I have said hard words of San Francisco;
they must scarce be literally understood (one cannot
suppose the Israelites did justice to the land of
Pharaoh); and the city took a fine revenge of me on
my return. She had never worn a more becoming
guise; the sun shone, the air was lively, the people
had flowers in their button-holes and smiles upon their
faces; and as I made my way towards Jim’s place
of employment, with some very black anxieties at heart,
I seemed to myself a blot on the surrounding gaiety.
My destination was in a by-street
in a mean, rickety building. “The Franklin
H. Dodge Steam Printing Company” appeared upon
its front, and, in characters of greater freshness,
so as to suggest recent conversion, the watch-cry,
“White Labour Only.” In the office
in a dusty pen Jim sat alone before a table.
A wretched change had overtaken him in clothes, body,
and bearing; he looked sick and shabby. He who
had once rejoiced in his day’s employment, like
a horse among pastures, now sat staring on a column
of accounts, idly chewing a pen, at times heavily sighing,
the picture of inefficiency and inattention.
He was sunk deep in a painful reverie; he neither
saw nor heard me, and I stood and watched him unobserved.
I had a sudden vain relenting. Repentance bludgeoned
me. As I had predicted to Nares, I stood and
kicked myself. Here was I come home again, my
honour saved; there was my friend in want of rest,
nursing, and a generous diet; and I asked myself, with
Falstaff, “What is in that word honour? what
is that honour?” and, like Falstaff, I told
myself that it was air.
“Jim!” said I.
“Loudon!” he gasped, and jumped from his
chair and stood shaking.
The next moment I was over the barrier, and we were
hand in hand.
“My poor old man!” I cried.
“Thank God, you’re home
at last!” he gulped, and kept patting my shoulder
with his hand.
“I’ve no good news for you, Jim,”
said I.
“You’ve come that’s
the good news that I want,” he replied.
“O how I have longed for you, Loudon!”
“I couldn’t do what you
wrote me,” I said, lowering my voice. “The
creditors have it all. I couldn’t do it.”
“S-s-h!” returned Jim.
“I was crazy when I wrote. I could never
have looked Mamie in the face if we had done it.
O, Loudon, what a gift that woman is! You think
you know something of life; you just don’t know
anything. It’s the goodness of the
woman, it’s a revelation!”
“That’s all right,”
said I. “That’s how I hoped to hear
you, Jim.”
“And so the Flying Scud
was a fraud,” he resumed. “I didn’t
quite understand your letter, but I made out that.”
“Fraud is a mild term for it,”
said I. “The creditors will never believe
what fools we were. And that reminds me,”
I continued, rejoicing in the transition, “how
about the bankruptcy?”
“You were lucky to be out of
that,” answered Jim, shaking his head; “you
were lucky not to see the papers. The Occidental
called me a fifth-rate kerb-stone broker with water
on the brain; another said I was a tree-frog that
had got into the same meadow with Longhurst, and had
blown myself out till I went pop. It was rough
on a man in his honeymoon; so was what they said about
my looks, and what I had on, and the way I perspired.
But I braced myself up with the Flying Scud. How
did it exactly figure out, anyway? I don’t
seem to catch on to that story, Loudon.”
“The devil you don’t!”
thinks I to myself; and then aloud, “You see,
we had neither one of us good luck. I didn’t
do much more than cover current expenses, and you
got floored immediately. How did we come to go
so soon?”
“Well, we’ll have to have
a talk over all this,” said Jim, with a sudden
start. “I should be getting to my books,
and I guess you had better go up right away to Mamie.
She’s at Speedy’s. She expects you
with impatience. She regards you in the light
of a favourite brother, Loudon.”
Any scheme was welcome which allowed
me to postpone the hour of explanation, and avoid
(were it only for a breathing space) the topic of
the Flying Scud. I hastened accordingly
to Bush Street. Mrs. Speedy, already rejoicing
in the return of a spouse, hailed me with acclamation.
“And it’s beautiful you’re looking,
Mr. Dodd, my dear,” she was kind enough to say.
“And a muracle they naygur waheenies let ye lave
the oilands. I have my suspicions of Shpeedy,”
she added roguishly. “Did ye see him after
the naygresses now?”
I gave Speedy an unblemished character.
“The one of ye will never bethray
the other,” said the playful dame, and ushered
me into a bare room, where Mamie sat working a type-writer.
I was touched by the cordiality of
her greeting. With the prettiest gesture in the
world she gave me both her hands, wheeled forth a chair,
and produced from a cupboard a tin of my favourite
tobacco, and a book of my exclusive cigarette-papers.
“There!” she cried; “you
see, Mr. Loudon, we were all prepared for you:
the things were bought the very day you sailed.”
I imagined she had always intended
me a pleasant welcome; but the certain fervour of
sincerity, which I could not help remarking, flowed
from an unexpected source. Captain Nares, with
a kindness for which I can never be sufficiently grateful,
had stolen a moment from his occupations, driven to
call on Mamie, and drawn her a generous picture of
my prowess at the wreck. She was careful not to
breathe a word of this interview, till she had led
me on to tell my adventures for myself.
“Ah! Captain Nares was
better,” she cried, when I had done. “From
your account, I have only learned one new thing, that
you are modest as well as brave.”
I cannot tell with what sort of disclamation
I sought to reply.
“It is of no use,” said
Mamie. “I know a hero. And when I heard
of you working all day like a common labourer, with
your hands bleeding and your nails broken and
how you told the captain to ‘crack on’
(I think he said) in the storm, when he was terrified
himself and the danger of that horrid mutiny” (Nares
had been obligingly dipping his brush in earthquake
and eclipse) “and how it was all done,
in part at least, for Jim and me I felt
we could never say how we admired and thanked you.”
“Mamie,” I cried, “don’t
talk of thanks; it is not a word to be used between
friends. Jim and I have been prosperous together;
now we shall be poor together. We’ve done
our best, and that’s all that need be said.
The next thing is for me to find a situation, and send
you and Jim up country for a long holiday in the redwoods for
a holiday Jim has got to have.”
“Jim can’t take your money, Mr. Loudon,”
said Mamie.
“Jim?” cried I. “He’s
got to. Didn’t I take his?”
Presently after, Jim himself arrived,
and before he had yet done mopping his brow, he was
at me with the accursed subject. “Now, Loudon,”
said he, “here we are, all together, the day’s
work done and the evening before us; just start in
with the whole story.”
“One word on business first,”
said I, speaking from the lips outward, and meanwhile
(in the private apartments of my brain) trying for
the thousandth time to find some plausible arrangement
of my story. “I want to have a notion how
we stand about the bankruptcy.”
“O, that’s ancient history,”
cried Jim. “We paid seven cents, and a
wonder we did as well. The receiver ”
(methought a spasm seized him at the name of this
official, and he broke off). “But it’s
all past and done with, anyway; and what I want to
get at is the facts about the wreck. I don’t
seem to understand it; appears to me like as there
was something underneath.”
“There was nothing in
it, anyway,” I said, with a forced laugh.
“That’s what I want to judge of,”
returned Jim.
“How the mischief is it I can
never keep you to that bankruptcy? It looks as
if you avoided it,” said I for a man
in my situation, with unpardonable folly.
“Don’t it look a little
as if you were trying to avoid the wreck?” asked
Jim.
It was my own doing; there was no
retreat. “My dear fellow, if you make a
point of it, here goes!” said I, and launched
with spurious gaiety into the current of my tale.
I told it with point and spirit; described the island
and the wreck, mimicked Anderson and the Chinese, maintained
the suspense.... My pen has stumbled on the fatal
word. I maintained the suspense so well that
it was never relieved; and when I stopped I
dare not say concluded, where there was no conclusion I
found Jim and Mamie regarding me with surprise.
“Well?” said Jim.
“Well, that’s all,” said I.
“But how do you explain it?” he asked.
“I can’t explain it,” said I.
Mamie wagged her head ominously.
“But, Great Cæsar’s ghost,
the money was offered!” cried Jim. “It
won’t do, Loudon; it’s nonsense on the
face of it! I don’t say but what you and
Nares did your best; I’m sure, of course, you
did; but I do say you got fooled. I say the stuff
is in that ship to-day, and I say I mean to get it.”
“There is nothing in the ship,
I tell you, but old wood and iron!” said I.
“You’ll see,” said
Jim. “Next time I go myself. I’ll
take Mamie for the trip: Longhurst won’t
refuse me the expense of a schooner. You wait
till I get the searching of her.”
“But you can’t search her!” cried
I. “She’s burned!”
“Burned!” cried Mamie,
starting a little from the attitude of quiescent capacity
in which she had hitherto sat to hear me, her hands
folded in her lap.
There was an appreciable pause.
“I beg your pardon, Loudon,”
began Jim at last, “but why in snakes did you
burn her?”
“It was an idea of Nares’s,” said
I.
“This is certainly the strangest circumstance
of all,” observed Mamie.
“I must say, Loudon, it does
seem kind of unexpected,” added Jim. “It
seems kind of crazy even. What did you what
did Nares expect to gain by burning her?”
“I don’t know; it didn’t
seem to matter; we had got all there was to get,”
said I.
“That’s the very point,”
cried Jim. “It was quite plain you hadn’t.”
“What made you so sure?” asked Mamie.
“How can I tell you?”
I cried. “We had been all through her.
We were sure; that’s all that I can say.”
“I begin to think you were,”
she returned, with a significant emphasis.
Jim hurriedly intervened. “What
I don’t quite make out, Loudon, is, that you
don’t seem to appreciate the peculiarities of
the thing,” said he. “It doesn’t
seem to have struck you same as it does me.”
“Pshaw! why go on with this?”
cried Mamie, suddenly rising. “Mr. Dodd
is not telling us either what he thinks or what he
knows.”
“Mamie!” cried Jim.
“You need not be concerned for
his feelings, James; he is not concerned for yours,”
returned the lady. “He dare not deny it,
besides. And this is not the first time he has
practised reticence. Have you forgotten that
he knew the address, and did not tell it you until
that man had escaped?”
Jim turned to me pleadingly we
were all on our feet. “Loudon,” he
said, “you see Mamie has some fancy, and I must
say there’s just a sort of a shadow of an excuse;
for it is bewildering even to me,
Loudon, with my trained business intelligence.
For God’s sake clear it up.”
“This serves me right,”
said I. “I should not have tried to keep
you in the dark; I should have told you at first that
I was pledged to secrecy; I should have asked you
to trust me in the beginning. It is all I can
do now. There is more of the story, but it concerns
none of us. My tongue is tied. I have given
my word of honour. You must trust me, and try
to forgive me.”
“I daresay I am very stupid,
Mr. Dodd,” began Mamie, with an alarming sweetness,
“but I thought you went upon this trip as my
husband’s representative and with my husband’s
money? You tell us now that you are pledged,
but I should have thought you were pledged first of
all to James. You say it does not concern us;
we are poor people, and my husband is sick, and it
concerns us a great deal to understand how we come
to have lost our money, and why our representative
comes back to us with nothing. You ask that we
should trust you; you do not seem to understand the
question we are asking ourselves is whether we have
not trusted you too much.”
“I do not ask you to trust me,”
I replied. “I ask Jim. He knows me.”
“You think you can do what you
please with James; you trust to his affection, do
you not? And me, I suppose, you do not consider,”
said Mamie. “But it was perhaps an unfortunate
day for you when we were married, for I at least am
not blind. The crew run away, the ship is sold
for a great deal of money, you know that man’s
address and you conceal it; you do not find what you
were sent to look for, and yet you burn the ship;
and now, when we ask explanations, you are pledged
to secrecy! But I am pledged to no such thing;
I will not stand by in silence and see my sick and
ruined husband betrayed by his condescending friend.
I will give you the truth for once. Mr. Dodd,
you have been bought and sold.”
“Mamie,” cried Jim, “no
more of this! It’s me you’re striking;
it’s only me you hurt. You don’t
know, you cannot understand these things. Why,
to-day, if it hadn’t been for Loudon, I couldn’t
have looked you in the face. He saved my honesty.”
“I have heard plenty of this
talk before,” she replied. “You are
a sweet-hearted fool, and I love you for it.
But I am a clear-headed woman; my eyes are open, and
I understand this man’s hypocrisy. Did he
not come here to-day and pretend he would take a situation pretend
he would share his hard-earned wages with us until
you were well? Pretend! It makes me furious!
His wages! a share of his wages! That would have
been your pittance, that would have been your share
of the Flying Scud you who worked
and toiled for him when he was a beggar in the streets
of Paris. But we do not want your charity; thank
God, I can work for my own husband! See what
it is to have obliged a gentleman! He would let
you pick him up when he was begging; he would stand
and look on and let you black his shoes, and sneer
at you. For you were always sneering at my James;
you always looked down upon him in your heart, you
know it!” She turned back to Jim. “And
now when he is rich,” she began, and then swooped
again on me. “For you are rich, I dare you
to deny it; I defy you to look me in the face and
try to deny that you are rich rich with
our money my husband’s money ”
Heaven knows to what a height she
might have risen, being, by this time, bodily whirled
away in her own hurricane of words. Heart-sickness,
a black depression, a treacherous sympathy with my
assailant, pity unutterable for poor Jim, already
filled, divided, and abashed my spirit. Flight
seemed the only remedy; and making a private sign to
Jim, as if to ask permission, I slunk from the unequal
field.
I was but a little way down the street,
when I was arrested by the sound of some one running,
and Jim’s voice calling me by name. He had
followed me with a letter which had been long awaiting
my return.
I took it in a dream. “This
has been a devil of a business,” said I.
“Don’t think hard of Mamie,”
he pleaded. “It’s the way she’s
made; it’s her high-toned loyalty. And
of course I know it’s all right. I know
your sterling character; but you didn’t, somehow,
make out to give us the thing straight, Loudon.
Anybody might have I mean it I
mean ”
“Never mind what you mean, my
poor Jim,” said I. “She’s a
gallant little woman and a loyal wife: and I
thought her splendid. My story was as fishy as
the devil. I’ll never think the less of
either her or you.”
“It’ll blow over; it must blow over,”
said he.
“It never can,” I returned,
sighing: “and don’t you try to make
it! Don’t name me, unless it’s with
an oath. And get home to her right away.
Good-bye, my best of friends. Good-bye, and God
bless you. We shall never meet again.”
“O, Loudon, that we should live
to say such words!” he cried.
I had no views on life, beyond an
occasional impulse to commit suicide, or to get drunk,
and drifted down the street, semi-conscious, walking
apparently on air in the light-headedness of grief.
I had money in my pocket, whether mine or my creditors’
I had no means of guessing; and, the “Poodle
Dog” lying in my path, I went mechanically in
and took a table. A waiter attended me, and I
suppose I gave my orders; for presently I found myself,
with a sudden return of consciousness, beginning dinner.
On the white cloth at my elbow lay the letter, addressed
in a clerk’s hand, and bearing an English stamp
and the Edinburgh postmark. A bowl of bouillon
and a glass of wine awakened in one corner of my brain
(where all the rest was in mourning, the blinds down
as for a funeral) a faint stir of curiosity; and while
I waited the next course, wondering the while what
I had ordered, I opened and began to read the epoch-making
document:
“DEAR SIR, I am charged
with the melancholy duty of announcing to you the
death of your excellent grandfather, Mr. Alexander
Loudon, on the 17th ult. On Sunday, the 13th,
he went to church as usual in the forenoon, and
stopped on his way home, at the corner of Princes
Street, in one of our seasonable east winds, to
talk with an old friend. The same evening
acute bronchitis declared itself; from the first,
Dr. M’Combie anticipated a fatal result, and
the old gentleman appeared to have no illusion
as to his own state. He repeatedly assured
me it was ‘by’ with him now; ‘and
high time too,’ he once added with characteristic
asperity. He was not in the least changed on
the approach of death: only (what I am sure must
be very grateful to your feelings) he seemed to
think and speak even more kindly than usual of
yourself, referring to you as ‘Jeannie’s
yin,’ with strong expressions of regard.
’He was the only one I ever liket of the hale
jing-bang,’ was one of his expressions; and
you will be glad to know that he dwelt particularly
on the dutiful respect you had always displayed
in your relations. The small codicil, by which
he bequeaths you his Molesworth, and other professional
works, was added (you will observe) on the day
before his death; so that you were in his thoughts
until the end. I should say that, though rather
a trying patient, he was most tenderly nursed by
your uncle, and your cousin, Miss Euphemia.
I enclose a copy of the testament, by which you will
see that you share equally with Mr. Adam, and that
I hold at your disposal a sum nearly approaching
seventeen thousand pounds. I beg to congratulate
you on this considerable acquisition, and expect your
orders, to which I shall hasten to give my best
attention. Thinking that you might desire
to return at once to this country, and not knowing
how you may be placed, I enclose a credit for six hundred
pounds. Please sign the accompanying slip,
and let me have it at your earliest convenience.
“I am, dear sir, yours truly,
“W. RUTHERFORD
GREGG.”
“God bless the old gentleman!”
I thought; “and for that matter God bless Uncle
Adam! and my cousin Euphemia! and Mr. Gregg!”
I had a vision of that grey old life now brought to
an end “and high time too” a
vision of those Sabbath streets alternately vacant
and filled with silent people; of the babel of the
bells, the long-drawn psalmody, the shrewd sting of
the east wind, the hollow, echoing, dreary house to
which “Ecky” had returned with the hand
of death already on his shoulder; a vision, too, of
the long, rough country lad, perhaps a serious courtier
of the lasses in the hawthorn den, perhaps a rustic
dancer on the green, who had first earned and answered
to that harsh diminutive. And I asked myself
if, on the whole, poor Ecky had succeeded in life;
if the last state of that man were not on the whole
worse than the first; and the house in Randolph Crescent
a less admirable dwelling than the hamlet where he
saw the day and grew to manhood. Here was a consolatory
thought for one who was himself a failure.
Yes, I declare the word came in my
mind; and all the while, in another partition of the
brain, I was glowing and singing for my new-found
opulence. The pile of gold four thousand
two hundred and fifty double eagles, seventeen thousand
ugly sovereigns, twenty-one thousand two hundred and
fifty Napoleons danced, and rang and ran
molten, and lit up life with their effulgence, in
the eye of fancy. Here were all things made plain
to me: Paradise Paris, I mean regained,
Carthew protected, Jim restored, the creditors ...
“The creditors!” I repeated,
and sank back benumbed. It was all theirs to
the last farthing: my grandfather had died too
soon to save me.
I must have somewhere a rare vein
of decision. In that revolutionary moment I found
myself prepared for all extremes except the one:
ready to do anything, or to go anywhere, so long as
I might save my money. At the worst, there was
flight, flight to some of those blest countries where
the serpent extradition has not yet entered in.
On no condition is extradition
Allowed
in Callao!
the old lawless words
haunted me; and I saw myself hugging my gold in the
company of such men as had once made and sung them,
in the rude and bloody wharf-side drinking-shops of
Chili and Peru. The run of my ill-luck, the breach
of my old friendship, this bubble fortune flaunted
for a moment in my eyes and snatched again, had made
me desperate and (in the expressive vulgarism) ugly.
To drink vile spirits among vile companions by the
flare of a pine-torch; to go burthened with my furtive
treasure in a belt; to fight for it knife in hand,
rolling on a clay floor; to flee perpetually in fresh
ships and to be chased through the sea from isle to
isle, seemed, in my then frame of mind, a welcome
series of events.
That was for the worst; but it began
to dawn slowly on my mind that there was yet a possible
better. Once escaped, once safe in Callao, I
might approach my creditors with a good grace; and,
properly handled by a cunning agent, it was just possible
they might accept some easy composition. The
hope recalled me to the bankruptcy. It was strange,
I reflected; often as I had questioned Jim, he had
never obliged me with an answer. In his haste
for news about the wreck, my own no less legitimate
curiosity had gone disappointed. Hateful as the
thought was to me, I must return at once and find
out where I stood.
I left my dinner still unfinished,
paying for the whole, of course, and tossing the waiter
a gold piece. I was reckless; I knew not what
was mine, and cared not: I must take what I could
get and give as I was able; to rob and to squander
seemed the complementary parts of my new destiny.
I walked up Bush Street, whistling, brazening myself
to confront Mamie in the first place, and the world
at large and a certain visionary judge upon a bench
in the second. Just outside, I stopped and lighted
a cigar to give me greater countenance; and puffing
this and wearing what (I am sure) was a wretched assumption
of braggadocio, I reappeared on the scene of my disgrace.
My friend and his wife were finishing
a poor meal rags of old mutton, the remainder
cakes from breakfast eaten cold, and a starveling pot
of coffee.
“I beg your pardon, Mrs. Pinkerton,”
said I. “Sorry to inflict my presence where
it cannot be desired; but there is a piece of business
necessary to be discussed.”
“Pray do not consider me,”
said Mamie, rising, and she sailed into the adjoining
bedroom.
Jim watched her go and shook his head;
he looked miserably old and ill.
“What is it now?” he asked.
“Perhaps you remember you answered none of my
questions,” said I.
“Your questions?” faltered Jim.
“Even so, Jim; my questions,”
I repeated. “I put questions as well as
yourself; and however little I may have satisfied Mamie
with my answers, I beg to remind you that you gave
me none at all.”
“You mean about the bankruptcy?” asked
Jim.
I nodded.
He writhed in his chair. “The
straight truth is, I was ashamed,” he said.
“I was trying to dodge you. I’ve been
playing fast and loose with you, Loudon; I’ve
deceived you from the first, I blush to own it.
And here you came home and put the very question I
was fearing. Why did we bust so soon? Your
keen business eye had not deceived you. That’s
the point, that’s my shame; that’s what
killed me this afternoon when Mamie was treating you
so, and my conscience was telling me all the time,
‘Thou art the man.’”
“What was it, Jim?” I asked.
“What I had been at all the
time, Loudon,” he wailed; “and I don’t
know how I’m to look you in the face and say
it, after my duplicity. It was stocks,”
he added in a whisper.
“And you were afraid to tell
me that!” I cried. “You poor, old,
cheerless dreamer! what would it matter what you did
or didn’t? Can’t you see we’re
doomed? And anyway, that’s not my point.
It’s how I stand that I want to know. There
is a particular reason. Am I clear? Have
I a certificate, or what have I to do to get one?
And when will it be dated? You can’t think
what hangs by it!”
“That’s the worst of all,”
said Jim, like a man in a dream; “I can’t
see how to tell him!”
“What do you mean?” I
cried, a small pang of terror at my heart.
“I’m afraid I sacrificed
you, Loudon,” he said, looking at me pitifully.
“Sacrificed me?” I repeated.
“How? What do you mean by sacrifice?”
“I know it’ll shock your
delicate self-respect,” he said; “but what
was I to do? Things looked so bad. The receiver ”
(as usual, the name stuck in his throat, and he began
afresh). “There was a lot of talk, the
reporters were after me already; there was the trouble,
and all about the Mexican business; and I got scared
right out, and I guess I lost my head. You weren’t
there, you see, and that was my temptation.”
I did not know how long he might thus
beat about the bush with dreadful hintings, and I
was already beside myself with terror. What had
he done? I saw he had been tempted; I knew from
his letters that he was in no condition to resist.
How had he sacrificed the absent?
“Jim,” I said, “you
must speak right out. I’ve got all that
I can carry.”
“Well,” he said “I
know it was a liberty I made it out you
were no business man, only a stone-broke painter;
that half the time you didn’t know anything,
anyway, particularly money and accounts. I said
you never could be got to understand whose was whose.
I had to say that because of some entries in the books ”
“For God’s sake,”
I cried, “put me out of this agony! What
did you accuse me of?”
“Accuse you of?” repeated
Jim. “Of what I’m telling you.
And there being no deed of partnership, I made out
you were only a kind of clerk that I called a partner
just to give you taffy; and so I got you ranked a
creditor on the estate for your wages and the money
you had lent. And ”
I believe I reeled. “A
creditor!” I roared; “a creditor!
I’m not in the bankruptcy at all?”
“No,” said Jim. “I know it
was a liberty ”
“O, damn your liberty! read
that,” I cried, dashing the letter before him
on the table, “and call in your wife, and be
done with eating this truck” as I
spoke I slung the cold mutton in the empty grate “and
let’s all go and have a champagne supper.
I’ve dined I’m sure I don’t
remember what I had; I’d dine again ten scores
of times upon a night like this. Read it, you
blazing ass! I’m not insane. Here,
Mamie,” I continued, opening the bedroom door,
“come out and make it up with me, and go and
kiss your husband; and I’ll tell you what, after
the supper, let’s go to some place where there’s
a band, and I’ll waltz with you till sunrise.”
“What does it all mean?” cried Jim.
“It means we have a champagne
supper to-night, and all go to Vapor Valley or to
Monterey to-morrow,” said I. “Mamie,
go and get your things on; and you, Jim, sit down
right where you are, take a sheet of paper, and tell
Franklin Dodge to go to Texas. Mamie, you
were right, my dear; I was rich all the time, and
didn’t know it.”