It was a little after daybreak next
morning that Mainwaring awoke from the first unrefreshing
night he had passed at The Lookout. He was so
feverish and restless that he dressed himself at sunrise,
and cautiously stepped out upon the still silent veranda.
The chairs which he and Louise Macy had occupied were
still, it seemed to him, conspicuously confidential
with each other, and he separated them, but as he looked
down into the Great Canyon at his feet he was conscious
of some undefinable change in the prospect. A
slight mist was rising from the valley, as if it were
the last of last night’s illusions; the first
level sunbeams were obtrusively searching, and the
keen morning air had a dryly practical insistence
which irritated him, until a light footstep on the
farther end of the veranda caused him to turn sharply.
It was the singular apparition of
a small boy, bearing a surprising resemblance to Minty
Sharpe, and dressed in an unique fashion. On a
tumbled sea of blond curls a “chip” sailor
hat, with a broad red ribbon, rode jauntily.
But here the nautical suggestion changed, as had the
desire of becoming a pirate which induced it.
A red shirt, with a white collar, and a yellow plaid
ribbon tie, that also recalled Minty Sharpe, lightly
turned the suggestion of his costume to mining.
Short black velvet trousers, coming to his knee, and
ostentatiously new short-legged boots, with visible
straps like curling ears, completed the entirely original
character of his lower limbs.
Mainwaring, always easily gentle and
familiar with children and his inferiors, looked at
him with an encouraging smile. Richelieu for
it was he advanced gravely and held out
his hand, with the cameo ring apparent. Mainwaring,
with equal gravity, shook it warmly, and removed his
hat. Richelieu, keenly observant, did the same.
“Is Jim Bradley out yet?” asked Richelieu,
carelessly.
“No; I think not. But I’m Frank Mainwaring.
Will I do?”
Richelieu smiled. The dimples,
the white teeth, the dark, laughing eyes, were surely
Minty’s?
“I’m Richelieu,” he rejoined with
equal candor.
“Richelieu?”
“Yes. That Frenchman the
Lord Cardinal you know. Mar saw Forrest
do him out in St. Louis.”
“Do him?”
“Yes, in the theayter.”
With a confused misconception of his
meaning, Mainwaring tried to recall the historical
dress of the great Cardinal and fit it to the masquerader if
such he were before him. But Richelieu
relieved him by adding,
“Richelieu Sharpe.”
“Oh, that’s your name!”
said Mainwaring, cheerfully. “Then you’re
Miss Minty’s brother. I know her.
How jolly lucky!”
They both shook hands again.
Richelieu, eager to get rid of the burden of his sister’s
message, which he felt was in the way of free-and-easy
intercourse with this charming stranger, looked uneasily
towards the house.
“I say,” said Mainwaring,
“if you’re in a hurry, you’d better
go in there and knock. I hear some one stirring
in the kitchen.”
Richelieu nodded, but first went back
to the steps of the veranda, picked up a small blue
knotted handkerchief, apparently containing some heavy
objects, and repassed Mainwaring.
“What! have you cut it, Richelieu,
with your valuables? What have you got there?”
“Specimins,” said Richelieu, shortly,
and vanished.
He returned presently. “Well,
Cardinal, did you see anybody?” asked Mainwaring.
“Mrs. Bradley; but Jim’s
over to the mill. I’m goin’ there.”
“Did you see Miss Macy?”
continued Mainwaring, carelessly.
“Loo?”
“Loo! well; yes.”
“No. She’s philanderin’ with
Captain Greyson.”
“Philandering with Greyson?” echoed Mainwaring,
in wonder.
“Yes; on horseback on the ridge.”
“You mean she’s riding out with Mr. with
Captain Greyson?”
“Yes; ridin’ and philanderin’,”
persisted Richelieu.
“And what do you call philandering?”
“Well; I reckon you and she
oughter know,” returned Richelieu, with a precocious
air.
“Certainly,” said Mainwaring,
with a faint smile. Richelieu really was like
Minty.
There was a long silence. This
young Englishman was becoming exceedingly uninteresting.
Richelieu felt that he was gaining neither profit nor
amusement, and losing time. “I’m going,”
he said.
“Good morning,” said Mainwaring, without
looking up.
Richelieu picked up his specimens,
thoroughly convinced of the stranger’s glittering
deceitfulness, and vanished.
It was nearly eight o’clock
when Mrs. Bradley came from the house. She apologized,
with a slightly distrait smile, for the tardiness of
the household. “Mr. Bradley stayed at the
mill all night, and will not be here until breakfast,
when he brings your friend Mr. Richardson with him” Mainwaring
scarcely repressed a movement of impatience “who
arrives early. It’s unfortunate that Miss
Sharpe can’t come to-day.”
In his abstraction Mainwaring did
not notice that Mrs. Bradley slightly accented Minty’s
formal appellation, and said carelessly,
“Oh, that’s why her brother came over
here so early!”
“Did you see him?” asked Mrs. Bradley,
almost abruptly.
“Yes. He is an amusing
little beggar; but I think he shares his sister’s
preference for Mr. Bradley. He deserted me here
in the veranda for him at the mill.”
“Louise will keep you company
as soon as she has changed her dress,” continued
Mrs. Bradley. “She was out riding early
this morning with a friend. She’s very
fond of early morning rides.”
“And philandering,”
repeated Mainwaring to himself. It was quite natural
for Miss Macy to ride out in the morning, after the
fashion of the country, with an escort; but why had
the cub insisted on the “philandering”?
He had said, “And philandering,” distinctly.
It was a nasty thing for him to say. Any other
fellow but he, Mainwaring, might misunderstand the
whole thing. Perhaps he ought to warn her but
no! he could not repeat the gossip of a child, and
that child the brother of one of her inferiors.
But was Minty an inferior? Did she and Minty talk
together about this fellow Greyson? At all events,
it would only revive the awkwardness of the preceding
day, and he resolved to say nothing.
He was rewarded by a half-inquiring,
half-confiding look in Louise’s bright eyes,
when she presently greeted him on the veranda.
“She had quite forgotten,” she said, “to
tell him last night of her morning’s engagement;
indeed, she had half forgotten it. It used
to be a favorite practice of hers, with Captain Greyson;
but she had lately given it up. She believed
she had not ridden since since ”
“Since when?” asked Mainwaring.
“Well, since you were ill,” she said frankly.
A quick pleasure shone in Mainwaring’s
cheek and eye; but Louise’s pretty lids did
not drop, nor her faint, quiet bloom deepen. Breakfast
was already waiting when Mr. Richardson arrived alone.
He explained that Mr. Bradley had
some important and unexpected business which had delayed
him, but which, he added, “Mr. Bradley says may
prove interesting enough to you to excuse his absence
this morning.” Mainwaring was not displeased
that his critical and observant host was not present
at their meeting. Louise Macy was, however, as
demurely conscious of the different bearing of the
two compatriots. Richardson’s somewhat
self-important patronage of the two ladies, and that
Californian familiarity he had acquired, changed to
a certain uneasy deference towards Mainwaring; while
the younger Englishman’s slightly stiff and
deliberate cordiality was, nevertheless, mingled with
a mysterious understanding that appeared innate and
unconscious. Louise was quick to see that these
two men, more widely divergent in quality than any
two of her own countrymen, were yet more subtly connected
by some unknown sympathy than the most equal of Americans.
Minty’s prophetic belief of the effect of the
two women upon Richardson was certainly true as regarded
Mrs. Bradley. The banker a large material
nature was quickly fascinated by the demure,
puritanic graces of that lady, and was inclined to
exhibit a somewhat broad and ostentatious gallantry
that annoyed Mainwaring. When they were seated
alone on the veranda, which the ladies had discreetly
left to them, Richardson said,
“Odd I didn’t hear of
Bradley’s wife before. She seems a spicy,
pretty, comfortable creature. Regularly thrown
away with him up here.”
Mainwaring replied coldly that she
was “an admirable helpmeet of a very admirable
man,” not, however, without an uneasy recollection
of her previous confidences respecting her husband.
“They have been most thoroughly good and kind
to me; my own brother and sister could not have done
more. And certainly not with better taste or delicacy,”
he added, markedly.
“Certainly, certainly,”
said Richardson, hurriedly. “I wrote to
Lady Mainwaring that you were taken capital care of
by some very honest people; and that ”
“Lady Mainwaring already knows
what I think of them, and what she owes to their kindness,”
said Mainwaring, dryly.
“True, true,” said Richardson,
apologetically. “Of course you must have
seen a good deal of them. I only know Bradley
in a business way. He’s been trying to
get the Bank to help him to put up some new mills here;
but we didn’t see it. I dare say he is good
company rather amusing, eh?”
Mainwaring had the gift of his class
of snubbing by the polite and forgiving oblivion of
silence. Richardson shifted uneasily in his chair,
but continued with assumed carelessness:
“No; I only knew of this cousin,
Miss Macy. I heard of her when she was visiting
some friends in Menlo Park last year. Rather an
attractive girl. They say Colonel Johnson, of
Sacramento, took quite a fancy to her it
would have been a good match, I dare say, for he is
very rich but the thing fell through in
some way. Then, they say, she wanted to
marry that Spaniard, young Pico, of the Amador Ranche;
but his family wouldn’t hear of it. Somehow,
she’s deuced unlucky. I suppose she’ll
make a mess of it with Captain Greyson she was out
riding with this morning.”
“Didn’t the Bank think
Bradley’s mills a good investment?” asked
Mainwaring quietly, when Richardson paused.
“Not with him in it; he is not a business man,
you know.”
“I thought he was. He seems
to me an energetic man, who knows his work, and is
not afraid to look after it himself.”
“That’s just it.
He has got absurd ideas of co-operating with his workmen,
you know, and doing everything slowly and on a limited
scale. The only thing to be done is to buy up
all the land on this ridge, run off the settlers,
freeze out all the other mills, and put it into a big
San Francisco company on shares. That’s
the only way we would look at it.”
“But you don’t consider
the investment bad, even from his point of view?”
“Perhaps not.”
“And you only decline it because it isn’t
big enough for the Bank?”
“Exactly.”
“Richardson,” said Mainwaring,
slowly rising, putting his hands in his trousers pockets,
and suddenly looking down upon the banker from the
easy level of habitual superiority, “I wish you’d
attend to this thing for me. I desire to make
some return to Mr. Bradley for his kindness. I
wish to give him what help he wants in his
own way you understand. I wish it,
and I believe my father wishes it, too. If you’d
like him to write to you to that effect ”
“By no means, it’s not
at all necessary,” said Richardson, dropping
with equal suddenness into his old-world obsequiousness.
“I shall certainly do as you wish. It is
not a bad investment, Mr. Mainwaring, and as you suggest,
a very proper return for their kindness. And,
being here, it will come quite naturally for me to
take up the affair again.”
“And I say, Richardson.”
“Yes, sir?”
“As these ladies are rather
short-handed in their domestic service, you know,
perhaps you’d better not stay to luncheon or
dinner, but go on to the Summit House it’s
only a mile or two farther and come back
here this evening. I shan’t want you until
then.”
“Certainly!” stammered Richardson.
“I’ll just take leave of the ladies!”
“It’s not at all necessary,”
said Mainwaring, quietly; “you would only disturb
them in their household duties. I’ll tell
them what I’ve done with you, if they ask.
You’ll find your stick and hat in the passage,
and you can leave the veranda by these steps.
By the way, you had better manage at the Summit to
get some one to bring my traps from here to be forwarded
to Sacramento to-morrow. I’ll want a conveyance,
or a horse of some kind, myself, for I’ve given
up walking for a while; but we can settle about that
to-night. Come early. Good morning?”
He accompanied his thoroughly subjugated
countryman who, however, far from attempting
to reassert himself, actually seemed easier and more
cheerful in his submission to the end of
the veranda, and watched him depart. As he turned
back, he saw the pretty figure of Louise Macy leaning
against the doorway. How graceful and refined
she looked in that simple morning dress! What
wonder that she was admired by Greyson, by Johnson,
and by that Spaniard! no, by Jove, it was
she that wanted to marry him!
“What have you sent away Mr.
Richardson for?” asked the young girl, with
a half-reproachful, half-mischievous look in her bright
eyes.
“I packed him off because I
thought it was a little too hard on you and Mrs. Bradley
to entertain him without help.”
“But as he was our guest,
you might have left that to us,” said Miss Macy.
“By Jove! I never thought
of that,” said Mainwaring, coloring in consternation.
“Pray forgive me, Miss Macy but you
see I knew the man, and could say it, and you couldn’t.”
“Well, I forgive you, for you
look really so cut up,” said Louise, laughing.
“But I don’t know what Jenny will say of
your disposing of her conquest so summarily.”
She stopped and regarded him more attentively.
“Has he brought you any bad news? if so, it’s
a pity you didn’t send him away before.
He’s quite spoiling our cure.”
Mainwaring thought bitterly that he
had. “But it’s a cure for all that,
Miss Macy,” he said, with an attempt at cheerfulness,
“and being a cure, you see, there’s no
longer an excuse for my staying here. I have been
making arrangements for leaving here to-morrow.”
“So soon?”
“Do you think it soon, Miss
Macy?” asked Mainwaring, turning pale in spite
of himself.
“I quite forgot that
you were here as an invalid only, and that we owe
our pleasure to the accident of your pain.”
She spoke a little artificially, he
thought, yet her cheeks had not lost their pink bloom,
nor her eyes their tranquillity. Had he heard
Minty’s criticism he might have believed that
the organic omission noticed by her was a fact.
“And now that your good work
as Sister of Charity is completed, you’ll be
able to enter the world of gayety again with a clear
conscience,” said Mainwaring, with a smile that
he inwardly felt was a miserable failure. “You’ll
be able to resume your morning rides, you know, which
the wretched invalid interrupted.”
Louise raised her clear eyes to his,
without reproach, indignation, or even wonder.
He felt as if he had attempted an insult and failed.
“Does my cousin know you are
going so soon?” she asked finally.
“No, I did not know myself until
to-day. You see,” he added hastily, while
his honest blood blazoned the lie in his cheek, “I’ve
heard of some miserable business affairs that will
bring me back to England sooner that I expected.”
“I think you should consider
your health more important than any mere business,”
said Louise. “I don’t mean that you
should remain here,” she added with a hasty
laugh, “but it would be a pity, now that you
have reaped the benefit of rest and taking care of
yourself, that you should not make it your only business
to seek it elsewhere.”
Mainwaring longed to say that within
the last half hour, living or dying had become of
little moment to him; but he doubted the truth or efficacy
of this timeworn heroic of passion. He felt, too,
that anything he said was a mere subterfuge for the
real reason of his sudden departure. And how
was he to question her as to that reason? In escaping
from these subterfuges he was compelled
to lie again. With an assumption of changing
the subject, he said calmly, “Richardson thought
he had met you before in Menlo Park, I
think.”
Amazed at the evident irrelevance
of the remark, Louise said coldly, that she did not
remember having seen him before.
“I think it was at a Mr. Johnson’s or
with a Mr. Johnson or perhaps at one
of those Spanish ranches I think he mentioned
some name like Pico!”
Louise looked at him wonderingly for
an instant, and then gave way to a frank, irrepressible
laugh, which lent her delicate but rather set little
face all the color he had missed. Partially relieved
by her unconcern, and yet mortified that he had only
provoked her sense of the ludicrous, he tried to laugh
also.
“Then, to be quite plain,”
said Louise, wiping her now humid eyes, “you
want me to understand that you really didn’t
pay sufficient attention to hear correctly! Thank
you; that’s a pretty English compliment, I suppose.”
“I dare say you wouldn’t call it ’philandering’?”
“I certainly shouldn’t, for I don’t
know what ‘philandering’ means.”
Mainwaring could not reply, with Richelieu,
“You ought to know”; nor did he dare explain
what he thought it meant, and how he knew it.
Louise, however, innocently solved the difficulty.
“There’s a country song I’ve heard
Minty sing,” she said. “It runs
Come, Philander, let
us be a-marchin’,
Every one for his true
love a-sarchin’
Choose your true love
now or never. . . .
Have you been listening to her also?”
“No,” said Mainwaring,
with a sudden incomprehensible, but utterly irrepressible,
resolution; “but I’m ‘a-marchin’,’
you know, and perhaps I must ‘choose my true
love now or never.’ Will you help me, Miss
Macy?”
He drew gently near her. He had
become quite white, but also very manly, and it struck
her, more deeply, thoroughly, and conscientiously sincere
than any man who had before addressed her. She
moved slightly away, as if to rest herself by laying
both hands upon the back of the chair.
“Where do you expect to begin
your ’sarchin’’?” she said,
leaning on the chair and tilting it before her; “or
are you as vague as usual as to locality? Is
it at some ‘Mr. Johnson’ or ‘Mr.
Pico,’ or ”
“Here,” he interrupted boldly.
“I really think you ought to
first tell my cousin that you are going away to-morrow,”
she said, with a faint smile. “It’s
such short notice. She’s just in there.”
She nodded her pretty head, without raising her eyes,
towards the hall.
“But it may not be so soon,” said Mainwaring.
“Oh, then the ‘sarchin’’
is not so important?” said Louise, raising her
head, and looking towards the hall with some uneasy
but indefinable feminine instinct.
She was right; the sitting-room door
opened, and Mrs. Bradley made her smiling appearance.
“Mr. Mainwaring was just looking
for you,” said Louise, for the first time raising
her eyes to him. “He’s not only sent
off Mr. Richardson, but he’s going away himself
to-morrow.”
Mrs. Bradley looked from the one to
the other in mute wonder. Mainwaring cast an
imploring glance at Louise, which had the desired effect.
Much more seriously, and in a quaint, business-like
way, the young girl took it upon herself to explain
to Mrs. Bradley that Richardson had brought the invalid
some important news that would, unfortunately, not
only shorten his stay in America, but even compel
him to leave The Lookout sooner than he expected,
perhaps to-morrow. Mainwaring thanked her with
his eyes, and then turned to Mrs. Bradley.
“Whether I go to-morrow or next
day,” he said with simple and earnest directness,
“I intend, you know, to see you soon again, either
here or in my own home in England. I do not know,”
he added with marked gravity, “that I have succeeded
in convincing you that I have made your family already
well known to my people, and that” he
fixed his eyes with a meaning look on Louise “no
matter when, or in what way, you come to them, your
place is made ready for you. You may not like
them, you know: the governor is getting to be
an old man perhaps too old for young Americans but
they will like you, and you must put up with
that. My mother and sisters know Miss Macy as
well as I do, and will make her one of the family.”
The conscientious earnestness with
which these apparent conventionalities were uttered,
and some occult quality of quiet conviction in the
young man’s manner, brought a pleasant sparkle
to the eyes of Mrs. Bradley and Louise.
“But,” said Mrs. Bradley,
gayly, “our going to England is quite beyond
our present wildest dreams; nothing but a windfall,
an unexpected rise in timber, or even the tabooed
hotel speculation, could make it possible.”
“But I shall take the liberty
of trying to present it to Mr. Bradley tonight in
some practical way that may convince even his critical
judgment,” said Mainwaring, still seriously.
“It will be,” he added more lightly, “the
famous testimonial of my cure which I promised you.”
“And you will find Mr. Bradley
so sceptical that you will be obliged to defer your
going,” said Mrs. Bradley, triumphantly.
“Come, Louise, we must not forget that we have
still Mr. Mainwaring’s present comfort to look
after; that Minty has basely deserted us, and that
we ourselves must see that the last days of our guest
beneath our roof are not remembered for their privation.”
She led Louise away with a half-mischievous
suggestion of maternal propriety, and left Mainwaring
once more alone on the veranda.
He had done it! Certainly she
must have understood his meaning, and there was nothing
left for him to do but to acquaint Bradley with his
intentions to-night, and press her for a final answer
in the morning. There would be no indelicacy
then in asking her for an interview more free from
interruption than this public veranda. Without
conceit, he did not doubt what the answer would be.
His indecision, his sudden resolution to leave her,
had been all based upon the uncertainty of his
own feelings, the propriety of his declaration,
the possibility of some previous experience of hers
that might compromise him. Convinced by
her unembarrassed manner of her innocence, or rather
satisfied of her indifference to Richardson’s
gossip, he had been hurried by his feelings into an
unexpected avowal. Brought up in the perfect security
of his own social position, and familiarly conscious without
vanity of its importance and power in such
a situation, he believed, without undervaluing Louise’s
charms or independence, that he had no one else than
himself to consult. Even the slight uneasiness
that still pursued him was more due to his habitual
conscientiousness of his own intention than to any
fear that she would not fully respond to it. Indeed,
with his conservative ideas of proper feminine self-restraint,
Louise’s calm passivity and undemonstrative
attitude were a proof of her superiority; had she
blushed overmuch, cried, or thrown herself into his
arms, he would have doubted the wisdom of so easy
a selection. It was true he had known her scarcely
three weeks; if he chose to be content with that, his
own accessible record of three centuries should be
sufficient for her, and condone any irregularity.
Nevertheless, as an hour slipped away
and Louise did not make her appearance, either on
the veranda or in the little sitting-room off the
hall, Mainwaring became more uneasy as to the incompleteness
of their interview. Perhaps a faint suspicion
of the inadequacy of her response began to trouble
him; but he still fatuously regarded it rather as
owing to his own hurried and unfinished declaration.
It was true that he hadn’t said half what he
intended to say; it was true that she might have misunderstood
it as the conventional gallantry of the situation,
as terrible thought! the light
banter of the habitual love-making American, to which
she had been accustomed; perhaps even now she relegated
him to the level of Greyson, and this accounted for
her singular impassiveness an impassiveness
that certainly was singular now he reflected upon
it that might have been even contempt.
The last thought pricked his deep conscientiousness;
he walked hurriedly up and down the veranda, and then,
suddenly re-entering his room, took up a sheet of
note-paper, and began to write to her:
“Can you grant me a few moments’
interview alone? I cannot bear you should think
that what I was trying to tell you when we were interrupted
was prompted by anything but the deepest sincerity
and conviction, or that I am willing it should be
passed over lightly by you or be forgotten. Pray
give me a chance of proving it, by saying you will
see me. F. M.”
But how should he convey this to her?
His delicacy revolted against handing it to her behind
Mrs. Bradley’s back, or the prestidigitation
of slipping it into her lap or under her plate before
them at luncheon; he thought for an instant of the
Chinaman, but gentlemen except in that
“mirror of nature” the stage usually
hesitate to suborn other people’s servants,
or entrust a woman’s secret to her inferiors.
He remembered that Louise’s room was at the
farther end of the house, and its low window gave
upon the veranda, and was guarded at night by a film
of white and blue curtains that were parted during
the day, to allow a triangular revelation of a pale
blue and white draped interior. Mainwaring reflected
that the low inside window ledge was easily accessible
from the veranda, would afford a capital lodgment for
the note, and be quickly seen by the fair occupant
of the room on entering. He sauntered slowly
past the window; the room was empty, the moment propitious.
A slight breeze was stirring the blue ribbons of the
curtain; it would be necessary to secure the note with
something; he returned along the veranda to the steps,
where he had noticed a small irregular stone lying,
which had evidently escaped from Richelieu’s
bag of treasure specimens, and had been overlooked
by that ingenuous child. It was of a pretty peacock-blue
color, and, besides securing a paper, would be sure
to attract her attention. He placed his note on
the inside ledge, and the blue stone atop, and went
away with a sense of relief.
Another half hour passed without incident.
He could hear the voices of the two women in the kitchen
and dining-room. After a while they appeared
to cease, and he heard the sound of an opening door.
It then occurred to him that the veranda was still
too exposed for a confidential interview, and he resolved
to descend the steps, pass before the windows of the
kitchen where Louise might see him, and penetrate
the shrubbery, where she might be induced to follow
him. They would not be interrupted nor overheard
there.
But he had barely left the veranda
before the figure of Richelieu, who had been patiently
waiting for Mainwaring’s disappearance, emerged
stealthily from the shrubbery. He had discovered
his loss on handing his “fire assays”
to the good-humored Bradley for later examination,
and he had retraced his way, step by step, looking
everywhere for his missing stone with the unbounded
hopefulness, lazy persistency, and lofty disregard
for time and occupation known only to the genuine boy.
He remembered to have placed his knotted bag upon the
veranda, and, slipping off his stiff boots slowly
and softly, slid along against the wall of the house,
looking carefully on the floor, and yet preserving
a studied negligence of demeanor, with one hand in
his pocket, and his small mouth contracted into a
singularly soothing and almost voiceless whistle Richelieu’s
own peculiar accomplishment. But no stone appeared.
Like most of his genus he was superstitious, and repeated
to himself the cabalistic formula: “Losin’s
seekin’s, findin’s keepin’s” presumed
to be of great efficacy in such cases with
religious fervor. He had laboriously reached
the end of the veranda when he noticed the open window
of Louise’s room, and stopped as a perfunctory
duty to look in. And then Richelieu Sharpe stood
for an instant utterly confounded and aghast at this
crowning proof of the absolute infamy and sickening
enormity of Man.
There was his stone his,
Richelieu’s, own specimen, carefully
gathered by himself and none other and
now stolen, abstracted, “skyugled,” “smouged,”
“hooked” by this “rotten, skunkified,
long-legged, splay-footed, hoss-laughin’, nigger-toothed,
or’nary despot” And, worse than all, actually
made to do infamous duty as a “love token” a
“candy-gift!” a “philanderin’
box” to his, Richelieu’s, girl for
Louise belonged to that innocent and vague outside
seraglio of Richelieu’s boyish dreams and
put atop of a letter to her! and Providence permitted
such an outrage! “Wot was he, Richelieu,
sent to school for, and organized wickedness in the
shape of gorilla Injins like this allowed to ride
high horses rampant over Californey!” He looked
at the heavens in mute appeal. And then Providence
not immediately interfering he thrust his
own small arm into the window, regained his priceless
treasure, and fled swiftly.
A fateful silence ensued. The
wind slightly moved the curtain outward, as if in
a playful attempt to follow him, and then subsided.
A moment later, apparently re-enforced by other winds,
or sympathizing with Richelieu, it lightly lifted
the unlucky missive and cast it softly from the window.
But here another wind, lying in wait, caught it cleverly,
and tossed it, in a long curve, into the abyss.
For an instant it seemed to float lazily, as on the
mirrored surface of a lake, until, turning upon its
side, it suddenly darted into utter oblivion.
When Mainwaring returned from the
shrubbery, he went softly to the window. The
disappearance of the letter and stone satisfied him
of the success of his stratagem, and for the space
of three hours relieved his anxiety. But at the
end of that time, finding no response from Louise,
his former uneasiness returned. Was she offended,
or the first doubt of her acceptance of
him crossed his mind!
A sudden and inexplicable sense of
shame came upon him. At the same moment, he heard
his name called from the steps, turned and
beheld Minty.
Her dark eyes were shining with a
pleasant light, and her lips parted on her white teeth
with a frank, happy smile. She advanced and held
out her hand. He took it with a mingling of disappointment
and embarrassment.
“You’re wondering why
I kem on here, arter I sent word this morning that
I kelkilated not to come. Well, ‘twixt then
and now suthin’ ’s happened. We’ve
had fine doin’s over at our house, you bet!
Pop don’t know which end he’s standin’
on; and I reckon that for about ten minutes I didn’t
know my own name. But ez soon ez I got fairly
hold o’ the hull thing, and had it put straight
in my mind, I sez to myself, Minty Sharpe, sez I,
the first thing for you to do now, is to put on yer
bonnet and shawl, and trapse over to Jim Bradley’s
and help them two womenfolks get dinner for themselves
and that sick stranger. And,” continued
Minty, throwing herself into a chair and fanning her
glowing face with her apron, “yer I am!”
“But you have not told me what
has happened,” said Mainwaring, with a constrained
smile, and an uneasy glance towards the house.
“That’s so,” said
Minty, with a brilliant laugh. “I clean
forgot the hull gist of the thing. Well, we’re
rich folks now over thar’ on Barren
Ledge! That onery brother of mine, Richelieu,
hez taken some of his specimens over to Jim Bradley
to be tested. And Bradley, just to please that
child, takes ’em; and not an hour ago Bradley
comes running, likety switch, over to Pop to tell
him to put up his notices, for the hull of that ledge
where the forge stands is a mine o’ silver and
copper. Afore ye knew it, Lordy! half the folks
outer the Summit and the mill was scattered down thar
all over it. Richardson that stranger
ez knows you kem thar too with Jim, and
he allows, ef Bradley’s essay is right, it’s
worth more than a hundred thousand dollars ez it stands!”
“I suppose I must congratulate
you, Miss Sharpe,” said Mainwaring with an attempt
at interest, but his attention still preoccupied with
the open doorway.
“Oh, they know all about
it!” said Minty, following the direction of his
abstracted eyes with a slight darkening of her own,
“I jest kem out o’ the kitchen the other
way, and Jim sent ’em a note; but I allowed I’d
tell you myself. Specially ez you are going
away to-morrow.”
“Who said I was going away to-morrow?”
asked Mainwaring, uneasily.
“Loo Macy!”
“Ah she did?
But I may change my mind, you know!” he continued,
with a faint smile.
Minty shook her curls decisively.
“I reckon she knows,” she said dryly,
“she’s got law and gospel for wot she says.
But yer she comes. Ask her! Look yer, Loo,”
she added, as the two women appeared at the doorway,
with a certain exaggeration of congratulatory manner
that struck Mainwaring as being as artificial and
disturbed as his own, “didn’t Sir Francis
yer say he was going to-morrow?”
“That’s what I understood!”
returned Louise, with cold astonishment, letting her
clear indifferent eyes fall upon Mainwaring. “I
do not know that he has changed his mind.”
“Unless, as Miss Sharpe is a
great capitalist now, she is willing to use her powers
of persuasion,” added Mrs. Bradley, with a slight
acidulous pointing of her usual prim playfulness.
“I reckon Minty Sharpe’s
the same ez she allus wos, unless more so,”
returned Minty, with an honest egotism that carried
so much conviction to the hearer as to condone its
vanity. “But I kem yer to do a day’s
work, gals, and I allow to pitch in and do it, and
not sit yer swoppin’ compliments and keeping
him from packin’ his duds. Onless,”
she stopped, and looked around at the uneasy, unsympathetic
circle with a faint tremulousness of lip that belied
the brave black eyes above it, “onless I’m
in yer way.”
The two women sprang forward with
a feminine bewildering excess of protestation; and
Mainwaring, suddenly pierced through his outer selfish
embarrassment to his more honest depths, stammered
quickly
“Look here, Miss Sharpe, if
you think of running away again, after having come
all the way here to make us share the knowledge of
your good fortune and your better heart, by Jove!
I’ll go back with you.”
But here the two women effusively
hurried her away from the dangerous proximity of such
sympathetic honesty, and a moment later Mainwaring
heard her laughing voice, as of old, ringing in the
kitchen. And then, as if unconsciously responding
to the significant common sense that lay in her last
allusion to him, he went to his room and grimly began
his packing.
He did not again see Louise alone.
At their informal luncheon the conversation turned
upon the more absorbing topic of the Sharpes’
discovery, its extent, and its probable effect upon
the fortunes of the locality. He noticed, abstractedly,
that both Mrs. Bradley and her cousin showed a real
or assumed scepticism of its value. This did
not disturb him greatly, except for its intended check
upon Minty’s enthusiasm. He was more conscious,
perhaps, with a faint touch of mortified
vanity, that his own contemplated departure
was of lesser importance than this local excitement.
Yet in his growing conviction that all was over if,
indeed, it had ever begun between himself
and Louise, he was grateful to this natural diversion
of incident which spared them both an interval of
embarrassing commonplaces. And, with the suspicion
of some indefinable insincerity either of
his own or Louise’s haunting him,
Minty’s frank heartiness and outspoken loyalty
gave him a strange relief. It seemed to him as
if the clear cool breath of the forest had entered
with her homely garments, and the steadfast truth
of Nature were incarnate in her shining eyes.
How far this poetic fancy would have been consistent
or even coexistent with any gleam of tenderness or
self-forgetfulness in Louise’s equally pretty
orbs, I leave the satirical feminine reader to determine.
It was late when Bradley at last returned,
bringing further and more complete corroboration of
the truth of Sharpe’s good fortune. Two
experts had arrived, one from Pine Flat and another
from the Summit, and upon this statement Richardson
had offered to purchase an interest in the discovery
that would at once enable the blacksmith to develop
his mine. “I shouldn’t wonder, Mainwaring,”
he added cheerfully, “if he’d put you
into it, too, and make your eternal fortune.”
“With larks falling from the
skies all round you, it’s a pity you couldn’t
get put into something,” said Mrs. Bradley, straightening
her pretty brows.
“I’m not a gold-miner,
my dear,” said Bradley, pleasantly.
“Nor a gold-finder,” returned
his wife, with a cruel little depression of her pink
nostrils, “but you can work all night in that
stupid mill and then,” she added in a low voice,
to escape Minty’s attention, “spend the
whole of the next day examining and following up a
boy’s discovery that his own relations had been
too lazy and too ignorant to understand and profit
by. I suppose that next you will be hunting up
a site on the other side of the Canyon,
where somebody else can put up a hotel and ruin your
own prospects.”
A sensitive shadow of pain quickly
dimmed Bradley’s glance not the first
or last time evidently, for it was gradually bringing
out a background of sadness in his intelligent eyes.
But the next moment he turned kindly to Mainwaring,
and began to deplore the necessity of his early departure,
which Richardson had already made known to him with
practical and satisfying reasons.
“I hope you won’t forget,
my dear fellow, that your most really urgent business
is to look after your health; and if, hereafter, you’ll
only remember the old Lookout enough to impress that
fact upon you, I shall feel that any poor service
I have rendered you has been amply repaid.”
Mainwaring, notwithstanding that he
winced slightly at this fateful echo of Louise’s
advice, returned the grasp of his friend’s hand
with an honest pressure equal to his own. He
longed now only for the coming of Richardson, to complete
his scheme of grateful benefaction to his host.
The banker came fortunately as the
conversation began to flag; and Mrs. Bradley’s
half-coquettish ill-humor of a pretty woman, and Louise’s
abstracted indifference, were becoming so noticeable
as to even impress Minty into a thoughtful taciturnity.
The graciousness of his reception by Mrs. Bradley
somewhat restored his former ostentatious gallantry,
and his self-satisfied, domineering manner had enough
masculine power in it to favorably affect the three
women, who, it must be confessed, were a little bored
by the finer abstractions of Bradley and Mainwaring.
After a few moments, Mainwaring rose and, with a significant
glance at Richardson to remind him of his proposed
conference with Bradley, turned to leave the room.
He was obliged to pass Louise, who was sitting by the
table. His attention was suddenly arrested by
something in her hand with which she was listlessly
playing. It was the stone which he had put on
his letter to her.
As he had not been present when Bradley
arrived, he did not know that this fateful object
had been brought home by his host, who, after receiving
it from Richelieu, had put it in his pocket to illustrate
his story of the discovery. On the contrary, it
seemed that Louise’s careless exposure of his
foolish stratagem was gratuitously and purposely cruel.
Nevertheless, he stopped and looked at her.
“That’s a queer stone
you have there,” he said, in a tone which she
recognized as coldly and ostentatiously civil.
“Yes,” she replied, without
looking up; “it’s the outcrop of that mine.”
She handed it to him as if to obviate any further remark.
“I thought you had seen it before.”
“The outcrop,” he repeated
dryly. “That is it it it
is the indication or sign of something important that’s
below it isn’t it?”
Louise shrugged her shoulders sceptically.
“It don’t follow. It’s just
as likely to cover rubbish, after you’ve taken
the trouble to look.”
“Thanks,” he said, with
measured gentleness, and passed quietly out of the
room.
The moon had already risen when Bradley,
with his brierwood pipe, preceded Richardson upon
the veranda. The latter threw his large frame
into Louise’s rocking-chair near the edge of
the abyss; Bradley, with his own chair tilted against
the side of the house after the national fashion,
waited for him to speak. The absence of Mainwaring
and the stimulus of Mrs. Bradley’s graciousness
had given the banker a certain condescending familiarity,
which Bradley received with amused and ironical tolerance
that his twinkling eyes made partly visible in the
darkness.
“One of the things I wanted
to talk to you about, Bradley, was that old affair
of the advance you asked for from the Bank. We
did not quite see our way to it then, and, speaking
as a business man, it isn’t really a matter
of business now; but it has lately been put to me in
a light that would make the doing of it possible you
understand? The fact of the matter is this:
Sir Robert Mainwaring, the father of the young fellow
you’ve got in your house, is one of our directors
and largest shareholders, and I can tell you if
you don’t suspect it already you’ve
been lucky, Bradley deucedly lucky to
have had him in your house and to have rendered him
a service. He’s the heir to one of the
largest landed estates in his country, one of the oldest
county families, and will step into the title some
day. But, ahem!” he coughed patronizingly,
“you knew all that! No? Well, that
charming wife of yours, at least, does; for she’s
been talking about it. Gad, Bradley, it takes
those women to find out anything of that kind, eh?”
The light in Bradley’s eyes
and his pipe went slowly out together.
“Then we’ll say that affair
of the advance is as good as settled. It’s
Sir Robert’s wish, you understand, and this young
fellow’s wish, and if you’ll
come down to the Bank next week we’ll arrange
it for you; I think you’ll admit they’re
doing the handsome to you and yours. And therefore,”
he lowered his voice confidentially, “you’ll
see, Bradley, that it will only be the honorable thing
in you, you know, to look upon the affair as finished,
and, in fact, to do all you can” he
drew his chair closer “to to to
drop this other foolishness.”
“I don’t think I quite
understand you!” said Bradley, slowly.
“But your wife does, if you
don’t,” returned Richardson, bluntly; “I
mean this foolish flirtation between Louise Macy and
Mainwaring, which is utterly preposterous. Why,
man, it can’t possibly come to anything, and
it couldn’t be allowed for a moment. Look
at his position and hers. I should think, as
a practical man, it would strike you ”
“Only one thing strikes me,
Richardson,” interrupted Bradley, in a singularly
distinct whisper, rising, and moving nearer the speaker;
“it is that you’re sitting perilously
near the edge of this veranda. For, by the living
God, if you don’t take yourself out of that chair
and out of this house, I won’t be answerable
for the consequences!”
“Hold on there a minute, will
you?” said Mainwaring’s voice from the
window.
Both men turned towards it. A
long leg was protruding from Mainwaring’s window;
it was quickly followed by the other leg and body of
the occupant, and the next moment Mainwaring come
towards the two men, with his hands in his pockets.
“Not so loud,” he said, looking towards
the house.
“Let that man go,” said
Bradley, in a repressed voice. “You and
I, Mainwaring, can speak together afterwards.”
“That man must stay until he
hears what I have got to say,” said Mainwaring,
stepping between them. He was very white and grave
in the moonlight, but very quiet; and he did not take
his hands from his pockets. “I’ve
listened to what he said because he came here on my
business, which was simply to offer to do you a service.
That was all, Bradley, that I told him to do.
This rot about what he expects of you in return is
his own impertinence. If you’d punched his
head when he began it, it would have been all right.
But since he has begun it, before he goes I think
he ought to hear me tell you that I have already offered
myself to Miss Macy, and she has refused me!
If she had given me the least encouragement, I should
have told you before. Further, I want to say
that, in spite of that man’s insinuations, I
firmly believe that no one is aware of the circumstance
except Miss Macy and myself.”
“I had no idea of intimating
that anything had happened that was not highly honorable
and creditable to you and the young lady,” began
Richardson hurriedly.
“I don’t know that it
was necessary for you to have any ideas on the subject
at all,” said Mainwaring, sternly; “nor
that, having been shown how you have insulted this
gentleman and myself, you need trouble us an instant
longer with your company. You need not come back.
I will manage my other affairs myself.”
“Very well, Mr. Mainwaring but you
may be sure that I shall certainly take the first
opportunity to explain myself to Sir Robert,”
returned Richardson as, with an attempt at dignity,
he strode away.
There was an interval of silence.
“Don’t be too hard upon
a fellow, Bradley,” said Mainwaring as Bradley
remained dark and motionless in the shadow. “It
is a poor return I’m making you for your kindness,
but I swear I never thought of anything like like this.”
“Nor did I,” said Bradley, bitterly.
“I know it, and that’s
what makes it so infernally bad for me. Forgive
me, won’t you? Think of me, old fellow,
as the wretchedest ass you ever met, but not such
a cad as this would make me!” As Mainwaring stepped
out from the moonlight towards him with extended hand,
Bradley grasped it warmly.
“Thanks there thanks,
old fellow! And, Bradley I say don’t
say anything to your wife, for I don’t think
she knows it. And, Bradley look here I
didn’t like to be anything but plain before that
fellow; but I don’t mind telling you, now
that it’s all over, that I really think Louise Miss
Macy didn’t altogether understand
me either.”
With another shake of the hand they
separated for the night. For a long time after
Mainwaring had gone, Bradley remained gazing thoughtfully
into the Great Canyon. He thought of the time
when he had first come there, full of life and enthusiasm,
making an ideal world of his pure and wholesome eyrie
on the ledge. What else he thought will, probably,
never be known until the misunderstanding of honorable
and chivalrous men by a charming and illogical sex
shall incite the audacious pen of some more daring
romancer.
When he returned to the house, he
said kindly to his wife, “I have been thinking
to-day about your hotel scheme, and I shall write to
Sacramento to-night to accept that capitalist’s
offer.”