By
Bret Harte
They had all known him as a shiftless,
worthless creature. From the time he first entered
Redwood Camp, carrying his entire effects in a red
handkerchief on the end of a long-handled shovel, until
he lazily drifted out of it on a plank in the terrible
inundation of ’56, they never expected anything
better of him. In a community of strong men with
sullen virtues and charmingly fascinating vices, he
was tolerated as possessing neither not
even rising by any dominant human weakness or ludicrous
quality to the importance of a butt. In the dramatis
personae of Redwood Camp he was a simple “super” who
had only passive, speechless roles in those fierce
dramas that were sometimes unrolled beneath its green-curtained
pines. Nameless and penniless, he was overlooked
by the census and ignored by the tax collector, while
in a hotly-contested election for sheriff, when even
the head-boards of the scant cemetery were consulted
to fill the poll-lists, it was discovered that neither
candidate had thought fit to avail himself of his actual
vote. He was debarred the rude heraldry of a nickname
of achievement, and in a camp made up of “Euchre
Bills,” “Poker Dicks,” “Profane
Pete,” and “Snap-shot Harry,” was
known vaguely as “him,” “Skeesicks,”
or “that coot.” It was remembered
long after, with a feeling of superstition, that he
had never even met with the dignity of an accident,
nor received the fleeting honor of a chance shot meant
for somebody else in any of the liberal and broadly
comprehensive encounters which distinguished the camp.
And the inundation that finally carried him out of
it was partly anticipated by his passive incompetency,
for while the others escaped or were drowned
in escaping he calmly floated off on his
plank without an opposing effort.
For all that, Elijah Martin which
was his real name was far from being unamiable
or repellent. That he was cowardly, untruthful,
selfish, and lazy, was undoubtedly the fact; perhaps
it was his peculiar misfortune that, just then, courage,
frankness, generosity, and activity were the dominant
factors in the life of Redwood Camp. His submissive
gentleness, his unquestioned modesty, his half refinement,
and his amiable exterior consequently availed him
nothing against the fact that he was missed during
a raid of the Digger Indians, and lied to account for
it; or that he lost his right to a gold discovery
by failing to make it good against a bully, and selfishly
kept this discovery from the knowledge of the camp.
Yet this weakness awakened no animosity in his companions,
and it is probable that the indifference of the camp
to his fate in this final catastrophe came purely
from a simple forgetfulness of one who at that supreme
moment was weakly incapable.
Such was the reputation and such the
antecedents of the man who, on the 15th of March,
1856, found himself adrift in a swollen tributary of
the Minyo. A spring freshet of unusual volume
had flooded the adjacent river until, bursting its
bounds, it escaped through the narrow, wedge-shaped
valley that held Redwood Camp. For a day and night
the surcharged river poured half its waters through
the straggling camp. At the end of that time
every vestige of the little settlement was swept away;
all that was left was scattered far and wide in the
country, caught in the hanging branches of water-side
willows and alders, embayed in sluggish pools, dragged
over submerged meadows, and one fragment bearing
up Elijah Martin pursuing the devious courses
of an unknown tributary fifty miles away. Had
he been a rash, impatient man, he would have been speedily
drowned in some earlier desperate attempt to reach
the shore; had he been an ordinary bold man, he would
have succeeded in transferring himself to the branches
of some obstructing tree; but he was neither, and
he clung to his broken raft-like berth with an endurance
that was half the paralysis of terror and half the
patience of habitual misfortune. Eventually he
was caught in a side current, swept to the bank, and
cast ashore on an unexplored wilderness.
His first consciousness was one of
hunger that usurped any sentiment of gratitude for
his escape from drowning. As soon as his cramped
limbs permitted, he crawled out of the bushes in search
of food. He did not know where he was; there
was no sign of habitation or even occupation anywhere.
He had been too terrified to notice the direction
in which he had drifted even if he had possessed
the ordinary knowledge of a backwoodsman, which he
did not. He was helpless. In his bewildered
state, seeing a squirrel cracking a nut on the branch
of a hollow tree near him, he made a half-frenzied
dart at the frightened animal, which ran away.
But the same association of ideas in his torpid and
confused brain impelled him to search for the squirrel’s
hoard in the hollow of the tree. He ate the few
hazel-nuts he found there, ravenously. The purely
animal instinct satisfied, he seemed to have borrowed
from it a certain strength and intuition. He
limped through the thicket not unlike some awkward,
shy quadrumane, stopping here and there to peer
out through the openings over the marshes that lay
beyond. His sight, hearing, and even the sense
of smell had become preternaturally acute. It
was the latter which suddenly arrested his steps with
the odor of dried fish. It had a significance
beyond the mere instincts of hunger it
indicated the contiguity of some Indian encampment.
And as such it meant danger, torture, and
death.
He stopped, trembled violently, and
tried to collect his scattered senses. Redwood
Camp had embroiled itself needlessly and brutally with
the surrounding Indians, and only held its own against
them by reckless courage and unerring marksmanship.
The frequent use of a casual wandering Indian as a
target for the practising rifles of its members had
kept up an undying hatred in the heart of the aborigines
and stimulated them to terrible and isolated reprisals.
The scalped and skinned dead body of Jack Trainer,
tied on his horse and held hideously upright by a
cross of wood behind his saddle, had passed, one night,
a slow and ghastly apparition, into camp; the corpse
of Dick Ryner had been found anchored on the river-bed,
disembowelled and filled with stone and gravel.
The solitary and unprotected member of Redwood Camp
who fell into the enemy’s hands was doomed.
Elijah Martin remembered this, but
his fears gradually began to subside in a certain
apathy of the imagination, which, perhaps, dulled his
apprehensions and allowed the instinct of hunger to
become again uppermost. He knew that the low
bark tents, or wigwams, of the Indians were hung
with strips of dried salmon, and his whole being was
new centered upon an attempt to stealthily procure
a delicious morsel. As yet he had distinguished
no other sign of life or habitation; a few moments
later, however, and grown bolder with an animal-like
trustfulness in his momentary security, he crept out
of the thicket and found himself near a long, low
mound or burrow-like structure of mud and bark on
the river-bank. A single narrow opening, not unlike
the entrance of an Esquimau hut, gave upon the river.
Martin had no difficulty in recognizing the character
of the building. It was a “sweathouse,”
an institution common to nearly all the aboriginal
tribes of California. Half a religious temple,
it was also half a sanitary asylum, was used as a
Russian bath or superheated vault, from which the braves,
sweltering and stifling all night, by smothered fires,
at early dawn plunged, perspiring, into the ice-cold
river. The heat and smoke were further utilized
to dry and cure the long strips of fish hanging from
the roof, and it was through the narrow aperture that
served as a chimney that the odor escaped which Martin
had detected. He knew that as the bathers only
occupied the house from midnight to early morn, it
was now probably empty. He advanced confidently
toward it.
He was a little surprised to find
that the small open space between it and the river
was occupied by a rude scaffolding, like that on which
certain tribes exposed their dead, but in this instance
it only contained the feathered leggings, fringed
blanket, and eagle-plumed head-dress of some brave.
He did not, however, linger in this plainly visible
area, but quickly dropped on all fours and crept into
the interior of the house. Here he completed
his feast with the fish, and warmed his chilled limbs
on the embers of the still smouldering fires.
It was while drying his tattered clothes and shoeless
feet that he thought of the dead brave’s useless
leggings and moccasins, and it occurred to him that
he would be less likely to attract the Indians’
attention from a distance and provoke a ready arrow,
if he were disguised as one of them. Crawling
out again, he quickly secured, not only the leggings,
but the blanket and head-dress, and putting them on,
cast his own clothes into the stream. A bolder,
more energetic, or more provident man would have followed
the act by quickly making his way back to the thicket
to reconnoitre, taking with him a supply of fish for
future needs. But Elijah Martin succumbed again
to the recklessness of inertia; he yielded once more
to the animal instinct of momentary security.
He returned to the interior of the hut, curled himself
again on the ashes, and weakly resolving to sleep
until moonrise, and as weakly hesitating, ended by
falling into uneasy but helpless stupor.
When he awoke, the rising sun, almost
level with the low entrance to the sweat-house, was
darting its direct rays into the interior, as if searching
it with fiery spears. He had slept ten hours.
He rose tremblingly to his knees. Everything
was quiet without; he might yet escape. He crawled
to the opening. The open space before it was empty,
but the scaffolding was gone. The clear, keen
air revived him. As he sprang out, erect, a shout
that nearly stunned him seemed to rise from the earth
on all sides. He glanced around him in a helpless
agony of fear. A dozen concentric circles of
squatting Indians, whose heads were visible above
the reeds, encompassed the banks around the sunken
base of the sweat-house with successive dusky rings.
Every avenue of escape seemed closed. Perhaps
for that reason the attitude of his surrounding captors
was passive rather than aggressive, and the shrewd,
half-Hebraic profiles nearest him expressed only stoical
waiting. There was a strange similarity of expression
in his own immovable apathy of despair. His only
sense of averting his fate was a confused idea of explaining
his intrusion. His desperate memory yielded a
few common Indian words. He pointed automatically
to himself and the stream. His white lips moved.
“I come from the river!”
A guttural cry, as if the whole assembly
were clearing their throats, went round the different
circles. The nearest rocked themselves to and
fro and bent their feathered heads toward him.
A hollow-cheeked, decrepit old man arose and said,
simply:
“It is he! The great chief has come!”
He was saved. More than that,
he was re-created. For, by signs and intimations
he was quickly made aware that since the death of their
late chief, their medicine-men had prophesied that
his perfect successor should appear miraculously before
them, borne noiselessly on the river from the
sea, in the plumes and insignia of his predecessor.
This mere coincidence of appearance and costume might
not have been convincing to the braves had not Elijah
Martin’s actual deficiencies contributed to
their unquestioned faith in him. Not only his
inert possession of the sweat-house and his apathetic
attitude in their presence, but his utter and complete
unlikeness to the white frontiersmen of their knowledge
and tradition creatures of fire and sword
and malevolent activity as well as his
manifest dissimilarity to themselves, settled their
conviction of his supernatural origin. His gentle,
submissive voice, his yielding will, his lazy helplessness,
the absence of strange weapons and fierce explosives
in his possession, his unwonted sobriety all
proved him an exception to his apparent race that
was in itself miraculous. For it must be confessed
that, in spite of the cherished theories of most romances
and all statesmen and commanders, that fear is
the great civilizer of the savage barbarian, and that
he is supposed to regard the prowess of the white
man and his mysterious death-dealing weapons as evidence
of his supernatural origin and superior creation, the
facts have generally pointed to the reverse.
Elijah Martin was not long in discovering that when
the Minyo hunter, with his obsolete bow, dropped dead
by a bullet from a viewless and apparently noiseless
space, it was not considered the lightnings of
an avenging Deity, but was traced directly to the
ambushed rifle of Kansas Joe, swayed by a viciousness
quite as human as their own; the spectacle of Blizzard
Dick, verging on delirium tremens, and riding “amuck”
into an Indian village with a revolver in each hand,
did not impress them as a supernatural act, nor
excite their respectful awe as much as the less harmful
frenzy of one of their own medicine-men; they were
not influenced by implacable white gods, who
relaxed only to drive hard bargains and exchange mildewed
flour and shoddy blankets for their fish and furs.
I am afraid they regarded these raids of Christian
civilization as they looked upon grasshopper plagues,
famines, inundations, and epidemics; while an utterly
impassive God washed his hands of the means he had
employed, and even encouraged the faithful to resist
and overcome his emissaries the white devils!
Had Elijah Martin been a student of theology, he would
have been struck with the singular resemblance of these
theories although the application thereof
was reversed to the Christian faith.
But Elijah Martin had neither the imagination of a
theologian nor the insight of a politician. He
only saw that he, hitherto ignored and despised in
a community of half-barbaric men, now translated to
a community of men wholly savage, was respected and
worshipped!
It might have turned a stronger head
than Elijah’s. He was at first frightened,
fearful lest his reception concealed some hidden irony,
or that, like the flower-crowned victim of ancient
sacrifice, he was exalted and sustained to give importance
and majesty to some impending martyrdom. Then
he began to dread that his innocent deceit if
deceit it was should be discovered; at
last, partly from meekness and partly from the animal
contentment of present security, he accepted the situation.
Fortunately for him it was purely passive. The
Great Chief of the Minyo tribe was simply an expressionless
idol of flesh and blood. The previous incumbent
of that office had been an old man, impotent and senseless
of late years through age and disease. The chieftains
and braves had consulted in council before him, and
perfunctorily submitted their decisions, like offerings,
to his unresponsive shrine. In the same way,
all material events expeditions, trophies,
industries were supposed to pass before
the dull, impassive eyes of the great chief, for direct
acceptance. On the second day of Elijah’s
accession, two of the braves brought a bleeding human
scalp before him. Elijah turned pale, trembled,
and averted his head, and then, remembering the danger
of giving way to his weakness, grew still more ghastly.
The warriors watched him with impassioned faces.
A grunt but whether of astonishment, dissent,
or approval, he would not tell went round
the circle. But the scalp was taken away and
never again appeared in his presence.
An incident still more alarming quickly
followed. Two captives, white men, securely bound,
were one day brought before him on their way to the
stake, followed by a crowd of old and young squaws
and children. The unhappy Elijah recognized in
the prisoners two packers from a distant settlement
who sometimes passed through Redwood Camp. An
agony of terror, shame, and remorse shook the pseudo
chief to his crest of high feathers, and blanched
his face beneath its paint and yellow ochre. To
interfere to save them from the torture they were evidently
to receive at the hands of those squaws and children,
according to custom, would be exposure and death to
him as well as themselves; while to assist by his
passive presence at the horrible sacrifice of his countrymen
was too much for even his weak selfishness. Scarcely
knowing what he did as the lugubrious procession passed
before him, he hurriedly hid his face in his blanket
and turned his back upon the scene. There was
a dead silence. The warriors were evidently unprepared
for this extraordinary conduct of their chief.
What might have been their action it was impossible
to conjecture, for at that moment a little squaw, perhaps
impatient for the sport and partly emboldened by the
fact that she had been selected, only a few days before,
as the betrothed of the new chief, approached him
slyly from the other side. The horrified eyes
of Elijah, momentarily raised from his blanket, saw
and recognized her. The feebleness of a weak
nature, that dared not measure itself directly with
the real cause, vented its rage on a secondary object.
He darted a quick glance of indignation and hatred
at the young girl. She ran back in startled terror
to her companions, a hurried consultation followed,
and in another moment the whole bevy of girls, old
women, and children were on the wing, shrieking and
crying, to their wigwams.
“You see,” said one of
the prisoners coolly to the other, in English, “I
was right. They never intended to do anything
to us. It was only a bluff. These Minyos
are a different sort from the other tribes. They
never kill anybody if they can help it.”
“You’re wrong,”
said the other, excitedly. “It was that
big chief there, with his head in a blanket, that
sent those dogs to the right about. Hell! did
you see them run at just a look from him? He’s
a high and mighty feller, you bet. Look at his
dignity!”
“That’s so he
ain’t no slouch,” said the other, gazing
at Elijah’s muffled head, critically. “D d
if he ain’t a born king.”
The sudden conflict and utter revulsion
of emotion that those simple words caused in Elijah’s
breast was almost incredible. He had been at
first astounded by the revelation of the peaceful reputation
of the unknown tribe he had been called upon to govern;
but even this comforting assurance was as nothing
compared to the greater revelations implied in the
speaker’s praise of himself. He, Elijah
Martin! the despised, the rejected, the worthless
outcast of Redwood Camp, recognized as a “born
king,” a leader; his power felt by the very men
who had scorned him! And he had done nothing stop!
had he actually done nothing? Was it not
possible that he was really what they thought
him? His brain reeled under the strong, unaccustomed
wine of praise; acting upon his weak selfishness,
it exalted him for a moment to their measure of his
strength, even as their former belief in his inefficiency
had kept him down. Courage is too often only
the memory of past success. This was his first
effort; he forgot he had not earned it, even as he
now ignored the danger of earning it. The few
words of unconscious praise had fallen like the blade
of knighthood on his cowering shoulders; he had risen
ennobled from the contact. Though his face was
still muffled in his blanket, he stood erect and seemed
to have gained in stature.
The braves had remained standing irresolute,
and yet watchful, a few paces from their captives.
Suddenly, Elijah, still keeping his back to the prisoners,
turned upon the braves, with blazing eyes, violently
throwing out his hands with the gesture of breaking
bonds. Like all sudden demonstrations of undemonstrative
men, it was extravagant, weird, and theatrical.
But it was more potent than speech the speech
that, even if effective, would still have betrayed
him to his countrymen. The braves hurriedly cut
the thongs of the prisoners; another impulsive gesture
from Elijah, and they, too, fled. When he lifted
his eyes cautiously from his blanket, captors and
captives had dispersed in opposite directions, and
he was alone and triumphant!
From that moment Elijah Martin was
another man. He went to bed that night in an
intoxicating dream of power; he arose a man of will,
of strength. He read it in the eyes of the braves,
albeit at times averted in wonder. He understood,
now, that although peace had been their habit and
custom, they had nevertheless sought to test his theories
of administration with the offering of the scalps
and the captives, and in this detection of their common
weakness he forgot his own. Most heroes require
the contrast of the unheroic to set them off; and Elijah
actually found himself devising means for strengthening
the defensive and offensive character of the tribe,
and was himself strengthened by it. Meanwhile
the escaped packers did not fail to heighten the importance
of their adventure by elevating the character and
achievements of their deliverer; and it was presently
announced throughout the frontier settlements that
the hitherto insignificant and peaceful tribe of Minyos,
who inhabited a large territory bordering on the Pacific
Ocean, had developed into a powerful nation, only kept
from the war-path by a more powerful but mysterious
chief. The Government sent an Indian agent to
treat with them, in its usual half-paternal, half-aggressive,
and wholly inconsistent policy. Elijah, who still
retained the imitative sense and adaptability to surroundings
which belong to most lazy, impressible natures, and
in striped yellow and vermilion features looked the
chief he personated, met the agent with silent and
becoming gravity. The council was carried on by
signs. Never before had an Indian treaty been
entered into with such perfect knowledge of the intentions
and designs of the whites by the Indians, and such
profound ignorance of the qualities of the Indians
by the whites. It need scarcely be said that
the treaty was an unquestionable Indian success.
They did not give up their arable lands; what they
did sell to the agent they refused to exchange for
extravagant-priced shoddy blankets, worthless guns,
damp powder, and mouldy meal. They took pay in
dollars, and were thus enabled to open more profitable
commerce with the traders at the settlements for better
goods and better bargains; they simply declined beads,
whiskey, and Bibles at any price. The result
was that the traders found it profitable to protect
them from their countrymen, and the chances of wantonly
shooting down a possible valuable customer stopped
the old indiscriminate rifle-practice. The Indians
were allowed to cultivate their fields in peace.
Elijah purchased for them a few agricultural implements.
The catching, curing, and smoking of salmon became
an important branch of trade. They waxed prosperous
and rich; they lost their nomadic habits a
centralized settlement bearing the external signs
of an Indian village took the place of their old temporary
encampments, but the huts were internally an improvement
on the old wigwams. The dried fish were banished
from the tent-poles to long sheds especially constructed
for that purpose. The sweat-house was no longer
utilized for worldly purposes. The wise and mighty
Elijah did not attempt to reform their religion, but
to preserve it in its integrity.
That these improvements and changes
were due to the influence of one man was undoubtedly
true, but that he was necessarily a superior man did
not follow. Elijah’s success was due partly
to the fact that he had been enabled to impress certain
negative virtues, which were part of his own nature,
upon a community equally constituted to receive them.
Each was strengthened by the recognition in each other
of the unexpected value of those qualities; each acquired
a confidence begotten of their success. “He-hides-his-face,”
as Elijah Martin was known to the tribe after the
episode of the released captives, was really not so
much of an autocrat as many constitutional rulers.
Two years of tranquil prosperity passed.
Elijah Martin, foundling, outcast, without civilized
ties or relationship of any kind, forgotten by his
countrymen, and lifted into alien power, wealth, security,
and respect, became homesick!
It was near the close of a summer
afternoon. He was sitting at the door of his
lodge, which overlooked, on one side, the far-shining
levels of the Pacific and, on the other, the slow
descent to the cultivated meadows and banks of the
Minyo River, that debouched through a waste of salt-marsh,
beach-grass, sand-dunes, and foamy estuary into the
ocean. The headland, or promontory the
only eminence of the Minyo territory had
been reserved by him for his lodge, partly on account
of its isolation from the village at its base, and
partly for the view it commanded of his territory.
Yet his wearying and discontented eyes were more often
found on the ocean, as a possible highway of escape
from his irksome position, than on the plain and the
distant range of mountains, so closely connected with
the nearer past and his former detractors. In
his vague longing he had no desire to return to them,
even in triumph in his present security there still
lingered a doubt of his ability to cope with the old
conditions. It was more like his easy, indolent
nature which revived in his prosperity to
trust to this least practical and remote solution
of his trouble. His homesickness was as vague
as his plan for escape from it; he did not know exactly
what he regretted, but it was probably some life he
had not enjoyed, some pleasure that had escaped his
former incompetency and poverty.
He had sat thus a hundred times, as
aimlessly blinking at the vast possibilities of the
shining sea beyond, turning his back upon the nearer
and more practicable mountains, lulled by the far-off
beating of monotonous rollers, the lonely cry of the
curlew and plover, the drowsy changes of alternate
breaths of cool, fragrant reeds and warm, spicy sands
that blew across his eyelids, and succumbed to sleep,
as he had done a hundred times before. The narrow
strips of colored cloth, insignia of his dignity,
flapped lazily from his tent-poles, and at last seemed
to slumber with him; the shadows of the leaf-tracery
thrown by the bay-tree, on the ground at his feet,
scarcely changed its pattern. Nothing moved but
the round, restless, berry-like eyes of Wachita, his
child-wife, the former heroine of the incident with
the captive packers, who sat near her lord, armed
with a willow wand, watchful of intruding wasps, sand-flies,
and even the more ostentatious advances of a rotund
and clerical-looking humble-bee, with his monotonous
homily. Content, dumb, submissive, vacant, at
such times, Wachita, debarred her husband’s
confidences through the native customs and his own
indifferent taciturnity, satisfied herself by gazing
at him with the wondering but ineffectual sympathy
of a faithful dog. Unfortunately for Elijah her
purely mechanical ministration could not prevent a
more dangerous intrusion upon his security.
He awoke with a light start, and eyes
that gradually fixed upon the woman a look of returning
consciousness. Wachita pointed timidly to the
village below.
“The Messenger of the Great
White Father has come to-day, with his wagons and
horses; he would see the chief of the Minyos, but I
would not disturb my lord.”
Elijah’s brow contracted.
Relieved of its characteristic metaphor, he knew that
this meant that the new Indian agent had made his usual
official visit, and had exhibited the usual anxiety
to see the famous chieftain.
“Good!” he said.
“White Rabbit [his lieutenant] will see the Messenger
and exchange gifts. It is enough.”
“The white messenger has brought
his wangee [white] woman with him. They would
look upon the face of him who hides it,” continued
Wachita, dubiously. “They would that Wachita
should bring them nearer to where my lord is, that
they might see him when he knew it not.”
Elijah glanced moodily at his wife,
with the half suspicion with which he still regarded
her alien character. “Then let Wachita go
back to the squaws and old women, and let her
hide herself with them until the wangee strangers
are gone,” he said curtly. “I have
spoken. Go!”
Accustomed to these abrupt dismissals,
which did not necessarily indicate displeasure, Wachita
disappeared without a word. Elijah, who had risen,
remained for a few moments leaning against the tent-poles,
gazing abstractedly toward the sea. The bees droned
uninterruptedly in his ears, the far-off roll of the
breakers came to him distinctly; but suddenly, with
greater distinctness, came the murmur of a woman’s
voice.
“He don’t look savage a bit! Why,
he’s real handsome.”
“Hush! you ” said a second
voice, in a frightened whisper.
“But if he did hear he
couldn’t understand,” returned the first
voice. A suppressed giggle followed.
Luckily, Elijah’s natural and
acquired habits of repression suited the emergency.
He did not move, although he felt the quick blood fly
to his face, and the voice of the first speaker had
suffused him with a strange and delicious anticipation.
He restrained himself, though the words she had naively
dropped were filling him with new and tremulous suggestion.
He was motionless, even while he felt that the vague
longing and yearning which had possessed him hitherto
was now mysteriously taking some unknown form and
action.
The murmuring ceased. The humble-bees’
drone again became ascendant a sudden fear
seized him. She was going; he should never
see her! While he had stood there a dolt and
sluggard, she had satisfied her curiosity and stolen
away. With a sudden yielding to impulse, he darted
quickly in the direction where he had heard her voice.
The thicket moved, parted, crackled, and rustled,
and then undulated thirty feet before him in a long
wave, as if from the passage of some lithe, invisible
figure. But at the same moment a little cry,
half of alarm, half of laughter, broke from his very
feet, and a bent manzanito-bush, relaxed by frightened
fingers, flew back against his breast. Thrusting
it hurriedly aside, his stooping, eager face came
almost in contact with the pink, flushed cheeks and
tangled curls of a woman’s head. He was
so near, her moist and laughing eyes almost drowned
his eager glance; her parted lips and white teeth
were so close to his that her quick breath took away
his own.
She had dropped on one knee, as her
companion fled, expecting he would overlook her as
he passed, but his direct onset had extracted the
feminine outcry. Yet even then she did not seem
greatly frightened.
“It’s only a joke, sir,”
she said, coolly lifting herself to her feet by grasping
his arm. “I’m Mrs. Dall, the Indian
agent’s wife. They said you wouldn’t
let anybody see you and I determined I would.
That’s all!” She stopped, threw back her
tangled curls behind her ears, shook the briers and
thorns from her skirt, and added: “Well,
I reckon you aren’t afraid of a woman, are you?
So no harm’s done. Good-by!”
She drew slightly back as if to retreat,
but the elasticity of the manzanito against which
she was leaning threw her forward once more.
He again inhaled the perfume of her hair; he saw even
the tiny freckles that darkened her upper lip and
brought out the moist, red curve below. A sudden
recollection of a playmate of his vagabond childhood
flashed across his mind; a wild inspiration of lawlessness,
begotten of his past experience, his solitude, his
dictatorial power, and the beauty of the woman before
him, mounted to his brain. He threw his arms passionately
around her, pressed his lips to hers, and with a half-hysterical
laugh drew back and disappeared in the thicket.
Mrs. Dall remained for an instant
dazed and stupefied. Then she lifted her arm
mechanically, and with her sleeve wiped her bruised
mouth and the ochre-stain that his paint had left,
like blood, upon her cheek. Her laughing face
had become instantly grave, but not from fear; her
dark eyes had clouded, but not entirely with indignation.
She suddenly brought down her hand sharply against
her side with a gesture of discovery.
“That’s no Injun!”
she said, with prompt decision. The next minute
she plunged back into the trail again, and the dense
foliage once more closed around her. But as she
did so the broad, vacant face and the mutely wondering
eyes of Wachita rose, like a placid moon, between the
branches of a tree where they had been hidden, and
shone serenely and impassively after her.
A month elapsed. But it was a
month filled with more experience to Elijah than his
past two years of exaltation. In the first few
days following his meeting with Mrs. Dall, he was
possessed by terror, mingled with flashes of desperation,
at the remembrance of his rash imprudence. His
recollection of extravagant frontier chivalry to womankind,
and the swift retribution of the insulted husband or
guardian, alternately filled him with abject fear or
extravagant recklessness. At times prepared for
flight, even to the desperate abandonment of himself
in a canoe to the waters of the Pacific: at times
he was on the point of inciting his braves to attack
the Indian agency and precipitate the war that he
felt would be inevitable. As the days passed,
and there seemed to be no interruption to his friendly
relations with the agency, with that relief a new,
subtle joy crept into Elijah’s heart. The
image of the agent’s wife framed in the leafy
screen behind his lodge, the perfume of her hair and
breath mingled with the spicing of the bay, the brief
thrill and tantalization of the stolen kiss still
haunted him. Through his long, shy abstention
from society, and his two years of solitary exile,
the fresh beauty of this young Western wife, in whom
the frank artlessness of girlhood still lingered, appeared
to him like a superior creation. He forgot his
vague longings in the inception of a more tangible
but equally unpractical passion. He remembered
her unconscious and spontaneous admiration of him;
he dared to connect it with her forgiving silence.
If she had withheld her confidences from her husband,
he could hope he knew not exactly what!
One afternoon Wachita put into his
hand a folded note. With an instinctive presentiment
of its contents, Elijah turned red and embarrassed
in receiving it from the woman who was recognized as
his wife. But the impassive, submissive manner
of this household drudge, instead of touching his
conscience, seemed to him a vulgar and brutal acceptance
of the situation that dulled whatever compunction he
might have had. He opened the note and read hurriedly
as follows:
“You took a great freedom with
me the other day, and I am justified in taking one
with you now. I believe you understand English
as well as I do. If you want to explain that
and your conduct to me, I will be at the same place
this afternoon. My friend will accompany me, but
she need not hear what you have to say.”
Elijah read the letter, which might
have been written by an ordinary school-girl, as if
it had conveyed the veiled rendezvous of a princess.
The reserve, caution, and shyness which had been the
safeguard of his weak nature were swamped in a flow
of immature passion. He flew to the interview
with the eagerness and inexperience of first love.
He was completely at her mercy. So utterly was
he subjugated by her presence that she did not even
run the risk of his passion. Whatever sentiment
might have mingled with her curiosity, she was never
conscious of a necessity to guard herself against
it. At this second meeting she was in full possession
of his secret. He had told her everything; she
had promised nothing in return she had
not even accepted anything. Even her actual after-relations
to the denouement of his passion are still shrouded
in mystery.
Nevertheless, Elijah lived two weeks
on the unsubstantial memory of this meeting.
What might have followed could not be known, for at
the end of that time an outrage so atrocious
that even the peaceful Minyos were thrilled with savage
indignation was committed on the outskirts
of the village. An old chief, who had been specially
selected to deal with the Indian agent, and who kept
a small trading outpost, had been killed and his goods
despoiled by a reckless Redwood packer. The murderer
had coolly said that he was only “serving out”
the tool of a fraudulent imposture on the Government,
and that he dared the arch-impostor himself, the so-called
Minyo chief, to help himself. A wave of ungovernable
fury surged up to the very tent-poles of Elijah’s
lodge and demanded vengeance. Elijah trembled
and hesitated. In the thraldom of his selfish
passion for Mrs. Dall he dared not contemplate a collision
with her countrymen. He would have again sought
refuge in his passive, non-committal attitude, but
he knew the impersonal character of Indian retribution
and compensation a sacrifice of equal value,
without reference to the culpability of the victim and
he dreaded some spontaneous outbreak. To prevent
the enforced expiation of the crime by some innocent
brother packer, he was obliged to give orders for the
pursuit and arrest of the criminal, secretly hoping
for his escape or the interposition of some circumstance
to avert his punishment. A day of sullen expectancy
to the old men and squaws in camp, of gloomy anxiety
to Elijah alone in his lodge, followed the departure
of the braves on the war-path. It was midnight
when they returned. Elijah, who from his habitual
reserve and the accepted etiquette of his exalted station
had remained impassive in his tent, only knew from
the guttural rejoicings of the squaws that the
expedition had been successful and the captive was
in their hands. At any other time he might have
thought it an evidence of some growing scepticism
of his infallibility of judgment and a diminution
of respect that they did not confront him with their
prisoner. But he was too glad to escape from the
danger of exposure and possible arraignment of his
past life by the desperate captive, even though it
might not have been understood by the spectators.
He reflected that the omission might have arisen from
their recollection of his previous aversion to a retaliation
on other prisoners. Enough that they would wait
his signal for the torture and execution at sunrise
the next day.
The night passed slowly. It is
more than probable that the selfish and ignoble torments
of the sleepless and vacillating judge were greater
than those of the prisoner who dozed at the stake between
his curses. Yet it was part of Elijah’s
fatal weakness that his kinder and more human instincts
were dominated even at that moment by his lawless
passion for the Indian agent’s wife, and his
indecision as to the fate of his captive was as much
due to this preoccupation as to a selfish consideration
of her relations to the result. He hated the prisoner
for his infelicitous and untimely crime, yet he could
not make up his mind to his death. He paced the
ground before his lodge in dishonorable incertitude.
The small eyes of the submissive Wachita watched him
with vague solicitude.
Toward morning he was struck by a
shameful inspiration. He would creep unperceived
to the victim’s side, unloose his bonds, and
bid him fly to the Indian agency. There he was
to inform Mrs. Dall that her husband’s safety
depended upon his absenting himself for a few days,
but that she was to remain and communicate with Elijah.
She would understand everything, perhaps; at least
she would know that the prisoner’s release was
to please her, but even if she did not, no harm would
be done, a white man’s life would be saved,
and his real motive would not be suspected. He
turned with feverish eagerness to the lodge. Wachita
had disappeared probably to join the other
women. It was well; she would not suspect him.
The tree to which the doomed man was
bound was, by custom, selected nearest the chief’s
lodge, within its sacred enclosure, with no other
protection than that offered by its reserved seclusion
and the outer semicircle of warriors’ tents
before it. To escape, the captive would therefore
have to pass beside the chief’s lodge to the
rear and descend the hill toward the shore. Elijah
would show him the way, and make it appear as if he
had escaped unaided. As he glided into the shadow
of a group of pines, he could dimly discern the outline
of the destined victim, secured against one of the
larger trees in a sitting posture, with his head fallen
forward on his breast as if in sleep. But at the
same moment another figure glided out from the shadow
and approached the fatal tree. It was Wachita!
He stopped in amazement. But
in another instant a flash of intelligence made it
clear. He remembered her vague uneasiness and
solicitude at his agitation, her sudden disappearance;
she had fathomed his perplexity, as she had once before.
Of her own accord she was going to release the prisoner!
The knife to cut his cords glittered in her hand.
Brave and faithful animal!
He held his breath as he drew nearer.
But, to his horror, the knife suddenly flashed in
the air and darted down, again and again, upon the
body of the helpless man. There was a convulsive
struggle, but no outcry, and the next moment the body
hung limp and inert in its cords. Elijah would
himself have fallen, half-fainting, against a tree,
but, by a revulsion of feeling, came the quick revelation
that the desperate girl had rightly solved the problem!
She had done what he ought to have done and
his loyalty and manhood were preserved. That conviction
and the courage to act upon it to have called
the sleeping braves to witness his sacrifice would
have saved him, but it was ordered otherwise.
As the girl rapidly passed him he
threw out his hand and seized her wrist. “Who
did you do this for?” he demanded.
“For you,” she said, stupidly.
“And why?”
“Because you no kill him you love
his squaw.”
“His squaw!” He staggered
back. A terrible suspicion flashed upon him.
He dashed Wachita aside and ran to the tree. It
was the body of the Indian agent! Aboriginal
justice had been satisfied. The warriors had
not caught the murderer, but, true to their idea
of vicarious retribution, had determined upon the
expiatory sacrifice of a life as valuable and innocent
as the one they had lost.
“So the Gov’rment hev
at last woke up and wiped out them cussed Digger Minyos,”
said Snapshot Harry, as he laid down the newspaper,
in the brand-new saloon of the brand-new town of Redwood.
“I see they’ve stampeded both banks of
the Minyo River, and sent off a lot to the reservation.
I reckon the soldiers at Fort Cass got sick o’
sentiment after those hounds killed the Injun agent,
and are beginning to agree with us that the only ‘good
Injun’ is a dead one.”
“And it turns out that that
wonderful chief, that them two packers used to rave
about, woz about as big a devil ez any, and tried to
run off with the agent’s wife, only the warriors
killed her. I’d like to know what become
of him. Some says he was killed, others allow
that he got away. I’ve heerd tell that
he was originally some kind of Methodist preacher! a
kind o’ saint that got a sort o’ spiritooal
holt on the old squaws and children.”
“Why don’t you ask old
Skeesicks? I see he’s back here ag’in and
grubbin’ along at a dollar a day on tailin’s.
He’s been somewhere up north, they say.”
“What, Skeesicks? that shiftless,
o’n’ry cuss! You bet he wusn’t
anywhere where there was danger of fighting. Why,
you might as well hev suspected him of being
the big chief himself! There he comes ask
him.”
And the laughter was so general that Elijah Martin alias
Skeesicks lounging shyly into the bar-room,
joined in it weakly.