She had so far forgotten herself in
yielding to the spell of the place, and in the revelation
of her naked soul and inner nature, that it was with
something of the instinct of outraged modesty that
she seemed to shrink before this apparition of the
outer world and outer worldliness. In an instant
the nearer past returned; she remembered where she
was, how she had come there, from whom she had come,
and to whom she was returning. She could see
that she had not only aimlessly wandered from the
world but from the road; and for that instant she hated
this man who had reminded her of it, even while she
knew she must ask his assistance. It relieved
her slightly to observe that he seemed as disturbed
and impatient as herself, and as he took a pencil
from between his lips and returned it to his pocket
he scarcely looked at her.
But with her return to the world of
convenances came its repression, and with
a gentlewoman’s ease and modulated voice she
leaned over her mustang’s neck and said:
“I have strayed from my party and am afraid I
have lost my way. We were going to the hotel at
San Mateo. Would you be kind enough to direct
me there, or show me how I can regain the road by
which I came?”
Her voice and manner were quite enough
to arrest him where he stood with a pleased surprise
in his fresh and ingenuous face. She looked at
him more closely. He was, in spite of his long
silken mustache, so absurdly young; he might, in spite
of that youth, be so absurdly man-like! What
was he doing there? Was he a farmer’s son,
an artist, a surveyor, or a city clerk out for a holiday?
Was there perhaps a youthful female of his species
somewhere for whom he was waiting and upon whose tryst
she was now breaking? Was he terrible
thought! the outlying picket of some family
picnic? His dress, neat, simple, free from ostentatious
ornament, betrayed nothing. She waited for his
voice.
“Oh, you have left San Mateo
miles away to the right,” he said with quick
youthful sympathy, “at least five miles!
Where did you leave your party?”
His voice was winning, and even refined,
she thought. She answered it quite spontaneously:
“At a fork of two roads. I see now I took
the wrong turning.”
“Yes, you took the road to Crystal
Spring. It’s just down there in the valley,
not more than a mile. You’d have been there
now if you hadn’t turned off at the woods.”
“I couldn’t help it, it was so beautiful.”
“Isn’t it?”
“Perfect.”
“And such shadows, and such intensity of color.”
“Wonderful! and all along the ridge,
looking down that defile!”
“Yes, and that point where it
seems as if you had only to stretch out your hand
to pick a manzanita berry from the other side of the
canyon, half a mile across!”
“Yes, and that first glimpse
of the valley through the Gothic gateway of rocks!”
“And the color of those rocks, cinnamon
and bronze with the light green of the Yerba buena
vine splashing over them.”
“Yes, but for color did
you notice that hillside of yellow poppies pouring
down into the valley like a golden Niagara?”
“Certainly, and the perfect clearness
of everything.”
“And yet such complete silence and repose!”
“Oh, yes!”
“Ah, yes!”
They were both gravely nodding and
shaking their heads with sparkling eyes and brightened
color, looking not at each other but at the far landscape
vignetted through a lozenge-shaped wind opening in
the trees. Suddenly Mrs. Ashwood straightened
herself in the saddle, looked grave, lifted the reins
and apparently the ten years with them that had dropped
from her. But she said in her easiest well-bred
tones, and a half sigh, “Then I must take the
road back again to where it forks?”
“Oh, no! you can go by Crystal
Spring. It’s no further, and I’ll
show you the way. But you’d better stop
and rest yourself and your horse for a little while
at the Springs Hotel. It’s a very nice place.
Many people ride there from San Francisco to luncheon
and return. I wonder that your party didn’t
prefer it; and if they are looking for you, as
they surely must be,” he said, as if with a
sudden conception of her importance, “they’ll
come there when they find you’re not at San Mateo.”
This seemed reasonable, although the
process of being “fetched” and taking
the five miles ride, which she had enjoyed so much
alone, in company was not attractive. “Couldn’t
I go on at once?” she said impulsively.
“You would meet them sooner,” he said
thoughtfully.
This was quite enough for Mrs. Ashwood.
“I think I’ll rest this poor horse, who
is really tired,” she, said with charming hypocrisy,
“and stop at the hotel.”
She saw his face brighten. Perhaps
he was the son of the hotel proprietor, or a youthful
partner himself. “I suppose you live here?”
she suggested gently. “You seem to know
the place so well.”
“No,” he returned quickly;
“I only run down here from San Francisco when
I can get a day off.”
A day off! He was in some regular
employment. But he continued: “And
I used to go to boarding-school near here, and know
all these woods well.”
He must be a native! How odd!
She had not conceived that there might be any other
population here than the immigrants; perhaps that was
what made him so interesting and different from the
others. “Then your father and mother live
here?” she said.
His frank face, incapable of disguise,
changed suddenly. “No,” he said simply,
but without any trace of awkwardness. Then after
a slight pause he laid his hand she noticed
it was white and well kept on her mustang’s
neck, and said, “If if you care to
trust yourself to me, I could lead you and your horse
down a trail into the valley that is at least a third
of the distance shorter. It would save you going
back to the regular road, and there are one or two
lovely views that I could show you. I should
be so pleased, if it would not trouble you. There’s
a steep place or two but I think there’s
no danger.”
“I shall not be afraid.”
She smiled so graciously, and, as
she fully believed, maternally, that he looked at
her the second time. To his first hurried impression
of her as an elegant and delicately nurtured woman one
of the class of distinguished tourists that fashion
was beginning to send thither he had now
to add that she had a quantity of fine silken-spun
light hair gathered in a heavy braid beneath her gray
hat; that her mouth was very delicately lipped and
beautifully sensitive; that her soft skin, although
just then touched with excitement, was a pale faded
velvet, and seemed to be worn with ennui rather than
experience; that her eyes were hidden behind a strip
of gray veil whence only a faint glow was discernible.
To this must still be added a poetic fancy all his
own that, as she sat there, with the skirt of her
gray habit falling from her long bodiced waist over
the mustang’s fawn-colored flanks, and with
her slim gauntleted hands lightly swaying the reins,
she looked like Queen Guinevere in the forest.
Not that he particularly fancied Queen Guinevere,
or that he at all imagined himself Launcelot, but it
was quite in keeping with the suggestion-haunted brain
of John Milton Harcourt, whom the astute reader has
of course long since recognized.
Preceding her through the soft carpeted
vault with a woodman’s instinct, for
there was apparently no trail to be seen, the
soft inner twilight began to give way to the outer
stronger day, and presently she was startled to see
the clear blue of the sky before her on apparently
the same level as the brown pine-tessellated floor
she was treading. Not only did this show her
that she was crossing a ridge of the upland, but a
few moments later she had passed beyond the woods to
a golden hillside that sloped towards a leafy, sheltered,
and exquisitely-proportioned valley. A tiny but
picturesque tower, and a few straggling roofs and
gables, the flashing of a crystal stream through the
leaves, and a narrow white ribbon of road winding
behind it indicated the hostelry they were seeking.
So peaceful and unfrequented it looked, nestling between
the hills, that it seemed as if they had discovered
it.
With his hand at times upon the bridle,
at others merely caressing her mustang’s neck,
he led the way; there were a few breathless places
where the crown of his straw hat appeared between
her horse’s reins, and again when she seemed
almost slipping over on his shoulder, but they were
passed with such frank fearlessness and invincible
youthful confidence on the part of her escort that
she felt no timidity. There were moments when
a bit of the charmed landscape unfolding before them
overpowered them both, and they halted to gaze, sometimes
without a word, or only a significant gesture of sympathy
and attention. At one of those artistic manifestations
Mrs. Ashwood laid her slim gloved fingers lightly but
unwittingly on John Milton’s arm, and withdrew
them, however, with a quick girlish apology and a
foolish color which annoyed her more than the appearance
of familiarity. But they were now getting well
down into the valley; the court of the little hotel
was already opening before them; their unconventional
relations in the idyllic world above had changed;
the new one required some delicacy of handling, and
she had an idea that even the simplicity of the young
stranger might be confusing.
“I must ask you to continue
to act as my escort,” she said, laughingly.
“I am Mrs. Ashwood of Philadelphia, visiting
San Francisco with my sister and brother, who are,
I am afraid, even now hopelessly waiting luncheon
for me at San Mateo. But as there seems to be
no prospect of my joining them in time, I hope you
will be able to give me the pleasure of your company,
with whatever they may give us here in the way of
refreshment.”
“I shall be very happy,”
returned John Milton with unmistakable candor; “but
perhaps some of your friends will be arriving in quest
of you, if they are not already here.”
“Then they will join us or wait,”
said Mrs. Ashwood incisively, with her first exhibition
of the imperiousness of a rich and pretty woman.
Perhaps she was a little annoyed that her elaborate
introduction of herself had produced no reciprocal
disclosure by her companion. “Will you
please send the landlord to me?” she added.
John Milton disappeared in the hotel
as she cantered to the porch. In another moment
she was giving the landlord her orders with the easy
confidence of one who knew herself only as an always
welcome and highly privileged guest, which was not
without its effect. “And,” she added
carelessly, “when everything is ready you will
please tell Mr.”
“Harcourt,” suggested the landlord promptly.
Mrs. Ashwood’s perfectly trained
face gave not the slightest sign of the surprise that
had overtaken her. “Of course, Mr.
Harcourt.”
“You know he’s the son
of the millionaire,” continued the landlord,
not at all unwilling to display the importance of
the habitues of Crystal Spring, “though they’ve
quarreled and don’t get on together.”
“I know,” said the lady
languidly, “and, if any one comes here for me,
ask them to wait in the parlor until I come.”
Then, submitting herself and her dusty
habit to the awkward ministration of the Irish chambermaid,
she was quite thrilled with a delightful curiosity.
She vaguely remembered that she had heard something
of the Harcourt family discord, but that
was the divorced daughter surely! And this young
man was Harcourt’s son, and they had quarreled!
A quarrel with a frank, open, ingenuous fellow like
that a mere boy could only be
the father’s fault. Luckily she had never
mentioned the name of Harcourt! She would not
now; he need not know that it was his father who had
originated the party; why should she make him uncomfortable
for the few moments they were together?
There was nothing of this in her face
as she descended and joined him. He thought that
face handsome, well-bred, and refined. But this
breeding and refinement seemed to him in
his ignorance of the world, possibly as
only a graceful concealment of a self of which he knew
nothing; and he was not surprised to find that her
pretty gray eyes, now no longer hidden by her veil,
really told him no more than her lips. He was
a little afraid of her, and now that she had lost her
naïve enthusiasm he was conscious of a vague remorsefulness
for his interrupted work in the forest. What
was he doing here? He who had avoided the cruel,
selfish world of wealth and pleasure, a
world that this woman represented, the
world that had stood apart from him in the one dream
of his life and had let Loo die! His
quickly responsive face darkened.
“I am afraid I really interrupted
you up there,” she said gently, looking in his
face with an expression of unfeigned concern; “you
were at work of some kind, I know, and I have very
selfishly thought only of myself. But the whole
scene was so new to me, and I so rarely meet any one
who sees things as I do, that I know you will forgive
me.” She bent her eyes upon him with a
certain soft timidity. “You are an artist?”
“I am afraid not,” he
said, coloring and smiling faintly; “I don’t
think I could draw a straight line.”
“Don’t try to; they’re
not pretty, and the mere ability to draw them straight
or curved doesn’t make an artist. But you
are a lover of nature, I know, and from what
I have heard you say I believe you can do what lovers
cannot do, make others feel as they do, and
that is what I call being an artist. You write?
You are a poet?”
“Oh dear, no,” he said
with a smile, half of relief and half of naïve superiority,
“I’m a prose writer on a daily
newspaper.”
To his surprise she was not disconcerted;
rather a look of animation lit up her face as she
said brightly, “Oh, then, you can of course satisfy
my curiosity about something. You know the road
from San Francisco to the Cliff House. Except
for the view of the sea-lions when one gets there
it’s stupid; my brother says it’s like
all the San Francisco excursions, a dusty
drive with a julep at the end of it. Well, one
day we were coming back from a drive there, and when
we were beginning to wind along the brow of that dreadful
staring Lone Mountain Cemetery, I said I would get
out and walk, and avoid the obtrusive glitter of those
tombstones rising before me all the way. I pushed
open a little gate and passed in. Once among
these funereal shrubs and cold statuesque lilies everything
was changed; I saw the staring tombstones no longer,
for, like them, I seemed to be always facing the sea.
The road had vanished; everything had vanished but
the endless waste of ocean below me, and the last
slope of rock and sand. It seemed to be the fittest
place for a cemetery, this end of the crumbling
earth, this beginning of the eternal sea.
There! don’t think that idea my own, or that
I thought of it then. No, I read it
all afterwards, and that’s why I’m telling
you this.”
She could not help smiling at his
now attentive face, and went on: “Some
days afterwards I got hold of a newspaper four or six
months old, and there was a description of all that
I thought I had seen and felt, only far
more beautiful and touching, as you shall see, for
I cut it out of the paper and have kept it. It
seemed to me that it must be some personal experience, as
if the writer had followed some dear friend there, although
it was with the unostentation and indefiniteness of
true and delicate feeling. It impressed me so
much that I went back there twice or thrice, and always
seemed to move to the rhythm of that beautiful funeral
march and I am afraid, being a woman, that
I wandered around among the graves as though I could
find out who it was that had been sung so sweetly,
and if it were man or woman. I’ve got it
here,” she said, taking a dainty ivory porte-monnaie
from her pocket and picking out with two slim finger-tips
a folded slip of newspaper; “and I thought that
maybe you might recognize the style of the writer,
and perhaps know something of his history. For
I believe he has one. There! that is only a part
of the article, of course, but it is the part that
interested me. Just read from there,” she
pointed, leaning partly over his shoulder so that
her soft breath stirred his hair, “to the end;
it isn’t long.”
In the film that seemed to come across
his eyes, suddenly the print appeared blurred and
indistinct. But he knew that she had put into
his hand something he had written after the death
of his wife; something spontaneous and impulsive,
when her loss still filled his days and nights and
almost unconsciously swayed his pen. He remembered
that his eyes had been as dim when he wrote it and
now handed to him by this smiling, well-to-do
woman, he was as shocked at first as if he had suddenly
found her reading his private letters. This was
followed by a sudden sense of shame that he had ever
thus publicly bared his feelings, and then by the
illogical but irresistible conviction that it was false
and stupid. The few phrases she had pointed out
appeared as cheap and hollow rhetoric amid the surroundings
of their social tete-a-tete over the luncheon-table.
There was small danger that this heady wine of woman’s
praise would make him betray himself; there was no
sign of gratified authorship in his voice as he quietly
laid down the paper and said dryly: “I
am afraid I can’t help you. You know it
may be purely fanciful.”
“I don’t think so,”
said Mrs. Ashwood thoughtfully. “At the
same time it doesn’t strike me as a very abiding
grief for that very reason. It’s too
sympathetic. It strikes me that it might be the
first grief of some one too young to be inured to
sorrow or experienced enough to accept it as the common
lot. But like all youthful impressions it is very
sincere and true while it lasts. I don’t
know whether one gets anything more real when one
gets older.”
With an insincerity he could not account
for, he now felt inclined to defend his previous sentiment,
although all the while conscious of a certain charm
in his companion’s graceful skepticism.
He had in his truthfulness and independence hitherto
always been quite free from that feeble admiration
of cynicism which attacks the intellectually weak and
immature, and his present predilection may have been
due more to her charming personality. She was
not at all like his sisters; she had none of Clementina’s
cold abstraction, and none of Euphemia’s sharp
and demonstrative effusiveness. And in his secret
consciousness of her flattering foreknowledge of him,
with her assurance that before they had ever met he
had unwittingly influenced her, he began to feel more
at his ease. His fair companion also, in the
equally secret knowledge she had acquired of his history,
felt as secure as if she had been formally introduced.
Nobody could find fault with her for showing civility
to the ostensible son of her host; it was not necessary
that she should be aware of their family differences.
There was a charm too in their enforced isolation,
in what was the exceptional solitude of the little
hotel that day, and the seclusion of their table by
the window of the dining-room, which gave a charming
domesticity to their repast. From time to time
they glanced down the lonely canyon, losing itself
in the afternoon shadow. Nevertheless Mrs. Ashwood’s
preoccupation with Nature did not preclude a human
curiosity to hear something more of John Milton’s
quarrel with his father. There was certainly nothing
of the prodigal son about him; there was no precocious
evil knowledge in his frank eyes; no record of excesses
in his healthy, fresh complexion; no unwholesome or
disturbed tastes in what she had seen of his rural
preferences and understanding of natural beauty.
To have attempted any direct questioning that would
have revealed his name and identity would have obliged
her to speak of herself as his father’s guest.
She began indirectly; he had said he had been a reporter,
and he was still a chronicler of this strange life.
He had of course heard of many cases of family feuds
and estrangements? Her brother had told her of
some dreadful vendettas he had known in the Southwest,
and how whole families had been divided. Since
she had been here she had heard of odd cases of brothers
meeting accidentally after long and unaccounted separations;
of husbands suddenly confronted with wives they had
deserted; of fathers encountering discarded sons!
John Milton’s face betrayed
no uneasy consciousness. If anything it was beginning
to glow with a boyish admiration of the grace and intelligence
of the fair speaker, that was perhaps heightened by
an assumption of half coquettish discomfiture.
“You are laughing at me!”
she said finally. “But inhuman and selfish
as these stories may seem, and sometimes are, I believe
that these curious estrangements and separations often
come from some fatal weakness of temperament that
might be strengthened, or some trivial misunderstanding
that could be explained. It is separation that
makes them seem irrevocable only because they are
inexplicable, and a vague memory always seems more
terrible than a definite one. Facts may be forgiven
and forgotten, but mysteries haunt one always.
I believe there are weak, sensitive people who dread
to put their wrongs into shape; those are the kind
who sulk, and when you add separation to sulking, reconciliation
becomes impossible. I knew a very singular case
of that kind once. If you like, I’ll tell
it to you. May be you will be able, some day,
to weave it into one of your writings. And it’s
quite true.”
It is hardly necessary to say that
John Milton had not been touched by any personal significance
in his companion’s speech, whatever she may
have intended; and it is equally true that whether
she had presently forgotten her purpose, or had become
suddenly interested in her own conversation, her face
grew more animated, her manner more confidential,
and something of the youthful enthusiasm she had shown
in the mountain seemed to come back to her.
“I might say it happened anywhere
and call the people M. or N., but it really did occur
in my own family, and although I was much younger
at the time it impressed me very strongly. My
cousin, who had been my playmate, was an orphan, and
had been intrusted to the care of my father, who was
his guardian. He was always a clever boy, but
singularly sensitive and quick to take offense.
Perhaps it was because the little property his father
had left made him partly dependent on my father, and
that I was rich, but he seemed to feel the disparity
in our positions. I was too young to understand
it; I think it existed only in his imagination, for
I believe we were treated alike. But I remember
that he was full of vague threats of running away
and going to sea, and that it was part of his weak
temperament to terrify me with his extravagant confidences.
I was always frightened when, after one of those scenes,
he would pack his valise or perhaps only tie up a few
things in a handkerchief, as in the advertisement
pictures of the runaway slaves, and declare that we
would never lay eyes upon him again. At first
I never saw the ridiculousness of all this, for
I ought to have told you that he was a rather delicate
and timid boy, and quite unfitted for a rough life
or any exposure, but others did, and one
day I laughed at him and told him he was afraid.
I shall never forget the expression of his face and
never forgive myself for it. He went away, but
he returned the next day! He threatened once
to commit suicide, left his clothes on the bank of
the river, and came home in another suit of clothes
he had taken with him. When I was sent abroad
to school I lost sight of him; when I returned he
was at college, apparently unchanged. When he
came home for vacation, far from having been subdued
by contact with strangers, it seemed that his unhappy
sensitiveness had been only intensified by the ridicule
of his fellows. He had even acquired a most ridiculous
theory about the degrading effects of civilization,
and wanted to go back to a state of barbarism.
He said the wilderness was the only true home of man.
My father, instead of bearing with what I believe
was his infirmity, dryly offered him the means to try
his experiment. He started for some place in
Texas, saying we would never hear from him again.
A month after he wrote for more money. My father
replied rather impatiently, I suppose, I
never knew exactly what he wrote. That was some
years ago. He had told the truth at last, for
we never heard from him again.”
It is to be feared that John Milton
was following the animated lips and eyes of the fair
speaker rather than her story. Perhaps that was
the reason why he said, “May he not have been
a disappointed man?”
“I don’t understand,” she said simply.
“Perhaps,” said John Milton
with a boyish blush, “you may have unconsciously
raised hopes in his heart and”
“I should hardly attempt to
interest a chronicler of adventure like you in such
a very commonplace, every-day style of romance,”
she said, with a little impatience, “even if
my vanity compelled me to make such confidences to
a stranger. No, it was nothing quite
as vulgar as that. And,” she added quickly,
with a playfully amused smile as she saw the young
fellow’s evident distress, “I should have
probably heard from him again. Those stories
always end in that way.”
“And you think?” said John
Milton.
“I think,” said Mrs. Ashwood
slowly, “that he actually did commit suicide or
effaced himself in some way, just as firmly as I believe
he might have been saved by judicious treatment.
Otherwise we should have heard from him. You’ll
say that’s only a woman’s reasoning but
I think our perceptions are often instinctive, and
I knew his character.”
Still following the play of her delicate
features into a romance of his own weaving, the imaginative
young reporter who had seen so much from the heights
of Russian Hill said earnestly, “Then I have
your permission to use this material at any future
time?”
“Yes,” said the lady smilingly.
“And you will not mind if I should take some
liberties with the text?”
“I must of course leave something
to your artistic taste. But you will let me see
it?”
There were voices outside now, breaking
the silence of the veranda. They had been so
preoccupied as not to notice the arrival of a horseman.
Steps came along the passage; the landlord returned.
Mrs. Ashwood turned quickly towards him.
“Mr. Grant, of your party, ma’am, to fetch
you.”
She saw an unmistakable change in
her young friend’s mobile face. “I
will be ready in a moment,” she said to the landlord.
Then, turning to John Milton, the arch-hypocrite said
sweetly: “My brother must have known instinctively
that I was in good hands, as he didn’t come.
But I am sorry, for I should have so liked to introduce
him to you although by the way,”
with a bright smile, “I don’t think you
have yet told me your name. I know I couldn’t
have forgotten it.”
“Harcourt,” said John
Milton, with a half-embarrassed laugh.
“But you must come and see me,
Mr. Mr. Harcourt,” she said, producing
a card from a case already in her fingers, “at
my hotel, and let my brother thank you there for your
kindness and gallantry to a stranger. I shall
be here a few weeks longer before we go south to look
for a place where my brother can winter. Do
come and see me, although I cannot introduce you to
anything as real and beautiful as what you have
shown me to-day. Good-by, Mr. Harcourt; I won’t
trouble you to come down and bore yourself with my
escort’s questions and congratulations.”
She bent her head and allowed her
soft eyes to rest upon his with a graciousness that
was beyond her speech, pulled her veil over her eyes
again, with a pretty suggestion that she had no further
use for them, and taking her riding-skirt lightly
in her hand seemed to glide from the room.
On her way to San Mateo, where it
appeared the disorganized party had prolonged their
visit to accept an invitation to dine with a local
magnate, she was pleasantly conversational with the
slightly abstracted Grant. She was so sorry to
have given them all this trouble and anxiety!
Of course she ought to have waited at the fork of the
road, but she had never doubted but she could rejoin
them presently on the main road. She was glad
that Miss Euphemia’s runaway horse had been stopped
without accident; it would have been dreadful if anything
had happened to her; Mr. Harcourt seemed so wrapped
up in his girls. It was a pity they never had
a son Ah? Indeed! Then there was
a son? So and father and son had quarreled?
That was so sad. And for some trifling cause,
no doubt?
“I believe he married the housemaid,”
said Grant grimly. “Be careful! Allow
me.”
“It’s no use!” said
Mrs. Ashwood, flushing with pink impatience, as she
recovered her seat, which a sudden bolt of her mustang
had imperiled, “I really can’t make out
the tricks of this beast! Thank you,” she
added, with a sweet smile, “but I think I can
manage him now. I can’t see why he stopped.
I’ll be more careful. You were saying the
son was married surely not that boy!”
“Boy!” echoed Grant. “Then
you know?”
“I mean of course he must be
a boy they all grew up here and
it was only five or six years ago that their parents
emigrated,” she retorted a little impatiently.
“And what about this creature?”
“Your horse?”
“You know I mean the woman he
married. Of course she was older than he and
caught him?”
“I think there was a year or
two difference,” said Grant quietly.
“Yes, but your gallantry keeps
you from telling the truth; which is that the women,
in cases of this kind, are much older and more experienced.”
“Are they? Well, perhaps she is, now.
She is dead.”
Mrs. Ashwood walked her horse.
“Poor thing,” she said. Then a sudden
idea took possession of her and brought a film to her
eyes. “How long ago?” she asked in
a low voice.
“About six or seven months,
I think. I believe there was a baby who died
too.”
She continued to walk her horse slowly,
stroking its curved neck. “I think it’s
perfectly shameful!” she said suddenly.
“Not so bad as that, Mrs. Ashwood,
surely. The girl may have loved him and
he”
“You know perfectly what I mean,
Mr. Grant. I speak of the conduct of the mother
and father and those two sisters!”
Grant slightly elevated his eyebrows.
“But you forget, Mrs. Ashwood. It was young
Harcourt and his wife’s own act. They preferred
to take their own path and keep it.”
“I think,” said Mrs. Ashwood
authoritatively, “that the idea of leaving those
two unfortunate children to suffer and struggle on
alone out there on the sand
hills of San Francisco was simply disgraceful!”
Later that evening she was unreasonably
annoyed to find that her brother, Mr. John Shipley,
had taken advantage of the absence of Grant to pay
marked attention to Clementina, and had even prevailed
upon that imperious goddess to accompany him after
dinner on a moonlight stroll upon the veranda and
terraces of Los Pajaros. Nevertheless she seemed
to recover her spirits enough to talk volubly of the
beautiful scenery she had discovered in her late perilous
abandonment in the wilds of the Coast Range; to aver
her intention to visit it again; to speak of it in
a severely practical way as offering a far better site
for the cottages of the young married couples just
beginning life than the outskirts of towns or the
bleak sand hills of San Francisco; and thence by graceful
degrees into a dissertation upon popular fallacies
in regard to hasty marriages, and the mistaken idea
of some parents in not accepting the inevitable and
making the best of it. She still found time to
enter into an appreciative and exhaustive criticism
upon the literature and journalistic enterprise of
the Pacific Coast with the proprietor of the “Pioneer,”
and to cause that gentleman to declare that whatever
people might say about rich and fashionable Eastern
women, that Mrs. Ashwood’s head was about as
level as it was pretty.
The next morning found her more thoughtful
and subdued, and when her brother came upon her sitting
on the veranda, while the party were preparing to
return, she was reading a newspaper slip that she had
taken from her porte-monnaie, with a face
that was partly shadowed.
“What have you struck there,
Conny?” said her brother gayly. “It
looks too serious for a recipe.”
“Something I should like you
to read some time, Jack,” she said, lifting
her lashes with a slight timidity, “if you would
take the trouble. I really wonder how it would
impress you.”
“Pass it over,” said Jack
Shipley good-humoredly, with his cigar between his
lips. “I’ll take it now.”
She handed him the slip and turned
partly away; he took it, glanced at it sideways, turned
it over, and suddenly his look grew concentrated,
and he took the cigar from his lips.
“Well,” she said playfully,
turning to him again. “What do you think
of it?”
“Think of it?” he said
with a rising color. “I think it’s
infamous! Who did it?”
She stared at him, then glanced quickly
at the slip. “What are you reading?”
she said.
“This, of course,” he
said impatiently. “What you gave me.”
But he was pointing to the other side
of the newspaper slip.
She took it from him impatiently and
read for the first time the printing on the reverse
side of the article she had treasured so long.
It was the concluding paragraph of an apparently larger
editorial. “One thing is certain, that
a man in Daniel Harcourt’s position cannot afford
to pass over in silence accusations like the above,
that affect not only his private character, but the
integrity of his title to the land that was the foundation
of his fortune. When trickery, sharp practice,
and even criminality in the past are more than hinted
at, they cannot be met by mere pompous silence or
allusions to private position, social prestige, or
distinguished friends in the present.”
Mrs. Ashwood turned the slip over
with scornful impatience, a pretty uplifting of her
eyebrows and a slight curl of her lip. “I
suppose none of those people’s beginnings can
bear looking into and they certainly should
be the last ones to find fault with anybody. But,
good gracious, Jack! what has this to do with you?”
“With me?” said Shipley
angrily. “Why, I proposed to Clementina
last night!”