The abrupt departure of George Kearney
from Devil’s Ford excited but little interest
in the community, and was soon forgotten. It was
generally attributed to differences between himself
and his partners on the question of further outlay
of their earnings on mining improvements he
and Philip Carr alone representing a sanguine minority
whose faith in the future of the mine accepted any
risks. It was alleged by some that he had sold
out to his brother; it was believed by others that
he had simply gone to Sacramento to borrow money on
his share, in order to continue the improvements on
his own responsibility. The partners themselves
were uncommunicative; even Whiskey Dick, who since
his remarkable social elevation had become less oracular,
much to his own astonishment, contributed nothing
to the gossip except a suggestion that as the fiery
temper of George Kearney brooked no opposition, even
from his brother, it was better they should separate
before the estrangement became serious.
Mr. Carr did not disguise his annoyance
at the loss of his young disciple and firm ally.
But an unlucky allusion to his previous remarks on
Kearney’s attentions to Jessie, and a querulous
regret that he had permitted a disruption of their
social intimacy, brought such an ominous and frigid
opposition, not only from Christie, but even the frivolous
Jessie herself, that Carr sank back in a crushed and
terrified silence. “I only meant to say,”
he stammered after a pause, in which he, however,
resumed his aggrieved manner, “that Fairfax
seems to come here still, and he is not such
a particular friend of mine.”
“But she is and has
your interest entirely at heart,” said Jessie,
stoutly, “and he only comes here to tell us how
things are going on at the works.”
“And criticise your father,
I suppose,” said Mr. Carr, with an attempt at
jocularity that did not, however, disguise an irritated
suspiciousness. “He really seems to have
supplanted me as he has poor Kearney in your
estimation.”
“Now, father,” said Jessie,
suddenly seizing him by the shoulders in affected
indignation, but really to conceal a certain embarrassment
that sprang quite as much from her sister’s quietly
observant eye as her father’s speech, “you
promised to let this ridiculous discussion drop.
You will make me and Christie so nervous that we will
not dare to open the door to a visitor, until he declares
his innocence of any matrimonial intentions.
You don’t want to give color to the gossip that
agreement with your views about the improvements is
necessary to getting on with us.”
“Who dares talk such rubbish?”
said Carr, reddening; “is that the kind of gossip
that Fairfax brings here?”
“Hardly, when it’s known
that he don’t quite agree with you, and does
come here. That’s the best denial of the
gossip.”
Christie, who had of late loftily
ignored these discussions, waited until her father
had taken his departure.
“Then that is the reason why
you still see Mr. Munroe, after what you said,”
she remarked quietly to Jessie.
Jessie, who would have liked to escape
with her father, was obliged to pause on the threshold
of the door, with a pretty assumption of blank forgetfulness
in her blue eyes and lifted eyebrows.
“Said what? when?” she asked vacantly.
“When when Mr. Kearney
that day in the woods went away,”
said Christie, faintly coloring.
“Oh! That day,”
said Jessie briskly; “the day he just gloved
your hand with kisses, and then fled wildly into the
forest to conceal his emotion.”
“The day he behaved very foolishly,”
said Christie, with reproachful calmness, that did
not, however, prevent a suspicion of indignant moisture
in her eyes “when you explained”
“That it wasn’t meant for me,”
interrupted Jessie.
“That it was to you that Mr.
MUNROE’S attentions were directed. And then
we agreed that it was better to prevent any further
advances of this kind by avoiding any familiar relations
with either of them.”
“Yes,” said Jessie, “I
remember; but you’re not confounding my seeing
Fairfax occasionally now with that sort of thing.
He doesn’t kiss my hand like anything,”
she added, as if in abstract reflection.
“Nor run away, either,”
suggested the trodden worm, turning.
There was an ominous silence.
“Do you know we are nearly out
of coffee?” said Jessie choking, but moving
towards the door with Spartan-like calmness.
“Yes. And something must
be done this very day about the washing,” said
Christie, with suppressed emotion, going towards the
opposite entrance.
Tears stood in each other’s
eyes with this terrible exchange of domestic confidences.
Nevertheless, after a moment’s pause, they deliberately
turned again, and, facing each other with frightful
calmness, left the room by purposeless and deliberate
exits other than those they had contemplated a
crushing abnegation of self, that, to some extent,
relieved their surcharged feelings.
Meantime the material prosperity of
Devil’s Ford increased, if a prosperity based
upon no visible foundation but the confidences and
hopes of its inhabitants could be called material.
Few, if any, stopped to consider that the improvements,
buildings, and business were simply the outlay of
capital brought from elsewhere, and as yet the settlement
or town, as it was now called, had neither produced
nor exported capital of itself equal to half the amount
expended. It was true that some land was cultivated
on the further slope, some mills erected and lumber
furnished from the inexhaustible forest; but the consumers
were the inhabitants themselves, who paid for their
produce in borrowed capital or unlimited credit.
It was never discovered that while all roads led to
Devil’s Ford, Devil’s Ford led to nowhere.
The difficulties overcome in getting things into the
settlement were never surmounted for getting things
out of it. The lumber was practically valueless
for export to other settlements across the mountain
roads, which were equally rich in timber. The
theory so enthusiastically held by the original locators,
that Devil’s Ford was a vast sink that had, through
ages, exhausted and absorbed the trickling wealth
of the adjacent hills and valleys, was suffering an
ironical corroboration.
One morning it was known that work
was stopped at the Devil’s Ford Ditch temporarily
only, it was alleged, and many of the old workmen
simply had their labor for the present transferred
to excavating the river banks, and the collection
of vast heaps of “pay gravel.” Specimens
from these mounds, taken from different localities,
and at different levels, were sent to San Francisco
for more rigid assay and analysis. It was believed
that this would establish the fact of the permanent
richness of the drifts, and not only justify past expenditure,
but a renewed outlay of credit and capital. The
suspension of engineering work gave Mr. Carr an opportunity
to visit San Francisco on general business of the
mine, which could not, however, prevent him from arranging
further combinations with capital. His two daughters
accompanied him. It offered an admirable opportunity
for a shopping expedition, a change of scene, and
a peaceful solution of their perplexing and anomalous
social relations with Devil’s Ford. In
the first flush of gratitude to their father for this
opportune holiday, something of harmony had been restored
to the family circle that had of late been shaken by
discord.
But their sanguine hopes of enjoyment
were not entirely fulfilled. Both Jessie and
Christie were obliged to confess to a certain disappointment
in the aspect of the civilization they were now reentering.
They at first attributed it to the change in their
own habits during the last three months, and their
having become barbarous and countrified in their seclusion.
Certainly in the matter of dress they were behind the
fashions as revealed in Montgomery Street. But
when the brief solace afforded them by the modiste
and dressmaker was past, there seemed little else
to be gained. They missed at first, I fear, the
chivalrous and loyal devotion that had only amused
them at Devil’s Ford, and were the more inclined,
I think, to distrust the conscious and more civilized
gallantry of the better dressed and more carefully
presented men they met. For it must be admitted
that, for obvious reasons, their criticisms were at
first confined to the sex they had been most in contact
with. They could not help noticing that the men
were more eager, annoyingly feverish, and self-asserting
in their superior elegance and external show than
their old associates were in their frank, unrestrained
habits. It seemed to them that the five millionaires
of Devil’s Ford, in their radical simplicity
and thoroughness, were perhaps nearer the type of
true gentlemanhood than these citizens who imitated
a civilization they were unable yet to reach.
The women simply frightened them,
as being, even more than the men, demonstrative and
excessive in their fine looks, their fine dresses,
their extravagant demand for excitement. In less
than a week they found themselves regretting not
the new villa on the slope of Devil’s Ford,
which even in its own bizarre fashion was exceeded
by the barbarous ostentation of the villas and private
houses around them but the double cabin
under the trees, which now seemed to them almost aristocratic
in its grave simplicity and abstention. In the
mysterious forests of masts that thronged the city’s
quays they recalled the straight shafts of the pines
on Devil’s slopes, only to miss the sedate repose
and infinite calm that used to environ them.
In the feverish, pulsating life of the young metropolis
they often stopped oppressed, giddy, and choking; the
roar of the streets and thoroughfares was meaningless
to them, except to revive strange memories of the
deep, unvarying monotone of the evening wind over
their humbler roof on the Sierran hillside. Civic
bred and nurtured as they were, the recurrence of
these sensations perplexed and alarmed them.
“It seems so perfectly ridiculous,”
said Jessie, “for us to feel as out of place
here as that Pike County servant girl in Sacramento
who had never seen a steamboat before; do you know,
I quite had a turn the other day at seeing a man on
the Stockton wharf in a red shirt, with a rifle on
his shoulder.”
“And you wanted to go and speak
to him?” said Christie, with a sad smile.
“No, that’s just it; I
felt awfully hurt and injured that he did not come
up and speak to me! I wonder if we got any
fever or that sort of thing up there; it makes one
quite superstitious.”
Christie did not reply; more than
once before she had felt that inexplicable misgiving.
It had sometimes seemed to her that she had never
been quite herself since that memorable night when
she had slipped out of their sleeping-cabin, and stood
alone in the gracious and commanding presence of the
woods and hills. In the solitude of night, with
the hum of the great city rising below her at
times even in theatres or crowded assemblies of men
and women she forgot herself, and again
stood in the weird brilliancy of that moonlight night
in mute worship at the foot of that slowly-rising
mystic altar of piled terraces, hanging forests, and
lifted plateaus that climbed forever to the lonely
skies. Again she felt before her the expanding
and opening arms of the protecting woods. Had
they really closed upon her in some pantheistic embrace
that made her a part of them? Had she been baptized
in that moonlight as a child of the great forest?
It was easy to believe in the myths of the poets of
an idyllic life under those trees, where, free from
conventional restrictions, one loved and was loved.
If she, with her own worldly experience, could think
of this now, why might not George Kearney have thought?
. . . She stopped, and found herself blushing
even in the darkness. As the thought and blush
were the usual sequel of her reflections, it is to
be feared that they may have been at times the impelling
cause.
Mr. Carr, however, made up for his
daughters’ want of sympathy with metropolitan
life. To their astonishment, he not only plunged
into the fashionable gayeties and amusements of the
town, but in dress and manner assumed the rôle of
a leader of society. The invariable answer to
their half-humorous comment was the necessities of
the mine, and the policy of frequenting the company
of capitalists, to enlist their support and confidence.
There was something in this so unlike their father,
that what at any other time they would have hailed
as a relief to his habitual abstraction now half alarmed
them. Yet he was not dissipated he
did not drink nor gamble. There certainly did
not seem any harm in his frequenting the society of
ladies, with a gallantry that appeared to be forced
and a pleasure that to their critical eyes was certainly
apocryphal. He did not drag his daughters into
the mixed society of that period; he did not press
upon them the company of those he most frequented,
and whose accepted position in that little world of
fashion was considered equal to their own. When
Jessie strongly objected to the pronounced manners
of a certain widow, whose actual present wealth and
pecuniary influence condoned for a more uncertain prehistoric
past, Mr. Carr did not urge a further acquaintance.
“As long as you’re not thinking of marrying
again, papa,” Jessie had said finally, “I
don’t see the necessity of our knowing her.”
“But suppose I were,” had replied Mr.
Carr with affected humor. “Then you certainly
wouldn’t care for any one like her,” his
daughter had responded triumphantly. Mr. Carr
smiled, and dropped the subject, but it is probable
that his daughters’ want of sympathy with his
acquaintances did not in the least interfere with
his social prestige. A gentleman in all his relations
and under all circumstances, even his cold scientific
abstraction was provocative; rich men envied his lofty
ignorance of the smaller details of money-making,
even while they mistrusted his judgment. A man
still well preserved, and free from weakening vices,
he was a dangerous rival to younger and faster San
Francisco, in the eyes of the sex, who knew how to
value a repose they did not themselves possess.
Suddenly Mr. Carr announced his intention
of proceeding to Sacramento, on further business of
the mine, leaving his two daughters in the family
of a wealthy friend until he should return for them.
He opposed their ready suggestion to return to Devil’s
Ford with a new and unnecessary inflexibility:
he even met their compromise to accompany him to Sacramento
with equal decision.
“You will be only in my way,”
he said curtly. “Enjoy yourselves here
while you can.”
Thus left to themselves, they tried
to accept his advice. Possibly some slight reaction
to their previous disappointment may have already set
in; perhaps they felt any distraction to be a relief
to their anxiety about their father. They went
out more; they frequented concerts and parties; they
accepted, with their host and his family, an invitation
to one of those opulent and barbaric entertainments
with which a noted San Francisco millionaire distracted
his rare moments of reflection in his gorgeous palace
on the hills. Here they could at least be once
more in the country they loved, albeit of a milder
and less heroic type, and a little degraded by the
overlapping tinsel and scattered spangles of the palace.
It was a three days’ fête; the
style and choice of amusements left to the guests,
and an equal and active participation by no means necessary
or indispensable. Consequently, when Christie
and Jessie Carr proposed a ride through the adjacent
canyon on the second morning, they had no difficulty
in finding horses in the well-furnished stables of
their opulent entertainers, nor cavaliers among the
other guests, who were too happy to find favor in
the eyes of the two pretty girls who were supposed
to be abnormally fastidious and refined. Christie’s
escort was a good-natured young banker, shrewd enough
to avoid demonstrative attentions, and lucky enough
to interest her during the ride with his clear and
half-humorous reflections on some of the business speculations
of the day. If his ideas were occasionally too
clever, and not always consistent with a high sense
of honor, she was none the less interested to know
the ethics of that world of speculation into which
her father had plunged, and the more convinced, with
mingled sense of pride and anxiety, that his still
dominant gentlemanhood would prevent his coping with
it on equal terms. Nor could she help contrasting
the conversation of the sharp-witted man at her side
with what she still remembered of the vague, touching,
boyish enthusiasm of the millionaires of Devil’s
Ford. Had her escort guessed the result of this
contrast, he would hardly have been as gratified as
he was with the grave attention of her beautiful eyes.
The fascination of a gracious day
and the leafy solitude of the canyon led them to prolong
their ride beyond the proposed limit, and it became
necessary towards sunset for them to seek some shorter
cut home.
“There’s a vaquero in
yonder field,” said Christie’s escort,
who was riding with her a little in advance of the
others, “and those fellows know every trail
that a horse can follow. I’ll ride on, intercept
him, and try my Spanish on him. If I miss him,
as he’s galloping on, you might try your hand
on him yourself. He’ll understand your eyes,
Miss Carr, in any language.”
As he dashed away, to cover his first
audacity of compliment, Christie lifted the eyes thus
apostrophized to the opposite field. The vaquero,
who was chasing some cattle, was evidently too preoccupied
to heed the shouts of her companion, and wheeling
round suddenly to intercept one of the deviating fugitives,
permitted Christie’s escort to dash past him
before that gentleman could rein in his excited steed.
This brought the vaquero directly in her path.
Perceiving her, he threw his horse back on its haunches,
to prevent a collision. Christie rode up to him,
suddenly uttered a cry, and halted. For before
her, sunburnt in cheek and throat, darker in the free
growth of moustache and curling hair, clad in the
coarse, picturesque finery of his class, undisguised
only in his boyish beauty, sat George Kearney.
The blood, that had forsaken her astonished
face, rushed as quickly back. His eyes, which
had suddenly sparkled with an electrical glow, sank
before hers. His hand dropped, and his cheek flushed
with a dark embarrassment.
“You here, Mr. Kearney?
How strange! but how glad I am to meet you
again!”
She tried to smile; her voice trembled,
and her little hand shook as she extended it to him.
He raised his dark eyes quickly, and
impulsively urged his horse to her side. But,
as if suddenly awakening to the reality of the situation,
he glanced at her hurriedly, down at his barbaric finery,
and threw a searching look towards her escort.
In an instant Christie saw the infelicity
of her position, and its dangers. The words of
Whiskey Dick, “He wouldn’t stand that,”
flashed across her mind. There was no time to
lose. The banker had already gained control over
his horse, and was approaching them, all unconscious
of the fixed stare with which George was regarding
him. Christie hastily seized the hand which he
had allowed to fall at his side, and said quickly:
“Will you ride with me a little way, Mr. Kearney?”
He turned the same searching look
upon her. She met it clearly and steadily; he
even thought reproachfully.
“Do!” she said hurriedly.
“I ask it as a favor. I want to speak to
you. Jessie and I are here alone. Father
is away. You are one of our oldest friends.”
He hesitated. She turned to the
astonished young banker, who rode up.
“I have just met an old friend.
Will you please ride back as quickly as you can, and
tell Jessie that Mr. Kearney is here, and ask her to
join us?”
She watched her dazed escort, still
speechless from the spectacle of the fastidious Miss
Carr tete-a-tete with a common Mexican vaquero, gallop
off in the direction of the canyon, and then turned
to George.
“Now take me home, the shortest
way, as quick as you can.”
“Home?” echoed George.
“I mean to Mr. Prince’s house. Quick!
before they can come up to us.”
He mechanically put spurs to his horse;
she followed. They presently struck into a trail
that soon diverged again into a disused logging track
through the woods.
“This is the short cut to Prince’s,
by two miles,” he said, as they entered the
woods.
As they were still galloping, without
exchanging a word, Christie began to slacken her speed;
George did the same. They were safe from intrusion
at the present, even if the others had found the short
cut. Christie, bold and self-reliant a moment
ago, suddenly found herself growing weak and embarrassed.
What had she done?
She checked her horse suddenly.
“Perhaps we had better wait for them,”
she said timidly.
George had not raised his eyes to hers.
“You said you wanted to hurry
home,” he replied gently, passing his hand along
his mustang’s velvety neck, “and and
you had something to say to me.”
“Certainly,” she answered,
with a faint laugh. “I’m so astonished
at meeting you here. I’m quite bewildered.
You are living here; you have forsaken us to buy a
ranche?” she continued, looking at him attentively.
His brow colored slightly.
“No, I’m living here,
but I have bought no ranche. I’m only
a hired man on somebody else’s ranche,
to look after the cattle.”
He saw her beautiful eyes fill with
astonishment and something else. His
brow cleared; he went on, with his old boyish laugh:
“No, Miss Carr. The fact
is, I’m dead broke. I’ve lost everything
since I saw you last. But as I know how to ride,
and I’m not afraid of work, I manage to keep
along.”
“You have lost money in in
the mines?” said Christie suddenly.
“No” he replied
quickly, evading her eyes. “My brother has
my interest, you know. I’ve been foolish
on my own account solely. You know I’m
rather inclined to that sort of thing. But as
long as my folly don’t affect others, I can
stand it.”
“But it may affect others and
they may not think of it as folly ”
She stopped short, confused by his brightening color
and eyes. “I mean Oh, Mr. Kearney,
I want you to be frank with me. I know nothing
of business, but I know there has been trouble about
the mine at Devil’s Ford. Tell me honestly,
has my father anything to do with it? If I thought
that through any imprudence of his, you had suffered if
I believed that you could trace any misfortune of
yours to him to us I should
never forgive myself” she stopped
and flashed a single look at him “I
should never forgive you for abandoning us.”
The look of pain which had at first
shown itself in his face, which never concealed anything,
passed, and a quick smile followed her feminine anticlimax.
“Miss Carr,” he said,
with boyish eagerness, “if any man suggested
to me that your father wasn’t the brightest
and best of his kind too wise and clever
for the fools about him to understand I’d I’d
shoot him.”
Confused by his ready and gracious
disclaimer of what she had not intended to say,
there was nothing left for her but to rush upon what
she really intended to say, with what she felt was
shameful precipitation.
“One word more, Mr. Kearney,”
she began, looking down, but feeling the color come
to her face as she spoke. “When you spoke
to me the day you left, you must have thought me hard
and cruel. When I tell you that I thought you
were alluding to Jessie and some feeling you had for
her ”
“For Jessie!” echoed George.
“You will understand that that ”
“That what?” said George, drawing nearer
to her.
“That I was only speaking as
she might have spoken had you talked to her of me,”
added Christie hurriedly, slightly backing her horse
away from him.
But this was not so easy, as George
was the better rider, and by an imperceptible movement
of his wrist and foot had glued his horse to her side.
“He will go now,” she had thought, but
he didn’t.
“We must ride on,” she suggested faintly.
“No,” he said with a sudden
dropping of his boyish manner and a slight lifting
of his head. “We must ride together no further,
Miss Carr. I must go back to the work I am hired
to do, and you must go on with your party, whom I
hear coming. But when we part here you must bid
me good-by not as Jessie’s sister but
as Christie the one the only
woman that I love, or that I ever have loved.”
He held out his hand. With the
recollection of their previous parting, she tremblingly
advanced her own. He took it, but did not raise
it to his lips. And it was she who found herself
half confusedly retaining his hand in hers, until
she dropped it with a blush.
“Then is this the reason you
give for deserting us as you have deserted Devil’s
Ford?” she said coldly.
He lifted his eyes to her with a strange
smile, and said, “Yes,” wheeled his horse,
and disappeared in the forest.
He had left her thus abruptly once
before, kissed, blushing, and indignant. He was
leaving her now, unkissed, but white and indignant.
Yet she was so self-possessed when the party joined
her, that the singular rencontre and her explanation
of the stranger’s sudden departure excited no
further comment. Only Jessie managed to whisper
in her ear,
“I hope you are satisfied now
that it wasn’t me he meant?”
“Not at all,” said Christie coldly.