I.THE WORLD AND THE DOOR
A favourite dodge to get
your story read by the public is to assert that it is true, and then add that
Truth is stranger than Fiction. I do not know if the yarn I am anxious for you
to read is true; but the Spanish purser of the fruit steamer El Carrero swore
to me by the shrine of Santa Guadalupe that he had the facts from the U. S.
vice-consul at La Paz—a person who could not possibly have been cognizant of
half of them.
As for the adage quoted above, I take pleasure in puncturing it by
affirming that I read in a purely fictional story the other day the line: “‘Be
it so,’ said the policeman.” Nothing so strange has yet cropped out in Truth.
When H. Ferguson Hedges, millionaire promoter, investor and
man-about-New-York, turned his thoughts upon matters convivial, and word of it
went “down the line,” bouncers took a precautionary turn at the Indian clubs,
waiters put ironstone china on his favourite tables, cab drivers crowded close
to the curbstone in front of all-night cafés, and careful cashiers in his
regular haunts charged up a few bottles to his account by way of preface and
introduction.
As a money power a one-millionaire is of small account in a city
where the man who cuts your slice of beef behind the free-lunch counter rides
to work in his own automobile. But Hedges spent his money as lavishly, loudly
and showily as though he were only a clerk squandering a week’s wages. And,
after all, the bartender takes no interest in your reserve fund. He would
rather look you up on his cash register than in Bradstreet.
On the evening that the material allegation of facts begins,
Hedges was bidding dull care begone in the company of five or six good
fellows—acquaintances and friends who had gathered in his wake.
Among them were two younger men—Ralph Merriam, a broker, and Wade,
his friend.
Two deep-sea cabmen were chartered. At Columbus Circle they hove
to long enough to revile the statue of the great navigator, unpatriotically
rebuking him for having voyaged in search of land instead of liquids. Midnight
overtook the party marooned in the rear of a cheap café far uptown.
Hedges was arrogant, overriding and quarrelsome. He was burly and
tough, iron-gray but vigorous, “good” for the rest of the night. There was a
dispute—about nothing that matters—and the five-fingered words were passed—the
words that represent the glove cast into the lists. Merriam played the rôle of
the verbal Hotspur.
Hedges rose quickly, seized his chair, swung it once and smashed
wildly down at Merriam’s head. Merriam dodged, drew a small revolver and shot
Hedges in the chest. The leading roysterer stumbled, fell in a wry heap, and
lay still.
Wade, a commuter, had formed that habit of promptness. He juggled
Merriam out a side door, walked him to the corner, ran him a block and caught a
hansom. They rode five minutes and then got out on a dark corner and dismissed
the cab. Across the street the lights of a small saloon betrayed its hectic
hospitality.
“Go in the back room of that saloon,” said Wade, “and wait. I’ll
go find out what’s doing and let you know. You may take two drinks while I am
gone—no more.”
At ten minutes to one o’clock Wade returned. “Brace up, old chap,”
he said. “The ambulance got there just as I did. The doctor says he’s dead. You
may have one more drink. You let me run this thing for you. You’ve got to skip.
I don’t believe a chair is legally a deadly weapon. You’ve got to make tracks,
that’s all there is to it.”
Merriam complained of the cold querulously, and asked for another
drink. “Did you notice what big veins he had on the back of his hands?” he
said. “I never could stand—I never could—”
“Take one more,” said Wade, “and then come on. I’ll see you
through.”
Wade kept his promise so well that at eleven o’clock the next
morning Merriam, with a new suit case full of new clothes and hair-brushes,
stepped quietly on board a little 500-ton fruit steamer at an East River pier.
The vessel had brought the season’s first cargo of limes from Port Limon, and
was homeward bound. Merriam had his bank balance of $2,800 in his pocket in
large bills, and brief instructions to pile up as much water as he could
between himself and New York. There was no time for anything more.
From Port Limon Merriam worked down the coast by schooner and
sloop to Colon, thence across the isthmus to Panama, where he caught a tramp
bound for Callao and such intermediate ports as might tempt the discursive
skipper from his course.
It was at La Paz that Merriam decided to land—La Paz the
Beautiful, a little harbourless town smothered in a living green ribbon that
banded the foot of a cloud-piercing mountain. Here the little steamer stopped
to tread water while the captain’s dory took him ashore that he might feel the
pulse of the cocoanut market. Merriam went too, with his suit case, and
remained.
Kalb, the vice-consul, a Græco-Armenian citizen of the United
States, born in Hessen-Darmstadt, and educated in Cincinnati ward primaries,
considered all Americans his brothers and bankers. He attached himself to Merriam’s
elbow, introduced him to every one in La Paz who wore shoes, borrowed ten
dollars and went back to his hammock.
There was a little wooden hotel in the edge of a banana grove,
facing the sea, that catered to the tastes of the few foreigners that had
dropped out of the world into the triste Peruvian town. At
Kalb’s introductory: “Shake hands with ––––,” he had obediently exchanged
manual salutations with a German doctor, one French and two Italian merchants,
and three or four Americans who were spoken of as gold men, rubber men,
mahogany men—anything but men of living tissue.
After dinner Merriam sat in a corner of the broad front galeria with
Bibb, a Vermonter interested in hydraulic mining, and smoked and drank Scotch
“smoke.” The moonlit sea, spreading infinitely before him, seemed to separate
him beyond all apprehension from his old life. The horrid tragedy in which he
had played such a disastrous part now began, for the first time since he stole
on board the fruiter, a wretched fugitive, to lose its sharper outlines.
Distance lent assuagement to his view. Bibb had opened the flood-gates of a
stream of long-dammed discourse, overjoyed to have captured an audience that
had not suffered under a hundred repetitions of his views and theories.
“One year more,” said Bibb, “and I’ll go back to God’s country.
Oh, I know it’s pretty here, and you get dolce far niente handed
to you in chunks, but this country wasn’t made for a white man to live in.
You’ve got to have to plug through snow now and then, and see a game of
baseball and wear a stiff collar and have a policeman cuss you. Still, La Paz
is a good sort of a pipe-dreamy old hole. And Mrs. Conant is here. When any of
us feels particularly like jumping into the sea we rush around to her house and
propose. It’s nicer to be rejected by Mrs. Conant than it is to be drowned. And
they say drowning is a delightful sensation.”
“Many like her here?” asked Merriam.
“Not anywhere,” said Bibb, with a comfortable sigh. She’s the only
white woman in La Paz. The rest range from a dappled dun to the colour of a
b-flat piano key. She’s been here a year. Comes from—well, you know how a woman
can talk—ask ’em to say ‘string’ and they’ll say ‘crow’s foot’ or ‘cat’s
cradle.’ Sometimes you’d think she was from Oshkosh, and again from
Jacksonville, Florida, and the next day from Cape Cod.”
“Mystery?” ventured Merriam.
“M—well, she looks it; but her talk’s translucent enough. But
that’s a woman. I suppose if the Sphinx were to begin talking she’d merely say:
‘Goodness me! more visitors coming for dinner, and nothing to eat but the sand
which is here.’ But you won’t think about that when you meet her, Merriam.
You’ll propose to her too.”
To make a hard story soft, Merriam did meet her and propose to
her. He found her to be a woman in black with hair the colour of a bronze
turkey’s wings, and mysterious, remembering eyes that—well,
that looked as if she might have been a trained nurse looking on when Eve was
created. Her words and manner, though, were translucent, as Bibb had said. She
spoke, vaguely, of friends in California and some of the lower parishes in
Louisiana. The tropical climate and indolent life suited her; she had thought
of buying an orange grove later on; La Paz, all in all, charmed her.
Merriam’s courtship of the Sphinx lasted three months, although be
did not know that he was courting her. He was using her as an antidote for
remorse, until he found, too late, that he had acquired the habit. During that
time he had received no news from home. Wade did not know where he was; and he
was not sure of Wade’s exact address, and was afraid to write. He thought he
had better let matters rest as they were for a while.
One afternoon he and Mrs. Conant hired two ponies and rode out
along the mountain trail as far as the little cold river that came tumbling
down the foothills. There they stopped for a drink, and Merriam spoke his
piece—he proposed, as Bibb had prophesied.
Mrs. Conant gave him one glance of brilliant tenderness, and then
her face took on such a strange, haggard look that Merriam was shaken out of
his intoxication and back to his senses.
“I beg your pardon, Florence,” he said, releasing her hand; “but
I’ll have to hedge on part of what I said. I can’t ask you to marry me, of
course. I killed a man in New York—a man who was my friend—shot him down—in
quite a cowardly manner, I understand. Of course, the drinking didn’t excuse
it. Well, I couldn’t resist having my say; and I’ll always mean it. I’m here as
a fugitive from justice, and—I suppose that ends our acquaintance.”
Mrs. Conant plucked little leaves assiduously from the low-hanging
branch of a lime tree.
“I suppose so,” she said, in low and oddly uneven tones; “but that
depends upon you. I’ll be as honest as you were. I poisoned my husband. I am a
self-made widow. A man cannot love a murderess. So I suppose that ends our
acquaintance.”
She looked up at him slowly. His face turned a little pale, and he
stared at her blankly, like a deaf-and-dumb man who was wondering what it was
all about.
She took a swift step toward him, with stiffened arms and eyes
blazing.
“Don’t look at me like that!” she cried, as though she were in
acute pain. “Curse me, or turn your back on me, but don’t look that way. Am I a
woman to be beaten? If I could show you—here on my arms, and on my back are
scars—and it has been more than a year—scars that he made in his brutal rages.
A holy nun would have risen and struck the fiend down. Yes, I killed him. The
foul and horrible words that he hurled at me that last day are repeated in my
ears every night when I sleep. And then came his blows, and the end of my
endurance. I got the poison that afternoon. It was his custom to drink every
night in the library before going to bed a hot punch made of rum and wine. Only
from my fair hands would he receive it— because he knew the fumes of spirits
always sickened me. That night when the maid brought it to me I sent her
downstairs on an errand. Before taking him his drink I went to my little
private cabinet and poured into it more than a tea-spoonful of tincture of aconite—enough
to kill three men, so I had learned. I had drawn $6,000 that I had in bank, and
with that and a few things in a satchel I left the house without any one seeing
me. As I passed the library I heard him stagger up and fall heavily on a couch.
I took a night train for New Orleans, and from there I sailed to the Bermudas.
I finally cast anchor in La Paz. And now what have you to say? Can you open
your mouth?”
Merriam came back to life.
“Florence,” he said earnestly, “I want you. I don’t care what you’ve
done. If the world—”
“Ralph,” she interrupted, almost with a scream, “be my world!”
Her eyes melted; she relaxed magnificently and swayed toward
Merriam so suddenly that he had to jump to catch her.
Dear me! in such scenes how the talk runs into artificial prose.
But it can’t be helped. It’s the subconscious smell of the footlights’ smoke
that’s in all of us. Stir the depths of your cook’s soul sufficiently and she
will discourse in Bulwer-Lyttonese.
Merriam and Mrs. Conant were very happy. He announced their
engagement at the Hotel Orilla del Mar. Eight foreigners and four native Astors
pounded his back and shouted insincere congratulations at him. Pedrito, the
Castilian-mannered barkeep, was goaded to extra duty until his agility would
have turned a Boston cherry-phosphate clerk a pale lilac with envy.
They were both very happy. According to the strange mathematics of
the god of mutual affinity, the shadows that clouded their pasts when united
became only half as dense instead of darker. They shut the world out and bolted
the doors. Each was the other’s world. Mrs. Conant lived again. The remembering
look left her eyes. Merriam was with her every moment that was possible. On a
little plateau under a grove of palms and calabash trees they were going to
build a fairy bungalow. They were to be married in two months. Many hours of
the day they had their heads together over the house plans. Their joint capital
would set up a business in fruit or woods that would yield a comfortable
support. “Good night, my world,” would say Mrs. Conant every evening when
Merriam left her for his hotel. They were very happy. Their love had,
circumstantially, that element of melancholy in it that it seems to require to
attain its supremest elevation. And it seemed that their mutual great
misfortune or sin was a bond that nothing could sever.
One day a steamer hove in the offing. Bare-legged and
bare-shouldered La Paz scampered down to the beach, for the arrival of a
steamer was their loop-the-loop, circus, Emancipation Day and four-o’clock tea.
When the steamer was near enough, wise ones proclaimed that she
was the Pajaro, bound up-coast from Callao to Panama.
The Pajaro put on brakes a mile off shore. Soon a
boat came bobbing shoreward. Merriam strolled down on the beach to look on. In
the shallow water the Carib sailors sprang out and dragged the boat with a
mighty rush to the firm shingle. Out climbed the purser, the captain and two
passengers, ploughing their way through the deep sand toward the hotel. Merriam
glanced toward them with the mild interest due to strangers. There was
something familiar to him in the walk of one of the passengers. He looked
again, and his blood seemed to turn to strawberry ice cream in his veins.
Burly, arrogant, debonair as ever, H. Ferguson Hedges, the man he had killed,
was coming toward him ten feet away.
When Hedges saw Merriam his face flushed a dark red. Then he
shouted in his old, bluff way: “Hello, Merriam. Glad to see you. Didn’t expect
to find you out here. Quinby, this is my old friend Merriam, of New
York—Merriam, Mr. Quinby.”
Merriam gave Hedges and then Quinby an ice-cold hand. “Br-r-r-r!”
said Hedges. “But you’ve got a frappéd flipper! Man, you’re not well. You’re as
yellow as a Chinaman. Malarial here? Steer us to a bar if there is such a
thing, and let’s take a prophylactic.”
Merriam, still half comatose, led them toward the Hotel Orilla del
Mar.
“Quinby and I,” explained Hedges, puffing through the slippery
sand, “are looking out along the coast for some investments. We’ve just come up
from Concepción and Valparaiso and Lima. The captain of this subsidized ferry
boat told us there was some good picking around here in silver mines. So we got
off. Now, where is that café, Merriam? Oh, in this portable soda water
pavilion?”
Leaving Quinby at the bar, Hedges drew Merriam aside.
“Now, what does this mean?” he said, with gruff kindness. “Are you
sulking about that fool row we had?”
“I thought,” stammered Merriam—“I heard—they told me you were—that
I had—”
“Well, you didn’t, and I’m not,” said Hedges. “That fool young
ambulance surgeon told Wade I was a candidate for a coffin just because I’d got
tired and quit breathing. I laid up in a private hospital for a month; but here
I am, kicking as hard as ever. Wade and I tried to find you, but couldn’t. Now,
Merriam, shake hands and forget it all. I was as much to blame as you were; and
the shot really did me good—I came out of the hospital as healthy and fit as a
cab horse. Come on; that drink’s waiting.”
“Old man,” said Merriam, brokenly, “I don’t know how to thank
you—I—well, you know—”
“Oh, forget it,” boomed Hedges. “Quinby’ll die of thirst if we
don’t join him.”
Bibb was sitting on the shady side of the gallery waiting for the
eleven-o’clock breakfast. Presently Merriam came out and joined him. His eye
was strangely bright.
“Bibb, my boy,” said he, slowly waving his hand, “do you see those
mountains and that sea and sky and sunshine?—they’re mine, Bibbsy—all mine.”
“You go in,” said Bibb, “and take eight grains of quinine, right
away. It won’t do in this climate for a man to get to thinking he’s
Rockefeller, or James O’Neill either.”
Inside, the purser was untying a great roll of newspapers, many of
them weeks old, gathered in the lower ports by the Pajaro to
be distributed at casual stopping-places. Thus do the beneficent voyagers
scatter news and entertainment among the prisoners of sea and mountains.
Tio Pancho, the hotel proprietor, set his great
silver-rimmed anteojos upon his nose and divided the papers
into a number of smaller rolls. A barefooted muchacho dashed
in, desiring the post of messenger.
“Bien venido,” said Tio Pancho. “This to Señora Conant;
that to el Doctor S-S-Schlegel—Dios! what a name to say!—that to Señor
Davis—one for Don Alberto. These two for the Casa de Huespedes, Numero
6, en la calle de las Buenas Gracias. And say to them
all, muchacho, that the Pajaro sails for Panama at
three this afternoon. If any have letters to send by the post, let them come
quickly, that they may first pass through the correo.”
Mrs. Conant received her roll of newspapers at four o’clock. The
boy was late in delivering them, because he had been deflected from his duty by
an iguana that crossed his path and to which he immediately gave chase. But it
made no hardship, for she had no letters to send.
She was idling in a hammock in the patio of the house that she
occupied, half awake, half happily dreaming of the paradise that she and
Merriam had created out of the wrecks of their pasts. She was content now for
the horizon of that shimmering sea to be the horizon of her life. They had shut
out the world and closed the door.
Merriam was coming to her house at seven, after his dinner at the
hotel. She would put on a white dress and an apricot-coloured lace mantilla,
and they would walk an hour under the cocoanut palms by the lagoon. She smiled
contentedly, and chose a paper at random from the roll the boy had brought.
At first the words of a certain headline of a Sunday newspaper
meant nothing to her; they conveyed only a visualized sense of familiarity. The
largest type ran thus: “Lloyd B. Conant secures divorce.” And then the
subheadings: “Well-known Saint Louis paint manufacturer wins suit, pleading one
year’s absence of wife.” “Her mysterious disappearance recalled.” “Nothing has
been heard of her since.”
Twisting herself quickly out of the hammock, Mrs. Conant’s eye
soon traversed the half-column of the “Recall.” It ended thus: “It will be
remembered that Mrs. Conant disappeared one evening in March of last year. It
was freely rumoured that her marriage with Lloyd B. Conant resulted in much
unhappiness. Stories were not wanting to the effect that his cruelty toward his
wife had more than once taken the form of physical abuse. After her departure a
full bottle of tincture of aconite, a deadly poison, was found in a small
medicine cabinet in her bedroom. This might have been an indication that she
meditated suicide. It is supposed that she abandoned such an intention if she
possessed it, and left her home instead.”
Mrs. Conant slowly dropped the paper, and sat on a chair, clasping
her hands tightly.
“Let me think—O God!—let me think,” she whispered. “I took the
bottle with me . . . I threw it out of the window of the train . . . I— . . .
there was another bottle in the cabinet . . . there were two, side by side—the
aconite—and the valerian that I took when I could not sleep . . . If they found
the aconite bottle full, why—but, he is alive, of course—I gave him only a
harmless dose of valerian . . . I am not a murderess in fact . . . Ralph, I—O
God, don’t let this be a dream!”
She went into the part of the house that she rented from the old
Peruvian man and his wife, shut the door, and walked up and down her room
swiftly and feverishly for half an hour. Merriam’s photograph stood in a frame
on a table. She picked it up, looked at it with a smile of exquisite
tenderness, and—dropped four tears on it. And Merriam only twenty rods away!
Then she stood still for ten minutes, looking into space. She looked into space
through a slowly opening door. On her side of the door was the building
material for a castle of Romance—love, an Arcady of waving palms, a lullaby of
waves on the shore of a haven of rest, respite, peace, a lotus land of dreamy
ease and security—a life of poetry and heart’s ease and refuge. Romanticist, will
you tell me what Mrs. Conant saw on the other side of the door? You
cannot?—that is, you will not? Very well; then listen.
She saw herself go into a department store and buy five spools of
silk thread and three yards of gingham to make an apron for the cook. “Shall I
charge it, ma’am?” asked the clerk. As she walked out a lady whom she met
greeted her cordially. “Oh, where did you get the pattern for those sleeves,
dear Mrs. Conant?” she said. At the corner a policeman helped her across the
street and touched his helmet. “Any callers?” she asked the maid when she
reached home. “Mrs. Waldron,” answered the maid, “and the two Misses
Jenkinson.” “Very well,” she said. “You may bring me a cup of tea, Maggie.”
Mrs. Conant went to the door and called Angela, the old Peruvian
woman. “If Mateo is there send him to me.” Mateo, a half-breed, shuffling and
old but efficient, came.
“Is there a steamer or a vessel of any kind leaving this coast
to-night or to-morrow that I can get passage on?” she asked.
Mateo considered.
“At Punta Reina, thirty miles down the coast, señora,” he
answered, “there is a small steamer loading with cinchona and dyewoods. She
sails for San Francisco to-morrow at sunrise. So says my brother, who arrived
in his sloop to-day, passing by Punta Reina.”
“You must take me in that sloop to that steamer to-night. Will you
do that?”
“Perhaps—” Mateo shrugged a suggestive shoulder. Mrs. Conant took
a handful of money from a drawer and gave it to him.
“Get the sloop ready behind the little point of land below the
town,” she ordered. “Get sailors, and be ready to sail at six o’clock. In half
an hour bring a cart partly filled with straw into the patio here, and take my
trunk to the sloop. There is more money yet. Now, hurry.”
For one time Mateo walked away without shuffling his feet.
“Angela,” cried Mrs. Conant, almost fiercely, “come and help me
pack. I am going away. Out with this trunk. My clothes first. Stir yourself.
Those dark dresses first. Hurry.”
From the first she did not waver from her decision. Her view was
clear and final. Her door had opened and let the world in. Her love for Merriam
was not lessened; but it now appeared a hopeless and unrealizable thing. The
visions of their future that had seemed so blissful and complete had vanished.
She tried to assure herself that her renunciation was rather for his sake than
for her own. Now that she was cleared of her burden—at least, technically—would
not his own weigh too heavily upon him? If she should cling to him, would not
the difference forever silently mar and corrode their happiness? Thus she
reasoned; but there were a thousand little voices calling to her that she could
feel rather than hear, like the hum of distant, powerful machinery—the little
voices of the world, that, when raised in unison, can send their insistent call
through the thickest door.
Once while packing, a brief shadow of the lotus dream came back to
her. She held Merriam’s picture to her heart with one hand, while she threw a
pair of shoes into the trunk with her other.
At six o’clock Mateo returned and reported the sloop ready. He and
his brother lifted the trunk into the cart, covered it with straw and conveyed
it to the point of embarkation. From there they transferred it on board in the
sloop’s dory. Then Mateo returned for additional orders.
Mrs. Conant was ready. She had settled all business matters with
Angela, and was impatiently waiting. She wore a long, loose black-silk duster
that she often walked about in when the evenings were chilly. On her head was a
small round hat, and over it the apricot-coloured lace mantilla.
Dusk had quickly followed the short twilight. Mateo led her by
dark and grass-grown streets toward the point behind which the sloop was
anchored. On turning a corner they beheld the Hotel Orilla del Mar three
streets away, nebulously aglow with its array of kerosene lamps.
Mrs. Conant paused, with streaming eyes. “I must, I must see
him once before I go,” she murmured in anguish. But even then she did not
falter in her decision. Quickly she invented a plan by which she might speak to
him, and yet make her departure without his knowing. She would walk past the
hotel, ask some one to call him out and talk a few moments on some trivial
excuse, leaving him expecting to see her at her home at seven.
She unpinned her hat and gave it to Mateo. “Keep this, and wait
here till I come,” she ordered. Then she draped the mantilla over her head as
she usually did when walking after sunset, and went straight to the Orilla del
Mar.
She was glad to see the bulky, white-clad figure of Tio Pancho
standing alone on the gallery.
“Tio Pancho,” she said, with a charming smile, “may I trouble you
to ask Mr. Merriam to come out for just a few moments that I may speak with
him?”
Tio Pancho bowed as an elephant bows.
“Buenas tardes, Señora Conant,” he said, as a cavalier talks. And
then he went on, less at his ease:
“But does not the señora know that Señor Merriam sailed on
the Pajaro for Panama at three o’clock of this afternoon?”
Not many days ago my old
friend from the tropics, J. P. Bridger, United States consul on the island of
Ratona, was in the city. We had wassail and jubilee and saw the Flatiron
building, and missed seeing the Bronxless menagerie by about a couple of
nights. And then, at the ebb tide, we were walking up a street that parallels
and parodies Broadway.
A woman with a comely and mundane countenance passed us, holding
in leash a wheezing, vicious, waddling, brute of a yellow pug. The dog
entangled himself with Bridger’s legs and mumbled his ankles in a snarling,
peevish, sulky bite. Bridger, with a happy smile, kicked the breath out of the
brute; the woman showered us with a quick rain of well-conceived adjectives
that left us in no doubt as to our place in her opinion, and we passed on. Ten
yards farther an old woman with disordered white hair and her bankbook tucked
well hidden beneath her tattered shawl begged. Bridger stopped and disinterred
for her a quarter from his holiday waistcoat.
On the next corner a quarter of a ton of well-clothed man with a
rice-powdered, fat, white jowl, stood holding the chain of a devil-born bulldog
whose forelegs were strangers by the length of a dachshund. A little woman in a
last-season’s hat confronted him and wept, which was plainly all she could do,
while he cursed her in low sweet, practised tones.
Bridger smiled again—strictly to himself—and this time he took out
a little memorandum book and made a note of it. This he had no right to do
without due explanation, and I said so.
“It’s a new theory,” said Bridger, “that I picked up down in
Ratona. I’ve been gathering support for it as I knock about. The world isn’t
ripe for it yet, but—well I’ll tell you; and then you run your mind back along
the people you’ve known and see what you make of it.”
And so I cornered Bridger in a place where they have artificial
palms and wine; and he told me the story which is here in my words and on his
responsibility.
One afternoon at three o’clock, on the island of Ratona, a boy
raced along the beach screaming, “Pajaro, ahoy!”
Thus he made known the keenness of his hearing and the justice of
his discrimination in pitch.
He who first heard and made oral proclamation concerning the toot
of an approaching steamer’s whistle, and correctly named the steamer, was a
small hero in Ratona—until the next steamer came. Wherefore, there was rivalry
among the barefoot youth of Ratona, and many fell victims to the softly blown
conch shells of sloops which, as they enter harbour, sound surprisingly like a
distant steamer’s signal. And some could name you the vessel when its call, in
your duller ears, sounded no louder than the sigh of the wind through the
branches of the cocoanut palms.
But to-day he who proclaimed the Pajaro gained
his honours. Ratona bent its ear to listen; and soon the deep-tongued blast
grew louder and nearer, and at length Ratona saw above the line of palms on the
low “point” the two black funnels of the fruiter slowly creeping toward the
mouth of the harbour.
You must know that Ratona is an island twenty miles off the south
of a South American republic. It is a port of that republic; and it sleeps
sweetly in a smiling sea, toiling not nor spinning; fed by the abundant tropics
where all things “ripen, cease and fall toward the grave.”
Eight hundred people dream life away in a green-embowered village
that follows the horseshoe curve of its bijou harbour. They are mostly Spanish
and Indian mestizos, with a shading of San Domingo Negroes, a
lightening of pure-blood Spanish officials and a slight leavening of the froth
of three or four pioneering white races. No steamers touch at Ratona save the
fruit steamers which take on their banana inspectors there on their way to the
coast. They leave Sunday newspapers, ice, quinine, bacon, watermelons and
vaccine matter at the island and that is about all the touch Ratona gets with
the world.
The Pajaro paused at the mouth of the harbour,
rolling heavily in the swell that sent the whitecaps racing beyond the smooth
water inside. Already two dories from the village—one conveying fruit inspectors,
the other going for what it could get—were halfway out to the steamer.
The inspectors’ dory was taken on board with them, and the Pajaro steamed
away for the mainland for its load of fruit.
The other boat returned to Ratona bearing a contribution from the Pajaro’s store
of ice, the usual roll of newspapers and one passenger—Taylor Plunkett, sheriff
of Chatham County, Kentucky.
Bridger, the United States consul at Ratona, was cleaning his
rifle in the official shanty under a bread-fruit tree twenty yards from the
water of the harbour. The consul occupied a place somewhat near the tail of his
political party’s procession. The music of the band wagon sounded very faintly
to him in the distance. The plums of office went to others. Bridger’s share of
the spoils—the consulship at Ratona—was little more than a prune—a dried prune
from the boarding-house department of the public crib. But $900 yearly was
opulence in Ratona. Besides, Bridger had contracted a passion for shooting
alligators in the lagoons near his consulate, and was not unhappy.
He looked up from a careful inspection of his rifle lock and saw a
broad man filling his doorway. A broad, noiseless, slow-moving man, sunburned
almost to the brown of Vandyke. A man of forty-five, neatly clothed in homespun,
with scanty light hair, a close-clipped brown-and-gray beard and pale-blue eyes
expressing mildness and simplicity.
“You are Mr. Bridger, the consul,” said the broad man. “They
directed me here. Can you tell me what those big bunches of things like gourds
are in those trees that look like feather dusters along the edge of the water?”
“Take that chair,” said the consul, reoiling his cleaning rag.
“No, the other one—that bamboo thing won’t hold you. Why, they’re
cocoanuts—green cocoanuts. The shell of ’em is always a light green before
they’re ripe.”
“Much obliged,” said the other man, sitting down carefully. “I
didn’t quite like to tell the folks at home they were olives unless I was sure
about it. My name is Plunkett. I’m sheriff of Chatham County, Kentucky. I’ve
got extradition papers in my pocket authorizing the arrest of a man on this
island. They’ve been signed by the President of this country, and they’re in
correct shape. The man’s name is Wade Williams. He’s in the cocoanut raising
business. What he’s wanted for is the murder of his wife two years ago. Where
can I find him?”
The consul squinted an eye and looked through his rifle barrel.
“There’s nobody on the island who calls himself ‘Williams,’” he
remarked.
“Didn’t suppose there was,” said Plunkett mildly. “He’ll do by any
other name.”
“Besides myself,” said Bridger, “there are only two Americans on
Ratona—Bob Reeves and Henry Morgan.”
“The man I want sells cocoanuts,” suggested Plunkett.
“You see that cocoanut walk extending up to the point?” said the
consul, waving his hand toward the open door. “That belongs to Bob Reeves.
Henry Morgan owns half the trees to loo’ard on the island.”
“One, month ago,” said the sheriff, “Wade Williams wrote a
confidential letter to a man in Chatham county, telling him where he was and
how he was getting along. The letter was lost; and the person that found it
gave it away. They sent me after him, and I’ve got the papers. I reckon he’s
one of your cocoanut men for certain.”
“You’ve got his picture, of course,” said Bridger. “It might be
Reeves or Morgan, but I’d hate to think it. They’re both as fine fellows as
you’d meet in an all-day auto ride.”
“No,” doubtfully answered Plunkett; “there wasn’t any picture of
Williams to be had. And I never saw him myself. I’ve been sheriff only a year.
But I’ve got a pretty accurate description of him. About 5 feet 11; dark-hair
and eyes; nose inclined to be Roman; heavy about the shoulders; strong, white
teeth, with none missing; laughs a good deal, talkative; drinks considerably but
never to intoxication; looks you square in the eye when talking; age
thirty-five. Which one of your men does that description fit?”
The consul grinned broadly.
“I’ll tell you what you do,” he said, laying down his rifle and
slipping on his dingy black alpaca coat. “You come along, Mr. Plunkett, and
I’ll take you up to see the boys. If you can tell which one of ’em your
description fits better than it does the other you have the advantage of me.”
Bridger conducted the sheriff out and along the hard beach close
to which the tiny houses of the village were distributed. Immediately back of
the town rose sudden, small, thickly wooded hills. Up one of these, by means of
steps cut in the hard clay, the consul led Plunkett. On the very verge of an
eminence was perched a two-room wooden cottage with a thatched roof. A Carib
woman was washing clothes outside. The consul ushered the sheriff to the door
of the room that overlooked the harbour.
Two men were in the room, about to sit down, in their shirt
sleeves, to a table spread for dinner. They bore little resemblance one to the
other in detail; but the general description given by Plunkett could have been
justly applied to either. In height, colour of hair, shape of nose, build and
manners each of them tallied with it. They were fair types of jovial,
ready-witted, broad-gauged Americans who had gravitated together for
companionship in an alien land.
“Hello, Bridger” they called in unison at sight Of the consul.
“Come and have dinner with us!” And then they noticed Plunkett at his heels,
and came forward with hospitable curiosity.
“Gentlemen,” said the consul, his voice taking on unaccustomed
formality, “this is Mr. Plunkett. Mr. Plunkett—Mr. Reeves and Mr. Morgan.”
The cocoanut barons greeted the newcomer joyously. Reeves seemed
about an inch taller than Morgan, but his laugh was not quite as loud. Morgan’s
eyes were deep brown; Reeves’s were black. Reeves was the host and busied
himself with fetching other chairs and calling to the Carib woman for
supplemental table ware. It was explained that Morgan lived in a bamboo shack
to “loo’ard,” but that every day the two friends dined together. Plunkett stood
still during the preparations, looking about mildly with his pale-blue eyes.
Bridger looked apologetic and uneasy.
At length two other covers were laid and the company was assigned
to places. Reeves and Morgan stood side by side across the table from the
visitors. Reeves nodded genially as a signal for all to seat themselves. And
then suddenly Plunkett raised his hand with a gesture of authority. He was
looking straight between Reeves and Morgan.
“Wade Williams,” he said quietly, “you are under arrest for
murder.”
Reeves and Morgan instantly exchanged a quick, bright glance, the
quality of which was interrogation, with a seasoning of surprise. Then,
simultaneously they turned to the speaker with a puzzled and frank deprecation
in their gaze.
“Can’t say that we understand you, Mr. Plunkett,” said Morgan,
cheerfully. “Did you say ‘Williams’?”
“What’s the joke, Bridgy?” asked Reeves, turning, to the consul
with a smile.
Before Bridger could answer Plunkett spoke again.
“I’ll explain,” he said, quietly. “One of you don’t need any
explanation, but this is for the other one. One of you is Wade Williams of
Chatham County, Kentucky. You murdered your wife on May 5, two years ago, after
ill-treating and abusing her continually for five years. I have the proper
papers in my pocket for taking you back with me, and you are going. We will
return on the fruit steamer that comes back by this island to-morrow to leave
its inspectors. I acknowledge, gentlemen, that I’m not quite sure which one of
you is Williams. But Wade Williams goes back to Chatham County to-morrow. I
want you to understand that.”
A great sound of merry laughter from Morgan and Reeves went out
over the still harbour. Two or three fishermen in the fleet of sloops anchored
there looked up at the house of the diablos Americanos on the hill and
wondered.
“My dear Mr. Plunkett,” cried Morgan, conquering his mirth, “the
dinner is getting, cold. Let us sit down and eat. I am anxious to get my spoon
into that shark-fin soup. Business afterward.”
“Sit down, gentlemen, if you please,” added Reeves, pleasantly. “I
am sure Mr. Plunkett will not object. Perhaps a little time may be of advantage
to him in identifying—the gentleman he wishes to arrest.”
“No objections, I’m sure,” said Plunkett, dropping into his chair
heavily. “I’m hungry myself. I didn’t want to accept the hospitality of you
folks without giving you notice; that’s all.”
Reeves set bottles and glasses on the table.
“There’s cognac,” he said, “and anisada, and Scotch ‘smoke,’ and
rye. Take your choice.”
Bridger chose rye, Reeves poured three fingers of Scotch for
himself, Morgan took the same. The sheriff, against much protestation, filled
his glass from the water bottle.
“Here’s to the appetite,” said Reeves, raising his glass, “of Mr.
Williams!” Morgan’s laugh and his drink encountering sent him into a choking
splutter. All began to pay attention to the dinner, which was well cooked and
palatable.
“Williams!” called Plunkett, suddenly and sharply.
All looked up wonderingly. Reeves found the sheriff’s mild eye
resting upon him. He flushed a little.
“See here,” he said, with some asperity, “my name’s Reeves, and I
don’t want you to—” But the comedy of the thing came to his rescue, and he
ended with a laugh.
“I suppose, Mr. Plunkett,” said Morgan, carefully seasoning an
alligator pear, “that you are aware of the fact that you will import a good
deal of trouble for yourself into Kentucky if you take back the wrong man—that
is, of course, if you take anybody back?”
“Thank you for the salt,” said the sheriff. “Oh, I’ll take
somebody back. It’ll be one of you two gentlemen. Yes, I know I’d get stuck for
damages if I make a mistake. But I’m going to try to get the right man.”
“I’ll tell you what you do,” said Morgan, leaning forward with a
jolly twinkle in his eyes. “You take me. I’ll go without any trouble. The
cocoanut business hasn’t panned out well this year, and I’d like to make some extra
money out of your bondsmen.”
“That’s not fair,” chimed in Reeves. “I got only $16 a thousand
for my last shipment. Take me, Mr. Plunkett.”
“I’ll take Wade Williams,” said the sheriff, patiently, “or I’ll
come pretty close to it.”
“It’s like dining with a ghost,” remarked Morgan, with a pretended
shiver. “The ghost of a murderer, too! Will somebody pass the toothpicks to the
shade of the naughty Mr. Williams?”
Plunkett seemed as unconcerned as if he were dining at his own
table in Chatham County. He was a gallant trencherman, and the strange tropic
viands tickled his palate. Heavy, commonplace, almost slothful in his
movements, he appeared to be devoid of all the cunning and watchfulness of the
sleuth. He even ceased to observe, with any sharpness or attempted
discrimination, the two men, one of whom he had undertaken with surprising
self-confidence, to drag away upon the serious charge of wife-murder. Here,
indeed, was a problem set before him that if wrongly solved would have amounted
to his serious discomfiture, yet there he sat puzzling his soul (to all
appearances) over the novel flavour of a broiled iguana cutlet.
The consul felt a decided discomfort. Reeves and Morgan were his
friends and pals; yet the sheriff from Kentucky had a certain right to his
official aid and moral support. So Bridger sat the silentest around the board
and tried to estimate the peculiar situation. His conclusion was that both
Reeves and Morgan, quickwitted, as he knew them to be, had conceived at the
moment of Plunkett’s disclosure of his mission—and in the brief space of a
lightning flash—the idea that the other might be the guilty Williams; and that
each of them had decided in that moment loyally to protect his comrade against
the doom that threatened him. This was the consul’s theory and if he had been a
bookmaker at a race of wits for life and liberty he would have offered heavy
odds against the plodding sheriff from Chatham County, Kentucky.
When the meal was concluded the Carib woman came and removed the
dishes and cloth. Reeves strewed the table with excellent cigars, and Plunkett,
with the others, lighted one of these with evident gratification.
“I may be dull,” said Morgan, with a grin and a wink at Bridger;
“but I want to know if I am. Now, I say this is all a joke of Mr. Plunkett’s,
concocted to frighten two babes-in-the-woods. Is this Williamson to be taken
seriously or not?”
“‘Williams,’” corrected Plunkett gravely. “I never got off any
jokes in my life. I know I wouldn’t travel 2,000 miles to get off a poor one as
this would be if I didn’t take Wade Williams back with me. Gentlemen!”
continued the sheriff, now letting his mild eyes travel impartially from one of
the company to another, “see if you can find any joke in this case. Wade
Williams is listening to the words I utter now; but out of politeness, I will
speak of him as a third person. For five years he made his wife lead the life
of a dog—No; I’ll take that back. No dog in Kentucky was ever treated as she
was. He spent the money that she brought him—spent it at races, at the card
table and on horses and hunting. He was a good fellow to his friends, but a
cold, sullen demon at home. He wound up the five years of neglect by striking
her with his closed hand—a hand as hard as a stone—when she was ill and weak
from suffering. She died the next day; and he skipped. That’s all there is to
it. It’s enough. I never saw Williams; but I knew his wife. I’m not a man to
tell half. She and I were keeping company when she met him. She went to
Louisville on a visit and saw him there. I’ll admit that he spoilt my chances
in no time. I lived then on the edge of the Cumberland mountains. I was elected
sheriff of Chatham County a year after Wade Williams killed his wife. My
official duty sends me out here after him; but I’ll admit that there’s personal
feeling, too. And he’s going back with me. Mr.—er—Reeves, will you pass me a
match?
“Awfully imprudent of Williams,” said Morgan, putting his feet up
against the wall, “to strike a Kentucky lady. Seems to me I’ve heard they were
scrappers.”
“Bad, bad Williams,” said Reeves, pouring out more Scotch.
The two men spoke lightly, but the consul saw and felt the tension
and the carefulness in their actions and words. “Good old fellows,” he said to
himself; “they’re both all right. Each of ’em is standing by the other like a
little brick church.”
And then a dog walked into the room where they sat—a black-and-tan
hound, long-eared, lazy, confident of welcome.
Plunkett turned his head and looked at the animal, which halted,
confidently, within a few feet of his chair.
Suddenly the sheriff, with a deep-mouthed oath, left his seat and,
bestowed upon the dog a vicious and heavy kick, with his ponderous shoe.
The hound, heartbroken, astonished, with flapping ears and
incurved tail, uttered a piercing yelp of pain and surprise.
Reeves and the consul remained in their chairs, saying nothing,
but astonished at the unexpected show of intolerance from the easy-going man
from Chatham county.
But Morgan, with a suddenly purpling face, leaped, to his feet and
raised a threatening arm above the guest.
“You—brute!” he shouted, passionately; “why did you do that?”
Quickly the amenities returned, Plunkett muttered some indistinct
apology and regained his seat. Morgan with a decided effort controlled his
indignation and also returned to his chair.
And then Plunkett with the spring of a tiger, leaped around the
corner of the table and snapped handcuffs on the paralyzed Morgan’s wrists.
“Hound-lover and woman-killer!” he cried; “get ready to meet your
God.”
When Bridger had finished I asked him:
“Did he get the right man?”
“He did,” said the Consul.
“And how did he know?” I inquired, being in a kind of
bewilderment.
“When he put Morgan in the dory,” answered Bridger, “the next day
to take him aboard the Pajaro, this man Plunkett stopped to shake
hands with me and I asked him the same question.”
“‘Mr. Bridger,’ said he, ‘I’m a Kentuckian, and I’ve seen a great
deal of both men and animals. And I never yet saw a man that was overfond of
horses and dogs but what was cruel to women.’”
Lawyer Gooch bestowed
his undivided attention upon the engrossing arts of his profession. But one
flight of fancy did he allow his mind to entertain. He was fond of likening his
suite of office rooms to the bottom of a ship. The rooms were three in number,
with a door opening from one to another. These doors could also be closed.
“Ships,” Lawyer Gooch would say, “are constructed for safety, with
separate, water-tight compartments in their bottoms. If one compartment springs
a leak it fills with water; but the good ship goes on unhurt. Were it not for
the separating bulkheads one leak would sink the vessel. Now it often happens
that while I am occupied with clients, other clients with conflicting interests
call. With the assistance of Archibald—an office boy with a future—I cause the
dangerous influx to be diverted into separate compartments, while I sound with
my legal plummet the depth of each. If necessary, they may be baled into the
hallway and permitted to escape by way of the stairs, which we may term the lee
scuppers. Thus the good ship of business is kept afloat; whereas if the element
that supports her were allowed to mingle freely in her hold we might be
swamped—ha, ha, ha!”
The law is dry. Good jokes are few. Surely it might be permitted
Lawyer Gooch to mitigate the bore of briefs, the tedium of torts and the
prosiness of processes with even so light a levy upon the good property of
humour.
Lawyer Gooch’s practice leaned largely to the settlement of
marital infelicities. Did matrimony languish through complications, he
mediated, soothed and arbitrated. Did it suffer from implications, he
readjusted, defended and championed. Did it arrive at the extremity of
duplications, he always got light sentences for his clients.
But not always was Lawyer Gooch the keen, armed, wily belligerent,
ready with his two-edged sword to lop off the shackles of Hymen. He had been
known to build up instead of demolishing, to reunite instead of severing, to
lead erring and foolish ones back into the fold instead of scattering the
flock. Often had he by his eloquent and moving appeals sent husband and wife,
weeping, back into each other’s arms. Frequently he had coached childhood so
successfully that, at the psychological moment (and at a given signal) the
plaintive pipe of “Papa, won’t you tum home adain to me and muvver?” had won
the day and upheld the pillars of a tottering home.
Unprejudiced persons admitted that Lawyer Gooch received as big
fees from these reyoked clients as would have been paid him had the cases been
contested in court. Prejudiced ones intimated that his fees were doubled,
because the penitent couples always came back later for the divorce, anyhow.
There came a season in June when the legal ship of Lawyer Gooch
(to borrow his own figure) was nearly becalmed. The divorce mill grinds slowly
in June. It is the month of Cupid and Hymen.
Lawyer Gooch, then, sat idle in the middle room of his clientless
suite. A small anteroom connected—or rather separated—this apartment from the
hallway. Here was stationed Archibald, who wrested from visitors their cards or
oral nomenclature which he bore to his master while they waited.
Suddenly, on this day, there came a great knocking at the
outermost door.
Archibald, opening it, was thrust aside as superfluous by the
visitor, who without due reverence at once penetrated to the office of Lawyer
Gooch and threw himself with good-natured insolence into a comfortable chair
facing that gentlemen.
“You are Phineas C. Gooch, attorney-at-law?” said the visitor, his
tone of voice and inflection making his words at once a question, an assertion
and an accusation.
Before committing himself by a reply, the lawyer estimated his
possible client in one of his brief but shrewd and calculating glances.
The man was of the emphatic type—large-sized, active, bold and
debonair in demeanour, vain beyond a doubt, slightly swaggering, ready and at
ease. He was well-clothed, but with a shade too much ornateness. He was seeking
a lawyer; but if that fact would seem to saddle him with troubles they were not
patent in his beaming eye and courageous air.
“My name is Gooch,” at length the lawyer admitted. Upon pressure
he would also have confessed to the Phineas C. But he did not consider it good
practice to volunteer information. “I did not receive your card,” he continued,
by way of rebuke, “so I—”
“I know you didn’t,” remarked the visitor, coolly; “And you won’t
just yet. Light up?” He threw a leg over an arm of his chair, and tossed a
handful of rich-hued cigars upon the table. Lawyer Gooch knew the brand. He
thawed just enough to accept the invitation to smoke.
“You are a divorce lawyer,” said the cardless visitor. This time
there was no interrogation in his voice. Nor did his words constitute a simple
assertion. They formed a charge—a denunciation—as one would say to a dog: “You
are a dog.” Lawyer Gooch was silent under the imputation.
“You handle,” continued the visitor, “all the various
ramifications of busted-up connubiality. You are a surgeon, we might say, who
extracts Cupid’s darts when he shoots ’em into the wrong parties. You furnish
patent, incandescent lights for premises where the torch of Hymen has burned so
low you can’t light a cigar at it. Am I right, Mr. Gooch?”
“I have undertaken cases,” said the lawyer, guardedly, “in the
line to which your figurative speech seems to refer. Do you wish to consult me
professionally, Mr. ––––” The lawyer paused, with significance.
“Not yet,” said the other, with an arch wave of his cigar, “not
just yet. Let us approach the subject with the caution that should have been
used in the original act that makes this pow-wow necessary. There exists a
matrimonial jumble to be straightened out. But before I give you names I want
your honest—well, anyhow, your professional opinion on the merits of the
mix-up. I want you to size up the catastrophe—abstractly—you understand? I’m
Mr. Nobody; and I’ve got a story to tell you. Then you say what’s what. Do you
get my wireless?”
“You want to state a hypothetical case?” suggested Lawyer Gooch.
“That’s the word I was after. ‘Apothecary’ was the best shot I
could make at it in my mind. The hypothetical goes. I’ll state the case.
Suppose there’s a woman—a deuced fine-looking woman—who has run away from her
husband and home? She’s badly mashed on another man who went to her town to
work up some real estate business. Now, we may as well call this woman’s
husband Thomas R. Billings, for that’s his name. I’m giving you straight tips
on the cognomens. The Lothario chap is Henry K. Jessup. The Billingses lived in
a little town called Susanville—a good many miles from here. Now, Jessup leaves
Susanville two weeks ago. The next day Mrs. Billings follows him. She’s dead
gone on this man Jessup; you can bet your law library on that.”
Lawyer Gooch’s client said this with such unctuous satisfaction
that even the callous lawyer experienced a slight ripple of repulsion. He now
saw clearly in his fatuous visitor the conceit of the lady-killer, the egoistic
complacency of the successful trifler.
“Now,” continued the visitor, “suppose this Mrs. Billings wasn’t
happy at home? We’ll say she and her husband didn’t gee worth a cent. They’ve
got incompatibility to burn. The things she likes, Billings wouldn’t have as a
gift with trading-stamps. It’s Tabby and Rover with them all the time. She’s an
educated woman in science and culture, and she reads things out loud at
meetings. Billings is not on. He don’t appreciate progress and obelisks and
ethics, and things of that sort. Old Billings is simply a blink when it comes to
such things. The lady is out and out above his class. Now, lawyer, don’t it
look like a fair equalization of rights and wrongs that a woman like that
should be allowed to throw down Billings and take the man that can appreciate
her?
“Incompatibility,” said Lawyer Gooch, “is undoubtedly the source
of much marital discord and unhappiness. Where it is positively proved, divorce
would seem to be the equitable remedy. Are you—excuse me—is this man Jessup one
to whom the lady may safely trust her future?”
“Oh, you can bet on Jessup,” said the client, with a confident wag
of his head. “Jessup’s all right. He’ll do the square thing. Why, he left
Susanville just to keep people from talking about Mrs. Billings. But she
followed him up, and now, of course, he’ll stick to her. When she gets a
divorce, all legal and proper, Jessup will do the proper thing.”
“And now,” said Lawyer Gooch, “continuing the hypothesis, if you
prefer, and supposing that my services should be desired in the case, what—”
The client rose impulsively to his feet.
“Oh, dang the hypothetical business,” he exclaimed, impatiently.
“Let’s let her drop, and get down to straight talk. You ought to know who I am
by this time. I want that woman to have her divorce. I’ll pay for it. The day
you set Mrs. Billings free I’ll pay you five hundred dollars.”
Lawyer Gooch’s client banged his fist upon the table to punctuate
his generosity.
“If that is the case—” began the lawyer.
“Lady to see you, sir,” bawled Archibald, bouncing in from his
anteroom. He had orders to always announce immediately any client that might
come. There was no sense in turning business away.
Lawyer Gooch took client number one by the arm and led him suavely
into one of the adjoining rooms. “Favour me by remaining here a few minutes,
sir,” said he. “I will return and resume our consultation with the least
possible delay. I am rather expecting a visit from a very wealthy old lady in
connection with a will. I will not keep you waiting long.”
The breezy gentleman seated himself with obliging acquiescence,
and took up a magazine. The lawyer returned to the middle office, carefully
closing behind him the connecting door.
“Show the lady in, Archibald,” he said to the office boy, who was
awaiting the order.
A tall lady, of commanding presence and sternly handsome, entered
the room. She wore robes—robes; not clothes—ample and fluent. In her eye could
be perceived the lambent flame of genius and soul. In her hand was a green bag
of the capacity of a bushel, and an umbrella that also seemed to wear a robe,
ample and fluent. She accepted a chair.
“Are you Mr. Phineas C. Gooch, the lawyer?” she asked, in formal
and unconciliatory tones.
“I am,” answered Lawyer Gooch, without circumlocution. He never
circumlocuted when dealing with a woman. Women circumlocute. Time is wasted
when both sides in debate employ the same tactics.
“As a lawyer, sir,” began the lady, “you may have acquired some
knowledge of the human heart. Do you believe that the pusillanimous and petty
conventions of our artificial social life should stand as an obstacle in the
way of a noble and affectionate heart when it finds its true mate among the
miserable and worthless wretches in the world that are called men?”
“Madam,” said Lawyer Gooch, in the tone that he used in curbing
his female clients, “this is an office for conducting the practice of law. I am
a lawyer, not a philosopher, nor the editor of an ‘Answers to the Lovelorn’
column of a newspaper. I have other clients waiting. I will ask you kindly to
come to the point.”
“Well, you needn’t get so stiff around the gills about it,” said
the lady, with a snap of her luminous eyes and a startling gyration of her
umbrella. “Business is what I’ve come for. I want your opinion in the matter of
a suit for divorce, as the vulgar would call it, but which is really only the
readjustment of the false and ignoble conditions that the short-sighted laws of
man have interposed between a loving—”
“I beg your pardon, madam,” interrupted Lawyer Gooch, with some
impatience, “for reminding you again that this is a law office. Perhaps Mrs.
Wilcox—”
“Mrs. Wilcox is all right,” cut in the lady, with a hint of
asperity. “And so are Tolstoi, and Mrs. Gertrude Atherton, and Omar Khayyam,
and Mr. Edward Bok. I’ve read ’em all. I would like to discuss with you the
divine right of the soul as opposed to the freedom-destroying restrictions of a
bigoted and narrow-minded society. But I will proceed to business. I would
prefer to lay the matter before you in an impersonal way until you pass upon
its merits. That is to describe it as a supposable instance, without—”
“You wish to state a hypothetical case?” said Lawyer Gooch.
“I was going to say that,” said the lady, sharply. “Now, suppose
there is a woman who is all soul and heart and aspirations for a complete
existence. This woman has a husband who is far below her in intellect, in
taste—in everything. Bah! he is a brute. He despises literature. He sneers at
the lofty thoughts of the world’s great thinkers. He thinks only of real estate
and such sordid things. He is no mate for a woman with soul. We will say that
this unfortunate wife one day meets with her ideal—a man with brain and heart
and force. She loves him. Although this man feels the thrill of a new-found
affinity he is too noble, too honourable to declare himself. He flies from the
presence of his beloved. She flies after him, trampling, with superb
indifference, upon the fetters with which an unenlightened social system would
bind her. Now, what will a divorce cost? Eliza Ann Timmins, the poetess of
Sycamore Gap, got one for three hundred and forty dollars. Can I—I mean can
this lady I speak of get one that cheap?”
“Madam,” said Lawyer Gooch, “your last two or three sentences
delight me with their intelligence and clearness. Can we not now abandon the
hypothetical and come down to names and business?”
“I should say so,” exclaimed the lady, adopting the practical with
admirable readiness. “Thomas R. Billings is the name of the low brute who
stands between the happiness of his legal—his legal, but not his spiritual—wife
and Henry K. Jessup, the noble man whom nature intended for her mate. I,”
concluded the client, with an air of dramatic revelation, “am Mrs. Billings!”
“Gentlemen to see you, sir,” shouted Archibald, invading the room
almost at a handspring. Lawyer Gooch arose from his chair.
“Mrs. Billings,” he said courteously, “allow me to conduct you
into the adjoining office apartment for a few minutes. I am expecting a very
wealthy old gentleman on business connected with a will. In a very short while
I will join you, and continue our consultation.”
With his accustomed chivalrous manner, Lawyer Gooch ushered his
soulful client into the remaining unoccupied room, and came out, closing the
door with circumspection.
The next visitor introduced by Archibald was a thin, nervous,
irritable-looking man of middle age, with a worried and apprehensive expression
of countenance. He carried in one hand a small satchel, which he set down upon
the floor beside the chair which the lawyer placed for him. His clothing was of
good quality, but it was worn without regard to neatness or style, and appeared
to be covered with the dust of travel.
“You make a specialty of divorce cases,” he said, in, an agitated
but business-like tone.
“I may say,” began Lawyer Gooch, “that my practice has not altogether
avoided—”
“I know you do,” interrupted client number three. “You needn’t
tell me. I’ve heard all about you. I have a case to lay before you without
necessarily disclosing any connection that I might have with it—that is—”
“You wish,” said Lawyer Gooch, “to state a hypothetical case.
“You may call it that. I am a plain man of business. I will be as
brief as possible. We will first take up hypothetical woman. We will say she is
married uncongenially. In many ways she is a superior woman. Physically she is
considered to be handsome. She is devoted to what she calls literature—poetry
and prose, and such stuff. Her husband is a plain man in the business walks of
life. Their home has not been happy, although the husband has tried to make it
so. Some time ago a man—a stranger—came to the peaceful town in which they
lived and engaged in some real estate operations. This woman met him, and
became unaccountably infatuated with him. Her attentions became so open that
the man felt the community to be no safe place for him, so he left it. She
abandoned husband and home, and followed him. She forsook her home, where she
was provided with every comfort, to follow this man who had inspired her with
such a strange affection. Is there anything more to be deplored,” concluded the
client, in a trembling voice, “than the wrecking of a home by a woman’s
uncalculating folly?”
Lawyer Gooch delivered the cautious opinion that there was not.
“This man she has gone to join,” resumed the visitor, “is not the
man to make her happy. It is a wild and foolish self-deception that makes her
think he will. Her husband, in spite of their many disagreements, is the only
one capable of dealing with her sensitive and peculiar nature. But this she
does not realize now.”
“Would you consider a divorce the logical cure in the case you
present?” asked Lawyer Gooch, who felt that the conversation was wandering too
far from the field of business.
“A divorce!” exclaimed the client, feelingly—almost tearfully.
“No, no—not that. I have read, Mr. Gooch, of many instances where your sympathy
and kindly interest led you to act as a mediator between estranged husband and
wife, and brought them together again. Let us drop the hypothetical case—I need
conceal no longer that it is I who am the sufferer in this sad affair—the names
you shall have—Thomas R. Billings and wife—and Henry K. Jessup, the man with
whom she is infatuated.”
Client number three laid his hand upon Mr. Gooch’s arm. Deep
emotion was written upon his careworn face. “For Heaven’s sake”, he said
fervently, “help me in this hour of trouble. Seek out Mrs. Billings, and
persuade her to abandon this distressing pursuit of her lamentable folly. Tell
her, Mr. Gooch, that her husband is willing to receive her back to his heart
and home—promise her anything that will induce her to return. I have heard of
your success in these matters. Mrs. Billings cannot be very far away. I am worn
out with travel and weariness. Twice during the pursuit I saw her, but various
circumstances prevented our having an interview. Will you undertake this
mission for me, Mr. Gooch, and earn my everlasting gratitude?”
“It is true,” said Lawyer Gooch, frowning slightly at the other’s
last words, but immediately calling up an expression of virtuous benevolence,
“that on a number of occasions I have been successful in persuading couples who
sought the severing of their matrimonial bonds to think better of their rash
intentions and return to their homes reconciled. But I assure you that the work
is often exceedingly difficult. The amount of argument, perseverance, and, if I
may be allowed to say it, eloquence that it requires would astonish you. But
this is a case in which my sympathies would be wholly enlisted. I feel deeply
for you sir, and I would be most happy to see husband and wife reunited. But my
time,” concluded the lawyer, looking at his watch as if suddenly reminded of
the fact, “is valuable.”
“I am aware of that,” said the client, “and if you will take the
case and persuade Mrs. Billings to return home and leave the man alone that she
is following—on that day I will pay you the sum of one thousand dollars. I have
made a little money in real estate during the recent boom in Susanville, and I
will not begrudge that amount.”
“Retain your seat for a few moments, please,” said Lawyer Gooch,
arising, and again consulting his watch. “I have another client waiting in an
adjoining room whom I had very nearly forgotten. I will return in the briefest
possible space.”
The situation was now one that fully satisfied Lawyer Gooch’s love
of intricacy and complication. He revelled in cases that presented such subtle
problems and possibilities. It pleased him to think that he was master of the
happiness and fate of the three individuals who sat, unconscious of one
another’s presence, within his reach. His old figure of the ship glided into
his mind. But now the figure failed, for to have filled every compartment of an
actual vessel would have been to endanger her safety; with his compartments
full, his ship of affairs could but sail on to the advantageous port of a fine,
fat fee. The thing for him to do, of course, was to wring the best bargain he
could from some one of his anxious cargo.
First he called to the office boy: “Lock the outer door,
Archibald, and admit no one.” Then he moved, with long, silent strides into the
room in which client number one waited. That gentleman sat, patiently scanning
the pictures in the magazine, with a cigar in his mouth and his feet upon a
table.
“Well,” he remarked, cheerfully, as the lawyer entered, “have you made
up your mind? Does five hundred dollars go for getting the fair lady a
divorce?”
“You mean that as a retainer?” asked Lawyer Gooch, softly
interrogative.
“Hey? No; for the whole job. It’s enough, ain’t it?”
“My fee,” said Lawyer Gooch, “would be one thousand five hundred
dollars. Five hundred dollars down, and the remainder upon issuance of the
divorce.”
A loud whistle came from client number one. His feet descended to
the floor.
“Guess we can’t close the deal,” he said, arising, “I cleaned up
five hundred dollars in a little real estate dicker down in Susanville. I’d do
anything I could to free the lady, but it out-sizes my pile.”
“Could you stand one thousand two hundred dollars?” asked the
lawyer, insinuatingly.
“Five hundred is my limit, I tell you. Guess I’ll have to hunt up
a cheaper lawyer.” The client put on his hat.
“Out this way, please,” said Lawyer Gooch, opening the door that
led into the hallway.
As the gentleman flowed out of the compartment and down the
stairs, Lawyer Gooch smiled to himself. “Exit Mr. Jessup,” he murmured, as he
fingered the Henry Clay tuft of hair at his ear. “And now for the forsaken
husband.” He returned to the middle office, and assumed a businesslike manner.
“I understand,” he said to client number three, “that you agree to
pay one thousand dollars if I bring about, or am instrumental in bringing
about, the return of Mrs. Billings to her home, and her abandonment of her
infatuated pursuit of the man for whom she has conceived such a violent fancy.
Also that the case is now unreservedly in my hands on that basis. Is that
correct?”
“Entirely”, said the other, eagerly. “And I can produce the cash
any time at two hours’ notice.”
Lawyer Gooch stood up at his full height. His thin figure seemed
to expand. His thumbs sought the arm-holes of his vest. Upon his face was a
look of sympathetic benignity that he always wore during such undertakings.
“Then, sir,” he said, in kindly tones, “I think I can promise you
an early relief from your troubles. I have that much confidence in my powers of
argument and persuasion, in the natural impulses of the human heart toward
good, and in the strong influence of a husband’s unfaltering love. Mrs.
Billings, sir, is here—in that room—” the lawyer’s long arm pointed to the
door. “I will call her in at once; and our united pleadings—”
Lawyer Gooch paused, for client number three had leaped from his
chair as if propelled by steel springs, and clutched his satchel.
“What the devil,” he exclaimed, harshly, “do you mean? That woman
in there! I thought I shook her off forty miles back.”
He ran to the open window, looked out below, and threw one leg
over the sill.
“Stop!” cried Lawyer Gooch, in amazement. “What would you do?
Come, Mr. Billings, and face your erring but innocent wife. Our combined
entreaties cannot fail to—”
“Billings!” shouted the now thoroughly moved client. “I’ll
Billings you, you old idiot!”
Turning, he hurled his satchel with fury at the lawyer’s head. It
struck that astounded peacemaker between the eyes, causing him to stagger
backward a pace or two. When Lawyer Gooch recovered his wits he saw that his
client had disappeared. Rushing to the window, he leaned out, and saw the
recreant gathering himself up from the top of a shed upon which he had dropped
from the second-story window. Without stopping to collect his hat he then
plunged downward the remaining ten feet to the alley, up which he flew with
prodigious celerity until the surrounding building swallowed him up from view.
Lawyer Gooch passed his hand tremblingly across his brow. It was a
habitual act with him, serving to clear his thoughts. Perhaps also it now
seemed to soothe the spot where a very hard alligator-hide satchel had struck.
The satchel lay upon the floor, wide open, with its contents
spilled about. Mechanically, Lawyer Gooch stooped to gather up the articles.
The first was a collar; and the omniscient eye of the man of law perceived,
wonderingly, the initials H. K. J. marked upon it. Then came a comb, a brush, a
folded map, and a piece of soap. Lastly, a handful of old business letters,
addressed—every one of them—to “Henry K. Jessup, Esq.”
Lawyer Gooch closed the satchel, and set it upon the table. He
hesitated for a moment, and then put on his hat and walked into the office
boy’s anteroom.
“Archibald,” he said mildly, as he opened the hall door, “I am
going around to the Supreme Court rooms. In five minutes you may step into the
inner office, and inform the lady who is waiting there that”—here Lawyer Gooch
made use of the vernacular—“that there’s nothing doing.”
The New York Enterprise sent
H. B. Calloway as special correspondent to the Russo-Japanese-Portsmouth war.
For two months Calloway hung about Yokohama and Tokio, shaking
dice with the other correspondents for drinks of ‘rickshaws—oh, no, that’s
something to ride in; anyhow, he wasn’t earning the salary that his paper was
paying him. But that was not Calloway’s fault. The little brown men who held
the strings of Fate between their fingers were not ready for the readers of
the Enterprise to season their breakfast bacon and eggs with
the battles of the descendants of the gods.
But soon the column of correspondents that were to go out with the
First Army tightened their field-glass belts and went down to the Yalu with
Kuroki. Calloway was one of these.
Now, this is no history of the battle of the Yalu River. That has
been told in detail by the correspondents who gazed at the shrapnel smoke rings
from a distance of three miles. But, for justice’s sake, let it be understood
that the Japanese commander prohibited a nearer view.
Calloway’s feat was accomplished before the battle. What he did
was to furnish the Enterprise with the biggest beat of the
war. That paper published exclusively and in detail the news of the attack on
the lines of the Russian General on the same day that it was made. No other
paper printed a word about it for two days afterward, except a London paper,
whose account was absolutely incorrect and untrue.
Calloway did this in face of the fact that General Kuroki was
making his moves and laying his plans with the profoundest secrecy as far as
the world outside his camps was concerned. The correspondents were forbidden to
send out any news whatever of his plans; and every message that was allowed on
the wires was censored with rigid severity.
The correspondent for the London paper handed in a cablegram
describing Kuroki’s plans; but as it was wrong from beginning to end the censor
grinned and let it go through.
So, there they were—Kuroki on one side of the Yalu with forty-two
thousand infantry, five thousand cavalry, and one hundred and twenty-four guns.
On the other side, Zassulitch waited for him with only twenty-three thousand
men, and with a long stretch of river to guard. And Calloway had got hold of
some important inside information that he knew would bring the Enterprise staff
around a cablegram as thick as flies around a Park Row lemonade stand. If he
could only get that message past the censor—the new censor who had arrived and
taken his post that day!
Calloway did the obviously proper thing. He lit his pipe and sat
down on a gun carriage to think it over. And there we must leave him; for the
rest of the story belongs to Vesey, a sixteen-dollar-a-week reporter on
the Enterprise.
Calloway’s cablegram was handed to the managing editor at four
o’clock in the afternoon. He read it three times; and then drew a pocket mirror
from a pigeon-hole in his desk, and looked at his reflection carefully. Then he
went over to the desk of Boyd, his assistant (he usually called Boyd when he
wanted him), and laid the cablegram before him.
“It’s from Calloway,” he said. “See what you make of it.”
The message was dated at Wi-ju, and these were the words of it:
Foregone preconcerted
rash witching goes muffled rumour mine dark silent unfortunate richmond existing
great hotly brute select mooted parlous beggars ye angel incontrovertible.
Boyd read it twice.
“It’s either a cipher or a sunstroke,” said he.
“Ever hear of anything like a code in the office—a secret code?”
asked the m. e., who had held his desk for only two years. Managing editors
come and go.
“None except the vernacular that the lady specials write in,” said
Boyd. “Couldn’t be an acrostic, could it?”
“I thought of that,” said the m. e., “but the beginning letters
contain only four vowels. It must be a code of some sort.”
“Try em in groups,” suggested Boyd. “Let’s see—‘Rash witching
goes’—not with me it doesn’t. ‘Muffled rumour mine’—must have an underground
wire. ‘Dark silent unfortunate richmond’—no reason why he should knock that
town so hard. ‘Existing great hotly’—no it doesn’t pan out. I’ll call Scott.”
The city editor came in a hurry, and tried his luck. A city editor
must know something about everything; so Scott knew a little about
cipher-writing.
“It may be what is called an inverted alphabet cipher,” said he.
“I’ll try that. ‘R’ seems to be the oftenest used initial letter, with the
exception of ‘m.’ Assuming ‘r’ to mean ‘e’, the most frequently used vowel, we
transpose the letters—so.”
Scott worked rapidly with his pencil for two minutes; and then
showed the first word according to his reading—the word “Scejtzez.”
“Great!” cried Boyd. “It’s a charade. My first is a Russian
general. Go on, Scott.”
“No, that won’t work,” said the city editor. “It’s undoubtedly a
code. It’s impossible to read it without the key. Has the office ever used a
cipher code?”
“Just what I was asking,” said the m.e. “Hustle everybody up that
ought to know. We must get at it some way. Calloway has evidently got hold of
something big, and the censor has put the screws on, or he wouldn’t have cabled
in a lot of chop suey like this.”
Throughout the office of the Enterprise a dragnet
was sent, hauling in such members of the staff as would be likely to know of a
code, past or present, by reason of their wisdom, information, natural
intelligence, or length of servitude. They got together in a group in the city
room, with the m. e. in the centre. No one had heard of a code. All began to
explain to the head investigator that newspapers never use a code, anyhow—that
is, a cipher code. Of course the Associated Press stuff is a sort of code—an
abbreviation, rather—but—
The m. e. knew all that, and said so. He asked each man how long
he had worked on the paper. Not one of them had drawn pay from an Enterprise envelope
for longer than six years. Calloway had been on the paper twelve years.
“Try old Heffelbauer,” said the m. e. “He was here when Park Row
was a potato patch.”
Heffelbauer was an institution. He was half janitor, half
handy-man about the office, and half watchman—thus becoming the peer of
thirteen and one-half tailors. Sent for, he came, radiating his nationality.
“Heffelbauer,” said the m. e., “did you ever hear of a code
belonging to the office a long time ago—a private code? You know what a code
is, don’t you?”
“Yah,” said Heffelbauer. “Sure I know vat a code is. Yah, apout
dwelf or fifteen year ago der office had a code. Der reborters in der city-room
haf it here.”
“Ah!” said the m. e. “We’re getting on the trail now. Where was it
kept, Heffelbauer? What do you know about it?”
“Somedimes,” said the retainer, “dey keep it in der little room
behind der library room.”
“Can you find it?” asked the m. e. eagerly. “Do you know where it
is?”
“Mein Gott!” said Heffelbauer. “How long you dink a code live? Der
reborters call him a maskeet. But von day he butt mit his head der editor,
und—”
“Oh, he’s talking about a goat,” said Boyd. “Get out,
Heffelbauer.”
Again discomfited, the concerted wit and resource of the Enterprise huddled
around Calloway’s puzzle, considering its mysterious words in vain.
Then Vesey came in.
Vesey was the youngest reporter. He had a thirty-two-inch chest
and wore a number fourteen collar; but his bright Scotch plaid suit gave him
presence and conferred no obscurity upon his whereabouts. He wore his hat in
such a position that people followed him about to see him take it off,
convinced that it must be hung upon a peg driven into the back of his head. He
was never without an immense, knotted, hard-wood cane with a German-silver tip
on its crooked handle. Vesey was the best photograph hustler in the office.
Scott said it was because no living human being could resist the personal
triumph it was to hand his picture over to Vesey. Vesey always wrote his own
news stories, except the big ones, which were sent to the rewrite men. Add to
this fact that among all the inhabitants, temples, and groves of the earth
nothing existed that could abash Vesey, and his dim sketch is concluded.
Vesey butted into the circle of cipher readers very much as
Heffelbauer’s “code” would have done, and asked what was up. Some one
explained, with the touch of half-familiar condescension that they always used
toward him. Vesey reached out and took the cablegram from the m. e.’s hand.
Under the protection of some special Providence, he was always doing appalling
things like that, and coming, off unscathed.
“It’s a code,” said Vesey. “Anybody got the key?”
“The office has no code,” said Boyd, reaching for the message.
Vesey held to it.
“Then old Calloway expects us to read it, anyhow,” said he. “He’s
up a tree, or something, and he’s made this up so as to get it by the censor.
It’s up to us. Gee! I wish they had sent me, too. Say—we can’t afford to fall
down on our end of it. ‘Foregone, preconcerted rash, witching’—h’m.”
Vesey sat down on a table corner and began to whistle softly,
frowning at the cablegram.
“Let’s have it, please,” said the m. e. “We’ve got to get to work
on it.”
“I believe I’ve got a line on it,” said Vesey. “Give me ten
minutes.”
He walked to his desk, threw his hat into a waste-basket, spread
out flat on his chest like a gorgeous lizard, and started his pencil going. The
wit and wisdom of the Enterprise remained in a loose group,
and smiled at one another, nodding their heads toward Vesey. Then they began to
exchange their theories about the cipher.
It took Vesey exactly fifteen minutes. He brought to the m. e. a
pad with the code-key written on it.
“I felt the swing of it as soon as I saw it,” said Vesey. “Hurrah
for old Calloway! He’s done the Japs and every paper in town that prints
literature instead of news. Take a look at that.”
Thus had Vesey set forth the reading of the code:
Foregone—conclusion
Preconcerted—arrangement
Rash—act
Witching—hour of midnight
Goes—without saying
Muffled—report
Rumour—hath it
Mine—host
Dark—horse
Silent—majority
Unfortunate—pedestrians*
Richmond—in the field
Existing—conditions
Great—White Way
Hotly—contested
Brute—force
Select—few
Mooted—question
Parlous—times
Beggars—description
Ye—correspondent
Angel—unawares
Incontrovertible—fact
* Mr. Vesey afterward
explained that the logical journalistic complement of the word “unfortunate”
was once the word “victim.” But, since the automobile became so popular, the
correct following word is now “pedestrians”. Of course, in Calloway’s code it
meant infantry.
“It’s simply newspaper English,” explained Vesey. “I’ve been
reporting on the Enterprise long enough to know it by heart.
Old Calloway gives us the cue word, and we use the word that naturally follows
it just as we use ’em in the paper. Read it over, and you’ll see how pat they
drop into their places. Now, here’s the message he intended us to get.”
Vesey handed out another sheet of paper.
Concluded arrangement to
act at hour of midnight without saying. Report hath it that a large body of
cavalry and an overwhelming force of infantry will be thrown into the field.
Conditions white. Way contested by only a small force. Question the Times description.
Its correspondent is unaware of the facts.
“Great stuff!” cried Boyd excitedly. “Kuroki crosses the Yalu
to-night and attacks. Oh, we won’t do a thing to the sheets that make up with
Addison’s essays, real estate transfers, and bowling scores!”
“Mr. Vesey,” said the m. e., with his
jollying-which-you-should-regard-as-a-favour manner, “you have cast a serious
reflection upon the literary standards of the paper that employs you. You have
also assisted materially in giving us the biggest ‘beat’ of the year. I will
let you know in a day or two whether you are to be discharged or retained at a
larger salary. Somebody send Ames to me.”
Ames was the king-pin, the snowy-petalled Marguerite, the
star-bright looloo of the rewrite men. He saw attempted murder in the pains of
green-apple colic, cyclones in the summer zephyr, lost children in every
top-spinning urchin, an uprising of the down-trodden masses in every hurling of
a derelict potato at a passing automobile. When not rewriting, Ames sat on the
porch of his Brooklyn villa playing checkers with his ten-year-old son.
Ames and the “war editor” shut themselves in a room. There was a
map in there stuck full of little pins that represented armies and divisions.
Their fingers had been itching for days to move those pins along the crooked
line of the Yalu. They did so now; and in words of fire Ames translated
Calloway’s brief message into a front page masterpiece that set the world
talking. He told of the secret councils of the Japanese officers; gave Kuroki’s
flaming speeches in full; counted the cavalry and infantry to a man and a
horse; described the quick and silent building, of the bridge at Suikauchen,
across which the Mikado’s legions were hurled upon the surprised Zassulitch,
whose troops were widely scattered along the river. And the battle!—well, you
know what Ames can do with a battle if you give him just one smell of smoke for
a foundation. And in the same story, with seemingly supernatural knowledge, he
gleefully scored the most profound and ponderous paper in England for the false
and misleading account of the intended movements of the Japanese First Army
printed in its issue of the same date.
Only one error was made; and that was the fault of the cable
operator at Wi-ju. Calloway pointed it out after he came back. The word “great”
in his code should have been “gage,” and its complemental words “of battle.”
But it went to Ames “conditions white,” and of course he took that to mean
snow. His description of the Japanese army struggling through the snowstorm,
blinded by the whirling flakes, was thrillingly vivid. The artists turned out
some effective illustrations that made a hit as pictures of the artillery
dragging their guns through the drifts. But, as the attack was made on the
first day of May, “conditions white” excited some amusement. But it in made no
difference to the Enterprise, anyway.
It was wonderful. And Calloway was wonderful in having made the
new censor believe that his jargon of words meant no more than a complaint of
the dearth of news and a petition for more expense money. And Vesey was
wonderful. And most wonderful of all are words, and how they make friends one
with another, being oft associated, until not even obituary notices them do
part.
On the second day following, the city editor halted at Vesey’s
desk where the reporter was writing the story of a man who had broken his leg
by falling into a coal-hole—Ames having failed to find a murder motive in it.
“The old man says your salary is to be raised to twenty a week,”
said Scott.
“All right,” said Vesey. “Every little helps. Say—Mr. Scott, which
would you say—‘We can state without fear of successful contradiction,’ or, ‘On
the whole it can be safely asserted’?”
One winter the Alcazar
Opera Company of New Orleans made a speculative trip along the Mexican, Central
American and South American coasts. The venture proved a most successful one.
The music-loving, impressionable Spanish-Americans deluged the company with
dollars and “vivas.” The manager waxed plump and amiable. But for the
prohibitive climate he would have put forth the distinctive flower of his
prosperity—the overcoat of fur, braided, frogged and opulent. Almost was he
persuaded to raise the salaries of his company. But with a mighty effort he
conquered the impulse toward such an unprofitable effervescence of joy.
At Macuto, on the coast of Venezuela, the company scored its
greatest success. Imagine Coney Island translated into Spanish and you will
comprehend Macuto. The fashionable season is from November to March. Down from
La Guayra and Caracas and Valencia and other interior towns flock the people
for their holiday season. There are bathing and fiestas and bull fights and
scandal. And then the people have a passion for music that the bands in the
plaza and on the sea beach stir but do not satisfy. The coming of the Alcazar
Opera Company aroused the utmost ardour and zeal among the pleasure seekers.
The illustrious Guzman Blanco, President and Dictator of
Venezuela, sojourned in Macuto with his court for the season. That potent
ruler—who himself paid a subsidy of 40,000 pesos each year to grand opera in
Caracas—ordered one of the Government warehouses to be cleared for a temporary
theatre. A stage was quickly constructed and rough wooden benches made for the
audience. Private boxes were added for the use of the President and the
notables of the army and Government.
The company remained in Macuto for two weeks. Each performance
filled the house as closely as it could be packed. Then the music-mad people
fought for room in the open doors and windows, and crowded about, hundreds
deep, on the outside. Those audiences formed a brilliantly diversified patch of
colour. The hue of their faces ranged from the clear olive of the pure-blood
Spaniards down through the yellow and brown shades of the Mestizos to the
coal-black Carib and the Jamaica Negro. Scattered among them were little groups
of Indians with faces like stone idols, wrapped in gaudy fibre-woven
blankets—Indians down from the mountain states of Zamora and Los Andes and
Miranda to trade their gold dust in the coast towns.
The spell cast upon these denizens of the interior fastnesses was
remarkable. They sat in petrified ecstasy, conspicuous among the excitable
Macutians, who wildly strove with tongue and hand to give evidence of their
delight. Only once did the sombre rapture of these aboriginals find expression.
During the rendition of “Faust,” Guzman Blanco, extravagantly pleased by the
“Jewel Song,” cast upon the stage a purse of gold pieces. Other distinguished
citizens followed his lead to the extent of whatever loose coin they had
convenient, while some of the fair and fashionable señoras were moved, in
imitation, to fling a jewel or a ring or two at the feet of the Marguerite—who
was, according to the bills, Mlle. Nina Giraud. Then, from different parts of
the house rose sundry of the stolid hillmen and cast upon the stage little
brown and dun bags that fell with soft “thumps” and did not rebound. It was, no
doubt, pleasure at the tribute to her art that caused Mlle. Giraud’s eyes to
shine so brightly when she opened these little deerskin bags in her dressing
room and found them to contain pure gold dust. If so, the pleasure was rightly
hers, for her voice in song, pure, strong and thrilling with the feeling of the
emotional artist, deserved the tribute that it earned.
But the triumph of the Alcazar Opera Company is not the theme—it
but leans upon and colours it. There happened in Macuto a tragic thing, an
unsolvable mystery, that sobered for a time the gaiety of the happy season.
One evening between the short twilight and the time when she
should have whirled upon the stage in the red and black of the ardent Carmen,
Mlle. Nina Giraud disappeared from the sight and ken of 6,000 pairs of eyes and
as many minds in Macuto. There was the usual turmoil and hurrying to seek her.
Messengers flew to the little French-kept hotel where she stayed; others of the
company hastened here or there where she might be lingering in some tienda or
unduly prolonging her bath upon the beach. All search was fruitless.
Mademoiselle had vanished.
Half an hour passed and she did not appear. The dictator, unused
to the caprices of prime donne, became impatient. He sent an aide from his box
to say to the manager that if the curtain did not at once rise he would
immediately hale the entire company to the calabosa, though it would desolate
his heart, indeed, to be compelled to such an act. Birds in Macuto could be
made to sing.
The manager abandoned hope for the time of Mlle. Giraud. A member
of the chorus, who had dreamed hopelessly for years of the blessed opportunity,
quickly Carmenized herself and the opera went on.
Afterward, when the lost cantatrice appeared not, the aid of the
authorities was invoked. The President at once set the army, the police and all
citizens to the search. Not one clue to Mlle. Giraud’s disappearance was found.
The Alcazar left to fill engagements farther down the coast.
On the way back the steamer stopped at Macuto and the manager made
anxious inquiry. Not a trace of the lady had been discovered. The Alcazar could
do no more. The personal belongings of the missing lady were stored in the
hotel against her possible later reappearance and the opera company continued
upon its homeward voyage to New Orleans.
On the camino real along the beach the two saddle
mules and the four pack mules of Don Señor Johnny Armstrong stood, patiently
awaiting the crack of the whip of the arriero, Luis. That would be
the signal for the start on another long journey into the mountains. The pack
mules were loaded with a varied assortment of hardware and cutlery. These
articles Don Johnny traded to the interior Indians for the gold dust that they
washed from the Andean streams and stored in quills and bags against his
coming. It was a profitable business, and Señor Armstrong expected soon to be
able to purchase the coffee plantation that he coveted.
Armstrong stood on the narrow sidewalk, exchanging garbled Spanish
with old Peralto, the rich native merchant who had just charged him four prices
for half a gross of pot-metal hatchets, and abridged English with Rucker, the
little German who was Consul for the United States.
“Take with you, señor,” said Peralto, “the blessings of the saints
upon your journey.”
“Better try quinine,” growled Rucker through his pipe. “Take two
grains every night. And don’t make your trip too long, Johnny, because we haf
needs of you. It is ein villainous game dot Melville play of whist, and dere is
no oder substitute. Auf wiedersehen, und keep your eyes dot mule’s
ears between when you on der edge of der brecipices ride.”
The bells of Luis’s mule jingled and the pack train filed after
the warning note. Armstrong, waved a good-bye and took his place at the tail of
the procession. Up the narrow street they turned, and passed the two-story
wooden Hotel Ingles, where Ives and Dawson and Richards and the rest of the
chaps were dawdling on the broad piazza, reading week-old newspapers. They
crowded to the railing and shouted many friendly and wise and foolish farewells
after him. Across the plaza they trotted slowly past the bronze statue of
Guzman Blanco, within its fence of bayoneted rifles captured from
revolutionists, and out of the town between the rows of thatched huts swarming
with the unclothed youth of Macuto. They plunged into the damp coolness of
banana groves at length to emerge upon a bright stream, where brown women in scant
raiment laundered clothes destructively upon the rocks. Then the pack train,
fording the stream, attacked the sudden ascent, and bade adieu to such
civilization as the coast afforded.
For weeks Armstrong, guided by Luis, followed his regular route
among the mountains. After he had collected an arroba of the precious metal,
winning a profit of nearly $5,000, the heads of the lightened mules were turned
down-trail again. Where the head of the Guarico River springs from a great gash
in the mountain-side, Luis halted the train.
“Half a day’s journey from here, Señor,” said he, “is the village
of Tacuzama, which we have never visited. I think many ounces of gold may be
procured there. It is worth the trial.”
Armstrong concurred, and they turned again upward toward Tacuzama.
The trail was abrupt and precipitous, mounting through a dense forest. As night
fell, dark and gloomy, Luis once more halted. Before them was a black chasm,
bisecting the path as far as they could see.
Luis dismounted. “There should be a bridge,” he called, and ran
along the cleft a distance. “It is here,” he cried, and remounting, led the
way. In a few moments Armstrong, heard a sound as though a thunderous drum were
beating somewhere in the dark. It was the falling of the mules’ hoofs upon the
bridge made of strong hides lashed to poles and stretched across the chasm.
Half a mile further was Tacuzama. The village was a congregation of rock and
mud huts set in the profundity of an obscure wood. As they rode in a sound
inconsistent with that brooding solitude met their ears. From a long, low mud
hut that they were nearing rose the glorious voice of a woman in song. The
words were English, the air familiar to Armstrong’s memory, but not to his
musical knowledge.
He slipped from his mule and stole to a narrow window in one end
of the house. Peering cautiously inside, he saw, within three feet of him, a
woman of marvellous, imposing beauty, clothed in a splendid loose robe of
leopard skins. The hut was packed close to the small space in which she stood
with the squatting figures of Indians.
The woman finished her song and seated herself close to the little
window, as if grateful for the unpolluted air that entered it. When she had
ceased several of the audience rose and cast little softly-falling bags at her
feet. A harsh murmur—no doubt a barbarous kind of applause and comment—went
through the grim assembly.
Armstrong, was used to seizing opportunities promptly. Taking
advantage of the noise he called to the woman in a low but distinct voice: “Do
not turn your head this way, but listen. I am an American. If you need
assistance tell me how I can render it. Answer as briefly as you can.”
The woman was worthy of his boldness. Only by a sudden flush of
her pale cheek did she acknowledge understanding of his words. Then she spoke,
scarcely moving her lips.
“I am held a prisoner by these Indians. God knows I need help. In
two hours come to the little hut twenty yards toward the Mountainside. There
will be a light and a red curtain in the window. There is always a guard at the
door, whom you will have to overcome. For the love of heaven, do not fail to
come.”
The story seems to shrink from adventure and rescue and mystery.
The theme is one too gentle for those brave and quickening tones. And yet it
reaches as far back as time itself. It has been named “environment,” which is
as weak a word as any to express the unnameable kinship of man to nature, that
queer fraternity that causes stones and trees and salt water and clouds to play
upon our emotions. Why are we made serious and solemn and sublime by mountain
heights, grave and contemplative by an abundance of overhanging trees, reduced
to inconstancy and monkey capers by the ripples on a sandy beach? Did the
protoplasm—but enough. The chemists are looking into the matter, and before
long they will have all life in the table of the symbols.
Briefly, then, in order to confine the story within scientific
bounds, John Armstrong, went to the hut, choked the Indian guard and carried
away Mlle. Giraud. With her was also conveyed a number of pounds of gold dust
she had collected during her six months’ forced engagement in Tacuzama. The
Carabobo Indians are easily the most enthusiastic lovers of music between the
equator and the French Opera House in New Orleans. They are also strong
believers that the advice of Emerson was good when he said: “The thing thou
wantest, O discontented man —take it, and pay the price.” A number of them had
attended the performance of the Alcazar Opera Company in Macuto, and found
Mlle. Giraud’s style and technique satisfactory. They wanted her, so they took
her one evening suddenly and without any fuss. They treated her with much
consideration, exacting only one song recital each day. She was quite pleased
at being rescued by Mr. Armstrong. So much for mystery and adventure. Now to
resume the theory of the protoplasm.
John Armstrong and Mlle. Giraud rode among the Andean peaks,
enveloped in their greatness and sublimity. The mightiest cousins, furthest
removed, in nature’s great family become conscious of the tie. Among those huge
piles of primordial upheaval, amid those gigantic silences and elongated fields
of distance the littlenesses of men are precipitated as one chemical throws
down a sediment from another. They moved reverently, as in a temple. Their
souls were uplifted in unison with the stately heights. They travelled in a
zone of majesty and peace.
To Armstrong the woman seemed almost a holy thing. Yet bathed in
the white, still dignity of her martyrdom that purified her earthly beauty and
gave out, it seemed, an aura of transcendent loveliness, in those first hours
of companionship she drew from him an adoration that was half human love, half
the worship of a descended goddess.
Never yet since her rescue had she smiled. Over her dress she
still wore the robe of leopard skins, for the mountain air was cold. She looked
to be some splendid princess belonging to those wild and awesome altitudes. The
spirit of the region chimed with hers. Her eyes were always turned upon the
sombre cliffs, the blue gorges and the snow-clad turrets, looking a sublime
melancholy equal to their own. At times on the journey she sang thrilling te
deums and misereres that struck the true note of the hills, and made their
route seem like a solemn march down a cathedral aisle. The rescued one spoke
but seldom, her mood partaking of the hush of nature that surrounded them.
Armstrong looked upon her as an angel. He could not bring himself to the
sacrilege of attempting to woo her as other women may be wooed.
On the third day they had descended as far as the tierra
templada, the zona of the table lands and foot hills. The mountains were
receding in their rear, but still towered, exhibiting yet impressively their
formidable heads. Here they met signs of man. They saw the white houses of
coffee plantations gleam across the clearings. They struck into a road where
they met travellers and pack-mules. Cattle were grazing on the slopes. They
passed a little village where the round-eyed niños shrieked
and called at sight of them.
Mlle. Giraud laid aside her leopard-skin robe. It seemed to be a
trifle incongruous now. In the mountains it had appeared fitting and natural.
And if Armstrong was not mistaken she laid aside with it something of the high
dignity of her demeanour. As the country became more populous and significant
of comfortable life he saw, with a feeling of joy, that the exalted princess
and priestess of the Andean peaks was changing to a woman—an earth woman, but
no less enticing. A little colour crept to the surface of her marble cheek. She
arranged the conventional dress that the removal of the robe now disclosed with
the solicitous touch of one who is conscious of the eyes of others. She
smoothed the careless sweep of her hair. A mundane interest, long latent in the
chilling atmosphere of the ascetic peaks, showed in her eyes.
This thaw in his divinity sent Armstrong’s heart going faster. So
might an Arctic explorer thrill at his first ken of green fields and liquescent
waters. They were on a lower plane of earth and life and were succumbing to its
peculiar, subtle influence. The austerity of the hills no longer thinned the
air they breathed. About them was the breath of fruit and corn and builded
homes, the comfortable smell of smoke and warm earth and the consolations man
has placed between himself and the dust of his brother earth from which he
sprung. While traversing those awful mountains, Mile. Giraud had seemed to be
wrapped in their spirit of reverent reserve. Was this that same woman—now
palpitating, warm, eager, throbbing with conscious life and charm, feminine to
her finger-tips? Pondering over this, Armstrong felt certain misgivings intrude
upon his thoughts. He wished he could stop there with this changing creature,
descending no farther. Here was the elevation and environment to which her
nature seemed to respond with its best. He feared to go down upon the
man-dominated levels. Would her spirit not yield still further in that
artificial zone to which they were descending?
Now from a little plateau they saw the sea flash at the edge of
the green lowlands. Mile. Giraud gave a little, catching sigh.
“Oh! look, Mr. Armstrong, there is the sea! Isn’t it lovely? I’m
so tired of mountains.” She heaved a pretty shoulder in a gesture of
repugnance. “Those horrid Indians! Just think of what I suffered! Although I
suppose I attained my ambition of becoming a stellar attraction, I wouldn’t
care to repeat the engagement. It was very nice of you to bring me away. Tell
me, Mr. Armstrong—honestly, now —do I look such an awful, awful fright? I
haven’t looked into a mirror, you know, for months.”
Armstrong made answer according to his changed moods. Also he laid
his hand upon hers as it rested upon the horn of her saddle. Luis was at the
head of the pack train and could not see. She allowed it to remain there, and
her eyes smiled frankly into his.
Then at sundown they dropped upon the coast level under the palms
and lemons among the vivid greens and scarlets and ochres of the tierra
caliente. They rode into Macuto, and saw the line of volatile bathers
frolicking in the surf. The mountains were very far away.
Mlle. Giraud’s eyes were shining with a joy that could not have
existed under the chaperonage of the mountain-tops. There were other spirits
calling to her—nymphs of the orange groves, pixies from the chattering surf,
imps, born of the music, the perfumes, colours and the insinuating presence of
humanity. She laughed aloud, musically, at a sudden thought.
“Won’t there be a sensation?” she called to Armstrong. “Don’t I
wish I had an engagement just now, though! What a picnic the press agent would
have! ‘Held a prisoner by a band of savage Indians subdued by the spell of her
wonderful voice’—wouldn’t that make great stuff? But I guess I quit the game
winner, anyhow—there ought to be a couple of thousand dollars in that sack of
gold dust I collected as encores, don’t you think?”
He left her at the door of the little Hotel de Buen Descansar,
where she had stopped before. Two hours later he returned to the hotel. He
glanced in at the open door of the little combined reception room and café.
Half a dozen of Macuto’s representative social and official caballeros were
distributed about the room. Señor Villablanca, the wealthy rubber
concessionist, reposed his fat figure on two chairs, with an emollient smile
beaming upon his chocolate-coloured face. Guilbert, the French mining engineer,
leered through his polished nose-glasses. Colonel Mendez, of the regular army,
in gold-laced uniform and fatuous grin, was busily extracting corks from champagne
bottles. Other patterns of Macutian gallantry and fashion pranced and posed.
The air was hazy with cigarette smoke. Wine dripped upon the floor.
Perched upon a table in the centre of the room in an attitude of
easy preëminence was Mlle. Giraud. A chic costume of white lawn and cherry
ribbons supplanted her travelling garb. There was a suggestion of lace, and a
frill or two, with a discreet, small implication of hand-embroidered pink
hosiery. Upon her lap rested a guitar. In her face was the light of resurrection,
the peace of elysium attained through fire and suffering. She was singing to a
lively accompaniment a little song:
“When you see de big round moon
Comin’ up like a balloon,
Dis nigger skips fur to kiss de lips
Ob his stylish, black-faced coon.”
The singer caught sight of Armstrong.
“Hi! there, Johnny,” she called; “I’ve been expecting you for an
hour. What kept you? Gee! but these smoked guys are the slowest you ever saw.
They ain’t on, at all. Come along in, and I’ll make this coffee-coloured old
sport with the gold epaulettes open one for you right off the ice.”
“Thank you,” said Armstrong; “not just now, I believe. I’ve
several things to attend to.”
He walked out and down the street, and met Rucker coming up from
the Consulate.
“Play you a game of billiards,” said Armstrong. “I want something
to take the taste of the sea level out of my mouth.”
In gilt letters on the
ground glass of the door of room No. 962 were the words: “Robbins &
Hartley, Brokers.” The clerks had gone. It was past five, and with the solid
tramp of a drove of prize Percherons, scrub-women were invading the
cloud-capped twenty-story office building. A puff of red-hot air flavoured with
lemon peelings, soft-coal smoke and train oil came in through the half-open windows.
Robbins, fifty, something of an overweight beau, and addicted to
first nights and hotel palm-rooms, pretended to be envious of his partner’s
commuter’s joys.
“Going to be something doing in the humidity line to-night,” he
said. “You out-of-town chaps will be the people, with your katydids and
moonlight and long drinks and things out on the front porch.”
Hartley, twenty-nine, serious, thin, good-looking, nervous, sighed
and frowned a little.
“Yes,” said he, “we always have cool nights in Floralhurst, especially
in the winter.”
A man with an air of mystery came in the door and went up to
Hartley.
“I’ve found where she lives,” he announced in the portentous
half-whisper that makes the detective at work a marked being to his fellow men.
Hartley scowled him into a state of dramatic silence and quietude.
But by that time Robbins had got his cane and set his tie pin to his liking,
and with a debonair nod went out to his metropolitan amusements.
“Here is the address,” said the detective in a natural tone, being
deprived of an audience to foil.
Hartley took the leaf torn out of the sleuth’s dingy memorandum
book. On it were pencilled the words “Vivienne Arlington, No. 341 East ––––th
Street, care of Mrs. McComus.”
“Moved there a week ago,” said the detective. “Now, if you want
any shadowing done, Mr. Hartley, I can do you as fine a job in that line as
anybody in the city. It will be only $7 a day and expenses. Can send in a daily
typewritten report, covering—”
“You needn’t go on,” interrupted the broker. “It isn’t a case of
that kind. I merely wanted the address. How much shall I pay you?”
“One day’s work,” said the sleuth. “A tenner will cover it.”
Hartley paid the man and dismissed him. Then he left the office
and boarded a Broadway car. At the first large crosstown artery of travel he
took an eastbound car that deposited him in a decaying avenue, whose ancient
structures once sheltered the pride and glory of the town.
Walking a few squares, he came to the building that he sought. It
was a new flathouse, bearing carved upon its cheap stone portal its sonorous
name, “The Vallambrosa.” Fire-escapes zigzagged down its front—these laden with
household goods, drying clothes, and squalling children evicted by the
midsummer heat. Here and there a pale rubber plant peeped from the
miscellaneous mass, as if wondering to what kingdom it belonged—vegetable,
animal or artificial.
Hartley pressed the “McComus” button. The door latch clicked
spasmodically—now hospitably, now doubtfully, as though in anxiety whether it
might be admitting friends or duns. Hartley entered and began to climb the
stairs after the manner of those who seek their friends in city
flat-houses—which is the manner of a boy who climbs an apple-tree, stopping
when he comes upon what he wants.
On the fourth floor he saw Vivienne standing in an open door. She
invited him inside, with a nod and a bright, genuine smile. She placed a chair
for him near a window, and poised herself gracefully upon the edge of one of
those Jekyll-and-Hyde pieces of furniture that are masked and mysteriously
hooded, unguessable bulks by day and inquisitorial racks of torture by night.
Hartley cast a quick, critical, appreciative glance at her before
speaking, and told himself that his taste in choosing had been flawless.
Vivienne was about twenty-one. She was of the purest Saxon type.
Her hair was a ruddy golden, each filament of the neatly gathered mass shining
with its own lustre and delicate graduation of colour. In perfect harmony were
her ivory-clear complexion and deep sea-blue eyes that looked upon the world
with the ingenuous calmness of a mermaid or the pixie of an undiscovered
mountain stream. Her frame was strong and yet possessed the grace of absolute
naturalness. And yet with all her Northern clearness and frankness of line and colouring,
there seemed to be something of the tropics in her—something of languor in the
droop of her pose, of love of ease in her ingenious complacency of satisfaction
and comfort in the mere act of breathing—something that seemed to claim for her
a right as a perfect work of nature to exist and be admired equally with a rare
flower or some beautiful, milk-white dove among its sober-hued companions.
She was dressed in a white waist and dark skirt—that discreet
masquerade of goose-girl and duchess.
“Vivienne,” said Hartley, looking at her pleadingly, “you did not
answer my last letter. It was only by nearly a week’s search that I found where
you had moved to. Why have you kept me in suspense when you knew how anxiously
I was waiting to see you and hear from you?”
The girl looked out the window dreamily.
“Mr. Hartley,” she said hesitatingly, “I hardly know what to say
to you. I realize all the advantages of your offer, and sometimes I feel sure
that I could be contented with you. But, again, I am doubtful. I was born a
city girl, and I am afraid to bind myself to a quiet suburban life.”
“My dear girl,” said Hartley, ardently, “have I not told you that
you shall have everything that your heart can desire that is in my power to
give you? You shall come to the city for the theatres, for shopping and to
visit your friends as often as you care to. You can trust me, can you not?”
“To the fullest,” she said, turning her frank eyes upon him with a
smile. “I know you are the kindest of men, and that the girl you get will be a
lucky one. I learned all about you when I was at the Montgomerys’.”
“Ah!” exclaimed Hartley, with a tender, reminiscent light in his
eye; “I remember well the evening I first saw you at the Montgomerys’. Mrs.
Montgomery was sounding your praises to me all the evening. And she hardly did
you justice. I shall never forget that supper. Come, Vivienne, promise me. I
want you. You’ll never regret coming with me. No one else will ever give you as
pleasant a home.”
The girl sighed and looked down at her folded hands.
A sudden jealous suspicion seized Hartley.
“Tell me, Vivienne,” he asked, regarding her keenly, “is there
another—is there some one else ?”
A rosy flush crept slowly over her fair cheeks and neck.
“You shouldn’t ask that, Mr. Hartley,” she said, in some
confusion. “But I will tell you. There is one other—but he has no right—I have
promised him nothing.”
“His name?” demanded Hartley, sternly.
“Townsend.”
“Rafford Townsend!” exclaimed Hartley, with a grim tightening of
his jaw. “How did that man come to know you? After all I’ve done for him—”
“His auto has just stopped below,” said Vivienne, bending over the
window-sill. “He’s coming for his answer. Oh I don’t know what to do!”
The bell in the flat kitchen whirred. Vivienne hurried to press
the latch button.
“Stay here,” said Hartley. “I will meet him in the hall.”
Townsend, looking like a Spanish grandee in his light tweeds,
Panama hat and curling black mustache, came up the stairs three at a time. He
stopped at sight of Hartley and looked foolish.
“Go back,” said Hartley, firmly, pointing downstairs with his
forefinger.
“Hullo!” said Townsend, feigning surprise. “What’s up? What are
you doing here, old man?”
“Go back,” repeated Hartley, inflexibly. “The Law of the Jungle.
Do you want the Pack to tear you in pieces? The kill is mine.”
“I came here to see a plumber about the bathroom connections,”
said Townsend, bravely.
“All right,” said Hartley. “You shall have that lying plaster to
stick upon your traitorous soul. But, go back.” Townsend went downstairs,
leaving a bitter word to be wafted up the draught of the staircase. Hartley
went back to his wooing.
“Vivienne,” said he, masterfully. “I have got to have you. I will
take no more refusals or dilly-dallying.”
“When do you want me?” she asked.
“Now. As soon as you can get ready.”
She stood calmly before him and looked him in the eye.
“Do you think for one moment,” she said, “that I would enter your
home while Héloise is there?”
Hartley cringed as if from an unexpected blow. He folded his arms
and paced the carpet once or twice.
“She shall go,” he declared grimly. Drops stood upon his brow.
“Why should I let that woman make my life miserable? Never have I seen one day
of freedom from trouble since I have known her. You are right, Vivienne.
Héloise must be sent away before I can take you home. But she shall go. I have
decided. I will turn her from my doors.”
“When will you do this?” asked the girl.
Hartley clinched his teeth and bent his brows together.
“To-night,” he said, resolutely. “I will send her away to-night.”
“Then,” said Vivienne, “my answer is ‘yes.’ Come for me when you
will.”
She looked into his eyes with a sweet, sincere light in her own.
Hartley could scarcely believe that her surrender was true, it was so swift and
complete.
“Promise me,” he said feelingly, “on your word and honour.”
“On my word and honour,” repeated Vivienne, softly.
At the door he turned and gazed at her happily, but yet as one who
scarcely trusts the foundations of his joy.
“To-morrow,” he said, with a forefinger of reminder uplifted.
“To-morrow,” she repeated with a smile of truth and candour.
In an hour and forty minutes Hartley stepped off the train at
Floralhurst. A brisk walk of ten minutes brought him to the gate of a handsome
two-story cottage set upon a wide and well-tended lawn. Halfway to the house he
was met by a woman with jet-black braided hair and flowing white summer gown,
who half strangled him without apparent cause.
When they stepped into the hall she said:
“Mamma’s here. The auto is coming for her in half an hour. She
came to dinner, but there’s no dinner.”
“I’ve something to tell you,” said Hartley. “I thought to break it
to you gently, but since your mother is here we may as well out with it.”
He stooped and whispered something at her ear.
His wife screamed. Her mother came running into the hall. The
dark-haired woman screamed again—the joyful scream of a well-beloved and petted
woman.
“Oh, mamma!” she cried ecstatically, “what do you think? Vivienne
is coming to cook for us! She is the one that stayed with the Montgomerys a
whole year. And now, Billy, dear,” she concluded, “you must go right down into
the kitchen and discharge Héloise. She has been drunk again the whole day
long.”
VII.SOCIOLOGY IN SERGE AND STRAW
The season of
irresponsibility is at hand. Come, let us twine round our brows wreaths of
poison ivy (that is for idiocy), and wander hand in hand with sociology in the
summer fields.
Likely as not the world is flat. The wise men have tried to prove
that it is round, with indifferent success. They pointed out to us a ship going
to sea, and bade us observe that, at length, the convexity of the earth hid
from our view all but the vessel’s topmast. But we picked up a telescope and
looked, and saw the decks and hull again. Then the wise men said: “Oh, pshaw!
anyhow, the variation of the intersection of the equator and the ecliptic
proves it.” We could not see this through our telescope, so we remained silent.
But it stands to reason that, if the world were round, the queues of Chinamen
would stand straight up from their heads instead of hanging down their backs,
as travellers assure us they do.
Another hot-weather corroboration of the flat theory is the fact
that all of life, as we know it, moves in little, unavailing circles. More
justly than to anything else, it can be likened to the game of baseball. Crack!
we hit the ball, and away we go. If we earn a run (in life we call it success)
we get back to the home plate and sit upon a bench. If we are thrown out, we
walk back to the home plate—and sit upon a bench.
The circumnavigators of the alleged globe may have sailed the rim
of a watery circle back to the same port again. The truly great return at the
high tide of their attainments to the simplicity of a child. The billionaire
sits down at his mahogany to his bowl of bread and milk. When you reach the end
of your career, just take down the sign “Goal” and look at the other side of
it. You will find “Beginning Point” there. It has been reversed while you were
going around the track.
But this is humour, and must be stopped. Let us get back to the
serious questions that arise whenever Sociology turns summer boarder. You are
invited to consider the scene of the story—wild, Atlantic waves, thundering
against a wooded and rock-bound shore—in the Greater City of New York.
The town of Fishampton, on the south shore of Long Island, is
noted for its clam fritters and the summer residence of the Van Plushvelts.
The Van Plushvelts have a hundred million dollars, and their name
is a household word with tradesmen and photographers.
On the fifteenth of June the Van Plushvelts boarded up the front
door of their city house, carefully deposited their cat on the sidewalk,
instructed the caretaker not to allow it to eat any of the ivy on the walls,
and whizzed away in a 40-horse-power to Fishampton to stray alone in the
shade—Amaryllis not being in their class. If you are a subscriber to the Toadies’
Magazine, you have often—You say you are not? Well, you buy it at a
news-stand, thinking that the newsdealer is not wise to you. But he knows about
it all. HE knows—HE knows! I say that you have often seen in the Toadies’
Magazine pictures of the Van Plushvelts’ summer home; so it will not
be described here. Our business is with young Haywood Van Plushvelt, sixteen
years old, heir to the century of millions, darling of the financial gods and
great grandson of Peter Van Plushvelt, former owner of a particularly fine
cabbage patch that has been ruined by an intrusive lot of downtown skyscrapers.
One afternoon young Haywood Van Plushvelt strolled out between the
granite gate posts of “Dolce far Niente”—that’s what they called the place; and
it was an improvement on dolce Far Rockaway, I can tell you.
Haywood walked down into the village. He was human, after all, and
his prospective millions weighed upon him. Wealth had wreaked upon him its
direfullest. He was the product of private tutors. Even under his first
hobby-horse had tan bark been strewn. He had been born with a gold spoon,
lobster fork and fish-set in his mouth. For which I hope, later, to submit
justification, I must ask your consideration of his haberdashery and tailoring.
Young Fortunatus was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a
neat, white straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, of the well-known “immaculate”
trade mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat,
bamboo cane.
Down Persimmon Street (there’s never tree north of Hagerstown,
Md.) came from the village “Smoky” Dodson, fifteen and a half, worst boy in
Fishampton. “Smoky” was dressed in a ragged red sweater, wrecked and
weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and trousers of the “serviceable” brand.
Dust, clinging to the moisture induced by free exercise, darkened wide areas of
his face. “Smoky” carried a baseball bat, and a league ball that advertised
itself in the rotundity of his trousers pocket. Haywood stopped and passed the
time of day.
“Going to play ball?” he asked.
“Smoky’s” eyes and countenance confronted him with a frank
blue-and-freckled scrutiny.
“Me?” he said, with deadly mildness; “sure not. Can’t you see I’ve
got a divin’ suit on? I’m goin’ up in a submarine balloon to catch butterflies
with a two-inch auger.
“Excuse me,” said Haywood, with the insulting politeness of his
caste, “for mistaking you for a gentleman. I might have known better.”
“How might you have known better if you thought I was one?” said
“Smoky,” unconsciously a logician.
“By your appearance,” said Haywood. “No gentleman is dirty, ragged
and a liar.”
“Smoky” hooted once like a ferry-boat, spat on his hand, got a
firm grip on his baseball bat and then dropped it against the fence.
“Say,” said he, “I knows you. You’re the pup that belongs in that
swell private summer sanitarium for city-guys over there. I seen you come out
of the gate. You can’t bluff nobody because you’re rich. And because you got on
swell clothes. Arabella! Yah!”
“Ragamuffin!” said Haywood.
“Smoky” picked up a fence-rail splinter and laid it on his
shoulder.
“Dare you to knock it off,” he challenged.
“I wouldn’t soil my hands with you,” said the aristocrat.
“’Fraid,” said “Smoky” concisely. “Youse city-ducks ain’t got the
sand. I kin lick you with one-hand.”
“I don’t wish to have any trouble with you,” said Haywood. “I
asked you a civil question; and you replied, like a—like a—a cad.”
“Wot’s a cad?” asked “Smoky.”
“A cad is a disagreeable person,” answered Haywood, “who lacks
manners and doesn’t know his place. They sometimes play baseball.”
“I can tell you what a mollycoddle is,” said “Smoky.” “It’s a
monkey dressed up by its mother and sent out to pick daisies on the lawn.”
“When you have the honour to refer to the members of my family,”
said Haywood, with some dim ideas of a code in his mind, “you’d better leave
the ladies out of your remarks.”
“Ho! ladies!” mocked the rude one. “I say ladies! I know what them
rich women in the city does. They drink cocktails and swear and give parties to
gorillas. The papers say so.”
Then Haywood knew that it must be. He took off his coat, folded it
neatly and laid it on the roadside grass, placed his hat upon it and began to
unknot his blue silk tie.
“Hadn’t yer better ring fer yer maid, Arabella?” taunted “Smoky.”
“Wot yer going to do—go to bed?”
“I’m going to give you a good trouncing,” said the hero. He did
not hesitate, although the enemy was far beneath him socially. He remembered
that his father once thrashed a cabman, and the papers gave it two columns,
first page. And the Toadies’ Magazine had a special article on
Upper Cuts by the Upper Classes, and ran new pictures of the Van Plushvelt
country seat, at Fishampton.
“Wot’s trouncing?” asked “Smoky,” suspiciously. “I don’t want your
old clothes. I’m no—oh, you mean to scrap! My, my! I won’t do a thing to
mamma’s pet. Criminy! I’d hate to be a hand-laundered thing like you.
“Smoky” waited with some awkwardness for his adversary to prepare
for battle. His own decks were always clear for action. When he should spit
upon the palm of his terrible right it was equivalent to “You may fire now,
Gridley.”
The hated patrician advanced, with his shirt sleeves neatly rolled
up. “Smoky” waited, in an attitude of ease, expecting the affair to be
conducted according to Fishampton’s rules of war. These allowed combat to be
prefaced by stigma, recrimination, epithet, abuse and insult gradually
increasing in emphasis and degree. After a round of these “you’re anothers”
would come the chip knocked from the shoulder, or the advance across the “dare”
line drawn with a toe on the ground. Next light taps given and taken, these
also increasing in force until finally the blood was up and fists going at
their best.
But Haywood did not know Fishampton’s rules. Noblesse oblige kept
a faint smile on his face as he walked slowly up to “Smoky” and said:
“Going to play ball?”
“Smoky” quickly understood this to be a putting of the previous
question, giving him the chance to make practical apology by answering it with
civility and relevance.
“Listen this time,” said he. “I’m goin’ skatin’ on the river.
Don’t you see me automobile with Chinese lanterns on it standin’ and waitin’
for me?”
Haywood knocked him down.
“Smoky” felt wronged. To thus deprive him of preliminary wrangle
and objurgation was to send an armoured knight full tilt against a crashing
lance without permitting him first to caracole around the list to the flourish
of trumpets. But he scrambled up and fell upon his foe, head, feet and fists.
The fight lasted one round of an hour and ten minutes. It was
lengthened until it was more like a war or a family feud than a fight. Haywood
had learned some of the science of boxing and wrestling from his tutors, but
these he discarded for the more instinctive methods of battle handed down by
the cave-dwelling Van Plushvelts.
So, when he found himself, during the mêlée, seated upon the
kicking and roaring “Smoky’s” chest, he improved the opportunity by vigorously
kneading handfuls of sand and soil into his adversary’s ears, eyes and mouth,
and when “Smoky” got the proper leg hold and “turned” him, he fastened both
hands in the Plushvelt hair and pounded the Plushvelt head against the lap of
mother earth. Of course, the strife was not incessantly active. There were
seasons when one sat upon the other, holding him down, while each blew like a
grampus, spat out the more inconveniently large sections of gravel and earth,
and strove to subdue the spirit of his opponent with a frightful and
soul-paralyzing glare.
At last, it seemed that in the language of the ring, their efforts
lacked steam. They broke away, and each disappeared in a cloud as he brushed
away the dust of the conflict. As soon as his breath permitted, Haywood walked
close to “Smoky” and said:
“Going to play ball?”
“Smoky” looked pensively at the sky, at his bat lying on the
ground, and at the “leaguer” rounding his pocket.
“Sure,” he said, offhandedly. “The ‘Yellowjackets’ plays the ‘Long
Islands.’ I’m cap’n of the ‘Long Islands.’”
“I guess I didn’t mean to say you were ragged,” said Haywood. “But
you are dirty, you know.”
“Sure,” said “Smoky.” “Yer get that way knockin’ around. Say, I
don’t believe them New York papers about ladies drinkin’ and havin’ monkeys
dinin’ at the table with ’em. I guess they’re lies, like they print about
people eatin’ out of silver plates, and ownin’ dogs that cost $100.”
“Certainly,” said Haywood. “What do you play on your team?”
“Ketcher. Ever play any?”
“Never in my life,” said Haywood. “I’ve never known any fellows
except one or two of my cousins.”
“Jer like to learn? We’re goin’ to have a practice-game before the
match. Wanter come along? I’ll put yer in left-field, and yer won’t be long
ketchin’ on.”
“I’d like it bully,” said Haywood. “I’ve always wanted to play
baseball.”
The ladies’ maids of New York and the families of Western mine
owners with social ambitions will remember well the sensation that was created
by the report that the young multi-millionaire, Haywood Van Plushvelt, was
playing ball with the village youths of Fishampton. It was conceded that the
millennium of democracy had come. Reporters and photographers swarmed to the
island. The papers printed half-page pictures of him as short-stop stopping a
hot grounder. The Toadies’ Magazine got out a Bat and Ball
number that covered the subject historically, beginning with the vampire bat
and ending with the Patriarchs’ ball—illustrated with interior views of the Van
Plushvelt country seat. Ministers, educators and sociologists everywhere hailed
the event as the tocsin call that proclaimed the universal brotherhood of man.
One afternoon I was reclining under the trees near the shore at
Fishampton in the esteemed company of an eminent, bald-headed young
sociologist. By way of note it may be inserted that all sociologists are more
or less bald, and exactly thirty-two. Look ’em over.
The sociologist was citing the Van Plushvelt case as the most
important “uplift” symptom of a generation, and as an excuse for his own existence.
Immediately before us were the village baseball grounds. And now
came the sportive youth of Fishampton and distributed themselves, shouting,
about the diamond.
“There,” said the sociologist, pointing, “there is young Van
Plushvelt.”
I raised myself (so far a cosycophant with Mary Ann) and gazed.
Young Van Plushvelt sat upon the ground. He was dressed in a
ragged red sweater, wrecked and weather-worn golf cap, run-over shoes, and
trousers of the “serviceable” brand. Dust clinging to the moisture induced by
free exercise, darkened wide areas of his face.
“That is he,” repeated the sociologist. If he had said “him” I
could have been less vindictive.
On a bench, with an air, sat the young millionaire’s chum.
He was dressed in a neat suit of dark blue serge, a neat white
straw hat, neat low-cut tan shoes, linen of the well-known “immaculate” trade
mark, a neat, narrow four-in-hand tie, and carried a slender, neat bamboo cane.
I laughed loudly and vulgarly.
“What you want to do,” said I to the sociologist, “is to establish
a reformatory for the Logical Vicious Circle. Or else I’ve got wheels. It looks
to me as if things are running round and round in circles instead of getting
anywhere.”
“What do you mean?” asked the man of progress.
“Why, look what he has done to ‘Smoky’,” I replied.
“You will always be a fool,” said my friend, the sociologist,
getting up and walking away.
It looked like a good
thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down South, in Alabama—Bill Driscoll
and myself—when this kidnapping idea struck us. It was, as Bill afterward
expressed it, “during a moment of temporary mental apparition”; but we didn’t
find that out till later.
There was a town down there, as flat as a flannel-cake, and called
Summit, of course. It contained inhabitants of as undeleterious and
self-satisfied a class of peasantry as ever clustered around a Maypole.
Bill and me had a joint capital of about six hundred dollars, and
we needed just two thousand dollars more to pull off a fraudulent town-lot
scheme in Western Illinois with. We talked it over on the front steps of the
hotel. Philoprogenitiveness, says we, is strong in semi-rural communities;
therefore and for other reasons, a kidnapping project ought to do better there
than in the radius of newspapers that send reporters out in plain clothes to
stir up talk about such things. We knew that Summit couldn’t get after us with
anything stronger than constables and maybe some lackadaisical bloodhounds and
a diatribe or two in the Weekly Farmers’ Budget. So, it looked
good.
We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen
named Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage fancier
and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser. The kid was a boy
of ten, with bas-relief freckles, and hair the colour of the cover of the
magazine you buy at the news-stand when you want to catch a train. Bill and me
figured that Ebenezer would melt down for a ransom of two thousand dollars to a
cent. But wait till I tell you.
About two miles from Summit was a little mountain, covered with a
dense cedar brake. On the rear elevation of this mountain was a cave. There we
stored provisions. One evening after sundown, we drove in a buggy past old
Dorset’s house. The kid was in the street, throwing rocks at a kitten on the
opposite fence.
“Hey, little boy!” says Bill, “would you like to have a bag of
candy and a nice ride?”
The boy catches Bill neatly in the eye with a piece of brick.
“That will cost the old man an extra five hundred dollars,” says
Bill, climbing over the wheel.
That boy put up a fight like a welter-weight cinnamon bear; but,
at last, we got him down in the bottom of the buggy and drove away. We took him
up to the cave and I hitched the horse in the cedar brake. After dark I drove
the buggy to the little village, three miles away, where we had hired it, and
walked back to the mountain.
Bill was pasting court-plaster over the scratches and bruises on
his features. There was a fire burning behind the big rock at the entrance of
the cave, and the boy was watching a pot of boiling coffee, with two buzzard
tail-feathers stuck in his red hair. He points a stick at me when I come up,
and says:
“Ha! cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief,
the terror of the plains?
“He’s all right now,” says Bill, rolling up his trousers and
examining some bruises on his shins. “We’re playing Indian. We’re making
Buffalo Bill’s show look like magic-lantern views of Palestine in the town
hall. I’m Old Hank, the Trapper, Red Chief’s captive, and I’m to be scalped at
daybreak. By Geronimo! that kid can kick hard.”
Yes, sir, that boy seemed to be having the time of his life. The
fun of camping out in a cave had made him forget that he was a captive himself.
He immediately christened me Snake-eye, the Spy, and announced that, when his
braves returned from the warpath, I was to be broiled at the stake at the
rising of the sun.
Then we had supper; and he filled his mouth full of bacon and
bread and gravy, and began to talk. He made a during-dinner speech something
like this:
“I like this fine. I never camped out before; but I had a pet
’possum once, and I was nine last birthday. I hate to go to school. Rats ate up
sixteen of Jimmy Talbot’s aunt’s speckled hen’s eggs. Are there any real
Indians in these woods? I want some more gravy. Does the trees moving make the
wind blow? We had five puppies. What makes your nose so red, Hank? My father
has lots of money. Are the stars hot? I whipped Ed Walker twice, Saturday. I
don’t like girls. You dassent catch toads unless with a string. Do oxen make
any noise? Why are oranges round? Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave?
Amos Murray has got six toes. A parrot can talk, but a monkey or a fish can’t.
How many does it take to make twelve?”
Every few minutes he would remember that he was a pesky redskin,
and pick up his stick rifle and tiptoe to the mouth of the cave to rubber for
the scouts of the hated paleface. Now and then he would let out a war-whoop
that made Old Hank the Trapper shiver. That boy had Bill terrorized from the
start.
“Red Chief,” says I to the kid, “would you like to go home?”
“Aw, what for?” says he. “I don’t have any fun at home. I hate to
go to school. I like to camp out. You won’t take me back home again, Snake-eye,
will you?”
“Not right away,” says I. “We’ll stay here in the cave a while.”
“All right!” says he. “That’ll be fine. I never had such fun in
all my life.”
We went to bed about eleven o’clock. We spread down some wide
blankets and quilts and put Red Chief between us. We weren’t afraid he’d run
away. He kept us awake for three hours, jumping up and reaching for his rifle
and screeching: “Hist! pard,” in mine and Bill’s ears, as the fancied crackle
of a twig or the rustle of a leaf revealed to his young imagination the
stealthy approach of the outlaw band. At last, I fell into a troubled sleep,
and dreamed that I had been kidnapped and chained to a tree by a ferocious
pirate with red hair.
Just at daybreak, I was awakened by a series of awful screams from
Bill. They weren’t yells, or howls, or shouts, or whoops, or yawps, such as
you’d expect from a manly set of vocal organs—they were simply indecent,
terrifying, humiliating screams, such as women emit when they see ghosts or
caterpillars. It’s an awful thing to hear a strong, desperate, fat man scream
incontinently in a cave at daybreak.
I jumped up to see what the matter was. Red Chief was sitting on
Bill’s chest, with one hand twined in Bill’s hair. In the other he had the
sharp case-knife we used for slicing bacon; and he was industriously and
realistically trying to take Bill’s scalp, according to the sentence that had
been pronounced upon him the evening before.
I got the knife away from the kid and made him lie down again.
But, from that moment, Bill’s spirit was broken. He laid down on his side of
the bed, but he never closed an eye again in sleep as long as that boy was with
us. I dozed off for a while, but along toward sun-up I remembered that Red
Chief had said I was to be burned at the stake at the rising of the sun. I
wasn’t nervous or afraid; but I sat up and lit my pipe and leaned against a
rock.
“What you getting up so soon for, Sam?” asked Bill.
“Me?” says I. “Oh, I got a kind of a pain in my shoulder. I
thought sitting up would rest it.”
“You’re a liar!” says Bill. “You’re afraid. You was to be burned
at sunrise, and you was afraid he’d do it. And he would, too, if he could find
a match. Ain’t it awful, Sam? Do you think anybody will pay out money to get a
little imp like that back home?”
“Sure,” said I. “A rowdy kid like that is just the kind that
parents dote on. Now, you and the Chief get up and cook breakfast, while I go
up on the top of this mountain and reconnoitre.”
I went up on the peak of the little mountain and ran my eye over
the contiguous vicinity. Over toward Summit I expected to see the sturdy
yeomanry of the village armed with scythes and pitchforks beating the
countryside for the dastardly kidnappers. But what I saw was a peaceful
landscape dotted with one man ploughing with a dun mule. Nobody was dragging
the creek; no couriers dashed hither and yon, bringing tidings of no news to
the distracted parents. There was a sylvan attitude of somnolent sleepiness
pervading that section of the external outward surface of Alabama that lay
exposed to my view. “Perhaps,” says I to myself, “it has not yet been
discovered that the wolves have borne away the tender lambkin from the fold.
Heaven help the wolves!” says I, and I went down the mountain to breakfast.
When I got to the cave I found Bill backed up against the side of
it, breathing hard, and the boy threatening to smash him with a rock half as
big as a cocoanut.
“He put a red-hot boiled potato down my back,” explained Bill,
“and then mashed it with his foot; and I boxed his ears. Have you got a gun
about you, Sam?”
I took the rock away from the boy and kind of patched up the
argument. “I’ll fix you,” says the kid to Bill. “No man ever yet struck the Red
Chief but what he got paid for it. You better beware!”
After breakfast the kid takes a piece of leather with strings
wrapped around it out of his pocket and goes outside the cave unwinding it.
“What’s he up to now?” says Bill, anxiously. “You don’t think
he’ll run away, do you, Sam?”
“No fear of it,” says I. “He don’t seem to be much of a home body.
But we’ve got to fix up some plan about the ransom. There don’t seem to be much
excitement around Summit on account of his disappearance; but maybe they
haven’t realized yet that he’s gone. His folks may think he’s spending the
night with Aunt Jane or one of the neighbours. Anyhow, he’ll be missed to-day.
To-night we must get a message to his father demanding the two thousand dollars
for his return.”
Just then we heard a kind Of war-whoop, such as David might have
emitted when he knocked out the champion Goliath. It was a sling that Red Chief
had pulled out of his pocket, and he was whirling it around his head.
I dodged, and heard a heavy thud and a kind of a sigh from Bill,
like a horse gives out when you take his saddle off. A niggerhead rock the size
of an egg had caught Bill just behind his left ear. He loosened himself all
over and fell in the fire across the frying pan of hot water for washing the
dishes. I dragged him out and poured cold water on his head for half an hour.
By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says: “Sam,
do you know who my favourite Biblical character is?”
“Take it easy,” says I. “You’ll come to your senses presently.”
“King Herod,” says he. “You won’t go away and leave me here alone,
will you, Sam?”
I went out and caught that boy and shook him until his freckles
rattled.
“If you don’t behave,” says I, “I’ll take you straight home. Now,
are you going to be good, or not?”
“I was only funning,” says he sullenly. “I didn’t mean to hurt Old
Hank. But what did he hit me for? I’ll behave, Snake-eye, if you won’t send me
home, and if you’ll let me play the Black Scout to-day.”
“I don’t know the game,” says I. “That’s for you and Mr. Bill to
decide. He’s your playmate for the day. I’m going away for a while, on
business. Now, you come in and make friends with him and say you are sorry for
hurting him, or home you go, at once.”
I made him and Bill shake hands, and then I took Bill aside and
told him I was going to Poplar Cove, a little village three miles from the
cave, and find out what I could about how the kidnapping had been regarded in
Summit. Also, I thought it best to send a peremptory letter to old man Dorset
that day, demanding the ransom and dictating how it should be paid.
“You know, Sam,” says Bill, “I’ve stood by you without batting an
eye in earthquakes, fire and flood—in poker games, dynamite outrages, police
raids, train robberies and cyclones. I never lost my nerve yet till we
kidnapped that two-legged skyrocket of a kid. He’s got me going. You won’t
leave me long with him, will you, Sam?”
“I’ll be back some time this afternoon,” says I. “You must keep
the boy amused and quiet till I return. And now we’ll write the letter to old
Dorset.”
Bill and I got paper and pencil and worked on the letter while Red
Chief, with a blanket wrapped around him, strutted up and down, guarding the
mouth of the cave. Bill begged me tearfully to make the ransom fifteen hundred
dollars instead of two thousand. “I ain’t attempting,” says he, “to decry the
celebrated moral aspect of parental affection, but we’re dealing with humans,
and it ain’t human for anybody to give up two thousand dollars for that
forty-pound chunk of freckled wildcat. I’m willing to take a chance at fifteen
hundred dollars. You can charge the difference up to me.”
So, to relieve Bill, I acceded, and we collaborated a letter that
ran this way:
Ebenezer Dorset, Esq.:
We have your boy concealed in a place far from Summit.
It is useless for you or the most skilful detectives to attempt to find him.
Absolutely, the only terms on which you can have him restored to you are these:
We demand fifteen hundred dollars in large bills for his return; the money to
be left at midnight to-night at the same spot and in the same box as your
reply—as hereinafter described. If you agree to these terms, send your answer
in writing by a solitary messenger to-night at half-past eight o’clock. After
crossing Owl Creek, on the road to Poplar Cove, there are three large trees
about a hundred yards apart, close to the fence of the wheat field on the
right-hand side. At the bottom of the fence-post, opposite the third tree, will
be found a small pasteboard box.
The messenger will place the answer in this box and
return immediately to Summit.
If you attempt any treachery or fail to comply with our
demand as stated, you will never see your boy again.
If you pay the money as demanded, he will be returned
to you safe and well within three hours. These terms are final, and if you do
not accede to them no further communication will be attempted.
TWO DESPERATE MEN.
I addressed this letter to Dorset, and put it in my pocket. As I
was about to start, the kid comes up to me and says:
“Aw, Snake-eye, you said I could play the Black Scout while you
was gone.”
“Play it, of course,” says I. “Mr. Bill will play with you. What
kind of a game is it?”
“I’m the Black Scout,” says Red Chief, “and I have to ride to the
stockade to warn the settlers that the Indians are coming. I’m tired of playing
Indian myself. I want to be the Black Scout.”
“All right,” says I. “It sounds harmless to me. I guess Mr. Bill
will help you foil the pesky savages.”
“What am I to do?” asks Bill, looking at the kid suspiciously.
“You are the hoss,” says Black Scout. “Get down on your hands and
knees. How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?”
“You’d better keep him interested,” said I, “till we get the
scheme going. Loosen up.”
Bill gets down on his all fours, and a look comes in his eye like
a rabbit’s when you catch it in a trap.
“How far is it to the stockade, kid?” he asks, in a husky manner
of voice.
“Ninety miles,” says the Black Scout. “And you have to hump
yourself to get there on time. Whoa, now!”
The Black Scout jumps on Bill’s back and digs his heels in his
side.
“For Heaven’s sake,” says Bill, “hurry back, Sam, as soon as you
can. I wish we hadn’t made the ransom more than a thousand. Say, you quit
kicking me or I’ll get up and warm you good.”
I walked over to Poplar Cove and sat around the postoffice and
store, talking with the chawbacons that came in to trade. One whiskerando says
that he hears Summit is all upset on account of Elder Ebenezer Dorset’s boy
having been lost or stolen. That was all I wanted to know. I bought some
smoking tobacco, referred casually to the price of black-eyed peas, posted my
letter surreptitiously and came away. The postmaster said the mail-carrier
would come by in an hour to take the mail on to Summit.
When I got back to the cave Bill and the boy were not to be found.
I explored the vicinity of the cave, and risked a yodel or two, but there was
no response.
So I lighted my pipe and sat down on a mossy bank to await
developments.
In about half an hour I heard the bushes rustle, and Bill wabbled
out into the little glade in front of the cave. Behind him was the kid,
stepping softly like a scout, with a broad grin on his face. Bill stopped, took
off his hat and wiped his face with a red handkerchief. The kid stopped about
eight feet behind him.
“Sam,” says Bill, “I suppose you’ll think I’m a renegade, but I
couldn’t help it. I’m a grown person with masculine proclivities and habits of
self-defense, but there is a time when all systems of egotism and predominance
fail. The boy is gone. I have sent him home. All is off. There was martyrs in
old times,” goes on Bill, “that suffered death rather than give up the
particular graft they enjoyed. None of ’em ever was subjugated to such
supernatural tortures as I have been. I tried to be faithful to our articles of
depredation; but there came a limit.”
“What’s the trouble, Bill?” I asks him.
“I was rode,” says Bill, “the ninety miles to the stockade, not
barring an inch. Then, when the settlers was rescued, I was given oats. Sand
ain’t a palatable substitute. And then, for an hour I had to try to explain to
him why there was nothin’ in holes, how a road can run both ways and what makes
the grass green. I tell you, Sam, a human can only stand so much. I takes him
by the neck of his clothes and drags him down the mountain. On the way he kicks
my legs black-and-blue from the knees down; and I’ve got to have two or three
bites on my thumb and hand cauterized.
“But he’s gone”—continues Bill—“gone home. I showed him the road
to Summit and kicked him about eight feet nearer there at one kick. I’m sorry
we lose the ransom; but it was either that or Bill Driscoll to the madhouse.”
Bill is puffing and blowing, but there is a look of ineffable
peace and growing content on his rose-pink features.
“Bill,” says I, “there isn’t any heart disease in your family, is
there?
“No,” says Bill, “nothing chronic except malaria and accidents.
Why?”
“Then you might turn around,” says I, “and have a took behind
you.”
Bill turns and sees the boy, and loses his complexion and sits
down plump on the round and begins to pluck aimlessly at grass and little
sticks. For an hour I was afraid for his mind. And then I told him that my
scheme was to put the whole job through immediately and that we would get the
ransom and be off with it by midnight if old Dorset fell in with our
proposition. So Bill braced up enough to give the kid a weak sort of a smile
and a promise to play the Russian in a Japanese war with him is soon as he felt
a little better.
I had a scheme for collecting that ransom without danger of being
caught by counterplots that ought to commend itself to professional kidnappers.
The tree under which the answer was to be left—and the money later on—was close
to the road fence with big, bare fields on all sides. If a gang of constables
should be watching for any one to come for the note they could see him a long
way off crossing the fields or in the road. But no, sirree! At half-past eight
I was up in that tree as well hidden as a tree toad, waiting for the messenger
to arrive.
Exactly on time, a half-grown boy rides up the road on a bicycle,
locates the pasteboard box at the foot of the fence-post, slips a folded piece
of paper into it and pedals away again back toward Summit.
I waited an hour and then concluded the thing was square. I slid
down the tree, got the note, slipped along the fence till I struck the woods,
and was back at the cave in another half an hour. I opened the note, got near
the lantern and read it to Bill. It was written with a pen in a crabbed hand,
and the sum and substance of it was this:
Two Desperate Men.
Gentlemen: I received your letter to-day by post, in regard to the
ransom you ask for the return of my son. I think you are a little high in your
demands, and I hereby make you a counter-proposition, which I am inclined to
believe you will accept. You bring Johnny home and pay me two hundred and fifty
dollars in cash, and I agree to take him off your hands. You had better come at
night, for the neighbours believe he is lost, and I couldn’t be responsible for
what they would do to anybody they saw bringing him back.
Very respectfully,
EBENEZER DORSET.
“Great pirates of Penzance!” says I; “of all the impudent—”
But I glanced at Bill, and hesitated. He had the most appealing
look in his eyes I ever saw on the face of a dumb or a talking brute.
“Sam,” says he, “what’s two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
We’ve got the money. One more night of this kid will send me to a bed in
Bedlam. Besides being a thorough gentleman, I think Mr. Dorset is a spendthrift
for making us such a liberal offer. You ain’t going to let the chance go, are
you?”
“Tell you the truth, Bill,” says I, “this little he ewe lamb has
somewhat got on my nerves too. We’ll take him home, pay the ransom and make our
get-away.”
We took him home that night. We got him to go by telling him that
his father had bought a silver-mounted rifle and a pair of moccasins for him,
and we were going to hunt bears the next day.
It was just twelve o’clock when we knocked at Ebenezer’s front
door. Just at the moment when I should have been abstracting the fifteen
hundred dollars from the box under the tree, according to the original
proposition, Bill was counting out two hundred and fifty dollars into Dorset’s
hand.
When the kid found out we were going to leave him at home he
started up a howl like a calliope and fastened himself as tight as a leech to
Bill’s leg. His father peeled him away gradually, like a porous plaster.
“How long can you hold him?” asks Bill.
“I’m not as strong as I used to be,” says old Dorset, “but I think
I can promise you ten minutes.”
“Enough,” says Bill. “In ten minutes I shall cross the Central,
Southern and Middle Western States, and be legging it trippingly for the
Canadian border.”
And, as dark as it was, and as fat as Bill was, and as good a
runner as I am, he was a good mile and a half out of Summit before I could
catch up with him.
Prithee, smite the poet
in the eye when he would sing to you praises of the month of May. It is a month
presided over by the spirits of mischief and madness. Pixies and
flibbertigibbets haunt the budding woods: Puck and his train of midgets are
busy in town and country.
In May nature holds up at us a chiding finger, bidding us remember
that we are not gods, but overconceited members of her own great family. She
reminds us that we are brothers to the chowder-doomed clam and the donkey;
lineal scions of the pansy and the chimpanzee, and but cousins-german to the
cooing doves, the quacking ducks and the housemaids and policemen in the parks.
In May Cupid shoots blindfolded—millionaires marry stenographers;
wise professors woo white-aproned gum-chewers behind quick-lunch counters;
schoolma’ams make big bad boys remain after school; lads with ladders steal
lightly over lawns where Juliet waits in her trellissed window with her
telescope packed; young couples out for a walk come home married; old chaps put
on white spats and promenade near the Normal School; even married men, grown
unwontedly tender and sentimental, whack their spouses on the back and growl:
“How goes it, old girl:”
This May, who is no goddess, but Circe, masquerading at the dance
given in honour of the fair débutante, Summer, puts the kibosh on us all.
Old Mr. Coulson groaned a little, and then sat up straight in his
invalid’s chair. He had the gout very bad in one foot, a house near Gramercy
Park, half a million dollars and a daughter. And he had a housekeeper, Mrs.
Widdup. The fact and the name deserve a sentence each. They have it.
When May poked Mr. Coulson he became elder brother to the
turtle-dove. In the window near which he sat were boxes of jonquils, of
hyacinths, geraniums and pansies. The breeze brought their odour into the room.
Immediately there was a well-contested round between the breath of the flowers
and the able and active effluvium from gout liniment. The liniment won easily;
but not before the flowers got an uppercut to old Mr. Coulson’s nose. The
deadly work of the implacable, false enchantress May was done.
Across the park to the olfactories of Mr. Coulson came other
unmistakable, characteristic, copyrighted smells of spring that belong to
the-big-city-above-the-Subway, alone. The smells of hot asphalt, underground
caverns, gasoline, patchouli, orange peel, sewer gas, Albany grabs, Egyptian
cigarettes, mortar and the undried ink on newspapers. The inblowing air was
sweet and mild. Sparrows wrangled happily everywhere outdoors. Never trust May.
Mr. Coulson twisted the ends of his white mustache, cursed his
foot, and pounded a bell on the table by his side.
In came Mrs. Widdup. She was comely to the eye, fair, flustered,
forty and foxy.
“Higgins is out, sir,” she said, with a smile suggestive of
vibratory massage. “He went to post a letter. Can I do anything for you, sir?”
“It’s time for my aconite,” said old Mr. Coulson. “Drop it for me.
The bottle’s there. Three drops. In water. D–––– that is, confound Higgins!
There’s nobody in this house cares if I die here in this chair for want of
attention.”
Mrs. Widdup sighed deeply.
“Don’t be saying that, sir,” she said. “There’s them that would
care more than any one knows. Thirteen drops, you said, sir?”
“Three,” said old man Coulson.
He took his dose and then Mrs. Widdup’s hand. She blushed. Oh,
yes, it can be done. Just hold your breath and compress the diaphragm.
“Mrs. Widdup,” said Mr. Coulson, “the springtime’s full upon us.”
“Ain’t that right?” said Mrs. Widdup. “The air’s real warm. And
there’s bock-beer signs on every corner. And the park’s all yaller and pink and
blue with flowers; and I have such shooting pains up my legs and body.”
“‘In the spring,’” quoted Mr. Coulson, curling his mustache, “‘a
y–––– that is, a man’s—fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.’”
“Lawsy, now!” exclaimed Mrs. Widdup; “ain’t that right? Seems like
it’s in the air.”
“‘In the spring,’” continued old Mr. Coulson, “‘a livelier iris
shines upon the burnished dove.’”
“They do be lively, the Irish,” sighed Mrs. Widdup pensively.
“Mrs. Widdup,” said Mr. Coulson, making a face at a twinge of his
gouty foot, “this would be a lonesome house without you. I’m an—that is, I’m an
elderly man—but I’m worth a comfortable lot of money. If half a million
dollars’ worth of Government bonds and the true affection of a heart that,
though no longer beating with the first ardour of youth, can still throb with
genuine—”
The loud noise of an overturned chair near the portières of the
adjoining room interrupted the venerable and scarcely suspecting victim of May.
In stalked Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson, bony, durable,
tall, high-nosed, frigid, well-bred, thirty-five,
in-the-neighbourhood-of-Gramercy-Parkish. She put up a lorgnette. Mrs. Widdup
hastily stooped and arranged the bandages on Mr. Coulson’s gouty foot.
“I thought Higgins was with you,” said Miss Van Meeker Constantia.
“Higgins went out,” explained her father, “and Mrs. Widdup
answered the bell. That is better now, Mrs. Widdup, thank you. No; there is
nothing else I require.”
The housekeeper retired, pink under the cool, inquiring stare of
Miss Coulson.
“This spring weather is lovely, isn’t it, daughter?” said the old
man, consciously conscious.
“That’s just it,” replied Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson,
somewhat obscurely. “When does Mrs. Widdup start on her vacation, papa?”
“I believe she said a week from to-day,” said Mr. Coulson.
Miss Van Meeker Constantia stood for a minute at the window
gazing, toward the little park, flooded with the mellow afternoon sunlight.
With the eye of a botanist she viewed the flowers—most potent weapons of
insidious May. With the cool pulses of a virgin of Cologne she withstood the
attack of the ethereal mildness. The arrows of the pleasant sunshine fell back,
frostbitten, from the cold panoply of her unthrilled bosom. The odour of the
flowers waked no soft sentiments in the unexplored recesses of her dormant
heart. The chirp of the sparrows gave her a pain. She mocked at May.
But although Miss Coulson was proof against the season, she was
keen enough to estimate its power. She knew that elderly men and thick-waisted
women jumped as educated fleas in the ridiculous train of May, the merry mocker
of the months. She had heard of foolish old gentlemen marrying their housekeepers
before. What a humiliating thing, after all, was this feeling called love!
The next morning at 8 o’clock, when the iceman called, the cook
told him that Miss Coulson wanted to see him in the basement.
“Well, ain’t I the Olcott and Depew; not mentioning the first name
at all?” said the iceman, admiringly, of himself.
As a concession he rolled his sleeves down, dropped his icehooks
on a syringa and went back. When Miss Van Meeker Constantia Coulson addressed
him he took off his hat.
“There is a rear entrance to this basement,” said Miss Coulson,
“which can be reached by driving into the vacant lot next door, where they are
excavating for a building. I want you to bring in that way within two hours
1,000 pounds of ice. You may have to bring another man or two to help you. I
will show you where I want it placed. I also want 1,000 pounds a day delivered
the same way for the next four days. Your company may charge the ice on our
regular bill. This is for your extra trouble.”
Miss Coulson tendered a ten-dollar bill. The iceman bowed, and
held his hat in his two hands behind him.
“Not if you’ll excuse me, lady. It’ll be a pleasure to fix things
up for you any way you please.”
Alas for May!
About noon Mr. Coulson knocked two glasses off his table, broke
the spring of his bell and yelled for Higgins at the same time.
“Bring an axe,” commanded Mr. Coulson, sardonically, “or send out
for a quart of prussic acid, or have a policeman come in and shoot me. I’d
rather that than be frozen to death.”
“It does seem to be getting cool, Sir,” said Higgins. “I hadn’t
noticed it before. I’ll close the window, Sir.”
“Do,” said Mr. Coulson. “They call this spring, do they? If it
keeps up long I’ll go back to Palm Beach. House feels like a morgue.”
Later Miss Coulson dutifully came in to inquire how the gout was
progressing.
“’Stantia,” said the old man, “how is the weather outdoors?”
“Bright,” answered Miss Coulson, “but chilly.”
“Feels like the dead of winter to me,” said Mr. Coulson.
“An instance,” said Constantia, gazing abstractedly out the
window, “of ‘winter lingering in the lap of spring,’ though the metaphor is not
in the most refined taste.”
A little later she walked down by the side of the little park and
on westward to Broadway to accomplish a little shopping.
A little later than that Mrs. Widdup entered the invalid’s room.
“Did you ring, Sir?” she asked, dimpling in many places. “I asked
Higgins to go to the drug store, and I thought I heard your bell.”
“I did not,” said Mr. Coulson.
“I’m afraid,” said Mrs. Widdup, “I interrupted you sir, yesterday
when you were about to say something.”
“How comes it, Mrs. Widdup,” said old man Coulson sternly, “that I
find it so cold in this house?”
“Cold, Sir?” said the housekeeper, “why, now, since you speak of
it it do seem cold in this room. But, outdoors it’s as warm and fine as June,
sir. And how this weather do seem to make one’s heart jump out of one’s shirt
waist, sir. And the ivy all leaved out on the side of the house, and the
hand-organs playing, and the children dancing on the sidewalk—’tis a great time
for speaking out what’s in the heart. You were saying yesterday, sir—”
“Woman!” roared Mr. Coulson; “you are a fool. I pay you to take
care of this house. I am freezing to death in my own room, and you come in and
drivel to me about ivy and hand-organs. Get me an overcoat at once. See that
all doors and windows are closed below. An old, fat, irresponsible, one-sided
object like you prating about springtime and flowers in the middle of winter!
When Higgins comes back, tell him to bring me a hot rum punch. And now get
out!”
But who shall shame the bright face of May? Rogue though she be
and disturber of sane men’s peace, no wise virgins cunning nor cold storage
shall make her bow her head in the bright galaxy of months.
Oh, yes, the story was not quite finished.
A night passed, and Higgins helped old man Coulson in the morning
to his chair by the window. The cold of the room was gone. Heavenly odours and
fragrant mildness entered.
In hurried Mrs. Widdup, and stood by his chair. Mr. Coulson
reached his bony hand and grasped her plump one.
“Mrs. Widdup,” he said, “this house would be no home without you.
I have half a million dollars. If that and the true affection of a heart no
longer in its youthful prime, but still not cold, could—”
“I found out what made it cold,” said Mrs. Widdup, leaning against
his chair. “’Twas ice—tons of it—in the basement and in the furnace room,
everywhere. I shut off the registers that it was coming through into your room,
Mr. Coulson, poor soul! And now it’s Maytime again.”
“A true heart,” went on old man Coulson, a little wanderingly,
“that the springtime has brought to life again, and—but what will my daughter
say, Mrs. Widdup?”
“Never fear, sir,” said Mrs. Widdup, cheerfully. “Miss Coulson,
she ran away with the iceman last night, sir!”
I never cared especially
for feuds, believing them to be even more overrated products of our country
than grapefruit, scrapple, or honeymoons. Nevertheless, if I may be allowed, I
will tell you of an Indian Territory feud of which I was press-agent,
camp-follower, and inaccessory during the fact.
I was on a visit to Sam Durkee’s ranch, where I had a great time
falling off unmanicured ponies and waving my bare hand at the lower jaws of
wolves about two miles away. Sam was a hardened person of about twenty-five,
with a reputation for going home in the dark with perfect equanimity, though
often with reluctance.
Over in the Creek Nation was a family bearing the name of Tatum. I
was told that the Durkees and Tatums had been feuding for years. Several of
each family had bitten the grass, and it was expected that more Nebuchadnezzars
would follow. A younger generation of each family was growing up, and the grass
was keeping pace with them. But I gathered that they had fought fairly; that
they had not lain in cornfields and aimed at the division of their enemies’
suspenders in the back—partly, perhaps, because there were no cornfields, and
nobody wore more than one suspender. Nor had any woman or child of either house
ever been harmed. In those days—and you will find it so yet—their women were
safe.
Sam Durkee had a girl. (If it were an all-fiction magazine that I
expect to sell this story to, I should say, “Mr. Durkee rejoiced in a
fiancée.”) Her name was Ella Baynes. They appeared to be devoted to each other,
and to have perfect confidence in each other, as all couples do who are and
have or aren’t and haven’t. She was tolerably pretty, with a heavy mass of
brown hair that helped her along. He introduced me to her, which seemed not to
lessen her preference for him; so I reasoned that they were surely soul-mates.
Miss Baynes lived in Kingfisher, twenty miles from the ranch. Sam
lived on a gallop between the two places.
One day there came to Kingfisher a courageous young man, rather
small, with smooth face and regular features. He made many inquiries about the
business of the town, and especially of the inhabitants cognominally. He said
he was from Muscogee, and he looked it, with his yellow shoes and crocheted four-in-hand.
I met him once when I rode in for the mail. He said his name was Beverly
Travers, which seemed rather improbable.
There were active times on the ranch, just then, and Sam was too
busy to go to town often. As an incompetent and generally worthless guest, it
devolved upon me to ride in for little things such as post cards, barrels of
flour, baking-powder, smoking-tobacco, and—letters from Ella.
One day, when I was messenger for half a gross of cigarette papers
and a couple of wagon tires, I saw the alleged Beverly Travers in a
yellow-wheeled buggy with Ella Baynes, driving about town as ostentatiously as
the black, waxy mud would permit. I knew that this information would bring no
balm of Gilead to Sam’s soul, so I refrained from including it in the news of
the city that I retailed on my return. But on the next afternoon an elongated
ex-cowboy of the name of Simmons, an old-time pal of Sam’s, who kept a feed
store in Kingfisher, rode out to the ranch and rolled and burned many
cigarettes before he would talk. When he did make oration, his words were
these:
“Say, Sam, there’s been a description of a galoot miscallin’
himself Bevel-edged Travels impairing the atmospheric air of Kingfisher for the
past two weeks. You know who he was? He was not otherwise than Ben Tatum, from
the Creek Nation, son of old Gopher Tatum that your Uncle Newt shot last
February. You know what he done this morning? He killed your brother
Lester—shot him in the co’t-house yard.”
I wondered if Sam had heard. He pulled a twig from a mesquite
bush, chewed it gravely, and said:
“He did, did he? He killed Lester?”
“The same,” said Simmons. “And he did more. He run away with your
girl, the same as to say Miss Ella Baynes. I thought you might like to know, so
I rode out to impart the information.”
“I am much obliged, Jim,” said Sam, taking the chewed twig from
his mouth. “Yes, I’m glad you rode Out. Yes, I’m right glad.”
“Well, I’ll be ridin’ back, I reckon. That boy I left in the feed
store don’t know hay from oats. He shot Lester in the back.”
“Shot him in the back?”
“Yes, while he was hitchin’ his hoss.”
“I’m much obliged, Jim.”
“I kind of thought you’d like to know as soon as you could.”
“Come in and have some coffee before you ride back, Jim?”
“Why, no, I reckon not; I must get back to the store.”
“And you say—”
“Yes, Sam. Everybody seen ’em drive away together in a buckboard,
with a big bundle, like clothes, tied up in the back of it. He was drivin’ the
team he brought over with him from Muscogee. They’ll be hard to overtake right
away.”
“And which—”
“I was goin’ on to tell you. They left on the Guthrie road; but
there’s no tellin’ which forks they’ll take—you know that.”
“All right, Jim; much obliged.”
“You’re welcome, Sam.”
Simmons rolled a cigarette and stabbed his pony with both heels.
Twenty yards away he reined up and called back:
“You don’t want no—assistance, as you might say?”
“Not any, thanks.”
“I didn’t think you would. Well, so long!”
Sam took out and opened a bone-handled pocket-knife and scraped a
dried piece of mud from his left boot. I thought at first he was going to swear
a vendetta on the blade of it, or recite “The Gipsy’s Curse.” The few feuds I
had ever seen or read about usually opened that way. This one seemed to be
presented with a new treatment. Thus offered on the stage, it would have been
hissed off, and one of Belasco’s thrilling melodramas demanded instead.
“I wonder,” said Sam, with a profoundly thoughtful expression, “if
the cook has any cold beans left over!”
He called Wash, the Negro cook, and finding that he had some,
ordered him to heat up the pot and make some strong coffee. Then we went into
Sam’s private room, where he slept, and kept his armoury, dogs, and the saddles
of his favourite mounts. He took three or four six-shooters out of a bookcase
and began to look them over, whistling “The Cowboy’s Lament” abstractedly.
Afterward he ordered the two best horses on the ranch saddled and tied to the
hitching-post.
Now, in the feud business, in all sections of the country, I have
observed that in one particular there is a delicate but strict etiquette
belonging. You must not mention the word or refer to the subject in the
presence of a feudist. It would be more reprehensible than commenting upon the
mole on the chin of your rich aunt. I found, later on, that there is another
unwritten rule, but I think that belongs solely to the West.
It yet lacked two hours to supper-time; but in twenty minutes Sam
and I were plunging deep into the reheated beans, hot coffee, and cold beef.
“Nothing like a good meal before a long ride,” said Sam. “Eat
hearty.”
I had a sudden suspicion.
“Why did you have two horses saddled?” I asked.
“One, two—one, two,” said Sam. “You can count, can’t you?”
His mathematics carried with it a momentary qualm and a lesson.
The thought had not occurred to him that the thought could possibly occur to me
not to ride at his side on that red road to revenge and justice. It was the
higher calculus. I was booked for the trail. I began to eat more beans.
In an hour we set forth at a steady gallop eastward. Our horses
were Kentucky-bred, strengthened by the mesquite grass of the west. Ben Tatum’s
steeds may have been swifter, and he had a good lead; but if he had heard the
punctual thuds of the hoofs of those trailers of ours, born in the heart of
feudland, he might have felt that retribution was creeping up on the
hoof-prints of his dapper nags.
I knew that Ben Tatum’s card to play was flight—flight until he
came within the safer territory of his own henchmen and supporters. He knew
that the man pursuing him would follow the trail to any end where it might
lead.
During the ride Sam talked of the prospect for rain, of the price
of beef, and of the musical glasses. You would have thought he had never had a
brother or a sweetheart or an enemy on earth. There are some subjects too big
even for the words in the “Unabridged.” Knowing this phase of the feud code,
but not having practised it sufficiently, I overdid the thing by telling some
slightly funny anecdotes. Sam laughed at exactly the right place—laughed with his
mouth. When I caught sight of his mouth, I wished I had been blessed with
enough sense of humour to have suppressed those anecdotes.
Our first sight of them we had in Guthrie. Tired and hungry, we
stumbled, unwashed, into a little yellow-pine hotel and sat at a table. In the
opposite corner we saw the fugitives. They were bent upon their meal, but
looked around at times uneasily.
The girl was dressed in brown—one of these smooth, half-shiny,
silky-looking affairs with lace collar and cuffs, and what I believe they call
an accordion-plaited skirt. She wore a thick brown veil down to her nose, and a
broad-brimmed straw hat with some kind of feathers adorning it. The man wore
plain, dark clothes, and his hair was trimmed very short. He was such a man as
you might see anywhere.
There they were—the murderer and the woman he had stolen. There we
were—the rightful avenger, according to the code, and the supernumerary who
writes these words.
For one time, at least, in the heart of the supernumerary there
rose the killing instinct. For one moment he joined the force of
combatants—orally.
“What are you waiting for, Sam?” I said in a whisper. “Let him
have it now!”
Sam gave a melancholy sigh.
“You don’t understand; but he does,” he said. “He knows.
Mr. Tenderfoot, there’s a rule out here among white men in the Nation that you
can’t shoot a man when he’s with a woman. I never knew it to be broke yet.
You can’t do it. You’ve got to get him in a gang of men or by
himself. That’s why. He knows it, too. We all know. So, that’s Mr. Ben Tatum!
One of the ‘pretty men’! I’ll cut him out of the herd before they leave the
hotel, and regulate his account!”
After supper the flying pair disappeared quickly. Although Sam
haunted lobby and stairway and halls half the night, in some mysterious way the
fugitives eluded him; and in the morning the veiled lady in the brown dress
with the accordion-plaited skirt and the dapper young man with the
close-clipped hair, and the buckboard with the prancing nags, were gone.
It is a monotonous story, that of the ride; so it shall be
curtailed. Once again we overtook them on a road. We were about fifty yards
behind. They turned in the buckboard and looked at us; then drove on without
whipping up their horses. Their safety no longer lay in speed. Ben Tatum knew.
He knew that the only rock of safety left to him was the code. There is no
doubt that, had he been alone, the matter would have been settled quickly with
Sam Durkee in the usual way; but he had something at his side that kept still
the trigger-finger of both. It seemed likely that he was no coward.
So, you may perceive that woman, on occasions, may postpone
instead of precipitating conflict between man and man. But not willingly or
consciously. She is oblivious of codes.
Five miles farther, we came upon the future great Western city of
Chandler. The horses of pursuers and pursued were starved and weary. There was
one hotel that offered danger to man and entertainment to beast; so the four of
us met again in the dining room at the ringing of a bell so resonant and large
that it had cracked the welkin long ago. The dining room was not as large as
the one at Guthrie.
Just as we were eating apple pie—how Ben Davises and tragedy
impinge upon each other!—I noticed Sam looking with keen intentness at our
quarry where they were seated at a table across the room. The girl still wore
the brown dress with lace collar and cuffs, and the veil drawn down to her
nose. The man bent over his plate, with his close cropped head held low.
“There’s a code,” I heard Sam say, either to me or to himself,
“that won’t let you shoot a man in the company of a woman; but, by thunder,
there ain’t one to keep you from killing a woman in the company of a man!”
And, quicker than my mind could follow his argument, he whipped a
Colt’s automatic from under his left arm and pumped six bullets into the body
that the brown dress covered—the brown dress with the lace collar and cuffs and
the accordion-plaited skirt.
The young person in the dark sack suit, from whose head and from
whose life a woman’s glory had been clipped, laid her head on her arms
stretched upon the table; while people came running to raise Ben Tatum from the
floor in his feminine masquerade that had given Sam the opportunity to set
aside, technically, the obligations of the code.
XI.SUITE HOMES AND THEIR ROMANCE
Few young couples in the
Big-City-of-Bluff began their married existence with greater promise of
happiness than did Mr. and Mrs. Claude Turpin. They felt no especial animosity
toward each other; they were comfortably established in a handsome apartment
house that had a name and accommodations like those of a sleeping-car; they
were living as expensively as the couple on the next floor above who had twice
their income; and their marriage had occurred on a wager, a ferry-boat and
first acquaintance, thus securing a sensational newspaper notice with their
names attached to pictures of the Queen of Roumania and M. Santos-Dumont.
Turpin’s income was $200 per month. On pay day, after calculating
the amounts due for rent, instalments on furniture and piano, gas, and bills
owed to the florist, confectioner, milliner, tailor, wine merchant and cab
company, the Turpins would find that they still had $200 left to spend. How to
do this is one of the secrets of metropolitan life.
The domestic life of the Turpins was a beautiful picture to see.
But you couldn’t gaze upon it as you could at an oleograph of “Don’t Wake
Grandma,” or “Brooklyn by Moonlight.”
You had to blink when looked at it; and you heard a fizzing sound
just like the machine with a “scope” at the end of it. Yes; there wasn’t much
repose about the picture of the Turpins’ domestic life. It was something like
“Spearing Salmon in the Columbia River,” or “Japanese Artillery in Action.”
Every day was just like another; as the days are in New York. In
the morning Turpin would take bromo-seltzer, his pocket change from under the
clock, his hat, no breakfast and his departure for the office. At noon Mrs.
Turpin would get out of bed and humour, put on a kimono, airs, and the water to
boil for coffee.
Turpin lunched downtown. He came home at 6 to dress for dinner.
They always dined out. They strayed from the chop-house to chop-sueydom, from
terrace to table d’hôte, from rathskeller to roadhouse, from café to casino,
from Maria’s to the Martha Washington. Such is domestic life in the great city.
Your vine is the mistletoe; your fig tree bears dates. Your household gods are
Mercury and John Howard Payne. For the wedding march you now hear only “Come
with the Gypsy Bride.” You rarely dine at the same place twice in succession.
You tire of the food; and, besides, you want to give them time for the question
of that souvenir silver sugar bowl to blow over.
The Turpins were therefore happy. They made many warm and
delightful friends, some of whom they remembered the next day. Their home life
was an ideal one, according to the rules and regulations of the Book of Bluff.
There came a time when it dawned upon Turpin that his wife was
getting away with too much money. If you belong to the near-swell class in the
Big City, and your income is $200 per month, and you find at the end of the
month, after looking over the bills for current expenses, that you, yourself,
have spent $150, you very naturally wonder what has become of the other $50. So
you suspect your wife. And perhaps you give her a hint that something needs
explanation.
“I say, Vivien,” said Turpin, one afternoon when they were
enjoying in rapt silence the peace and quiet of their cozy apartment, “you’ve
been creating a hiatus big enough for a dog to crawl through in this month’s
honorarium. You haven’t been paying your dressmaker anything on account, have
you?”
There was a moment’s silence. No sounds could be heard except the
breathing of the fox terrier, and the subdued, monotonous sizzling of Vivien’s
fulvous locks against the insensate curling irons. Claude Turpin, sitting upon
a pillow that he had thoughtfully placed upon the convolutions of the apartment
sofa, narrowly watched the riante, lovely face of his wife.
“Claudie, dear,” said she, touching her finger to her ruby tongue
and testing the unresponsive curling irons, “you do me an injustice. Mme.
Toinette has not seen a cent of mine since the day you paid your tailor ten
dollars on account.”
Turpin’s suspicions were allayed for the time. But one day soon
there came an anonymous letter to him that read:
Watch your wife. She is
blowing in your money secretly. I was a sufferer just as you are. The place is
No. 345 Blank Street. A word to the wise, etc.
A MAN WHO KNOWS.
Turpin took this letter to the captain of police of the precinct
that he lived in.
“My precinct is as clean as a hound’s tooth,” said the captain.
“The lid’s shut down as close there as it is over the eye of a Williamsburg
girl when she’s kissed at a party. But if you think there’s anything queer at
the address, I’ll go there with ye.”
On the next afternoon at 3, Turpin and the captain crept softly up
the stairs of No. 345 Blank Street. A dozen plain-clothes men, dressed in full
police uniforms, so as to allay suspicion, waited in the hall below.
At the top of the stairs was a door, which was found to be locked.
The captain took a key from his pocket and unlocked it. The two men entered.
They found themselves in a large room, occupied by twenty or
twenty-five elegantly clothed ladies. Racing charts hung against the walls, a
ticker clicked in one corner; with a telephone receiver to his ear a man was
calling out the various positions of the horses in a very exciting race. The
occupants of the room looked up at the intruders; but, as if reassured by the
sight of the captain’s uniform, they reverted their attention to the man at the
telephone.
“You see,” said the captain to Turpin, “the value of an anonymous
letter! No high-minded and self-respecting gentleman should consider one worthy
of notice. Is your wife among this assembly, Mr. Turpin?”
“She is not,” said Turpin.
“And if she was,” continued the captain, “would she be within the
reach of the tongue of slander? These ladies constitute a Browning Society.
They meet to discuss the meaning of the great poet. The telephone is connected
with Boston, whence the parent society transmits frequently its interpretations
of the poems. Be ashamed of yer suspicions, Mr. Turpin.”
“Go soak your shield,” said Turpin. “Vivien knows how to take care
of herself in a pool-room. She’s not dropping anything on the ponies. There
must be something queer going on here.”
“Nothing but Browning,” said the captain. “Hear that?”
“Thanatopsis by a nose,” drawled the man at the telephone.
“That’s not Browning; that’s Longfellow,” said Turpin, who
sometimes read books.
“Back to the pasture!” exclaimed the captain. “Longfellow made the
pacing-to-wagon record of 7.53 ’way back in 1868.”
“I believe there’s something queer about this joint,” repeated
Turpin.
“I don’t see it,” said the captain.
“I know it looks like a pool-room, all right,” persisted Turpin,
“but that’s all a blind. Vivien has been dropping a lot of coin somewhere. I
believe there’s some under-handed work going on here.”
A number of racing sheets were tacked close together, covering a
large space on one of the walls. Turpin, suspicious, tore several of them down.
A door, previously hidden, was revealed. Turpin placed an ear to the crack and
listened intently. He heard the soft hum of many voices, low and guarded
laughter, and a sharp, metallic clicking and scraping as if from a multitude of
tiny but busy objects.
“My God! It is as I feared!” whispered Turpin to himself. “Summon
your men at once!” he called to the captain. “She is in there, I know.”
At the blowing of the captain’s whistle the uniformed
plain-clothes men rushed up the stairs into the pool-room. When they saw the
betting paraphernalia distributed around they halted, surprised and puzzled to
know why they had been summoned.
But the captain pointed to the locked door and bade them break it
down. In a few moments they demolished it with the axes they carried. Into the
other room sprang Claude Turpin, with the captain at his heels.
The scene was one that lingered long in Turpin’s mind. Nearly a
score of women—women expensively and fashionably clothed, many beautiful and of
refined appearance—had been seated at little marble-topped tables. When the
police burst open the door they shrieked and ran here and there like gayly
plumed birds that had been disturbed in a tropical grove. Some became
hysterical; one or two fainted; several knelt at the feet of the officers and
besought them for mercy on account of their families and social position.
A man who had been seated behind a desk had seized a roll of
currency as large as the ankle of a Paradise Roof Gardens chorus girl and
jumped out of the window. Half a dozen attendants huddled at one end of the
room, breathless from fear.
Upon the tables remained the damning and incontrovertible
evidences of the guilt of the habituées of that sinister room—dish after dish
heaped high with ice cream, and surrounded by stacks of empty ones, scraped to
the last spoonful.
“Ladies,” said the captain to his weeping circle of prisoners,
“I’ll not hold any of yez. Some of yez I recognize as having fine houses and
good standing in the community, with hard-working husbands and childer at home.
But I’ll read ye a bit of a lecture before ye go. In the next room there’s a
20-to-1 shot just dropped in under the wire three lengths ahead of the field.
Is this the way ye waste your husbands’ money instead of helping earn it? Home
wid yez! The lid’s on the ice-cream freezer in this precinct.”
Claude Turpin’s wife was among the patrons of the raided room. He
led her to their apartment in stern silence. There she wept so remorsefully and
besought his forgiveness so pleadingly that he forgot his just anger, and soon
he gathered his penitent golden-haired Vivien in his arms and forgave her.
“Darling,” she murmured, half sobbingly, as the moonlight drifted
through the open window, glorifying her sweet, upturned face, “I know I done
wrong. I will never touch ice cream again. I forgot you were not a millionaire.
I used to go there every day. But to-day I felt some strange, sad presentiment
of evil, and I was not myself. I ate only eleven saucers.”
“Say no more,” said Claude, gently as he fondly caressed her
waving curls.
“And you are sure that you fully forgive me?” asked Vivien, gazing
at him entreatingly with dewy eyes of heavenly blue.
“Almost sure, little one,” answered Claude, stooping and lightly
touching her snowy forehead with his lips. “I’ll let you know later on. I’ve
got a month’s salary down on Vanilla to win the three-year-old steeplechase
to-morrow; and if the ice-cream hunch is to the good you are It again—see?”
Justice-of-the-Peace
Benaja Widdup sat in the door of his office smoking his elder-stem pipe.
Half-way to the zenith the Cumberland range rose blue-gray in the afternoon
haze. A speckled hen swaggered down the main street of the “settlement,”
cackling foolishly.
Up the road came a sound of creaking axles, and then a slow cloud
of dust, and then a bull-cart bearing Ransie Bilbro and his wife. The cart
stopped at the Justice’s door, and the two climbed down. Ransie was a narrow
six feet of sallow brown skin and yellow hair. The imperturbability of the
mountains hung upon him like a suit of armour. The woman was calicoed, angled,
snuff-brushed, and weary with unknown desires. Through it all gleamed a faint
protest of cheated youth unconscious of its loss.
The Justice of the Peace slipped his feet into his shoes, for the
sake of dignity, and moved to let them enter.
“We-all,” said the woman, in a voice like the wind blowing through
pine boughs, “wants a divo’ce.” She looked at Ransie to see if he noted any
flaw or ambiguity or evasion or partiality or self-partisanship in her
statement of their business.
“A divo’ce,” repeated Ransie, with a solemn nod. “We-all can’t git
along together nohow. It’s lonesome enough fur to live in the mount’ins when a
man and a woman keers fur one another. But when she’s a-spittin’ like a wildcat
or a-sullenin’ like a hoot-owl in the cabin, a man ain’t got no call to live
with her.”
“When he’s a no-’count varmint,” said the woman, “without any
especial warmth, a-traipsin’ along of scalawags and moonshiners and a-layin’ on
his back pizen ’ith co’n whiskey, and a-pesterin’ folks with a pack o’ hungry,
triflin’ houn’s to feed!”
“When she keeps a-throwin’ skillet lids,” came Ransie’s antiphony,
“and slings b’ilin’ water on the best coon-dog in the Cumberlands, and sets
herself agin’ cookin’ a man’s victuals, and keeps him awake o’ nights accusin’
him of a sight of doin’s!”
“When he’s al’ays a-fightin’ the revenues, and gits a hard name in
the mount’ins fur a mean man, who’s gwine to be able fur to sleep o’ nights?”
The Justice of the Peace stirred deliberately to his duties. He
placed his one chair and a wooden stool for his petitioners. He opened his book
of statutes on the table and scanned the index. Presently he wiped his
spectacles and shifted his inkstand.
“The law and the statutes,” said he, “air silent on the subjeck of
divo’ce as fur as the jurisdiction of this co’t air concerned. But, accordin’
to equity and the Constitution and the golden rule, it’s a bad barg’in that
can’t run both ways. If a justice of the peace can marry a couple, it’s plain
that he is bound to be able to divo’ce ’em. This here office will issue a
decree of divo’ce and abide by the decision of the Supreme Co’t to hold it
good.”
Ransie Bilbro drew a small tobacco-bag from his trousers pocket.
Out of this he shook upon the table a five-dollar note. “Sold a b’arskin and
two foxes fur that,” he remarked. “It’s all the money we got.”
“The regular price of a divo’ce in this co’t,” said the Justice,
“air five dollars.” He stuffed the bill into the pocket of his homespun vest
with a deceptive air of indifference. With much bodily toil and mental travail
he wrote the decree upon half a sheet of foolscap, and then copied it upon the
other. Ransie Bilbro and his wife listened to his reading of the document that
was to give them freedom:
“Know all men by these presents that Ransie Bilbro and his wife,
Ariela Bilbro, this day personally appeared before me and promises that
hereinafter they will neither love, honour, nor obey each other, neither for
better nor worse, being of sound mind and body, and accept summons for divorce
according to the peace and dignity of the State. Herein fail not, so help you
God. Benaja Widdup, justice of the peace in and for the county of Piedmont,
State of Tennessee.”
The Justice was about to hand one of the documents to Ransie. The
voice of Ariela delayed the transfer. Both men looked at her. Their dull
masculinity was confronted by something sudden and unexpected in the woman.
“Judge, don’t you give him that air paper yit. ’Tain’t all
settled, nohow. I got to have my rights first. I got to have my ali-money.
’Tain’t no kind of a way to do fur a man to divo’ce his wife ’thout her havin’
a cent fur to do with. I’m a-layin’ off to be a-goin’ up to brother Ed’s up on
Hogback Mount’in. I’m bound fur to hev a pa’r of shoes and some snuff and
things besides. Ef Rance kin affo’d a divo’ce, let him pay me ali-money.”
Ransie Bilbro was stricken to dumb perplexity. There had been no
previous hint of alimony. Women were always bringing up startling and
unlooked-for issues.
Justice Benaja Widdup felt that the point demanded judicial
decision. The authorities were also silent on the subject of alimony. But the
woman’s feet were bare. The trail to Hogback Mountain was steep and flinty.
“Ariela Bilbro,” he asked, in official tones, “how much did you
’low would be good and sufficient ali-money in the case befo’ the co’t.”
“I ’lowed,” she answered, “fur the shoes and all, to say five
dollars. That ain’t much fur ali-money, but I reckon that’ll git me to up
brother Ed’s.”
“The amount,” said the Justice, “air not onreasonable. Ransie
Bilbro, you air ordered by the co’t to pay the plaintiff the sum of five
dollars befo’ the decree of divo’ce air issued.”
“I hain’t no mo’ money,” breathed Ransie, heavily. “I done paid
you all I had.”
“Otherwise,” said the Justice, looking severely over his
spectacles, “you air in contempt of co’t.”
“I reckon if you gimme till to-morrow,” pleaded the husband, “I
mout be able to rake or scrape it up somewhars. I never looked for to be
a-payin’ no ali-money.”
“The case air adjourned,” said Benaja Widdup, “till to-morrow,
when you-all will present yo’selves and obey the order of the co’t. Followin’
of which the decrees of divo’ce will be delivered.” He sat down in the door and
began to loosen a shoestring.
“We mout as well go down to Uncle Ziah’s,” decided Ransie, “and
spend the night.” He climbed into the cart on one side, and Ariela climbed in
on the other. Obeying the flap of his rope, the little red bull slowly came
around on a tack, and the cart crawled away in the nimbus arising from its
wheels.
Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup smoked his elder-stem pipe.
Late in the afternoon he got his weekly paper, and read it until the twilight
dimmed its lines. Then he lit the tallow candle on his table, and read until
the moon rose, marking the time for supper. He lived in the double log cabin on
the slope near the girdled poplar. Going home to supper he crossed a little
branch darkened by a laurel thicket. The dark figure of a man stepped from the
laurels and pointed a rifle at his breast. His hat was pulled down low, and
something covered most of his face.
“I want yo’ money,” said the figure, “’thout any talk. I’m gettin’
nervous, and my finger’s a-wabblin’ on this here trigger.”
“I’ve only got f-f-five dollars,” said the Justice, producing it
from his vest pocket.
“Roll it up,” came the order, “and stick it in the end of this
here gun-bar’l.”
The bill was crisp and new. Even fingers that were clumsy and
trembling found little difficulty in making a spill of it and inserting it
(this with less ease) into the muzzle of the rifle.
“Now I reckon you kin be goin’ along,” said the robber.
The Justice lingered not on his way.
The next day came the little red bull, drawing the cart to the
office door. Justice Benaja Widdup had his shoes on, for he was expecting the
visit. In his presence Ransie Bilbro handed to his wife a five-dollar bill. The
official’s eye sharply viewed it. It seemed to curl up as though it had been
rolled and inserted into the end of a gun-barrel. But the Justice refrained
from comment. It is true that other bills might be inclined to curl. He handed
each one a decree of divorce. Each stood awkwardly silent, slowly folding the
guarantee of freedom. The woman cast a shy glance full of constraint at Ransie.
“I reckon you’ll be goin’ back up to the cabin,” she said, along
’ith the bull-cart. There’s bread in the tin box settin’ on the shelf. I put
the bacon in the b’ilin’-pot to keep the hounds from gittin’ it. Don’t forget
to wind the clock to-night.”
“You air a-goin’ to your brother Ed’s?” asked Ransie, with fine
unconcern.
“I was ’lowin’ to get along up thar afore night. I ain’t sayin’ as
they’ll pester theyselves any to make me welcome, but I hain’t nowhar else fur
to go. It’s a right smart ways, and I reckon I better be goin’. I’ll be
a-sayin’ good-bye, Ranse—that is, if you keer fur to say so.”
“I don’t know as anybody’s a hound dog,” said Ransie, in a
martyr’s voice, “fur to not want to say good-bye—’less you air so anxious to
git away that you don’t want me to say it.”
Ariela was silent. She folded the five-dollar bill and her decree
carefully, and placed them in the bosom of her dress. Benaja Widdup watched the
money disappear with mournful eyes behind his spectacles.
And then with his next words he achieved rank (as his thoughts
ran) with either the great crowd of the world’s sympathizers or the little
crowd of its great financiers.
“Be kind o’ lonesome in the old cabin to-night, Ranse,” he said.
Ransie Bilbro stared out at the Cumberlands, clear blue now in the
sunlight. He did not look at Ariela.
“I ’low it might be lonesome,” he said; “but when folks gits mad
and wants a divo’ce, you can’t make folks stay.”
“There’s others wanted a divo’ce,” said Ariela, speaking to the
wooden stool. “Besides, nobody don’t want nobody to stay.”
“Nobody never said they didn’t.”
“Nobody never said they did. I reckon I better start on now to
brother Ed’s.”
“Nobody can’t wind that old clock.”
“Want me to go back along ’ith you in the cart and wind it fur
you, Ranse?”
The mountaineer’s countenance was proof against emotion. But he
reached out a big hand and enclosed Ariela’s thin brown one. Her soul peeped
out once through her impassive face, hallowing it.
“Them hounds shan’t pester you no more,” said Ransie. “I reckon I
been mean and low down. You wind that clock, Ariela.”
“My heart hit’s in that cabin, Ranse,” she whispered, “along ’ith
you. I ai’nt a-goin’ to git mad no more. Le’s be startin’, Ranse, so’s we kin
git home by sundown.”
Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup interposed as they started for
the door, forgetting his presence.
“In the name of the State of Tennessee,” he said, “I forbid
you-all to be a-defyin’ of its laws and statutes. This co’t is mo’ than willin’
and full of joy to see the clouds of discord and misunderstandin’ rollin’ away
from two lovin’ hearts, but it air the duty of the co’t to p’eserve the morals
and integrity of the State. The co’t reminds you that you air no longer man and
wife, but air divo’ced by regular decree, and as such air not entitled to the
benefits and ’purtenances of the mattermonal estate.”
Ariela caught Ransie’s arm. Did those words mean that she must
lose him now when they had just learned the lesson of life?
“But the co’t air prepared,” went on the Justice, “fur to remove
the disabilities set up by the decree of divo’ce. The co’t air on hand to
perform the solemn ceremony of marri’ge, thus fixin’ things up and enablin’ the
parties in the case to resume the honour’ble and elevatin’ state of mattermony
which they desires. The fee fur performin’ said ceremony will be, in this case,
to wit, five dollars.”
Ariela caught the gleam of promise in his words. Swiftly her hand
went to her bosom. Freely as an alighting dove the bill fluttered to the
Justice’s table. Her sallow cheek coloured as she stood hand in hand with
Ransie and listened to the reuniting words.
Ransie helped her into the cart, and climbed in beside her. The
little red bull turned once more, and they set out, hand-clasped, for the
mountains.
Justice-of-the-peace Benaja Widdup sat in his door and took off
his shoes. Once again he fingered the bill tucked down in his vest pocket. Once
again he smoked his elder-stem pipe. Once again the speckled hen swaggered down
the main street of the “settlement,” cackling foolishly.
The editor of the Hearthstone
Magazine has his own ideas about the selection of manuscript for his
publication. His theory is no secret; in fact, he will expound it to you
willingly sitting at his mahogany desk, smiling benignantly and tapping his
knee gently with his gold-rimmed eye-glasses.
“The Hearthstone,” he will say, “does not employ a
staff of readers. We obtain opinions of the manuscripts submitted to us
directly from types of the various classes of our readers.”
That is the editor’s theory; and this is the way he carries it
out:
When a batch of MSS. is received the editor stuffs every one of
his pockets full of them and distributes them as he goes about during the day.
The office employees, the hall porter, the janitor, the elevator man, messenger
boys, the waiters at the café where the editor has luncheon, the man at the
news-stand where he buys his evening paper, the grocer and milkman, the guard
on the 5.30 uptown elevated train, the ticket-chopper at Sixty ––––th street,
the cook and maid at his home—these are the readers who pass upon MSS. sent in
to the Hearthstone Magazine. If his pockets are not entirely emptied
by the time he reaches the bosom of his family the remaining ones are handed
over to his wife to read after the baby goes to sleep. A few days later the
editor gathers in the MSS. during his regular rounds and considers the verdict
of his assorted readers.
This system of making up a magazine has been very successful; and
the circulation, paced by the advertising rates, is making a wonderful record
of speed.
The Hearthstone Company also publishes books, and
its imprint is to be found on several successful works—all recommended, says
the editor, by the Hearthstone’s army of volunteer readers.
Now and then (according to talkative members of the editorial staff) the Hearthstone has
allowed manuscripts to slip through its fingers on the advice of its heterogeneous
readers, that afterward proved to be famous sellers when brought out by other
houses.
For instance (the gossips say), “The Rise and Fall of Silas
Latham” was unfavourably passed upon by the elevator-man; the office-boy
unanimously rejected “The Boss”; “In the Bishop’s Carriage” was contemptuously
looked upon by the street-car conductor; “The Deliverance” was turned down by a
clerk in the subscription department whose wife’s mother had just begun a
two-months’ visit at his home; “The Queen’s Quair” came back from the janitor
with the comment: “So is the book.”
But nevertheless the Hearthstone adheres to its
theory and system, and it will never lack volunteer readers; for each one of
the widely scattered staff, from the young lady stenographer in the editorial
office to the man who shovels in coal (whose adverse decision lost to the Hearthstone Company
the manuscript of “The Under World”), has expectations of becoming editor of
the magazine some day.
This method of the Hearthstone was well known to
Allen Slayton when he wrote his novelette entitled “Love Is All.” Slayton had
hung about the editorial offices of all the magazines so persistently that he
was acquainted with the inner workings of every one in Gotham.
He knew not only that the editor of the Hearthstone handed his
MSS. around among different types of people for reading, but that the stories
of sentimental love-interest went to Miss Puffkin, the editor’s stenographer.
Another of the editor’s peculiar customs was to conceal invariably the name of the
writer from his readers of MSS. so that a glittering name might not influence
the sincerity of their reports.
Slayton made “Love Is All” the effort of his life. He gave it six
months of the best work of his heart and brain. It was a pure love-story, fine,
elevated, romantic, passionate—a prose poem that set the divine blessing of
love (I am transposing from the manuscript) high above all earthly gifts and
honours, and listed it in the catalogue of heaven’s choicest rewards. Slayton’s
literary ambition was intense. He would have sacrificed all other worldly
possessions to have gained fame in his chosen art. He would almost have cut off
his right hand, or have offered himself to the knife of the appendicitis
fancier to have realized his dream of seeing one of his efforts published in
the Hearthstone.
Slayton finished “Love Is All,” and took it to the Hearthstone in
person. The office of the magazine was in a large, conglomerate building,
presided under by a janitor.
As the writer stepped inside the door on his way to the elevator a
potato masher flew through the hall, wrecking Slayton’s hat, and smashing the
glass of the door. Closely following in the wake of the utensil flew the
janitor, a bulky, unwholesome man, suspenderless and sordid, panic-stricken and
breathless. A frowsy, fat woman with flying hair followed the missile. The
janitor’s foot slipped on the tiled floor, he fell in a heap with an
exclamation of despair. The woman pounced upon him and seized his hair. The man
bellowed lustily.
Her vengeance wreaked, the virago rose and stalked triumphant as
Minerva, back to some cryptic domestic retreat at the rear. The janitor got to
his feet, blown and humiliated.
“This is married life,” he said to Slayton, with a certain bruised
humour. “That’s the girl I used to lay awake of nights thinking about. Sorry
about your hat, mister. Say, don’t snitch to the tenants about this, will yer?
I don’t want to lose me job.”
Slayton took the elevator at the end of the hall and went up to
the offices of the Hearthstone. He left the MS. of “Love Is All”
with the editor, who agreed to give him an answer as to its availability at the
end of a week.
Slayton formulated his great winning scheme on his way down. It
struck him with one brilliant flash, and he could not refrain from admiring his
own genius in conceiving the idea. That very night he set about carrying it
into execution.
Miss Puffkin, the Hearthstone stenographer,
boarded in the same house with the author. She was an oldish, thin, exclusive,
languishing, sentimental maid; and Slayton had been introduced to her some time
before.
The writer’s daring and self-sacrificing project was this: He knew
that the editor of the Hearthstone relied strongly upon Miss
Puffkin’s judgment in the manuscript of romantic and sentimental fiction. Her
taste represented the immense average of mediocre women who devour novels and
stories of that type. The central idea and keynote of “Love Is All” was love at
first sight—the enrapturing, irresistible, soul-thrilling feeling that compels
a man or a woman to recognize his or her spirit-mate as soon as heart speaks to
heart. Suppose he should impress this divine truth upon Miss Puffkin
personally!—would she not surely indorse her new and rapturous sensations by
recommending highly to the editor of the Hearthstone the
novelette “Love Is All”?
Slayton thought so. And that night he took Miss Puffkin to the
theatre. The next night he made vehement love to her in the dim parlour of the
boarding-house. He quoted freely from “Love Is All”; and he wound up with Miss
Puffkin’s head on his shoulder, and visions of literary fame dancing in his
head.
But Slayton did not stop at love-making. This, he said to himself,
was the turning point of his life; and, like a true sportsman, he “went the
limit.” On Thursday night he and Miss Puffkin walked over to the Big Church in
the Middle of the Block and were married.
Brave Slayton! Châteaubriand died in a garret, Byron courted a
widow, Keats starved to death, Poe mixed his drinks, De Quincey hit the pipe,
Ade lived in Chicago, James kept on doing it, Dickens wore white socks, De
Maupassant wore a strait-jacket, Tom Watson became a Populist, Jeremiah wept,
all these authors did these things for the sake of literature, but thou didst
cap them all; thou marriedst a wife for to carve for thyself a niche in the
temple of fame!
On Friday morning Mrs. Slayton said she would go over to the Hearthstone office,
hand in one or two manuscripts that the editor had given to her to read, and
resign her position as stenographer.
“Was there anything—er—that—er—you particularly fancied in the
stories you are going to turn in?” asked Slayton with a thumping heart.
“There was one—a novelette, that I liked so much,” said his wife.
“I haven’t read anything in years that I thought was half as nice and true to
life.”
That afternoon Slayton hurried down to the Hearthstone office.
He felt that his reward was close at hand. With a novelette in the Hearthstone,
literary reputation would soon be his.
The office boy met him at the railing in the outer office. It was
not for unsuccessful authors to hold personal colloquy with the editor except
at rare intervals.
Slayton, hugging himself internally, was nursing in his heart the
exquisite hope of being able to crush the office boy with his forthcoming success.
He inquired concerning his novelette. The office boy went into the
sacred precincts and brought forth a large envelope, thick with more than the
bulk of a thousand checks.
“The boss told me to tell you he’s sorry,” said the boy, “but your
manuscript ain’t available for the magazine.”
Slayton stood, dazed. “Can you tell me,” he stammered, “whether or
no Miss Puff—that is my—I mean Miss Puffkin—handed in a novelette this morning
that she had been asked to read?”
“Sure she did,” answered the office boy wisely. “I heard the old
man say that Miss Puffkin said it was a daisy. The name of it was, ‘Married for
the Mazuma, or a Working Girl’s Triumph.’”
“Say, you!” said the office boy confidentially, “your name’s
Slayton, ain’t it? I guess I mixed cases on you without meanin’ to do it. The
boss give me some manuscript to hand around the other day and I got the ones
for Miss Puffkin and the janitor mixed. I guess it’s all right, though.”
And then Slayton looked closer and saw on the cover of his
manuscript, under the title “Love Is All,” the janitor’s comment scribbled with
a piece of charcoal:
“The –––– you say!”
Twenty miles west of
Tucson, the “Sunset Express” stopped at a tank to take on water. Besides the
aqueous addition the engine of that famous flyer acquired some other things
that were not good for it.
While the fireman was lowering the feeding hose, Bob Tidball,
“Shark” Dodson and a quarter-bred Creek Indian called John Big Dog climbed on
the engine and showed the engineer three round orifices in pieces of ordnance
that they carried. These orifices so impressed the engineer with their
possibilities that he raised both hands in a gesture such as accompanies the
ejaculation “Do tell!”
At the crisp command of Shark Dodson, who was leader of the
attacking force the engineer descended to the ground and uncoupled the engine
and tender. Then John Big Dog, perched upon the coal, sportively held two guns
upon the engine driver and the fireman, and suggested that they run the engine
fifty yards away and there await further orders.
Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, scorning to put such low-grade ore
as the passengers through the mill, struck out for the rich pocket of the
express car. They found the messenger serene in the belief that the “Sunset
Express” was taking on nothing more stimulating and dangerous than aqua pura.
While Bob was knocking this idea out of his head with the butt-end of his
six-shooter Shark Dodson was already dosing the express-car safe with dynamite.
The safe exploded to the tune of $30,000, all gold and currency.
The passengers thrust their heads casually out of the windows to look for the
thunder-cloud. The conductor jerked at the bell-rope, which sagged down loose
and unresisting, at his tug. Shark Dodson and Bob Tidball, with their booty in
a stout canvas bag, tumbled out of the express car and ran awkwardly in their
high-heeled boots to the engine.
The engineer, sullenly angry but wise, ran the engine, according
to orders, rapidly away from the inert train. But before this was accomplished
the express messenger, recovered from Bob Tidball’s persuader to neutrality,
jumped out of his car with a Winchester rifle and took a trick in the game. Mr.
John Big Dog, sitting on the coal tender, unwittingly made a wrong lead by
giving an imitation of a target, and the messenger trumped him. With a ball
exactly between his shoulder blades the Creek chevalier of industry rolled off
to the ground, thus increasing the share of his comrades in the loot by
one-sixth each.
Two miles from the tank the engineer was ordered to stop.
The robbers waved a defiant adieu and plunged down the steep slope
into the thick woods that lined the track. Five minutes of crashing through a
thicket of chaparral brought them to open woods, where three horses were tied
to low-hanging branches. One was waiting for John Big Dog, who would never ride
by night or day again. This animal the robbers divested of saddle and bridle
and set free. They mounted the other two with the bag across one pommel, and
rode fast and with discretion through the forest and up a primeval, lonely
gorge. Here the animal that bore Bob Tidball slipped on a mossy boulder and
broke a foreleg. They shot him through the head at once and sat down to hold a
council of flight. Made secure for the present by the tortuous trail they had
travelled, the question of time was no longer so big. Many miles and hours lay
between them and the spryest posse that could follow. Shark Dodson’s horse,
with trailing rope and dropped bridle, panted and cropped thankfully of the
grass along the stream in the gorge. Bob Tidball opened the sack, drew out
double handfuls of the neat packages of currency and the one sack of gold and
chuckled with the glee of a child.
“Say, you old double-decked pirate,” he called joyfully to Dodson,
“you said we could do it—you got a head for financing that knocks the horns off
of anything in Arizona.”
“What are we going to do about a hoss for you, Bob? We ain’t got
long to wait here. They’ll be on our trail before daylight in the mornin’.”
“Oh, I guess that cayuse of yourn’ll carry double for a while,”
answered the sanguine Bob. “We’ll annex the first animal we come across. By
jingoes, we made a haul, didn’t we? Accordin’ to the marks on this money
there’s $30,000—$15,000 apiece!”
“It’s short of what I expected,” said Shark Dodson, kicking softly
at the packages with the toe of his boot. And then he looked pensively at the
wet sides of his tired horse.
“Old Bolivar’s mighty nigh played out,” he said, slowly. “I wish
that sorrel of yours hadn’t got hurt.”
“So do I,” said Bob, heartily, “but it can’t be helped. Bolivar’s
got plenty of bottom—he’ll get us both far enough to get fresh mounts. Dang it,
Shark, I can’t help thinkin’ how funny it is that an Easterner like you can
come out here and give us Western fellows cards and spades in the desperado
business. What part of the East was you from, anyway?”
“New York State,” said Shark Dodson, sitting down on a boulder and
chewing a twig. “I was born on a farm in Ulster County. I ran away from home
when I was seventeen. It was an accident my coming West. I was walkin’ along
the road with my clothes in a bundle, makin’ for New York City. I had an idea
of goin’ there and makin’ lots of money. I always felt like I could do it. I
came to a place one evenin’ where the road forked and I didn’t know which fork
to take. I studied about it for half an hour, and then I took the left-hand.
That night I run into the camp of a Wild West show that was travellin’ among
the little towns, and I went West with it. I’ve often wondered if I wouldn’t
have turned out different if I’d took the other road.”
“Oh, I reckon you’d have ended up about the same,” said Bob
Tidball, cheerfully philosophical. “It ain’t the roads we take; it’s what’s
inside of us that makes us turn out the way we do.”
Shark Dodson got up and leaned against a tree.
“I’d a good deal rather that sorrel of yourn hadn’t hurt himself,
Bob,” he said again, almost pathetically.
“Same here,” agreed Bob; “he was sure a first-rate kind of a
crowbait. But Bolivar, he’ll pull us through all right. Reckon we’d better be
movin’ on, hadn’t we, Shark? I’ll bag this boodle ag’in and we’ll hit the trail
for higher timber.”
Bob Tidball replaced the spoil in the bag and tied the mouth of it
tightly with a cord. When he looked up the most prominent object that he saw
was the muzzle of Shark Dodson’s .45 held upon him without a waver.
“Stop your funnin’,” said Bob, with a grin. “We got to be hittin’
the breeze.”
“Set still,” said Shark. “You ain’t goin’ to hit no breeze, Bob. I
hate to tell you, but there ain’t any chance for but one of us. Bolivar, he’s
plenty tired, and he can’t carry double.”
“We been pards, me and you, Shark Dodson, for three year,” Bob
said quietly. “We’ve risked our lives together time and again. I’ve always give
you a square deal, and I thought you was a man. I’ve heard some queer stories
about you shootin’ one or two men in a peculiar way, but I never believed ’em.
Now if you’re just havin’ a little fun with me, Shark, put your gun up, and
we’ll get on Bolivar and vamose. If you mean to shoot—shoot, you blackhearted
son of a tarantula!”
Shark Dodson’s face bore a deeply sorrowful look. “You don’t know
how bad I feel,” he sighed, “about that sorrel of yourn breakin’ his leg, Bob.”
The expression on Dodson’s face changed in an instant to one of
cold ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable house.
Truly Bob Tidball was never to “hit the breeze” again. The deadly
.45 of the false friend cracked and filled the gorge with a roar that the walls
hurled back with indignant echoes. And Bolivar, unconscious accomplice, swiftly
bore away the last of the holders-up of the “Sunset Express,” not put to the
stress of “carrying double.”
But as “Shark” Dodson galloped away the woods seemed to fade from
his view; the revolver in his right hand turned to the curved arm of a mahogany
chair; his saddle was strangely upholstered, and he opened his eyes and saw his
feet, not in stirrups, but resting quietly on the edge of a quartered-oak desk.
I am telling you that Dodson, of the firm of Dodson & Decker,
Wall Street brokers, opened his eyes. Peabody, the confidential clerk, was
standing by his chair, hesitating to speak. There was a confused hum of wheels
below, and the sedative buzz of an electric fan.
“Ahem! Peabody,” said Dodson, blinking. “I must have fallen
asleep. I had a most remarkable dream. What is it, Peabody?”
“Mr. Williams, sir, of Tracy & Williams, is outside. He has
come to settle his deal in X. Y. Z. The market caught him short, sir, if you
remember.”
“Yes, I remember. What is X. Y. Z. quoted at to-day, Peabody?”
“One eighty-five, sir.”
“Then that’s his price.”
“Excuse me,” said Peabody, rather nervously “for speaking of it,
but I’ve been talking to Williams. He’s an old friend of yours, Mr. Dodson, and
you practically have a corner in X. Y. Z. I thought you might—that is, I
thought you might not remember that he sold you the stock at 98. If he settles
at the market price it will take every cent he has in the world and his home
too to deliver the shares.”
The expression on Dodson’s face changed in an instant to one of
cold ferocity mingled with inexorable cupidity. The soul of the man showed
itself for a moment like an evil face in the window of a reputable house.
“He will settle at one eighty-five,” said Dodson. “Bolivar cannot
carry double.”
The most disreputable
thing in Yancey Goree’s law office was Goree himself, sprawled in his creaky
old arm-chair. The rickety little office, built of red brick, was set flush
with the street—the main street of the town of Bethel.
Bethel rested upon the foot-hills of the Blue Ridge. Above it the
mountains were piled to the sky. Far below it the turbid Catawba gleamed yellow
along its disconsolate valley.
The June day was at its sultriest hour. Bethel dozed in the tepid
shade. Trade was not. It was so still that Goree, reclining in his chair,
distinctly heard the clicking of the chips in the grand-jury room, where the
“court-house gang” was playing poker. From the open back door of the office a
well-worn path meandered across the grassy lot to the court-house. The treading
out of that path had cost Goree all he ever had—first inheritance of a few
thousand dollars, next the old family home, and, latterly the last shreds of
his self-respect and manhood. The “gang” had cleaned him out. The broken
gambler had turned drunkard and parasite; he had lived to see this day come
when the men who had stripped him denied him a seat at the game. His word was
no longer to be taken. The daily bouts at cards had arranged itself
accordingly, and to him was assigned the ignoble part of the onlooker. The
sheriff, the county clerk, a sportive deputy, a gay attorney, and a chalk-faced
man hailing “from the valley,” sat at table, and the sheared one was thus
tacitly advised to go and grow more wool.
Soon wearying of his ostracism, Goree had departed for his office,
muttering to himself as he unsteadily traversed the unlucky pathway. After a
drink of corn whiskey from a demijohn under the table, he had flung himself
into the chair, staring, in a sort of maudlin apathy, out at the mountains
immersed in the summer haze. The little white patch he saw away up on the side
of Blackjack was Laurel, the village near which he had been born and bred.
There, also, was the birthplace of the feud between the Gorees and the
Coltranes. Now no direct heir of the Gorees survived except this plucked and
singed bird of misfortune. To the Coltranes, also, but one male supporter was
left—Colonel Abner Coltrane, a man of substance and standing, a member of the
State Legislature, and a contemporary with Goree’s father. The feud had been a
typical one of the region; it had left a red record of hate, wrong and
slaughter.
But Yancey Goree was not thinking of feuds. His befuddled brain
was hopelessly attacking the problem of the future maintenance of himself and
his favourite follies. Of late, old friends of the family had seen to it that
he had whereof to eat and a place to sleep—but whiskey they would not buy for
him, and he must have whiskey. His law business was extinct; no case had been
intrusted to him in two years. He had been a borrower and a sponge, and it
seemed that if he fell no lower it would be from lack of opportunity. One more
chance—he was saying to himself—if he had one more stake at the game, he
thought he could win; but he had nothing left to sell, and his credit was more
than exhausted.
He could not help smiling, even in his misery, as he thought of
the man to whom, six months before, he had sold the old Goree homestead. There
had come from “back yan’” in the mountains two of the strangest creatures, a
man named Pike Garvey and his wife. “Back yan’,” with a wave of the hand toward
the hills, was understood among the mountaineers to designate the remotest
fastnesses, the unplumbed gorges, the haunts of lawbreakers, the wolf’s den,
and the boudoir of the bear. In the cabin far up on Blackjack’s shoulder, in
the wildest part of these retreats, this odd couple had lived for twenty years.
They had neither dog nor children to mitigate the heavy silence of the hills.
Pike Garvey was little known in the settlements, but all who had dealt with him
pronounced him “crazy as a loon.” He acknowledged no occupation save that of a
squirrel hunter, but he “moonshined” occasionally by way of diversion. Once the
“revenues” had dragged him from his lair, fighting silently and desperately
like a terrier, and he had been sent to state’s prison for two years. Released,
he popped back into his hole like an angry weasel.
Fortune, passing over many anxious wooers, made a freakish flight
into Blackjack’s bosky pockets to smile upon Pike and his faithful partner.
One day a party of spectacled, knickerbockered, and altogether
absurd prospectors invaded the vicinity of the Garvey’s cabin. Pike lifted his
squirrel rifle off the hooks and took a shot at them at long range on the
chance of their being revenues. Happily he missed, and the unconscious agents
of good luck drew nearer, disclosing their innocence of anything resembling law
or justice. Later on, they offered the Garveys an enormous quantity of ready,
green, crisp money for their thirty-acre patch of cleared land, mentioning, as
an excuse for such a mad action, some irrelevant and inadequate nonsense about
a bed of mica underlying the said property.
When the Garveys became possessed of so many dollars that they
faltered in computing them, the deficiencies of life on Blackjack began to grow
prominent. Pike began to talk of new shoes, a hogshead of tobacco to set in the
corner, a new lock to his rifle; and, leading Martella to a certain spot on the
mountain-side, he pointed out to her how a small cannon—doubtless a thing not
beyond the scope of their fortune in price—might be planted so as to command
and defend the sole accessible trail to the cabin, to the confusion of revenues
and meddling strangers forever.
But Adam reckoned without his Eve. These things represented to him
the applied power of wealth, but there slumbered in his dingy cabin an ambition
that soared far above his primitive wants. Somewhere in Mrs. Garvey’s bosom
still survived a spot of femininity unstarved by twenty years of Blackjack. For
so long a time the sounds in her ears had been the scaly-barks dropping in the
woods at noon, and the wolves singing among the rocks at night, and it was
enough to have purged her of vanities. She had grown fat and sad and yellow and
dull. But when the means came, she felt a rekindled desire to assume the
perquisites of her sex—to sit at tea tables; to buy futile things; to whitewash
the hideous veracity of life with a little form and ceremony. So she coldly
vetoed Pike’s proposed system of fortifications, and announced that they would
descend upon the world, and gyrate socially.
And thus, at length, it was decided, and the thing done. The
village of Laurel was their compromise between Mrs. Garvey’s preference for one
of the large valley towns and Pike’s hankering for primeval solitudes. Laurel
yielded a halting round of feeble social distractions comportable with
Martella’s ambitions, and was not entirely without recommendation to Pike, its
contiguity to the mountains presenting advantages for sudden retreat in case
fashionable society should make it advisable.
Their descent upon Laurel had been coincident with Yancey Goree’s
feverish desire to convert property into cash, and they bought the old Goree
homestead, paying four thousand dollars ready money into the spendthrift’s
shaking hands.
Thus it happened that while the disreputable last of the Gorees
sprawled in his disreputable office, at the end of his row, spurned by the
cronies whom he had gorged, strangers dwelt in the halls of his fathers.
A cloud of dust was rolling, slowly up the parched street, with
something travelling in the midst of it. A little breeze wafted the cloud to
one side, and a new, brightly painted carryall, drawn by a slothful gray horse,
became visible. The vehicle deflected from the middle of the street as it
neared Goree’s office, and stopped in the gutter directly in front of his door.
On the front seat sat a gaunt, tall man, dressed in black
broadcloth, his rigid hands incarcerated in yellow kid gloves. On the back seat
was a lady who triumphed over the June heat. Her stout form was armoured in a
skin-tight silk dress of the description known as “changeable,” being a
gorgeous combination of shifting hues. She sat erect, waving a much-ornamented
fan, with her eyes fixed stonily far down the street. However Martella Garvey’s
heart might be rejoicing at the pleasures of her new life, Blackjack had done
his work with her exterior. He had carved her countenance to the image of
emptiness and inanity; had imbued her with the stolidity of his crags, and the
reserve of his hushed interiors. She always seemed to hear, whatever her surroundings
were, the scaly-barks falling and pattering down the mountain-side. She could
always hear the awful silence of Blackjack sounding through the stillest of
nights.
Goree watched this solemn equipage, as it drove to his door, with
only faint interest; but when the lank driver wrapped the reins about his whip,
awkwardly descended, and stepped into the office, he rose unsteadily to receive
him, recognizing Pike Garvey, the new, the transformed, the recently civilized.
The mountaineer took the chair Goree offered him. They who cast
doubts upon Garvey’s soundness of mind had a strong witness in the man’s
countenance. His face was too long, a dull saffron in hue, and immobile as a
statue’s. Pale-blue, unwinking round eyes without lashes added to the singularity
of his gruesome visage. Goree was at a loss to account for the visit.
“Everything all right at Laurel, Mr. Garvey?” he inquired.
“Everything all right, sir, and mighty pleased is Missis Garvey
and me with the property. Missis Garvey likes yo’ old place, and she likes the
neighbourhood. Society is what she ’lows she wants, and she is gettin’ of it.
The Rogerses, the Hapgoods, the Pratts and the Troys hev been to see Missis
Garvey, and she hev et meals to most of thar houses. The best folks hev axed her
to differ’nt kinds of doin’s. I cyan’t say, Mr. Goree, that sech things suits
me—fur me, give me them thar.” Garvey’s huge, yellow-gloved hand flourished in
the direction of the mountains. “That’s whar I b’long, ’mongst the wild honey
bees and the b’ars. But that ain’t what I come fur to say, Mr. Goree. Thar’s
somethin’ you got what me and Missis Garvey wants to buy.”
“Buy!” echoed Goree. “From me?” Then he laughed harshly. “I reckon
you are mistaken about that. I reckon you are mistaken about that. I sold out
to you, as you yourself expressed it, ‘lock, stock and barrel.’ There isn’t
even a ramrod left to sell.”
“You’ve got it; and we ’uns want it. ‘Take the money,’ says Missis
Garvey, ‘and buy it fa’r and squar’.’”
Goree shook his head. “The cupboard’s bare,” he said.
“We’ve riz,” pursued the mountaineer, undeflected from his object,
“a heap. We was pore as possums, and now we could hev folks to dinner every
day. We been recognized, Missis Garvey says, by the best society. But there’s
somethin’ we need we ain’t got. She says it ought to been put in the ’ventory
ov the sale, but it tain’t thar. ‘Take the money, then,’ says she, ‘and buy it
fa’r and squar’.’”
“Out with it,” said Goree, his racked nerves growing impatient.
Garvey threw his slouch hat upon the table, and leaned forward,
fixing his unblinking eyes upon Goree’s.
“There’s a old feud,” he said distinctly and slowly, “’tween you
’uns and the Coltranes.”
Goree frowned ominously. To speak of his feud to a feudist is a
serious breach of the mountain etiquette. The man from “back yan’” knew it as
well as the lawyer did.
“Na offense,” he went on “but purely in the way of business.
Missis Garvey hev studied all about feuds. Most of the quality folks in the
mountains hev ’em. The Settles and the Goforths, the Rankins and the Boyds, the
Silers and the Galloways, hev all been cyarin’ on feuds f’om twenty to a
hundred year. The last man to drap was when yo’ uncle, Jedge Paisley Goree,
’journed co’t and shot Len Coltrane f’om the bench. Missis Garvey and me, we come
f’om the po’ white trash. Nobody wouldn’t pick a feud with we ’uns, no mo’n
with a fam’ly of tree-toads. Quality people everywhar, says Missis Garvey, has
feuds. We ’uns ain’t quality, but we’re buyin’ into it as fur as we can. ‘Take
the money, then,’ says Missis Garvey, ‘and buy Mr. Goree’s feud, fa’r and
squar’.’”
The squirrel hunter straightened a leg half across the room, drew
a roll of bills from his pocket, and threw them on the table.
“Thar’s two hundred dollars, Mr. Goree; what you would call a fa’r
price for a feud that’s been ’lowed to run down like yourn hev. Thar’s only you
left to cyar’ on yo’ side of it, and you’d make mighty po’ killin’. I’ll take
it off yo’ hands, and it’ll set me and Missis Garvey up among the quality.
Thar’s the money.”
The little roll of currency on the table slowly untwisted itself,
writhing and jumping as its folds relaxed. In the silence that followed
Garvey’s last speech the rattling of the poker chips in the court-house could
be plainly heard. Goree knew that the sheriff had just won a pot, for the
subdued whoop with which he always greeted a victory floated across the square
upon the crinkly heat waves. Beads of moisture stood on Goree’s brow. Stooping,
he drew the wicker-covered demijohn from under the table, and filled a tumbler
from it.
“A little corn liquor, Mr. Garvey? Of course you are joking
about—what you spoke of? Opens quite a new market, doesn’t it? Feuds. Prime,
two-fifty to three. Feuds, slightly damaged—two hundred, I believe you said,
Mr. Garvey?”
Goree laughed self-consciously.
The mountaineer took the glass Goree handed him, and drank the
whisky without a tremor of the lids of his staring eyes. The lawyer applauded
the feat by a look of envious admiration. He poured his own drink, and took it
like a drunkard, by gulps, and with shudders at the smell and taste.
“Two hundred,” repeated Garvey. “Thar’s the money.”
A sudden passion flared up in Goree’s brain. He struck the table
with his fist. One of the bills flipped over and touched his hand. He flinched
as if something had stung him.
“Do you come to me,” he shouted, “seriously with such a
ridiculous, insulting, darned-fool proposition?”
“It’s fa’r and squar’,” said the squirrel hunter, but he reached
out his hand as if to take back the money; and then Goree knew that his own
flurry of rage had not been from pride or resentment, but from anger at
himself, knowing that he would set foot in the deeper depths that were being
opened to him. He turned in an instant from an outraged gentleman to an anxious
chafferer recommending his goods.
“Don’t be in a hurry, Garvey,” he said, his face crimson and his
speech thick. “I accept your p-p-proposition, though it’s dirt cheap at two
hundred. A t-trade’s all right when both p-purchaser and b-buyer are
s-satisfied. Shall I w-wrap it up for you, Mr. Garvey?”
Garvey rose, and shook out his broadcloth. “Missis Garvey will be
pleased. You air out of it, and it stands Coltrane and Garvey. Just a scrap ov
writin’, Mr. Goree, you bein’ a lawyer, to show we traded.”
Goree seized a sheet of paper and a pen. The money was clutched in
his moist hand. Everything else suddenly seemed to grow trivial and light.
“Bill of sale, by all means. ‘Right, title, and interest in and
to’ . . . ‘forever warrant and—’ No, Garvey, we’ll have to leave out that
‘defend,’” said Goree with a loud laugh. “You’ll have to defend this title
yourself.”
The mountaineer received the amazing screed that the lawyer handed
him, folded it with immense labour, and laced it carefully in his pocket.
Goree was standing near the window. “Step here,” he said, raising
his finger, “and I’ll show you your recently purchased enemy. There he goes,
down the other side of the street.”
The mountaineer crooked his long frame to look through the window
in the direction indicated by the other. Colonel Abner Coltrane, an erect,
portly gentleman of about fifty, wearing the inevitable long, double-breasted
frock coat of the Southern lawmaker, and an old high silk hat, was passing on
the opposite sidewalk. As Garvey looked, Goree glanced at his face. If there be
such a thing as a yellow wolf, here was its counterpart. Garvey snarled as his
unhuman eyes followed the moving figure, disclosing long, amber-coloured fangs.
“Is that him? Why, that’s the man who sent me to the pen’tentiary
once!”
“He used to be district attorney,” said Goree carelessly. “And, by
the way, he’s a first-class shot.”
“I kin hit a squirrel’s eye at a hundred yard,” said Garvey. “So
that thar’s Coltrane! I made a better trade than I was thinkin’. I’ll take keer
ov this feud, Mr. Goree, better’n you ever did!”
He moved toward the door, but lingered there, betraying a slight
perplexity.
“Anything else to-day?” inquired Goree with frothy sarcasm. “Any
family traditions, ancestral ghosts, or skeletons in the closet? Prices as low
as the lowest.”
“Thar was another thing,” replied the unmoved squirrel hunter,
“that Missis Garvey was thinkin’ of. ’Tain’t so much in my line as t’other, but
she wanted partic’lar that I should inquire, and ef you was willin’, ‘pay fur
it,’ she says, ‘fa’r and squar’.’ Thar’s a buryin’ groun’, as you know, Mr.
Goree, in the yard of yo’ old place, under the cedars. Them that lies thar is
yo’ folks what was killed by the Coltranes. The monyments has the names on ’em.
Missis Garvey says a fam’ly buryin’ groun’ is a sho’ sign of quality. She says
ef we git the feud, thar’s somethin’ else ought to go with it. The names on
them monyments is ‘Goree,’ but they can be changed to ourn by—”
“Go! Go!” screamed Goree, his face turning purple. He stretched
out both hands toward the mountaineer, his fingers hooked and shaking. “Go, you
ghoul! Even a Ch-Chinaman protects the g-graves of his ancestors—go!”
The squirrel hunter slouched out of the door to his carryall.
While he was climbing over the wheel Goree was collecting, with feverish
celerity, the money that had fallen from his hand to the floor. As the vehicle
slowly turned about, the sheep, with a coat of newly grown wool, was hurrying,
in indecent haste, along the path to the court-house.
At three o’clock in the morning they brought him back to his
office, shorn and unconscious. The sheriff, the sportive deputy, the county
clerk, and the gay attorney carried him, the chalk-faced man “from the valley”
acting as escort.
“On the table,” said one of them, and they deposited him there
among the litter of his unprofitable books and papers.
“Yance thinks a lot of a pair of deuces when he’s liquored up,”
sighed the sheriff reflectively.
“Too much,” said the gay attorney. “A man has no business to play
poker who drinks as much as he does. I wonder how much he dropped to-night.”
“Close to two hundred. What I wonder is whar he got it. Yance
ain’t had a cent fur over a month, I know.”
“Struck a client, maybe. Well, let’s get home before daylight.
He’ll be all right when he wakes up, except for a sort of beehive about the
cranium.”
The gang slipped away through the early morning twilight. The next
eye to gaze upon the miserable Goree was the orb of day. He peered through the
uncurtained window, first deluging the sleeper in a flood of faint gold, but
soon pouring upon the mottled red of his flesh a searching, white, summer heat.
Goree stirred, half unconsciously, among the table’s débris, and turned his
face from the window. His movement dislodged a heavy law book, which crashed
upon the floor. Opening his eyes, he saw, bending over him, a man in a black
frock coat. Looking higher, he discovered a well-worn silk hat, and beneath it
the kindly, smooth face of Colonel Abner Coltrane.
A little uncertain of the outcome, the colonel waited for the
other to make some sign of recognition. Not in twenty years had male members of
these two families faced each other in peace. Goree’s eyelids puckered as he
strained his blurred sight toward this visitor, and then he smiled serenely.
“Have you brought Stella and Lucy over to play?” he said calmly.
“Do you know me, Yancey?” asked Coltrane.
“Of course I do. You brought me a whip with a whistle in the end.”
So he had—twenty-four years ago; when Yancey’s father was his best
friend.
Goree’s eyes wandered about the room. The colonel understood. “Lie
still, and I’ll bring you some,” said he. There was a pump in the yard at the
rear, and Goree closed his eyes, listening with rapture to the click of its
handle, and the bubbling of the falling stream. Coltrane brought a pitcher of
the cool water, and held it for him to drink. Presently Goree sat up—a most
forlorn object, his summer suit of flax soiled and crumpled, his discreditable
head tousled and unsteady. He tried to wave one of his hands toward the
colonel.
“Ex-excuse—everything, will you?” he said. “I must have drunk too
much whiskey last night, and gone to bed on the table.” His brows knitted into
a puzzled frown.
“Out with the boys awhile?” asked Coltrane kindly.
“No, I went nowhere. I haven’t had a dollar to spend in the last
two months. Struck the demijohn too often, I reckon, as usual.”
Colonel Coltrane touched him on the shoulder.
“A little while ago, Yancey,” he began, “you asked me if I had
brought Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren’t quite awake then, and must
have been dreaming you were a boy again. You are awake now, and I want you to
listen to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their old playmate, and to my
old friend’s son. They know that I am going to bring you home with me, and you
will find them as ready with a welcome as they were in the old days. I want you
to come to my house and stay until you are yourself again, and as much longer
as you will. We heard of your being down in the world, and in the midst of
temptation, and we agreed that you should come over and play at our house once
more. Will you come, my boy? Will you drop our old family trouble and come with
me?”
“Trouble!” said Goree, opening his eyes wide. “There was never any
trouble between us that I know of. I’m sure we’ve always been the best friends.
But, good Lord, Colonel, how could I go to your home as I am—a drunken wretch,
a miserable, degraded spendthrift and gambler—”
He lurched from the table into his armchair, and began to weep
maudlin tears, mingled with genuine drops of remorse and shame. Coltrane talked
to him persistently and reasonably, reminding him of the simple mountain
pleasures of which he had once been so fond, and insisting upon the genuineness
of the invitation.
Finally he landed Goree by telling him he was counting upon his
help in the engineering and transportation of a large amount of felled timber
from a high mountain-side to a waterway. He knew that Goree had once invented a
device for this purpose—a series of slides and chutes upon which he had justly
prided himself. In an instant the poor fellow, delighted at the idea of his
being of use to any one, had paper spread upon the table, and was drawing rapid
but pitifully shaky lines in demonstration of what he could and would do.
The man was sickened of the husks; his prodigal heart was turning
again toward the mountains. His mind was yet strangely clogged, and his
thoughts and memories were returning to his brain one by one, like carrier
pigeons over a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with the progress he had
made.
Bethel received the surprise of its existence that afternoon when
a Coltrane and a Goree rode amicably together through the town. Side by side
they rode, out from the dusty streets and gaping townspeople, down across the
creek bridge, and up toward the mountain. The prodigal had brushed and washed
and combed himself to a more decent figure, but he was unsteady in the saddle,
and he seemed to be deep in the contemplation of some vexing problem. Coltrane
left him in his mood, relying upon the influence of changed surroundings to
restore his equilibrium.
Once Goree was seized with a shaking fit, and almost came to a
collapse. He had to dismount and rest at the side of the road. The colonel,
foreseeing such a condition, had provided a small flask of whisky for the
journey but when it was offered to him Goree refused it almost with violence,
declaring he would never touch it again. By and by he was recovered, and went
quietly enough for a mile or two. Then he pulled up his horse suddenly, and
said:
“I lost two hundred dollars last night, playing poker. Now, where
did I get that money?”
“Take it easy, Yancey. The mountain air will soon clear it up.
We’ll go fishing, first thing, at the Pinnacle Falls. The trout are jumping
there like bullfrogs. We’ll take Stella and Lucy along, and have a picnic on
Eagle Rock. Have you forgotten how a hickory-cured-ham sandwich tastes, Yancey,
to a hungry fisherman?”
Evidently the colonel did not believe the story of his lost
wealth; so Goree retired again into brooding silence.
By late Afternoon they had travelled ten of the twelve miles
between Bethel and Laurel. Half a mile this side of Laurel lay the old Goree
place; a mile or two beyond the village lived the Coltranes. The road was now
steep and laborious, but the compensations were many. The tilted aisles of the
forest were opulent with leaf and bird and bloom. The tonic air put to shame
the pharmacopæia. The glades were dark with mossy shade, and bright with shy
rivulets winking from the ferns and laurels. On the lower side they viewed,
framed in the near foliage, exquisite sketches of the far valley swooning in
its opal haze.
Coltrane was pleased to see that his companion was yielding to the
spell of the hills and woods. For now they had but to skirt the base of
Painter’s Cliff; to cross Elder Branch and mount the hill beyond, and Goree
would have to face the squandered home of his fathers. Every rock he passed,
every tree, every foot of the rocky way, was familiar to him. Though he had
forgotten the woods, they thrilled him like the music of “Home, Sweet Home.”
They rounded the cliff, descended into Elder Branch, and paused
there to let the horses drink and splash in the swift water. On the right was a
rail fence that cornered there, and followed the road and stream. Inclosed by
it was the old apple orchard of the home place; the house was yet concealed by
the brow of the steep hill. Inside and along the fence, pokeberries, elders,
sassafras, and sumac grew high and dense. At a rustle of their branches, both
Goree and Coltrane glanced up, and saw a long, yellow, wolfish face above the
fence, staring at them with pale, unwinking eyes. The head quickly disappeared;
there was a violent swaying of the bushes, and an ungainly figure ran up
through the apple orchard in the direction of the house, zig-zagging among the
trees.
“That’s Garvey,” said Coltrane; “the man you sold out to. There’s
no doubt but he’s considerably cracked. I had to send him up for moonshining
once, several years ago, in spite of the fact that I believed him
irresponsible. Why, what’s the matter, Yancey?”
Goree was wiping his forehead, and his face had lost its colour.
“Do I look queer, too?” he asked, trying to smile. “I’m just remembering a few
more things.” Some of the alcohol had evaporated from his brain. “I recollect
now where I got that two hundred dollars.”
“Don’t think of it,” said Coltrane cheerfully. “Later on we’ll
figure it all out together.”
They rode out of the branch, and when they reached the foot of the
hill Goree stopped again.
“Did you ever suspect I was a very vain kind of fellow, Colonel?”
he asked. “Sort of foolish proud about appearances?”
The colonel’s eyes refused to wander to the soiled, sagging suit
of flax and the faded slouch hat.
“It seems to me,” he replied, mystified, but humouring him, “I
remember a young buck about twenty, with the tightest coat, the sleekest hair,
and the prancingest saddle horse in the Blue Ridge.”
“Right you are,” said Goree eagerly. “And it’s in me yet, though
it don’t show. Oh, I’m as vain as a turkey gobbler, and as proud as Lucifer.
I’m going to ask you to indulge this weakness of mine in a little matter.”
“Speak out, Yancey. We’ll create you Duke of Laurel and Baron of
Blue Ridge, if you choose; and you shall have a feather out of Stella’s
peacock’s tail to wear in your hat.”
“I’m in earnest. In a few minutes we’ll pass the house up there on
the hill where I was born, and where my people have lived for nearly a century.
Strangers live there now—and look at me! I am about to show myself to them
ragged and poverty-stricken, a wastrel and a beggar. Colonel Coltrane, I’m
ashamed to do it. I want you to let me wear your coat and hat until we are out
of sight beyond. I know you think it a foolish pride, but I want to make as
good a showing as I can when I pass the old place.”
“Now, what does this mean?” said Coltrane to himself, as he
compared his companion’s sane looks and quiet demeanour with his strange
request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting readily, as if the
fancy were in no wise to be considered strange.
The coat and hat fitted Goree well. He buttoned the former about
him with a look of satisfaction and dignity. He and Coltrane were nearly the
same size—rather tall, portly, and erect. Twenty-five years were between them,
but in appearance they might have been brothers. Goree looked older than his
age; his face was puffy and lined; the colonel had the smooth, fresh complexion
of a temperate liver. He put on Goree’s disreputable old flax coat and faded
slouch hat.
“Now,” said Goree, taking up the reins, “I’m all right. I want you
to ride about ten feet in the rear as we go by, Colonel, so that they can get a
good look at me. They’ll see I’m no back number yet, by any means. I guess I’ll
show up pretty well to them once more, anyhow. Let’s ride on.”
He set out up the hill at a smart trot, the colonel following, as
he had been requested.
Goree sat straight in the saddle, with head erect, but his eyes
were turned to the right, sharply scanning every shrub and fence and hiding-place
in the old homestead yard. Once he muttered to himself, “Will the crazy fool
try it, or did I dream half of it?”
It was when he came opposite the little family burying ground that
he saw what he had been looking for—a puff of white smoke, coming from the
thick cedars in one corner. He toppled so slowly to the left that Coltrane had
time to urge his horse to that side, and catch him with one arm.
The squirrel hunter had not overpraised his aim. He had sent the
bullet where he intended, and where Goree had expected that it would
pass—through the breast of Colonel Abner Coltrane’s black frock coat.
Goree leaned heavily against Coltrane, but he did not fall. The
horses kept pace, side by side, and the Colonel’s arm kept him steady. The
little white houses of Laurel shone through the trees, half a mile away. Goree
reached out one hand and groped until it rested upon Coltrane’s fingers, which
held his bridle.
“Good friend,” he said, and that was all.
Thus did Yancey Goree, as he rode past his old home, make,
considering all things, the best showing that was in his power.
Half a dozen people
supping at a table in one of the upper-Broadway all-night restaurants were
making too much noise. Three times the manager walked past them with a politely
warning glance; but their argument had waxed too warm to be quelled by a
manager’s gaze. It was midnight, and the restaurant was filled with patrons
from the theatres of that district. Some among the dispersed audiences must
have recognized among the quarrelsome sextet the faces of the players belonging
to the Carroll Comedy Company.
Four of the six made up the company. Another was the author of the
comedietta, “A Gay Coquette,” which the quartette of players had been
presenting with fair success at several vaudeville houses in the city. The
sixth at the table was a person inconsequent in the realm of art, but one at
whose bidding many lobsters had perished.
Loudly the six maintained their clamorous debate. No one of the
Party was silent except when answers were stormed from him by the excited ones.
That was the comedian of “A Gay Coquette.” He was a young man with a face even
too melancholy for his profession.
The oral warfare of four immoderate tongues was directed at Miss
Clarice Carroll, the twinkling star of the small aggregation. Excepting the
downcast comedian, all members of the party united in casting upon her with
vehemence the blame of some momentous misfortune. Fifty times they told her:
“It is your fault, Clarice—it is you alone who spoilt the scene. It is only of
late that you have acted this way. At this rate the sketch will have to be
taken off.”
Miss Carroll was a match for any four. Gallic ancestry gave her a
vivacity that could easily mount to fury. Her large eyes flashed a scorching
denial at her accusers. Her slender, eloquent arms constantly menaced the
tableware. Her high, clear soprano voice rose to what would have been a scream
had it not possessed so pure a musical quality. She hurled back at the
attacking four their denunciations in tones sweet, but of too great carrying
power for a Broadway restaurant.
Finally they exhausted her patience both as a woman and an artist.
She sprang up like a panther, managed to smash half a dozen plates and glasses
with one royal sweep of her arm, and defied her critics. They rose and wrangled
more loudly. The comedian sighed and looked a trifle sadder and disinterested.
The manager came tripping and suggested peace. He was told to go to the popular
synonym for war so promptly that the affair might have happened at The Hague.
Thus was the manager angered. He made a sign with his hand and a
waiter slipped out of the door. In twenty minutes the party of six was in a
police station facing a grizzled and philosophical desk sergeant.
“Disorderly conduct in a restaurant,” said the policeman who had
brought the party in.
The author of “A Gay Coquette” stepped to the front. He wore
nose-glasses and evening clothes, even if his shoes had been tans before they
met the patent-leather-polish bottle.
“Mr. Sergeant,” said he, out of his throat, like Actor Irving, “I
would like to protest against this arrest. The company of actors who are
performing in a little play that I have written, in company with a friend and
myself were having a little supper. We became deeply interested in the
discussion as to which one of the cast is responsible for a scene in the sketch
that lately has fallen so flat that the piece is about to become a failure. We
may have been rather noisy and intolerant of interruption by the restaurant
people; but the matter was of considerable importance to all of us. You see
that we are sober and are not the kind of people who desire to raise
disturbances. I hope that the case will not be pressed and that we may be
allowed to go.”
“Who makes the charge?” asked the sergeant.
“Me,” said a white-aproned voice in the rear. “De restaurant sent
me to. De gang was raisin’ a rough-house and breakin’ dishes.”
“The dishes were paid for,” said the playwright. “They were not
broken purposely. In her anger, because we remonstrated with her for spoiling
the scene, Miss—”
“It’s not true, sergeant,” cried the clear voice of Miss Clarice
Carroll. In a long coat of tan silk and a red-plumed hat, she bounded before
the desk.
“It’s not my fault,” she cried indignantly. “How dare they say
such a thing! I’ve played the title rôle ever since it was staged, and if you
want to know who made it a success, ask the public—that’s all.”
“What Miss Carroll says is true in part,” said the author. “For
five months the comedietta was a drawing-card in the best houses. But during
the last two weeks it has lost favour. There is one scene in it in which Miss
Carroll made a big hit. Now she hardly gets a hand out of it. She spoils it by
acting it entirely different from her old way.”
“It is not my fault,” reiterated the actress.
“There are only two of you on in the scene,” argued the playwright
hotly, “you and Delmars, here—”
“Then it’s his fault,” declared Miss Carroll, with a lightning
glance of scorn from her dark eyes. The comedian caught it, and gazed with
increased melancholy at the panels of the sergeant’s desk.
The night was a dull one in that particular police station.
The sergeant’s long-blunted curiosity awoke a little.
“I’ve heard you,” he said to the author. And then he addressed the
thin-faced and ascetic-looking lady of the company who played “Aunt Turnip-top”
in the little comedy.
“Who do you think spoils the scene you are fussing about?” he
asked.
“I’m no knocker,” said that lady, “and everybody knows it. So,
when I say that Clarice falls down every time in that scene I’m judging her art
and not herself. She was great in it once. She does it something fierce now.
It’ll dope the show if she keeps it up.”
The sergeant looked at the comedian.
“You and the lady have this scene together, I understand. I
suppose there’s no use asking you which one of you queers it?”
The comedian avoided the direct rays from the two fixed stars of
Miss Carroll’s eyes.
“I don’t know,” he said, looking down at his patent-leather toes.
“Are you one of the actors?” asked the sergeant of a dwarfish
youth with a middle-aged face.
“Why, say!” replied the last Thespian witness, “you don’t notice
any tin spear in my hands, do you? You haven’t heard me shout: ‘See, the
Emperor comes!’ since I’ve been in here, have you? I guess I’m on the stage
long enough for ’em not to start a panic by mistaking me for a thin curl of
smoke rising above the footlights.”
“In your opinion, if you’ve got one,” said the sergeant, “is the
frost that gathers on the scene in question the work of the lady or the
gentleman who takes part in it?”
The middle-aged youth looked pained.
“I regret to say,” he answered, “that Miss Carroll seems to have
lost her grip on that scene. She’s all right in the rest of the play, but—but I
tell you, sergeant, she can do it—she has done it equal to any of ’em—and she
can do it again.”
Miss Carroll ran forward, glowing and palpitating.
“Thank you, Jimmy, for the first good word I’ve had in many a
day,” she cried. And then she turned her eager face toward the desk.
“I’ll show you, sergeant, whether I am to blame. I’ll show them
whether I can do that scene. Come, Mr. Delmars; let us begin. You will let us,
won’t you, sergeant?”
“How long will it take?” asked the sergeant, dubiously.
“Eight minutes,” said the playwright. “The entire play consumes
but thirty.”
“You may go ahead,” said the sergeant. “Most of you seem to side
against the little lady. Maybe she had a right to crack up a saucer or two in
that restaurant. We’ll see how she does the turn before we take that up.”
The matron of the police station had been standing near, listening
to the singular argument. She came nigher and stood near the sergeant’s chair.
Two or three of the reserves strolled in, big and yawning.
“Before beginning the scene,” said the playwright, “and assuming
that you have not seen a production of ‘A Gay Coquette,’ I will make a brief
but necessary explanation. It is a musical-farce-comedy—burlesque-comedietta.
As the title implies, Miss Carroll’s rôle is that of a gay, rollicking, mischievous,
heartless coquette. She sustains that character throughout the entire comedy
part of the production. And I have designed the extravaganza features so that
she may preserve and present the same coquettish idea.
“Now, the scene in which we take exception to Miss Carroll’s
acting is called the ‘gorilla dance.’ She is costumed to represent a wood
nymph, and there is a great song-and-dance scene with a gorilla—played by Mr.
Delmars, the comedian. A tropical-forest stage is set.
“That used to get four and five recalls. The main thing was the
acting and the dance—it was the funniest thing in New York for five months.
Delmars’s song, ‘I’ll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home,’ while he and Miss Carroll
were cutting hide-and-seek capers among the tropical plants, was a winner.”
“What’s the trouble with the scene now?” asked the sergeant.
“Miss Carroll spoils it right in the middle of it,” said the
playwright wrathfully.
With a wide gesture of her ever-moving arms the actress waved back
the little group of spectators, leaving a space in front of the desk for the
scene of her vindication or fall. Then she whipped off her long tan cloak and
tossed it across the arm of the policeman who still stood officially among
them.
Miss Carroll had gone to supper well cloaked, but in the costume
of the tropic wood nymph. A skirt of fern leaves touched her knee; she was like
a humming-bird—green and golden and purple.
And then she danced a fluttering, fantastic dance, so agile and
light and mazy in her steps that the other three members of the Carroll Comedy
Company broke into applause at the art of it.
And at the proper time Delmars leaped out at her side, mimicking
the uncouth, hideous bounds of the gorilla so funnily that the grizzled
sergeant himself gave a short laugh like the closing of a padlock. They danced
together the gorilla dance, and won a hand from all.
Then began the most fantastic part of the scene—the wooing of the
nymph by the gorilla. It was a kind of dance itself—eccentric and prankish,
with the nymph in coquettish and seductive retreat, followed by the gorilla as
he sang “I’ll Woo Thee to My Sylvan Home.”
The song was a lyric of merit. The words were nonsense, as
befitted the play, but the music was worthy of something better. Delmars struck
into it in a rich tenor that owned a quality that shamed the flippant words.
During one verse of the song the wood nymph performed the
grotesque evolutions designed for the scene. At the middle of the second verse
she stood still, with a strange look on her face, seeming to gaze dreamily into
the depths of the scenic forest. The gorilla’s last leap had brought him to her
feet, and there he knelt, holding her hand, until he had finished the
haunting-lyric that was set in the absurd comedy like a diamond in a piece of
putty.
When Delmars ceased Miss Carroll started, and covered a sudden
flow of tears with both hands.
“There!” cried the playwright, gesticulating with violence; “there
you have it, sergeant. For two weeks she has spoiled that scene in just that
manner at every performance. I have begged her to consider that it is not
Ophelia or Juliet that she is playing. Do you wonder now at our impatience?
Tears for the gorilla song! The play is lost!”
Out of her bewitchment, whatever it was, the wood nymph flared
suddenly, and pointed a desperate finger at Delmars.
“It is you—you who have done this,” she cried wildly. “You never
sang that song that way until lately. It is your doing.”
“I give it up,” said the sergeant.
And then the gray-haired matron of the police station came forward
from behind the sergeant’s chair.
“Must an old woman teach you all?” she said. She went up to Miss
Carroll and took her hand.
“The man’s wearing his heart out for you, my dear. Couldn’t you
tell it the first note you heard him sing? All of his monkey flip-flops
wouldn’t have kept it from me. Must you be deaf as well as blind? That’s why
you couldn’t act your part, child. Do you love him or must he be a gorilla for
the rest of his days?”
Miss Carroll whirled around and caught Delmars with a lightning
glance of her eye. He came toward her, melancholy.
“Did you hear, Mr. Delmars?” she asked, with a catching breath.
“I did,” said the comedian. “It is true. I didn’t think there was
any use. I tried to let you know with the song.”
“Silly!” said the matron; “why didn’t you speak?”
“No, no,” cried the wood nymph, “his way was the best. I didn’t
know, but—it was just what I wanted, Bobby.”
She sprang like a green grasshopper; and the comedian opened his
arms, and—smiled.
“Get out of this,” roared the desk sergeant to the waiting waiter
from the restaurant. “There’s nothing doing here for you.”
The judge of the United
States court of the district lying along the Rio Grande border found the
following letter one morning in his mail:
JUDGE:
When you sent me up for four years you made a talk. Among other hard things,
you called me a rattlesnake. Maybe I am one—anyhow, you hear me rattling now.
One year after I got to the pen, my daughter died of—well, they said it was
poverty and the disgrace together. You’ve got a daughter, Judge, and I’m going
to make you know how it feels to lose one. And I’m going to bite that district
attorney that spoke against me. I’m free now, and I guess I’ve turned to
rattlesnake all right. I feel like one. I don’t say much, but this is my
rattle. Look out when I strike.
Yours respectfully,
RATTLESNAKE.
Judge Derwent threw the letter carelessly aside. It was nothing
new to receive such epistles from desperate men whom he had been called upon to
judge. He felt no alarm. Later on he showed the letter to Littlefield, the
young district attorney, for Littlefield’s name was included in the threat, and
the judge was punctilious in matters between himself and his fellow men.
Littlefield honoured the rattle of the writer, as far as it concerned
himself, with a smile of contempt; but he frowned a little over the reference
to the Judge’s daughter, for he and Nancy Derwent were to be married in the
fall.
Littlefield went to the clerk of the court and looked over the
records with him. They decided that the letter might have been sent by Mexico
Sam, a half-breed border desperado who had been imprisoned for manslaughter
four years before. Then official duties crowded the matter from his mind, and
the rattle of the revengeful serpent was forgotten.
Court was in session at Brownsville. Most of the cases to be tried
were charges of smuggling, counterfeiting, post-office robberies, and
violations of Federal laws along the border. One case was that of a young
Mexican, Rafael Ortiz, who had been rounded up by a clever deputy marshal in
the act of passing a counterfeit silver dollar. He had been suspected of many
such deviations from rectitude, but this was the first time that anything
provable had been fixed upon him. Ortiz languished cozily in jail, smoking
brown cigarettes and waiting for trial. Kilpatrick, the deputy, brought the
counterfeit dollar and handed it to the district attorney in his office in the
court-house. The deputy and a reputable druggist were prepared to swear that
Ortiz paid for a bottle of medicine with it. The coin was a poor counterfeit,
soft, dull-looking, and made principally of lead. It was the day before the
morning on which the docket would reach the case of Ortiz, and the district
attorney was preparing himself for trial.
“Not much need of having in high-priced experts to prove the
coin’s queer, is there, Kil?” smiled Littlefield, as he thumped the dollar down
upon the table, where it fell with no more ring than would have come from a
lump of putty.
“I guess the Greaser’s as good as behind the bars,” said the
deputy, easing up his holsters. “You’ve got him dead. If it had been just one
time, these Mexicans can’t tell good money from bad; but this little yaller
rascal belongs to a gang of counterfeiters, I know. This is the first time I’ve
been able to catch him doing the trick. He’s got a girl down there in them
Mexican jacals on the river bank. I seen her one day when I was watching him.
She’s as pretty as a red heifer in a flower bed.”
Littlefield shoved the counterfeit dollar into his pocket, and
slipped his memoranda of the case into an envelope. Just then a bright, winsome
face, as frank and jolly as a boy’s, appeared in the doorway, and in walked
Nancy Derwent.
“Oh, Bob, didn’t court adjourn at twelve to-day until to-morrow?”
she asked of Littlefield.
“It did,” said the district attorney, “and I’m very glad of it.
I’ve got a lot of rulings to look up, and—”
“Now, that’s just like you. I wonder you and father don’t turn to
law books or rulings or something! I want you to take me out plover-shooting
this afternoon. Long Prairie is just alive with them. Don’t say no, please! I
want to try my new twelve-bore hammerless. I’ve sent to the livery stable to
engage Fly and Bess for the buckboard; they stand fire so nicely. I was sure
you would go.”
They were to be married in the fall. The glamour was at its
height. The plovers won the day—or, rather, the afternoon—over the calf-bound
authorities. Littlefield began to put his papers away.
There was a knock at the door. Kilpatrick answered it. A
beautiful, dark-eyed girl with a skin tinged with the faintest lemon colour
walked into the room. A black shawl was thrown over her head and wound once
around her neck.
She began to talk in Spanish, a voluble, mournful stream of
melancholy music. Littlefield did not understand Spanish. The deputy did, and
he translated her talk by portions, at intervals holding up his hand to check
the flow of her words.
“She came to see you, Mr. Littlefield. Her name’s Joya Treviñas.
She wants to see you about—well, she’s mixed up with that Rafael Ortiz. She’s
his—she’s his girl. She says he’s innocent. She says she made the money and got
him to pass it. Don’t you believe her, Mr. Littlefield. That’s the way with
these Mexican girls; they’ll lie, steal, or kill for a fellow when they get
stuck on him. Never trust a woman that’s in love!”
“Mr. Kilpatrick!”
Nancy Derwent’s indignant exclamation caused the deputy to
flounder for a moment in attempting to explain that he had misquoted his own
sentiments, and then he went on with the translation:
“She says she’s willing to take his place in the jail if you’ll
let him out. She says she was down sick with the fever, and the doctor said
she’d die if she didn’t have medicine. That’s why he passed the lead dollar on
the drug store. She says it saved her life. This Rafael seems to be her honey,
all right; there’s a lot of stuff in her talk about love and such things that
you don’t want to hear.”
It was an old story to the district attorney.
“Tell her,” said he, “that I can do nothing. The case comes up in
the morning, and he will have to make his fight before the court.”
Nancy Derwent was not so hardened. She was looking with
sympathetic interest at Joya Treviñas and at Littlefield alternately. The
deputy repeated the district attorney’s words to the girl. She spoke a sentence
or two in a low voice, pulled her shawl closely about her face, and left the
room.
“What did she say then?” asked the district attorney.
“Nothing special,” said the deputy. “She said: ‘If the life of the
one’—let’s see how it went—‘Si la vida de ella á quien tu amas—if the
life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember Rafael Ortiz.’”
Kilpatrick strolled out through the corridor in the direction of
the marshal’s office.
“Can’t you do anything for them, Bob?” asked Nancy. “It’s such a
little thing—just one counterfeit dollar—to ruin the happiness of two lives!
She was in danger of death, and he did it to save her. Doesn’t the law know the
feeling of pity?”
“It hasn’t a place in jurisprudence, Nan,” said Littlefield,
“especially in re the district attorney’s duty. I’ll promise
you that the prosecution will not be vindictive; but the man is as good as
convicted when the case is called. Witnesses will swear to his passing the bad
dollar which I have in my pocket at this moment as ‘Exhibit A.’ There are no
Mexicans on the jury, and it will vote Mr. Greaser guilty without leaving the
box.”
The plover-shooting was fine that afternoon, and in the excitement
of the sport the case of Rafael and the grief of Joya Treviñas was forgotten.
The district attorney and Nancy Derwent drove out from the town three miles
along a smooth, grassy road, and then struck across a rolling prairie toward a
heavy line of timber on Piedra Creek. Beyond this creek lay Long Prairie, the
favourite haunt of the plover. As they were nearing the creek they heard the
galloping of a horse to their right, and saw a man with black hair and a
swarthy face riding toward the woods at a tangent, as if he had come up behind
them.
“I’ve seen that fellow somewhere,” said Littlefield, who had a
memory for faces, “but I can’t exactly place him. Some ranchman, I suppose,
taking a short cut home.”
They spent an hour on Long Prairie, shooting from the buckboard.
Nancy Derwent, an active, outdoor Western girl, was pleased with her
twelve-bore. She had bagged within two brace of her companion’s score.
They started homeward at a gentle trot. When within a hundred
yards of Piedra Creek a man rode out of the timber directly toward them.
“It looks like the man we saw coming over,” remarked Miss Derwent.
As the distance between them lessened, the district attorney
suddenly pulled up his team sharply, with his eyes fixed upon the advancing
horseman. That individual had drawn a Winchester from its scabbard on his saddle
and thrown it over his arm.
“Now I know you, Mexico Sam!” muttered Littlefield to himself. “It
was you who shook your rattles in that gentle epistle.”
Mexico Sam did not leave things long in doubt. He had a nice eye
in all matters relating to firearms, so when he was within good rifle range,
but outside of danger from No. 8 shot, he threw up his Winchester and opened
fire upon the occupants of the buckboard.
The first shot cracked the back of the seat within the two-inch
space between the shoulders of Littlefield and Miss Derwent. The next went
through the dashboard and Littlefield’s trouser leg.
The district attorney hustled Nancy out of the buck-board to the
ground. She was a little pale, but asked no questions. She had the frontier
instinct that accepts conditions in an emergency without superfluous argument.
They kept their guns in hand, and Littlefield hastily gathered some handfuls of
cartridges from the pasteboard box on the seat and crowded them into his
pockets.
“Keep behind the horses, Nan,” he commanded. “That fellow is a
ruffian I sent to prison once. He’s trying to get even. He knows our shot won’t
hurt him at that distance.”
“All right, Bob,” said Nancy steadily. “I’m not afraid. But you
come close, too. Whoa, Bess; stand still, now!”
She stroked Bess’s mane. Littlefield stood with his gun ready,
praying that the desperado would come within range.
But Mexico Sam was playing his vendetta along safe lines. He was a
bird of different feather from the plover. His accurate eye drew an imaginary
line of circumference around the area of danger from bird-shot, and upon this
line he rode. His horse wheeled to the right, and as his victims rounded to the
safe side of their equine breast-work he sent a ball through the district
attorney’s hat. Once he miscalculated in making a détour, and over-stepped his
margin. Littlefield’s gun flashed, and Mexico Sam ducked his head to the
harmless patter of the shot. A few of them stung his horse, which pranced
promptly back to the safety line.
The desperado fired again. A little cry came from Nancy Derwent.
Littlefield whirled, with blazing eyes, and saw the blood trickling down her
cheek.
“I’m not hurt, Bob—only a splinter struck me. I think he hit one
of the wheel-spokes.”
“Lord!” groaned Littlefield. “If I only had a charge of buckshot!”
The ruffian got his horse still, and took careful aim. Fly gave a
snort and fell in the harness, struck in the neck. Bess, now disabused of the
idea that plover were being fired at, broke her traces and galloped wildly
away. Mexican Sam sent a ball neatly through the fulness of Nancy Derwent’s
shooting jacket.
“Lie down—lie down!” snapped Littlefield. “Close to the horse—flat
on the ground—so.” He almost threw her upon the grass against the back of the
recumbent Fly. Oddly enough, at that moment the words of the Mexican girl
returned to his mind:
“If the life of the girl you love is ever in danger, remember
Rafael Ortiz.”
Littlefield uttered an exclamation.
“Open fire on him, Nan, across the horse’s back. Fire as fast as
you can! You can’t hurt him, but keep him dodging shot for one minute while I
try to work a little scheme.”
Nancy gave a quick glance at Littlefield, and saw him take out his
pocket-knife and open it. Then she turned her face to obey orders, keeping up a
rapid fire at the enemy.
Mexico Sam waited patiently until this innocuous fusillade ceased.
He had plenty of time, and he did not care to risk the chance of a bird-shot in
his eye when it could be avoided by a little caution. He pulled his heavy
Stetson low down over his face until the shots ceased. Then he drew a little
nearer, and fired with careful aim at what he could see of his victims above
the fallen horse.
Neither of them moved. He urged his horse a few steps nearer. He
saw the district attorney rise to one knee and deliberately level his shotgun.
He pulled his hat down and awaited the harmless rattle of the tiny pellets.
The shotgun blazed with a heavy report. Mexico Sam sighed, turned
limp all over, and slowly fell from his horse—a dead rattlesnake.
At ten o’clock the next morning court opened, and the case of the
United States versus Rafael Ortiz was called. The district attorney, with his
arm in a sling, rose and addressed the court.
“May it please your honour,” he said, “I desire to enter a nolle
pros. in this case. Even though the defendant should be guilty, there
is not sufficient evidence in the hands of the government to secure a
conviction. The piece of counterfeit coin upon the identity of which the case
was built is not now available as evidence. I ask, therefore, that the case be
stricken off.”
At the noon recess Kilpatrick strolled into the district
attorney’s office.
“I’ve just been down to take a squint at old Mexico Sam,” said the
deputy. “They’ve got him laid out. Old Mexico was a tough outfit, I reckon. The
boys was wonderin’ down there what you shot him with. Some said it must have
been nails. I never see a gun carry anything to make holes like he had.”
“I shot him,” said the district attorney, “with Exhibit A of your
counterfeiting case. Lucky thing for me—and somebody else—that it was as bad
money as it was! It sliced up into slugs very nicely. Say, Kil, can’t you go
down to the jacals and find where that Mexican girl lives? Miss Derwent wants
to know.”
At 8 A. M. it lay on Giuseppi’s
news-stand, still damp from the presses. Giuseppi, with the cunning of his ilk,
philandered on the opposite corner, leaving his patrons to help themselves, no
doubt on a theory related to the hypothesis of the watched pot.
This particular newspaper was, according to its custom and design,
an educator, a guide, a monitor, a champion and a household counsellor
and vade mecum.
From its many excellencies might be selected three editorials. One
was in simple and chaste but illuminating language directed to parents and
teachers, deprecating corporal punishment for children.
Another was an accusive and significant warning addressed to a
notorious labour leader who was on the point of instigating his clients to a
troublesome strike.
The third was an eloquent demand that the police force be
sustained and aided in everything that tended to increase its efficiency as
public guardians and servants.
Besides these more important chidings and requisitions upon the
store of good citizenship was a wise prescription or form of procedure laid out
by the editor of the heart-to-heart column in the specific case of a young man
who had complained of the obduracy of his lady love, teaching him how he might
win her.
Again, there was, on the beauty page, a complete answer to a young
lady inquirer who desired admonition toward the securing of bright eyes, rosy
cheeks and a beautiful countenance.
One other item requiring special cognizance was a brief
“personal,” running thus:
DEAR JACK:—Forgive
me. You were right. Meet me corner Madison and —th at 8.30 this morning. We
leave at noon.
PENITENT.
At 8 o’clock a young man with a haggard look and the feverish
gleam of unrest in his eye dropped a penny and picked up the top paper as he
passed Giuseppi’s stand. A sleepless night had left him a late riser. There was
an office to be reached by nine, and a shave and a hasty cup of coffee to be
crowded into the interval.
He visited his barber shop and then hurried on his way. He
pocketed his paper, meditating a belated perusal of it at the luncheon hour. At
the next corner it fell from his pocket, carrying with it his pair of new
gloves. Three blocks he walked, missed the gloves and turned back fuming.
Just on the half-hour he reached the corner where lay the gloves
and the paper. But he strangely ignored that which he had come to seek. He was
holding two little hands as tightly as ever he could and looking into two
penitent brown eyes, while joy rioted in his heart.
“Dear Jack,” she said, “I knew you would be here on time.”
“I wonder what she means by that,” he was saying to himself; “but
it’s all right, it’s all right.”
A big wind puffed out of the west, picked up the paper from the
sidewalk, opened it out and sent it flying and whirling down a side street. Up
that street was driving a skittish bay to a spider-wheel buggy, the young man
who had written to the heart-to-heart editor for a recipe that he might win her
for whom he sighed.
The wind, with a prankish flurry, flapped the flying newspaper
against the face of the skittish bay. There was a lengthened streak of bay
mingled with the red of running gear that stretched itself out for four blocks.
Then a water-hydrant played its part in the cosmogony, the buggy became
matchwood as foreordained, and the driver rested very quietly where he had been
flung on the asphalt in front of a certain brownstone mansion.
They came out and had him inside very promptly. And there was one
who made herself a pillow for his head, and cared for no curious eyes, bending
over and saying, “Oh, it was you; it was you all the time, Bobby! Couldn’t you
see it? And if you die, why, so must I, and—”
But in all this wind we must hurry to keep in touch with our
paper.
Policeman O’Brine arrested it as a character dangerous to traffic.
Straightening its dishevelled leaves with his big, slow fingers, he stood a few
feet from the family entrance of the Shandon Bells Café. One headline he
spelled out ponderously: “The Papers to the Front in a Move to Help the
Police.”
But, whisht! The voice of Danny, the head bartender, through the
crack of the door: “Here’s a nip for ye, Mike, ould man.”
Behind the widespread, amicable columns of the press Policeman
O’Brine receives swiftly his nip of the real stuff. He moves away, stalwart,
refreshed, fortified, to his duties. Might not the editor man view with pride
the early, the spiritual, the literal fruit that had blessed his labours.
Policeman O’Brine folded the paper and poked it playfully under
the arm of a small boy that was passing. That boy was named Johnny, and he took
the paper home with him. His sister was named Gladys, and she had written to
the beauty editor of the paper asking for the practicable touchstone of beauty.
That was weeks ago, and she had ceased to look for an answer. Gladys was a pale
girl, with dull eyes and a discontented expression. She was dressing to go up
to the avenue to get some braid. Beneath her skirt she pinned two leaves of the
paper Johnny had brought. When she walked the rustling sound was an exact
imitation of the real thing.
On the street she met the Brown girl from the flat below and
stopped to talk. The Brown girl turned green. Only silk at $5 a yard could make
the sound that she heard when Gladys moved. The Brown girl, consumed by
jealousy, said something spiteful and went her way, with pinched lips.
Gladys proceeded toward the avenue. Her eyes now sparkled like
jagerfonteins. A rosy bloom visited her cheeks; a triumphant, subtle,
vivifying, smile transfigured her face. She was beautiful. Could the beauty
editor have seen her then! There was something in her answer in the paper, I
believe, about cultivating kind feelings toward others in order to make plain
features attractive.
The labour leader against whom the paper’s solemn and weighty
editorial injunction was laid was the father of Gladys and Johnny. He picked up
the remains of the journal from which Gladys had ravished a cosmetic of silken
sounds. The editorial did not come under his eye, but instead it was greeted by
one of those ingenious and specious puzzle problems that enthrall alike the simpleton
and the sage.
The labour leader tore off half of the page, provided himself with
table, pencil and paper and glued himself to his puzzle.
Three hours later, after waiting vainly for him at the appointed
place, other more conservative leaders declared and ruled in favour of
arbitration, and the strike with its attendant dangers was averted. Subsequent
editions of the paper referred, in coloured inks, to the clarion tone of its
successful denunciation of the labour leader’s intended designs.
The remaining leaves of the active journal also went loyally to
the proving of its potency.
When Johnny returned from school he sought a secluded spot and
removed the missing columns from the inside of his clothing, where they had
been artfully distributed so as to successfully defend such areas as are
generally attacked during scholastic castigations. Johnny attended a private
school and had had trouble with his teacher. As has been said, there was an
excellent editorial against corporal punishment in that morning’s issue, and no
doubt it had its effect.
After this can any one doubt the power of the press?
At ten o’clock P. M.
Felicia, the maid, left by the basement door with the policeman to get a
raspberry phosphate around the corner. She detested the policeman and objected
earnestly to the arrangement. She pointed out, not unreasonably, that she might
have been allowed to fall asleep over one of St. George Rathbone’s novels on
the third floor, but she was overruled. Raspberries and cops were not created
for nothing.
The burglar got into the house without much difficulty; because we
must have action and not too much description in a 2,000-word story.
In the dining room he opened the slide of his dark lantern. With a
brace and centrebit he began to bore into the lock of the silver-closet.
Suddenly a click was heard. The room was flooded with electric
light. The dark velvet portières parted to admit a fair-haired boy of eight in
pink pajamas, bearing a bottle of olive oil in his hand.
“Are you a burglar?” he asked, in a sweet, childish voice.
“Listen to that,” exclaimed the man, in a hoarse voice. “Am I a
burglar? Wot do you suppose I have a three-days’ growth of bristly beard on my
face for, and a cap with flaps? Give me the oil, quick, and let me grease the
bit, so I won’t wake up your mamma, who is lying down with a headache, and left
you in charge of Felicia who has been faithless to her trust.”
“Oh, dear,” said Tommy, with a sigh. “I thought you would be more
up-to-date. This oil is for the salad when I bring lunch from the pantry for
you. And mamma and papa have gone to the Metropolitan to hear De Reszke. But
that isn’t my fault. It only shows how long the story has been knocking around
among the editors. If the author had been wise he’d have changed it to Caruso
in the proofs.”
“Be quiet,” hissed the burglar, under his breath. “If you raise an
alarm I’ll wring your neck like a rabbit’s.”
“Like a chicken’s,” corrected Tommy. “You had that wrong. You
don’t wring rabbits’ necks.”
“Aren’t you afraid of me?” asked the burglar.
“You know I’m not,” answered Tommy. “Don’t you suppose I know fact
from fiction. If this wasn’t a story I’d yell like an Indian when I saw you;
and you’d probably tumble downstairs and get pinched on the sidewalk.”
“I see,” said the burglar, “that you’re on to your job. Go on with
the performance.”
Tommy seated himself in an armchair and drew his toes up under
him.
“Why do you go around robbing strangers, Mr. Burglar? Have you no
friends?”
“I see what you’re driving at,” said the burglar, with a dark
frown. “It’s the same old story. Your innocence and childish insouciance is
going to lead me back into an honest life. Every time I crack a crib where
there’s a kid around, it happens.”
“Would you mind gazing with wolfish eyes at the plate of cold beef
that the butler has left on the dining table?” said Tommy. “I’m afraid it’s
growing late.”
The burglar accommodated.
“Poor man,” said Tommy. “You must be hungry. If you will please
stand in a listless attitude I will get you something to eat.”
The boy brought a roast chicken, a jar of marmalade and a bottle
of wine from the pantry. The burglar seized a knife and fork sullenly.
“It’s only been an hour,” he grumbled, “since I had a lobster and
a pint of musty ale up on Broadway. I wish these story writers would let a
fellow have a pepsin tablet, anyhow, between feeds.”
“My papa writes books,” remarked Tommy.
The burglar jumped to his feet quickly.
“You said he had gone to the opera,” he hissed, hoarsely and with
immediate suspicion.
“I ought to have explained,” said Tommy. “He didn’t buy the
tickets.” The burglar sat again and toyed with the wishbone.
“Why do you burgle houses?” asked the boy, wonderingly.
“Because,” replied the burglar, with a sudden flow of tears. “God
bless my little brown-haired boy Bessie at home.”
“Ah,” said Tommy, wrinkling his nose, “you got that answer in the
wrong place. You want to tell your hard-luck story before you pull out the
child stop.”
“Oh, yes,” said the burglar, “I forgot. Well, once I lived in
Milwaukee, and—”
“Take the silver,” said Tommy, rising from his chair.
“Hold on,” said the burglar. “But I moved away.” I could find no
other employment. For a while I managed to support my wife and child by passing
confederate money; but, alas! I was forced to give that up because it did not
belong to the union. I became desperate and a burglar.”
“Have you ever fallen into the hands of the police?” asked Tommy.
“I said ‘burglar,’ not ‘beggar,’” answered the cracksman.
“After you finish your lunch,” said Tommy, “and experience the
usual change of heart, how shall we wind up the story?”
“Suppose,” said the burglar, thoughtfully, “that Tony Pastor turns
out earlier than usual to-night, and your father gets in from ‘Parsifal’ at
10.30. I am thoroughly repentant because you have made me think of my own
little boy Bessie, and—”
“Say,” said Tommy, “haven’t you got that wrong?”
“Not on your coloured crayon drawings by B. Cory Kilvert,” said
the burglar. “It’s always a Bessie that I have at home, artlessly prattling to
the pale-cheeked burglar’s bride. As I was saying, your father opens the front
door just as I am departing with admonitions and sandwiches that you have
wrapped up for me. Upon recognizing me as an old Harvard classmate he starts
back in—”
“Not in surprise?” interrupted Tommy, with wide, open eyes.
“He starts back in the doorway,” continued the burglar. And then
he rose to his feet and began to shout “Rah, rah, rah! rah, rah, rah! rah, rah,
rah!”
“Well,” said Tommy, wonderingly, “that’s, the first time I ever
knew a burglar to give a college yell when he was burglarizing a house, even in
a story.”
“That’s one on you,” said the burglar, with a laugh. “I was
practising the dramatization. If this is put on the stage that college touch is
about the only thing that will make it go.”
Tommy looked his admiration.
“You’re on, all right,” he said.
“And there’s another mistake you’ve made,” said the burglar. “You
should have gone some time ago and brought me the $9 gold piece your mother
gave you on your birthday to take to Bessie.”
“But she didn’t give it to me to take to Bessie,” said Tommy,
pouting.
“Come, come!” said the burglar, sternly. “It’s not nice of you to
take advantage because the story contains an ambiguous sentence. You know what
I mean. It’s mighty little I get out of these fictional jobs, anyhow. I lose
all the loot, and I have to reform every time; and all the swag I’m allowed is
the blamed little fol-de-rols and luck-pieces that you kids hand over. Why, in
one story, all I got was a kiss from a little girl who came in on me when I was
opening a safe. And it tasted of molasses candy, too. I’ve a good notion to tie
this table cover over your head and keep on into the silver-closet.”
“Oh, no, you haven’t,” said Tommy, wrapping his arms around his
knees. “Because if you did no editor would buy the story. You know you’ve got
to preserve the unities.”
“So’ve you,” said the burglar, rather glumly. “Instead of sitting
here talking impudence and taking the bread out of a poor man’s mouth, what
you’d like to be doing is hiding under the bed and screeching at the top of
your voice.”
“You’re right, old man,” said Tommy, heartily. “I wonder what they
make us do it for? I think the S. P. C. C. ought to interfere. I’m sure it’s
neither agreeable nor usual for a kid of my age to butt in when a full-grown
burglar is at work and offer him a red sled and a pair of skates not to awaken
his sick mother. And look how they make the burglars act! You’d think editors
would know—but what’s the use?”
The burglar wiped his hands on the tablecloth and arose with a
yawn.
“Well, let’s get through with it,” he said. “God bless you, my
little boy! you have saved a man from committing a crime this night. Bessie
shall pray for you as soon as I get home and give her her orders. I shall never
burglarize another house—at least not until the June magazines are out. It’ll
be your little sister’s turn then to run in on me while I am abstracting the U.
S. 4 per cent. from the tea urn and buy me off with her coral necklace and a
falsetto kiss.”
“You haven’t got all the kicks coming to you,” sighed Tommy,
crawling out of his chair. “Think of the sleep I’m losing. But it’s tough on
both of us, old man. I wish you could get out of the story and really rob
somebody. Maybe you’ll have the chance if they dramatize us.”
“Never!” said the burglar, gloomily. “Between the box office and
my better impulses that your leading juveniles are supposed to awaken and the
magazines that pay on publication, I guess I’ll always be broke.”
“I’m sorry,” said Tommy, sympathetically. “But I can’t help myself
any more than you can. It’s one of the canons of household fiction that no
burglar shall be successful. The burglar must be foiled by a kid like me, or by
a young lady heroine, or at the last moment by his old pal, Red Mike, who recognizes
the house as one in which he used to be the coachman. You have got the worst
end of it in any kind of a story.”
“Well, I suppose I must be clearing out now,” said the burglar,
taking up his lantern and bracebit.
“You have to take the rest of this chicken and the bottle of wine
with you for Bessie and her mother,” said Tommy, calmly.
“But confound it,” exclaimed the burglar, in an annoyed tone,
“they don’t want it. I’ve got five cases of Château de Beychsvelle at home that
was bottled in 1853. That claret of yours is corked. And you couldn’t get
either of them to look at a chicken unless it was stewed in champagne. You
know, after I get out of the story I don’t have so many limitations. I make a
turn now and then.”
“Yes, but you must take them,” said Tommy, loading his arms with
the bundles.
“Bless you, young master!” recited the burglar, obedient.
“Second-Story Saul will never forget you. And now hurry and let me out, kid.
Our 2,000 words must be nearly up.”
Tommy led the way through the hall toward the front door. Suddenly
the burglar stopped and called to him softly: “Ain’t there a cop out there in
front somewhere sparking the girl?”
“Yes,” said Tommy, “but what—”
“I’m afraid he’ll catch me,” said the burglar. “You mustn’t forget
that this is fiction.”
“Great head!” said Tommy, turning. “Come out by the back door.”
The original cause of
the trouble was about twenty years in growing.
At the end of that time it was worth it.
Had you lived anywhere within fifty miles of Sundown Ranch you
would have heard of it. It possessed a quantity of jet-black hair, a pair of
extremely frank, deep-brown eyes and a laugh that rippled across the prairie
like the sound of a hidden brook. The name of it was Rosita McMullen; and she
was the daughter of old man McMullen of the Sundown Sheep Ranch.
There came riding on red roan steeds—or, to be more explicit, on a
paint and a flea-bitten sorrel—two wooers. One was Madison Lane, and the other
was the Frio Kid. But at that time they did not call him the Frio Kid, for he
had not earned the honours of special nomenclature. His name was simply Johnny
McRoy.
It must not be supposed that these two were the sum of the
agreeable Rosita’s admirers. The bronchos of a dozen others champed their bits
at the long hitching rack of the Sundown Ranch. Many were the sheeps’-eyes that
were cast in those savannas that did not belong to the flocks of Dan McMullen.
But of all the cavaliers, Madison Lane and Johnny McRoy galloped far ahead,
wherefore they are to be chronicled.
Madison Lane, a young cattleman from the Nueces country, won the
race. He and Rosita were married one Christmas day. Armed, hilarious,
vociferous, magnanimous, the cowmen and the sheepmen, laying aside their
hereditary hatred, joined forces to celebrate the occasion.
Sundown Ranch was sonorous with the cracking of jokes and
sixshooters, the shine of buckles and bright eyes, the outspoken
congratulations of the herders of kine.
But while the wedding feast was at its liveliest there descended
upon it Johnny McRoy, bitten by jealousy, like one possessed.
“I’ll give you a Christmas present,” he yelled, shrilly, at the
door, with his .45 in his hand. Even then he had some reputation as an offhand
shot.
His first bullet cut a neat underbit in Madison Lane’s right ear.
The barrel of his gun moved an inch. The next shot would have been the bride’s
had not Carson, a sheepman, possessed a mind with triggers somewhat well oiled
and in repair. The guns of the wedding party had been hung, in their belts,
upon nails in the wall when they sat at table, as a concession to good taste.
But Carson, with great promptness, hurled his plate of roast venison and
frijoles at McRoy, spoiling his aim. The second bullet, then, only shattered
the white petals of a Spanish dagger flower suspended two feet above Rosita’s
head.
The guests spurned their chairs and jumped for their weapons. It
was considered an improper act to shoot the bride and groom at a wedding. In
about six seconds there were twenty or so bullets due to be whizzing in the
direction of Mr. McRoy.
“I’ll shoot better next time,” yelled Johnny; “and there’ll be a
next time.” He backed rapidly out the door.
Carson, the sheepman, spurred on to attempt further exploits by
the success of his plate-throwing, was first to reach the door. McRoy’s bullet
from the darkness laid him low.
The cattlemen then swept out upon him, calling for vengeance, for,
while the slaughter of a sheepman has not always lacked condonement, it was a
decided misdemeanour in this instance. Carson was innocent; he was no
accomplice at the matrimonial proceedings; nor had any one heard him quote the
line “Christmas comes but once a year” to the guests.
But the sortie failed in its vengeance. McRoy was on his horse and
away, shouting back curses and threats as he galloped into the concealing
chaparral.
That night was the birthnight of the Frio Kid. He became the “bad
man” of that portion of the State. The rejection of his suit by Miss McMullen
turned him to a dangerous man. When officers went after him for the shooting of
Carson, he killed two of them, and entered upon the life of an outlaw. He
became a marvellous shot with either hand. He would turn up in towns and
settlements, raise a quarrel at the slightest opportunity, pick off his man and
laugh at the officers of the law. He was so cool, so deadly, so rapid, so
inhumanly blood-thirsty that none but faint attempts were ever made to capture
him. When he was at last shot and killed by a little one-armed Mexican who was
nearly dead himself from fright, the Frio Kid had the deaths of eighteen men on
his head. About half of these were killed in fair duels depending upon the
quickness of the draw. The other half were men whom he assassinated from
absolute wantonness and cruelty.
Many tales are told along the border of his impudent courage and
daring. But he was not one of the breed of desperadoes who have seasons of
generosity and even of softness. They say he never had mercy on the object of
his anger. Yet at this and every Christmastide it is well to give each one
credit, if it can be done, for whatever speck of good he may have possessed. If
the Frio Kid ever did a kindly act or felt a throb of generosity in his heart
it was once at such a time and season, and this is the way it happened.
One who has been crossed in love should never breathe the odour
from the blossoms of the ratama tree. It stirs the memory to a dangerous
degree.
One December in the Frio country there was a ratama tree in full
bloom, for the winter had been as warm as springtime. That way rode the Frio
Kid and his satellite and co-murderer, Mexican Frank. The kid reined in his
mustang, and sat in his saddle, thoughtful and grim, with dangerously narrowing
eyes. The rich, sweet scent touched him somewhere beneath his ice and iron.
“I don’t know what I’ve been thinking about, Mex,” he remarked in
his usual mild drawl, “to have forgot all about a Christmas present I got to
give. I’m going to ride over to-morrow night and shoot Madison Lane in his own
house. He got my girl—Rosita would have had me if he hadn’t cut into the game.
I wonder why I happened to overlook it up to now?”
“Ah, shucks, Kid,” said Mexican, “don’t talk foolishness. You know
you can’t get within a mile of Mad Lane’s house to-morrow night. I see old man
Allen day before yesterday, and he says Mad is going to have Christmas doings
at his house. You remember how you shot up the festivities when Mad was
married, and about the threats you made? Don’t you suppose Mad Lane’ll kind of
keep his eye open for a certain Mr. Kid? You plumb make me tired, Kid, with
such remarks.”
“I’m going,” repeated the Frio Kid, without heat, “to go to
Madison Lane’s Christmas doings, and kill him. I ought to have done it a long
time ago. Why, Mex, just two weeks ago I dreamed me and Rosita was married
instead of her and him; and we was living in a house, and I could see her
smiling at me, and—oh! h––––l, Mex, he got her; and I’ll get him—yes, sir, on
Christmas Eve he got her, and then’s when I’ll get him.”
“There’s other ways of committing suicide,” advised Mexican. “Why
don’t you go and surrender to the sheriff?”
“I’ll get him,” said the Kid.
Christmas Eve fell as balmy as April. Perhaps there was a hint of
far-away frostiness in the air, but it tingles like seltzer, perfumed faintly
with late prairie blossoms and the mesquite grass.
When night came the five or six rooms of the ranch-house were
brightly lit. In one room was a Christmas tree, for the Lanes had a boy of
three, and a dozen or more guests were expected from the nearer ranches.
At nightfall Madison Lane called aside Jim Belcher and three other
cowboys employed on his ranch.
“Now, boys,” said Lane, “keep your eyes open. Walk around the
house and watch the road well. All of you know the ‘Frio Kid,’ as they call him
now, and if you see him, open fire on him without asking any questions. I’m not
afraid of his coming around, but Rosita is. She’s been afraid he’d come in on
us every Christmas since we were married.”
The guests had arrived in buckboards and on horseback, and were
making themselves comfortable inside.
The evening went along pleasantly. The guests enjoyed and praised
Rosita’s excellent supper, and afterward the men scattered in groups about the
rooms or on the broad “gallery,” smoking and chatting.
The Christmas tree, of course, delighted the youngsters, and above
all were they pleased when Santa Claus himself in magnificent white beard and
furs appeared and began to distribute the toys.
“It’s my papa,” announced Billy Sampson, aged six. “I’ve seen him
wear ’em before.”
Berkly, a sheepman, an old friend of Lane, stopped Rosita as she
was passing by him on the gallery, where he was sitting smoking.
“Well, Mrs. Lane,” said he, “I suppose by this Christmas you’ve
gotten over being afraid of that fellow McRoy, haven’t you? Madison and I have
talked about it, you know.”
“Very nearly,” said Rosita, smiling, “but I am still nervous
sometimes. I shall never forget that awful time when he came so near to killing
us.”
“He’s the most cold-hearted villain in the world,” said Berkly.
“The citizens all along the border ought to turn out and hunt him down like a
wolf.”
“He has committed awful crimes,” said Rosita, “but—I—don’t—know. I
think there is a spot of good somewhere in everybody. He was not always
bad—that I know.”
Rosita turned into the hallway between the rooms. Santa Claus, in
muffling whiskers and furs, was just coming through.
“I heard what you said through the window, Mrs. Lane,” he said. “I
was just going down in my pocket for a Christmas present for your husband. But
I’ve left one for you, instead. It’s in the room to your right.”
“Oh, thank you, kind Santa Claus,” said Rosita, brightly.
Rosita went into the room, while Santa Claus stepped into the
cooler air of the yard.
She found no one in the room but Madison.
“Where is my present that Santa said he left for me in here?” she
asked.
“Haven’t seen anything in the way of a present,” said her husband,
laughing, “unless he could have meant me.”
The next day Gabriel Radd, the foreman of the X O Ranch, dropped
into the post-office at Loma Alta.
“Well, the Frio Kid’s got his dose of lead at last,” he remarked
to the postmaster.
“That so? How’d it happen?”
“One of old Sanchez’s Mexican sheep herders did it!—think of it!
the Frio Kid killed by a sheep herder! The Greaser saw him riding along past
his camp about twelve o’clock last night, and was so skeered that he up with a
Winchester and let him have it. Funniest part of it was that the Kid was
dressed all up with white Angora-skin whiskers and a regular Santy Claus
rig-out from head to foot. Think of the Frio Kid playing Santy!”
I mentioned to Rivington
that I was in search of characteristic New York scenes and incidents—something
typical, I told him, without necessarily having to spell the first syllable
with an “i.”
“Oh, for your writing business,” said Rivington; “you couldn’t
have applied to a better shop. What I don’t know about little old New York
wouldn’t make a sonnet to a sunbonnet. I’ll put you right in the middle of so
much local colour that you won’t know whether you are a magazine cover or in
the erysipelas ward. When do you want to begin?”
Rivington is a young-man-about-town and a New Yorker by birth,
preference and incommutability.
I told him that I would be glad to accept his escort and
guardianship so that I might take notes of Manhattan’s grand, gloomy and
peculiar idiosyncrasies, and that the time of so doing would be at his own
convenience.
“We’ll begin this very evening,” said Rivington, himself
interested, like a good fellow. “Dine with me at seven, and then I’ll steer you
up against metropolitan phases so thick you’ll have to have a kinetoscope to
record ’em.”
So I dined with Rivington pleasantly at his club, in
Forty-eleventh street, and then we set forth in pursuit of the elusive tincture
of affairs.
As we came out of the club there stood two men on the sidewalk
near the steps in earnest conversation.
“And by what process of ratiocination,” said one of them, “do you
arrive at the conclusion that the division of society into producing and
non-possessing classes predicates failure when compared with competitive
systems that are monopolizing in tendency and result inimically to industrial
evolution?”
“Oh, come off your perch!” said the other man, who wore glasses.
“Your premises won’t come out in the wash. You wind-jammers who apply
bandy-legged theories to concrete categorical syllogisms send logical
conclusions skallybootin’ into the infinitesimal ragbag. You can’t pull my leg
with an old sophism with whiskers on it. You quote Marx and Hyndman and
Kautsky—what are they?—shines! Tolstoi?—his garret is full of rats. I put it to
you over the home-plate that the idea of a cooperative commonwealth and an
abolishment of competitive systems simply takes the rag off the bush and gives
me hyperesthesia of the roopteetoop! The skookum house for yours!”
I stopped a few yards away and took out my little notebook.
“Oh, come ahead,” said Rivington, somewhat nervously; “you don’t
want to listen to that.”
“Why, man,” I whispered, “this is just what I do want to hear.
These slang types are among your city’s most distinguishing features. Is this
the Bowery variety? I really must hear more of it.”
“If I follow you,” said the man who had spoken first, “you do not
believe it possible to reorganize society on the basis of common interest?”
“Shinny on your own side!” said the man with glasses. “You never
heard any such music from my foghorn. What I said was that I did not believe it
practicable just now. The guys with wads are not in the frame of mind to slack
up on the mazuma, and the man with the portable tin banqueting canister isn’t
exactly ready to join the Bible class. You can bet your variegated socks that
the situation is all spifflicated up from the Battery to breakfast! What the
country needs is for some bully old bloke like Cobden or some wise guy like old
Ben Franklin to sashay up to the front and biff the nigger’s head with the
baseball. Do you catch my smoke? What?”
Rivington pulled me by the arm impatiently.
“Please come on,” he said. “Let’s go see something. This isn’t
what you want.”
“Indeed, it is,” I said resisting. “This tough talk is the very
stuff that counts. There is a picturesqueness about the speech of the lower
order of people that is quite unique. Did you say that this is the Bowery
variety of slang?”
“Oh, well,” said Rivington, giving it up, “I’ll tell you straight.
That’s one of our college professors talking. He ran down for a day or two at
the club. It’s a sort of fad with him lately to use slang in his conversation.
He thinks it improves language. The man he is talking to is one of New York’s
famous social economists. Now will you come on. You can’t use that, you know.”
“No,” I agreed; “I can’t use that. Would you call that typical of
New York?”
“Of course not,” said Rivington, with a sigh of relief. “I’m glad
you see the difference. But if you want to hear the real old tough Bowery slang
I’ll take you down where you’ll get your fill of it.”
“I would like it,” I said; “that is, if it’s the real thing. I’ve
often read it in books, but I never heard it. Do you think it will be dangerous
to go unprotected among those characters?”
“Oh, no,” said Rivington; “not at this time of night. To tell the
truth, I haven’t been along the Bowery in a long time, but I know it as well as
I do Broadway. We’ll look up some of the typical Bowery boys and get them to
talk. It’ll be worth your while. They talk a peculiar dialect that you won’t
hear anywhere else on earth.”
Rivington and I went east in a Forty-second street car and then
south on the Third avenue line.
At Houston street we got off and walked.
“We are now on the famous Bowery,” said Rivington; “the Bowery
celebrated in song and story.”
We passed block after block of “gents’” furnishing stores—the
windows full of shirts with prices attached and cuffs inside. In other windows
were neckties and no shirts. People walked up and down the sidewalks.
“In some ways,” said I, “this reminds me of Kokomono, Ind., during
the peach-crating season.”
Rivington was nettled.
“Step into one of these saloons or vaudeville shows,” said he,
“with a large roll of money, and see how quickly the Bowery will sustain its
reputation.”
“You make impossible conditions,” said I, coldly.
By and by Rivington stopped and said we were in the heart of the
Bowery. There was a policeman on the corner whom Rivington knew.
“Hallo, Donahue!” said my guide. “How goes it? My friend and I are
down this way looking up a bit of local colour. He’s anxious to meet one of the
Bowery types. Can’t you put us on to something genuine in that line—something
that’s got the colour, you know?”
Policeman Donahue turned himself about ponderously, his florid
face full of good-nature. He pointed with his club down the street.
“Sure!” he said huskily. “Here comes a lad now that was born on
the Bowery and knows every inch of it. If he’s ever been above Bleecker street
he’s kept it to himself.”
A man about twenty-eight or twenty-nine, with a smooth face, was
sauntering toward us with his hands in his coat pockets. Policeman Donahue
stopped him with a courteous wave of his club.
“Evening, Kerry,” he said. “Here’s a couple of gents, friends of
mine, that want to hear you spiel something about the Bowery. Can you reel ’em
off a few yards?”
“Certainly, Donahue,” said the young man, pleasantly. “Good
evening, gentlemen,” he said to us, with a pleasant smile. Donahue walked off
on his beat.
“This is the goods,” whispered Rivington, nudging me with his
elbow. “Look at his jaw!”
“Say, cull,” said Rivington, pushing back his hat, “wot’s doin’?
Me and my friend’s taking a look down de old line—see? De copper tipped us off
dat you was wise to de bowery. Is dat right?”
I could not help admiring Rivington’s power of adapting himself to
his surroundings.
“Donahue was right,” said the young man, frankly; “I was brought
up on the Bowery. I have been news-boy, teamster, pugilist, member of an
organized band of ‘toughs,’ bartender, and a ‘sport’ in various meanings of the
word. The experience certainly warrants the supposition that I have at least a
passing acquaintance with a few phases of Bowery life. I will be pleased to
place whatever knowledge and experience I have at the service of my friend
Donahue’s friends.”
Rivington seemed ill at ease.
“I say,” he said—somewhat entreatingly, “I thought—you’re not
stringing us, are you? It isn’t just the kind of talk we expected. You haven’t
even said ‘Hully gee!’ once. Do you really belong on the Bowery?”
“I am afraid,” said the Bowery boy, smilingly, “that at some time
you have been enticed into one of the dives of literature and had the
counterfeit coin of the Bowery passed upon you. The ‘argot’ to which you
doubtless refer was the invention of certain of your literary ‘discoverers’ who
invaded the unknown wilds below Third avenue and put strange sounds into the
mouths of the inhabitants. Safe in their homes far to the north and west, the
credulous readers who were beguiled by this new ‘dialect’ perused and believed.
Like Marco Polo and Mungo Park—pioneers indeed, but ambitious souls who could
not draw the line of demarcation between discovery and invention—the literary
bones of these explorers are dotting the trackless wastes of the subway. While
it is true that after the publication of the mythical language attributed to
the dwellers along the Bowery certain of its pat phrases and apt metaphors were
adopted and, to a limited extent, used in this locality, it was because our
people are prompt in assimilating whatever is to their commercial advantage. To
the tourists who visited our newly discovered clime, and who expected a
realization of their literary guide books, they supplied the demands of the
market.
“But perhaps I am wandering from the question. In what way can I
assist you, gentlemen? I beg you will believe that the hospitality of the
street is extended to all. There are, I regret to say, many catchpenny places
of entertainment, but I cannot conceive that they would entice you.”
I felt Rivington lean somewhat heavily against me.
“Say!” he remarked, with uncertain utterance; “come and have a
drink with us.”
“Thank you, but I never drink. I find that alcohol, even in the
smallest quantities, alters the perspective. And I must preserve my
perspective, for I am studying the Bowery. I have lived in it nearly thirty
years, and I am just beginning to understand its heartbeats. It is like a great
river fed by a hundred alien streams. Each influx brings strange seeds on its
flood, strange silt and weeds, and now and then a flower of rare promise. To
construe this river requires a man who can build dykes against the overflow,
who is a naturalist, a geologist, a humanitarian, a diver and a strong swimmer.
I love my Bowery. It was my cradle and is my inspiration. I have published one
book. The critics have been kind. I put my heart in it. I am writing another,
into which I hope to put both heart and brain. Consider me your guide, gentlemen.
Is there anything I can take you to see, any place to which I can conduct you?”
I was afraid to look at Rivington except with one eye.
“Thanks,” said Rivington. “We were looking up . . . that is . . .
my friend . . . confound it; it’s against all precedent, you know . . . awfully
obliged . . . just the same.”
“In case,” said our friend, “you would like to meet some of our
Bowery young men I would be pleased to have you visit the quarters of our East
Side Kappa Delta Phi Society, only two blocks east of here.”
“Awfully sorry,” said Rivington, “but my friend’s got me on the
jump to-night. He’s a terror when he’s out after local colour. Now, there’s
nothing I would like better than to drop in at the Kappa Delta Phi, but—some
other time!”
We said our farewells and boarded a home-bound car. We had a
rabbit on upper Broadway, and then I parted with Rivington on a street corner.
“Well, anyhow,” said he, braced and recovered, “it couldn’t have
happened anywhere but in little old New York.”
Which to say the least, was typical of Rivington.
If you should chance to
visit the General Land Office, step into the draughtsmen’s room and ask to be
shown the map of Salado County. A leisurely German—possibly old Kampfer
himself—will bring it to you. It will be four feet square, on heavy
drawing-cloth. The lettering and the figures will be beautifully clear and
distinct. The title will be in splendid, undecipherable German text, ornamented
with classic Teutonic designs—very likely Ceres or Pomona leaning against the
initial letters with cornucopias venting grapes and wieners. You must tell him
that this is not the map you wish to see; that he will kindly bring you its
official predecessor. He will then say, “Ach, so!” and bring out a map half the
size of the first, dim, old, tattered, and faded.
By looking carefully near its northwest corner you will presently
come upon the worn contours of Chiquito River, and, maybe, if your eyes are
good, discern the silent witness to this story.
The Commissioner of the Land Office was of the old style; his
antique courtesy was too formal for his day. He dressed in fine black, and
there was a suggestion of Roman drapery in his long coat-skirts. His collars
were “undetached” (blame haberdashery for the word); his tie was a narrow,
funereal strip, tied in the same knot as were his shoe-strings. His gray hair
was a trifle too long behind, but he kept it smooth and orderly. His face was
clean-shaven, like the old statesmen’s. Most people thought it a stern face,
but when its official expression was off, a few had seen altogether a different
countenance. Especially tender and gentle it had appeared to those who were
about him during the last illness of his only child.
The Commissioner had been a widower for years, and his life, outside
his official duties, had been so devoted to little Georgia that people spoke of
it as a touching and admirable thing. He was a reserved man, and dignified
almost to austerity, but the child had come below it all and rested upon his
very heart, so that she scarcely missed the mother’s love that had been taken
away. There was a wonderful companionship between them, for she had many of his
own ways, being thoughtful and serious beyond her years.
One day, while she was lying with the fever burning brightly in
her checks, she said suddenly:
“Papa, I wish I could do something good for a whole lot of
children!”
“What would you like to do, dear?” asked the Commissioner. “Give
them a party?”
“Oh, I don’t mean those kind. I mean poor children who haven’t
homes, and aren’t loved and cared for as I am. I tell you what, papa!”
“What, my own child?”
“If I shouldn’t get well, I’ll leave them you—not give you,
but just lend you, for you must come to mamma and me when you die too. If you
can find time, wouldn’t you do something to help them, if I ask you, papa?”
“Hush, hush dear, dear child,” said the Commissioner, holding her
hot little hand against his cheek; “you’ll get well real soon, and you and I
will see what we can do for them together.”
But in whatsoever paths of benevolence, thus vaguely premeditated,
the Commissioner might tread, he was not to have the company of his beloved.
That night the little frail body grew suddenly too tired to struggle further,
and Georgia’s exit was made from the great stage when she had scarcely begun to
speak her little piece before the footlights. But there must be a stage manager
who understands. She had given the cue to the one who was to speak after her.
A week after she was laid away, the Commissioner reappeared at the
office, a little more courteous, a little paler and sterner, with the black
frock-coat hanging a little more loosely from his tall figure.
His desk was piled with work that had accumulated during the four
heartbreaking weeks of his absence. His chief clerk had done what he could, but
there were questions of law, of fine judicial decisions to be made concerning
the issue of patents, the marketing and leasing of school lands, the
classification into grazing, agricultural, watered, and timbered, of new tracts
to be opened to settlers.
The Commissioner went to work silently and obstinately, putting
back his grief as far as possible, forcing his mind to attack the complicated
and important business of his office. On the second day after his return he
called the porter, pointed to a leather-covered chair that stood near his own,
and ordered it removed to a lumber-room at the top of the building. In that
chair Georgia would always sit when she came to the office for him of
afternoons.
As time passed, the Commissioner seemed to grow more silent,
solitary, and reserved. A new phase of mind developed in him. He could not
endure the presence of a child. Often when a clattering youngster belonging to
one of the clerks would come chattering into the big business-room adjoining his
little apartment, the Commissioner would steal softly and close the door. He
would always cross the street to avoid meeting the school-children when they
came dancing along in happy groups upon the sidewalk, and his firm mouth would
close into a mere line.
It was nearly three months after the rains had washed the last
dead flower-petals from the mound above little Georgia when the “land-shark”
firm of Hamlin and Avery filed papers upon what they considered the “fattest”
vacancy of the year.
It should not be supposed that all who were termed “land-sharks”
deserved the name. Many of them were reputable men of good business character.
Some of them could walk into the most august councils of the State and say:
“Gentlemen, we would like to have this, and that, and matters go thus.” But,
next to a three years’ drought and the boll-worm, the Actual Settler hated the
Land-shark. The land-shark haunted the Land Office, where all the land records
were kept, and hunted “vacancies”—that is, tracts of unappropriated public
domain, generally invisible upon the official maps, but actually existing “upon
the ground.” The law entitled any one possessing certain State scrip to file by
virtue of same upon any land not previously legally appropriated. Most of the
scrip was now in the hands of the land-sharks. Thus, at the cost of a few
hundred dollars, they often secured lands worth as many thousands. Naturally,
the search for “vacancies” was lively.
But often—very often—the land they thus secured, though legally
“unappropriated,” would be occupied by happy and contented settlers, who had
laboured for years to build up their homes, only to discover that their titles
were worthless, and to receive peremptory notice to quit. Thus came about the
bitter and not unjustifiable hatred felt by the toiling settlers toward the
shrewd and seldom merciful speculators who so often turned them forth destitute
and homeless from their fruitless labours. The history of the state teems with
their antagonism. Mr. Land-shark seldom showed his face on “locations” from
which he should have to eject the unfortunate victims of a monstrously tangled
land system, but let his emissaries do the work. There was lead in every cabin,
moulded into balls for him; many of his brothers had enriched the grass with their
blood. The fault of it all lay far back.
When the state was young, she felt the need of attracting
newcomers, and of rewarding those pioneers already within her borders. Year
after year she issued land scrip—Headrights, Bounties, Veteran Donations, Confederates;
and to railroads, irrigation companies, colonies, and tillers of the soil
galore. All required of the grantee was that he or it should have the scrip
properly surveyed upon the public domain by the county or district surveyor,
and the land thus appropriated became the property of him or it, or his or its
heirs and assigns, forever.
In those days—and here is where the trouble began—the state’s
domain was practically inexhaustible, and the old surveyors, with princely—yea,
even Western American—liberality, gave good measure and over-flowing. Often the
jovial man of metes and bounds would dispense altogether with the tripod and
chain. Mounted on a pony that could cover something near a “vara” at a step,
with a pocket compass to direct his course, he would trot out a survey by
counting the beat of his pony’s hoofs, mark his corners, and write out his
field notes with the complacency produced by an act of duty well performed.
Sometimes—and who could blame the surveyor?—when the pony was “feeling his oats,”
he might step a little higher and farther, and in that case the beneficiary of
the scrip might get a thousand or two more acres in his survey than the scrip
called for. But look at the boundless leagues the state had to spare! However,
no one ever had to complain of the pony under-stepping. Nearly every old survey
in the state contained an excess of land.
In later years, when the state became more populous, and land
values increased, this careless work entailed incalculable trouble, endless
litigation, a period of riotous land-grabbing, and no little bloodshed. The
land-sharks voraciously attacked these excesses in the old surveys, and filed
upon such portions with new scrip as unappropriated public domain. Wherever the
identifications of the old tracts were vague, and the corners were not to be
clearly established, the Land Office would recognize the newer locations as
valid, and issue title to the locators. Here was the greatest hardship to be
found. These old surveys, taken from the pick of the land, were already nearly
all occupied by unsuspecting and peaceful settlers, and thus their titles were
demolished, and the choice was placed before them either to buy their land over
at a double price or to vacate it, with their families and personal belongings,
immediately. Land locators sprang up by hundreds. The country was held up and
searched for “vacancies” at the point of a compass. Hundreds of thousands of
dollars’ worth of splendid acres were wrested from their innocent purchasers
and holders. There began a vast hegira of evicted settlers in tattered wagons;
going nowhere, cursing injustice, stunned, purposeless, homeless, hopeless.
Their children began to look up to them for bread, and cry.
It was in consequence of these conditions that Hamilton and Avery
had filed upon a strip of land about a mile wide and three miles long,
comprising about two thousand acres, it being the excess over complement of the
Elias Denny three-league survey on Chiquito River, in one of the middle-western
counties. This two-thousand-acre body of land was asserted by them to be vacant
land, and improperly considered a part of the Denny survey. They based this
assertion and their claim upon the land upon the demonstrated facts that the
beginning corner of the Denny survey was plainly identified; that its field
notes called to run west 5,760 varas, and then called for Chiquito River;
thence it ran south, with the meanders—and so on—and that the Chiquito River
was, on the ground, fully a mile farther west from the point reached by course
and distance. To sum up: there were two thousand acres of vacant land between
the Denny survey proper and Chiquito River.
One sweltering day in July the Commissioner called for the papers
in connection with this new location. They were brought, and heaped, a foot
deep, upon his desk—field notes, statements, sketches, affidavits, connecting
lines—documents of every description that shrewdness and money could call to
the aid of Hamlin and Avery.
The firm was pressing the Commissioner to issue a patent upon
their location. They possesed inside information concerning a new railroad that
would probably pass somewhere near this land.
The General Land Office was very still while the Commissioner was
delving into the heart of the mass of evidence. The pigeons could be heard on
the roof of the old, castle-like building, cooing and fretting. The clerks were
droning everywhere, scarcely pretending to earn their salaries. Each little
sound echoed hollow and loud from the bare, stone-flagged floors, the plastered
walls, and the iron-joisted ceiling. The impalpable, perpetual limestone dust
that never settled, whitened a long streamer of sunlight that pierced the
tattered window-awning.
It seemed that Hamlin and Avery had builded well. The Denny survey
was carelessly made, even for a careless period. Its beginning corner was
identical with that of a well-defined old Spanish grant, but its other calls
were sinfully vague. The field notes contained no other object that survived—no
tree, no natural object save Chiquito River, and it was a mile wrong there.
According to precedent, the Office would be justified in giving it its
complement by course and distance, and considering the remainder vacant instead
of a mere excess.
The Actual Settler was besieging the office with wild protests in
re. Having the nose of a pointer and the eye of a hawk for the land-shark,
he had observed his myrmidons running the lines upon his ground. Making
inquiries, he learned that the spoiler had attacked his home, and he left the
plough in the furrow and took his pen in hand.
One of the protests the Commissioner read twice. It was from a
woman, a widow, the granddaughter of Elias Denny himself. She told how her
grandfather had sold most of the survey years before at a trivial price—land
that was now a principality in extent and value. Her mother had also sold a
part, and she herself had succeeded to this western portion, along Chiquito
River. Much of it she had been forced to part with in order to live, and now
she owned only about three hundred acres, on which she had her home. Her letter
wound up rather pathetically:
“I’ve got eight children, the oldest fifteen years. I work all day
and half the night to till what little land I can and keep us in clothes and
books. I teach my children too. My neighbours is all poor and has big families.
The drought kills the crops every two or three years and then we has hard times
to get enough to eat. There is ten families on this land what the land-sharks
is trying to rob us of, and all of them got titles from me. I sold to them
cheap, and they aint paid out yet, but part of them is, and if their land
should be took from them I would die. My grandfather was an honest man, and he
helped to build up this state, and he taught his children to be honest, and how
could I make it up to them who bought from me? Mr. Commissioner, if you let
them land-sharks take the roof from over my children and the little from them
as they has to live on, whoever again calls this state great or its government
just will have a lie in their mouths”
The Commissioner laid this letter aside with a sigh. Many, many
such letters he had received. He had never been hurt by them, nor had he ever
felt that they appealed to him personally. He was but the state’s servant, and
must follow its laws. And yet, somehow, this reflection did not always
eliminate a certain responsible feeling that hung upon him. Of all the state’s
officers he was supremest in his department, not even excepting the Governor.
Broad, general land laws he followed, it was true, but he had a wide latitude
in particular ramifications. Rather than law, what he followed was Rulings:
Office Rulings and precedents. In the complicated and new questions that were
being engendered by the state’s development the Commissioner’s ruling was rarely
appealed from. Even the courts sustained it when its equity was apparent.
The Commissioner stepped to the door and spoke to a clerk in the
other room—spoke as he always did, as if he were addressing a prince of the
blood:
“Mr. Weldon, will you be kind enough to ask Mr. Ashe, the state
school-land appraiser, to please come to my office as soon as convenient?”
Ashe came quickly from the big table where he was arranging his
reports.
“Mr. Ashe,” said the Commissioner, “you worked along the Chiquito
River, in Salado County, during your last trip, I believe. Do you remember
anything of the Elias Denny three-league survey?”
“Yes, sir, I do,” the blunt, breezy, surveyor answered. “I crossed
it on my way to Block H, on the north side of it. The road runs with the Chiquito
River, along the valley. The Denny survey fronts three miles on the Chiquito.”
“It is claimed,” continued the commissioner, “that it fails to
reach the river by as much as a mile.”
The appraiser shrugged his shoulder. He was by birth and instinct
an Actual Settler, and the natural foe of the land-shark.
“It has always been considered to extend to the river,” he said,
dryly.
“But that is not the point I desired to discuss,” said the
Commissioner. “What kind of country is this valley portion of (let us say,
then) the Denny tract?”
The spirit of the Actual Settler beamed in Ashe’s face.
“Beautiful,” he said, with enthusiasm. “Valley as level as this
floor, with just a little swell on, like the sea, and rich as cream. Just
enough brakes to shelter the cattle in winter. Black loamy soil for six feet,
and then clay. Holds water. A dozen nice little houses on it, with windmills
and gardens. People pretty poor, I guess—too far from market—but comfortable.
Never saw so many kids in my life.”
“They raise flocks?” inquired the Commissioner.
“Ho, ho! I mean two-legged kids,” laughed the surveyor;
“two-legged, and bare-legged, and tow-headed.”
“Children! oh, children!” mused the Commissioner, as though a new
view had opened to him; “they raise children!
“It’s a lonesome country, Commissioner,” said the surveyor. “Can
you blame ’em?”
“I suppose,” continued the Commissioner, slowly, as one carefully
pursues deductions from a new, stupendous theory, “not all of them are
tow-headed. It would not be unreasonable, Mr. Ashe, I conjecture, to believe
that a portion of them have brown, or even black, hair.”
“Brown and black, sure,” said Ashe; “also red.”
“No doubt,” said the Commissioner. “Well, I thank you for your
courtesy in informing me, Mr. Ashe. I will not detain you any longer from your
duties.”
Later, in the afternoon, came Hamlin and Avery, big, handsome,
genial, sauntering men, clothed in white duck and low-cut shoes. They permeated
the whole office with an aura of debonair prosperity. They passed among the
clerks and left a wake of abbreviated given names and fat brown cigars.
These were the aristocracy of the land-sharks, who went in for big
things. Full of serene confidence in themselves, there was no corporation, no
syndicate, no railroad company or attorney general too big for them to tackle.
The peculiar smoke of their rare, fat brown cigars was to be perceived in the
sanctum of every department of state, in every committee-room of the
Legislature, in every bank parlour and every private caucus-room in the state Capital.
Always pleasant, never in a hurry, in seeming to possess unlimited leisure,
people wondered when they gave their attention to the many audacious
enterprises in which they were known to be engaged.
By and by the two dropped carelessly into the Commissioner’s room
and reclined lazily in the big, leather-upholstered arm-chairs. They drawled a
good-natured complaint of the weather, and Hamlin told the Commissioner an
excellent story he had amassed that morning from the Secretary of State.
But the Commissioner knew why they were there. He had half
promised to render a decision that day upon their location.
The chief clerk now brought in a batch of duplicate certificates
for the Commissioner to sign. As he traced his sprawling signature, “Hollis
Summerfield, Comr. Genl. Land Office,” on each one, the chief clerk stood,
deftly removing them and applying the blotter.
“I notice,” said the chief clerk, “you’ve been going through that
Salado County location. Kampfer is making a new map of Salado, and I believe is
platting in that section of the county now.”
“I will see it,” said the Commissioner. A few moments later he
went to the draughtsmen’s room.
As he entered he saw five or six of the draughtsmen grouped about
Kampfer’s desk, gargling away at each other in pectoral German, and gazing at
something thereupon. At the Commissioner’s approach they scattered to their
several places. Kampfer, a wizened little German, with long, frizzled ringlets
and a watery eye, began to stammer forth some sort of an apology, the Commissioner
thought, for the congregation of his fellows about his desk.
“Never mind,” said the Commissioner, “I wish to see the map you
are making”; and, passing around the old German, seated himself upon the high
draughtsman’s stool. Kampfer continued to break English in trying to explain.
“Herr Gommissioner, I assure you blenty sat I haf not it
bremeditated—sat it wass—sat it itself make. Look you! from se field notes wass
it blatted—blease to observe se calls: South, 10 degrees west 1,050 varas;
south, 10 degrees east 300 varas; south, 100; south, 9 west, 200; south, 40
degrees west 400—and so on. Herr Gommissioner, nefer would I have—”
The Commissioner raised one white hand, silently, Kampfer dropped
his pipe and fled.
With a hand at each side of his face, and his elbows resting upon
the desk, the Commissioner sat staring at the map which was spread and fastened
there—staring at the sweet and living profile of little Georgia drawn
thereupon—at her face, pensive, delicate, and infantile, outlined in a perfect
likeness.
When his mind at length came to inquire into the reason of it, he
saw that it must have been, as Kampfer had said, unpremeditated. The old
draughtsman had been platting in the Elias Denny survey, and Georgia’s
likeness, striking though it was, was formed by nothing more than the meanders
of Chiquito River. Indeed, Kampfer’s blotter, whereon his preliminary work was
done, showed the laborious tracings of the calls and the countless pricks of
the compasses. Then, over his faint pencilling, Kampfer had drawn in India ink
with a full, firm pen the similitude of Chiquito River, and forth had blossomed
mysteriously the dainty, pathetic profile of the child.
The Commissioner sat for half an hour with his face in his hands,
gazing downward, and none dared approach him. Then he arose and walked out. In
the business office he paused long enough to ask that the Denny file be brought
to his desk.
He found Hamlin and Avery still reclining in their chairs,
apparently oblivious of business. They were lazily discussing summer opera, it
being, their habit—perhaps their pride also—to appear supernaturally
indifferent whenever they stood with large interests imperilled. And they stood
to win more on this stake than most people knew. They possessed inside information
to the effect that a new railroad would, within a year, split this very
Chiquito River valley and send land values ballooning all along its route. A
dollar under thirty thousand profit on this location, if it should hold good,
would be a loss to their expectations. So, while they chatted lightly and
waited for the Commissioner to open the subject, there was a quick, sidelong
sparkle in their eyes, evincing a desire to read their title clear to those
fair acres on the Chiquito.
A clerk brought in the file. The Commissioner seated himself and
wrote upon it in red ink. Then he rose to his feet and stood for a while
looking straight out of the window. The Land Office capped the summit of a bold
hill. The eyes of the Commissioner passed over the roofs of many houses set in
a packing of deep green, the whole checkered by strips of blinding white
streets. The horizon, where his gaze was focussed, swelled to a fair wooded
eminence flecked with faint dots of shining white. There was the cemetery,
where lay many who were forgotten, and a few who had not lived in vain. And one
lay there, occupying very small space, whose childish heart had been large
enough to desire, while near its last beats, good to others. The Commissioner’s
lips moved slightly as he whispered to himself: “It was her last will and
testament, and I have neglected it so long!”
The big brown cigars of Hamlin and Avery were fireless, but they
still gripped them between their teeth and waited, while they marvelled at the
absent expression upon the Commissioner’s face.
By and by he spoke suddenly and promptly.
“Gentlemen, I have just indorsed the Elias Denny survey for
patenting. This office will not regard your location upon a part of it as
legal.” He paused a moment, and then, extending his hand as those dear old-time
ones used to do in debate, he enunciated the spirit of that Ruling that
subsequently drove the land-sharks to the wall, and placed the seal of peace
and security over the doors of ten thousand homes.
“And, furthermore,” he continued, with a clear, soft light upon
his face, “it may interest you to know that from this time on this office will
consider that when a survey of land made by virtue of a certificate granted by
this state to the men who wrested it from the wilderness and the savage—made in
good faith, settled in good faith, and left in good faith to their children or
innocent purchasers—when such a survey, although overrunning its complement,
shall call for any natural object visible to the eye of man, to that object it
shall hold, and be good and valid. And the children of this state shall lie
down to sleep at night, and rumours of disturbers of title shall not disquiet
them. For,” concluded the Commissioner, “of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.”
In the silence that followed, a laugh floated up from the
patent-room below. The man who carried down the Denny file was exhibiting it
among the clerks.
“Look here,” he said, delightedly, “the old man has forgotten his
name. He’s written ‘Patent to original grantee,’ and signed it ‘Georgia Summerfield,
Comr.’”
The speech of the Commissioner rebounded lightly from the
impregnable Hamlin and Avery. They smiled, rose gracefully, spoke of the
baseball team, and argued feelingly that quite a perceptible breeze had arisen
from the east. They lit fresh fat brown cigars, and drifted courteously away.
But later they made another tiger-spring for their quarry in the courts. But
the courts, according to reports in the papers, “coolly roasted them” (a
remarkable performance, suggestive of liquid-air didoes), and sustained the
Commissioner’s Ruling.
And this Ruling itself grew to be a Precedent, and the Actual
Settler framed it, and taught his children to spell from it, and there was
sound sleep o’ nights from the pines to the sage-brush, and from the chaparral to
the great brown river of the north.
But I think, and I am sure the Commissioner never thought
otherwise, that whether Kampfer was a snuffy old instrument of destiny, or
whether the meanders of the Chiquito accidentally platted themselves into that
memorable sweet profile or not, there was brought about “something good for a
whole lot of children,” and the result ought to be called “Georgia’s Ruling.”
Alas for the man and for
the artist with the shifting point of perspective! Life shall be a confusion of
ways to the one; the landscape shall rise up and confound the other. Take the
case of Lorison. At one time he appeared to himself to be the feeblest of
fools; at another he conceived that he followed ideals so fine that the world was
not yet ready to accept them. During one mood he cursed his folly; possessed by
the other, he bore himself with a serene grandeur akin to greatness: in neither
did he attain the perspective.
Generations before, the name had been “Larsen.” His race had bequeathed
him its fine-strung, melancholy temperament, its saving balance of thrift and
industry.
From his point of perspective he saw himself an outcast from
society, forever to be a shady skulker along the ragged edge of respectability;
a denizen des trois-quarts de monde, that pathetic spheroid lying
between the haut and the demi, whose inhabitants
envy each of their neighbours, and are scorned by both. He was self-condemned
to this opinion, as he was self-exiled, through it, to this quaint Southern city
a thousand miles from his former home. Here he had dwelt for longer than a
year, knowing but few, keeping in a subjective world of shadows which was
invaded at times by the perplexing bulks of jarring realities. Then he fell in
love with a girl whom he met in a cheap restaurant, and his story begins.
The Rue Chartres, in New Orleans, is a street of ghosts. It lies
in the quarter where the Frenchman, in his prime, set up his translated pride
and glory; where, also, the arrogant don had swaggered, and dreamed of gold and
grants and ladies’ gloves. Every flagstone has its grooves worn by footsteps
going royally to the wooing and the fighting. Every house has a princely
heartbreak; each doorway its untold tale of gallant promise and slow decay.
By night the Rue Chartres is now but a murky fissure, from which
the groping wayfarer sees, flung against the sky, the tangled filigree of
Moorish iron balconies. The old houses of monsieur stand yet, indomitable
against the century, but their essence is gone. The street is one of ghosts to
whosoever can see them.
A faint heartbeat of the street’s ancient glory still survives in
a corner occupied by the Café Carabine d’Or. Once men gathered there to plot
against kings, and to warn presidents. They do so yet, but they are not the
same kind of men. A brass button will scatter these; those would have set their
faces against an army. Above the door hangs the sign board, upon which has been
depicted a vast animal of unfamiliar species. In the act of firing upon this
monster is represented an unobtrusive human levelling an obtrusive gun, once
the colour of bright gold. Now the legend above the picture is faded beyond
conjecture; the gun’s relation to the title is a matter of faith; the menaced
animal, wearied of the long aim of the hunter, has resolved itself into a
shapeless blot.
The place is known as “Antonio’s,” as the name, white upon the
red-lit transparency, and gilt upon the windows, attests. There is a promise in
“Antonio”; a justifiable expectancy of savoury things in oil and pepper and
wine, and perhaps an angel’s whisper of garlic. But the rest of the name is
“O’Riley.” Antonio O’Riley!
The Carabine d’Or is an ignominious ghost of the Rue Chartres. The
café where Bienville and Conti dined, where a prince has broken bread, is
become a “family ristaurant.”
Its customers are working men and women, almost to a unit.
Occasionally you will see chorus girls from the cheaper theatres, and men who
follow avocations subject to quick vicissitudes; but at Antonio’s—name rich in
Bohemian promise, but tame in fulfillment—manners debonair and gay are toned
down to the “family” standard. Should you light a cigarette, mine host will
touch you on the “arrum” and remind you that the proprieties are menaced.
“Antonio” entices and beguiles from fiery legend without, but “O’Riley” teaches
decorum within.
It was at this restaurant that Lorison first saw the girl. A
flashy fellow with a predatory eye had followed her in, and had advanced to
take the other chair at the little table where she stopped, but Lorison slipped
into the seat before him. Their acquaintance began, and grew, and now for two
months they had sat at the same table each evening, not meeting by appointment,
but as if by a series of fortuitous and happy accidents. After dining, they
would take a walk together in one of the little city parks, or among the
panoramic markets where exhibits a continuous vaudeville of sights and sounds.
Always at eight o’clock their steps led them to a certain street corner, where
she prettily but firmly bade him good night and left him. “I do not live far
from here,” she frequently said, “and you must let me go the rest of the way
alone.”
But now Lorison had discovered that he wanted to go the rest of
the way with her, or happiness would depart, leaving, him on a very lonely
corner of life. And at the same time that he made the discovery, the secret of
his banishment from the society of the good laid its finger in his face and
told him it must not be.
Man is too thoroughly an egoist not to be also an egotist; if he
love, the object shall know it. During a lifetime he may conceal it through
stress of expediency and honour, but it shall bubble from his dying lips,
though it disrupt a neighbourhood. It is known, however, that most men do not
wait so long to disclose their passion. In the case of Lorison, his particular
ethics positively forbade him to declare his sentiments, but he must needs
dally with the subject, and woo by innuendo at least.
On this night, after the usual meal at the Carabine d’Or, he strolled
with his companion down the dim old street toward the river.
The Rue Chartres perishes in the old Place d’Armes. The ancient
Cabildo, where Spanish justice fell like hail, faces it, and the Cathedral,
another provincial ghost, overlooks it. Its centre is a little, iron-railed
park of flowers and immaculate gravelled walks, where citizens take the air of
evenings. Pedestalled high above it, the general sits his cavorting steed, with
his face turned stonily down the river toward English Turn, whence come no more
Britons to bombard his cotton bales.
Often the two sat in this square, but to-night Lorison guided her
past the stone-stepped gate, and still riverward. As they walked, he smiled to
himself to think that all he knew of her—except that be loved her—was her name,
Norah Greenway, and that she lived with her brother. They had talked about
everything except themselves. Perhaps her reticence had been caused by his.
They came, at length, upon the levee, and sat upon a great,
prostrate beam. The air was pungent with the dust of commerce. The great river
slipped yellowly past. Across it Algiers lay, a longitudinous black bulk
against a vibrant electric haze sprinkled with exact stars.
The girl was young and of the piquant order. A certain bright
melancholy pervaded her; she possessed an untarnished, pale prettiness doomed
to please. Her voice, when she spoke, dwarfed her theme. It was the voice
capable of investing little subjects with a large interest. She sat at ease,
bestowing her skirts with the little womanly touch, serene as if the begrimed
pier were a summer garden. Lorison poked the rotting boards with his cane.
He began by telling her that he was in love with some one to whom
he durst not speak of it. “And why not?” she asked, accepting swiftly his fatuous
presentation of a third person of straw. “My place in the world,” he answered,
“is none to ask a woman to share. I am an outcast from honest people; I am
wrongly accused of one crime, and am, I believe, guilty of another.”
Thence he plunged into the story of his abdication from society.
The story, pruned of his moral philosophy, deserves no more than the slightest
touch. It is no new tale, that of the gambler’s declension. During one night’s
sitting he lost, and then had imperilled a certain amount of his employer’s
money, which, by accident, he carried with him. He continued to lose, to the
last wager, and then began to gain, leaving the game winner to a somewhat
formidable sum. The same night his employer’s safe was robbed. A search was
had; the winnings of Lorison were found in his room, their total forming an
accusative nearness to the sum purloined. He was taken, tried and, through
incomplete evidence, released, smutched with the sinister devoirs of
a disagreeing jury.
“It is not in the unjust accusation,” he said to the girl, “that
my burden lies, but in the knowledge that from the moment I staked the first
dollar of the firm’s money I was a criminal—no matter whether I lost or won.
You see why it is impossible for me to speak of love to her.”
“It is a sad thing,” said Norah, after a little pause, “to think
what very good people there are in the world.”
“Good?” said Lorison.
“I was thinking of this superior person whom you say you love. She
must be a very poor sort of creature.”
“I do not understand.”
“Nearly,” she continued, “as poor a sort of creature as yourself.”
“You do not understand,” said Lorison, removing his hat and
sweeping back his fine, light hair. “Suppose she loved me in return, and were
willing to marry me. Think, if you can, what would follow. Never a day would
pass but she would be reminded of her sacrifice. I would read a condescension
in her smile, a pity even in her affection, that would madden me. No. The thing
would stand between us forever. Only equals should mate. I could never ask her
to come down upon my lower plane.”
An arc light faintly shone upon Lorison’s face. An illumination
from within also pervaded it. The girl saw the rapt, ascetic look; it was the
face either of Sir Galahad or Sir Fool.
“Quite starlike,” she said, “is this unapproachable angel. Really
too high to be grasped.”
“By me, yes.”
She faced him suddenly. “My dear friend, would you prefer your
star fallen?” Lorison made a wide gesture.
“You push me to the bald fact,” he declared; “you are not in
sympathy with my argument. But I will answer you so. If I could reach my
particular star, to drag it down, I would not do it; but if it were fallen, I
would pick it up, and thank Heaven for the privilege.”
They were silent for some minutes. Norah shivered, and thrust her
hands deep into the pockets of her jacket. Lorison uttered a remorseful
exclamation.
“I’m not cold,” she said. “I was just thinking. I ought to tell
you something. You have selected a strange confidante. But you cannot expect a
chance acquaintance, picked up in a doubtful restaurant, to be an angel.”
“Norah!” cried Lorison.
“Let me go on. You have told me about yourself. We have been such
good friends. I must tell you now what I never wanted you to know. I am—worse
than you are. I was on the stage . . . I sang in the chorus . . . I was pretty
bad, I guess . . . I stole diamonds from the prima donna . . . they arrested me
. . . I gave most of them up, and they let me go . . . I drank wine every night
. . . a great deal . . . I was very wicked, but—”
Lorison knelt quickly by her side and took her hands.
“Dear Norah!” he said, exultantly. “It is you, it is you I love!
You never guessed it, did you? ’Tis you I meant all the time. Now I can speak.
Let me make you forget the past. We have both suffered; let us shut out the
world, and live for each other. Norah, do you hear me say I love you?”
“In spite of—”
“Rather say because of it. You have come out of your past noble
and good. Your heart is an angel’s. Give it to me.”
“A little while ago you feared the future too much to even speak.”
“But for you; not for myself. Can you love me?”
She cast herself, wildly sobbing, upon his breast.
“Better than life—than truth itself—than everything.”
“And my own past,” said Lorison, with a note of solicitude—“can
you forgive and—”
“I answered you that,” she whispered, “when I told you I loved
you.” She leaned away, and looked thoughtfully at him. “If I had not told you
about myself, would you have—would you—”
“No,” he interrupted; “I would never have let you know I loved
you. I would never have asked you this—Norah, will you be my wife?”
She wept again.
“Oh, believe me; I am good now—I am no longer wicked! I will be
the best wife in the world. Don’t think I am—bad any more. If you do I shall
die, I shall die!”
While he was consoling, her, she brightened up, eager and
impetuous. “Will you marry me to-night?” she said. “Will you prove it that way.
I have a reason for wishing it to be to-night. Will you?”
Of one of two things was this exceeding frankness the outcome:
either of importunate brazenness or of utter innocence. The lover’s perspective
contained only the one.
“The sooner,” said Lorison, “the happier I shall be.”
“What is there to do?” she asked. “What do you have to get? Come!
You should know.”
Her energy stirred the dreamer to action.
“A city directory first,” he cried, gayly, “to find where the man
lives who gives licenses to happiness. We will go together and rout him out.
Cabs, cars, policemen, telephones and ministers shall aid us.”
“Father Rogan shall marry us,” said the girl, with ardour. “I will
take you to him.”
An hour later the two stood at the open doorway of an immense,
gloomy brick building in a narrow and lonely street. The license was tight in
Norah’s hand.
“Wait here a moment,” she said, “till I find Father Rogan.”
She plunged into the black hallway, and the lover was left
standing, as it were, on one leg, outside. His impatience was not greatly
taxed. Gazing curiously into what seemed the hallway to Erebus, he was
presently reassured by a stream of light that bisected the darkness, far down
the passage. Then he heard her call, and fluttered lampward, like the moth. She
beckoned him through a doorway into the room whence emanated the light. The
room was bare of nearly everything except books, which had subjugated all its
space. Here and there little spots of territory had been reconquered. An
elderly, bald man, with a superlatively calm, remote eye, stood by a table with
a book in his hand, his finger still marking a page. His dress was sombre and
appertained to a religious order. His eye denoted an acquaintance with the
perspective.
“Father Rogan,” said Norah, “this is he.”
“The two of ye,” said Father Rogan, “want to get married?”
They did not deny it. He married them. The ceremony was quickly
done. One who could have witnessed it, and felt its scope, might have trembled
at the terrible inadequacy of it to rise to the dignity of its endless chain of
results.
Afterward the priest spake briefly, as if by rote, of certain
other civil and legal addenda that either might or should, at a later time, cap
the ceremony. Lorison tendered a fee, which was declined, and before the door
closed after the departing couple Father Rogan’s book popped open again where
his finger marked it.
In the dark hall Norah whirled and clung to her companion,
tearful.
“Will you never, never be sorry?”
At last she was reassured.
At the first light they reached upon the street, she asked the
time, just as she had each night. Lorison looked at his watch. Half-past eight.
Lorison thought it was from habit that she guided their steps
toward the corner where they always parted. But, arrived there, she hesitated,
and then released his arm. A drug store stood on the corner; its bright, soft
light shone upon them.
“Please leave me here as usual to-night,” said Norah, sweetly. “I
must—I would rather you would. You will not object? At six to-morrow evening I
will meet you at Antonio’s. I want to sit with you there once more. And then—I
will go where you say.” She gave him a bewildering, bright smile, and walked
swiftly away.
Surely it needed all the strength of her charm to carry off this
astounding behaviour. It was no discredit to Lorison’s strength of mind that
his head began to whirl. Pocketing his hands, he rambled vacuously over to the
druggist’s windows, and began assiduously to spell over the names of the patent
medicines therein displayed.
As soon as be had recovered his wits, he proceeded along the
street in an aimless fashion. After drifting for two or three squares, he
flowed into a somewhat more pretentious thoroughfare, a way much frequented by
him in his solitary ramblings. For here was a row of shops devoted to traffic
in goods of the widest range of choice—handiworks of art, skill and fancy,
products of nature and labour from every zone.
Here, for a time, he loitered among the conspicuous windows, where
was set, emphasized by congested floods of light, the cunningest spoil of the
interiors. There were few passers, and of this Lorison was glad. He was not of
the world. For a long time he had touched his fellow man only at the gear of a
levelled cog-wheel—at right angles, and upon a different axis. He had dropped
into a distinctly new orbit. The stroke of ill fortune had acted upon him, in
effect, as a blow delivered upon the apex of a certain ingenious toy, the
musical top, which, when thus buffeted while spinning, gives forth, with
scarcely retarded motion, a complete change of key and chord.
Strolling along the pacific avenue, he experienced singular,
supernatural calm, accompanied by an unusual a activity of brain. Reflecting
upon recent affairs, he assured himself of his happiness in having won for a
bride the one he had so greatly desired, yet he wondered mildly at his dearth
of active emotion. Her strange behaviour in abandoning him without valid excuse
on his bridal eve aroused in him only a vague and curious speculation. Again,
he found himself contemplating, with complaisant serenity, the incidents of her
somewhat lively career. His perspective seemed to have been queerly shifted.
As he stood before a window near a corner, his ears were assailed
by a waxing clamour and commotion. He stood close to the window to allow
passage to the cause of the hubbub—a procession of human beings, which rounded
the corner and headed in his direction. He perceived a salient hue of blue and
a glitter of brass about a central figure of dazzling white and silver, and a
ragged wake of black, bobbing figures.
Two ponderous policemen were conducting between them a woman
dressed as if for the stage, in a short, white, satiny skirt reaching to the
knees, pink stockings, and a sort of sleeveless bodice bright with relucent,
armour-like scales. Upon her curly, light hair was perched, at a rollicking
angle, a shining tin helmet. The costume was to be instantly recognized as one
of those amazing conceptions to which competition has harried the inventors of
the spectacular ballet. One of the officers bore a long cloak upon his arm,
which, doubtless, had been intended to veil the candid attractions of their
effulgent prisoner, but, for some reason, it had not been called into use, to
the vociferous delight of the tail of the procession.
Compelled by a sudden and vigorous movement of the woman, the
parade halted before the window by which Lorison stood. He saw that she was
young, and, at the first glance, was deceived by a sophistical prettiness of
her face, which waned before a more judicious scrutiny. Her look was bold and
reckless, and upon her countenance, where yet the contours of youth survived,
were the finger-marks of old age’s credentialed courier, Late Hours.
The young woman fixed her unshrinking gaze upon Lorison, and
called to him in the voice of the wronged heroine in straits:
“Say! You look like a good fellow; come and put up the bail, won’t
you? I’ve done nothing to get pinched for. It’s all a mistake. See how they’re
treating me! You won’t be sorry, if you’ll help me out of this. Think of your
sister or your girl being dragged along the streets this way! I say, come along
now, like a good fellow.”
It may be that Lorison, in spite of the unconvincing bathos of
this appeal, showed a sympathetic face, for one of the officers left the
woman’s side, and went over to him.
“It’s all right, Sir,” he said, in a husky, confidential tone;
“she’s the right party. We took her after the first act at the Green Light
Theatre, on a wire from the chief of police of Chicago. It’s only a square or
two to the station. Her rig’s pretty bad, but she refused to change clothes—or,
rather,” added the officer, with a smile, “to put on some. I thought I’d
explain matters to you so you wouldn’t think she was being imposed upon.”
“What is the charge?” asked Lorison.
“Grand larceny. Diamonds. Her husband is a jeweller in Chicago.
She cleaned his show case of the sparklers, and skipped with a comic-opera
troupe.”
The policeman, perceiving that the interest of the entire group of
spectators was centred upon himself and Lorison—their conference being regarded
as a possible new complication—was fain to prolong the situation—which
reflected his own importance—by a little afterpiece of philosophical comment.
“A gentleman like you, Sir,” he went on affably, “would never
notice it, but it comes in my line to observe what an immense amount of trouble
is made by that combination—I mean the stage, diamonds and light-headed women
who aren’t satisfied with good homes. I tell you, Sir, a man these days and
nights wants to know what his women folks are up to.”
The policeman smiled a good night, and returned to the side of his
charge, who had been intently watching Lorison’s face during the conversation,
no doubt for some indication of his intention to render succour. Now, at the
failure of the sign, and at the movement made to continue the ignominious
progress, she abandoned hope, and addressed him thus, pointedly:
“You damn chalk-faced quitter! You was thinking of giving me a
hand, but you let the cop talk you out of it the first word. You’re a dandy to
tie to. Say, if you ever get a girl, she’ll have a picnic. Won’t she work you
to the queen’s taste! Oh, my!” She concluded with a taunting, shrill laugh that
rasped Lorison like a saw. The policemen urged her forward; the delighted train
of gaping followers closed up the rear; and the captive Amazon, accepting her
fate, extended the scope of her maledictions so that none in hearing might seem
to be slighted.
Then there came upon Lorison an overwhelming revulsion of his
perspective. It may be that he had been ripe for it, that the abnormal
condition of mind in which he had for so long existed was already about to
revert to its balance; however, it is certain that the events of the last few
minutes had furnished the channel, if not the impetus, for the change.
The initial determining influence had been so small a thing as the
fact and manner of his having been approached by the officer. That agent had,
by the style of his accost, restored the loiterer to his former place in
society. In an instant he had been transformed from a somewhat rancid prowler
along the fishy side streets of gentility into an honest gentleman, with whom
even so lordly a guardian of the peace might agreeably exchange the
compliments.
This, then, first broke the spell, and set thrilling in him a
resurrected longing for the fellowship of his kind, and the rewards of the
virtuous. To what end, he vehemently asked himself, was this fanciful
self-accusation, this empty renunciation, this moral squeamishness through
which he had been led to abandon what was his heritage in life, and not beyond
his deserts? Technically, he was uncondemned; his sole guilty spot was in
thought rather than deed, and cognizance of it unshared by others. For what
good, moral or sentimental, did he slink, retreating like the hedgehog from his
own shadow, to and fro in this musty Bohemia that lacked even the picturesque?
But the thing that struck home and set him raging was the part
played by the Amazonian prisoner. To the counterpart of that astounding
belligerent—identical at least, in the way of experience—to one, by her own
confession, thus far fallen, had he, not three hours since, been united in
marriage. How desirable and natural it had seemed to him then, and how
monstrous it seemed now! How the words of diamond thief number two yet burned
in his ears: “If you ever get a girl, she’ll have a picnic.” What did that mean
but that women instinctively knew him for one they could hoodwink? Still again,
there reverberated the policeman’s sapient contribution to his agony: “A man
these days and nights wants to know what his women folks are up to.” Oh, yes,
he had been a fool; he had looked at things from the wrong standpoint.
But the wildest note in all the clamour was struck by pain’s
forefinger, jealousy. Now, at least, he felt that keenest sting—a mounting love
unworthily bestowed. Whatever she might be, he loved her; he bore in his own
breast his doom. A grating, comic flavour to his predicament struck him
suddenly, and he laughed creakingly as he swung down the echoing pavement. An
impetuous desire to act, to battle with his fate, seized him. He stopped upon
his heel, and smote his palms together triumphantly. His wife was—where? But
there was a tangible link; an outlet more or less navigable, through which his
derelict ship of matrimony might yet be safely towed—the priest!
Like all imaginative men with pliable natures, Lorison was, when
thoroughly stirred, apt to become tempestuous. With a high and stubborn
indignation upon him, be retraced his steps to the intersecting street by which
he had come. Down this he hurried to the corner where he had parted with—an
astringent grimace tinctured the thought—his wife. Thence still back he harked,
following through an unfamiliar district his stimulated recollections of the
way they had come from that preposterous wedding. Many times he went abroad,
and nosed his way back to the trail, furious.
At last, when he reached the dark, calamitous building in which
his madness had culminated, and found the black hallway, he dashed down it,
perceiving no light or sound. But he raised his voice, hailing loudly; reckless
of everything but that he should find the old mischief-maker with the eyes that
looked too far away to see the disaster he had wrought. The door opened, and in
the stream of light Father Rogan stood, his book in hand, with his finger
marking the place.
“Ah!” cried Lorison. “You are the man I want. I had a wife of you
a few hours ago. I would not trouble you, but I neglected to note how it was
done. Will you oblige me with the information whether the business is beyond
remedy?”
“Come inside,” said the priest; “there are other lodgers in the house,
who might prefer sleep to even a gratified curiosity.”
Lorison entered the room and took the chair offered him. The
priest’s eyes looked a courteous interrogation.
“I must apologize again,” said the young man, “for so soon
intruding upon you with my marital infelicities, but, as my wife has neglected
to furnish me with her address, I am deprived of the legitimate recourse of a
family row.”
“I am quite a plain man,” said Father Rogan, pleasantly; “but I do
not see how I am to ask you questions.”
“Pardon my indirectness,” said Lorison; “I will ask one. In this
room to-night you pronounced me to be a husband. You afterward spoke of
additional rites or performances that either should or could be effected. I
paid little attention to your words then, but I am hungry to hear them repeated
now. As matters stand, am I married past all help?”
“You are as legally and as firmly bound,” said the priest, “as
though it had been done in a cathedral, in the presence of thousands. The
additional observances I referred to are not necessary to the strictest
legality of the act, but were advised as a precaution for the future—for
convenience of proof in such contingencies as wills, inheritances and the
like.”
Lorison laughed harshly.
“Many thanks,” he said. “Then there is no mistake, and I am the
happy benedict. I suppose I should go stand upon the bridal corner, and when my
wife gets through walking the streets she will look me up.”
Father Rogan regarded him calmly.
“My son,” he said, “when a man and woman come to me to be married
I always marry them. I do this for the sake of other people whom they might go
away and marry if they did not marry each other. As you see, I do not seek your
confidence; but your case seems to me to be one not altogether devoid of
interest. Very few marriages that have come to my notice have brought such
well-expressed regret within so short a time. I will hazard one question: were
you not under the impression that you loved the lady you married, at the time
you did so;”
“Loved her!” cried Lorison, wildly. “Never so well as now, though
she told me she deceived and sinned and stole. Never more than now, when,
perhaps, she is laughing at the fool she cajoled and left, with scarcely a
word, to return to God only knows what particular line of her former folly.”
Father Rogan answered nothing. During the silence that succeeded,
he sat with a quiet expectation beaming in his full, lambent eye.
“If you would listen—” began Lorison. The priest held up his hand.
“As I hoped,” he said. “I thought you would trust me. Wait but a
moment.” He brought a long clay pipe, filled and lighted it.
“Now, my son,” he said.
Lorison poured a twelve month’s accumulated confidence into Father
Rogan’s ear. He told all; not sparing himself or omitting the facts of his
past, the events of the night, or his disturbing conjectures and fears.
“The main point,” said the priest, when he had concluded, “seems
to me to be this—are you reasonably sure that you love this woman whom you have
married?”
“Why,” exclaimed Lorison, rising impulsively to his feet—“why
should I deny it? But look at me—am I fish, flesh or fowl? That is the main
point to me, I assure you.”
“I understand you,” said the priest, also rising, and laying down
his pipe. “The situation is one that has taxed the endurance of much older men
than you—in fact, especially much older men than you. I will try to relieve you
from it, and this night. You shall see for yourself into exactly what
predicament you have fallen, and how you shall, possibly, be extricated. There
is no evidence so credible as that of the eyesight.”
Father Rogan moved about the room, and donned a soft black hat.
Buttoning his coat to his throat, he laid his hand on the doorknob. “Let us
walk,” he said.
The two went out upon the street. The priest turned his face down
it, and Lorison walked with him through a squalid district, where the houses
loomed, awry and desolate-looking, high above them. Presently they turned into
a less dismal side street, where the houses were smaller, and, though hinting
of the most meagre comfort, lacked the concentrated wretchedness of the more
populous byways.
At a segregated, two-story house Father Rogan halted, and mounted
the steps with the confidence of a familiar visitor. He ushered Lorison into a
narrow hallway, faintly lighted by a cobwebbed hanging lamp. Almost immediately
a door to the right opened and a dingy Irishwoman protruded her head.
“Good evening to ye, Mistress Geehan,” said the priest,
unconsciously, it seemed, falling into a delicately flavoured brogue. “And is
it yourself can tell me if Norah has gone out again, the night, maybe?”
“Oh, it’s yer blissid riverence! Sure and I can tell ye the same.
The purty darlin’ wint out, as usual, but a bit later. And she says: ‘Mother
Geehan,’ says she, ‘it’s me last noight out, praise the saints, this noight
is!’ And, oh, yer riverence, the swate, beautiful drame of a dress she had this
toime! White satin and silk and ribbons, and lace about the neck and
arrums—’twas a sin, yer reverence, the gold was spint upon it.”
The priest heard Lorison catch his breath painfully, and a faint
smile flickered across his own clean-cut mouth.
“Well, then, Mistress Geehan,” said he, “I’ll just step upstairs
and see the bit boy for a minute, and I’ll take this gentleman up with me.”
“He’s awake, thin,” said the woman. “I’ve just come down from
sitting wid him the last hour, tilling him fine shtories of ould County Tyrone.
’Tis a greedy gossoon, it is, yer riverence, for me shtories.”
“Small the doubt,” said Father Rogan. “There’s no rocking would
put him to slape the quicker, I’m thinking.”
Amid the woman’s shrill protest against the retort, the two men
ascended the steep stairway. The priest pushed open the door of a room near its
top.
“Is that you already, sister?” drawled a sweet, childish voice from
the darkness.
“It’s only ould Father Denny come to see ye, darlin’; and a foine
gentleman I’ve brought to make ye a gr-r-and call. And ye resaves us fast
aslape in bed! Shame on yez manners!”
“Oh, Father Denny, is that you? I’m glad. And will you light the
lamp, please? It’s on the table by the door. And quit talking like Mother
Geehan, Father Denny.”
The priest lit the lamp, and Lorison saw a tiny, towsled-haired
boy, with a thin, delicate face, sitting up in a small bed in a corner.
Quickly, also, his rapid glance considered the room and its contents. It was
furnished with more than comfort, and its adornments plainly indicated a
woman’s discerning taste. An open door beyond revealed the blackness of an
adjoining room’s interior.
The boy clutched both of Father Rogan’s hands. “I’m so glad you
came,” he said; “but why did you come in the night? Did sister send you?”
“Off wid ye! Am I to be sint about, at me age, as was Terence
McShane, of Ballymahone? I come on me own r-r-responsibility.”
Lorison had also advanced to the boy’s bedside. He was fond of
children; and the wee fellow, laying himself down to sleep alone in that dark
room, stirred-his heart.
“Aren’t you afraid, little man?” he asked, stooping down beside
him.
“Sometimes,” answered the boy, with a shy smile, “when the rats
make too much noise. But nearly every night, when sister goes out, Mother
Geehan stays a while with me, and tells me funny stories. I’m not often afraid,
sir.”
“This brave little gentleman,” said Father Rogan, “is a scholar of
mine. Every day from half-past six to half-past eight—when sister comes for
him—he stops in my study, and we find out what’s in the inside of books. He
knows multiplication, division and fractions; and he’s troubling me to begin
wid the chronicles of Ciaran of Clonmacnoise, Corurac McCullenan and Cuan
O’Lochain, the gr-r-reat Irish histhorians.” The boy was evidently accustomed
to the priest’s Celtic pleasantries. A little, appreciative grin was all the
attention the insinuation of pedantry received.
Lorison, to have saved his life, could not have put to the child
one of those vital questions that were wildly beating about, unanswered, in his
own brain. The little fellow was very like Norah; he had the same shining hair
and candid eyes.
“Oh, Father Denny,” cried the boy, suddenly, “I forgot to tell
you! Sister is not going away at night any more! She told me so when she kissed
me good night as she was leaving. And she said she was so happy, and then she
cried. Wasn’t that queer? But I’m glad; aren’t you?”
“Yes, lad. And now, ye omadhaun, go to sleep, and say good night;
we must be going.”
“Which shall I do first, Father Denny?”
“Faith, he’s caught me again! Wait till I get the sassenach into
the annals of Tageruach, the hagiographer; I’ll give him enough of the Irish
idiom to make him more respectful.”
The light was out, and the small, brave voice bidding them good
night from the dark room. They groped downstairs, and tore away from the
garrulity of Mother Geehan.
Again the priest steered them through the dim ways, but this time
in another direction. His conductor was serenely silent, and Lorison followed
his example to the extent of seldom speaking. Serene he could not be. His heart
beat suffocatingly in his breast. The following of this blind, menacing trail
was pregnant with he knew not what humiliating revelation to be delivered at
its end.
They came into a more pretentious street, where trade, it could be
surmised, flourished by day. And again the priest paused; this time before a
lofty building, whose great doors and windows in the lowest floor were
carefully shuttered and barred. Its higher apertures were dark, save in the
third story, the windows of which were brilliantly lighted. Lorison’s ear
caught a distant, regular, pleasing thrumming, as of music above. They stood at
an angle of the building. Up, along the side nearest them, mounted an iron
stairway. At its top was an upright, illuminated parallelogram. Father Rogan
had stopped, and stood, musing.
“I will say this much,” he remarked, thoughtfully: “I believe you
to be a better man than you think yourself to be, and a better man than I
thought some hours ago. But do not take this,” he added, with a smile, “as much
praise. I promised you a possible deliverance from an unhappy perplexity. I
will have to modify that promise. I can only remove the mystery that enhanced
that perplexity. Your deliverance depends upon yourself. Come.”
He led his companion up the stairway. Halfway up, Lorison caught
him by the sleeve. “Remember,” he gasped, “I love that woman.”
“You desired to know.
“I—Go on.”
The priest reached the landing at the top of the stairway.
Lorison, behind him, saw that the illuminated space was the glass upper half of
a door opening into the lighted room. The rhythmic music increased as they
neared it; the stairs shook with the mellow vibrations.
Lorison stopped breathing when he set foot upon the highest step,
for the priest stood aside, and motioned him to look through the glass of the
door.
His eye, accustomed to the darkness, met first a blinding glare,
and then he made out the faces and forms of many people, amid an extravagant
display of splendid robings—billowy laces, brilliant-hued finery, ribbons,
silks and misty drapery. And then he caught the meaning of that jarring hum,
and he saw the tired, pale, happy face of his wife, bending, as were a score of
others, over her sewing machine—toiling, toiling. Here was the folly she
pursued, and the end of his quest.
But not his deliverance, though even then remorse struck him. His
shamed soul fluttered once more before it retired to make room for the other
and better one. For, to temper his thrill of joy, the shine of the satin and
the glimmer of ornaments recalled the disturbing figure of the bespangled
Amazon, and the base duplicate histories lit by the glare of footlights and
stolen diamonds. It is past the wisdom of him who only sets the scenes, either
to praise or blame the man. But this time his love overcame his scruples. He
took a quick step, and reached out his hand for the doorknob. Father Rogan was
quicker to arrest it and draw him back.
“You use my trust in you queerly,” said the priest sternly. “What
are you about to do?”
“I am going to my wife,” said Lorison. “Let me pass.”
“Listen,” said the priest, holding him firmly by the arm. “I am
about to put you in possession of a piece of knowledge of which, thus far, you
have scarcely proved deserving. I do not think you ever will; but I will not
dwell upon that. You see in that room the woman you married, working for a
frugal living for herself, and a generous comfort for an idolized brother. This
building belongs to the chief costumer of the city. For months the advance
orders for the coming Mardi Gras festivals have kept the work going day and
night. I myself secured employment here for Norah. She toils here each night
from nine o’clock until daylight, and, besides, carries home with her some of
the finer costumes, requiring more delicate needlework, and works there part of
the day. Somehow, you two have remained strangely ignorant of each other’s lives.
Are you convinced now that your wife is not walking the streets?”
“Let me go to her,” cried Lorison, again struggling, “and beg her
forgiveness!’
“Sir,” said the priest, “do you owe me nothing? Be quiet. It seems
so often that Heaven lets fall its choicest gifts into hands that must be
taught to hold them. Listen again. You forgot that repentant sin must not
compromise, but look up, for redemption, to the purest and best. You went to
her with the fine-spun sophistry that peace could be found in a mutual guilt;
and she, fearful of losing what her heart so craved, thought it worth the price
to buy it with a desperate, pure, beautiful lie. I have known her since the day
she was born; she is as innocent and unsullied in life and deed as a holy
saint. In that lowly street where she dwells she first saw the light, and she
has lived there ever since, spending her days in generous self-sacrifice for
others. Och, ye spalpeen!” continued Father Rogan, raising his finger in kindly
anger at Lorison. “What for, I wonder, could she be after making a fool of
hersilf, and shamin’ her swate soul with lies, for the like of you!”
“Sir,” said Lorison, trembling, “say what you please of me. Doubt
it as you must, I will yet prove my gratitude to you, and my devotion to her.
But let me speak to her once now, let me kneel for just one moment at her feet,
and—”
“Tut, tut!” said the priest. “How many acts of a love drama do you
think an old bookworm like me capable of witnessing? Besides, what kind of
figures do we cut, spying upon the mysteries of midnight millinery! Go to meet
your wife to-morrow, as she ordered you, and obey her thereafter, and maybe
some time I shall get forgiveness for the part I have played in this night’s
work. Off wid yez down the shtairs, now! ’Tis late, and an ould man like me
should be takin’ his rest.”
XXIV.MADAME BO-PEEP, OF THE RANCHES
“Aunt Ellen,” said
Octavia, cheerfully, as she threw her black kid gloves carefully at the
dignified Persian cat on the window-seat, “I’m a pauper.”
“You are so extreme in your statements, Octavia, dear,” said Aunt
Ellen, mildly, looking up from her paper. “If you find yourself temporarily in
need of some small change for bonbons, you will find my purse in the drawer of
the writing desk.”
Octavia Beaupree removed her hat and seated herself on a footstool
near her aunt’s chair, clasping her hands about her knees. Her slim and
flexible figure, clad in a modish mourning costume, accommodated itself easily
and gracefully to the trying position. Her bright and youthful face, with its
pair of sparkling, life-enamoured eyes, tried to compose itself to the
seriousness that the occasion seemed to demand.
“You good auntie, it isn’t a case of bonbons; it is abject,
staring, unpicturesque poverty, with ready-made clothes, gasolined gloves, and
probably one o’clock dinners all waiting with the traditional wolf at the door.
I’ve just come from my lawyer, auntie, and, ‘Please, ma’am, I ain’t got nothink
’t all. Flowers, lady? Buttonhole, gentleman? Pencils, sir, three for five, to
help a poor widow?’ Do I do it nicely, auntie, or, as a bread-winner
accomplishment, were my lessons in elocution entirely wasted?”
“Do be serious, my dear,” said Aunt Ellen, letting her paper fall
to the floor, “long enough to tell me what you mean. Colonel Beaupree’s
estate—”
“Colonel Beaupree’s estate,” interrupted Octavia, emphasizing her
words with appropriate dramatic gestures, “is of Spanish castellar
architecture. Colonel Beaupree’s resources are—wind. Colonel Beaupree’s stocks
are—water. Colonel Beaupree’s income is—all in. The statement lacks the legal
technicalities to which I have been listening for an hour, but that is what it
means when translated.”
“Octavia!” Aunt Ellen was now visibly possessed by consternation.
“I can hardly believe it. And it was the impression that he was worth a
million. And the De Peysters themselves introduced him!”
Octavia rippled out a laugh, and then became properly grave.
“De mortuis nil, auntie—not even the rest of it. The dear
old colonel—what a gold brick he was, after all! I paid for my bargain
fairly—I’m all here, am I not?—items: eyes, fingers, toes, youth, old family,
unquestionable position in society as called for in the contract—no wild-cat
stock here.” Octavia picked up the morning paper from the floor. “But I’m not going
to ‘squeal’—isn’t that what they call it when you rail at Fortune because
you’ve, lost the game?” She turned the pages of the paper calmly. “‘Stock
market’—no use for that. ‘Society’s doings’—that’s done. Here is my page— the
wish column. A Van Dresser could not be said to ‘want’ for anything, of course.
‘Chamber-maids, cooks, canvassers, stenographers—’”
“Dear,” said Aunt Ellen, with a little tremor in her voice,
“please do not talk in that way. Even if your affairs are in so unfortunate a
condition, there is my three thousand—”
Octavia sprang up lithely, and deposited a smart kiss on the
delicate cheek of the prim little elderly maid.
“Blessed auntie, your three thousand is just sufficient to insure
your Hyson to be free from willow leaves and keep the Persian in sterilized
cream. I know I’d be welcome, but I prefer to strike bottom like Beelzebub
rather than hang around like the Peri listening to the music from the side
entrance. I’m going to earn my own living. There’s nothing else to do. I’m
a—Oh, oh, oh!—I had forgotten. There’s one thing saved from the wreck. It’s a
corral—no, a ranch in—let me see—Texas: an asset, dear old Mr. Bannister called
it. How pleased he was to show me something he could describe as unencumbered!
I’ve a description of it among those stupid papers he made me bring away with
me from his office. I’ll try to find it.”
Octavia found her shopping-bag, and drew from it a long envelope
filled with typewritten documents.
“A ranch in Texas,” sighed Aunt Ellen. “It sounds to me more like
a liability than an asset. Those are the places where the centipedes are found,
and cowboys, and fandangos.”
“‘The Rancho de las Sombras,’” read Octavia from a sheet of
violently purple typewriting, “‘is situated one hundred and ten miles southeast
of San Antonio, and thirty-eight miles from its nearest railroad station,
Nopal, on the I. and G. N. Ranch, consists of 7,680 acres of well-watered land,
with title conferred by State patents, and twenty-two sections, or 14,080
acres, partly under yearly running lease and partly bought under State’s
twenty-year-purchase act. Eight thousand graded merino sheep, with the
necessary equipment of horses, vehicles and general ranch paraphernalia.
Ranch-house built of brick, with six rooms comfortably furnished according to
the requirements of the climate. All within a strong barbed-wire fence.
“‘The present ranch manager seems to be competent and reliable,
and is rapidly placing upon a paying basis a business that, in other hands, had
been allowed to suffer from neglect and misconduct.
“‘This property was secured by Colonel Beaupree in a deal with a
Western irrigation syndicate, and the title to it seems to be perfect. With
careful management and the natural increase of land values, it ought to be made
the foundation for a comfortable fortune for its owner.’”
When Octavia ceased reading, Aunt Ellen uttered something as near
a sniff as her breeding permitted.
“The prospectus,” she said, with uncompromising metropolitan
suspicion, “doesn’t mention the centipedes, or the Indians. And you never did
like mutton, Octavia. I don’t see what advantage you can derive from
this—desert.”
But Octavia was in a trance. Her eyes were steadily regarding
something quite beyond their focus. Her lips were parted, and her face was
lighted by the kindling furor of the explorer, the ardent, stirring disquiet of
the adventurer. Suddenly she clasped her hands together exultantly.
“The problem solves itself, auntie,” she cried. “I’m going to that
ranch. I’m going to live on it. I’m going to learn to like mutton, and even
concede the good qualities of centipedes—at a respectful distance. It’s just
what I need. It’s a new life that comes when my old one is just ending. It’s a
release, auntie; it isn’t a narrowing. Think of the gallops over those leagues
of prairies, with the wind tugging at the roots of your hair, the coming close
to the earth and learning over again the stories of the growing grass and the
little wild flowers without names! Glorious is what it will be. Shall I be a
shepherdess with a Watteau hat, and a crook to keep the bad wolves from the
lambs, or a typical Western ranch girl, with short hair, like the pictures of
her in the Sunday papers? I think the latter. And they’ll have my picture, too,
with the wild-cats I’ve slain, single-handed, hanging from my saddle horn.
‘From the Four Hundred to the Flocks’ is the way they’ll headline it, and
they’ll print photographs of the old Van Dresser mansion and the church where I
was married. They won’t have my picture, but they’ll get an artist to draw it.
I’ll be wild and woolly, and I’ll grow my own wool.”
“Octavia!” Aunt Ellen condensed into the one word all the protests
she was unable to utter.
“Don’t say a word, auntie. I’m going. I’ll see the sky at night
fit down on the world like a big butter-dish cover, and I’ll make friends again
with the stars that I haven’t had a chat with since I was a wee child. I wish
to go. I’m tired of all this. I’m glad I haven’t any money. I could bless
Colonel Beaupree for that ranch, and forgive him for all his bubbles. What if
the life will be rough and lonely! I—I deserve it. I shut my heart to
everything except that miserable ambition. I—oh, I wish to go away, and
forget—forget!”
Octavia swerved suddenly to her knees, laid her flushed face in
her aunt’s lap, and shook with turbulent sobs.
Aunt Ellen bent over her, and smoothed the coppery-brown hair.
“I didn’t know,” she said, gently; “I didn’t know—that. Who was
it, dear?”
When Mrs. Octavia Beaupree, née Van Dresser, stepped from the
train at Nopal, her manner lost, for the moment, some of that easy certitude
which had always marked her movements. The town was of recent establishment,
and seemed to have been hastily constructed of undressed lumber and flapping
canvas. The element that had congregated about the station, though not
offensively demonstrative, was clearly composed of citizens accustomed to and
prepared for rude alarms.
Octavia stood on the platform, against the telegraph office, and
attempted to choose by intuition from the swaggering, straggling string of
loungers, the manager of the Rancho de las Sombras, who had been instructed by
Mr. Bannister to meet her there. That tall, serious, looking, elderly man in
the blue flannel shirt and white tie she thought must be he. But, no; he passed
by, removing his gaze from the lady as hers rested on him, according to the
Southern custom. The manager, she thought, with some impatience at being kept
waiting, should have no difficulty in selecting her. Young women wearing the
most recent thing in ash-coloured travelling suits were not so plentiful in
Nopal!
Thus keeping a speculative watch on all persons of possible
managerial aspect, Octavia, with a catching breath and a start of surprise,
suddenly became aware of Teddy Westlake hurrying along the platform in the
direction of the train—of Teddy Westlake or his sun-browned ghost in cheviot,
boots and leather-girdled hat—Theodore Westlake, Jr., amateur polo (almost)
champion, all-round butterfly and cumberer of the soil; but a broader, surer,
more emphasized and determined Teddy than the one she had known a year ago when
last she saw him.
He perceived Octavia at almost the same time, deflected his
course, and steered for her in his old, straightforward way. Something like awe
came upon her as the strangeness of his metamorphosis was brought into closer
range; the rich, red-brown of his complexion brought out so vividly his
straw-coloured mustache and steel-gray eyes. He seemed more grown-up, and,
somehow, farther away. But, when he spoke, the old, boyish Teddy came back
again. They had been friends from childhood.
“Why, ’Tave!” he exclaimed, unable to reduce his perplexity to
coherence. “How—what—when—where?”
“Train,” said Octavia; “necessity; ten minutes ago; home. Your
complexion’s gone, Teddy. Now, how—what—when—where?”
“I’m working down here,” said Teddy. He cast side glances about
the station as one does who tries to combine politeness with duty.
“You didn’t notice on the train,” he asked, “an old lady with gray
curls and a poodle, who occupied two seats with her bundles and quarrelled with
the conductor, did you?”
“I think not,” answered Octavia, reflecting. “And you haven’t, by
any chance, noticed a big, gray-mustached man in a blue shirt and six-shooters,
with little flakes of merino wool sticking in his hair, have you?”
“Lots of ’em,” said Teddy, with symptoms of mental delirium under
the strain. Do you happen to know any such individual?”
“No; the description is imaginary. Is your interest in the old
lady whom you describe a personal one?”
“Never saw her in my life. She’s painted entirely from fancy. She
owns the little piece of property where I earn my bread and butter—the Rancho
de las Sombras. I drove up to meet her according to arrangement with her
lawyer.”
Octavia leaned against the wall of the telegraph office. Was this
possible? And didn’t he know?
“Are you the manager of that ranch?” she asked weakly.
“I am,” said Teddy, with pride.
“I am Mrs. Beaupree,” said Octavia faintly; “but my hair never
would curl, and I was polite to the conductor.”
For a moment that strange, grown-up look came back, and removed
Teddy miles away from her.
“I hope you’ll excuse me,” he said, rather awkwardly. “You see,
I’ve been down here in the chaparral a year. I hadn’t heard. Give me your
checks, please, and I’ll have your traps loaded into the wagon. José will
follow with them. We travel ahead in the buckboard.”
Seated by Teddy in a feather-weight buckboard, behind a pair of
wild, cream-coloured Spanish ponies, Octavia abandoned all thought for the
exhilaration of the present. They swept out of the little town and down the
level road toward the south. Soon the road dwindled and disappeared, and they
struck across a world carpeted with an endless reach of curly mesquite grass.
The wheels made no sound. The tireless ponies bounded ahead at an unbroken
gallop. The temperate wind, made fragrant by thousands of acres of blue and
yellow wild flowers, roared gloriously in their ears. The motion was aërial,
ecstatic, with a thrilling sense of perpetuity in its effect. Octavia sat silent,
possessed by a feeling of elemental, sensual bliss. Teddy seemed to be
wrestling with some internal problem.
“I’m going to call you madama,” he announced as the result of his
labours. “That is what the Mexicans will call you—they’re nearly all Mexicans
on the ranch, you know. That seems to me about the proper thing.”
“Very well, Mr. Westlake,” said Octavia, primly.
“Oh, now,” said Teddy, in some consternation, “that’s carrying the
thing too far, isn’t it?”
“Don’t worry me with your beastly etiquette. I’m just beginning to
live. Don’t remind me of anything artificial. If only this air could be
bottled! This much alone is worth coming for. Oh, look I there goes a deer!”
“Jack-rabbit,” said Teddy, without turning his head.
“Could I—might I drive?” suggested Octavia, panting, with
rose-tinted cheeks and the eye of an eager child.
“On one condition. Could I—might I smoke?”
“Forever!” cried Octavia, taking the lines with solemn joy. “How
shall I know which way to drive?”
“Keep her sou’ by sou’east, and all sail set. You see that black
speck on the horizon under that lowermost Gulf cloud? That’s a group of
live-oaks and a landmark. Steer halfway between that and the little hill to the
left. I’ll recite you the whole code of driving rules for the Texas prairies:
keep the reins from under the horses’ feet, and swear at ’em frequent.”
“I’m too happy to swear, Ted. Oh, why do people buy yachts or
travel in palace-cars, when a buckboard and a pair of plugs and a spring
morning like this can satisfy all desire?”
“Now, I’ll ask you,” protested Teddy, who was futilely striking
match after match on the dashboard, “not to call those denizens of the air
plugs. They can kick out a hundred miles between daylight and dark.” At last he
succeeded in snatching a light for his cigar from the flame held in the hollow
of his hands.
“Room!” said Octavia, intensely. “That’s what produces the effect.
I know now what I’ve wanted—scope—range—room!”
“Smoking-room,” said Teddy, unsentimentally. “I love to smoke in a
buckboard. The wind blows the smoke into you and out again. It saves exertion.”
The two fell so naturally into their old-time goodfellowship that
it was only by degrees that a sense of the strangeness of the new relations
between them came to be felt.
“Madama,” said Teddy, wonderingly, “however did you get it into
your head to cut the crowd and come down here? Is it a fad now among the upper
classes to trot off to sheep ranches instead of to Newport?”
“I was broke, Teddy,” said Octavia, sweetly, with her interest
centred upon steering safely between a Spanish dagger plant and a clump of
chaparral; “I haven’t a thing in the world but this ranch—not even any other
home to go to.”
“Come, now,” said Teddy, anxiously but incredulously, “you don’t
mean it?”
“When my husband,” said Octavia, with a shy slurring of the word,
“died three months ago I thought I had a reasonable amount of the world’s
goods. His lawyer exploded that theory in a sixty-minute fully illustrated
lecture. I took to the sheep as a last resort. Do you happen to know of any fashionable
caprice among the gilded youth of Manhattan that induces them to abandon polo
and club windows to become managers of sheep ranches?”
“It’s easily explained in my case,” responded Teddy, promptly. “I
had to go to work. I couldn’t have earned my board in New York, so I chummed a
while with old Sandford, one of the syndicate that owned the ranch before
Colonel Beaupree bought it, and got a place down here. I wasn’t manager at
first. I jogged around on ponies and studied the business in detail, until I
got all the points in my head. I saw where it was losing and what the remedies
were, and then Sandford put me in charge. I get a hundred dollars a month, and
I earn it.”
“Poor Teddy!” said Octavia, with a smile.
“You needn’t. I like it. I save half my wages, and I’m as hard as
a water plug. It beats polo.”
“Will it furnish bread and tea and jam for another outcast from
civilization?”
“The spring shearing,” said the manager, “just cleaned up a
deficit in last year’s business. Wastefulness and inattention have been the
rule heretofore. The autumn clip will leave a small profit over all expenses.
Next year there will be jam.”
When, about four o’clock in the afternoon, the ponies rounded a
gentle, brush-covered hill, and then swooped, like a double cream-coloured
cyclone, upon the Rancho de las Sombras, Octavia gave a little cry of delight.
A lordly grove of magnificent live-oaks cast an area of grateful, cool shade,
whence the ranch had drawn its name, “de las Sombras”—of the shadows. The
house, of red brick, one story, ran low and long beneath the trees. Through its
middle, dividing its six rooms in half, extended a broad, arched passageway,
picturesque with flowering cactus and hanging red earthen jars. A “gallery,”
low and broad, encircled the building. Vines climbed about it, and the adjacent
ground was, for a space, covered with transplanted grass and shrubs. A little
lake, long and narrow, glimmered in the sun at the rear. Further away stood the
shacks of the Mexican workers, the corrals, wool sheds and shearing pens. To
the right lay the low hills, splattered with dark patches of chaparral; to the
left the unbounded green prairie blending against the blue heavens.
“It’s a home, Teddy,” said Octavia, breathlessly; that’s what it
is—it’s a home.”
“Not so bad for a sheep ranch,” admitted Teddy, with excusable
pride. “I’ve been tinkering on it at odd times.”
A Mexican youth sprang from somewhere in the grass, and took
charge of the creams. The mistress and the manager entered the house.
“Here’s Mrs. MacIntyre,” said Teddy, as a placid, neat, elderly
lady came out upon the gallery to meet them. “Mrs. Mac, here’s the boss. Very
likely she will be wanting a hunk of ham and a dish of beans after her drive.”
Mrs. MacIntyre, the housekeeper, as much a fixture on the place as
the lake or the live-oaks, received the imputation of the ranch’s resources of
refreshment with mild indignation, and was about to give it utterance when
Octavia spoke.
“Oh, Mrs. MacIntyre, don’t apologize for Teddy. Yes, I call him
Teddy. So does every one whom he hasn’t duped into taking him seriously. You
see, we used to cut paper dolls and play jackstraws together ages ago. No one
minds what he says.”
“No,” said Teddy, “no one minds what he says, just so he doesn’t
do it again.”
Octavia cast one of those subtle, sidelong glances toward him from
beneath her lowered eyelids—a glance that Teddy used to describe as an
upper-cut. But there was nothing in his ingenuous, weather-tanned face to
warrant a suspicion that he was making an allusion—nothing. Beyond a doubt,
thought Octavia, he had forgotten.
“Mr. Westlake likes his fun,” said Mrs. Maclntyre, as she
conducted Octavia to her rooms. “But,” she added, loyally, “people around here
usually pay attention to what he says when he talks in earnest. I don’t know
what would have become of this place without him.”
Two rooms at the east end of the house had been arranged for the
occupancy of the ranch’s mistress. When she entered them a slight dismay seized
her at their bare appearance and the scantiness of their furniture; but she
quickly reflected that the climate was a semi-tropical one, and was moved to
appreciation of the well-conceived efforts to conform to it. The sashes had
already been removed from the big windows, and white curtains waved in the Gulf
breeze that streamed through the wide jalousies. The bare floor was amply
strewn with cool rugs; the chairs were inviting, deep, dreamy willows; the
walls were papered with a light, cheerful olive. One whole side of her sitting
room was covered with books on smooth, unpainted pine shelves. She flew to
these at once. Before her was a well-selected library. She caught glimpses of
titles of volumes of fiction and travel not yet seasoned from the dampness of
the press.
Presently, recollecting that she was now in a wilderness given
over to mutton, centipedes and privations, the incongruity of these luxuries
struck her, and, with intuitive feminine suspicion, she began turning to the
fly-leaves of volume after volume. Upon each one was inscribed in fluent characters
the name of Theodore Westlake, Jr.
Octavia, fatigued by her long journey, retired early that night.
Lying upon her white, cool bed, she rested deliciously, but sleep coquetted
long with her. She listened to faint noises whose strangeness kept her faculties
on the alert—the fractious yelping of the coyotes, the ceaseless, low symphony
of the wind, the distant booming of the frogs about the lake, the lamentation
of a concertina in the Mexicans’ quarters. There were many conflicting feelings
in her heart—thankfulness and rebellion, peace and disquietude, loneliness and
a sense of protecting care, happiness and an old, haunting pain.
She did what any other woman would have done—sought relief in a
wholesome tide of unreasonable tears, and her last words, murmured to herself
before slumber, capitulating, came softly to woo her, were “He has forgotten.”
The manager of the Rancho de las Sombras was no dilettante. He was
a “hustler.” He was generally up, mounted, and away of mornings before the rest
of the household were awake, making the rounds of the flocks and camps. This
was the duty of the major-domo, a stately old Mexican with a princely air and
manner, but Teddy seemed to have a great deal of confidence in his own
eyesight. Except in the busy seasons, he nearly always returned to the ranch to
breakfast at eight o’clock, with Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, at the little
table set in the central hallway, bringing with him a tonic and breezy
cheerfulness full of the health and flavour of the prairies.
A few days after Octavia’s arrival he made her get out one of her
riding skirts, and curtail it to a shortness demanded by the chaparral brakes.
With some misgivings she donned this and the pair of buckskin
leggings he prescribed in addition, and, mounted upon a dancing pony, rode with
him to view her possessions. He showed her everything—the flocks of ewes,
muttons and grazing lambs, the dipping vats, the shearing pens, the uncouth
merino rams in their little pasture, the water-tanks prepared against the
summer drought—giving account of his stewardship with a boyish enthusiasm that
never flagged.
Where was the old Teddy that she knew so well? This side of him
was the same, and it was a side that pleased her; but this was all she ever saw
of him now. Where was his sentimentality—those old, varying moods of impetuous
love-making, of fanciful, quixotic devotion, of heart-breaking gloom, of
alternating, absurd tenderness and haughty dignity? His nature had been a
sensitive one, his temperament bordering closely on the artistic. She knew
that, besides being a follower of fashion and its fads and sports, he had
cultivated tastes of a finer nature. He had written things, he had tampered
with colours, he was something of a student in certain branches of art, and
once she had been admitted to all his aspirations and thoughts. But now—and she
could not avoid the conclusion—Teddy had barricaded against her every side of
himself except one—the side that showed the manager of the Rancho de las
Sombras and a jolly chum who had forgiven and forgotten. Queerly enough the
words of Mr. Bannister’s description of her property came into her mind—“all
inclosed within a strong barbed-wire fence.”
“Teddy’s fenced, too,” said Octavia to herself.
It was not difficult for her to reason out the cause of his
fortifications. It had originated one night at the Hammersmiths’ ball. It
occurred at a time soon after she had decided to accept Colonel Beaupree and
his million, which was no more than her looks and the entrée she held to the
inner circles were worth. Teddy had proposed with all his impetuosity and fire,
and she looked him straight in the eyes, and said, coldly and finally: “Never
let me hear any such silly nonsense from you again.” “You won’t,” said Teddy,
with an expression around his mouth, and—now Teddy was inclosed within a strong
barbed-wire fence.
It was on this first ride of inspection that Teddy was seized by
the inspiration that suggested the name of Mother Goose’s heroine, and he at
once bestowed it upon Octavia. The idea, supported by both a similarity of
names and identity of occupations, seemed to strike him as a peculiarly happy
one, and he never tired of using it. The Mexicans on the ranch also took up the
name, adding another syllable to accommodate their lingual incapacity for the
final “p,” gravely referring to her as “La Madama Bo-Peepy.” Eventually it
spread, and “Madame Bo-Peep’s ranch” was as often mentioned as the “Rancho de
las Sombras.”
Came the long, hot season from May to September, when work is
scarce on the ranches. Octavia passed the days in a kind of lotus-eater’s
dream. Books, hammocks, correspondence with a few intimate friends, a renewed
interest in her old water-colour box and easel—these disposed of the sultry
hours of daylight. The evenings were always sure to bring enjoyment. Best of
all were the rapturous horseback rides with Teddy, when the moon gave light
over the wind-swept leagues, chaperoned by the wheeling night-hawk and the
startled owl. Often the Mexicans would come up from their shacks with their guitars
and sing the weirdest of heart-breaking songs. There were long, cosy chats on
the breezy gallery, and an interminable warfare of wits between Teddy and Mrs.
MacIntyre, whose abundant Scotch shrewdness often more than overmatched the
lighter humour in which she was lacking.
And the nights came, one after another, and were filed away by
weeks and months—nights soft and languorous and fragrant, that should have
driven Strephon to Chloe over wires however barbed, that might have drawn Cupid
himself to hunt, lasso in hand, among those amorous pastures—but Teddy kept his
fences up.
One July night Madame Bo-Peep and her ranch manager were sitting
on the east gallery. Teddy had been exhausting the science of prognostication
as to the probabilities of a price of twenty-four cents for the autumn clip,
and had then subsided into an anesthetic cloud of Havana smoke. Only as
incompetent a judge as a woman would have failed to note long ago that at least
a third of his salary must have gone up in the fumes of those imported
Regalias.
“Teddy,” said Octavia, suddenly, and rather sharply, “what are you
working down here on a ranch for?”
“One hundred per,” said Teddy, glibly, “and found.”
“I’ve a good mind to discharge you.”
“Can’t do it,” said Teddy, with a grin.
“Why not?” demanded Octavia, with argumentative heat.
“Under contract. Terms of sale respect all unexpired contracts.
Mine runs until 12 P. M., December thirty-first. You might get up at midnight
on that date and fire me. If you try it sooner I’ll be in a position to bring
legal proceedings.”
Octavia seemed to be considering the prospects of litigation.
“But,” continued Teddy cheerfully, “I’ve been thinking of
resigning anyway.”
Octavia’s rocking-chair ceased its motion. There were centipedes
in this country, she felt sure; and Indians, and vast, lonely, desolate, empty
wastes; all within strong barbed-wire fence. There was a Van Dresser pride, but
there was also a Van Dresser heart. She must know for certain whether or not he
had forgotten.
“Ah, well, Teddy,” she said, with a fine assumption of polite
interest, “it’s lonely down here; you’re longing to get back to the old life—to
polo and lobsters and theatres and balls.”
“Never cared much for balls,” said Teddy virtuously.
“You’re getting old, Teddy. Your memory is failing. Nobody ever
knew you to miss a dance, unless it occurred on the same night with another one
which you attended. And you showed such shocking bad taste, too, in dancing too
often with the same partner. Let me see, what was that Forbes girl’s name—the
one with wall eyes—Mabel, wasn’t it?”
“No; Adèle. Mabel was the one with the bony elbows. That wasn’t
wall in Adèle’s eyes. It was soul. We used to talk sonnets together, and
Verlaine. Just then I was trying to run a pipe from the Pierian spring.”
“You were on the floor with her,” said Octavia, undeflected, “five
times at the Hammersmiths’.”
“Hammersmiths’ what?” questioned Teddy, vacuously.
“Ball—ball,” said Octavia, viciously. “What were we talking of?”
“Eyes, I thought,” said Teddy, after some reflection; “and
elbows.”
“Those Hammersmiths,” went on Octavia, in her sweetest society
prattle, after subduing an intense desire to yank a handful of sunburnt, sandy
hair from the head lying back contentedly against the canvas of the steamer
chair, “had too much money. Mines, wasn’t it? It was something that paid
something to the ton. You couldn’t get a glass of plain water in their house.
Everything at that ball was dreadfully overdone.”
“It was,” said Teddy.
“Such a crowd there was!” Octavia continued, conscious that she
was talking the rapid drivel of a school-girl describing her first dance. “The
balconies were as warm as the rooms. I—lost—something at that ball.” The last
sentence was uttered in a tone calculated to remove the barbs from miles of
wire.
“So did I,” confessed Teddy, in a lower voice.
“A glove,” said Octavia, falling back as the enemy approached her
ditches.
“Caste,” said Teddy, halting his firing line without loss. “I
hobnobbed, half the evening with one of Hammersmith’s miners, a fellow who kept
his hands in his pockets, and talked like an archangel about reduction plants
and drifts and levels and sluice-boxes.”
“A pearl-gray glove, nearly new,” sighed Octavia, mournfully.
“A bang-up chap, that McArdle,” maintained Teddy approvingly. “A
man who hated olives and elevators; a man who handled mountains as croquettes,
and built tunnels in the air; a man who never uttered a word of silly nonsense
in his life. Did you sign those lease-renewal applications yet, madama? They’ve
got to be on file in the land office by the thirty-first.”
Teddy turned his head lazily. Octavia’s chair was vacant.
A certain centipede, crawling along the lines marked out by fate,
expounded the situation. It was early one morning while Octavia and Mrs.
Maclntyre were trimming the honeysuckle on the west gallery. Teddy had risen
and departed hastily before daylight in response to word that a flock of ewes
had been scattered from their bedding ground during the night by a
thunder-storm.
The centipede, driven by destiny, showed himself on the floor of
the gallery, and then, the screeches of the two women giving him his cue, he
scuttled with all his yellow legs through the open door into the furthermost
west room, which was Teddy’s. Arming themselves with domestic utensils selected
with regard to their length, Octavia and Mrs. Maclntyre, with much clutching of
skirts and skirmishing for the position of rear guard in the attacking force,
followed.
Once outside, the centipede seemed to have disappeared, and his
prospective murderers began a thorough but cautious search for their victim.
Even in the midst of such a dangerous and absorbing adventure
Octavia was conscious of an awed curiosity on finding herself in Teddy’s
sanctum. In that room he sat alone, silently communing with those secret
thoughts that he now shared with no one, dreamed there whatever dreams he now
called on no one to interpret.
It was the room of a Spartan or a soldier. In one corner stood a
wide, canvas-covered cot; in another, a small bookcase; in another, a grim stand
of Winchesters and shotguns. An immense table, strewn with letters, papers and
documents and surmounted by a set of pigeon-holes, occupied one side.
The centipede showed genius in concealing himself in such bare
quarters. Mrs. Maclntyre was poking a broom-handle behind the bookcase. Octavia
approached Teddy’s cot. The room was just as the manager had left it in his
hurry. The Mexican maid had not yet given it her attention. There was his big
pillow with the imprint of his head still in the centre. She thought the horrid
beast might have climbed the cot and hidden itself to bite Teddy. Centipedes
were thus cruel and vindictive toward managers.
She cautiously overturned the pillow, and then parted her lips to
give the signal for reinforcements at sight of a long, slender, dark object
lying there. But, repressing it in time, she caught up a glove, a pearl-gray
glove, flattened—it might be conceived—by many, many months of nightly pressure
beneath the pillow of the man who had forgotten the Hammersmiths’ ball. Teddy
must have left so hurriedly that morning that he had, for once, forgotten to
transfer it to its resting-place by day. Even managers, who are notoriously
wily and cunning, are sometimes caught up with.
Octavia slid the gray glove into the bosom of her summery morning
gown. It was hers. Men who put themselves within a strong barbed-wire fence,
and remember Hammersmith balls only by the talk of miners about sluice-boxes,
should not be allowed to possess such articles.
After all, what a paradise this prairie country was! How it
blossomed like the rose when you found things that were thought to be lost! How
delicious was that morning breeze coming in the windows, fresh and sweet with
the breath of the yellow ratama blooms! Might one not stand, for a minute, with
shining, far-gazing eyes, and dream that mistakes might be corrected?
Why was Mrs. Maclntyre poking about so absurdly with a broom?
“I’ve found it,” said Mrs. MacIntyre, banging the door. “Here it
is.”
“Did you lose something? asked Octavia, with sweetly polite
non-interest.
“The little devil!” said Mrs. Maclntyre, driven to violence.
“Ye’ve no forgotten him alretty?”
Between them they slew the centipede. Thus was he rewarded for his
agency toward the recovery of things lost at the Hammersmiths’ ball.
It seems that Teddy, in due course, remembered the glove, and when
he returned to the house at sunset made a secret but exhaustive search for it.
Not until evening, upon the moonlit eastern gallery, did he find it. It was
upon the hand that he had thought lost to him forever, and so he was moved to
repeat certain nonsense that he had been commanded never, never to utter again.
Teddy’s fences were down.
This time there was no ambition to stand in the way, and the
wooing was as natural and successful as should be between ardent shepherd and
gentle shepherdess.
The prairies changed to a garden. The Rancho de las Sombras became
the Ranch of Light.
A few days later Octavia received a letter from Mr. Bannister, in
reply to one she had written to him asking some questions about her business. A
portion of the letter ran as follows:
“I am at a loss to
account for your references to the sheep ranch. Two months after your departure
to take up your residence upon it, it was discovered that Colonel Beaupree’s
title was worthless. A deed came to light showing that he disposed of the
property before his death. The matter was reported to your manager, Mr.
Westlake, who at once repurchased the property. It is entirely beyond my powers
of conjecture to imagine how you have remained in ignorance of this fact. I beg
that you that will at once confer with that gentleman, who will, at least,
corroborate my statement.”
Octavia sought Teddy, with battle in her eye.
“What are you working on this ranch for?” she asked once more.
“One hundred—” he began to repeat, but saw in her face that she
knew. She held Mr. Bannister’s letter in her hand. He knew that the game was
up.
“It’s my ranch,” said Teddy, like a schoolboy detected in evil.
“It’s a mighty poor manager that isn’t able to absorb the boss’s business if
you give him time.”
“Why were you working down here?” pursued Octavia still struggling
after the key to the riddle of Teddy.
“To tell the truth, ’Tave,” said Teddy, with quiet candour, “it
wasn’t for the salary. That about kept me in cigars and sunburn lotions. I was
sent south by my doctor. ’Twas that right lung that was going to the bad on
account of over-exercise and strain at polo and gymnastics. I needed climate
and ozone and rest and things of that sort.”
In an instant Octavia was close against the vicinity of the
affected organ. Mr. Bannister’s letter fluttered to the floor.
“It’s—it’s well now, isn’t it, Teddy?”
“Sound as a mesquite chunk. I deceived you in one thing. I paid
fifty thousand for your ranch as soon as I found you had no title. I had just
about that much income accumulated at my banker’s while I’ve been herding sheep
down here, so it was almost like picking the thing up on a bargain-counter for
a penny. There’s another little surplus of unearned increment piling up there,
’Tave. I’ve been thinking of a wedding trip in a yacht with white ribbons tied
to the mast, through the Mediterranean, and then up among the Hebrides and down
Norway to the Zuyder Zee.”
“And I was thinking,” said Octavia, softly, “of a wedding gallop
with my manager among the flocks of sheep and back to a wedding breakfast with
Mrs. MacIntyre on the gallery, with, maybe, a sprig of orange blossom fastened
to the red jar above the table.”
Teddy laughed, and began to chant:
“Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,
And doesn’t know where to find ’em.
Let ’em alone, and they’ll come home,
And—”
Octavia drew his head down, and whispered in his ear.
But that is one of the tales they brought behind them.
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