suggestion conveyed no
meaning to her. “What are the ‘Loops’? and what is ‘Amateur Night’?”
“I forgot you said you were from the interior. But so much the
better, if you’ve only got the journalistic grip. It will be a first
impression, and first impressions are always unbiased, unprejudiced, fresh,
vivid. The Loops are out on the rim of the city, near the Park,—a place of
diversion. There’s a scenic railway, a water toboggan slide, a concert band, a
theatre, wild animals, moving pictures, and so forth and so forth. The common
people go there to look at the animals and enjoy themselves, and the other
people go there to enjoy themselves by watching the common people enjoy
themselves. A democratic, fresh-air-breathing, frolicking affair, that’s what
the Loops are.
“But the theatre is what concerns you. It’s vaudeville. One turn
follows another—jugglers, acrobats, rubber-jointed wonders, fire-dancers,
coon-song artists, singers, players, female impersonators, sentimental
soloists, and so forth and so forth. These people are professional
vaudevillists. They make their living that way. Many are excellently paid. Some
are free rovers, doing a turn wherever they can get an opening, at the
Obermann, the Orpheus, the Alcatraz, the Louvre, and so forth and so forth.
Others cover circuit pretty well all over the country. An interesting phase of
life, and the pay is big enough to attract many aspirants.
“Now the management of the Loops, in its bid for popularity,
instituted what is called ‘Amateur Night’; that is to say, twice a week, after
the professionals have done their turns, the stage is given over to the
aspiring amateurs. The audience remains to criticise. The populace becomes the
arbiter of art—or it thinks it does, which is the same thing; and it pays its
money and is well pleased with itself, and Amateur Night is a paying
proposition to the management.
“But the point of Amateur Night, and it is well to note it, is
that these amateurs are not really amateurs. They are paid for doing their
turn. At the best, they may be termed ‘professional amateurs.’ It stands to
reason that the management could not get people to face a rampant audience for
nothing, and on such occasions the audience certainly goes mad. It’s great
fun—for the audience. But the thing for you to do, and it requires nerve, I
assure you, is to go out, make arrangements for two turns, (Wednesday and
Saturday nights, I believe), do your two turns, and write it up for the Sunday
Intelligencer.”
“But—but,” she quavered, “I—I—” and there was a suggestion of
disappointment and tears in her voice.
“I see,” he said kindly. “You were expecting something else,
something different, something better. We all do at first. But remember the
admiral of the Queen’s Na-vee, who swept the floor and polished up the handle
of the big front door. You must face the drudgery of apprenticeship or quit
right now. What do you say?”
The abruptness with which he demanded her decision startled her.
As she faltered, she could see a shade of disappointment beginning to darken
his face.
“In a way it must be considered a test,” he added encouragingly.
“A severe one, but so much the better. Now is the time. Are you game?”
“I’ll try,” she said faintly, at the same time making a note of
the directness, abruptness, and haste of these city men with whom she was
coming in contact.
“Good! Why, when I started in, I had the dreariest, deadliest
details imaginable. And after that, for a weary time, I did the police and
divorce courts. But it all came well in the end and did me good. You are
luckier in making your start with Sunday work. It’s not particularly great.
What of it? Do it. Show the stuff you’re made of, and you’ll get a call for
better work—better class and better pay. Now you go out this afternoon to the
Loops, and engage to do two turns.”
“But what kind of turns can I do?” Edna asked dubiously.
“Do? That’s easy. Can you sing? Never mind, don’t need to sing.
Screech, do anything—that’s what you’re paid for, to afford amusement, to give
bad art for the populace to howl down. And when you do your turn, take some one
along for chaperon. Be afraid of no one. Talk up. Move about among the amateurs
waiting their turn, pump them, study them, photograph them in your brain. Get
the atmosphere, the color, strong color, lots of it. Dig right in with both
hands, and get the essence of it, the spirit, the significance. What does it
mean? Find out what it means. That’s what you’re there for. That’s what the
readers of the Sunday Intelligencer want to know.
“Be terse in style, vigorous of phrase, apt, concretely apt, in
similitude. Avoid platitudes and commonplaces. Exercise selection. Seize upon
things salient, eliminate the rest, and you have pictures. Paint those pictures
in words and the Intelligencer will have you. Get hold of a few back numbers,
and study the Sunday Intelligencer feature story. Tell it all in the opening
paragraph as advertisement of contents, and in the contents tell it all over
again. Then put a snapper at the end, so if they’re crowded for space they can
cut off your contents anywhere, reattach the snapper, and the story will still
retain form. There, that’s enough. Study the rest out for yourself.”
They both rose to their feet, Edna quite carried away by his
enthusiasm and his quick, jerky sentences, bristling with the things she wanted
to know.
“And remember, Miss Wyman, if you’re ambitious, that the aim and
end of journalism is not the feature article. Avoid the rut. The feature is a
trick. Master it, but don’t let it master you. But master it you must; for if
you can’t learn to do a feature well, you can never expect to do anything
better. In short, put your whole self into it, and yet, outside of it, above
it, remain yourself, if you follow me. And now good luck to you.”
They had reached the door and were shaking hands.
“And one thing more,” he interrupted her thanks, “let me see your
copy before you turn it in. I may be able to put you straight here and there.”
Edna found the manager of the Loops a full-fleshed, heavy-jowled
man, bushy of eyebrow and generally belligerent of aspect, with an
absent-minded scowl on his face and a black cigar stuck in the midst thereof.
Symes was his name, she had learned, Ernst Symes.
“Whatcher turn?” he demanded, ere half her brief application had
left her lips.
“Sentimental soloist, soprano,” she answered promptly, remembering
Irwin’s advice to talk up.
“Whatcher name?” Mr. Symes asked, scarcely deigning to glance at
her.
She hesitated. So rapidly had she been rushed into the adventure
that she had not considered the question of a name at all.
“Any name? Stage name?” he bellowed impatiently.
“Nan Bellayne,” she invented on the spur of the moment.
“B-e-l-l-a-y-n-e. Yes, that’s it.”
He scribbled it into a notebook. “All right. Take your turn
Wednesday and Saturday.”
“How much do I get?” Edna demanded.
“Two-an’-a-half a turn. Two turns, five. Getcher pay first Monday
after second turn.”
And without the simple courtesy of “Good day,” he turned his back
on her and plunged into the newspaper he had been reading when she entered.
Edna came early on Wednesday evening, Letty with her, and in a
telescope basket her costume—a simple affair. A plaid shawl borrowed from the
washerwoman, a ragged scrubbing skirt borrowed from the charwoman, and a gray
wig rented from a costumer for twenty-five cents a night, completed the outfit;
for Edna had elected to be an old Irishwoman singing broken-heartedly after her
wandering boy.
Though they had come early, she found everything in uproar. The
main performance was under way, the orchestra was playing and the audience
intermittently applauding. The infusion of the amateurs clogged the working of
things behind the stage, crowded the passages, dressing rooms, and wings, and
forced everybody into everybody else’s way. This was particularly distasteful
to the professionals, who carried themselves as befitted those of a higher
caste, and whose behavior toward the pariah amateurs was marked by hauteur and
even brutality. And Edna, bullied and elbowed and shoved about, clinging
desperately to her basket and seeking a dressing room, took note of it all.
A dressing room she finally found, jammed with three other amateur
“ladies,” who were “making up” with much noise, high-pitched voices, and
squabbling over a lone mirror. Her own make-up was so simple that it was
quickly accomplished, and she left the trio of ladies holding an armed truce
while they passed judgment upon her. Letty was close at her shoulder, and with
patience and persistence they managed to get a nook in one of the wings which
commanded a view of the stage.
A small, dark man, dapper and debonair, swallow-tailed and
top-hatted, was waltzing about the stage with dainty, mincing steps, and in a
thin little voice singing something or other about somebody or something
evidently pathetic. As his waning voice neared the end of the lines, a large
woman, crowned with an amazing wealth of blond hair, thrust rudely past Edna,
trod heavily on her toes, and shoved her contemptuously to the side. “Bloomin’
hamateur!” she hissed as she went past, and the next instant she was on the
stage, graciously bowing to the audience, while the small, dark man twirled
extravagantly about on his tiptoes.
“Hello, girls!”
This greeting, drawled with an inimitable vocal caress in every
syllable, close in her ear, caused Edna to give a startled little jump. A
smooth-faced, moon-faced young man was smiling at her good-naturedly. His
“make-up” was plainly that of the stock tramp of the stage, though the
inevitable whiskers were lacking.
“Oh, it don’t take a minute to slap’m on,” he explained, divining
the search in her eyes and waving in his hand the adornment in question. “They
make a feller sweat,” he explained further. And then, “What’s yer turn?”
“Soprano—sentimental,” she answered, trying to be offhand and at
ease.
“Whata you doin’ it for?” he demanded directly.
“For fun; what else?” she countered.
“I just sized you up for that as soon as I put eyes on you. You
ain’t graftin’ for a paper, are you?”
“I never met but one editor in my life,” she replied evasively,
“and I, he—well, we didn’t get on very well together.”
“Hittin’ ‘m for a job?”
Edna nodded carelessly, though inwardly anxious and cudgelling her
brains for something to turn the conversation.
“What’d he say?”
“That eighteen other girls had already been there that week.”
“Gave you the icy mit, eh?” The moon-faced young man laughed and
slapped his thighs. “You see, we’re kind of suspicious. The Sunday papers ‘d
like to get Amateur Night done up brown in a nice little package, and the
manager don’t see it that way. Gets wild-eyed at the thought of it.”
“And what’s your turn?” she asked.
“Who? me? Oh, I’m doin’ the tramp act to-night. I’m Charley Welsh,
you know.”
She felt that by the mention of his name he intended to convey to
her complete enlightenment, but the best she could do was to say politely, “Oh,
is that so?”
She wanted to laugh at the hurt disappointment which came into his
face, but concealed her amusement.
“Come, now,” he said brusquely, “you can’t stand there and tell me
you’ve never heard of Charley Welsh? Well, you must be young. Why, I’m an Only,
the Only amateur at that. Sure, you must have seen me. I’m everywhere. I could
be a professional, but I get more dough out of it by doin’ the amateur.”
“But what’s an ‘Only’?” she queried. “I want to learn.”
“Sure,” Charley Welsh said gallantly. “I’ll put you wise. An
‘Only’ is a nonpareil, the feller that does one kind of a turn better’n any
other feller. He’s the Only, see?”
And Edna saw.
“To get a line on the biz,” he continued, “throw yer lamps on me.
I’m the Only all-round amateur. To-night I make a bluff at the tramp act. It’s
harder to bluff it than to really do it, but then it’s acting, it’s amateur,
it’s art. See? I do everything, from Sheeny monologue to team song and dance
and Dutch comedian. Sure, I’m Charley Welsh, the Only Charley Welsh.”
And in this fashion, while the thin, dark man and the large, blond
woman warbled dulcetly out on the stage and the other professionals followed in
their turns, did Charley Welsh put Edna wise, giving her much miscellaneous and
superfluous information and much that she stored away for the Sunday
Intelligencer.
“Well, tra la loo,” he said suddenly. “There’s his highness
chasin’ you up. Yer first on the bill. Never mind the row when you go on. Just
finish yer turn like a lady.”
It was at that moment that Edna felt her journalistic ambition
departing from her, and was aware of an overmastering desire to be somewhere
else. But the stage manager, like an ogre, barred her retreat. She could hear
the opening bars of her song going up from the orchestra and the noises of the
house dying away to the silence of anticipation.
“Go ahead,” Letty whispered, pressing her hand; and from the other
side came the peremptory “Don’t flunk!” of Charley Welsh.
But her feet seemed rooted to the floor, and she leaned weakly
against a shift scene. The orchestra was beginning over again, and a lone voice
from the house piped with startling distinctness:
“Puzzle picture! Find Nannie!”
A roar of laughter greeted the sally, and Edna shrank back. But
the strong hand of the manager descended on her shoulder, and with a quick,
powerful shove propelled her out on to the stage. His hand and arm had flashed
into full view, and the audience, grasping the situation, thundered its
appreciation. The orchestra was drowned out by the terrible din, and Edna could
see the bows scraping away across the violins, apparently without sound. It was
impossible for her to begin in time, and as she patiently waited, arms akimbo
and ears straining for the music, the house let loose again (a favorite trick,
she afterward learned, of confusing the amateur by preventing him or her from
hearing the orchestra).
But Edna was recovering her presence of mind. She became aware,
pit to dome, of a vast sea of smiling and fun-distorted faces, of vast roars of
laughter, rising wave on wave, and then her Scotch blood went cold and angry.
The hard-working but silent orchestra gave her the cue, and, without making a
sound, she began to move her lips, stretch forth her arms, and sway her body,
as though she were really singing. The noise in the house redoubled in the
attempt to drown her voice, but she serenely went on with her pantomime. This
seemed to continue an interminable time, when the audience, tiring of its prank
and in order to hear, suddenly stilled its clamor, and discovered the dumb show
she had been making. For a moment all was silent, save for the orchestra, her
lips moving on without a sound, and then the audience realized that it had been
sold, and broke out afresh, this time with genuine applause in acknowledgment
of her victory. She chose this as the happy moment for her exit, and with a bow
and a backward retreat, she was off the stage in Letty’s arms.
The worst was past, and for the rest of the evening she moved
about among the amateurs and professionals, talking, listening, observing,
finding out what it meant and taking mental notes of it all. Charley Welsh
constituted himself her preceptor and guardian angel, and so well did he
perform the self-allotted task that when it was all over she felt fully
prepared to write her article. But the proposition had been to do two turns,
and her native pluck forced her to live up to it. Also, in the course of the
intervening days, she discovered fleeting impressions that required
verification; so, on Saturday, she was back again, with her telescope basket
and Letty.
The manager seemed looking for her, and she caught an expression
of relief in his eyes when he first saw her. He hurried up, greeted her, and
bowed with a respect ludicrously at variance with his previous ogre-like
behavior. And as he bowed, across his shoulders she saw Charley Welsh
deliberately wink.
But the surprise had just begun. The manager begged to be
introduced to her sister, chatted entertainingly with the pair of them, and
strove greatly and anxiously to be agreeable. He even went so far as to give
Edna a dressing room to herself, to the unspeakable envy of the three other
amateur ladies of previous acquaintance. Edna was nonplussed, and it was not
till she met Charley Welsh in the passage that light was thrown on the mystery.
“Hello!” he greeted her. “On Easy Street, eh? Everything slidin’
your way.”
She smiled brightly.
“Thinks yer a female reporter, sure. I almost split when I saw’m
layin’ himself out sweet an’ pleasin’. Honest, now, that ain’t yer graft, is
it?”
“I told you my experience with editors,” she parried. “And honest
now, it was honest, too.”
But the Only Charley Welsh shook his head dubiously. “Not that I
care a rap,” he declared. “And if you are, just gimme a couple of lines of
notice, the right kind, good ad, you know. And if yer not, why yer all right
anyway. Yer not our class, that’s straight.”
After her turn, which she did this time with the nerve of an old
campaigner, the manager returned to the charge; and after saying nice things
and being generally nice himself, he came to the point.
“You’ll treat us well, I hope,” he said insinuatingly. “Do the
right thing by us, and all that?”
“Oh,” she answered innocently, “you couldn’t persuade me to do
another turn; I know I seemed to take and that you’d like to have me, but I
really, really can’t.”
“You know what I mean,” he said, with a touch of his old
bulldozing manner.
“No, I really won’t,” she persisted. “Vaudeville’s too—too wearing
on the nerves, my nerves, at any rate.”
Whereat he looked puzzled and doubtful, and forbore to press the
point further.
But on Monday morning, when she came to his office to get her pay
for the two turns, it was he who puzzled her.
“You surely must have mistaken me,” he lied glibly. “I remember
saying something about paying your car fare. We always do this, you know, but
we never, never pay amateurs. That would take the life and sparkle out of the
whole thing. No, Charley Welsh was stringing you. He gets paid nothing for his
turns. No amateur gets paid. The idea is ridiculous. However, here’s fifty
cents. It will pay your sister’s car fare also. And,”—very suavely,—“speaking
for the Loops, permit me to thank you for the kind and successful contribution
of your services.”
That afternoon, true to her promise to Max Irwin, she placed her
typewritten copy into his hands. And while he ran over it, he nodded his head
from time to time, and maintained a running fire of commendatory remarks:
“Good!—that’s it!—that’s the stuff!—psychology’s all right!—the very idea!—you’ve
caught it!—excellent!—missed it a bit here, but it’ll go—that’s
vigorous!—strong!—vivid!—pictures! pictures!—excellent!—most excellent!”
And when he had run down to the bottom of the last page, holding
out his hand: “My dear Miss Wyman, I congratulate you. I must say you have
exceeded my expectations, which, to say the least, were large. You are a
journalist, a natural journalist. You’ve got the grip, and you’re sure to get
on. The Intelligencer will take it, without doubt, and take you too. They’ll
have to take you. If they don’t, some of the other papers will get you.”
“But what’s this?” he queried, the next instant, his face going
serious. “You’ve said nothing about receiving the pay for your turns, and
that’s one of the points of the feature. I expressly mentioned it, if you’ll
remember.”
“It will never do,” he said, shaking his head ominously, when she
had explained. “You simply must collect that money somehow. Let me see. Let me
think a moment.”
“Never mind, Mr. Irwin,” she said. “I’ve bothered you enough. Let
me use your ‘phone, please, and I’ll try Mr. Ernst Symes again.”
He vacated his chair by the desk, and Edna took down the receiver.
“Charley Welsh is sick,” she began, when the connection had been
made. “What? No I’m not Charley Welsh. Charley Welsh is sick, and his sister
wants to know if she can come out this afternoon and draw his pay for him?”
“Tell Charley Welsh’s sister that Charley Welsh was out this
morning, and drew his own pay,” came back the manager’s familiar tones, crisp
with asperity.
“All right,” Edna went on. “And now Nan Bellayne wants to know if
she and her sister can come out this afternoon and draw Nan Bellayne’s pay?”
“What’d he say? What’d he say?” Max Irwin cried excitedly, as she
hung up.
“That Nan Bellayne was too much for him, and that she and her
sister could come out and get her pay and the freedom of the Loops, to boot.”
“One thing, more,” he interrupted her thanks at the door, as on
her previous visit. “Now that you’ve shown the stuff you’re made of, I should
esteem it, ahem, a privilege to give you a line myself to the Intelligencer
people.”
5.THE MINIONS OF MIDAS
Wade Atsheler is
dead—dead by his own hand. To say that this was entirely unexpected by the
small coterie which knew him, would be to say an untruth; and yet never once
had we, his intimates, ever canvassed the idea. Rather had we been prepared for
it in some incomprehensible subconscious way. Before the perpetration of the
deed, its possibility is remotest from our thoughts; but when we did know that
he was dead, it seemed, somehow, that we had understood and looked forward to
it all the time. This, by retrospective analysis, we could easily explain by
the fact of his great trouble. I use “great trouble” advisedly. Young,
handsome, with an assured position as the right-hand man of Eben Hale, the
great street-railway magnate, there could be no reason for him to complain of
fortune’s favors. Yet we had watched his smooth brow furrow and corrugate as
under some carking care or devouring sorrow. We had watched his thick, black
hair thin and silver as green grain under brazen skies and parching drought.
Who can forget, in the midst of the hilarious scenes he toward the last sought
with greater and greater avidity—who can forget, I say, the deep abstractions
and black moods into which he fell? At such times, when the fun rippled and
soared from height to height, suddenly, without rhyme or reason, his eyes would
turn lacklustre, his brows knit, as with clenched hands and face overshot with
spasms of mental pain he wrestled on the edge of the abyss with some unknown
danger.
He never spoke of his trouble, nor were we indiscreet enough to
ask. But it was just as well; for had we, and had he spoken, our help and
strength could have availed nothing. When Eben Hale died, whose confidential
secretary he was—nay, well-nigh adopted son and full business partner—he no
longer came among us. Not, as I now know, that our company was distasteful to
him, but because his trouble had so grown that he could not respond to our happiness
nor find surcease with us. Why this should be so we could not at the time
understand, for when Eben Hale’s will was probated, the world learned that he
was sole heir to his employer’s many millions, and it was expressly stipulated
that this great inheritance was given to him without qualification, hitch, or
hindrance in the exercise thereof. Not a share of stock, not a penny of cash,
was bequeathed to the dead man’s relatives. As for his direct family, one
astounding clause expressly stated that Wade Atsheler was to dispense to Eben
Hale’s wife and sons and daughters whatever moneys his judgement dictated, at
whatever times he deemed advisable. Had there been any scandal in the dead
man’s family, or had his sons been wild or undutiful, then there might have
been a glimmering of reason in this most unusual action; but Eben Hale’s
domestic happiness had been proverbial in the community, and one would have to
travel far and wide to discover a cleaner, saner, wholesomer progeny of sons
and daughters. While his wife—well, by those who knew her best she was
endearingly termed “The Mother of the Gracchi.” Needless to state, this
inexplicable will was a nine day’s wonder; but the expectant public was
disappointed in that no contest was made.
It was only the other day that Eben Hale was laid away in his
stately marble mausoleum. And now Wade Atsheler is dead. The news was printed
in this morning’s paper. I have just received through the mail a letter from
him, posted, evidently, but a short hour before he hurled himself into
eternity. This letter, which lies before me, is a narrative in his own
handwriting, linking together numerous newspaper clippings and facsimiles of
letters. The original correspondence, he has told me, is in the hands of the
police. He has begged me, also, as a warning to society against a most
frightful and diabolical danger which threatens its very existence, to make
public the terrible series of tragedies in which he has been innocently
concerned. I herewith append the text in full:
It was in August, 1899, just after my return from my summer
vacation, that the blow fell. We did not know it at the time; we had not yet
learned to school our minds to such awful possibilities. Mr. Hale opened the
letter, read it, and tossed it upon my desk with a laugh. When I had looked it
over, I also laughed, saying, “Some ghastly joke, Mr. Hale, and one in very
poor taste.” Find here, my dear John, an exact duplicate of the letter in
question.
OFFICE OF THE M. OF M. August 17, 1899.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—We desire you to realize upon whatever portion of your
vast holdings is necessary to obtain, IN CASH, twenty millions of dollars. This
sum we require you to pay over to us, or to our agents. You will note we do not
specify any given time, for it is not our wish to hurry you in this matter. You
may even, if it be easier for you, pay us in ten, fifteen, or twenty
instalments; but we will accept no single instalment of less than a million.
Believe us, dear Mr. Hale, when we say that we embark upon this
course of action utterly devoid of animus. We are members of that intellectual
proletariat, the increasing numbers of which mark in red lettering the last
days of the nineteenth century. We have, from a thorough study of economics,
decided to enter upon this business. It has many merits, chief among which may
be noted that we can indulge in large and lucrative operations without capital.
So far, we have been fairly successful, and we hope our dealings with you may
be pleasant and satisfactory.
Pray attend while we explain our views more fully. At the base of
the present system of society is to be found the property right. And this right
of the individual to hold property is demonstrated, in the last analysis, to
rest solely and wholly upon MIGHT. The mailed gentlemen of William the
Conqueror divided and apportioned England amongst themselves with the naked
sword. This, we are sure you will grant, is true of all feudal possessions.
With the invention of steam and the Industrial Revolution there came into existence
the Capitalist Class, in the modern sense of the word. These capitalists
quickly towered above the ancient nobility. The captains of industry have
virtually dispossessed the descendants of the captains of war. Mind, and not
muscle, wins in to-day’s struggle for existence. But this state of affairs is
none the less based upon might. The change has been qualitative. The old-time
Feudal Baronage ravaged the world with fire and sword; the modern Money
Baronage exploits the world by mastering and applying the world’s economic
forces. Brain, and not brawn, endures; and those best fitted to survive are the
intellectually and commercially powerful.
We, the M. of M., are not content to become wage slaves. The great
trusts and business combinations (with which you have your rating) prevent us
from rising to the place among you which our intellects qualify us to occupy.
Why? Because we are without capital. We are of the unwashed, but with this
difference: our brains are of the best, and we have no foolish ethical nor
social scruples. As wage slaves, toiling early and late, and living
abstemiously, we could not save in threescore years—nor in twenty times
threescore years—a sum of money sufficient successfully to cope with the great
aggregations of massed capital which now exist. Nevertheless, we have entered
the arena. We now throw down the gage to the capital of the world. Whether it
wishes to fight or not, it shall have to fight.
Mr. Hale, our interests dictate us to demand of you twenty
millions of dollars. While we are considerate enough to give you reasonable
time in which to carry out your share of the transaction, please do not delay
too long. When you have agreed to our terms, insert a suitable notice in the
agony column of the “Morning Blazer.” We shall then acquaint you with our plan
for transferring the sum mentioned. You had better do this some time prior to
October 1st. If you do not, in order to show that we are in earnest we shall on
that date kill a man on East Thirty-ninth Street. He will be a workingman. This
man you do not know; nor do we. You represent a force in modern society; we
also represent a force—a new force. Without anger or malice, we have closed in
battle. As you will readily discern, we are simply a business proposition. You
are the upper, and we the nether, millstone; this man’s life shall be ground
out between. You may save him if you agree to our conditions and act in time.
There was once a king cursed with a golden touch. His name we have
taken to do duty as our official seal. Some day, to protect ourselves against
competitors, we shall copyright it.
We beg to remain,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
I leave it to you, dear John, why should we not have laughed over
such a preposterous communication? The idea, we could not but grant, was well conceived,
but it was too grotesque to be taken seriously. Mr. Hale said he would preserve
it as a literary curiosity, and shoved it away in a pigeonhole. Then we
promptly forgot its existence. And as promptly, on the 1st of October, going
over the morning mail, we read the following:
OFFICE OF THE M. OF M., October 1, 1899.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—Your victim has met his fate. An hour ago, on East
Thirty-ninth Street, a workingman was thrust through the heart with a knife.
Ere you read this his body will be lying at the Morgue. Go and look upon your
handiwork.
On October 14th, in token of our earnestness in this matter, and
in case you do not relent, we shall kill a policeman on or near the corner of
Polk Street and Clermont Avenue.
Very cordially,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
Again Mr. Hale laughed. His mind was full of a prospective deal
with a Chicago syndicate for the sale of all his street railways in that city,
and so he went on dictating to the stenographer, never giving it a second
thought. But somehow, I know not why, a heavy depression fell upon me. What if
it were not a joke, I asked myself, and turned involuntarily to the morning
paper. There it was, as befitted an obscure person of the lower classes, a
paltry half-dozen lines tucked away in a corner, next a patent medicine
advertisement:
Shortly after five o’clock this morning, on East Thirty-ninth
Street, a laborer named Pete Lascalle, while on his way to work, was stabbed to
the heart by an unknown assailant, who escaped by running. The police have been
unable to discover any motive for the murder.
“Impossible!” was Mr. Hale’s rejoinder, when I had read the item
aloud; but the incident evidently weighed upon his mind, for late in the
afternoon, with many epithets denunciatory of his foolishness, he asked me to
acquaint the police with the affair. I had the pleasure of being laughed at in
the Inspector’s private office, although I went away with the assurance that
they would look into it and that the vicinity of Polk and Clermont would be doubly
patrolled on the night mentioned. There it dropped, till the two weeks had sped
by, when the following note came to us through the mail:
OFFICE OF THE M. OF M. October 15, 1899.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—Your second victim has fallen on schedule time. We are
in no hurry; but to increase the pressure we shall henceforth kill weekly. To
protect ourselves against police interference we shall hereafter inform you of
the event but a little prior to or simultaneously with the deed. Trusting this
finds you in good health,
We are,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
This time Mr. Hale took up the paper, and after a brief search,
read to me this account:
A DASTARDLY CRIME
Joseph Donahue, assigned only last night to special patrol duty in
the Eleventh Ward, at midnight was shot through the brain and instantly killed.
The tragedy was enacted in the full glare of the street lights on the corner of
Polk Street and Clermont Avenue. Our society is indeed unstable when the
custodians of its peace are thus openly and wantonly shot down. The police have
so far been unable to obtain the slightest clue.
Barely had he finished this when the police arrived—the Inspector
himself and two of his keenest sleuths. Alarm sat upon their faces, and it was
plain that they were seriously perturbed. Though the facts were so few and
simple, we talked long, going over the affair again and again. When the
Inspector went away, he confidently assured us that everything would soon be
straightened out and the assassins run to earth. In the meantime he thought it
well to detail guards for the protection of Mr. Hale and myself, and several
more to be constantly on the vigil about the house and grounds. After the lapse
of a week, at one o’clock in the afternoon, this telegram was received:
OFFICE OF THE M. OF M. October 21, 1899.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—We are sorry to note how completely you have
misunderstood us. You have seen fit to surround yourself and household with
armed guards, as though, forsooth, we were common criminals, apt to break in
upon you and wrest away by force your twenty millions. Believe us, this is
farthest from our intention.
You will readily comprehend, after a little sober thought, that
your life is dear to us. Do not be afraid. We would not hurt you for the world.
It is our policy to cherish you tenderly and protect you from all harm. Your
death means nothing to us. If it did, rest assured that we would not hesitate a
moment in destroying you. Think this over, Mr. Hale. When you have paid us our
price, there will be need of retrenchment. Dismiss your guards now, and cut
down your expenses.
Within minutes of the time you receive this a nurse-girl will have
been choked to death in Brentwood Park. The body may be found in the shrubbery
lining the path which leads off to the left from the band-stand.
Cordially yours,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
The next instant Mr. Hale was at the telephone, warning the
Inspector of the impending murder. The Inspector excused himself in order to
call up Police Sub-station F and despatch men to the scene. Fifteen minutes
later he rang us up and informed us that the body had been discovered, yet
warm, in the place indicated. That evening the papers teemed with glaring
Jack-the-Strangler headlines, denouncing the brutality of the deed and complaining
about the laxity of the police. We were also closeted with the Inspector, who
begged us by all means to keep the affair secret. Success, he said, depended
upon silence.
As you know, John, Mr. Hale was a man of iron. He refused to
surrender. But, oh, John, it was terrible, nay, horrible—this awful something,
this blind force in the dark. We could not fight, could not plan, could do
nothing save hold our hands and wait. And week by week, as certain as the
rising of the sun, came the notification and death of some person, man or
woman, innocent of evil, but just as much killed by us as though we had done it
with our own hands. A word from Mr. Hale and the slaughter would have ceased.
But he hardened his heart and waited, the lines deepening, the mouth and eyes
growing sterner and firmer, and the face aging with the hours. It is needless
for me to speak of my own suffering during that frightful period. Find here the
letters and telegrams of the M. of M., and the newspaper accounts, etc., of the
various murders.
You will notice also the letters warning Mr. Hale of certain
machinations of commercial enemies and secret manipulations of stock. The M. of
M. seemed to have its hand on the inner pulse of the business and financial
world. They possessed themselves of and forwarded to us information which our
agents could not obtain. One timely note from them, at a critical moment in a
certain deal, saved all of five millions to Mr. Hale. At another time they sent
us a telegram which probably was the means of preventing an anarchist crank
from taking my employer’s life. We captured the man on his arrival and turned
him over to the police, who found upon him enough of a new and powerful
explosive to sink a battleship.
We persisted. Mr. Hale was grit clear through. He disbursed at the
rate of one hundred thousand per week for secret service. The aid of the
Pinkertons and of countless private detective agencies was called in, and in
addition to this thousands were upon our payroll. Our agents swarmed
everywhere, in all guises, penetrating all classes of society. They grasped at
a myriad clues; hundreds of suspects were jailed, and at various times
thousands of suspicious persons were under surveillance, but nothing tangible
came to light. With its communications the M. of M. continually changed its
method of delivery. And every messenger they sent us was arrested forthwith.
But these inevitably proved to be innocent individuals, while their
descriptions of the persons who had employed them for the errand never tallied.
On the last day of December we received this notification:
OFFICE OF THE M. OF M., December 31, 1899.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—Pursuant of our policy, with which we flatter ourselves
you are already well versed, we beg to state that we shall give a passport from
this Vale of Tears to Inspector Bying, with whom, because of our attentions,
you have become so well acquainted. It is his custom to be in his private
office at this hour. Even as you read this he breathes his last.
Cordially yours,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
I dropped the letter and sprang to the telephone. Great was my
relief when I heard the Inspector’s hearty voice. But, even as he spoke, his
voice died away in the receiver to a gurgling sob, and I heard faintly the
crash of a falling body. Then a strange voice hello’d me, sent me the regards
of the M. of M., and broke the switch. Like a flash I called up the public
office of the Central Police, telling them to go at once to the Inspector’s aid
in his private office. I then held the line, and a few minutes later received
the intelligence that he had been found bathed in his own blood and breathing
his last. There were no eyewitnesses, and no trace was discoverable of the
murderer.
Whereupon Mr. Hale immediately increased his secret service till a
quarter of a million flowed weekly from his coffers. He was determined to win
out. His graduated rewards aggregated over ten millions. You have a fair idea
of his resources and you can see in what manner he drew upon them. It was the
principle, he affirmed, that he was fighting for, not the gold. And it must be
admitted that his course proved the nobility of his motive. The police
departments of all the great cities cooperated, and even the United States
Government stepped in, and the affair became one of the highest questions of
state. Certain contingent funds of the nation were devoted to the unearthing of
the M. of M., and every government agent was on the alert. But all in vain. The
Minions of Midas carried on their damnable work unhampered. They had their way
and struck unerringly.
But while he fought to the last, Mr. Hale could not wash his hands
of the blood with which they were dyed. Though not technically a murderer,
though no jury of his peers would ever have convicted him, none the less the
death of every individual was due to him. As I said before, a word from him and
the slaughter would have ceased. But he refused to give that word. He insisted
that the integrity of society was assailed; that he was not sufficiently a
coward to desert his post; and that it was manifestly just that a few should be
martyred for the ultimate welfare of the many. Nevertheless this blood was upon
his head, and he sank into deeper and deeper gloom. I was likewise whelmed with
the guilt of an accomplice. Babies were ruthlessly killed, children, aged men;
and not only were these murders local, but they were distributed over the
country. In the middle of February, one evening, as we sat in the library,
there came a sharp knock at the door. On responding to it I found, lying on the
carpet of the corridor, the following missive:
OFFICE OF THE M. OF M., February 15, 1900.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—Does not your soul cry out upon the red harvest it is
reaping? Perhaps we have been too abstract in conducting our business. Let us
now be concrete. Miss Adelaide Laidlaw is a talented young woman, as good, we
understand, as she is beautiful. She is the daughter of your old friend, Judge
Laidlaw, and we happen to know that you carried her in your arms when she was
an infant. She is your daughter’s closest friend, and at present is visiting
her. When your eyes have read thus far her visit will have terminated.
Very cordially,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
My God! did we not instantly realize the terrible import! We
rushed through the dayrooms—she was not there—and on to her own apartments. The
door was locked, but we crashed it down by hurling ourselves against it. There
she lay, just as she had finished dressing for the opera, smothered with
pillows torn from the couch, the flush of life yet on her flesh, the body still
flexible and warm. Let me pass over the rest of this horror. You will surely
remember, John, the newspaper accounts.
Late that night Mr. Hale summoned me to him, and before God did
pledge me most solemnly to stand by him and not to compromise, even if all kith
and kin were destroyed.
The next day I was surprised at his cheerfulness. I had thought he
would be deeply shocked by this last tragedy—how deep I was soon to learn. All
day he was light-hearted and high-spirited, as though at last he had found a
way out of the frightful difficulty. The next morning we found him dead in his
bed, a peaceful smile upon his careworn face—asphyxiation. Through the
connivance of the police and the authorities, it was given out to the world as
heart disease. We deemed it wise to withhold the truth; but little good has it
done us, little good has anything done us.
Barely had I left that chamber of death, when—but too late—the
following extraordinary letter was received:
OFFICE OF THE M. of M., February 17, 1900.
MR. EBEN HALE, Money Baron:
Dear Sir,—You will pardon our intrusion, we hope, so closely upon
the sad event of day before yesterday; but what we wish to say may be of the
utmost importance to you. It is in our mind that you may attempt to escape us.
There is but one way, apparently, as you have ere this doubtless discovered.
But we wish to inform you that even this one way is barred. You may die, but
you die failing and acknowledging your failure. Note this: WE ARE PART AND
PARCEL OF YOUR POSSESSIONS. WITH YOUR MILLIONS WE PASS DOWN TO YOUR HEIRS AND
ASSIGNS FOREVER.
We are the inevitable. We are the culmination of industrial and
social wrong. We turn upon the society that has created us. We are the
successful failures of the age, the scourges of a degraded civilization.
We are the creatures of a perverse social selection. We meet force
with force. Only the strong shall endure. We believe in the survival of the
fittest. You have crushed your wage slaves into the dirt and you have survived.
The captains of war, at your command, have shot down like dogs your employees
in a score of bloody strikes. By such means you have endured. We do not grumble
at the result, for we acknowledge and have our being in the same natural law.
And now the question has arisen: UNDER THE PRESENT SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT, WHICH OF
US SHALL SURVIVE? We believe we are the fittest. You believe you are the
fittest. We leave the eventuality to time and law.
Cordially yours,
THE MINIONS OF MIDAS.
John, do you wonder now that I shunned pleasure and avoided
friends? But why explain? Surely this narrative will make everything clear.
Three weeks ago Adelaide Laidlaw died. Since then I have waited in hope and
fear. Yesterday the will was probated and made public. To-day I was notified
that a woman of the middle class would be killed in Golden Gate Park, in
faraway San Francisco. The despatches in to-night’s papers give the details of
the brutal happening—details which correspond with those furnished me in
advance.
It is useless. I cannot struggle against the inevitable. I have
been faithful to Mr. Hale and have worked hard. Why my faithfulness should have
been thus rewarded I cannot understand. Yet I cannot be false to my trust, nor
break my word by compromising. Still, I have resolved that no more deaths shall
be upon my head. I have willed the many millions I lately received to their
rightful owners. Let the stalwart sons of Eben Hale work out their own
salvation. Ere you read this I shall have passed on. The Minions of Midas are all-powerful.
The police are impotent. I have learned from them that other millionnaires have
been likewise mulcted or persecuted—how many is not known, for when one yields
to the M. of M., his mouth is thenceforth sealed. Those who have not yielded
are even now reaping their scarlet harvest. The grim game is being played out.
The Federal Government can do nothing. I also understand that similar branch
organizations have made their appearance in Europe. Society is shaken to its
foundations. Principalities and powers are as brands ripe for the burning.
Instead of the masses against the classes, it is a class against the classes.
We, the guardians of human progress, are being singled out and struck down. Law
and order have failed.
The officials have begged me to keep this secret. I have done so,
but can do so no longer. It has become a question of public import, fraught
with the direst consequences, and I shall do my duty before I leave this world
by informing it of its peril. Do you, John, as my last request, make this
public. Do not be frightened. The fate of humanity rests in your hand. Let the
press strike off millions of copies; let the electric currents sweep it round
the world; wherever men meet and speak, let them speak of it in fear and
trembling. And then, when thoroughly aroused, let society arise in its might
and cast out this abomination.
Yours, in long farewell,
WADE ATSHELER.
6.THE SHADOW AND THE FLASH
When I look back, I
realize what a peculiar friendship it was. First, there was Lloyd Inwood, tall,
slender, and finely knit, nervous and dark. And then Paul Tichlorne, tall,
slender, and finely knit, nervous and blond. Each was the replica of the other
in everything except color. Lloyd’s eyes were black; Paul’s were blue. Under
stress of excitement, the blood coursed olive in the face of Lloyd, crimson in
the face of Paul. But outside this matter of coloring they were as like as two
peas. Both were high-strung, prone to excessive tension and endurance, and they
lived at concert pitch.
But there was a trio involved in this remarkable friendship, and
the third was short, and fat, and chunky, and lazy, and, loath to say, it was
I. Paul and Lloyd seemed born to rivalry with each other, and I to be
peacemaker between them. We grew up together, the three of us, and full often
have I received the angry blows each intended for the other. They were always
competing, striving to outdo each other, and when entered upon some such
struggle there was no limit either to their endeavors or passions.
This intense spirit of rivalry obtained in their studies and their
games. If Paul memorized one canto of “Marmion,” Lloyd memorized two cantos,
Paul came back with three, and Lloyd again with four, till each knew the whole
poem by heart. I remember an incident that occurred at the swimming hole—an
incident tragically significant of the life-struggle between them. The boys had
a game of diving to the bottom of a ten-foot pool and holding on by submerged
roots to see who could stay under the longest. Paul and Lloyd allowed themselves
to be bantered into making the descent together. When I saw their faces, set
and determined, disappear in the water as they sank swiftly down, I felt a
foreboding of something dreadful. The moments sped, the ripples died away, the
face of the pool grew placid and untroubled, and neither black nor golden head
broke surface in quest of air. We above grew anxious. The longest record of the
longest-winded boy had been exceeded, and still there was no sign. Air bubbles
trickled slowly upward, showing that the breath had been expelled from their
lungs, and after that the bubbles ceased to trickle upward. Each second became
interminable, and, unable longer to endure the suspense, I plunged into the
water.
I found them down at the bottom, clutching tight to the roots,
their heads not a foot apart, their eyes wide open, each glaring fixedly at the
other. They were suffering frightful torment, writhing and twisting in the
pangs of voluntary suffocation; for neither would let go and acknowledge
himself beaten. I tried to break Paul’s hold on the root, but he resisted me
fiercely. Then I lost my breath and came to the surface, badly scared. I
quickly explained the situation, and half a dozen of us went down and by main
strength tore them loose. By the time we got them out, both were unconscious,
and it was only after much barrel-rolling and rubbing and pounding that they
finally came to their senses. They would have drowned there, had no one rescued
them.
When Paul Tichlorne entered college, he let it be generally understood
that he was going in for the social sciences. Lloyd Inwood, entering at the
same time, elected to take the same course. But Paul had had it secretly in
mind all the time to study the natural sciences, specializing on chemistry, and
at the last moment he switched over. Though Lloyd had already arranged his
year’s work and attended the first lectures, he at once followed Paul’s lead
and went in for the natural sciences and especially for chemistry. Their
rivalry soon became a noted thing throughout the university. Each was a spur to
the other, and they went into chemistry deeper than did ever students before—so
deep, in fact, that ere they took their sheepskins they could have stumped any
chemistry or “cow college” professor in the institution, save “old” Moss, head
of the department, and even him they puzzled and edified more than once.
Lloyd’s discovery of the “death bacillus” of the sea toad, and his experiments
on it with potassium cyanide, sent his name and that of his university ringing
round the world; nor was Paul a whit behind when he succeeded in producing
laboratory colloids exhibiting amoeba-like activities, and when he cast new
light upon the processes of fertilization through his startling experiments
with simple sodium chlorides and magnesium solutions on low forms of marine
life.
It was in their undergraduate days, however, in the midst of their
profoundest plunges into the mysteries of organic chemistry, that Doris Van
Benschoten entered into their lives. Lloyd met her first, but within twenty-four
hours Paul saw to it that he also made her acquaintance. Of course, they fell
in love with her, and she became the only thing in life worth living for. They
wooed her with equal ardor and fire, and so intense became their struggle for
her that half the student-body took to wagering wildly on the result. Even
“old” Moss, one day, after an astounding demonstration in his private
laboratory by Paul, was guilty to the extent of a month’s salary of backing him
to become the bridegroom of Doris Van Benschoten.
In the end she solved the problem in her own way, to everybody’s
satisfaction except Paul’s and Lloyd’s. Getting them together, she said that
she really could not choose between them because she loved them both equally
well; and that, unfortunately, since polyandry was not permitted in the United
States she would be compelled to forego the honor and happiness of marrying
either of them. Each blamed the other for this lamentable outcome, and the
bitterness between them grew more bitter.
But things came to a head enough. It was at my home, after they
had taken their degrees and dropped out of the world’s sight, that the
beginning of the end came to pass. Both were men of means, with little
inclination and no necessity for professional life. My friendship and their
mutual animosity were the two things that linked them in any way together.
While they were very often at my place, they made it a fastidious point to
avoid each other on such visits, though it was inevitable, under the
circumstances, that they should come upon each other occasionally.
On the day I have in recollection, Paul Tichlorne had been mooning
all morning in my study over a current scientific review. This left me free to
my own affairs, and I was out among my roses when Lloyd Inwood arrived.
Clipping and pruning and tacking the climbers on the porch, with my mouth full
of nails, and Lloyd following me about and lending a hand now and again, we
fell to discussing the mythical race of invisible people, that strange and
vagrant people the traditions of which have come down to us. Lloyd warmed to
the talk in his nervous, jerky fashion, and was soon interrogating the physical
properties and possibilities of invisibility. A perfectly black object, he
contended, would elude and defy the acutest vision.
“Color is a sensation,” he was saying. “It has no objective
reality. Without light, we can see neither colors nor objects themselves. All
objects are black in the dark, and in the dark it is impossible to see them. If
no light strikes upon them, then no light is flung back from them to the eye,
and so we have no vision-evidence of their being.”
“But we see black objects in daylight,” I objected.
“Very true,” he went on warmly. “And that is because they are not
perfectly black. Were they perfectly black, absolutely black, as it were, we
could not see them—ay, not in the blaze of a thousand suns could we see them!
And so I say, with the right pigments, properly compounded, an absolutely black
paint could be produced which would render invisible whatever it was applied
to.”
“It would be a remarkable discovery,” I said non-committally, for
the whole thing seemed too fantastic for aught but speculative purposes.
“Remarkable!” Lloyd slapped me on the shoulder. “I should say so.
Why, old chap, to coat myself with such a paint would be to put the world at my
feet. The secrets of kings and courts would be mine, the machinations of
diplomats and politicians, the play of stock-gamblers, the plans of trusts and
corporations. I could keep my hand on the inner pulse of things and become the
greatest power in the world. And I—” He broke off shortly, then added, “Well, I
have begun my experiments, and I don’t mind telling you that I’m right in line
for it.”
A laugh from the doorway startled us. Paul Tichlorne was standing
there, a smile of mockery on his lips.
“You forget, my dear Lloyd,” he said.
“Forget what?”
“You forget,” Paul went on—“ah, you forget the shadow.”
I saw Lloyd’s face drop, but he answered sneeringly, “I can carry
a sunshade, you know.” Then he turned suddenly and fiercely upon him. “Look
here, Paul, you’ll keep out of this if you know what’s good for you.”
A rupture seemed imminent, but Paul laughed good-naturedly. “I
wouldn’t lay fingers on your dirty pigments. Succeed beyond your most sanguine
expectations, yet you will always fetch up against the shadow. You can’t get
away from it. Now I shall go on the very opposite tack. In the very nature of
my proposition the shadow will be eliminated—”
“Transparency!” ejaculated Lloyd, instantly. “But it can’t be
achieved.”
“Oh, no; of course not.” And Paul shrugged his shoulders and
strolled off down the briar-rose path.
This was the beginning of it. Both men attacked the problem with
all the tremendous energy for which they were noted, and with a rancor and bitterness
that made me tremble for the success of either. Each trusted me to the utmost,
and in the long weeks of experimentation that followed I was made a party to
both sides, listening to their theorizings and witnessing their demonstrations.
Never, by word or sign, did I convey to either the slightest hint of the
other’s progress, and they respected me for the seal I put upon my lips.
Lloyd Inwood, after prolonged and unintermittent application, when
the tension upon his mind and body became too great to bear, had a strange way
of obtaining relief. He attended prize fights. It was at one of these brutal
exhibitions, whither he had dragged me in order to tell his latest results,
that his theory received striking confirmation.
“Do you see that red-whiskered man?” he asked, pointing across the
ring to the fifth tier of seats on the opposite side. “And do you see the next
man to him, the one in the white hat? Well, there is quite a gap between them,
is there not?”
“Certainly,” I answered. “They are a seat apart. The gap is the
unoccupied seat.”
He leaned over to me and spoke seriously. “Between the
red-whiskered man and the white-hatted man sits Ben Wasson. You have heard me
speak of him. He is the cleverest pugilist of his weight in the country. He is
also a Caribbean negro, full-blooded, and the blackest in the United States. He
has on a black overcoat buttoned up. I saw him when he came in and took that
seat. As soon as he sat down he disappeared. Watch closely; he may smile.”
I was for crossing over to verify Lloyd’s statement, but he
restrained me. “Wait,” he said.
I waited and watched, till the red-whiskered man turned his head
as though addressing the unoccupied seat; and then, in that empty space, I saw
the rolling whites of a pair of eyes and the white double-crescent of two rows
of teeth, and for the instant I could make out a negro’s face. But with the
passing of the smile his visibility passed, and the chair seemed vacant as
before.
“Were he perfectly black, you could sit alongside him and not see
him,” Lloyd said; and I confess the illustration was apt enough to make me
well-nigh convinced.
I visited Lloyd’s laboratory a number of times after that, and
found him always deep in his search after the absolute black. His experiments
covered all sorts of pigments, such as lamp-blacks, tars, carbonized vegetable
matters, soots of oils and fats, and the various carbonized animal substances.
“White light is composed of the seven primary colors,” he argued
to me. “But it is itself, of itself, invisible. Only by being reflected from
objects do it and the objects become visible. But only that portion of it that
is reflected becomes visible. For instance, here is a blue tobacco-box. The
white light strikes against it, and, with one exception, all its component colors—violet,
indigo, green, yellow, orange, and red—are absorbed. The one exception is BLUE.
It is not absorbed, but reflected. Wherefore the tobacco-box gives us a
sensation of blueness. We do not see the other colors because they are
absorbed. We see only the blue. For the same reason grass is GREEN. The green
waves of white light are thrown upon our eyes.”
“When we paint our houses, we do not apply color to them,” he said
at another time. “What we do is to apply certain substances that have the
property of absorbing from white light all the colors except those that we
would have our houses appear. When a substance reflects all the colors to the
eye, it seems to us white. When it absorbs all the colors, it is black. But, as
I said before, we have as yet no perfect black. All the colors are not
absorbed. The perfect black, guarding against high lights, will be utterly and
absolutely invisible. Look at that, for example.”
He pointed to the palette lying on his work-table. Different
shades of black pigments were brushed on it. One, in particular, I could hardly
see. It gave my eyes a blurring sensation, and I rubbed them and looked again.
“That,” he said impressively, “is the blackest black you or any
mortal man ever looked upon. But just you wait, and I’ll have a black so black
that no mortal man will be able to look upon it—and see it!”
On the other hand, I used to find Paul Tichlorne plunged as deeply
into the study of light polarization, diffraction, and interference, single and
double refraction, and all manner of strange organic compounds.
“Transparency: a state or quality of body which permits all rays
of light to pass through,” he defined for me. “That is what I am seeking. Lloyd
blunders up against the shadow with his perfect opaqueness. But I escape it. A
transparent body casts no shadow; neither does it reflect light-waves—that is,
the perfectly transparent does not. So, avoiding high lights, not only will
such a body cast no shadow, but, since it reflects no light, it will also be
invisible.”
We were standing by the window at another time. Paul was engaged
in polishing a number of lenses, which were ranged along the sill. Suddenly,
after a pause in the conversation, he said, “Oh! I’ve dropped a lens. Stick
your head out, old man, and see where it went to.”
Out I started to thrust my head, but a sharp blow on the forehead
caused me to recoil. I rubbed my bruised brow and gazed with reproachful
inquiry at Paul, who was laughing in gleeful, boyish fashion.
“Well?” he said.
“Well?” I echoed.
“Why don’t you investigate?” he demanded. And investigate I did.
Before thrusting out my head, my senses, automatically active, had told me
there was nothing there, that nothing intervened between me and out-of-doors,
that the aperture of the window opening was utterly empty. I stretched forth my
hand and felt a hard object, smooth and cool and flat, which my touch, out of
its experience, told me to be glass. I looked again, but could see positively
nothing.
“White quartzose sand,” Paul rattled off, “sodic carbonate, slaked
lime, cutlet, manganese peroxide—there you have it, the finest French plate
glass, made by the great St. Gobain Company, who made the finest plate glass in
the world, and this is the finest piece they ever made. It cost a king’s
ransom. But look at it! You can’t see it. You don’t know it’s there till you
run your head against it.
“Eh, old boy! That’s merely an object-lesson—certain elements, in
themselves opaque, yet so compounded as to give a resultant body which is
transparent. But that is a matter of inorganic chemistry, you say. Very true.
But I dare to assert, standing here on my two feet, that in the organic I can
duplicate whatever occurs in the inorganic.
“Here!” He held a test-tube between me and the light, and I noted
the cloudy or muddy liquid it contained. He emptied the contents of another
test-tube into it, and almost instantly it became clear and sparkling.
“Or here!” With quick, nervous movements among his array of
test-tubes, he turned a white solution to a wine color, and a light yellow
solution to a dark brown. He dropped a piece of litmus paper into an acid, when
it changed instantly to red, and on floating it in an alkali it turned as
quickly to blue.
“The litmus paper is still the litmus paper,” he enunciated in the
formal manner of the lecturer. “I have not changed it into something else. Then
what did I do? I merely changed the arrangement of its molecules. Where, at
first, it absorbed all colors from the light but red, its molecular structure
was so changed that it absorbed red and all colors except blue. And so it goes,
ad infinitum. Now, what I purpose to do is this.” He paused for a space. “I
purpose to seek—ay, and to find—the proper reagents, which, acting upon the
living organism, will bring about molecular changes analogous to those you have
just witnessed. But these reagents, which I shall find, and for that matter,
upon which I already have my hands, will not turn the living body to blue or
red or black, but they will turn it to transparency. All light will pass
through it. It will be invisible. It will cast no shadow.”
A few weeks later I went hunting with Paul. He had been promising
me for some time that I should have the pleasure of shooting over a wonderful
dog—the most wonderful dog, in fact, that ever man shot over, so he averred,
and continued to aver till my curiosity was aroused. But on the morning in
question I was disappointed, for there was no dog in evidence.
“Don’t see him about,” Paul remarked unconcernedly, and we set off
across the fields.
I could not imagine, at the time, what was ailing me, but I had a
feeling of some impending and deadly illness. My nerves were all awry, and,
from the astounding tricks they played me, my senses seemed to have run riot.
Strange sounds disturbed me. At times I heard the swish-swish of grass being
shoved aside, and once the patter of feet across a patch of stony ground.
“Did you hear anything, Paul?” I asked once.
But he shook his head, and thrust his feet steadily forward.
While climbing a fence, I heard the low, eager whine of a dog,
apparently from within a couple of feet of me; but on looking about me I saw
nothing.
I dropped to the ground, limp and trembling.
“Paul,” I said, “we had better return to the house. I am afraid I
am going to be sick.”
“Nonsense, old man,” he answered. “The sunshine has gone to your
head like wine. You’ll be all right. It’s famous weather.”
But, passing along a narrow path through a clump of cottonwoods,
some object brushed against my legs and I stumbled and nearly fell. I looked
with sudden anxiety at Paul.
“What’s the matter?” he asked. “Tripping over your own feet?”
I kept my tongue between my teeth and plodded on, though sore
perplexed and thoroughly satisfied that some acute and mysterious malady had
attacked my nerves. So far my eyes had escaped; but, when we got to the open
fields again, even my vision went back on me. Strange flashes of vari-colored,
rainbow light began to appear and disappear on the path before me. Still, I
managed to keep myself in hand, till the vari-colored lights persisted for a
space of fully twenty seconds, dancing and flashing in continuous play. Then I
sat down, weak and shaky.
“It’s all up with me,” I gasped, covering my eyes with my hands.
“It has attacked my eyes. Paul, take me home.”
But Paul laughed long and loud. “What did I tell you?—the most
wonderful dog, eh? Well, what do you think?”
He turned partly from me and began to whistle. I heard the patter
of feet, the panting of a heated animal, and the unmistakable yelp of a dog.
Then Paul stooped down and apparently fondled the empty air.
“Here! Give me your fist.”
And he rubbed my hand over the cold nose and jowls of a dog. A dog
it certainly was, with the shape and the smooth, short coat of a pointer.
Suffice to say, I speedily recovered my spirits and control. Paul
put a collar about the animal’s neck and tied his handkerchief to its tail. And
then was vouchsafed us the remarkable sight of an empty collar and a waving
handkerchief cavorting over the fields. It was something to see that collar and
handkerchief pin a bevy of quail in a clump of locusts and remain rigid and
immovable till we had flushed the birds.
Now and again the dog emitted the vari-colored light-flashes I
have mentioned. The one thing, Paul explained, which he had not anticipated and
which he doubted could be overcome.
“They’re a large family,” he said, “these sun dogs, wind dogs,
rainbows, halos, and parhelia. They are produced by refraction of light from
mineral and ice crystals, from mist, rain, spray, and no end of things; and I
am afraid they are the penalty I must pay for transparency. I escaped Lloyd’s
shadow only to fetch up against the rainbow flash.”
A couple of days later, before the entrance to Paul’s laboratory,
I encountered a terrible stench. So overpowering was it that it was easy to
discover the source—a mass of putrescent matter on the doorstep which in
general outlines resembled a dog.
Paul was startled when he investigated my find. It was his
invisible dog, or rather, what had been his invisible dog, for it was now
plainly visible. It had been playing about but a few minutes before in all
health and strength. Closer examination revealed that the skull had been
crushed by some heavy blow. While it was strange that the animal should have
been killed, the inexplicable thing was that it should so quickly decay.
“The reagents I injected into its system were harmless,” Paul
explained. “Yet they were powerful, and it appears that when death comes they
force practically instantaneous disintegration. Remarkable! Most remarkable!
Well, the only thing is not to die. They do not harm so long as one lives. But
I do wonder who smashed in that dog’s head.”
Light, however, was thrown upon this when a frightened housemaid
brought the news that Gaffer Bedshaw had that very morning, not more than an
hour back, gone violently insane, and was strapped down at home, in the
huntsman’s lodge, where he raved of a battle with a ferocious and gigantic
beast that he had encountered in the Tichlorne pasture. He claimed that the
thing, whatever it was, was invisible, that with his own eyes he had seen that
it was invisible; wherefore his tearful wife and daughters shook their heads,
and wherefore he but waxed the more violent, and the gardener and the coachman
tightened the straps by another hole.
Nor, while Paul Tichlorne was thus successfully mastering the
problem of invisibility, was Lloyd Inwood a whit behind. I went over in answer
to a message of his to come and see how he was getting on. Now his laboratory
occupied an isolated situation in the midst of his vast grounds. It was built
in a pleasant little glade, surrounded on all sides by a dense forest growth,
and was to be gained by way of a winding and erratic path. But I have travelled
that path so often as to know every foot of it, and conceive my surprise when I
came upon the glade and found no laboratory. The quaint shed structure with its
red sandstone chimney was not. Nor did it look as if it ever had been. There
were no signs of ruin, no debris, nothing.
I started to walk across what had once been its site. “This,” I
said to myself, “should be where the step went up to the door.” Barely were the
words out of my mouth when I stubbed my toe on some obstacle, pitched forward,
and butted my head into something that FELT very much like a door. I reached
out my hand. It WAS a door. I found the knob and turned it. And at once, as the
door swung inward on its hinges, the whole interior of the laboratory impinged
upon my vision. Greeting Lloyd, I closed the door and backed up the path a few
paces. I could see nothing of the building. Returning and opening the door, at
once all the furniture and every detail of the interior were visible. It was
indeed startling, the sudden transition from void to light and form and color.
“What do you think of it, eh?” Lloyd asked, wringing my hand. “I
slapped a couple of coats of absolute black on the outside yesterday afternoon
to see how it worked. How’s your head? you bumped it pretty solidly, I
imagine.”
“Never mind that,” he interrupted my congratulations. “I’ve
something better for you to do.”
While he talked he began to strip, and when he stood naked before
me he thrust a pot and brush into my hand and said, “Here, give me a coat of
this.”
It was an oily, shellac-like stuff, which spread quickly and
easily over the skin and dried immediately.
“Merely preliminary and precautionary,” he explained when I had
finished; “but now for the real stuff.”
I picked up another pot he indicated, and glanced inside, but
could see nothing.
“It’s empty,” I said.
“Stick your finger in it.”
I obeyed, and was aware of a sensation of cool moistness. On
withdrawing my hand I glanced at the forefinger, the one I had immersed, but it
had disappeared. I moved and knew from the alternate tension and relaxation of
the muscles that I moved it, but it defied my sense of sight. To all
appearances I had been shorn of a finger; nor could I get any visual impression
of it till I extended it under the skylight and saw its shadow plainly blotted
on the floor.
Lloyd chuckled. “Now spread it on, and keep your eyes open.”
I dipped the brush into the seemingly empty pot, and gave him a
long stroke across his chest. With the passage of the brush the living flesh
disappeared from beneath. I covered his right leg, and he was a one-legged man
defying all laws of gravitation. And so, stroke by stroke, member by member, I
painted Lloyd Inwood into nothingness. It was a creepy experience, and I was
glad when naught remained in sight but his burning black eyes, poised
apparently unsupported in mid-air.
“I have a refined and harmless solution for them,” he said. “A
fine spray with an air-brush, and presto! I am not.”
This deftly accomplished, he said, “Now I shall move about, and do
you tell me what sensations you experience.”
“In the first place, I cannot see you,” I said, and I could hear
his gleeful laugh from the midst of the emptiness. “Of course,” I continued,
“you cannot escape your shadow, but that was to be expected. When you pass
between my eye and an object, the object disappears, but so unusual and
incomprehensible is its disappearance that it seems to me as though my eyes had
blurred. When you move rapidly, I experience a bewildering succession of blurs.
The blurring sensation makes my eyes ache and my brain tired.”
“Have you any other warnings of my presence?” he asked.
“No, and yes,” I answered. “When you are near me I have feelings
similar to those produced by dank warehouses, gloomy crypts, and deep mines.
And as sailors feel the loom of the land on dark nights, so I think I feel the
loom of your body. But it is all very vague and intangible.”
Long we talked that last morning in his laboratory; and when I
turned to go, he put his unseen hand in mine with nervous grip, and said, “Now
I shall conquer the world!” And I could not dare to tell him of Paul
Tichlorne’s equal success.
At home I found a note from Paul, asking me to come up
immediately, and it was high noon when I came spinning up the driveway on my
wheel. Paul called me from the tennis court, and I dismounted and went over.
But the court was empty. As I stood there, gaping open-mouthed, a tennis ball
struck me on the arm, and as I turned about, another whizzed past my ear. For
aught I could see of my assailant, they came whirling at me from out of space,
and right well was I peppered with them. But when the balls already flung at me
began to come back for a second whack, I realized the situation. Seizing a
racquet and keeping my eyes open, I quickly saw a rainbow flash appearing and
disappearing and darting over the ground. I took out after it, and when I laid
the racquet upon it for a half-dozen stout blows, Paul’s voice rang out:
“Enough! Enough! Oh! Ouch! Stop! You’re landing on my naked skin,
you know! Ow! O-w-w! I’ll be good! I’ll be good! I only wanted you to see my
metamorphosis,” he said ruefully, and I imagined he was rubbing his hurts.
A few minutes later we were playing tennis—a handicap on my part,
for I could have no knowledge of his position save when all the angles between
himself, the sun, and me, were in proper conjunction. Then he flashed, and only
then. But the flashes were more brilliant than the rainbow—purest blue, most
delicate violet, brightest yellow, and all the intermediary shades, with the
scintillant brilliancy of the diamond, dazzling, blinding, iridescent.
But in the midst of our play I felt a sudden cold chill, reminding
me of deep mines and gloomy crypts, such a chill as I had experienced that very
morning. The next moment, close to the net, I saw a ball rebound in mid-air and
empty space, and at the same instant, a score of feet away, Paul Tichlorne
emitted a rainbow flash. It could not be he from whom the ball had rebounded,
and with sickening dread I realized that Lloyd Inwood had come upon the scene.
To make sure, I looked for his shadow, and there it was, a shapeless blotch the
girth of his body, (the sun was overhead), moving along the ground. I
remembered his threat, and felt sure that all the long years of rivalry were
about to culminate in uncanny battle.
I cried a warning to Paul, and heard a snarl as of a wild beast,
and an answering snarl. I saw the dark blotch move swiftly across the court,
and a brilliant burst of vari-colored light moving with equal swiftness to meet
it; and then shadow and flash came together and there was the sound of unseen
blows. The net went down before my frightened eyes. I sprang toward the
fighters, crying:
“For God’s sake!”
But their locked bodies smote against my knees, and I was
overthrown.
“You keep out of this, old man!” I heard the voice of Lloyd Inwood
from out of the emptiness. And then Paul’s voice crying, “Yes, we’ve had enough
of peacemaking!”
From the sound of their voices I knew they had separated. I could
not locate Paul, and so approached the shadow that represented Lloyd. But from
the other side came a stunning blow on the point of my jaw, and I heard Paul
scream angrily, “Now will you keep away?”
Then they came together again, the impact of their blows, their
groans and gasps, and the swift flashings and shadow-movings telling plainly of
the deadliness of the struggle.
I shouted for help, and Gaffer Bedshaw came running into the
court. I could see, as he approached, that he was looking at me strangely, but
he collided with the combatants and was hurled headlong to the ground. With
despairing shriek and a cry of “O Lord, I’ve got ‘em!” he sprang to his feet
and tore madly out of the court.
I could do nothing, so I sat up, fascinated and powerless, and
watched the struggle. The noonday sun beat down with dazzling brightness on the
naked tennis court. And it was naked. All I could see was the blotch of shadow
and the rainbow flashes, the dust rising from the invisible feet, the earth
tearing up from beneath the straining foot-grips, and the wire screen bulge
once or twice as their bodies hurled against it. That was all, and after a time
even that ceased. There were no more flashes, and the shadow had become long
and stationary; and I remembered their set boyish faces when they clung to the
roots in the deep coolness of the pool.
They found me an hour afterward. Some inkling of what had happened
got to the servants and they quitted the Tichlorne service in a body. Gaffer
Bedshaw never recovered from the second shock he received, and is confined in a
madhouse, hopelessly incurable. The secrets of their marvellous discoveries
died with Paul and Lloyd, both laboratories being destroyed by grief-stricken
relatives. As for myself, I no longer care for chemical research, and science
is a tabooed topic in my household. I have returned to my roses. Nature’s
colors are good enough for me.
7.ALL GOLD CANYON
It was the green heart
of the canyon, where the walls swerved back from the rigid plan and relieved
their harshness of line by making a little sheltered nook and filling it to the
brim with sweetness and roundness and softness. Here all things rested. Even the
narrow stream ceased its turbulent down-rush long enough to form a quiet pool.
Knee-deep in the water, with drooping head and half-shut eyes, drowsed a
red-coated, many-antlered buck.
On one side, beginning at the very lip of the pool, was a tiny
meadow, a cool, resilient surface of green that extended to the base of the
frowning wall. Beyond the pool a gentle slope of earth ran up and up to meet
the opposing wall. Fine grass covered the slope—grass that was spangled with
flowers, with here and there patches of color, orange and purple and golden.
Below, the canyon was shut in. There was no view. The walls leaned together
abruptly and the canyon ended in a chaos of rocks, moss-covered and hidden by a
green screen of vines and creepers and boughs of trees. Up the canyon rose far
hills and peaks, the big foothills, pine-covered and remote. And far beyond,
like clouds upon the border of the sky, towered minarets of white, where the
Sierra’s eternal snows flashed austerely the blazes of the sun.
There was no dust in the canyon. The leaves and flowers were clean
and virginal. The grass was young velvet. Over the pool three cottonwoods sent
their scurvy fluffs fluttering down the quiet air. On the slope the blossoms of
the wine-wooded manzanita filled the air with springtime odors, while the
leaves, wise with experience, were already beginning their vertical twist
against the coming aridity of summer. In the open spaces on the slope, beyond
the farthest shadow-reach of the manzanita, poised the mariposa lilies, like so
many flights of jewelled moths suddenly arrested and on the verge of trembling
into flight again. Here and there that woods harlequin, the madrone, permitting
itself to be caught in the act of changing its pea-green trunk to madder-red,
breathed its fragrance into the air from great clusters of waxen bells. Creamy
white were these bells, shaped like lilies-of-the-valley, with the sweetness of
perfume that is of the springtime.
There was not a sigh of wind. The air was drowsy with its weight
of perfume. It was a sweetness that would have been cloying had the air been
heavy and humid. But the air was sharp and thin. It was as starlight transmuted
into atmosphere, shot through and warmed by sunshine, and flower-drenched with
sweetness.
An occasional butterfly drifted in and out through the patches of
light and shade. And from all about rose the low and sleepy hum of mountain
bees—feasting Sybarites that jostled one another good-naturedly at the board,
nor found time for rough discourtesy. So quietly did the little stream drip and
ripple its way through the canyon that it spoke only in faint and occasional
gurgles. The voice of the stream was as a drowsy whisper, ever interrupted by
dozings and silences, ever lifted again in the awakenings.
The motion of all things was a drifting in the heart of the
canyon. Sunshine and butterflies drifted in and out among the trees. The hum of
the bees and the whisper of the stream were a drifting of sound. And the
drifting sound and drifting color seemed to weave together in the making of a
delicate and intangible fabric which was the spirit of the place. It was a
spirit of peace that was not of death, but of smooth-pulsing life, of quietude
that was not silence, of movement that was not action, of repose that was quick
with existence without being violent with struggle and travail. The spirit of
the place was the spirit of the peace of the living, somnolent with the
easement and content of prosperity, and undisturbed by rumors of far wars.
The red-coated, many-antlered buck acknowledged the lordship of
the spirit of the place and dozed knee-deep in the cool, shaded pool. There
seemed no flies to vex him and he was languid with rest. Sometimes his ears
moved when the stream awoke and whispered; but they moved lazily, with, foreknowledge
that it was merely the stream grown garrulous at discovery that it had slept.
But there came a time when the buck’s ears lifted and tensed with
swift eagerness for sound. His head was turned down the canyon. His sensitive,
quivering nostrils scented the air. His eyes could not pierce the green screen
through which the stream rippled away, but to his ears came the voice of a man.
It was a steady, monotonous, singsong voice. Once the buck heard the harsh
clash of metal upon rock. At the sound he snorted with a sudden start that
jerked him through the air from water to meadow, and his feet sank into the
young velvet, while he pricked his ears and again scented the air. Then he
stole across the tiny meadow, pausing once and again to listen, and faded away
out of the canyon like a wraith, soft-footed and without sound.
The clash of steel-shod soles against the rocks began to be heard,
and the man’s voice grew louder. It was raised in a sort of chant and became
distinct with nearness, so that the words could be heard:
“Turn around an’ tu’n
yo’ face Untoe them sweet hills of grace (D’ pow’rs of sin yo’ am scornin’!).
Look about an’ look aroun’, Fling yo’ sin-pack on d’ groun’ (Yo’ will meet wid
d’ Lord in d’ mornin’!).”
A sound of scrambling accompanied the song, and the spirit of the
place fled away on the heels of the red-coated buck. The green screen was burst
asunder, and a man peered out at the meadow and the pool and the sloping
side-hill. He was a deliberate sort of man. He took in the scene with one
embracing glance, then ran his eyes over the details to verify the general
impression. Then, and not until then, did he open his mouth in vivid and solemn
approval:
“Smoke of life an’ snakes of purgatory! Will you just look at
that! Wood an’ water an’ grass an’ a side-hill! A pocket-hunter’s delight an’ a
cayuse’s paradise! Cool green for tired eyes! Pink pills for pale people ain’t
in it. A secret pasture for prospectors and a resting-place for tired burros,
by damn!”
He was a sandy-complexioned man in whose face geniality and humor
seemed the salient characteristics. It was a mobile face, quick-changing to
inward mood and thought. Thinking was in him a visible process. Ideas chased
across his face like wind-flaws across the surface of a lake. His hair, sparse
and unkempt of growth, was as indeterminate and colorless as his complexion. It
would seem that all the color of his frame had gone into his eyes, for they
were startlingly blue. Also, they were laughing and merry eyes, within them
much of the naivete and wonder of the child; and yet, in an unassertive way,
they contained much of calm self-reliance and strength of purpose founded upon
self-experience and experience of the world.
From out the screen of vines and creepers he flung ahead of him a
miner’s pick and shovel and gold-pan. Then he crawled out himself into the
open. He was clad in faded overalls and black cotton shirt, with hobnailed
brogans on his feet, and on his head a hat whose shapelessness and stains
advertised the rough usage of wind and rain and sun and camp-smoke. He stood
erect, seeing wide-eyed the secrecy of the scene and sensuously inhaling the
warm, sweet breath of the canyon-garden through nostrils that dilated and
quivered with delight. His eyes narrowed to laughing slits of blue, his face
wreathed itself in joy, and his mouth curled in a smile as he cried aloud:
“Jumping dandelions and happy hollyhocks, but that smells good to
me! Talk about your attar o’ roses an’ cologne factories! They ain’t in it!”
He had the habit of soliloquy. His quick-changing facial
expressions might tell every thought and mood, but the tongue, perforce, ran
hard after, repeating, like a second Boswell.
The man lay down on the lip of the pool and drank long and deep of
its water. “Tastes good to me,” he murmured, lifting his head and gazing across
the pool at the side-hill, while he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
The side-hill attracted his attention. Still lying on his stomach, he studied
the hill formation long and carefully. It was a practised eye that travelled up
the slope to the crumbling canyon-wall and back and down again to the edge of
the pool. He scrambled to his feet and favored the side-hill with a second
survey.
“Looks good to me,” he concluded, picking up his pick and shovel
and gold-pan.
He crossed the stream below the pool, stepping agilely from stone
to stone. Where the sidehill touched the water he dug up a shovelful of dirt
and put it into the gold-pan. He squatted down, holding the pan in his two
hands, and partly immersing it in the stream. Then he imparted to the pan a
deft circular motion that sent the water sluicing in and out through the dirt
and gravel. The larger and the lighter particles worked to the surface, and
these, by a skilful dipping movement of the pan, he spilled out and over the
edge. Occasionally, to expedite matters, he rested the pan and with his fingers
raked out the large pebbles and pieces of rock.
The contents of the pan diminished rapidly until only fine dirt
and the smallest bits of gravel remained. At this stage he began to work very
deliberately and carefully. It was fine washing, and he washed fine and finer,
with a keen scrutiny and delicate and fastidious touch. At last the pan seemed
empty of everything but water; but with a quick semicircular flirt that sent
the water flying over the shallow rim into the stream, he disclosed a layer of
black sand on the bottom of the pan. So thin was this layer that it was like a
streak of paint. He examined it closely. In the midst of it was a tiny golden
speck. He dribbled a little water in over the depressed edge of the pan. With a
quick flirt he sent the water sluicing across the bottom, turning the grains of
black sand over and over. A second tiny golden speck rewarded his effort.
The washing had now become very fine—fine beyond all need of
ordinary placer-mining. He worked the black sand, a small portion at a time, up
the shallow rim of the pan. Each small portion he examined sharply, so that his
eyes saw every grain of it before he allowed it to slide over the edge and
away. Jealously, bit by bit, he let the black sand slip away. A golden speck,
no larger than a pin-point, appeared on the rim, and by his manipulation of the
riveter it returned to the bottom of the pan. And in such fashion another speck
was disclosed, and another. Great was his care of them. Like a shepherd he
herded his flock of golden specks so that not one should be lost. At last, of
the pan of dirt nothing remained but his golden herd. He counted it, and then,
after all his labor, sent it flying out of the pan with one final swirl of
water.
But his blue eyes were shining with desire as he rose to his feet.
“Seven,” he muttered aloud, asserting the sum of the specks for which he had
toiled so hard and which he had so wantonly thrown away. “Seven,” he repeated,
with the emphasis of one trying to impress a number on his memory.
He stood still a long while, surveying the hill-side. In his eyes
was a curiosity, new-aroused and burning. There was an exultance about his
bearing and a keenness like that of a hunting animal catching the fresh scent
of game.
He moved down the stream a few steps and took a second panful of
dirt.
Again came the careful washing, the jealous herding of the golden
specks, and the wantonness with which he sent them flying into the stream when
he had counted their number.
“Five,” he muttered, and repeated, “five.”
He could not forbear another survey of the hill before filling the
pan farther down the stream. His golden herds diminished. “Four, three, two,
two, one,” were his memory-tabulations as he moved down the stream. When but
one speck of gold rewarded his washing, he stopped and built a fire of dry
twigs. Into this he thrust the gold-pan and burned it till it was blue-black.
He held up the pan and examined it critically. Then he nodded approbation.
Against such a color-background he could defy the tiniest yellow speck to elude
him.
Still moving down the stream, he panned again. A single speck was
his reward. A third pan contained no gold at all. Not satisfied with this, he panned
three times again, taking his shovels of dirt within a foot of one another.
Each pan proved empty of gold, and the fact, instead of discouraging him,
seemed to give him satisfaction. His elation increased with each barren
washing, until he arose, exclaiming jubilantly:
“If it ain’t the real thing, may God knock off my head with sour
apples!”
Returning to where he had started operations, he began to pan up
the stream. At first his golden herds increased—increased prodigiously.
“Fourteen, eighteen, twenty-one, twenty-six,” ran his memory tabulations. Just
above the pool he struck his richest pan—thirty-five colors.
“Almost enough to save,” he remarked regretfully as he allowed the
water to sweep them away.
The sun climbed to the top of the sky. The man worked on. Pan by
pan, he went up the stream, the tally of results steadily decreasing.
“It’s just booful, the way it peters out,” he exulted when a
shovelful of dirt contained no more than a single speck of gold.
And when no specks at all were found in several pans, he
straightened up and favored the hillside with a confident glance.
“Ah, ha! Mr. Pocket!” he cried out, as though to an auditor hidden
somewhere above him beneath the surface of the slope. “Ah, ha! Mr. Pocket! I’m
a-comin’, I’m a-comin’, an’ I’m shorely gwine to get yer! You heah me, Mr.
Pocket? I’m gwine to get yer as shore as punkins ain’t cauliflowers!”
He turned and flung a measuring glance at the sun poised above him
in the azure of the cloudless sky. Then he went down the canyon, following the
line of shovel-holes he had made in filling the pans. He crossed the stream
below the pool and disappeared through the green screen. There was little
opportunity for the spirit of the place to return with its quietude and repose,
for the man’s voice, raised in ragtime song, still dominated the canyon with
possession.
After a time, with a greater clashing of steel-shod feet on rock,
he returned. The green screen was tremendously agitated. It surged back and
forth in the throes of a struggle. There was a loud grating and clanging of
metal. The man’s voice leaped to a higher pitch and was sharp with
imperativeness. A large body plunged and panted. There was a snapping and
ripping and rending, and amid a shower of falling leaves a horse burst through
the screen. On its back was a pack, and from this trailed broken vines and torn
creepers. The animal gazed with astonished eyes at the scene into which it had
been precipitated, then dropped its head to the grass and began contentedly to
graze. A second horse scrambled into view, slipping once on the mossy rocks and
regaining equilibrium when its hoofs sank into the yielding surface of the
meadow. It was riderless, though on its back was a high-horned Mexican saddle,
scarred and discolored by long usage.
The man brought up the rear. He threw off pack and saddle, with an
eye to camp location, and gave the animals their freedom to graze. He unpacked
his food and got out frying-pan and coffee-pot. He gathered an armful of dry
wood, and with a few stones made a place for his fire.
“My!” he said, “but I’ve got an appetite. I could scoff
iron-filings an’ horseshoe nails an’ thank you kindly, ma’am, for a second
helpin’.”
He straightened up, and, while he reached for matches in the
pocket of his overalls, his eyes travelled across the pool to the side-hill.
His fingers had clutched the match-box, but they relaxed their hold and the
hand came out empty. The man wavered perceptibly. He looked at his preparations
for cooking and he looked at the hill.
“Guess I’ll take another whack at her,” he concluded, starting to
cross the stream.
“They ain’t no sense in it, I know,” he mumbled apologetically.
“But keepin’ grub back an hour ain’t goin’ to hurt none, I reckon.”
A few feet back from his first line of test-pans he started a second
line. The sun dropped down the western sky, the shadows lengthened, but the man
worked on. He began a third line of test-pans. He was cross-cutting the
hillside, line by line, as he ascended. The centre of each line produced the
richest pans, while the ends came where no colors showed in the pan. And as he
ascended the hillside the lines grew perceptibly shorter. The regularity with
which their length diminished served to indicate that somewhere up the slope
the last line would be so short as to have scarcely length at all, and that
beyond could come only a point. The design was growing into an inverted “V.”
The converging sides of this “V” marked the boundaries of the gold-bearing
dirt.
The apex of the “V” was evidently the man’s goal. Often he ran his
eye along the converging sides and on up the hill, trying to divine the apex,
the point where the gold-bearing dirt must cease. Here resided “Mr. Pocket”—for
so the man familiarly addressed the imaginary point above him on the slope,
crying out:
“Come down out o’ that, Mr. Pocket! Be right smart an’ agreeable,
an’ come down!”
“All right,” he would add later, in a voice resigned to
determination. “All right, Mr. Pocket. It’s plain to me I got to come right up
an’ snatch you out bald-headed. An’ I’ll do it! I’ll do it!” he would threaten
still later.
Each pan he carried down to the water to wash, and as he went
higher up the hill the pans grew richer, until he began to save the gold in an
empty baking-powder can which he carried carelessly in his hip-pocket. So
engrossed was he in his toil that he did not notice the long twilight of
oncoming night. It was not until he tried vainly to see the gold colors in the
bottom of the pan that he realized the passage of time. He straightened up
abruptly. An expression of whimsical wonderment and awe overspread his face as
he drawled:
“Gosh darn my buttons! if I didn’t plumb forget dinner!”
He stumbled across the stream in the darkness and lighted his
long-delayed fire. Flapjacks and bacon and warmed-over beans constituted his
supper. Then he smoked a pipe by the smouldering coals, listening to the night
noises and watching the moonlight stream through the canyon. After that he
unrolled his bed, took off his heavy shoes, and pulled the blankets up to his
chin. His face showed white in the moonlight, like the face of a corpse. But it
was a corpse that knew its resurrection, for the man rose suddenly on one elbow
and gazed across at his hillside.
“Good night, Mr. Pocket,” he called sleepily. “Good night.”
He slept through the early gray of morning until the direct rays
of the sun smote his closed eyelids, when he awoke with a start and looked
about him until he had established the continuity of his existence and
identified his present self with the days previously lived.
To dress, he had merely to buckle on his shoes. He glanced at his
fireplace and at his hillside, wavered, but fought down the temptation and
started the fire.
“Keep yer shirt on, Bill; keep yer shirt on,” he admonished
himself. “What’s the good of rushin’? No use in gettin’ all het up an’ sweaty.
Mr. Pocket’ll wait for you. He ain’t a-runnin’ away before you can get yer
breakfast. Now, what you want, Bill, is something fresh in yer bill o’ fare. So
it’s up to you to go an’ get it.”
He cut a short pole at the water’s edge and drew from one of his
pockets a bit of line and a draggled fly that had once been a royal coachman.
“Mebbe they’ll bite in the early morning,” he muttered, as he made
his first cast into the pool. And a moment later he was gleefully crying: “What’d
I tell you, eh? What’d I tell you?”
He had no reel, nor any inclination to waste time, and by main
strength, and swiftly, he drew out of the water a flashing ten-inch trout.
Three more, caught in rapid succession, furnished his breakfast. When he came
to the stepping-stones on his way to his hillside, he was struck by a sudden
thought, and paused.
“I’d just better take a hike down-stream a ways,” he said.
“There’s no tellin’ what cuss may be snoopin’ around.”
But he crossed over on the stones, and with a “I really oughter
take that hike,” the need of the precaution passed out of his mind and he fell
to work.
At nightfall he straightened up. The small of his back was stiff
from stooping toil, and as he put his hand behind him to soothe the protesting
muscles, he said:
“Now what d’ye think of that, by damn? I clean forgot my dinner
again! If I don’t watch out, I’ll sure be degeneratin’ into a two-meal-a-day
crank.”
“Pockets is the damnedest things I ever see for makin’ a man
absent-minded,” he communed that night, as he crawled into his blankets. Nor
did he forget to call up the hillside, “Good night, Mr. Pocket! Good night!”
Rising with the sun, and snatching a hasty breakfast, he was early
at work. A fever seemed to be growing in him, nor did the increasing richness
of the test-pans allay this fever. There was a flush in his cheek other than
that made by the heat of the sun, and he was oblivious to fatigue and the
passage of time. When he filled a pan with dirt, he ran down the hill to wash
it; nor could he forbear running up the hill again, panting and stumbling
profanely, to refill the pan.
He was now a hundred yards from the water, and the inverted “V”
was assuming definite proportions. The width of the pay-dirt steadily
decreased, and the man extended in his mind’s eye the sides of the “V” to their
meeting-place far up the hill. This was his goal, the apex of the “V,” and he
panned many times to locate it.
“Just about two yards above that manzanita bush an’ a yard to the
right,” he finally concluded.
Then the temptation seized him. “As plain as the nose on your
face,” he said, as he abandoned his laborious cross-cutting and climbed to the
indicated apex. He filled a pan and carried it down the hill to wash. It
contained no trace of gold. He dug deep, and he dug shallow, filling and
washing a dozen pans, and was unrewarded even by the tiniest golden speck. He
was enraged at having yielded to the temptation, and cursed himself
blasphemously and pridelessly. Then he went down the hill and took up the
cross-cutting.
“Slow an’ certain, Bill; slow an’ certain,” he crooned.
“Short-cuts to fortune ain’t in your line, an’ it’s about time you know it. Get
wise, Bill; get wise. Slow an’ certain’s the only hand you can play; so go to
it, an’ keep to it, too.”
As the cross-cuts decreased, showing that the sides of the “V”
were converging, the depth of the “V” increased. The gold-trace was dipping
into the hill. It was only at thirty inches beneath the surface that he could
get colors in his pan. The dirt he found at twenty-five inches from the
surface, and at thirty-five inches, yielded barren pans. At the base of the
“V,” by the water’s edge, he had found the gold colors at the grass roots. The
higher he went up the hill, the deeper the gold dipped.
To dig a hole three feet deep in order to get one test-pan was a
task of no mean magnitude; while between the man and the apex intervened an
untold number of such holes to be. “An’ there’s no tellin’ how much deeper
it’ll pitch,” he sighed, in a moment’s pause, while his fingers soothed his
aching back.
Feverish with desire, with aching back and stiffening muscles,
with pick and shovel gouging and mauling the soft brown earth, the man toiled
up the hill. Before him was the smooth slope, spangled with flowers and made
sweet with their breath. Behind him was devastation. It looked like some
terrible eruption breaking out on the smooth skin of the hill. His slow
progress was like that of a slug, befouling beauty with a monstrous trail.
Though the dipping gold-trace increased the man’s work, he found
consolation in the increasing richness of the pans. Twenty cents, thirty cents,
fifty cents, sixty cents, were the values of the gold found in the pans, and at
nightfall he washed his banner pan, which gave him a dollar’s worth of gold-dust
from a shovelful of dirt.
“I’ll just bet it’s my luck to have some inquisitive cuss come
buttin’ in here on my pasture,” he mumbled sleepily that night as he pulled the
blankets up to his chin.
Suddenly he sat upright. “Bill!” he called sharply. “Now, listen
to me, Bill; d’ye hear! It’s up to you, to-morrow mornin’, to mosey round an’
see what you can see. Understand? To-morrow morning, an’ don’t you forget it!”
He yawned and glanced across at his side-hill. “Good night, Mr.
Pocket,” he called.
In the morning he stole a march on the sun, for he had finished
breakfast when its first rays caught him, and he was climbing the wall of the
canyon where it crumbled away and gave footing. From the outlook at the top he
found himself in the midst of loneliness. As far as he could see, chain after
chain of mountains heaved themselves into his vision. To the east his eyes,
leaping the miles between range and range and between many ranges, brought up
at last against the white-peaked Sierras—the main crest, where the backbone of
the Western world reared itself against the sky. To the north and south he
could see more distinctly the cross-systems that broke through the main trend
of the sea of mountains. To the west the ranges fell away, one behind the
other, diminishing and fading into the gentle foothills that, in turn,
descended into the great valley which he could not see.
And in all that mighty sweep of earth he saw no sign of man nor of
the handiwork of man—save only the torn bosom of the hillside at his feet. The man
looked long and carefully. Once, far down his own canyon, he thought he saw in
the air a faint hint of smoke. He looked again and decided that it was the
purple haze of the hills made dark by a convolution of the canyon wall at its
back.
“Hey, you, Mr. Pocket!” he called down into the canyon. “Stand out
from under! I’m a-comin’, Mr. Pocket! I’m a-comin’!”
The heavy brogans on the man’s feet made him appear clumsy-footed,
but he swung down from the giddy height as lightly and airily as a mountain
goat. A rock, turning under his foot on the edge of the precipice, did not
disconcert him. He seemed to know the precise time required for the turn to
culminate in disaster, and in the meantime he utilized the false footing itself
for the momentary earth-contact necessary to carry him on into safety. Where
the earth sloped so steeply that it was impossible to stand for a second
upright, the man did not hesitate. His foot pressed the impossible surface for
but a fraction of the fatal second and gave him the bound that carried him
onward. Again, where even the fraction of a second’s footing was out of the
question, he would swing his body past by a moment’s hand-grip on a jutting
knob of rock, a crevice, or a precariously rooted shrub. At last, with a wild
leap and yell, he exchanged the face of the wall for an earth-slide and
finished the descent in the midst of several tons of sliding earth and gravel.
His first pan of the morning washed out over two dollars in coarse
gold. It was from the centre of the “V.” To either side the diminution in the
values of the pans was swift. His lines of crosscutting holes were growing very
short. The converging sides of the inverted “V” were only a few yards apart.
Their meeting-point was only a few yards above him. But the pay-streak was
dipping deeper and deeper into the earth. By early afternoon he was sinking the
test-holes five feet before the pans could show the gold-trace.
For that matter, the gold-trace had become something more than a
trace; it was a placer mine in itself, and the man resolved to come back after
he had found the pocket and work over the ground. But the increasing richness
of the pans began to worry him. By late afternoon the worth of the pans had
grown to three and four dollars. The man scratched his head perplexedly and
looked a few feet up the hill at the manzanita bush that marked approximately
the apex of the “V.” He nodded his head and said oracularly:
“It’s one o’ two things, Bill; one o’ two things. Either Mr.
Pocket’s spilled himself all out an’ down the hill, or else Mr. Pocket’s that
damned rich you maybe won’t be able to carry him all away with you. And that’d
be hell, wouldn’t it, now?” He chuckled at contemplation of so pleasant a
dilemma.
Nightfall found him by the edge of the stream his eyes wrestling
with the gathering darkness over the washing of a five-dollar pan.
“Wisht I had an electric light to go on working,” he said.
He found sleep difficult that night. Many times he composed
himself and closed his eyes for slumber to overtake him; but his blood pounded
with too strong desire, and as many times his eyes opened and he murmured
wearily, “Wisht it was sun-up.”
Sleep came to him in the end, but his eyes were open with the
first paling of the stars, and the gray of dawn caught him with breakfast finished
and climbing the hillside in the direction of the secret abiding-place of Mr.
Pocket.
The first cross-cut the man made, there was space for only three
holes, so narrow had become the pay-streak and so close was he to the
fountainhead of the golden stream he had been following for four days.
“Be ca’m, Bill; be ca’m,” he admonished himself, as he broke
ground for the final hole where the sides of the “V” had at last come together
in a point.
“I’ve got the almighty cinch on you, Mr. Pocket, an’ you can’t
lose me,” he said many times as he sank the hole deeper and deeper.
Four feet, five feet, six feet, he dug his way down into the
earth. The digging grew harder. His pick grated on broken rock. He examined the
rock. “Rotten quartz,” was his conclusion as, with the shovel, he cleared the
bottom of the hole of loose dirt. He attacked the crumbling quartz with the
pick, bursting the disintegrating rock asunder with every stroke.
He thrust his shovel into the loose mass. His eye caught a gleam
of yellow. He dropped the shovel and squatted suddenly on his heels. As a
farmer rubs the clinging earth from fresh-dug potatoes, so the man, a piece of
rotten quartz held in both hands, rubbed the dirt away.
“Sufferin’ Sardanopolis!” he cried. “Lumps an’ chunks of it! Lumps
an’ chunks of it!”
It was only half rock he held in his hand. The other half was
virgin gold. He dropped it into his pan and examined another piece. Little
yellow was to be seen, but with his strong fingers he crumbled the rotten
quartz away till both hands were filled with glowing yellow. He rubbed the dirt
away from fragment after fragment, tossing them into the gold-pan. It was a
treasure-hole. So much had the quartz rotted away that there was less of it
than there was of gold. Now and again he found a piece to which no rock clung—a
piece that was all gold. A chunk, where the pick had laid open the heart of the
gold, glittered like a handful of yellow jewels, and he cocked his head at it
and slowly turned it around and over to observe the rich play of the light upon
it.
“Talk about yer Too Much Gold diggin’s!” the man snorted
contemptuously. “Why, this diggin’ ‘d make it look like thirty cents. This
diggin’ is All Gold. An’ right here an’ now I name this yere canyon ‘All Gold
Canyon,’ b’ gosh!”
Still squatting on his heels, he continued examining the fragments
and tossing them into the pan. Suddenly there came to him a premonition of
danger. It seemed a shadow had fallen upon him. But there was no shadow. His
heart had given a great jump up into his throat and was choking him. Then his
blood slowly chilled and he felt the sweat of his shirt cold against his flesh.
He did not spring up nor look around. He did not move. He was
considering the nature of the premonition he had received, trying to locate the
source of the mysterious force that had warned him, striving to sense the
imperative presence of the unseen thing that threatened him. There is an aura
of things hostile, made manifest by messengers refined for the senses to know;
and this aura he felt, but knew not how he felt it. His was the feeling as when
a cloud passes over the sun. It seemed that between him and life had passed
something dark and smothering and menacing; a gloom, as it were, that swallowed
up life and made for death—his death.
Every force of his being impelled him to spring up and confront
the unseen danger, but his soul dominated the panic, and he remained squatting
on his heels, in his hands a chunk of gold. He did not dare to look around, but
he knew by now that there was something behind him and above him. He made
believe to be interested in the gold in his hand. He examined it critically,
turned it over and over, and rubbed the dirt from it. And all the time he knew
that something behind him was looking at the gold over his shoulder.
Still feigning interest in the chunk of gold in his hand, he
listened intently and he heard the breathing of the thing behind him. His eyes
searched the ground in front of him for a weapon, but they saw only the
uprooted gold, worthless to him now in his extremity. There was his pick, a
handy weapon on occasion; but this was not such an occasion. The man realized
his predicament. He was in a narrow hole that was seven feet deep. His head did
not come to the surface of the ground. He was in a trap.
He remained squatting on his heels. He was quite cool and
collected; but his mind, considering every factor, showed him only his
helplessness. He continued rubbing the dirt from the quartz fragments and
throwing the gold into the pan. There was nothing else for him to do. Yet he
knew that he would have to rise up, sooner or later, and face the danger that
breathed at his back.
The minutes passed, and with the passage of each minute he knew
that by so much he was nearer the time when he must stand up, or else—and his
wet shirt went cold against his flesh again at the thought—or else he might
receive death as he stooped there over his treasure.
Still he squatted on his heels, rubbing dirt from gold and
debating in just what manner he should rise up. He might rise up with a rush
and claw his way out of the hole to meet whatever threatened on the even
footing above ground. Or he might rise up slowly and carelessly, and feign
casually to discover the thing that breathed at his back. His instinct and
every fighting fibre of his body favored the mad, clawing rush to the surface.
His intellect, and the craft thereof, favored the slow and cautious meeting
with the thing that menaced and which he could not see. And while he debated, a
loud, crashing noise burst on his ear. At the same instant he received a
stunning blow on the left side of the back, and from the point of impact felt a
rush of flame through his flesh. He sprang up in the air, but halfway to his
feet collapsed. His body crumpled in like a leaf withered in sudden heat, and
he came down, his chest across his pan of gold, his face in the dirt and rock,
his legs tangled and twisted because of the restricted space at the bottom of
the hole. His legs twitched convulsively several times. His body was shaken as
with a mighty ague. There was a slow expansion of the lungs, accompanied by a
deep sigh. Then the air was slowly, very slowly, exhaled, and his body as
slowly flattened itself down into inertness.
Above, revolver in hand, a man was peering down over the edge of the
hole. He peered for a long time at the prone and motionless body beneath him.
After a while the stranger sat down on the edge of the hole so that he could
see into it, and rested the revolver on his knee. Reaching his hand into a
pocket, he drew out a wisp of brown paper. Into this he dropped a few crumbs of
tobacco. The combination became a cigarette, brown and squat, with the ends
turned in. Not once did he take his eyes from the body at the bottom of the
hole. He lighted the cigarette and drew its smoke into his lungs with a
caressing intake of the breath. He smoked slowly. Once the cigarette went out
and he relighted it. And all the while he studied the body beneath him.
In the end he tossed the cigarette stub away and rose to his feet.
He moved to the edge of the hole. Spanning it, a hand resting on each edge, and
with the revolver still in the right hand, he muscled his body down into the
hole. While his feet were yet a yard from the bottom he released his hands and
dropped down.
At the instant his feet struck bottom he saw the pocket-miner’s
arm leap out, and his own legs knew a swift, jerking grip that overthrew him.
In the nature of the jump his revolver-hand was above his head. Swiftly as the
grip had flashed about his legs, just as swiftly he brought the revolver down.
He was still in the air, his fall in process of completion, when he pulled the
trigger. The explosion was deafening in the confined space. The smoke filled
the hole so that he could see nothing. He struck the bottom on his back, and
like a cat’s the pocket-miner’s body was on top of him. Even as the miner’s
body passed on top, the stranger crooked in his right arm to fire; and even in
that instant the miner, with a quick thrust of elbow, struck his wrist. The
muzzle was thrown up and the bullet thudded into the dirt of the side of the
hole.
The next instant the stranger felt the miner’s hand grip his
wrist. The struggle was now for the revolver. Each man strove to turn it
against the other’s body. The smoke in the hole was clearing. The stranger,
lying on his back, was beginning to see dimly. But suddenly he was blinded by a
handful of dirt deliberately flung into his eyes by his antagonist. In that
moment of shock his grip on the revolver was broken. In the next moment he felt
a smashing darkness descend upon his brain, and in the midst of the darkness
even the darkness ceased.
But the pocket-miner fired again and again, until the revolver was
empty. Then he tossed it from him and, breathing heavily, sat down on the dead
man’s legs.
The miner was sobbing and struggling for breath. “Measly skunk!”
he panted; “a-campin’ on my trail an’ lettin’ me do the work, an’ then shootin’
me in the back!”
He was half crying from anger and exhaustion. He peered at the
face of the dead man. It was sprinkled with loose dirt and gravel, and it was
difficult to distinguish the features.
“Never laid eyes on him before,” the miner concluded his scrutiny.
“Just a common an’ ordinary thief, damn him! An’ he shot me in the back! He
shot me in the back!”
He opened his shirt and felt himself, front and back, on his left
side.
“Went clean through, and no harm done!” he cried jubilantly. “I’ll
bet he aimed right all right, but he drew the gun over when he pulled the
trigger—the cuss! But I fixed ‘m! Oh, I fixed ‘m!”
His fingers were investigating the bullet-hole in his side, and a
shade of regret passed over his face. “It’s goin’ to be stiffer’n hell,” he
said. “An’ it’s up to me to get mended an’ get out o’ here.”
He crawled out of the hole and went down the hill to his camp.
Half an hour later he returned, leading his pack-horse. His open shirt
disclosed the rude bandages with which he had dressed his wound. He was slow
and awkward with his left-hand movements, but that did not prevent his using
the arm.
The bight of the pack-rope under the dead man’s shoulders enabled
him to heave the body out of the hole. Then he set to work gathering up his
gold. He worked steadily for several hours, pausing often to rest his
stiffening shoulder and to exclaim:
“He shot me in the back, the measly skunk! He shot me in the
back!”
When his treasure was quite cleaned up and wrapped securely into a
number of blanket-covered parcels, he made an estimate of its value.
“Four hundred pounds, or I’m a Hottentot,” he concluded. “Say two
hundred in quartz an’ dirt—that leaves two hundred pounds of gold. Bill! Wake
up! Two hundred pounds of gold! Forty thousand dollars! An’ it’s yourn—all
yourn!”
He scratched his head delightedly and his fingers blundered into
an unfamiliar groove. They quested along it for several inches. It was a crease
through his scalp where the second bullet had ploughed.
He walked angrily over to the dead man.
“You would, would you?” he bullied. “You would, eh? Well, I fixed
you good an’ plenty, an’ I’ll give you decent burial, too. That’s more’n you’d
have done for me.”
He dragged the body to the edge of the hole and toppled it in. It
struck the bottom with a dull crash, on its side, the face twisted up to the
light. The miner peered down at it.
“An’ you shot me in the back!” he said accusingly.
With pick and shovel he filled the hole. Then he loaded the gold
on his horse. It was too great a load for the animal, and when he had gained
his camp he transferred part of it to his saddle-horse. Even so, he was
compelled to abandon a portion of his outfit—pick and shovel and gold-pan,
extra food and cooking utensils, and divers odds and ends.
The sun was at the zenith when the man forced the horses at the
screen of vines and creepers. To climb the huge boulders the animals were compelled
to uprear and struggle blindly through the tangled mass of vegetation. Once the
saddle-horse fell heavily and the man removed the pack to get the animal on its
feet. After it started on its way again the man thrust his head out from among
the leaves and peered up at the hillside.
“The measly skunk!” he said, and disappeared.
There was a ripping and tearing of vines and boughs. The trees
surged back and forth, marking the passage of the animals through the midst of
them. There was a clashing of steel-shod hoofs on stone, and now and again an
oath or a sharp cry of command. Then the voice of the man was raised in song:—
“Tu’n around an’ tu’n
yo’ face Untoe them sweet hills of grace (D’ pow’rs of sin yo’ am scornin’!).
Look about an, look aroun’, Fling yo’ sin-pack on d’ groun’ (Yo’ will meet wid
d’ Lord in d’ mornin’!).”
The song grew faint and fainter, and through the silence crept
back the spirit of the place. The stream once more drowsed and whispered; the
hum of the mountain bees rose sleepily. Down through the perfume-weighted air
fluttered the snowy fluffs of the cottonwoods. The butterflies drifted in and
out among the trees, and over all blazed the quiet sunshine. Only remained the
hoof-marks in the meadow and the torn hillside to mark the boisterous trail of
the life that had broken the peace of the place and passed on.
8.PLANCHETTE
“It is my right to
know,” the girl said.
Her voice was firm-fibred with determination. There was no hint of
pleading in it, yet it was the determination that is reached through a long
period of pleading. But in her case it had been pleading, not of speech, but of
personality. Her lips had been ever mute, but her face and eyes, and the very
attitude of her soul, had been for a long time eloquent with questioning. This
the man had known, but he had never answered; and now she was demanding by the
spoken word that he answer.
“It is my right,” the girl repeated.
“I know it,” he answered, desperately and helplessly.
She waited, in the silence which followed, her eyes fixed upon the
light that filtered down through the lofty boughs and bathed the great redwood
trunks in mellow warmth. This light, subdued and colored, seemed almost a
radiation from the trunks themselves, so strongly did they saturate it with
their hue. The girl saw without seeing, as she heard, without hearing, the deep
gurgling of the stream far below on the canyon bottom.
She looked down at the man. “Well?” she asked, with the firmness
which feigns belief that obedience will be forthcoming.
She was sitting upright, her back against a fallen tree-trunk,
while he lay near to her, on his side, an elbow on the ground and the hand
supporting his head.
“Dear, dear Lute,” he murmured.
She shivered at the sound of his voice—not from repulsion, but
from struggle against the fascination of its caressing gentleness. She had come
to know well the lure of the man—the wealth of easement and rest that was
promised by every caressing intonation of his voice, by the mere touch of hand
on hand or the faint impact of his breath on neck or cheek. The man could not
express himself by word nor look nor touch without weaving into the expression,
subtly and occultly, the feeling as of a hand that passed and that in passing
stroked softly and soothingly. Nor was this all-pervading caress a something
that cloyed with too great sweetness; nor was it sickly sentimental; nor was it
maudlin with love’s madness. It was vigorous, compelling, masculine. For that
matter, it was largely unconscious on the man’s part. He was only dimly aware
of it. It was a part of him, the breath of his soul as it were, involuntary and
unpremeditated.
But now, resolved and desperate, she steeled herself against him.
He tried to face her, but her gray eyes looked out to him, steadily, from under
cool, level brows, and he dropped his head upon her knee. Her hand strayed into
his hair softly, and her face melted into solicitude and tenderness. But when
he looked up again, her gray eyes were steady, her brows cool and level.
“What more can I tell you?” the man said. He raised his head and
met her gaze. “I cannot marry you. I cannot marry any woman. I love you—you
know that—better than my own life. I weigh you in the scales against all the
dear things of living, and you outweigh everything. I would give everything to
possess you, yet I may not. I cannot marry you. I can never marry you.”
Her lips were compressed with the effort of control. His head was
sinking back to her knee, when she checked him.
“You are already married, Chris?”
“No! no!” he cried vehemently. “I have never been married. I want
to marry only you, and I cannot!”
“Then—”
“Don’t!” he interrupted. “Don’t ask me!”
“It is my right to know,” she repeated.
“I know it,” he again interrupted. “But I cannot tell you.”
“You have not considered me, Chris,” she went on gently.
“I know, I know,” he broke in.
“You cannot have considered me. You do not know what I have to
bear from my people because of you.”
“I did not think they felt so very unkindly toward me,” he said
bitterly.
“It is true. They can scarcely tolerate you. They do not show it
to you, but they almost hate you. It is I who have had to bear all this. It was
not always so, though. They liked you at first as... as I liked you. But that
was four years ago. The time passed by—a year, two years; and then they began
to turn against you. They are not to be blamed. You spoke no word. They felt
that you were destroying my life. It is four years, now, and you have never
once mentioned marriage to them. What were they to think? What they have
thought, that you were destroying my life.”
As she talked, she continued to pass her fingers caressingly
through his hair, sorrowful for the pain that she was inflicting.
“They did like you at first. Who can help liking you? You seem to
draw affection from all living things, as the trees draw the moisture from the
ground. It comes to you as it were your birthright. Aunt Mildred and Uncle
Robert thought there was nobody like you. The sun rose and set in you. They
thought I was the luckiest girl alive to win the love of a man like you. ‘For
it looks very much like it,’ Uncle Robert used to say, wagging his head
wickedly at me. Of course they liked you. Aunt Mildred used to sigh, and look
across teasingly at Uncle, and say, ‘When I think of Chris, it almost makes me
wish I were younger myself.’ And Uncle would answer, ‘I don’t blame you, my
dear, not in the least.’ And then the pair of them would beam upon me their
congratulations that I had won the love of a man like you.
“And they knew I loved you as well. How could I hide it?—this great,
wonderful thing that had entered into my life and swallowed up all my days! For
four years, Chris, I have lived only for you. Every moment was yours. Waking, I
loved you. Sleeping, I dreamed of you. Every act I have performed was shaped by
you, by the thought of you. Even my thoughts were moulded by you, by the
invisible presence of you. I had no end, petty or great, that you were not
there for me.”
“I had no idea of imposing such slavery,” he muttered.
“You imposed nothing. You always let me have my own way. It was
you who were the obedient slave. You did for me without offending me. You
forestalled my wishes without the semblance of forestalling them, so natural
and inevitable was everything you did for me. I said, without offending me. You
were no dancing puppet. You made no fuss. Don’t you see? You did not seem to do
things at all. Somehow they were always there, just done, as a matter of
course.
“The slavery was love’s slavery. It was just my love for you that
made you swallow up all my days. You did not force yourself into my thoughts.
You crept in, always, and you were there always—how much, you will never know.
“But as time went by, Aunt Mildred and Uncle grew to dislike you.
They grew afraid. What was to become of me? You were destroying my life. My
music? You know how my dream of it has dimmed away. That spring, when I first
met you—I was twenty, and I was about to start for Germany. I was going to
study hard. That was four years ago, and I am still here in California.
“I had other lovers. You drove them away—No! no! I don’t mean
that. It was I that drove them away. What did I care for lovers, for anything,
when you were near? But as I said, Aunt Mildred and Uncle grew afraid. There
has been talk—friends, busybodies, and all the rest. The time went by. You did
not speak. I could only wonder, wonder. I knew you loved me. Much was said
against you by Uncle at first, and then by Aunt Mildred. They were father and
mother to me, you know. I could not defend you. Yet I was loyal to you. I
refused to discuss you. I closed up. There was half-estrangement in my
home—Uncle Robert with a face like an undertaker, and Aunt Mildred’s heart
breaking. But what could I do, Chris? What could I do?”
The man, his head resting on her knee again, groaned, but made no
other reply.
“Aunt Mildred was mother to me, yet I went to her no more with my
confidences. My childhood’s book was closed. It was a sweet book, Chris. The
tears come into my eyes sometimes when I think of it. But never mind that.
Great happiness has been mine as well. I am glad I can talk frankly of my love
for you. And the attaining of such frankness has been very sweet. I do love
you, Chris. I love you... I cannot tell you how. You are everything to me, and
more besides. You remember that Christmas tree of the children?—when we played
blindman’s buff? and you caught me by the arm so, with such a clutching of
fingers that I cried out with the hurt? I never told you, but the arm was badly
bruised. And such sweet I got of it you could never guess. There, black and
blue, was the imprint of your fingers—your fingers, Chris, your fingers. It was
the touch of you made visible. It was there a week, and I kissed the marks—oh,
so often! I hated to see them go; I wanted to rebruise the arm and make them
linger. I was jealous of the returning white that drove the bruise away.
Somehow,—oh! I cannot explain, but I loved you so!”
In the silence that fell, she continued her caressing of his hair,
while she idly watched a great gray squirrel, boisterous and hilarious, as it
scampered back and forth in a distant vista of the redwoods. A crimson-crested
woodpecker, energetically drilling a fallen trunk, caught and transferred her
gaze. The man did not lift his head. Rather, he crushed his face closer against
her knee, while his heaving shoulders marked the hardness with which he
breathed.
“You must tell me, Chris,” the girl said gently. “This mystery—it
is killing me. I must know why we cannot be married. Are we always to be this
way?—merely lovers, meeting often, it is true, and yet with the long absences
between the meetings? Is it all the world holds for you and me, Chris? Are we
never to be more to each other? Oh, it is good just to love, I know—you have
made me madly happy; but one does get so hungry at times for something more! I
want more and more of you, Chris. I want all of you. I want all our days to be
together. I want all the companionship, the comradeship, which cannot be ours
now, and which will be ours when we are married—” She caught her breath
quickly. “But we are never to be married. I forgot. And you must tell me why.”
The man raised his head and looked her in the eyes. It was a way
he had with whomever he talked, of looking them in the eyes.
“I have considered you, Lute,” he began doggedly. “I did consider
you at the very first. I should never have gone on with it. I should have gone
away. I knew it. And I considered you in the light of that knowledge, and
yet... I did not go away. My God! what was I to do? I loved you. I could not go
away. I could not help it. I stayed. I resolved, but I broke my resolves. I was
like a drunkard. I was drunk of you. I was weak, I know. I failed. I could not
go away. I tried. I went away—you will remember, though you did not know why.
You know now. I went away, but I could not remain away. Knowing that we could
never marry, I came back to you. I am here, now, with you. Send me away, Lute.
I have not the strength to go myself.”
“But why should you go away?” she asked. “Besides, I must know
why, before I can send you away.”
“Don’t ask me.”
“Tell me,” she said, her voice tenderly imperative.
“Don’t, Lute; don’t force me,” the man pleaded, and there was
appeal in his eyes and voice.
“But you must tell me,” she insisted. “It is justice you owe me.”
The man wavered. “If I do...” he began. Then he ended with
determination, “I should never be able to forgive myself. No, I cannot tell
you. Don’t try to compel me, Lute. You would be as sorry as I.”
“If there is anything... if there are obstacles... if this mystery
does really prevent....” She was speaking slowly, with long pauses, seeking the
more delicate ways of speech for the framing of her thought. “Chris, I do love
you. I love you as deeply as it is possible for any woman to love, I am sure.
If you were to say to me now ‘Come,’ I would go with you. I would follow
wherever you led. I would be your page, as in the days of old when ladies went
with their knights to far lands. You are my knight, Chris, and you can do no
wrong. Your will is my wish. I was once afraid of the censure of the world. Now
that you have come into my life I am no longer afraid. I would laugh at the
world and its censure for your sake—for my sake too. I would laugh, for I
should have you, and you are more to me than the good will and approval of the
world. If you say ‘Come,’ I will—”
“Don’t! Don’t!” he cried. “It is impossible! Marriage or not, I
cannot even say ‘Come.’ I dare not. I’ll show you. I’ll tell you.”
He sat up beside her, the action stamped with resolve. He took her
hand in his and held it closely. His lips moved to the verge of speech. The
mystery trembled for utterance. The air was palpitant with its presence. As if
it were an irrevocable decree, the girl steeled herself to hear. But the man
paused, gazing straight out before him. She felt his hand relax in hers, and
she pressed it sympathetically, encouragingly. But she felt the rigidity going
out of his tensed body, and she knew that spirit and flesh were relaxing
together. His resolution was ebbing. He would not speak—she knew it; and she
knew, likewise, with the sureness of faith, that it was because he could not.
She gazed despairingly before her, a numb feeling at her heart, as
though hope and happiness had died. She watched the sun flickering down through
the warm-trunked redwoods. But she watched in a mechanical, absent way. She
looked at the scene as from a long way off, without interest, herself an alien,
no longer an intimate part of the earth and trees and flowers she loved so
well.
So far removed did she seem, that she was aware of a curiosity,
strangely impersonal, in what lay around her. Through a near vista she looked
at a buckeye tree in full blossom as though her eyes encountered it for the
first time. Her eyes paused and dwelt upon a yellow cluster of Diogenes’
lanterns that grew on the edge of an open space. It was the way of flowers
always to give her quick pleasure-thrills, but no thrill was hers now. She
pondered the flower slowly and thoughtfully, as a hasheesh-eater, heavy with
the drug, might ponder some whim-flower that obtruded on his vision. In her
ears was the voice of the stream—a hoarse-throated, sleepy old giant, muttering
and mumbling his somnolent fancies. But her fancy was not in turn aroused, as
was its wont; she knew the sound merely for water rushing over the rocks of the
deep canyon-bottom, that and nothing more.
Her gaze wandered on beyond the Diogenes’ lanterns into the open
space. Knee-deep in the wild oats of the hillside grazed two horses,
chestnut-sorrels the pair of them, perfectly matched, warm and golden in the
sunshine, their spring-coats a sheen of high-lights shot through with
color-flashes that glowed like fiery jewels. She recognized, almost with a
shock, that one of them was hers, Dolly, the companion of her girlhood and
womanhood, on whose neck she had sobbed her sorrows and sung her joys. A
moistness welled into her eyes at the sight, and she came back from the
remoteness of her mood, quick with passion and sorrow, to be part of the world
again.
The man sank forward from the hips, relaxing entirely, and with a
groan dropped his head on her knee. She leaned over him and pressed her lips
softly and lingeringly to his hair.
“Come, let us go,” she said, almost in a whisper.
She caught her breath in a half-sob, then tightened her lips as
she rose. His face was white to ghastliness, so shaken was he by the struggle
through which he had passed. They did not look at each other, but walked
directly to the horses. She leaned against Dolly’s neck while he tightened the
girths. Then she gathered the reins in her hand and waited. He looked at her as
he bent down, an appeal for forgiveness in his eyes; and in that moment her own
eyes answered. Her foot rested in his hands, and from there she vaulted into
the saddle. Without speaking, without further looking at each other, they turned
the horses’ heads and took the narrow trail that wound down through the sombre
redwood aisles and across the open glades to the pasture-lands below. The trail
became a cow-path, the cow-path became a wood-road, which later joined with a
hay-road; and they rode down through the low-rolling, tawny California hills to
where a set of bars let out on the county road which ran along the bottom of
the valley. The girl sat her horse while the man dismounted and began taking
down the bars.
“No—wait!” she cried, before he had touched the two lower bars.
She urged the mare forward a couple of strides, and then the
animal lifted over the bars in a clean little jump. The man’s eyes sparkled,
and he clapped his hands.
“You beauty! you beauty!” the girl cried, leaning forward
impulsively in the saddle and pressing her cheek to the mare’s neck where it
burned flame-color in the sun.
“Let’s trade horses for the ride in,” she suggested, when he had
led his horse through and finished putting up the bars. “You’ve never sufficiently
appreciated Dolly.”
“No, no,” he protested.
“You think she is too old, too sedate,” Lute insisted. “She’s only
sixteen, and she can outrun nine colts out of ten. Only she never cuts up.
She’s too steady, and you don’t approve of her—no, don’t deny it, sir. I know.
And I know also that she can outrun your vaunted Washoe Ban. There! I challenge
you! And furthermore, you may ride her yourself. You know what Ban can do; so
you must ride Dolly and see for yourself what she can do.”
They proceeded to exchange the saddles on the horses, glad of the
diversion and making the most of it.
“I’m glad I was born in California,” Lute remarked, as she swung
astride of Ban. “It’s an outrage both to horse and woman to ride in a
sidesaddle.”
“You look like a young Amazon,” the man said approvingly, his eyes
passing tenderly over the girl as she swung the horse around.
“Are you ready?” she asked.
“All ready!”
“To the old mill,” she called, as the horses sprang forward.
“That’s less than a mile.”
“To a finish?” he demanded.
She nodded, and the horses, feeling the urge of the reins, caught
the spirit of the race. The dust rose in clouds behind as they tore along the
level road. They swung around the bend, horses and riders tilted at sharp
angles to the ground, and more than once the riders ducked low to escape the
branches of outreaching and overhanging trees. They clattered over the small
plank bridges, and thundered over the larger iron ones to an ominous clanking
of loose rods.
They rode side by side, saving the animals for the rush at the
finish, yet putting them at a pace that drew upon vitality and staying power.
Curving around a clump of white oaks, the road straightened out before them for
several hundred yards, at the end of which they could see the ruined mill.
“Now for it!” the girl cried.
She urged the horse by suddenly leaning forward with her body, at
the same time, for an instant, letting the rein slack and touching the neck
with her bridle hand. She began to draw away from the man.
“Touch her on the neck!” she cried to him.
With this, the mare pulled alongside and began gradually to pass
the girl. Chris and Lute looked at each other for a moment, the mare still
drawing ahead, so that Chris was compelled slowly to turn his head. The mill
was a hundred yards away.
“Shall I give him the spurs?” Lute shouted.
The man nodded, and the girl drove the spurs in sharply and
quickly, calling upon the horse for its utmost, but watched her own horse forge
slowly ahead of her.
“Beaten by three lengths!” Lute beamed triumphantly, as they
pulled into a walk. “Confess, sir, confess! You didn’t think the old mare had
it in her.”
Lute leaned to the side and rested her hand for a moment on
Dolly’s wet neck.
“Ban’s a sluggard alongside of her,” Chris affirmed. “Dolly’s all
right, if she is in her Indian Summer.”
Lute nodded approval. “That’s a sweet way of putting it—Indian
Summer. It just describes her. But she’s not lazy. She has all the fire and
none of the folly. She is very wise, what of her years.”
“That accounts for it,” Chris demurred. “Her folly passed with her
youth. Many’s the lively time she’s given you.”
“No,” Lute answered. “I never knew her really to cut up. I think
the only trouble she ever gave me was when I was training her to open gates.
She was afraid when they swung back upon her—the animal’s fear of the trap,
perhaps. But she bravely got over it. And she never was vicious. She never
bolted, nor bucked, nor cut up in all her life—never, not once.”
The horses went on at a walk, still breathing heavily from their
run. The road wound along the bottom of the valley, now and again crossing the
stream. From either side rose the drowsy purr of mowing-machines, punctuated by
occasional sharp cries of the men who were gathering the hay-crop. On the
western side of the valley the hills rose green and dark, but the eastern side
was already burned brown and tan by the sun.
“There is summer, here is spring,” Lute said. “Oh, beautiful
Sonoma Valley!”
Her eyes were glistening and her face was radiant with love of the
land. Her gaze wandered on across orchard patches and sweeping vineyard
stretches, seeking out the purple which seemed to hang like a dim smoke in the
wrinkles of the hills and in the more distant canyon gorges. Far up, among the
more rugged crests, where the steep slopes were covered with manzanita, she
caught a glimpse of a clear space where the wild grass had not yet lost its
green.
“Have you ever heard of the secret pasture?” she asked, her eyes
still fixed on the remote green.
A snort of fear brought her eyes back to the man beside her.
Dolly, upreared, with distended nostrils and wild eyes, was pawing the air
madly with her fore legs. Chris threw himself forward against her neck to keep
her from falling backward, and at the same time touched her with the spurs to
compel her to drop her fore feet to the ground in order to obey the go-ahead
impulse of the spurs.
“Why, Dolly, this is most remarkable,” Lute began reprovingly.
But, to her surprise, the mare threw her head down, arched her
back as she went up in the air, and, returning, struck the ground stiff-legged
and bunched.
“A genuine buck!” Chris called out, and the next moment the mare
was rising under him in a second buck.
Lute looked on, astounded at the unprecedented conduct of her
mare, and admiring her lover’s horsemanship. He was quite cool, and was himself
evidently enjoying the performance. Again and again, half a dozen times, Dolly
arched herself into the air and struck, stiffly bunched. Then she threw her
head straight up and rose on her hind legs, pivoting about and striking with
her fore feet. Lute whirled into safety the horse she was riding, and as she
did so caught a glimpse of Dolly’s eyes, with the look in them of blind brute
madness, bulging until it seemed they must burst from her head. The faint pink
in the white of the eyes was gone, replaced by a white that was like dull
marble and that yet flashed as from some inner fire.
A faint cry of fear, suppressed in the instant of utterance,
slipped past Lute’s lips. One hind leg of the mare seemed to collapse, and for
a moment the whole quivering body, upreared and perpendicular, swayed back and
forth, and there was uncertainty as to whether it would fall forward or
backward. The man, half-slipping sidewise from the saddle, so as to fall clear
if the mare toppled backward, threw his weight to the front and alongside her
neck. This overcame the dangerous teetering balance, and the mare struck the
ground on her feet again.
But there was no let-up. Dolly straightened out so that the line
of the face was almost a continuation of the line of the stretched neck; this
position enabled her to master the bit, which she did by bolting straight ahead
down the road.
For the first time Lute became really frightened. She spurred
Washoe Ban in pursuit, but he could not hold his own with the mad mare, and
dropped gradually behind. Lute saw Dolly check and rear in the air again, and
caught up just as the mare made a second bolt. As Dolly dashed around a bend,
she stopped suddenly, stiff-legged. Lute saw her lover torn out of the saddle,
his thigh-grip broken by the sudden jerk. Though he had lost his seat, he had
not been thrown, and as the mare dashed on Lute saw him clinging to the side of
the horse, a hand in the mane and a leg across the saddle. With a quick cavort
he regained his seat and proceeded to fight with the mare for control.
But Dolly swerved from the road and dashed down a grassy slope
yellowed with innumerable mariposa lilies. An ancient fence at the bottom was
no obstacle. She burst through as though it were filmy spider-web and
disappeared in the underbrush. Lute followed unhesitatingly, putting Ban
through the gap in the fence and plunging on into the thicket. She lay along
his neck, closely, to escape the ripping and tearing of the trees and vines.
She felt the horse drop down through leafy branches and into the cool gravel of
a stream’s bottom. From ahead came a splashing of water, and she caught a
glimpse of Dolly, dashing up the small bank and into a clump of scrub-oaks,
against the trunks of which she was trying to scrape off her rider.
Lute almost caught up amongst the trees, but was hopelessly
outdistanced on the fallow field adjoining, across which the mare tore with a
fine disregard for heavy ground and gopher-holes. When she turned at a sharp
angle into the thicket-land beyond, Lute took the long diagonal, skirted the
ticket, and reined in Ban at the other side. She had arrived first. From within
the thicket she could hear a tremendous crashing of brush and branches. Then
the mare burst through and into the open, falling to her knees, exhausted, on
the soft earth. She arose and staggered forward, then came limply to a halt.
She was in lather-sweat of fear, and stood trembling pitiably.
Chris was still on her back. His shirt was in ribbons. The backs
of his hands were bruised and lacerated, while his face was streaming blood
from a gash near the temple. Lute had controlled herself well, but now she was
aware of a quick nausea and a trembling of weakness.
“Chris!” she said, so softly that it was almost a whisper. Then
she sighed, “Thank God.”
“Oh, I’m all right,” he cried to her, putting into his voice all
the heartiness he could command, which was not much, for he had himself been
under no mean nervous strain.
He showed the reaction he was undergoing, when he swung down out
of the saddle. He began with a brave muscular display as he lifted his leg
over, but ended, on his feet, leaning against the limp Dolly for support. Lute
flashed out of her saddle, and her arms were about him in an embrace of
thankfulness.
“I know where there is a spring,” she said, a moment later.
They left the horses standing untethered, and she led her lover
into the cool recesses of the thicket to where crystal water bubbled from out
the base of the mountain.
“What was that you said about Dolly’s never cutting up?” he asked,
when the blood had been stanched and his nerves and pulse-beats were normal
again.
“I am stunned,” Lute answered. “I cannot understand it. She never
did anything like it in all her life. And all animals like you so—it’s not
because of that. Why, she is a child’s horse. I was only a little girl when I
first rode her, and to this day—”
“Well, this day she was everything but a child’s horse,” Chris
broke in. “She was a devil. She tried to scrape me off against the trees, and to
batter my brains out against the limbs. She tried all the lowest and narrowest
places she could find. You should have seen her squeeze through. And did you
see those bucks?”
Lute nodded.
“Regular bucking-bronco proposition.”
“But what should she know about bucking?” Lute demanded. “She was
never known to buck—never.”
He shrugged his shoulders. “Some forgotten instinct, perhaps,
long-lapsed and come to life again.”
The girl rose to her feet determinedly. “I’m going to find out,”
she said.
They went back to the horses, where they subjected Dolly to a
rigid examination that disclosed nothing. Hoofs, legs, bit, mouth,
body—everything was as it should be. The saddle and saddle-cloth were innocent
of bur or sticker; the back was smooth and unbroken. They searched for sign of
snake-bite and sting of fly or insect, but found nothing.
“Whatever it was, it was subjective, that much is certain,” Chris
said.
“Obsession,” Lute suggested.
They laughed together at the idea, for both were twentieth-century
products, healthy-minded and normal, with souls that delighted in the
butterfly-chase of ideals but that halted before the brink where superstition
begins.
“An evil spirit,” Chris laughed; “but what evil have I done that I
should be so punished?”
“You think too much of yourself, sir,” she rejoined. “It is more
likely some evil, I don’t know what, that Dolly has done. You were a mere
accident. I might have been on her back at the time, or Aunt Mildred, or
anybody.”
As she talked, she took hold of the stirrup-strap and started to
shorten it.
“What are you doing?” Chris demanded.
“I’m going to ride Dolly in.”
“No, you’re not,” he announced. “It would be bad discipline. After
what has happened I am simply compelled to ride her in myself.”
But it was a very weak and very sick mare he rode, stumbling and
halting, afflicted with nervous jerks and recurring muscular spasms—the
aftermath of the tremendous orgasm through which she had passed.
“I feel like a book of verse and a hammock, after all that has
happened,” Lute said, as they rode into camp.
It was a summer camp of city-tired people, pitched in a grove of
towering redwoods through whose lofty boughs the sunshine trickled down, broken
and subdued to soft light and cool shadow. Apart from the main camp were the
kitchen and the servants’ tents; and midway between was the great dining hall,
walled by the living redwood columns, where fresh whispers of air were always
to be found, and where no canopy was needed to keep the sun away.
“Poor Dolly, she is really sick,” Lute said that evening, when
they had returned from a last look at the mare. “But you weren’t hurt, Chris,
and that’s enough for one small woman to be thankful for. I thought I knew, but
I really did not know till to-day, how much you meant to me. I could hear only
the plunging and struggle in the thicket. I could not see you, nor know how it
went with you.”
“My thoughts were of you,” Chris answered, and felt the responsive
pressure of the hand that rested on his arm.
She turned her face up to his and met his lips.
“Good night,” she said.
“Dear Lute, dear Lute,” he caressed her with his voice as she
moved away among the shadows.
* * *
“Who’s going for the mail?” called a woman’s voice through the
trees.
Lute closed the book from which they had been reading, and sighed.
“We weren’t going to ride to-day,” she said.
“Let me go,” Chris proposed. “You stay here. I’ll be down and back
in no time.”
She shook her head.
“Who’s going for the mail?” the voice insisted.
“Where’s Martin?” Lute called, lifting her voice in answer.
“I don’t know,” came the voice. “I think Robert took him along
somewhere—horse-buying, or fishing, or I don’t know what. There’s really nobody
left but Chris and you. Besides, it will give you an appetite for dinner.
You’ve been lounging in the hammock all day. And Uncle Robert must have his
newspaper.”
“All right, Aunty, we’re starting,” Lute called back, getting out
of the hammock.
A few minutes later, in riding-clothes, they were saddling the
horses. They rode out on to the county road, where blazed the afternoon sun,
and turned toward Glen Ellen. The little town slept in the sun, and the
somnolent storekeeper and postmaster scarcely kept his eyes open long enough to
make up the packet of letters and newspapers.
An hour later Lute and Chris turned aside from the road and dipped
along a cow-path down the high bank to water the horses, before going into
camp.
“Dolly looks as though she’d forgotten all about yesterday,” Chris
said, as they sat their horses knee-deep in the rushing water. “Look at her.”
The mare had raised her head and cocked her ears at the rustling
of a quail in the thicket. Chris leaned over and rubbed around her ears.
Dolly’s enjoyment was evident, and she drooped her head over against the
shoulder of his own horse.
“Like a kitten,” was Lute’s comment.
“Yet I shall never be able wholly to trust her again,” Chris said.
“Not after yesterday’s mad freak.”
“I have a feeling myself that you are safer on Ban,” Lute laughed.
“It is strange. My trust in Dolly is as implicit as ever. I feel confident so
far as I am concerned, but I should never care to see you on her back again.
Now with Ban, my faith is still unshaken. Look at that neck! Isn’t he handsome!
He’ll be as wise as Dolly when he is as old as she.”
“I feel the same way,” Chris laughed back. “Ban could never
possibly betray me.”
They turned their horses out of the stream. Dolly stopped to brush
a fly from her knee with her nose, and Ban urged past into the narrow way of
the path. The space was too restricted to make him return, save with much
trouble, and Chris allowed him to go on. Lute, riding behind, dwelt with her
eyes upon her lover’s back, pleasuring in the lines of the bare neck and the
sweep out to the muscular shoulders.
Suddenly she reined in her horse. She could do nothing but look,
so brief was the duration of the happening. Beneath and above was the almost
perpendicular bank. The path itself was barely wide enough for footing. Yet
Washoe Ban, whirling and rearing at the same time, toppled for a moment in the
air and fell backward off the path.
So unexpected and so quick was it, that the man was involved in
the fall. There had been no time for him to throw himself to the path. He was
falling ere he knew it, and he did the only thing possible—slipped the stirrups
and threw his body into the air, to the side, and at the same time down. It was
twelve feet to the rocks below. He maintained an upright position, his head up
and his eyes fixed on the horse above him and falling upon him.
Chris struck like a cat, on his feet, on the instant making a leap
to the side. The next instant Ban crashed down beside him. The animal struggled
little, but sounded the terrible cry that horses sometimes sound when they have
received mortal hurt. He had struck almost squarely on his back, and in that
position he remained, his head twisted partly under, his hind legs relaxed and
motionless, his fore legs futilely striking the air.
Chris looked up reassuringly.
“I am getting used to it,” Lute smiled down to him. “Of course I
need not ask if you are hurt. Can I do anything?”
He smiled back and went over to the fallen beast, letting go the
girths of the saddle and getting the head straightened out.
“I thought so,” he said, after a cursory examination. “I thought
so at the time. Did you hear that sort of crunching snap?”
She shuddered.
“Well, that was the punctuation of life, the final period dropped
at the end of Ban’s usefulness.” He started around to come up by the path.
“I’ve been astride of Ban for the last time. Let us go home.”
At the top of the bank Chris turned and looked down.
“Good-by, Washoe Ban!” he called out. “Good-by, old fellow.”
The animal was struggling to lift its head. There were tears in
Chris’s eyes as he turned abruptly away, and tears in Lute’s eyes as they met
his. She was silent in her sympathy, though the pressure of her hand was firm
in his as he walked beside her horse down the dusty road.
“It was done deliberately,” Chris burst forth suddenly. “There was
no warning. He deliberately flung himself over backward.”
“There was no warning,” Lute concurred. “I was looking. I saw him.
He whirled and threw himself at the same time, just as if you had done it
yourself, with a tremendous jerk and backward pull on the bit.”
“It was not my hand, I swear it. I was not even thinking of him.
He was going up with a fairly loose rein, as a matter of course.”
“I should have seen it, had you done it,” Lute said. “But it was
all done before you had a chance to do anything. It was not your hand, not even
your unconscious hand.”
“Then it was some invisible hand, reaching out from I don’t know
where.”
He looked up whimsically at the sky and smiled at the conceit.
Martin stepped forward to receive Dolly, when they came into the
stable end of the grove, but his face expressed no surprise at sight of Chris
coming in on foot. Chris lingered behind Lute for moment.
“Can you shoot a horse?” he asked.
The groom nodded, then added, “Yes, sir,” with a second and deeper
nod.
“How do you do it?”
“Draw a line from the eyes to the ears—I mean the opposite ears,
sir. And where the lines cross—”
“That will do,” Chris interrupted. “You know the watering place at
the second bend. You’ll find Ban there with a broken back.”
* * *
“Oh, here you are, sir. I have been looking for you everywhere
since dinner. You are wanted immediately.”
Chris tossed his cigar away, then went over and pressed his foot
on its glowing fire.
“You haven’t told anybody about it?—Ban?” he queried.
Lute shook her head. “They’ll learn soon enough. Martin will
mention it to Uncle Robert to-morrow.”
“But don’t feel too bad about it,” she said, after a moment’s
pause, slipping her hand into his.
“He was my colt,” he said. “Nobody has ridden him but you. I broke
him myself. I knew him from the time he was born. I knew every bit of him,
every trick, every caper, and I would have staked my life that it was
impossible for him to do a thing like this. There was no warning, no fighting
for the bit, no previous unruliness. I have been thinking it over. He didn’t
fight for the bit, for that matter. He wasn’t unruly, nor disobedient. There
wasn’t time. It was an impulse, and he acted upon it like lightning. I am
astounded now at the swiftness with which it took place. Inside the first
second we were over the edge and falling.
“It was deliberate—deliberate suicide. And attempted murder. It
was a trap. I was the victim. He had me, and he threw himself over with me. Yet
he did not hate me. He loved me... as much as it is possible for a horse to
love. I am confounded. I cannot understand it any more than you can understand
Dolly’s behavior yesterday.”
“But horses go insane, Chris,” Lute said. “You know that. It’s
merely coincidence that two horses in two days should have spells under you.”
“That’s the only explanation,” he answered, starting off with her.
“But why am I wanted urgently?”
“Planchette.”
“Oh, I remember. It will be a new experience to me. Somehow I
missed it when it was all the rage long ago.”
“So did all of us,” Lute replied, “except Mrs. Grantly. It is her
favorite phantom, it seems.”
“A weird little thing,” he remarked. “Bundle of nerves and black
eyes. I’ll wager she doesn’t weigh ninety pounds, and most of that’s
magnetism.”
“Positively uncanny... at times.” Lute shivered involuntarily.
“She gives me the creeps.”
“Contact of the healthy with the morbid,” he explained dryly. “You
will notice it is the healthy that always has the creeps. The morbid never has
the creeps. It gives the creeps. That’s its function. Where did you people pick
her up, anyway?”
“I don’t know—yes, I do, too. Aunt Mildred met her in Boston, I
think—oh, I don’t know. At any rate, Mrs. Grantly came to California, and of
course had to visit Aunt Mildred. You know the open house we keep.”
They halted where a passageway between two great redwood trunks
gave entrance to the dining room. Above, through lacing boughs, could be seen
the stars. Candles lighted the tree-columned space. About the table, examining
the Planchette contrivance, were four persons. Chris’s gaze roved over them,
and he was aware of a guilty sorrow-pang as he paused for a moment on Lute’s Aunt
Mildred and Uncle Robert, mellow with ripe middle age and genial with the
gentle buffets life had dealt them. He passed amusedly over the black-eyed,
frail-bodied Mrs. Grantly, and halted on the fourth person, a portly,
massive-headed man, whose gray temples belied the youthful solidity of his
face.
“Who’s that?” Chris whispered.
“A Mr. Barton. The train was late. That’s why you didn’t see him
at dinner. He’s only a capitalist—water-power-long-distance-electricity
transmitter, or something like that.”
“Doesn’t look as though he could give an ox points on
imagination.”
“He can’t. He inherited his money. But he knows enough to hold on
to it and hire other men’s brains. He is very conservative.”
“That is to be expected,” was Chris’s comment. His gaze went back
to the man and woman who had been father and mother to the girl beside him. “Do
you know,” he said, “it came to me with a shock yesterday when you told me that
they had turned against me and that I was scarcely tolerated. I met them
afterwards, last evening, guiltily, in fear and trembling—and to-day, too. And
yet I could see no difference from of old.”
“Dear man,” Lute sighed. “Hospitality is as natural to them as the
act of breathing. But it isn’t that, after all. It is all genuine in their dear
hearts. No matter how severe the censure they put upon you when you are absent,
the moment they are with you they soften and are all kindness and warmth. As
soon as their eyes rest on you, affection and love come bubbling up. You are so
made. Every animal likes you. All people like you. They can’t help it. You
can’t help it. You are universally lovable, and the best of it is that you
don’t know it. You don’t know it now. Even as I tell it to you, you don’t
realize it, you won’t realize it—and that very incapacity to realize it is one
of the reasons why you are so loved. You are incredulous now, and you shake
your head; but I know, who am your slave, as all people know, for they likewise
are your slaves.
“Why, in a minute we shall go in and join them. Mark the affection,
almost maternal, that will well up in Aunt Mildred’s eyes. Listen to the tones
of Uncle Robert’s voice when he says, ‘Well, Chris, my boy?’ Watch Mrs. Grantly
melt, literally melt, like a dewdrop in the sun.
“Take Mr. Barton, there. You have never seen him before. Why, you
will invite him out to smoke a cigar with you when the rest of us have gone to
bed—you, a mere nobody, and he a man of many millions, a man of power, a man
obtuse and stupid like the ox; and he will follow you about, smoking; the cigar,
like a little dog, your little dog, trotting at your back. He will not know he
is doing it, but he will be doing it just the same. Don’t I know, Chris? Oh, I
have watched you, watched you, so often, and loved you for it, and loved you
again for it, because you were so delightfully and blindly unaware of what you
were doing.”
“I’m almost bursting with vanity from listening to you,” he
laughed, passing his arm around her and drawing her against him.
“Yes,” she whispered, “and in this very moment, when you are
laughing at all that I have said, you, the feel of you, your soul,—call it what
you will, it is you,—is calling for all the love that is in me.”
She leaned more closely against him, and sighed as with fatigue.
He breathed a kiss into her hair and held her with firm tenderness.
Aunt Mildred stirred briskly and looked up from the Planchette
board.
“Come, let us begin,” she said. “It will soon grow chilly. Robert,
where are those children?”
“Here we are,” Lute called out, disengaging herself.
“Now for a bundle of creeps,” Chris whispered, as they started in.
Lute’s prophecy of the manner in which her lover would be received
was realized. Mrs. Grantly, unreal, unhealthy, scintillant with frigid
magnetism, warmed and melted as though of truth she were dew and he sun. Mr.
Barton beamed broadly upon him, and was colossally gracious. Aunt Mildred
greeted him with a glow of fondness and motherly kindness, while Uncle Robert
genially and heartily demanded, “Well, Chris, my boy, and what of the riding?”
But Aunt Mildred drew her shawl more closely around her and
hastened them to the business in hand. On the table was a sheet of paper. On
the paper, rifling on three supports, was a small triangular board. Two of the
supports were easily moving casters. The third support, placed at the apex of
the triangle, was a lead pencil.
“Who’s first?” Uncle Robert demanded.
There was a moment’s hesitancy, then Aunt Mildred placed her hand
on the board, and said: “Some one has always to be the fool for the delectation
of the rest.”
“Brave woman,” applauded her husband. “Now, Mrs. Grantly, do your
worst.”
“I?” that lady queried. “I do nothing. The power, or whatever you
care to think it, is outside of me, as it is outside of all of you. As to what
that power is, I will not dare to say. There is such a power. I have had
evidences of it. And you will undoubtedly have evidences of it. Now please be
quiet, everybody. Touch the board very lightly, but firmly, Mrs. Story; but do
nothing of your own volition.”
Aunt Mildred nodded, and stood with her hand on Planchette; while
the rest formed about her in a silent and expectant circle. But nothing
happened. The minutes ticked away, and Planchette remained motionless.
“Be patient,” Mrs. Grantly counselled. “Do not struggle against
any influences you may feel working on you. But do not do anything yourself.
The influence will take care of that. You will feel impelled to do things, and
such impulses will be practically irresistible.”
“I wish the influence would hurry up,” Aunt Mildred protested at
the end of five motionless minutes.
“Just a little longer, Mrs. Story, just a little longer,” Mrs.
Grantly said soothingly.
Suddenly Aunt Mildred’s hand began to twitch into movement. A mild
concern showed in her face as she observed the movement of her hand and heard
the scratching of the pencil-point at the apex of Planchette.
For another five minutes this continued, when Aunt Mildred
withdrew her hand with an effort, and said, with a nervous laugh:
“I don’t know whether I did it myself or not. I do know that I was
growing nervous, standing there like a psychic fool with all your solemn faces
turned upon me.”
“Hen-scratches,” was Uncle Robert’s judgement, when he looked over
the paper upon which she had scrawled.
“Quite illegible,” was Mrs. Grantly’s dictum. “It does not
resemble writing at all. The influences have not got to working yet. Do you try
it, Mr. Barton.”
That gentleman stepped forward, ponderously willing to please, and
placed his hand on the board. And for ten solid, stolid minutes he stood there,
motionless, like a statue, the frozen personification of the commercial age.
Uncle Robert’s face began to work. He blinked, stiffened his mouth, uttered
suppressed, throaty sounds, deep down; finally he snorted, lost his
self-control, and broke out in a roar of laughter. All joined in this
merriment, including Mrs. Grantly. Mr. Barton laughed with them, but he was
vaguely nettled.
“You try it, Story,” he said.
Uncle Robert, still laughing, and urged on by Lute and his wife,
took the board. Suddenly his face sobered. His hand had begun to move, and the
pencil could be heard scratching across the paper.
“By George!” he muttered. “That’s curious. Look at it. I’m not
doing it. I know I’m not doing it. Look at that hand go! Just look at it!”
“Now, Robert, none of your ridiculousness,” his wife warned him.
“I tell you I’m not doing it,” he replied indignantly. “The force
has got hold of me. Ask Mrs. Grantly. Tell her to make it stop, if you want it
to stop. I can’t stop it. By George! look at that flourish. I didn’t do that. I
never wrote a flourish in my life.”
“Do try to be serious,” Mrs. Grantly warned them. “An atmosphere
of levity does not conduce to the best operation of Planchette.”
“There, that will do, I guess,” Uncle Robert said as he took his
hand away. “Now let’s see.”
He bent over and adjusted his glasses. “It’s handwriting at any
rate, and that’s better than the rest of you did. Here, Lute, your eyes are
young.”
“Oh, what flourishes!” Lute exclaimed, as she looked at the paper.
“And look there, there are two different handwritings.”
She began to read: “This is the first lecture. Concentrate on this
sentence: ‘I am a positive spirit and not negative to any condition.’ Then
follow with concentration on positive love. After that peace and harmony will
vibrate through and around your body. Your soul—The other writing breaks right
in. This is the way it goes: Bullfrog 95, Dixie 16, Golden Anchor 65, Gold
Mountain 13, Jim Butler 70, Jumbo 75, North Star 42, Rescue 7, Black Butte 75,
Brown Hope 16, Iron Top 3.”
“Iron Top’s pretty low,” Mr. Barton murmured.
“Robert, you’ve been dabbling again!” Aunt Mildred cried
accusingly.
“No, I’ve not,” he denied. “I only read the quotations. But how
the devil—I beg your pardon—they got there on that piece of paper I’d like to
know.”
“Your subconscious mind,” Chris suggested. “You read the
quotations in to-day’s paper.”
“No, I didn’t; but last week I glanced over the column.”
“A day or a year is all the same in the subconscious mind,” said
Mrs. Grantly. “The subconscious mind never forgets. But I am not saying that
this is due to the subconscious mind. I refuse to state to what I think it is
due.”
“But how about that other stuff?” Uncle Robert demanded. “Sounds
like what I’d think Christian Science ought to sound like.”
“Or theosophy,” Aunt Mildred volunteered. “Some message to a
neophyte.”
“Go on, read the rest,” her husband commanded.
“This puts you in touch with the mightier spirits,” Lute read.
“You shall become one with us, and your name shall be ‘Arya,’ and you shall—Conqueror
20, Empire 12, Columbia Mountain 18, Midway 140—and, and that is all. Oh, no!
here’s a last flourish, Arya, from Kandor—that must surely be the Mahatma.”
“I’d like to have you explain that theosophy stuff on the basis of
the subconscious mind, Chris,” Uncle Robert challenged.
Chris shrugged his shoulders. “No explanation. You must have got a
message intended for some one else.”
“Lines were crossed, eh?” Uncle Robert chuckled. “Multiplex
spiritual wireless telegraphy, I’d call it.”
“It IS nonsense,” Mrs. Grantly said. “I never knew Planchette to
behave so outrageously. There are disturbing influences at work. I felt them
from the first. Perhaps it is because you are all making too much fun of it.
You are too hilarious.”
“A certain befitting gravity should grace the occasion,” Chris
agreed, placing his hand on Planchette. “Let me try. And not one of you must
laugh or giggle, or even think ‘laugh’ or ‘giggle.’ And if you dare to snort,
even once, Uncle Robert, there is no telling what occult vengeance may be
wreaked upon you.”
“I’ll be good,” Uncle Robert rejoined. “But if I really must
snort, may I silently slip away?”
Chris nodded. His hand had already begun to work. There had been
no preliminary twitchings nor tentative essays at writing. At once his hand had
started off, and Planchette was moving swiftly and smoothly across the paper.
“Look at him,” Lute whispered to her aunt. “See how white he is.”
Chris betrayed disturbance at the sound of her voice, and
thereafter silence was maintained. Only could be heard the steady scratching of
the pencil. Suddenly, as though it had been stung, he jerked his hand away.
With a sigh and a yawn he stepped back from the table, then glanced with the
curiosity of a newly awakened man at their faces.
“I think I wrote something,” he said.
“I should say you did,” Mrs. Grantly remarked with satisfaction,
holding up the sheet of paper and glancing at it.
“Read it aloud,” Uncle Robert said.
“Here it is, then. It begins with ‘beware’ written three times,
and in much larger characters than the rest of the writing. BEWARE! BEWARE!
BEWARE! Chris Dunbar, I intend to destroy you. I have already made two attempts
upon your life, and failed. I shall yet succeed. So sure am I that I shall
succeed that I dare to tell you. I do not need to tell you why. In your own
heart you know. The wrong you are doing—And here it abruptly ends.”
Mrs. Grantly laid the paper down on the table and looked at Chris,
who had already become the centre of all eyes, and who was yawning as from an
overpowering drowsiness.
“Quite a sanguinary turn, I should say,” Uncle Robert remarked.
“I have already made two attempts upon your life,” Mrs. Grantly
read from the paper, which she was going over a second time.
“On my life?” Chris demanded between yawns. “Why, my life hasn’t
been attempted even once. My! I am sleepy!”
“Ah, my boy, you are thinking of flesh-and-blood men,” Uncle
Robert laughed. “But this is a spirit. Your life has been attempted by unseen
things. Most likely ghostly hands have tried to throttle you in your sleep.”
“Oh, Chris!” Lute cried impulsively. “This afternoon! The hand you
said must have seized your rein!”
“But I was joking,” he objected.
“Nevertheless...” Lute left her thought unspoken.
Mrs. Grantly had become keen on the scent. “What was that about
this afternoon? Was your life in danger?”
Chris’s drowsiness had disappeared. “I’m becoming interested
myself,” he acknowledged. “We haven’t said anything about it. Ban broke his
back this afternoon. He threw himself off the bank, and I ran the risk of being
caught underneath.”
“I wonder, I wonder,” Mrs. Grantly communed aloud. “There is
something in this.... It is a warning.... Ah! You were hurt yesterday riding
Miss Story’s horse! That makes the two attempts!”
She looked triumphantly at them. Planchette had been vindicated.
“Nonsense,” laughed Uncle Robert, but with a slight hint of
irritation in his manner. “Such things do not happen these days. This is the
twentieth century, my dear madam. The thing, at the very latest, smacks of
mediaevalism.”
“I have had such wonderful tests with Planchette,” Mrs. Grantly
began, then broke off suddenly to go to the table and place her hand on the
board.
“Who are you?” she asked. “What is your name?”
The board immediately began to write. By this time all heads, with
the exception of Mr. Barton’s, were bent over the table and following the
pencil.
“It’s Dick,” Aunt Mildred cried, a note of the mildly hysterical
in her voice.
Her husband straightened up, his face for the first time grave.
“It’s Dick’s signature,” he said. “I’d know his fist in a
thousand.”
“‘Dick Curtis,’” Mrs. Grantly read aloud. “Who is Dick Curtis?”
“By Jove, that’s remarkable!” Mr. Barton broke in. “The
handwriting in both instances is the same. Clever, I should say, really
clever,” he added admiringly.
“Let me see,” Uncle Robert demanded, taking the paper and
examining it. “Yes, it is Dick’s handwriting.”
“But who is Dick?” Mrs. Grantly insisted. “Who is this Dick
Curtis?”
“Dick Curtis, why, he was Captain Richard Curtis,” Uncle Robert
answered.
“He was Lute’s father,” Aunt Mildred supplemented. “Lute took our
name. She never saw him. He died when she was a few weeks old. He was my
brother.”
“Remarkable, most remarkable.” Mrs. Grantly was revolving the
message in her mind. “There were two attempts on Mr. Dunbar’s life. The
subconscious mind cannot explain that, for none of us knew of the accident
to-day.”
“I knew,” Chris answered, “and it was I that operated Planchette.
The explanation is simple.”
“But the handwriting,” interposed Mr. Barton. “What you wrote and
what Mrs. Grantly wrote are identical.”
Chris bent over and compared the handwriting.
“Besides,” Mrs. Grantly cried, “Mr. Story recognizes the
handwriting.”
She looked at him for verification.
He nodded his head. “Yes, it is Dick’s fist. I’ll swear to that.”
But to Lute had come a visioning. While the rest argued pro and
con and the air was filled with phrases,—“psychic phenomena,” “self-hypnotism,”
“residuum of unexplained truth,” and “spiritism,”—she was reviving mentally the
girlhood pictures she had conjured of this soldier-father she had never seen.
She possessed his sword, there were several old-fashioned daguerreotypes, there
was much that had been said of him, stories told of him—and all this had
constituted the material out of which she had builded him in her childhood
fancy.
“There is the possibility of one mind unconsciously suggesting to
another mind,” Mrs. Grantly was saying; but through Lute’s mind was trooping
her father on his great roan war-horse. Now he was leading his men. She saw him
on lonely scouts, or in the midst of the yelling Indians at Salt Meadows, when
of his command he returned with one man in ten. And in the picture she had of
him, in the physical semblance she had made of him, was reflected his spiritual
nature, reflected by her worshipful artistry in form and feature and
expression—his bravery, his quick temper, his impulsive championship, his
madness of wrath in a righteous cause, his warm generosity and swift
forgiveness, and his chivalry that epitomized codes and ideals primitive as the
days of knighthood. And first, last, and always, dominating all, she saw in the
face of him the hot passion and quickness of deed that had earned for him the
name “Fighting Dick Curtis.”
“Let me put it to the test,” she heard Mrs. Grantly saying. “Let
Miss Story try Planchette. There may be a further message.”
“No, no, I beg of you,” Aunt Mildred interposed. “It is too
uncanny. It surely is wrong to tamper with the dead. Besides, I am nervous. Or,
better, let me go to bed, leaving you to go on with your experiments. That will
be the best way, and you can tell me in the morning.” Mingled with the
“Good-nights,” were half-hearted protests from Mrs. Grantly, as Aunt Mildred
withdrew.
“Robert can return,” she called back, “as soon as he has seen me
to my tent.”
“It would be a shame to give it up now,” Mrs. Grantly said. “There
is no telling what we are on the verge of. Won’t you try it, Miss Story?”
Lute obeyed, but when she placed her hand on the board she was
conscious of a vague and nameless fear at this toying with the supernatural.
She was twentieth-century, and the thing in essence, as her uncle had said, was
mediaeval. Yet she could not shake off the instinctive fear that arose in
her—man’s inheritance from the wild and howling ages when his hairy, apelike
prototype was afraid of the dark and personified the elements into things of
fear.
But as the mysterious influence seized her hand and sent it
meriting across the paper, all the unusual passed out of the situation and she
was unaware of more than a feeble curiosity. For she was intent on another
visioning—this time of her mother, who was also unremembered in the flesh. Not
sharp and vivid like that of her father, but dim and nebulous was the picture
she shaped of her mother—a saint’s head in an aureole of sweetness and goodness
and meekness, and withal, shot through with a hint of reposeful determination,
of will, stubborn and unobtrusive, that in life had expressed itself mainly in
resignation.
Lute’s hand had ceased moving, and Mrs. Grantly was already
reading the message that had been written.
“It is a different handwriting,” she said. “A woman’s hand.
‘Martha,’ it is signed. Who is Martha?”
Lute was not surprised. “It is my mother,” she said simply. “What
does she say?”
She had not been made sleepy, as Chris had; but the keen edge of
her vitality had been blunted, and she was experiencing a sweet and pleasing
lassitude. And while the message was being read, in her eyes persisted the
vision of her mother.
“Dear child,” Mrs. Grantly read, “do not mind him. He was ever
quick of speech and rash. Be no niggard with your love. Love cannot hurt you.
To deny love is to sin. Obey your heart and you can do no wrong. Obey worldly
considerations, obey pride, obey those that prompt you against your heart’s
prompting, and you do sin. Do not mind your father. He is angry now, as was his
way in the earth-life; but he will come to see the wisdom of my counsel, for
this, too, was his way in the earth-life. Love, my child, and love
well.—Martha.”
“Let me see it,” Lute cried, seizing the paper and devouring the
handwriting with her eyes. She was thrilling with unexpressed love for the
mother she had never seen, and this written speech from the grave seemed to
give more tangibility to her having ever existed, than did the vision of her.
“This IS remarkable,” Mrs. Grantly was reiterating. “There was
never anything like it. Think of it, my dear, both your father and mother here
with us to-night.”
Lute shivered. The lassitude was gone, and she was her natural
self again, vibrant with the instinctive fear of things unseen. And it was
offensive to her mind that, real or illusion, the presence or the memorized
existences of her father and mother should be touched by these two persons who
were practically strangers—Mrs. Grantly, unhealthy and morbid, and Mr. Barton,
stolid and stupid with a grossness both of the flesh and the spirit. And it
further seemed a trespass that these strangers should thus enter into the
intimacy between her and Chris.
She could hear the steps of her uncle approaching, and the
situation flashed upon her, luminous and clear. She hurriedly folded the sheet
of paper and thrust it into her bosom.
“Don’t say anything to him about this second message, Mrs.
Grantly, please, and Mr. Barton. Nor to Aunt Mildred. It would only cause them
irritation and needless anxiety.”
In her mind there was also the desire to protect her lover, for
she knew that the strain of his present standing with her aunt and uncle would
be added to, unconsciously in their minds, by the weird message of Planchette.
“And please don’t let us have any more Planchette,” Lute continued
hastily. “Let us forget all the nonsense that has occurred.”
“‘Nonsense,’ my dear child?” Mrs. Grantly was indignantly
protesting when Uncle Robert strode into the circle.
“Hello!” he demanded. “What’s being done?”
“Too late,” Lute answered lightly. “No more stock quotations for
you. Planchette is adjourned, and we’re just winding up the discussion of the
theory of it. Do you know how late it is?”
000
“Well, what did you do last night after we left?”
“Oh, took a stroll,” Chris answered.
Lute’s eyes were quizzical as she asked with a tentativeness that
was palpably assumed, “With—a—with Mr. Barton?”
“Why, yes.”
“And a smoke?”
“Yes; and now what’s it all about?”
Lute broke into merry laughter. “Just as I told you that you would
do. Am I not a prophet? But I knew before I saw you that my forecast had come
true. I have just left Mr. Barton, and I knew he had walked with you last
night, for he is vowing by all his fetishes and idols that you are a perfectly
splendid young man. I could see it with my eyes shut. The Chris Dunbar glamour
has fallen upon him. But I have not finished the catechism by any means. Where
have you been all morning?”
“Where I am going to take you this afternoon.”
“You plan well without knowing my wishes.”
“I knew well what your wishes are. It is to see a horse I have
found.”
Her voice betrayed her delight, as she cried, “Oh, good!”
“He is a beauty,” Chris said.
But her face had suddenly gone grave, and apprehension brooded in
her eyes.
“He’s called Comanche,” Chris went on. “A beauty, a regular
beauty, the perfect type of the Californian cow-pony. And his lines—why, what’s
the matter?”
“Don’t let us ride any more,” Lute said, “at least for a while.
Really, I think I am a tiny bit tired of it, too.”
He was looking at her in astonishment, and she was bravely meeting
his eyes.
“I see hearses and flowers for you,” he began, “and a funeral
oration; I see the end of the world, and the stars falling out of the sky, and
the heavens rolling up as a scroll; I see the living and the dead gathered
together for the final judgement, the sheep and the goats, the lambs and the
rams and all the rest of it, the white-robed saints, the sound of golden harps,
and the lost souls howling as they fall into the Pit—all this I see on the day
that you, Lute Story, no longer care to ride a horse. A horse, Lute! a horse!”
“For a while, at least,” she pleaded.
“Ridiculous!” he cried. “What’s the matter? Aren’t you well?—you
who are always so abominably and adorably well!”
“No, it’s not that,” she answered. “I know it is ridiculous,
Chris, I know it, but the doubt will arise. I cannot help it. You always say I
am so sanely rooted to the earth and reality and all that, but—perhaps it’s
superstition, I don’t know—but the whole occurrence, the messages of
Planchette, the possibility of my father’s hand, I know not how, reaching, out
to Ban’s rein and hurling him and you to death, the correspondence between my
father’s statement that he has twice attempted your life and the fact that in
the last two days your life has twice been endangered by horses—my father was a
great horseman—all this, I say, causes the doubt to arise in my mind. What if
there be something in it? I am not so sure. Science may be too dogmatic in its
denial of the unseen. The forces of the unseen, of the spirit, may well be too
subtle, too sublimated, for science to lay hold of, and recognize, and
formulate. Don’t you see, Chris, that there is rationality in the very doubt?
It may be a very small doubt—oh, so small; but I love you too much to run even
that slight risk. Besides, I am a woman, and that should in itself fully
account for my predisposition toward superstition.
“Yes, yes, I know, call it unreality. But I’ve heard you
paradoxing upon the reality of the unreal—the reality of delusion to the mind
that is sick. And so with me, if you will; it is delusion and unreal, but to
me, constituted as I am, it is very real—is real as a nightmare is real, in the
throes of it, before one awakes.”
“The most logical argument for illogic I have ever heard,” Chris
smiled. “It is a good gaming proposition, at any rate. You manage to embrace
more chances in your philosophy than do I in mine. It reminds me of Sam—the
gardener you had a couple of years ago. I overheard him and Martin arguing in
the stable. You know what a bigoted atheist Martin is. Well, Martin had deluged
Sam with floods of logic. Sam pondered awhile, and then he said, ‘Foh a fack,
Mis’ Martin, you jis’ tawk like a house afire; but you ain’t got de show I
has.’ ‘How’s that?’ Martin asked. ‘Well, you see, Mis’ Martin, you has one
chance to mah two.’ ‘I don’t see it,’ Martin said. ‘Mis’ Martin, it’s dis way.
You has jis’ de chance, lak you say, to become worms foh de fruitification of
de cabbage garden. But I’s got de chance to lif’ mah voice to de glory of de
Lawd as I go paddin’ dem golden streets—along ‘ith de chance to be jis’ worms
along ‘ith you, Mis’ Martin.’”
“You refuse to take me seriously,” Lute said, when she had laughed
her appreciation.
“How can I take that Planchette rigmarole seriously?” he asked.
“You don’t explain it—the handwriting of my father, which Uncle
Robert recognized—oh, the whole thing, you don’t explain it.”
“I don’t know all the mysteries of mind,” Chris answered. “But I
believe such phenomena will all yield to scientific explanation in the not
distant future.”
“Just the same, I have a sneaking desire to find out some more
from Planchette,” Lute confessed. “The board is still down in the dining room.
We could try it now, you and I, and no one would know.”
Chris caught her hand, crying: “Come on! It will be a lark.”
Hand in hand they ran down the path to the tree-pillared room.
“The camp is deserted,” Lute said, as she placed Planchette on the
table. “Mrs. Grantly and Aunt Mildred are lying down, and Mr. Barton has gone
off with Uncle Robert. There is nobody to disturb us.” She placed her hand on
the board. “Now begin.”
For a few minutes nothing happened. Chris started to speak, but
she hushed him to silence. The preliminary twitchings had appeared in her hand
and arm. Then the pencil began to write. They read the message, word by word,
as it was written:
There is wisdom greater than the wisdom of reason. Love proceeds
not out of the dry-as-dust way of the mind. Love is of the heart, and is beyond
all reason, and logic, and philosophy. Trust your own heart, my daughter. And
if your heart bids you have faith in your lover, then laugh at the mind and its
cold wisdom, and obey your heart, and have faith in your lover.—Martha.
“But that whole message is the dictate of your own heart,” Chris
cried. “Don’t you see, Lute? The thought is your very own, and your
subconscious mind has expressed it there on the paper.”
“But there is one thing I don’t see,” she objected.
“And that?”
“Is the handwriting. Look at it. It does not resemble mine at all.
It is mincing, it is old-fashioned, it is the old-fashioned feminine of a
generation ago.”
“But you don’t mean to tell me that you really believe that this is
a message from the dead?” he interrupted.
“I don’t know, Chris,” she wavered. “I am sure I don’t know.”
“It is absurd!” he cried. “These are cobwebs of fancy. When one
dies, he is dead. He is dust. He goes to the worms, as Martin says. The dead? I
laugh at the dead. They do not exist. They are not. I defy the powers of the
grave, the men dead and dust and gone!
“And what have you to say to that?” he challenged, placing his
hand on Planchette.
On the instant his hand began to write. Both were startled by the
suddenness of it. The message was brief:
BEWARE! BEWARE! BEWARE!
He was distinctly sobered, but he laughed. “It is like a miracle
play. Death we have, speaking to us from the grave. But Good Deeds, where art
thou? And Kindred? and Joy? and Household Goods? and Friendship? and all the
goodly company?”
But Lute did not share his bravado. Her fright showed itself in
her face. She laid her trembling hand on his arm.
“Oh, Chris, let us stop. I am sorry we began it. Let us leave the
quiet dead to their rest. It is wrong. It must be wrong. I confess I am
affected by it. I cannot help it. As my body is trembling, so is my soul. This
speech of the grave, this dead man reaching out from the mould of a generation
to protect me from you. There is reason in it. There is the living mystery that
prevents you from marrying me. Were my father alive, he would protect me from
you. Dead, he still strives to protect me. His hands, his ghostly hands, are
against your life!”
“Do be calm,” Chris said soothingly. “Listen to me. It is all a
lark. We are playing with the subjective forces of our own being, with
phenomena which science has not yet explained, that is all. Psychology is so
young a science. The subconscious mind has just been discovered, one might say.
It is all mystery as yet; the laws of it are yet to be formulated. This is
simply unexplained phenomena. But that is no reason that we should immediately
account for it by labelling it spiritism. As yet we do not know, that is all.
As for Planchette—”
He abruptly ceased, for at that moment, to enforce his remark, he
had placed his hand on Planchette, and at that moment his hand had been seized,
as by a paroxysm, and sent dashing, willy-nilly, across the paper, writing as
the hand of an angry person would write.
“No, I don’t care for any more of it,” Lute said, when the message
was completed. “It is like witnessing a fight between you and my father in the
flesh. There is the savor in it of struggle and blows.”
She pointed out a sentence that read: “You cannot escape me nor the
just punishment that is yours!”
“Perhaps I visualize too vividly for my own comfort, for I can see
his hands at your throat. I know that he is, as you say, dead and dust, but for
all that, I can see him as a man that is alive and walks the earth; I see the
anger in his face, the anger and the vengeance, and I see it all directed
against you.”
She crumpled up the scrawled sheets of paper, and put Planchette
away.
“We won’t bother with it any more,” Chris said. “I didn’t think it
would affect you so strongly. But it’s all subjective, I’m sure, with possibly
a bit of suggestion thrown in—that and nothing more. And the whole strain of
our situation has made conditions unusually favorable for striking phenomena.”
“And about our situation,” Lute said, as they went slowly up the
path they had run down. “What we are to do, I don’t know. Are we to go on, as
we have gone on? What is best? Have you thought of anything?”
He debated for a few steps. “I have thought of telling your uncle
and aunt.”
“What you couldn’t tell me?” she asked quickly.
“No,” he answered slowly; “but just as much as I have told you. I
have no right to tell them more than I have told you.”
This time it was she that debated. “No, don’t tell them,” she said
finally. “They wouldn’t understand. I don’t understand, for that matter, but I
have faith in you, and in the nature of things they are not capable of this
same implicit faith. You raise up before me a mystery that prevents our
marriage, and I believe you; but they could not believe you without doubts
arising as to the wrong and ill-nature of the mystery. Besides, it would but
make their anxieties greater.”
“I should go away, I know I should go away,” he said, half under
his breath. “And I can. I am no weakling. Because I have failed to remain away once,
is no reason that I shall fail again.”
She caught her breath with a quick gasp. “It is like a bereavement
to hear you speak of going away and remaining away. I should never see you
again. It is too terrible. And do not reproach yourself for weakness. It is I
who am to blame. It is I who prevented you from remaining away before, I know.
I wanted you so. I want you so.
“There is nothing to be done, Chris, nothing to be done but to go
on with it and let it work itself out somehow. That is one thing we are sure
of: it will work out somehow.”
“But it would be easier if I went away,” he suggested.
“I am happier when you are here.”
“The cruelty of circumstance,” he muttered savagely.
“Go or stay—that will be part of the working out. But I do not
want you to go, Chris; you know that. And now no more about it. Talk cannot
mend it. Let us never mention it again—unless... unless some time, some
wonderful, happy time, you can come to me and say: ‘Lute, all is well with me.
The mystery no longer binds me. I am free.’ Until that time let us bury it,
along with Planchette and all the rest, and make the most of the little that is
given us.
“And now, to show you how prepared I am to make the most of that
little, I am even ready to go with you this afternoon to see the horse—though I
wish you wouldn’t ride any more... for a few days, anyway, or for a week. What
did you say was his name?”
“Comanche,” he answered. “I know you will like him.”
000
Chris lay on his back, his head propped by the bare jutting wall
of stone, his gaze attentively directed across the canyon to the opposing
tree-covered slope. There was a sound of crashing through underbrush, the
ringing of steel-shod hoofs on stone, and an occasional and mossy descent of a
dislodged boulder that bounded from the hill and fetched up with a final splash
in the torrent that rushed over a wild chaos of rocks beneath him. Now and
again he caught glimpses, framed in green foliage, of the golden brown of
Lute’s corduroy riding-habit and of the bay horse that moved beneath her.
She rode out into an open space where a loose earth-slide denied
lodgement to trees and grass. She halted the horse at the brink of the slide
and glanced down it with a measuring eye. Forty feet beneath, the slide
terminated in a small, firm-surfaced terrace, the banked accumulation of fallen
earth and gravel.
“It’s a good test,” she called across the canyon. “I’m going to
put him down it.”
The animal gingerly launched himself on the treacherous footing,
irregularly losing and gaining his hind feet, keeping his fore legs stiff, and
steadily and calmly, without panic or nervousness, extricating the fore feet as
fast as they sank too deep into the sliding earth that surged along in a wave
before him. When the firm footing at the bottom was reached, he strode out on
the little terrace with a quickness and springiness of gait and with glintings
of muscular fires that gave the lie to the calm deliberation of his movements
on the slide.
“Bravo!” Chris shouted across the canyon, clapping his hands.
“The wisest-footed, clearest-headed horse I ever saw,” Lute called
back, as she turned the animal to the side and dropped down a broken slope of
rubble and into the trees again.
Chris followed her by the sound of her progress, and by occasional
glimpses where the foliage was more open, as she zigzagged down the steep and
trailless descent. She emerged below him at the rugged rim of the torrent,
dropped the horse down a three-foot wall, and halted to study the crossing.
Four feet out in the stream, a narrow ledge thrust above the
surface of the water. Beyond the ledge boiled an angry pool. But to the left,
from the ledge, and several feet lower, was a tiny bed of gravel. A giant
boulder prevented direct access to the gravel bed. The only way to gain it was
by first leaping to the ledge of rock. She studied it carefully, and the
tightening of her bridle-arm advertised that she had made up her mind.
Chris, in his anxiety, had sat up to observe more closely what she
meditated.
“Don’t tackle it,” he called.
“I have faith in Comanche,” she called in return.
“He can’t make that side-jump to the gravel,” Chris warned. “He’ll
never keep his legs. He’ll topple over into the pool. Not one horse in a
thousand could do that stunt.”
“And Comanche is that very horse,” she answered. “Watch him.”
She gave the animal his head, and he leaped cleanly and accurately
to the ledge, striking with feet close together on the narrow space. On the
instant he struck, Lute lightly touched his neck with the rein, impelling him
to the left; and in that instant, tottering on the insecure footing, with front
feet slipping over into the pool beyond, he lifted on his hind legs, with a
half turn, sprang to the left, and dropped squarely down to the tiny gravel
bed. An easy jump brought him across the stream, and Lute angled him up the
bank and halted before her lover.
“Well?” she asked.
“I am all tense,” Chris answered. “I was holding my breath.”
“Buy him, by all means,” Lute said, dismounting. “He is a bargain.
I could dare anything on him. I never in my life had such confidence in a
horse’s feet.”
“His owner says that he has never been known to lose his feet,
that it is impossible to get him down.”
“Buy him, buy him at once,” she counselled, “before the man
changes his mind. If you don’t, I shall. Oh, such feet! I feel such confidence
in them that when I am on him I don’t consider he has feet at all. And he’s
quick as a cat, and instantly obedient. Bridle-wise is no name for it! You
could guide him with silken threads. Oh, I know I’m enthusiastic, but if you don’t
buy him, Chris. I shall. Remember, I’ve second refusal.”
Chris smiled agreement as he changed the saddles. Meanwhile she
compared the two horses.
“Of course he doesn’t match Dolly the way Ban did,” she concluded
regretfully; “but his coat is splendid just the same. And think of the horse
that is under the coat!”
Chris gave her a hand into the saddle, and followed her up the
slope to the county road. She reined in suddenly, saying:
“We won’t go straight back to camp.”
“You forget dinner,” he warned.
“But I remember Comanche,” she retorted. “We’ll ride directly over
to the ranch and buy him. Dinner will keep.”
“But the cook won’t,” Chris laughed. “She’s already threatened to
leave, what of our late-comings.”
“Even so,” was the answer. “Aunt Mildred may have to get another
cook, but at any rate we shall have got Comanche.”
They turned the horses in the other direction, and took the climb
of the Nun Canyon road that led over the divide and down into the Napa Valley.
But the climb was hard, the going was slow. Sometimes they topped the bed of
the torrent by hundreds of feet, and again they dipped down and crossed and
recrossed it twenty times in twice as many rods. They rode through the deep
shade of clean-bunked maples and towering redwoods, to emerge on open stretches
of mountain shoulder where the earth lay dry and cracked under the sun.
On one such shoulder they emerged, where the road stretched level
before them, for a quarter of a mile. On one side rose the huge bulk of the
mountain. On the other side the steep wall of the canyon fell away in
impossible slopes and sheer drops to the torrent at the bottom. It was an abyss
of green beauty and shady depths, pierced by vagrant shafts of the sun and
mottled here and there by the sun’s broader blazes. The sound of rushing water
ascended on the windless air, and there was a hum of mountain bees.
The horses broke into an easy lope. Chris rode on the outside,
looking down into the great depths and pleasuring with his eyes in what he saw.
Dissociating itself from the murmur of the bees, a murmur arose of falling
water. It grew louder with every stride of the horses.
“Look!” he cried.
Lute leaned well out from her horse to see. Beneath them the water
slid foaming down a smooth-faced rock to the lip, whence it leaped clear—a
pulsating ribbon of white, a-breath with movement, ever falling and ever
remaining, changing its substance but never its form, an aerial waterway as
immaterial as gauze and as permanent as the hills, that spanned space and the
free air from the lip of the rock to the tops of the trees far below, into
whose green screen it disappeared to fall into a secret pool.
They had flashed past. The descending water became a distant
murmur that merged again into the murmur of the bees and ceased. Swayed by a
common impulse, they looked at each other.
“Oh, Chris, it is good to be alive... and to have you here by my
side!”
He answered her by the warm light in his eyes.
All things tended to key them to an exquisite pitch—the movement
of their bodies, at one with the moving bodies of the animals beneath them; the
gently stimulated blood caressing the flesh through and through with the soft
vigors of health; the warm air fanning their faces, flowing over the skin with
balmy and tonic touch, permeating them and bathing them, subtly, with faint,
sensuous delight; and the beauty of the world, more subtly still, flowing upon
them and bathing them in the delight that is of the spirit and is personal and
holy, that is inexpressible yet communicable by the flash of an eye and the
dissolving of the veils of the soul.
So looked they at each other, the horses bounding beneath them,
the spring of the world and the spring of their youth astir in their blood, the
secret of being trembling in their eyes to the brink of disclosure, as if about
to dispel, with one magic word, all the irks and riddles of existence.
The road curved before them, so that the upper reaches of the
canyon could be seen, the distant bed of it towering high above their heads.
They were rounding the curve, leaning toward the inside, gazing before them at
the swift-growing picture. There was no sound of warning. She heard nothing,
but even before the horse went down she experienced the feeling that the unison
of the two leaping animals was broken. She turned her head, and so quickly that
she saw Comanche fall. It was not a stumble nor a trip. He fell as though,
abruptly, in midleap, he had died or been struck a stunning blow.
And in that moment she remembered Planchette; it seared her brain
as a lightning-flash of all-embracing memory. Her horse was back on its
haunches, the weight of her body on the reins; but her head was turned and her
eyes were on the falling Comanche. He struck the road-bed squarely, with his
legs loose and lifeless beneath him.
It all occurred in one of those age-long seconds that embrace an
eternity of happening. There was a slight but perceptible rebound from the
impact of Comanche’s body with the earth. The violence with which he struck
forced the air from his great lungs in an audible groan. His momentum swept him
onward and over the edge. The weight of the rider on his neck turned him over
head first as he pitched to the fall.
She was off her horse, she knew not how, and to the edge. Her
lover was out of the saddle and clear of Comanche, though held to the animal by
his right foot, which was caught in the stirrup. The slope was too steep for
them to come to a stop. Earth and small stones, dislodged by their struggles,
were rolling down with them and before them in a miniature avalanche. She stood
very quietly, holding one hand against her heart and gazing down. But while she
saw the real happening, in her eyes was also the vision of her father dealing
the spectral blow that had smashed Comanche down in mid-leap and sent horse and
rider hurtling over the edge.
Beneath horse and man the steep terminated in an up-and-down wall,
from the base of which, in turn, a second slope ran down to a second wall. A
third slope terminated in a final wall that based itself on the canyon-bed four
hundred feet beneath the point where the girl stood and watched. She could see
Chris vainly kicking his leg to free the foot from the trap of the stirrup.
Comanche fetched up hard against an outputting point of rock. For a fraction of
a second his fall was stopped, and in the slight interval the man managed to
grip hold of a young shoot of manzanita. Lute saw him complete the grip with
his other hand. Then Comanche’s fall began again. She saw the stirrup-strap
draw taut, then her lover’s body and arms. The manzanita shoot yielded its
roots, and horse and man plunged over the edge and out of sight.
They came into view on the next slope, together and rolling over
and over, with sometimes the man under and sometimes the horse. Chris no longer
struggled, and together they dashed over to the third slope. Near the edge of
the final wall, Comanche lodged on a buttock of stone. He lay quietly, and near
him, still attached to him by the stirrup, face downward, lay his rider.
“If only he will lie quietly,” Lute breathed aloud, her mind at
work on the means of rescue.
But she saw Comanche begin to struggle again, and clear on her
vision, it seemed, was the spectral arm of her father clutching the reins and
dragging the animal over. Comanche floundered across the hummock, the inert
body following, and together, horse and man, they plunged from sight. They did
not appear again. They had fetched bottom.
Lute looked about her. She stood alone on the world. Her lover was
gone. There was naught to show of his existence, save the marks of Comanche’s
hoofs on the road and of his body where it had slid over the brink.
“Chris!” she called once, and twice; but she called hopelessly.
Out of the depths, on the windless air, arose only the murmur of
bees and of running water.
“Chris!” she called yet a third time, and sank slowly down in the
dust of the road.
She felt the touch of Dolly’s muzzle on her arm, and she leaned
her head against the mare’s neck and waited. She knew not why she waited, nor
for what, only there seemed nothing else but waiting left for her to do.
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