With the closing of the little door
behind them they seemed to have shut out the turmoil
and vibration of the storm. The reason became
apparent when, after a few paces, they descended half
a dozen steps to a lower landing. This disclosed
the fact that the dwelling part of the Sidon General
Store was quite below the level of the shop and the
road, and on the slope of the solitary undulation
of the Tasajara plain, a little ravine
that fell away to a brawling stream below. The
only arboreous growth of Tasajara clothed its banks
in the shape of willows and alders that set compactly
around the quaint, irregular dwelling which straggled
down the ravine and looked upon a slope of bracken
and foliage on either side. The transition from
the black, treeless, storm-swept plain to this sheltered
declivity was striking and suggestive. From the
opposite bank one might fancy that the youthful and
original dwelling had ambitiously mounted the crest,
but, appalled at the dreary prospect beyond, had gone
no further; while from the road it seemed as if the
fastidious proprietor had tried to draw a line between
the vulgar trading-post, with which he was obliged
to face the coarser civilization of the place, and
the privacy of his domestic life. The real fact,
however, was that the ravine furnished wood and water;
and as Nature also provided one wall of the house, as
in the well-known example of aboriginal cave dwellings, its
peculiar construction commended itself to Sidon on
the ground of involving little labor.
Howbeit, from the two open windows
of the sitting-room which they had entered only the
faint pattering of dripping boughs and a slight murmur
from the swollen brook indicated the storm that shook
the upper plain, and the cool breath of laurel, syringa,
and alder was wafted through the neat apartment.
Passing through that pleasant rural atmosphere they
entered the kitchen, a much larger room, which appeared
to serve occasionally as a dining-room, and where
supper was already laid out. A stout, comfortable-looking
woman who had, however, a singularly permanent
expression of pained sympathy upon her face welcomed
them in tones of gentle commiseration.
“Ah, there you be, you two!
Now sit ye right down, dears; do. You must
be tired out; and you, Phemie, love, draw up by your
poor father. There that’s right.
You’ll be better soon.”
There was certainly no visible sign
of suffering or exhaustion on the part of either father
or daughter, nor the slightest apparent earthly reason
why they should be expected to exhibit any. But,
as already intimated, it was part of Mrs. Harkutt’s
generous idiosyncrasy to look upon all humanity as
suffering and toiling; to be petted, humored, condoled
with, and fed. It had, in the course of years,
imparted a singularly caressing sadness to her voice,
and given her the habit of ending her sentences with
a melancholy cooing and an unintelligible murmur of
agreement. It was undoubtedly sincere and sympathetic,
but at times inappropriate and distressing. It
had lost her the friendship of the one humorist of
Tasajara, whose best jokes she had received with such
heartfelt commiseration and such pained appreciation
of the evident labor involved as to reduce him to
silence.
Accustomed as Mr. Harkutt was to his
wife’s peculiarity, he was not above assuming
a certain slightly fatigued attitude befitting it.
“Yes,” he said, with a vague sigh, “where’s
Clemmie?”
“Lyin’ down since dinner;
she reckoned she wouldn’t get up to supper,”
she returned soothingly. “Phemie’s
goin’ to take her up some sass and tea.
The poor dear child wants a change.”
“She wants to go to ’Frisco,
and so do I, pop,” said Phemie, leaning her
elbow half over her father’s plate. “Come,
pop, say do, just for a week.”
“Only for a week,” murmured
the commiserating Mrs. Harkutt.
“Perhaps,” responded Harkutt,
with gloomy sarcasm, “ye wouldn’t mind
tellin’ me how you’re goin’ to get
there, and where the money’s comin’ from
to take you? There’s no teamin’ over
Tasajara till the rain stops, and no money comin’
in till the ranchmen can move their stuff. There
ain’t a hundred dollars in all Tasajara; at least
there ain’t been the first red cent of it paid
across my counter for a fortnit! Perhaps if you
do go you wouldn’t mind takin’ me and the
store along with ye, and leavin’ us there.”
“Yes, dear,” said Mrs.
Harkutt, with sympathetic but shameless tergiversation.
“Don’t bother your poor father, Phemie,
love; don’t you see he’s just tired out?
And you’re not eatin’ anything, dad.”
As Mr. Harkutt was uneasily conscious
that he had been eating heartily in spite of his financial
difficulties, he turned the subject abruptly.
“Where’s John Milton?”
Mrs. Harkutt shaded her eyes with
her hand, and gazed meditatively on the floor before
the fire and in the chimney corner for her only son,
baptized under that historic title. “He
was here a minit ago,” she said doubtfully.
“I really can’t think where he’s
gone. But,” assuringly, “it ain’t
far.”
“He’s skipped with one
o’ those story-books he’s borrowed,”
said Phemie. “He’s always doin’
it. Like as not he’s reading with a candle
in the wood-shed. We’ll all be burnt up
some night.”
“But he’s got through
his chores,” interposed Mrs. Harkutt deprecatingly.
“Yes,” continued Harkutt,
aggrievedly, “but instead of goin’ to bed,
or addin’ up bills, or takin’ count o’
stock, or even doin’ sums or suthin’ useful,
he’s ruinin’ his eyes and wastin’
his time over trash.” He rose and walked
slowly into the sitting-room, followed by his daughter
and a murmur of commiseration from his wife.
But Mrs. Harkutt’s ministration for the present
did not pass beyond her domain, the kitchen.
“I reckon ye ain’t expectin’
anybody tonight, Phemie?” said Mr. Harkutt,
sinking into a chair, and placing his slippered feet
against the wall.
“No,” said Phemie, “unless
something possesses that sappy little Parmlee to make
one of his visitations. John Milton says that
out on the road it blows so you can’t stand
up. It’s just like that idiot Parmlee to
be blown in here, and not have strength of mind enough
to get away again.”
Mr. Harkutt smiled. It was that
arch yet approving, severe yet satisfied smile with
which the deceived male parent usually receives any
depreciation of the ordinary young man by his daughters.
Euphemia was no giddy thing to be carried away by
young men’s attentions, not she!
Sitting back comfortably in his rocking-chair, he said,
“Play something.”
The young girl went to the closet
and took from the top shelf an excessively ornamented
accordion, the opulent gift of a reckless
admirer. It was so inordinately decorated, so
gorgeous in the blaze of papier mâche, mother-of-pearl,
and tortoise-shell on keys and keyboard, and so ostentatiously
radiant in the pink silk of its bellows that it seemed
to overawe the plainly furnished room with its splendors.
“You ought to keep it on the table in a glass
vase, Phemie,” said her father admiringly.
“And have him think I worshiped
it! Not me, indeed! He’s conceited
enough already,” she returned, saucily.
Mr. Harkutt again smiled his approbation,
then deliberately closed his eyes and threw his head
back in comfortable anticipation of the coming strains.
It is to be regretted that in brilliancy,
finish, and even cheerfulness of quality they were
not up to the suggestions of the keys and keyboard.
The most discreet and cautious effort on the part of
the young performer seemed only to produce startlingly
unexpected, but instantly suppressed complaints from
the instrument, accompanied by impatient interjections
of “No, no,” from the girl herself.
Nevertheless, with her pretty eyebrows knitted in
some charming distress of memory, her little mouth
half open between an apologetic smile and the exertion
of working the bellows, with her white, rounded arms
partly lifted up and waving before her, she was pleasantly
distracting to the eye. Gradually, as the scattered
strains were marshaled into something like an air,
she began to sing also, glossing over the instrumental
weaknesses, filling in certain dropped notes and omissions,
and otherwise assisting the ineffectual accordion
with a youthful but not unmusical voice. The song
was a lugubrious religious chant; under its influence
the house seemed to sink into greater quiet, permitting
in the intervals the murmur of the swollen creek to
appear more distinct, and even the far moaning of
the wind on the plain to become faintly audible.
At last, having fairly mastered the instrument, Phemie
got into the full swing of the chant. Unconstrained
by any criticism, carried away by the sound of her
own voice, and perhaps a youthful love for mere uproar,
or possibly desirous to drown her father’s voice,
which had unexpectedly joined in with a discomposing
bass, the conjoined utterances seemed to threaten the
frail structure of their dwelling, even as the gale
had distended the store behind them. When they
ceased at last it was in an accession of dripping
from the apparently stirred leaves outside. And
then a voice, evidently from the moist depths of the
abyss below, called out,
“Hullo, there!”
Phemie put down the accordion, said,
“Who’s that now?” went to the window,
lazily leaned her elbows on the sill, and peered into
the darkness. Nothing was to be seen; the open
space of dimly outlined landscape had that blank,
uncommunicative impenetrability with which Nature
always confronts and surprises us at such moments.
It seemed to Phemie that she was the only human being
present. Yet after the feeling had passed she
fancied she heard the wash of the current against some
object in the stream, half stationary and half resisting.
“Is any one down there?
Is that you, Mr. Parmlee?” she called.
There was a pause. Some invisible
auditor said to another, “It’s a young
lady.” Then the first voice rose again in
a more deferential tone: “Are we anywhere
near Sidon?”
“This is Sidon,” answered
Harkutt, who had risen, and was now quite obliterating
his daughter’s outline at the window.
“Thank you,” said the
voice. “Can we land anywhere here, on this
bank?”
“Run down, pop; they’re
strangers,” said the girl, with excited, almost
childish eagerness.
“Hold on,” called out
Harkutt, “I’ll be thar in a moment!”
He hastily thrust his feet into a pair of huge boots,
clapped on an oilskin hat and waterproof, and disappeared
through a door that led to a lower staircase.
Phemie, still at the window, albeit with a newly added
sense of self-consciousness, hung out breathlessly.
Presently a beam of light from the lower depths of
the house shot out into the darkness. It was
her father with a bull’s-eye lantern. As
he held it up and clambered cautiously down the bank,
its rays fell upon the turbid rushing stream, and
what appeared to be a rough raft of logs held with
difficulty against the bank by two men with long poles.
In its centre was a roll of blankets, a valise and
saddle-bags, and the shining brasses of some odd-looking
instruments.
As Mr. Harkutt, supporting himself
by a willow branch that overhung the current, held
up the lantern, the two men rapidly transferred their
freight from the raft to the bank, and leaped ashore.
The action gave an impulse to the raft, which, no
longer held in position by the poles, swung broadside
to the current and was instantly swept into the darkness.
Not a word had been spoken, but now
the voices of the men rose freely together. Phemie
listened with intense expectation. The explanation
was simple. They were surveyors who had been caught
by the overflow on Tasajara plain, had abandoned their
horses on the bank of Tasajara Creek, and with a hastily
constructed raft had intrusted themselves and their
instruments to the current. “But,”
said Harkutt quickly, “there is no connection
between Tasajara Creek and this stream.”
The two men laughed. “There is now,”
said one of them.
“But Tasajara Creek is a part
of the bay,” said the astonished Harkutt, “and
this stream rises inland and only runs into the bay
four miles lower down. And I don’t see
how
“You’re almost twelve
feet lower here than Tasajara Creek,” said the
first man, with a certain professional authority, “and
that’s why. There’s more water
than Tasajara Creek can carry, and it’s seeking
the bay this way. Look,” he continued,
taking the lantern from Harkutt’s hand and casting
its rays on the stream, “that’s salt drift
from the upper bay, and part of Tasajara Creek’s
running by your house now! Don’t be alarmed,”
he added reassuringly, glancing at the staring storekeeper.
“You’re all right here; this is only the
overflow and will find its level soon.”
But Mr. Harkutt remained gazing abstractedly
at the smiling speaker. From the window above
the impatient Phemie was wondering why he kept the
strangers waiting in the rain while he talked about
things that were perfectly plain. It was so like
a man!
“Then there’s a waterway
straight to Tasajara Creek?” he said slowly.
“There is, as long as this flood
lasts,” returned the first speaker promptly;
“and a cutting through the bank of two or three
hundred yards would make it permanent. Well,
what’s the matter with that?”
“Nothin’,” said
Harkutt hurriedly. “I am only considerin’!
But come in, dry yourselves, and take suthin’.”
The light over the rushing water was
withdrawn, and the whole prospect sank back into profound
darkness. Mr. Harkutt had disappeared with his
guests. Then there was the familiar shuffle of
his feet on the staircase, followed by other more
cautious footsteps that grew delicately and even courteously
deliberate as they approached. At which the young
girl, in some new sense of decorum, drew in her pretty
head, glanced around the room quickly, reset the tidy
on her father’s chair, placed the resplendent
accordion like an ornament in the exact centre of
the table, and then vanished into the hall as Mr. Harkutt
entered with the strangers.
They were both of the same age and
appearance, but the principal speaker was evidently
the superior of his companion, and although their attitude
to each other was equal and familiar, it could be easily
seen that he was the leader. He had a smooth,
beardless face, with a critical expression of eye
and mouth that might have been fastidious and supercilious
but for the kindly, humorous perception that tempered
it. His quick eye swept the apartment and then
fixed itself upon the accordion, but a smile lit up
his face as he said quietly,
“I hope we haven’t frightened
the musician away. It was bad enough to have
interrupted the young lady.”
“No, no,” said Mr. Harkutt,
who seemed to have lost his abstraction in the nervousness
of hospitality. “I reckon she’s only
lookin’ after her sick sister. But come
into the kitchen, both of you, straight off, and while
you’re dryin’ your clothes, mother’ll
fix you suthin’ hot.”
“We only need to change our
boots and stockings; we’ve some dry ones in
our pack downstairs,” said the first speaker
hesitatingly.
“I’ll fetch ’em
up and you can change in the kitchen. The old
woman won’t mind,” said Harkutt reassuringly.
“Come along.” He led the way to the
kitchen; the two strangers exchanged a glance of humorous
perplexity and followed.
The quiet of the little room was once
more unbroken. A far-off commiserating murmur
indicated that Mrs. Harkutt was receiving her guests.
The cool breath of the wet leaves without slightly
stirred the white dimity curtains, and somewhere from
the darkened eaves there was a still, somnolent drip.
Presently a hurried whisper and a half-laugh appeared
to be suppressed in the outer passage or hall.
There was another moment of hesitation and the door
opened suddenly and ostentatiously, disclosing Phemie,
with a taller and slighter young woman, her elder
sister, at her side. Perceiving that the room
was empty, they both said “Oh!” yet with
a certain artificiality of manner that was evidently
a lingering trace of some previous formal attitude
they had assumed. Then without further speech
they each selected a chair and a position, having
first shaken out their dresses, and gazed silently
at each other.
It may be said briefly that sitting
thus in spite of their unnatural attitude,
or perhaps rather because of its suggestion of a photographic
pose they made a striking picture, and strongly
accented their separate peculiarities. They were
both pretty, but the taller girl, apparently the elder,
had an ideal refinement and regularity of feature which
was not only unlike Phemie, but gratuitously unlike
the rest of her family, and as hopelessly and even
wantonly inconsistent with her surroundings as was
the elaborately ornamented accordion on the centre-table.
She was one of those occasional creatures, episodical
in the South and West, who might have been stamped
with some vague ante-natal impression of a mother
given to over-sentimental contemplation of books of
beauty and albums rather than the family features;
offspring of typical men and women, and yet themselves
incongruous to any known local or even general type.
The long swan-like neck, tendriled hair, swimming eyes,
and small patrician head, had never lived or moved
before in Tasajara or the West, nor perhaps even existed
except as a personified “Constancy,” “Meditation,”
or the “Baron’s Bride,” in mezzotint
or copperplate. Even the girl’s common
pink print dress with its high sleeves and shoulders
could not conventionalize these original outlines;
and the hand that rested stiffly on the back of her
chair, albeit neither over-white nor well kept, looked
as if it had never held anything but a lyre, a rose,
or a good book. Even the few sprays of wild jessamine
which she had placed in the coils of her waving hair,
although a local fashion, became her as a special
ornament.
The two girls kept their constrained
and artificially elaborated attitude for a few moments,
accompanied by the murmur of voices in the kitchen,
the monotonous drip of the eaves before the window,
and the far-off sough of the wind. Then Phemie
suddenly broke into a constrained giggle, which she
however quickly smothered as she had the accordion,
and with the same look of mischievous distress.
“I’m astonished at you,
Phemie,” said Clementina in a deep contralto
voice, which seemed even deeper from its restraint.
“You don’t seem to have any sense.
Anybody’d think you never had seen a stranger
before.”
“Saw him before you did,”
retorted Phemie pertly. But here a pushing of
chairs and shuffling of feet in the kitchen checked
her. Clementina fixed an abstracted gaze on the
ceiling; Phemie regarded a leaf on the window sill
with photographic rigidity as the door opened to the
strangers and her father.
The look of undisguised satisfaction
which lit the young men’s faces relieved Mr.
Harkutt’s awkward introduction of any embarrassment,
and almost before Phemie was fully aware of it, she
found herself talking rapidly and in a high key with
Mr. Lawrence Grant, the surveyor, while her sister
was equally, although more sedately, occupied with
Mr. Stephen Rice, his assistant. But the enthusiasm
of the strangers, and the desire to please and be
pleased was so genuine and contagious that presently
the accordion was brought into requisition, and Mr.
Grant exhibited a surprising faculty of accompaniment
to Mr. Rice’s tenor, in which both the girls
joined.
Then a game of cards with partners
followed, into which the rival parties introduced
such delightful and shameless obviousness of cheating,
and displayed such fascinating and exaggerated partisanship
that the game resolved itself into a hilarious melee,
to which peace was restored only by an exhibition
of tricks of legerdemain with the cards by the young
surveyor. All of which Mr. Harkutt supervised
patronizingly, with occasional fits of abstraction,
from his rocking-chair; and later Mrs. Harkutt from
her kitchen threshold, wiping her arms on her apron
and commiseratingly observing that she “declared,
the young folks looked better already.”
But it was here a more dangerous element
of mystery and suggestion was added by Mr. Lawrence
Grant in the telling of Miss Euphemia’s fortune
from the cards before him, and that young lady, pink
with excitement, fluttered her little hands not unlike
timid birds over the cards to be drawn, taking them
from him with an audible twitter of anxiety and great
doubts whether a certain “fair-haired gentleman”
was in hearts or diamonds.
“Here are two strangers,”
said Mr. Grant, with extraordinary gravity laying
down the cards, “and here is a ‘journey;’
this is ’unexpected news,’ and this ten
of diamonds means ‘great wealth’ to you,
which you see follows the advent of the two strangers
and is some way connected with them.”
“Oh, indeed,” said the
young lady with great pertness and a toss of her head.
“I suppose they’ve got the money with them.”
“No, though it reaches you through
them,” he answered with unflinching solemnity.
“Wait a bit, I have it! I see, I’ve
made a mistake with this card. It signifies a
journey or a road. Queer! isn’t it, Steve?
It’s the road.”
“It is queer,” said Rice
with equal gravity; “but it’s so.
The road, sure!” Nevertheless he looked up into
the large eyes of Clementina with a certain confidential
air of truthfulness.
“You see, ladies,” continued
the surveyor, appealing to them with unabashed rigidity
of feature, “the cards don’t lie!
Luckily we are in a position to corroborate them.
The road in question is a secret known only to us
and some capitalists in San Francisco. In fact
even they don’t know that it is feasible
until we report to them. But I don’t
mind telling you now, as a slight return for your
charming hospitality, that the road is a railroad
from Oakland to Tasajara Creek of which we’ve
just made the preliminary survey. So you see what
the cards mean is this: You’re not far
from Tasajara Creek; in fact with a very little expense
your father could connect this stream with the creek,
and have a waterway straight to the
railroad terminus. That’s the
wealth the cards promise; and if your father knows
how to take a hint he can make his fortune!”
It was impossible to say which was
the most dominant in the face of the speaker, the
expression of assumed gravity or the twinkling of humor
in his eyes. The two girls with superior feminine
perception divined that there was much truth in what
he said, albeit they didn’t entirely understand
it, and what they did understand except
the man’s good-humored motive was
not particularly interesting. In fact they were
slightly disappointed. What had promised to be
an audaciously flirtatious declaration, and even a
mischievous suggestion of marriage, had resolved itself
into something absurdly practical and business-like.
Not so Mr. Harkutt. He quickly
rose from his chair, and, leaning over the table,
with his eyes fixed on the card as if it really signified
the railroad, repeated quickly: “Railroad,
eh! What’s that? A railroad to Tasajara
Creek? Ye don’t mean it! That
is it ain’t a sure thing?”
“Perfectly sure. The money
is ready in San Francisco now, and by this time next
year ”
“A railroad to Tasajara Creek!”
continued Harkutt hurriedly. “What part
of it? Where?”
“At the embarcadero naturally,”
responded Grant. “There isn’t but
the one place for the terminus. There’s
an old shanty there now belongs to somebody.”
“Why, pop!” said Phemie
with sudden recollection, “ain’t it ’Lige
Curtis’s house? The land he offered”
“Hush!” said her father.
“You know, the one written in
that bit of paper,” continued the innocent Phemie.
“Hush! will you? God A’mighty!
are you goin’ to mind me? Are you goin’
to keep up your jabber when I’m speakin’
to the gentlemen? Is that your manners?
What next, I wonder!”
The sudden and unexpected passion
of the speaker, the incomprehensible change in his
voice, and the utterly disproportionate exaggeration
of his attitude towards his daughters, enforced an
instantaneous silence. The rain began to drip
audibly at the window, the rush of the river sounded
distinctly from without, even the shaking of the front
part of the dwelling by the distant gale became perceptible.
An angry flash sprang for an instant to the young
assistant’s eye, but it met the cautious glance
of his friend, and together both discreetly sought
the table. The two girls alone remained white
and collected. “Will you go on with my
fortune, Mr. Grant?” said Phemie quietly.
A certain respect, perhaps not before
observable, was suggested in the surveyor’s
tone as he smilingly replied, “Certainly, I was
only waiting for you to show your confidence in me,”
and took up the cards.
Mr. Harkutt coughed. “It
looks as if that blamed wind had blown suthin’
loose in the store,” he said affectedly.
“I reckon I’ll go and see.”
He hesitated a moment and then disappeared in the
passage. Yet even here he stood irresolute, looking
at the closed door behind him, and passing his hand
over his still flushed face. Presently he slowly
and abstractedly ascended the flight of steps, entered
the smaller passage that led to the back door of the
shop and opened it.
He was at first a little startled
at the halo of light from the still glowing stove,
which the greater obscurity of the long room had heightened
rather than diminished. Then he passed behind
the counter, but here the box of biscuits which occupied
the centre and cast a shadow over it compelled him
to grope vaguely for what he sought. Then he
stopped suddenly, the paper he had just found dropping
from his fingers, and said sharply,
“Who’s there?”
“Me, pop.”
“John Milton?”
“Yes, sir.”
“What the devil are you doin’ there, sir?”
“Readin’.”
It was true. The boy was half
reclining in a most distorted posture on two chairs,
his figure in deep shadow, but his book was raised
above his head so as to catch the red glow of the
stove on the printed page. Even then his father’s
angry interruption scarcely diverted his preoccupation;
he raised himself in his chair mechanically, with his
eyes still fixed on his book. Seeing which his
father quickly regained the paper, but continued his
objurgation.
“How dare you? Clear off
to bed, will you! Do you hear me? Pretty
goin’s on,” he added as if to justify his
indignation. “Sneakin’ in here and and
lyin’ ‘round at this time o’ night!
Why, if I hadn’t come in here to”
“What?” asked the boy
mechanically, catching vaguely at the unfinished sentence
and staring automatically at the paper in his father’s
hand.
“Nothin’, sir! Go
to bed, I tell you! Will you? What are you
standin’ gawpin’ at?” continued
Harkutt furiously.
The boy regained his feet slowly and
passed his father, but not without noticing with the
same listless yet ineffaceable perception of childhood
that he was hurriedly concealing the paper in his pocket.
With the same youthful inconsequence, wondering at
this more than at the interruption, which was no novel
event, he went slowly out of the room.
Harkutt listened to the retreating
tread of his bare feet in the passage and then carefully
locked the door. Taking the paper from his pocket,
and borrowing the idea he had just objurgated in his
son, he turned it towards the dull glow of the stove
and attempted to read it. But perhaps lacking
the patience as well as the keener sight of youth,
he was forced to relight the candle which he had left
on the counter, and reperused the paper. Yes!
there was certainly no mistake! Here was the actual
description of the property which the surveyor had
just indicated as the future terminus of the new railroad,
and here it was conveyed to him Daniel
Harkutt! What was that? Somebody knocking?
What did this continual interruption mean? An
odd superstitious fear now mingled with his irritation.
The sound appeared to come from the
front shutters. It suddenly occurred to him that
the light might be visible through the crevices.
He hurriedly extinguished it, and went to the door.
“Who’s there?”
“Me, Peters. Want to speak to
you.”
Mr. Harkutt with evident reluctance
drew the bolts. The wind, still boisterous and
besieging, did the rest, and precipitately propelled
Peters through the carefully guarded opening.
But his surprise at finding himself in the darkness
seemed to forestall any explanation of his visit.
“Well,” he said with an
odd mingling of reproach and suspicion. “I
declare I saw a light here just this minit! That’s
queer.”
“Yes, I put it out just now.
I was goin’ away,” replied Harkutt, with
ill-disguised impatience.
“What! been here ever since?”
“No,” said Harkutt curtly.
“Well, I want to speak to ye
about ‘Lige. Seein’ the candle shinin’
through the chinks I thought he might be still with
ye. If he ain’t, it looks bad. Light
up, can’t ye! I want to show you something.”
There was a peremptoriness in his
tone that struck Harkutt disagreeably, but observing
that he was carrying something in his hand, he somewhat
nervously re-lit the candle and faced him. Peters
had a hat in his hand. It was ’Lige’s!
“’Bout an hour after we
fellers left here,” said Peters, “I heard
the rattlin’ of hoofs on the road, and then
it seemed to stop just by my house. I went out
with a lantern, and, darn my skin! if there warn’t
’Lige’s hoss, the saddle empty, and ’Lige
nowhere! I looked round and called him but
nothing were to be seen. Thinkin’ he might
have slipped off tho’ ez a general
rule drunken men don’t, and he is a good rider I
followed down the road, lookin’ for him.
I kept on follerin’ it down to your run, half
a mile below.”
“But,” began Harkutt,
with a quick nervous laugh, “you don’t
reckon that because of that he”
“Hold on!” said Peters,
grimly producing a revolver from his side-pocket with
the stock and barrel clogged and streaked with mud.
“I found that too, and look!
one barrel discharged! And,” he added hurriedly,
as approaching a climax, “look ye, what
I nat’rally took for wet from the rain inside
that hat was blood!”
“Nonsense!” said Harkutt,
putting the hat aside with a new fastidiousness.
“You don’t think”
“I think,” said Peters,
lowering his voice, “I think, by God! He’s
bin and done it!”
“No!”
“Sure! Oh, it’s all
very well for Billings and the rest of that conceited
crowd to sneer and sling their ideas of ’Lige
gen’rally as they did jess now here, but
I’d like ’em to see that.”
It was difficult to tell if Mr. Peters’ triumphant
delight in confuting his late companions’ theories
had not even usurped in his mind the importance of
the news he brought, as it had of any human sympathy
with it.
“Look here,” returned
Harkutt earnestly, yet with a singularly cleared brow
and a more natural manner. “You ought to
take them things over to Squire Kerby’s, right
off, and show ’em to him. You kin tell him
how you left ’Lige here, and say that I can
prove by my daughter that he went away about ten minutes
after, at least, not more than fifteen.”
Like all unprofessional humanity, Mr. Harkutt had
an exaggerated conception of the majesty of unimportant
detail in the eye of the law. “I’d
go with you myself,” he added quickly, “but
I’ve got company strangers here.”
“How did he look when he left, kinder
wild?” suggested Peters.
Harkutt had begun to feel the prudence
of present reticence. “Well,” he
said, cautiously, “You saw how he looked.”
“You wasn’t rough with
him? that might have sent him off, you know,”
said Peters.
“No,” said Harkutt, forgetting
himself in a quick indignation, “no, I not only
treated him to another drink, but gave him” he
stopped suddenly and awkwardly.
“Eh?” said Peters.
“Some good advice, you
know,” said Harkutt, hastily. “But
come, you’d better hurry over to the squire’s.
You know you’ve made the discovery; your
evidence is important, and there’s a law that
obliges you to give information at once.”
The excitement of discovery and the
triumph over his disputants being spent, Peters, after
the Sidon fashion, evidently did not relish activity
as a duty. “You know,” he said dubiously,
“he mightn’t be dead, after all.”
Harkutt became a trifle distant.
“You know your own opinion of the thing,”
he replied after a pause. “You’ve
circumstantial evidence enough to see the squire,
and set others to work on it; and,” he added
significantly, “you’ve done your share
then, and can wipe your hands of it, eh?”
“That’s so,” said
Peters, eagerly. “I’ll just run over
to the squire.”
“And on account of the women
folks, you know, and the strangers here, I’ll
say nothin’ about it to-night,” added Harkutt.
Peters nodded his head, and taking
up the hat of the unfortunate Elijah with a certain
hesitation, as if he feared it had already lost its
dramatic intensity as a witness, disappeared into the
storm and darkness again. A lurking gust of wind
lying in ambush somewhere seemed to swoop down on
him as if to prevent further indecision and whirl him
away in the direction of the justice’s house;
and Mr. Harkutt shut the door, bolted it, and walked
aimlessly back to the counter.
From a slow, deliberate and cautious
man, he seemed to have changed within an hour to an
irresolute and capricious one. He took the paper
from his pocket, and, unlocking the money drawer of
his counter, folded into a small compass that which
now seemed to be the last testament of Elijah Curtis,
and placed it in a recess. Then he went to the
back door and paused, then returned, reopened the
money drawer, took out the paper and again buttoned
it in his hip pocket, standing by the stove and staring
abstractedly at the dull glow of the fire. He
even went through the mechanical process of raking
down the ashes, solely to gain time and
as an excuse for delaying some other necessary action.
He was thinking what he should do.
Had the question of his right to retain and make use
of that paper been squarely offered to him an hour
ago, he would without doubt have decided that he ought
not to keep it. Even now, looking at it as an
abstract principle, he did not deceive himself in
the least. But Nature has the reprehensible habit
of not presenting these questions to us squarely and
fairly, and it is remarkable that in most of our offending
the abstract principle is never the direct issue.
Mr. Harkutt was conscious of having been unwillingly
led step by step into a difficult, not to say dishonest,
situation, and against his own seeking. He had
never asked Elijah to sell him the property; he had
distinctly declined it; it had even been forced upon
him as security for the pittance he so freely gave
him. This proved (to himself) that he himself
was honest; it was only the circumstances that were
queer. Of course if Elijah had lived, he, Harkutt,
might have tried to drive some bargain with him before
the news of the railroad survey came out for
that was only business. But now that Elijah
was dead, who would be a penny the worse or better
but himself if he chose to consider the whole thing
as a lucky speculation, and his gift of five dollars
as the price he paid for it? Nobody could think
that he had calculated upon ’Lige’s suicide,
any more than that the property would become valuable.
In fact if it came to that, if ’Lige had really
contemplated killing himself as a hopeless bankrupt
after taking Harkutt’s money as a loan, it was
a swindle on his Harkutt’s good-nature.
He worked himself into a rage, which he felt was innately
virtuous, at this tyranny of cold principle over his
own warm-hearted instincts, but if it came to the
law, he’d stand by law and not sentiment.
He’d just let them by which he vaguely
meant the world, Tasajara, and possibly his own conscience see
that he wasn’t a sentimental fool, and he’d
freeze on to that paper and that property!
Only he ought to have spoken out before.
He ought to have told the surveyor at once that he
owned the land. He ought to have said: “Why,
that’s my land. I bought it of that drunken
’Lige Curtis for a song and out of charity.”
Yes, that was the only real trouble, and that came
from his own goodness, his own extravagant sense of
justice and right, his own cursed good-nature.
Yet, on second thoughts, he didn’t know why he
was obliged to tell the surveyor. Time enough
when the company wanted to buy the land. As soon
as it was settled that ’Lige was dead he’d
openly claim the property. But what if he wasn’t
dead? or they couldn’t find his body? or he
had only disappeared? His plain, matter-of-fact
face contracted and darkened. Of course he couldn’t
ask the company to wait for him to settle that point.
He had the power to dispose of the property under
that paper, and he should do it. If
’Lige turned up, that was another matter, and
he and ’Lige could arrange it between them.
He was quite firm here, and oddly enough quite relieved
in getting rid of what appeared only a simple question
of detail. He never suspected that he was contemplating
the one irretrievable step, and summarily dismissing
the whole ethical question.
He turned away from the stove, opened
the back door, and walked with a more determined step
through the passage to the sitting-room. But here
he halted again on the threshold with a quick return
of his old habits of caution. The door was slightly
open; apparently his angry outbreak of an hour ago
had not affected the spirits of his daughters, for
he could hear their hilarious voices mingling with
those of the strangers. They were evidently still
fortune-telling, but this time it was the prophetic
and divining accents of Mr. Rice addressed to Clementina
which were now plainly audible.
“I see heaps of money and a
great many friends in the change that is coming to
you. Dear me! how many suitors! But I cannot
promise you any marriage as brilliant as my friend
has just offered your sister. You may be certain,
however, that you’ll have your own choice in
this, as you have in all things.”
“Thank you for nothing,”
said Clementina’s voice. “But what
are those horrid black cards beside them? that’s
trouble, I’m sure.”
“Not for you, though near you.
Perhaps some one you don’t care much for and
don’t understand will have a heap of trouble
on your account, yes, on account of these
very riches; see, he follows the ten of diamonds.
It may be a suitor; it may be some one now in the
house, perhaps.”
“He means himself, Miss Clementina,”
struck in Grant’s voice laughingly.
“You’re not listening,
Miss Harkutt,” said Rice with half-serious reproach.
“Perhaps you know who it is?”
But Miss Clementina’s reply
was simply a hurried recognition of her father’s
pale face that here suddenly confronted her with the
opening door.
“Why, it’s father!”