Prosperity had settled upon the plains
of Tasajara. Not only had the embarcadero emerged
from the tules of Tasajara Creek as a thriving town
of steamboat wharves, warehouses, and outlying mills
and factories, but in five years the transforming
railroad had penetrated the great plain itself and
revealed its undeveloped fertility. The low-lying
lands that had been yearly overflowed by the creek,
now drained and cultivated, yielded treasures of wheat
and barley that were apparently inexhaustible.
Even the helpless indolence of Sidon had been surprised
into activity and change. There was nothing left
of the straggling settlement to recall its former
aspect. The site of Harkutt’s old store
and dwelling was lost and forgotten in the new mill
and granary that rose along the banks of the creek.
Decay leaves ruin and traces for the memory to linger
over; prosperity is unrelenting in its complete and
smiling obliteration of the past.
But Tasajara City, as the embarcadero
was now called, had no previous record, and even the
former existence of an actual settler like the forgotten
Elijah Curtis was unknown to the present inhabitants.
It was Daniel Harkutt’s idea carried out in
Daniel Harkutt’s land, with Daniel Harkutt’s
capital and energy. But Daniel Harkutt had become
Daniel Harcourt, and Harcourt Avenue, Harcourt Square,
and Harcourt House, ostentatiously proclaimed the
new spelling of his patronymic. When the change
was made and for what reason, who suggested it and
under what authority, were not easy to determine,
as the sign on his former store had borne nothing
but the legend, Goods and Provisions, and his name
did not appear on written record until after the occupation
of Tasajara; but it is presumed that it was at the
instigation of his daughters, and there was no one
to oppose it. Harcourt was a pretty name for a
street, a square, or a hotel; even the few in Sidon
who had called it Harkutt admitted that it was an
improvement quite consistent with the change from
the fever-haunted tules and sedges of the creek to
the broad, level, and handsome squares of Tasajara
City.
This might have been the opinion of
a visitor at the Harcourt House, who arrived one summer
afternoon from the Stockton boat, but whose shrewd,
half-critical, half-professional eyes and quiet questionings
betrayed some previous knowledge of the locality.
Seated on the broad veranda of the Harcourt House,
and gazing out on the well-kept green and young eucalyptus
trees of the Harcourt Square or Plaza, he had elicited
a counter question from a prosperous-looking citizen
who had been lounging at his side.
“I reckon you look ez if you
might have been here before, stranger.”
“Yes,” said the stranger
quietly, “I have been. But it was when the
tules grew in the square opposite, and the tide of
the creek washed them.”
“Well,” said the Tasajaran,
looking curiously at the stranger, “I call myself
a pioneer of Tasajara. My name’s Peters, of
Peters and Co., and those warehouses along
the wharf, where you landed just now, are mine; but
I was the first settler on Harcourt’s land, and
built the next cabin after him. I helped to clear
out them tules and dredged the channels yonder.
I took the contract with Harcourt to build the last
fifteen miles o’ railroad, and put up that depot
for the company. Perhaps you were here before
that?”
“I was,” returned the stranger quietly.
“I say,” said Peters,
hitching his chair a little nearer to his companion,
“you never knew a kind of broken-down feller,
called Curtis ’Lige Curtis who
once squatted here and sold his right to Harkutt?
He disappeared; it was allowed he killed hisself, but
they never found his body, and, between you and me,
I never took stock in that story. You know Harcourt
holds under him, and all Tasajara rests on that title.”
“I’ve heard so,”
assented the stranger carelessly, “but I never
knew the original settler. Then Harcourt has
been lucky?”
“You bet. He’s got
three millions right about here, or within this
quarter section, to say nothing of his outside speculations.”
“And lives here?”
“Not for two years. That’s
his old house across the plaza, but his women-folks
live mostly in ’Frisco and New York, where he’s
got houses too. They say they sorter got sick
of Tasajara after his youngest daughter ran off with
a feller.”
“Hallo!” said the stranger
with undisguised interest. “I never heard
of that! You don’t mean that she eloped” he
hesitated.
“Oh, it was a square enough
marriage. I reckon too square to suit some folks;
but the fellow hadn’t nothin’, and wasn’t
worth shucks, a sort of land surveyor,
doin’ odd jobs, you know; and the old man and
old woman were agin it, and the tother daughter worse
of all. It was allowed here you know
how women-folks talk! that the surveyor
had been sweet on Clementina, but had got tired of
being played by her, and took up with Phemie out o’
spite. Anyhow they got married, and Harcourt gave
them to understand they couldn’t expect anything
from him. P’raps that’s why it didn’t
last long, for only about two months ago she got a
divorce from Rice and came back to her family again.”
“Rice?” queried the stranger.
“Was that her husband’s name, Stephen
Rice?”
“I reckon! You knew him?”
“Yes, when the tide
came up to the tules, yonder,” answered the
stranger musingly. “And the other daughter, I
suppose she has made a good match, being a beauty
and the sole heiress?”
The Tasajaran made a grimace.
“Not much! I reckon she’s waitin’
for the Angel Gabriel, there ain’t
another good enough to suit her here. They say
she’s had most of the big men in California waitin’
in a line with their offers, like that cue the fellows
used to make at the ’Frisco post-office steamer
days and she with nary a letter or answer
for any of them.”
“Then Harcourt doesn’t
seem to have been as fortunate in his family affairs
as in his speculations?”
Peters uttered a grim laugh.
“Well, I reckon you know all about his son’s
stampeding with that girl last spring?”
“His son?” interrupted
the stranger. “Do you mean the boy they
called John Milton? Why, he was a mere child!”
“He was old enough to run away
with a young woman that helped in his mother’s
house, and marry her afore a justice of the peace.
The old man just snorted with rage, and swore he’d
have the marriage put aside, for the boy was under
age. He said it was a put-up job of the girl’s;
that she was older by two years, and only wanted to
get what money might be comin’ some day, but
that they’d never see a red cent of it.
Then, they say, John Milton up and sassed the old
man to his face, and allowed that he wouldn’t
take his dirty money if he starved first, and that
if the old man broke the marriage he’d marry
her again next year; that true love and honorable
poverty were better nor riches, and a lot more o’
that stuff he picked out o’ them ten-cent novels
he was allus reading. My women-folks say
that he actually liked the girl, because she was the
only one in the house that was ever kind to him; they
say the girls were just ragin’ mad at the idea
o’ havin’ a hired gal who had waited on
’em as a sister-in-law, and they even got old
Mammy Harcourt’s back up by sayin’ that
John’s wife would want to rule the house, and
run her out of her own kitchen. Some say he shook
them, talked back to ’em mighty sharp,
and held his head a heap higher nor them. Anyhow,
he’s livin’ with his wife somewhere in
’Frisco, in a shanty on a sand lot, and workin’
odd jobs for the newspapers. No! takin’
it by and large it don’t look as
if Harcourt had run his family to the same advantage
that he has his land.”
“Perhaps he doesn’t understand
them as well,” said the stranger smiling.
“Mor’n likely the material
ain’t thar, or ain’t as vallyble for a
new country,” said Peters grimly. “I
reckon the trouble is that he lets them two daughters
run him, and the man who lets any woman or women do
that, lets himself in for all their meannesses, and
all he gets in return is a woman’s result, show!”
Here the stranger, who was slowly
rising from his chair with the polite suggestion of
reluctantly tearing himself from the speaker’s
spell, said: “And Harcourt spends most
of his time in San Francisco, I suppose?”
“Yes! but to-day he’s
here to attend a directors’ meeting and the
opening of the Free Library and Tasajara Hall.
I saw the windows open, and the blinds up in his house
across the plaza as I passed just now.”
The stranger had by this time quite
effected his courteous withdrawal. “Good-afternoon,
Mr. Peters,” he said, smilingly lifting his hat,
and turned away.
Peters, who was obliged to take his
legs off the chair, and half rise to the stranger’s
politeness, here reflected that he did not know his
interlocutor’s name and business, and that he
had really got nothing in return for his information.
This must be remedied. As the stranger passed
through the hall into the street, followed by the unwonted
civilities of the spruce hotel clerk and the obsequious
attentions of the negro porter, Peters stepped to
the window of the office. “Who was that
man who just passed out?” he asked.
The clerk stared in undisguised astonishment.
“You don’t mean to say you didn’t
know who he was all the while you were
talking to him?”
“No,” returned Peters, impatiently.
“Why, that was Professor Lawrence
Grant! The Lawrence Grant don’t
you know? the biggest scientific man and
recognized expert on the Pacific slope. Why,
that’s the man whose single word is enough to
make or break the biggest mine or claim going!
That man! why, that’s the man whose
opinion’s worth thousands, for it carries millions
with it and can’t be bought.
That’s him who knocked the bottom outer El Dorado
last year, and next day sent Eureka up booming!
Ye remember that, sure?”
“Of course but” stammered
Peters.
“And to think you didn’t
know him!” repeated the hotel clerk wonderingly.
“And here I was reckoning you were getting points
from him all the time! Why, some men would have
given a thousand dollars for your chance of talking
to him yes! of even being seen
talking to him. Why, old Wingate once got a tip
on his Prairie Flower lead worth five thousand dollars
while just changing seats with him in the cars and
passing the time of day, sociable like. Why, what
did you talk about?”
Peters, with a miserable conviction
that he had thrown away a valuable opportunity in
mere idle gossip, nevertheless endeavored to look
mysterious as he replied, “Oh, business gin’rally.”
Then in the faint hope of yet retrieving his blunder
he inquired, “How long will he be here?”
“Don’t know. I reckon
he and Harcourt’s got something on hand.
He just asked if he was likely to be at home or at
his office. I told him I reckoned at the house,
for some of the family I didn’t get
to see who they were drove up in a carriage
from the 3.40 train while you were sitting there.”
Meanwhile the subject of this discussion,
quite unconscious of the sensation he had created,
or perhaps like most heroes philosophically careless
of it, was sauntering indifferently towards Harcourt’s
house. But he had no business with his former
host, his only object was to pass an idle hour before
his train left. He was, of course, not unaware
that he himself was largely responsible for Harcourt’s
success; that it was his hint which had induced
the petty trader of Sidon to venture his all in Tasajara;
his knowledge of the topography and geology of
the plain that had stimulated Harcourt’s agricultural
speculations; his hydrographic survey of the
creek that had made Harcourt’s plan of widening
the channel to commerce practicable and profitable.
This he could not help but know. But that it
was chiefly owing to his own clear, cool, far-seeing,
but never visionary, scientific observation, his
own accurate analysis, unprejudiced by even a savant’s
enthusiasm, and uninfluenced by any personal desire
or greed of gain, that Tasajara City had
risen from the stagnant tules, was a speculation that
had never occurred to him. There was a much more
uneasy consciousness of what he had done in Mr. Harcourt’s
face a few moments later, when his visitor’s
name was announced, and it is to be feared that if
that name had been less widely honored and respected
than it was, no merely grateful recollection of it
would have procured Grant an audience. As it was,
it was with a frown and a touch of his old impatient
asperity that he stepped to the threshold of an adjoining
room and called, “Clemmy!”
Clementina appeared at the door.
“There’s that man Grant
in the parlor. What brings him here, I wonder?
Who does he come to see?”
“Who did he ask for?”
“Me, but that don’t mean anything.”
“Perhaps he wants to see you on some business.”
“No. That isn’t his
high-toned style. He makes other people go to
him for that,” he said bitterly. “Anyhow don’t
you think it’s mighty queer his coming here
after his friend for it was he who introduced
Rice to us had behaved so to your sister,
and caused all this divorce and scandal?”
“Perhaps he may know nothing
about it; he and Rice separated long ago, even before
Grant became so famous. We never saw much of him,
you know, after we came here. Suppose you leave
him to me. I’ll see him.”
Mr. Harcourt reflected. “Didn’t
he used to be rather attentive to Phemie?”
Clementina shrugged her shoulders
carelessly. “I dare say but I
don’t think that now”
“Who said anything about now?”
retorted her father, with a return of his old abruptness.
After a pause he said: “I’ll go down
and see him first, and then send for you. You
can keep him for the opening and dinner, if you like.”
Meantime Lawrence Grant, serenely
unsuspicious of these domestic confidences, had been
shown into the parlor a large room furnished
in the same style as the drawing-room of the hotel
he had just quitted. He had ample time to note
that it was that wonderful Second Empire furniture
which he remembered that the early San Francisco pioneers
in the first flush of their wealth had imported directly
from France, and which for years after gave an unexpected
foreign flavor to the western domesticity and a tawdry
gilt equality to saloons and drawing-rooms, public
and private. But he was observant of a corresponding
change in Harcourt, when a moment later he entered
the room. That individuality which had kept the
former shopkeeper of Sidon distinct from, although
perhaps not superior to, his customers was
strongly marked. He was perhaps now more nervously
alert than then; he was certainly more impatient than
before, but that was pardonable in a man
of large affairs and action. Grant could not
deny that he seemed improved, rather perhaps
that the setting of fine clothes, cleanliness, and
the absence of petty worries, made his characteristics
respectable. That which is ill breeding in homespun,
is apt to become mere eccentricity in purple and fine
linen; Grant felt that Harcourt jarred on him less
than he did before, and was grateful without superciliousness.
Harcourt, relieved to find that Grant was neither
critical nor aggressively reminiscent, and above all
not inclined to claim the credit of creating him and
Tasajara, became more confident, more at his ease,
and, I fear, in proportion more unpleasant. It
is the repose and not the struggle of the parvenu
that confounds us.
“And you, Grant, you
have made yourself famous, and, I hear, have got pretty
much your own prices for your opinions ever since it
was known that you you er were
connected with the growth of Tasajara.”
Grant smiled; he was not quite prepared
for this; but it was amusing and would pass the time.
He murmured a sentence of half ironical deprecation,
and Mr. Harcourt continued:
“I haven’t got my San
Francisco house here to receive you in, but I hope
some day, sir, to see you there. We are only here
for the day and night, but if you care to attend the
opening ceremonies at the new hall, we can manage
to give you dinner afterwards. You can escort
my daughter Clementina, she’s here
with me.”
The smile of apologetic declination
which had begun to form on Grant’s lips was
suddenly arrested. “Then your daughter is
here?” he asked, with unaffected interest.
“Yes, she is in fact
a patroness of the library and sewing-circle, and
takes the greatest interest in it. The Reverend
Doctor Pilsbury relies upon her for everything.
She runs the society, even to the training of the
young ladies, sir. You shall see their exercises.”
This was certainly a new phase of
Clementina’s character. Yet why should
she not assume the rôle of Lady Bountiful with the
other functions of her new condition. “I
should have thought Miss Harcourt would have found
this rather difficult with her other social duties,”
he said, “and would have left it to her married
sister.” He thought it better not to appear
as if avoiding reference to Euphemia, although quietly
ignoring her late experiences. Mr. Harcourt was
less easy in his response.
“Now that Euphemia is again
with her own family,” he said ponderously, with
an affectation of social discrimination that was in
weak contrast to his usual direct business astuteness,
“I suppose she may take her part in these things,
but just now she requires rest. You may have heard
some rumor that she is going abroad for a time?
The fact is she hasn’t the least intention of
doing so, nor do we consider there is the slightest
reason for her going.” He paused as if to
give great emphasis to a statement that seemed otherwise
unimportant. “But here’s Clementina
coming, and I must get you to excuse me.
I’ve to meet the trustees of the church in ten
minutes, but I hope she’ll persuade you to stay,
and I’ll see you later at the hall.”
As Clementina entered the room her
father vanished and, I fear, as completely dropped
out of Mr. Grant’s mind. For the daughter’s
improvement was greater than her father’s, yet
so much more refined as to be at first only delicately
perceptible. Grant had been prepared for the
vulgar enhancement of fine clothes and personal adornment,
for the specious setting of luxurious circumstances
and surroundings, for the aplomb that came from flattery
and conscious power. But he found none of these;
her calm individuality was intensified rather than
subdued; she was dressed simply, with an economy of
ornament, rich material, and jewelry, but an accuracy
of taste that was always dominant. Her plain
gray merino dress, beautifully fitting her figure,
suggested, with its pale blue facings, some uniform,
as of the charitable society she patronized.
She came towards him with a graceful movement of greeting,
yet her face showed no consciousness of the interval
that had elapsed since they met; he almost fancied
himself transported back to the sitting-room at Sidon
with the monotonous patter of the leaves outside,
and the cool moist breath of the bay and alder coming
in at the window.
“Father says that you are only
passing through Tasajara to-day, as you did through
Sidon five years ago,” she said with a smiling
earnestness that he fancied however was the one new
phase of her character. “But I won’t
believe it! At least we will not accept another
visit quite as accidental as that, even though you
brought us twice the good fortune you did then.
You see, we have not forgotten it if you have, Mr.
Grant. And unless you want us to believe that
your fairy gifts will turn some day to leaves and
ashes, you will promise to stay with us tonight, and
let me show you some of the good we have done with
them. Perhaps you don’t know, or don’t
want to know, that it was I who got up this ‘Library
and Home Circle of the Sisters of Tasajara’ which
we are to open to-day. And can you imagine why?
You remember or have you forgotten that
you once affected to be concerned at the social condition
of the young ladies on the plains of Sidon? Well,
Mr. Grant, this is gotten up in order that the future
Mr. Grants who wander may find future Miss Billingses
who are worthy to converse with them and entertain
them, and who no longer wear men’s hats and live
on the public road.”
It was such a long speech for one
so taciturn as he remembered Clementina to have been;
so unexpected in tone considering her father’s
attitude towards him, and so unlooked for in its reference
to a slight incident of the past, that Grant’s
critical contemplation of her gave way to a quiet
and grateful glance of admiration. How could he
have been so mistaken in her character? He had
always preferred the outspoken Euphemia, and yet why
should he not have been equally mistaken in her?
Without having any personal knowledge of Rice’s
matrimonial troubles for their intimate
companionship had not continued after the survey he
had been inclined to blame him; now he seemed to find
excuses for him. He wondered if she really had
liked him as Peters had hinted; he wondered if she
knew that he, Grant, was no longer intimate with him
and knew nothing of her affairs. All this while
he was accepting her proffered hospitality and sending
to the hotel for his luggage. Then he drifted
into a conversation, which he had expected would be
brief, pointless, and confined to a stupid resume
of their mutual and social progress since they had
left Sidon. But here he was again mistaken; she
was talking familiarly of present social topics, of
things that she knew clearly and well, without effort
or attitude. She had been to New York and Boston
for two winters; she had spent the previous summer
at Newport; it might have been her whole youth for
the fluency, accuracy, and familiarity of her detail,
and the absence of provincial enthusiasm. She
was going abroad, probably in the spring. She
had thought of going to winter in Italy, but she would
wait now until her sister was ready to go with her.
Mr. Grant of course knew that Euphemia was separated
from Mr. Rice no not until her
father told him? Well the marriage
had been a wild and foolish thing for both. But
Euphemia was back again with them in the San Francisco
house; she had talked of coming to Tasajara to-day,
perhaps she might be there tonight. And, good
heavens! it was actually three o’clock already,
and they must start at once for the Hall. She
would go and get her hat and return instantly.
It was true; he had been talking with
her an hour pleasantly, intelligently,
and yet with a consciousness of an indefinite satisfaction
beyond all this. It must have been surprise at
her transformation, or his previous misconception
of her character. He had been watching her features
and wondering why he had ever thought them expressionless.
There was also the pleasant suggestion common
to humanity in such instances that he himself
was in some way responsible for the change; that it
was some awakened sympathy to his own nature that
had breathed into this cold and faultless statue the
warmth of life. In an odd flash of recollection
he remembered how, five years ago, when Rice had suggested
to her that she was “hard to please,” she
had replied that she “didn’t know, but
that she was waiting to see.” It did not
occur to him to wonder why she had not awakened then,
or if this awakening had anything to do with her own
volition. It was not probable that they would
meet again after to-day, or if they did, that she would
not relapse into her former self and fail to impress
him as she had now. But here she was a
paragon of feminine promptitude already
standing in the doorway, accurately gloved and booted,
and wearing a demure gray hat that modestly crowned
her decorously elegant figure.
They crossed the plaza side by side,
in the still garish sunlight that seemed to mock the
scant shade of the youthful eucalyptus trees, and
presently fell in with the stream of people going in
their direction. The former daughters of Sidon,
the Billingses, the Peterses, and Wingates, were there
bourgeoning and expanding in the glare of their new
prosperity, with silk and gold; there were newer faces
still, and pretty ones, for Tasajara as
a “Cow County” had attracted settlers with
large families, and there were already
the contrasting types of East and West. Many
turned to look after the tall figure of the daughter
of the Founder of Tasajara, a spectacle
lately rare to the town; a few glanced at her companion,
equally noticeable as a stranger. Thanks, however,
to some judicious preliminary advertising from the
hotel clerk, Peters, and Daniel Harcourt himself,
by the time Grant and Miss Harcourt had reached the
Hall his name and fame were already known, and speculation
had already begun whether this new stroke of Harcourt’s
shrewdness might not unite Clementina to a renowned
and profitable partner.
The Hall was in one of the further
and newly opened suburbs, and its side and rear windows
gave immediately upon the outlying and illimitable
plain of Tasajara. It was a tasteful and fair-seeming
structure of wood, surprisingly and surpassingly new.
In fact that was its one dominant feature; nowhere
else had youth and freshness ever shown itself as
unconquerable and all-conquering. The spice of
virgin woods and trackless forests still rose from
its pine floors, and breathed from its outer shell
of cedar that still oozed its sap, and redwood that
still dropped its life-blood. Nowhere else were
the plastered walls and ceilings as white and dazzling
in their unstained purity, or as redolent of the outlying
quarry in their clear cool breath of lime and stone.
Even the turpentine of fresh and spotless paint added
to this sense of wholesome germination, and as the
clear and brilliant Californian sunshine swept through
the open windows west and east, suffusing the whole
palpitating structure with its searching and resistless
radiance, the very air seemed filled with the aroma
of creation.
The fresh colors of the young Republic,
the bright blazonry of the newest State, the coat-of-arms
of the infant County of Tasajara (a vignette
of sunset-tules cloven by the steam of an advancing
train) hanging from the walls, were all
a part of this invincible juvenescence. Even
the newest silks, ribbons and prints of the latest
holiday fashions made their first virgin appearance
in the new building as if to consecrate it, until
it was stirred by the rustle of youth, as with the
sound and movement of budding spring.
A strain from the new organ whose
heart, however, had prematurely learned its own bitterness and
a thin, clear, but somewhat shrill chanting from a
choir of young ladies were followed by a prayer from
the Reverend Mr. Pilsbury. Then there was a pause
of expectancy, and Grant’s fair companion, who
up to that moment had been quietly acting as guide
and cicerone to her father’s guest, excused herself
with a little grimace of mock concern and was led
away by one of the committee. Grant’s usually
keen eyes were wandering somewhat abstractedly over
the agitated and rustling field of ribbons, flowers
and feathers before him, past the blazonry of banner
on the walls, and through the open windows to the
long sunlit levels beyond, when he noticed a stir upon
the raised dais or platform at the end of the room,
where the notables of Tasajara were formally assembled.
The mass of black coats suddenly parted and drew back
against the wall to allow the coming forward of a single
graceful figure. A thrill of nervousness as unexpected
as unaccountable passed over him as he recognized
Clementina. In the midst of a sudden silence
she read the report of the committee from a paper in
her hand, in a clear, untroubled voice the
old voice of Sidon and formally declared
the building opened. The sunlight, nearly level,
streamed through the western window across the front
of the platform where she stood and transfigured her
slight but noble figure. The hush that had fallen
upon the Hall was as much the effect of that tranquil,
ideal presence as of the message with which it was
charged. And yet that apparition was as inconsistent
with the clear, searching light which helped to set
it off, as it was with the broad new blazonry of decoration,
the yet unsullied record of the white walls, or even
the frank, animated and pretty faces that looked upon
it. Perhaps it was some such instinct that caused
the applause which hesitatingly and tardily followed
her from the platform to appear polite and half restrained
rather than spontaneous.
Nevertheless Grant was honestly and
sincerely profuse in his congratulations. “You
were far cooler and far more self-contained than I
should have been in your place,” he said, “than
in fact I actually was, only as your auditor.
But I suppose you have done it before?”
She turned her beautiful eyes on his
wonderingly. “No, this is the
first time I ever appeared in public, not
even at school, for even there I was always a private
pupil.”
“You astonish me,” said
Grant; “you seemed like an old hand at it.”
“Perhaps I did, or rather as
if I didn’t think anything of it myself, and
that no doubt is why the audience didn’t think
anything of it either.”
So she had noticed her cold reception,
and yet there was not the slightest trace of disappointment,
regret, or wounded vanity in her tone or manner.
“You must take me to the refreshment room now,”
she said pleasantly, “and help me to look after
the young ladies who are my guests. I’m
afraid there are still more speeches to come, and father
and Mr. Pilsbury are looking as if they confidently
expected something more would be ‘expected’
of them.”
Grant at once threw himself into the
task assigned to him, with his natural gallantry and
a certain captivating playfulness which he still retained.
Perhaps he was the more anxious to please in order
that his companion might share some of his popularity,
for it was undeniable that Miss Harcourt still seemed
to excite only a constrained politeness among those
with whom she courteously mingled. And this was
still more distinctly marked by the contrast of a
later incident.
For some moments the sound of laughter
and greeting had risen near the door of the refreshment
room that opened upon the central hall, and there
was a perceptible movement of the crowd particularly
of youthful male Tasajara in that direction.
It was evident that it announced the unexpected arrival
of some popular resident. Attracted like the others,
Grant turned and saw the company making way for the
smiling, easy, half-saucy, half-complacent entry of
a handsomely dressed young girl. As she turned
from time to time to recognize with rallying familiarity
or charming impertinence some of her admirers, there
was that in her tone and gesture which instantly recalled
to him the past. It was unmistakably Euphemia!
His eyes instinctively sought Clementina’s.
She was gazing at him with such a grave, penetrating
look, half doubting, half wistful, a
look so unlike her usual unruffled calm that he felt
strangely stirred. But the next moment, when she
rejoined him, the look had entirely gone. “You
have not seen my sister since you were at Sidon, I
believe?” she said quietly. “She would
be sorry to miss you.” But Euphemia and
her train were already passing them on the opposite
side of the long table. She had evidently recognized
Grant, yet the two sisters were looking intently into
each other’s eyes when he raised his own.
Then Euphemia met his bow with a momentary accession
of color, a coquettish wave of her hand across the
table, a slight exaggeration of her usual fascinating
recklessness, and smilingly moved away. He turned
to Clementina, but here an ominous tapping at the farther
end of the long table revealed the fact that Mr. Harcourt
was standing on a chair with oratorical possibilities
in his face and attitude. There was another forward
movement in the crowd and silence.
In that solid, black-broadclothed, respectable figure,
that massive watchchain, that white waistcoat, that
diamond pin glistening in the satin cravat, Euphemia
might have seen the realization of her prophetic vision
at Sidon five years before.
He spoke for ten minutes with a fluency
and comprehensive business-like directness that surprised
Grant. He was not there, he said, to glorify
what had been done by himself, his family, or his friends
in Tasajara. Others who were to follow him might
do that, or at least might be better able to explain
and expatiate upon the advantages of the institution
they had just opened, and its social, moral, and religious
effect upon the community. He was there as a
business man to demonstrate to them as
he had always done and always hoped to do the
money value of improvement; the profit if
they might choose to call it of well-regulated
and properly calculated speculation. The plot
of land upon which they stood, of which the building
occupied only one eighth, was bought two years before
for ten thousand dollars. When the plans of the
building were completed a month afterwards, the value
of the remaining seven eighths had risen enough to
defray the cost of the entire construction. He
was in a position to tell them that only that morning
the adjacent property, subdivided and laid out in streets
and building-plots, had been admitted into the corporate
limits of the city; and that on the next anniversary
of the building they would approach it through an
avenue of finished dwellings! An outburst of applause
followed the speaker’s practical climax; the
fresh young faces of his auditors glowed with invincible
enthusiasm; the afternoon trade-winds, freshening
over the limitless plain beyond, tossed the bright
banners at the windows as with sympathetic rejoicing,
and a few odorous pine shavings, overlooked in a corner
in the hurry of preparation, touched by an eddying
zephyr, crept out and rolled in yellow ringlets across
the floor.
The Reverend Doctor Pilsbury arose
in a more decorous silence. He had listened approvingly,
admiringly, he might say even reverently, to the preceding
speaker. But although his distinguished friend
had, with his usual modesty, made light of his own
services and those of his charming family, he, the
speaker, had not risen to sing his praises. No;
it was not in this Hall, projected by his foresight
and raised by his liberality; in this town, called
into existence by his energy and stamped by his attributes;
in this county, developed by his genius and sustained
by his capital; ay, in this very State whose grandeur
was made possible by such giants as he, it
was not in any of these places that it was necessary
to praise Daniel Harcourt, or that a panegyric of him
would be more than idle repetition. Nor would
he, as that distinguished man had suggested, enlarge
upon the social, moral, and religious benefits of
the improvement they were now celebrating. It
was written on the happy, innocent faces, in the festive
garb, in the decorous demeanor, in the intelligent
eyes that sparkled around him, in the presence of
those of his parishioners whom he could meet as freely
here to-day as in his own church on Sunday. What
then could he say? What then was there to say?
Perhaps he should say nothing if it were not for the
presence of the young before him. He stopped
and fixed his eyes paternally on the youthful Johnny
Billings, who with a half dozen other Sunday-school
scholars had been marshaled before the reverend speaker. And
what was to be the lesson they were to learn from
it? They had heard what had been achieved by
labor, enterprise, and diligence. Perhaps they
would believe, and naturally too, that what labor,
enterprise, and diligence had done could be done again.
But was that all? Was there nothing behind these
qualities which, after all, were within
the reach of every one here? Had they ever thought
that back of every pioneer, every explorer, every
pathfinder, every founder and creator, there was still
another? There was no terra incognita
so rare as to be unknown to one; no wilderness so
remote as to be beyond a greater ken than theirs;
no waste so trackless but that one had already passed
that way! Did they ever reflect that when the
dull sea ebbed and flowed in the tules over the very
spot where they were now standing, who it was that
also foresaw, conceived, and ordained the mighty change
that would take place; who even guided and directed
the feeble means employed to work it; whose spirit
moved, as in still older days of which they had read,
over the face of the stagnant waters? Perhaps
they had. Who then was the real pioneer of Tasajara, back
of the Harcourts, the Peterses, the Billingses, and
Wingates? The reverend gentleman gently paused
for a reply. It was given in the clear but startled
accents of the half frightened, half-fascinated Johnny
Billings, in three words:
“’Lige Curtis, sir!”