But Mr. Lawrence Grant’s character
in certain circumstances would seem to have as startling
and inexplicable contradictions as Clementina Harcourt’s,
and three days later he halted his horse at the entrance
of Los Gatos Rancho. The Home of the Cats so
called from the catamounts which infested the locality which
had for over a century lazily basked before one of
the hottest canyons in the Coast Range, had lately
been stirred into some activity by the American, Don
Diego Fletcher, who had bought it, put up a saw-mill,
and deforested the canyon. Still there remained
enough suggestion of a feline haunt about it to make
Grant feel as if he had tracked hither some stealthy
enemy, in spite of the peaceful intimation conveyed
by the sign on a rough boarded shed at the wayside,
that the “Los Gatos Land and Lumber Company”
held their office there.
A cigarette-smoking peon lounged before
the door. Yes; Don Diego was there, but as he
had arrived from Santa Clara only last night and was
going to Colonel Ramirez that afternoon, he was engaged.
Unless the business was important but the
cool, determined manner of Grant, even more than his
words, signified that it was important, and the
servant led the way to Don Diego’s presence.
There certainly was nothing in the
appearance of this sylvan proprietor and newspaper
capitalist to justify Grant’s suspicion of a
surreptitious foe. A handsome man scarcely older
than himself, in spite of a wavy mass of perfectly
white hair which contrasted singularly with his brown
mustache and dark sunburned face. So disguising
was the effect of these contradictions, that he not
only looked unlike anybody else, but even his nationality
seemed to be a matter of doubt. Only his eyes,
light blue and intelligent, which had a singular expression
of gentleness and worry, appeared individual to the
man. His manner was cultivated and easy.
He motioned his visitor courteously to a chair.
“I was referred to you,”
said Grant, almost abruptly, “as the person
responsible for a series of slanderous attacks against
Mr. Daniel Harcourt in the ‘Clarion,’
of which paper I believe you are the proprietor.
I was told that you declined to give the authority
for your action, unless you were forced to by legal
proceedings.”
Fletcher’s sensitive blue eyes
rested upon Grant’s with an expression of constrained
pain and pity. “I heard of your inquiries,
Mr. Grant; you were making them on behalf of this
Mr. Harcourt or Harkutt” he made the
distinction with intentional deliberation “with
a view, I believe, to some arbitration. The case
was stated to you fairly, I think; I believe I have
nothing to add to it.”
“That was your answer to the
ambassador of Mr. Harcourt,” said Grant, coldly,
“and as such I delivered it to him; but I am
here to-day to speak on my own account.”
What could be seen of Mr. Fletcher’s
lips appeared to curl in an odd smile. “Indeed,
I thought it was or would be all
in the family.”
Grant’s face grew more stern,
and his gray eyes glittered. “You’ll
find my status in this matter so far independent that
I don’t propose, like Mr. Harcourt, either to
begin a suit or to rest quietly under the calumny.
Briefly, Mr. Fletcher, as you or your informant knows,
I was the surveyor who revealed to Mr. Harcourt the
value of the land to which he claimed a title from
your man, this Elijah or ’Lige Curtis as you
call him,” he could not resist this
imitation of his adversary’s supercilious affectation
of precise nomenclature, “and it was
upon my representation of its value as an investment
that he began the improvements which have made him
wealthy. If this title was fraudulently obtained,
all the facts pertaining to it are sufficiently related
to connect me with the conspiracy.”
“Are you not a little hasty
in your presumption, Mr. Grant?” said Fletcher,
with unfeigned surprise.
“That is for me to judge,
Mr. Fletcher,” returned Grant, haughtily.
“But the name of Professor Grant
is known to all California as beyond the breath of
calumny or suspicion.”
“It is because of that fact
that I propose to keep it so.”
“And may I ask in what way you
wish me to assist you in so doing?”
“By promptly and publicly retracting
in the ‘Clarion’ every word of this slander
against Harcourt.”
Fletcher looked steadfastly at the
speaker. “And if I decline?”
“I think you have been long
enough in California, Mr. Fletcher, to know the alternative
expected of a gentleman,” said Grant, coldly.
Mr. Fletcher kept his gentle blue
eyes in which surprise still overbalanced
their expression of pained concern on Grant’s
face.
“But is not this more in the
style of Colonel Starbottle than Professor Grant?”
he asked, with a faint smile.
Grant rose instantly with a white
face. “You will have a better opportunity
of judging,” he said, “when Colonel Starbottle
has the honor of waiting upon you from me. Meantime,
I thank you for reminding me of the indiscretion into
which my folly, in still believing that this thing
could be settled amicably, has led me.”
He bowed coldly and withdrew.
Nevertheless, as he mounted his horse and rode away,
he felt his cheeks burning. Yet he had acted upon
calm consideration; he knew that to the ordinary Californian
experience there was nothing quixotic nor exaggerated
in the attitude he had taken. Men had quarreled
and fought on less grounds; he had even half convinced
himself that he had been insulted, and that his
own professional reputation demanded the withdrawal
of the attack on Harcourt on purely business grounds;
but he was not satisfied of the personal responsibility
of Fletcher nor of his gratuitous malignity. Nor
did the man look like a tool in the hands of some
unscrupulous and hidden enemy. However, he had
played his card. If he succeeded only in provoking
a duel with Fletcher, he at least would divert the
public attention from Harcourt to himself. He
knew that his superior position would throw the lesser
victim in the background. He would make the sacrifice;
that was his duty as a gentleman, even if she
would not care to accept it as an earnest of his unselfish
love!
He had reached the point where the
mountain track entered the Santa Clara turnpike when
his attention was attracted by a handsome but old-fashioned
carriage drawn by four white mules, which passed down
the road before him and turned suddenly off into a
private road. But it was not this picturesque
gala equipage of some local Spanish grandee that brought
a thrill to his nerves and a flash to his eye; it was
the unmistakable, tall, elegant figure and handsome
profile of Clementina, reclining in light gauzy wraps
against the back seat! It was no fanciful resemblance,
the outcome of his reverie, there never
was any one like her! it was she herself!
But what was she doing here?
A vaquero cantered from the cross
road where the dust of the vehicle still hung.
Grant hailed him. Ah! it was a fine carroza
de cuatro mulas that he had just passed!
Si, Senor, truly; it was of Don Jose Ramirez, who
lived just under the hill. It was bringing company
to the casa.
Ramirez! That was where Fletcher
was going! Had Clementina known that he was one
of Fletcher’s friends? Might she not be
exposed to unpleasantness, marked coolness, or even
insult in that unexpected meeting? Ought she
not to be warned or prepared for it? She had banished
Grant from her presence until this stain was removed
from her father’s name, but could she blame
him for trying to save her from contact with her father’s
slanderer? No! He turned his horse abruptly
into the cross road and spurred forward in the direction
of the casa.
It was quite visible now a
low-walled, quadrangular mass of whitewashed adobe
lying like a drift on the green hillside. The
carriage and four had far preceded him, and was already
half up the winding road towards the house. Later
he saw them reach the courtyard and disappear within.
He would be quite in time to speak with her before
she retired to change her dress. He would simply
say that while making a professional visit to Los
Gatos Land Company office he had become aware of Fletcher’s
connection with it, and accidentally of his intended
visit to Ramirez. His chance meeting with the
carriage on the highway had determined his course.
As he rode into the courtyard he observed
that it was also approached by another road, evidently
nearer Los Gatos, and probably the older and shorter
communication between the two ranchos. The fact
was significantly demonstrated a moment later.
He had given his horse to a servant, sent in his card
to Clementina, and had dropped listlessly on one of
the benches of the gallery surrounding the patio, when
a horseman rode briskly into the opposite gateway,
and dismounted with a familiar air. A waiting
peon who recognized him informed him that the Dona
was engaged with a visitor, but that they were both
returning to the gallery for chocolate in a moment.
The stranger was the man he had left only an hour
before Don Diego Fletcher!
In an instant the idiotic fatuity
of his position struck him fully. His only excuse
for following Clementina had been to warn her of the
coming of this man who had just entered, and who would
now meet her as quickly as himself. For a brief
moment the idea of quietly slipping out to the corral,
mounting his horse again, and flying from the rancho,
crossed his mind; but the thought that he would be
running away from the man he had just challenged,
and perhaps some new hostility that had sprung up
in his heart against him, compelled him to remain.
The eyes of both men met; Fletcher’s in half-wondering
annoyance, Grant’s in ill-concealed antagonism.
What they would have said is not known, for at that
moment the voices of Clementina and Mrs. Ramirez were
heard in the passage, and they both entered the gallery.
The two men were standing together; it was impossible
to see one without the other.
And yet Grant, whose eyes were instantly
directed to Clementina, thought that she had noted
neither. She remained for an instant standing
in the doorway in the same self-possessed, coldly
graceful pose he remembered she had taken on the platform
at Tasajara. Her eyelids were slightly downcast,
as if she had been arrested by some sudden thought
or some shy maiden sensitiveness; in her hesitation
Mrs. Ramirez passed impatiently before her.
“Mother of God!” said
that lively lady, regarding the two speechless men,
“is it an indiscretion we are making here or
are you dumb? You, Don Diego, are loud enough
when you and Don Jose are together; at least introduce
your friend.”
Grant quickly recovered himself.
“I am afraid,” he said, coming forward,
“unless Miss Harcourt does, that I am a mere
trespasser in your house, Senora. I saw her pass
in your carriage a few moments ago, and having a message
for her I ventured to follow her here.”
“It is Mr. Grant, a friend of
my father’s,” said Clementina, smiling
with equanimity, as if just awakening from a momentary
abstraction, yet apparently unconscious of Grant’s
imploring eyes; “but the other gentleman I have
not the pleasure of knowing.”
“Ah! Don Diego Fletcher,
a countryman of yours; and yet I think he knows you
not.”
Clementina’s face betrayed no
indication of the presence of her father’s foe,
and yet Grant knew that she must have recognized his
name, as she looked towards Fletcher with perfect
self-possession. He was too much engaged in watching
her to take note of Fletcher’s manifest disturbance,
or the evident effort with which he at last bowed to
her. That this unexpected double meeting with
the daughter of the man he had wronged, and the man
who had espoused the quarrel, should be confounding
to him appeared only natural. But he was unprepared
to understand the feverish alacrity with which he
accepted Dona Maria’s invitation to chocolate,
or the equally animated way in which Clementina threw
herself into her hostess’s Spanish levity.
He knew it was an awkward situation, that must be
surmounted without a scene; he was quite prepared in
the presence of Clementina to be civil to Fletcher;
but it was odd that in this feverish exchange of courtesies
and compliments he, Grant, should feel the greater
awkwardness and be the most ill at ease. He sat
down and took his part in the conversation; he let
it transpire for Clementina’s benefit that he
had been to Los Gatos only on business, yet there was
no opportunity for even a significant glance, and he
had the added embarrassment of seeing that she exhibited
no surprise nor seemed to attach the least importance
to his inopportune visit. In a miserable indecision
he allowed himself to be carried away by the high-flown
hospitality of his Spanish hostess, and consented to
stay to an early dinner. It was part of the infelicity
of circumstance that the voluble Dona Maria electing
him as the distinguished stranger above the resident
Fletcher monopolized him and attached him
to her side. She would do the honors of her house;
she must show him the ruins of the old Mission beside
the corral; Don Diego and Clementina would join them
presently in the garden. He cast a despairing
glance at the placidly smiling Clementina, who was
apparently equally indifferent to the evident constraint
and assumed ease of the man beside her, and turned
away with Mrs. Ramirez.
A silence fell upon the gallery so
deep that the receding voices and footsteps of Grant
and his hostess in the long passage were distinctly
heard until they reached the end. Then Fletcher
arose with an inarticulate exclamation. Clementina
instantly put her finger to her lips, glanced around
the gallery, extended her hand to him, and saying
“Come,” half-led, half-dragged him into
the passage. To the right she turned and pushed
open the door of a small room that seemed a combination
of boudoir and oratory, lit by a French window opening
to the garden, and flanked by a large black and white
crucifix with a prie Dieu beneath it. Closing
the door behind them she turned and faced her companion.
But it was no longer the face of the woman who had
been sitting in the gallery; it was the face that
had looked back at her from the mirror at Tasajara
the night that Grant had left her eager,
flushed, material with commonplace excitement!
“’Lige Curtis,” she said.
“Yes,” he answered passionately,
“Lige Curtis, whom you thought dead! ’Lige
Curtis, whom you once pitied, condoled with and despised!
’Lige Curtis, whose lands and property have
enriched you! ’Lige Curtis, who would have
shared it with you freely at the time, but whom your
father juggled and defrauded of it! ’Lige
Curtis, branded by him as a drunken outcast and suicide!
’Lige Curtis”
“Hush!” She clapped her
little hand over his mouth with a quick but awkward
schoolgirl gesture, inconceivable to any who had known
her usual languid elegance of motion, and held it
there. He struggled angrily, impatiently, reproachfully,
and then, with a sudden characteristic weakness that
seemed as much of a revelation as her once hoydenish
manner, kissed it, when she let it drop. Then
placing both her hands still girlishly on her slim
waist and curtseying grotesquely before him, she said:
“’Lige Curtis! Oh, yes! ’Lige
Curtis, who swore to do everything for me! ’Lige
Curtis, who promised to give up liquor for me, who
was to leave Tasajara for me! ’Lige Curtis,
who was to reform, and keep his land as a nest-egg
for us both in the future, and then who sold it and
himself and me to dad for a glass
of whiskey! ’Lige Curtis, who disappeared,
and then let us think he was dead, only that he might
attack us out of the ambush of his grave!”
“Yes, but think what I have
suffered all these years; not for the cursed land you
know I never cared for that but for you, you,
Clementina, you rich, admired by every
one; idolized, held far above me, me,
the forgotten outcast, the wretched suicide and
yet the man to whom you had once plighted your troth.
Which of those greedy fortune-hunters whom my money my
life-blood as you might have thought it was attracted
to you, did you care to tell that you had ever slipped
out of the little garden gate at Sidon to meet that
outcast! Do you wonder that as the years passed
and you were happy, I did not choose to be so
forgotten? Do you wonder that when you shut
the door on the past I managed to open it again if
only a little way that its light might
startle you?”
Yet she did not seem startled or disturbed,
and remained only looking at him critically.
“You say that you have suffered,”
she replied with a smile. “You don’t
look it! Your hair is white, but it is becoming
to you, and you are a handsomer man, ’Lige Curtis,
than you were when I first met you; you are finer,”
she went on, still regarding him, “stronger and
healthier than you were five years ago; you are rich
and prosperous, you have everything to make you happy,
but” here she laughed a little, held
out both her hands, taking his and holding his arms
apart in a rustic, homely fashion “but
you are still the same old ’Lige Curtis!
It was like you to go off and hide yourself in that
idiotic way; it was like you to let the property slide
in that stupid, unselfish fashion; it was like you
to get real mad, and say all those mean, silly things
to dad, that didn’t hurt him in your
regular looney style; for rich or poor, drunk or sober,
ragged or elegant, plain or handsome, you’re
always the same ’Lige Curtis!”
In proportion as that material, practical,
rustic self which nobody but ’Lige
Curtis had ever seen came back to her, so
in proportion the irresolute, wavering, weak and emotional
vagabond of Sidon came out to meet it. He looked
at her with a vague smile; his five years of childish
resentment, albeit carried on the shoulders of a man
mentally and morally her superior, melted away.
He drew her towards him, yet at the same moment a
quick suspicion returned.
“Well, and what are you doing
here? Has this man who has followed you any right,
any claim upon you?”
“None but what you in your folly
have forced upon him! You have made him father’s
ally. I don’t know why he came here.
I only know why I did to find you!”
“You suspected then?”
“I knew! Hush!”
The returning voices of Grant and
of Mrs. Ramirez were heard in the courtyard.
Clementina made a warning yet girlishly mirthful gesture,
again caught his hand, drew him quickly to the French
window, and slipped through it with him into the garden,
where they were quickly lost in the shadows of a ceanothus
hedge.
“They have probably met Don
Jose in the orchard, and as he and Don Diego have
business together, Dona Clementina has without doubt
gone to her room and left them. For you are not
very entertaining to the ladies to-day, you
two caballeros! You have much politics together,
eh? or you have discussed and disagreed,
eh? I will look for the Senorita, and let you
go, Don Distraído!”
It is to be feared that Grant’s
apologies and attempts to detain her were equally
feeble, as it seemed to him that this was
the only chance he might have of seeing Clementina
except in company with Fletcher. As Mrs. Ramirez
left he lit a cigarette and listlessly walked up and
down the gallery. But Clementina did not come,
neither did his hostess return. A subdued step
in the passage raised his hopes, it was
only the grizzled major domo, to show him his
room that he might prepare for dinner.
He followed mechanically down the
long passage to a second corridor. There was
a chance that he might meet Clementina, but he reached
his room without encountering any one. It was
a large vaulted apartment with a single window, a
deep embrasure in the thick wall that seemed to focus
like a telescope some forgotten, sequestered part of
the leafy garden. While washing his hands, gazing
absently at the green vignette framed by the dark
opening, his attention was drawn to a movement of the
foliage, stirred apparently by the rapid passage of
two half-hidden figures. The quick flash of a
feminine skirt seemed to indicate the coy flight of
some romping maid of the casa, and the pursuit and
struggle of her vaquero swain. To a despairing
lover even the spectacle of innocent, pastoral happiness
in others is not apt to be soothing, and Grant was
turning impatiently away when he suddenly stopped with
a rigid face and quickly approached the window.
In her struggles with the unseen Corydon, the clustering
leaves seemed to have yielded at the same moment with
the coy Chloris, and parting disclosed
a stolen kiss! Grant’s hand lay like ice
against the wall. For, disengaging Fletcher’s
arm from her waist and freeing her skirt from the
foliage, it was the calm, passionless Clementina herself
who stepped out, and moved pensively towards the casa.