“It can’t be Three Pines
yet,” said a passenger’s voice, in which
the laziness of sleep still lingered, “or else
we’ve snoozed over five mile. I don’t
see no lights; wot are we stoppin’ for?”
The other passengers struggled to an upright position.
One nearest the window opened it; its place was instantly
occupied by the double muzzle of a shot-gun!
No one moved. In the awestricken silence the
voice of the driver rose in drawling protestation.
“It ain’t no business
o’ mine, but it sorter strikes me that you chaps
are a-playin’ it just a little too fine this
time! It ain’t three miles from Three
Pine Station and forty men. Of course, that’s
your lookout, not mine!”
The audacity of the thing had evidently
struck even the usually taciturn and phlegmatic driver
into his first expostulation on record.
“Your thoughtful consideration
does you great credit,” said a voice from the
darkness, “and shall be properly presented to
our manager; but at the same time we wish it understood
that we do not hesitate to take any risks in strict
attention to our business and our clients. In
the mean time you will expedite matters, and give
your passengers a chance to get an early tea at Three
Pines, by handing down that treasure-box and mail-pouch.
Be careful in handling that blunderbuss you keep
beside it; the last time it unfortunately went off,
and I regret to say slightly wounded one of your passengers.
Accidents of this kind, interfering, as they do, with
the harmony and pleasure of our chance meetings, cannot
be too highly deplored.”
“By gosh!” ejaculated
an outside passenger in an audible whisper.
“Thank you, sir,” said
the voice quietly; “but as I overlooked you,
I will trouble you now to descend with the others.”
The voice moved nearer; and, by the
light of a flaming bull’s-eye cast upon the
coach, it could be seen to come from a stout, medium-sized
man with a black mask, which, however, showed half
of a smooth, beardless face, and an affable yet satirical
mouth. The speaker cleared his throat with the
slight preparatory cough of the practiced orator, and,
approaching the window, to Key’s intense surprise,
actually began in the identical professional and rhetorical
style previously indicated by the miner.
“Circumstances over which we
have no control, gentlemen, compel us to oblige you
to alight, stand in a row on one side, and hold up
your hands. You will find the attitude not unpleasant
after your cramped position in the coach, while the
change from its confined air to the wholesome night-breeze
of the Sierras cannot but prove salutary and refreshing.
It will also enable us to relieve you of such so-called
valuables and treasures in the way of gold dust and
coin, which I regret to say too often are misapplied
in careless hands, and which the teachings of the
highest morality distinctly denominate as the root
of all evil! I need not inform you, gentlemen,
as business men, that promptitude and celerity of
compliance will insure dispatch, and shorten an interview
which has been sometimes needlessly, and, I regret
to say, painfully protracted.”
He drew back deliberately with the
same monotonous precision of habit, and disclosed
the muzzles of his confederates’ weapons still
leveled at the passengers. In spite of their
astonishment, indignation, and discomfiture, his practiced
effrontery and deliberate display appeared in some
way to touch their humorous sense, and one or two smiled
hysterically, as they rose and hesitatingly filed out
of the vehicle. It is possible, however, that
the leveled shot-guns contributed more or less directly
to this result.
Two masks began to search the passengers
under the combined focus of the bull’s-eyes,
the shining gun-barrels, and a running but still carefully
prepared commentary from the spokesman. “It
is to be regretted that business men, instead of intrusting
their property to the custody of the regularly constituted
express agent, still continue to secrete it on their
persons; a custom that, without enhancing its security,
is not only an injustice to the express company, but
a great detriment to dispatch. We also wish
to point out that while we do not as a rule interfere
with the possession of articles of ordinary personal
use or adornment, such as simple jewelry or watches,
we reserve our right to restrict by confiscation the
vulgarity and unmanliness of diamonds and enormous
fob chains.”
The act of spoliation was apparently
complete, yet it was evident that the orator was restraining
himself for a more effective climax. Clearing
his throat again and stepping before the impatient
but still mystified file of passengers, he reviewed
them gravely. Then in a perfectly pitched tone
of mingled pain and apology, he said slowly:
“It would seem that, from no
wish of our own, we are obliged on this present occasion
to suspend one or two of our usual rules. We
are not in the habit of interfering with the wearing
apparel of our esteemed clients; but in the interests
of ordinary humanity we are obliged to remove the
boots of the gentleman on the extreme left, which evidently
give him great pain and impede his locomotion.
We also seldom deviate from our rule of obliging
our clients to hold up their hands during this examination;
but we gladly make an exception in favor of the gentleman
next to him, and permit him to hand us the altogether
too heavily weighted holster which presses upon his
hip. Gentlemen,” said the orator, slightly
raising his voice, with a deprecating gesture, “you
need not be alarmed! The indignant movement of
our friend, just now, was not to draw his revolver, for
it isn’t there!” He paused while his
companions speedily removed the farmer’s boots
and the miner’s holster, and with a still more
apologetic air approached the coach, where only the
lady remained erect and rigid in her corner.
“And now,” he said with simulated hesitation,
“we come to the last and to us the most painful
suspension of our rules. On these very rare
occasions, when we have been honored with the presence
of the fair sex, it has been our invariable custom
not only to leave them in the undisturbed possession
of their property, but even of their privacy as well.
It is with deep regret that on this occasion we are
obliged to make an exception. For in the present
instance, the lady, out of the gentleness of her heart
and the politeness of her sex, has burdened herself
not only with the weight but the responsibility of
a package forced upon her by one of the passengers.
We feel, and we believe, gentlemen, that most of
you will agree with us, that so scandalous and unmanly
an attempt to evade our rules and violate the sanctity
of the lady’s immunity will never be permitted.
For your own sake, madam, we are compelled to ask
you for the satchel under your seat. It will
be returned to you when the package is removed.”
“One moment,” said the
professional man indignantly, “there is a man
here whom you have spared, a man who lately
joined us. Is that man,” pointing to the
astonished Key, “one of your confederates?”
“That man,” returned the
spokesman with a laugh, “is the owner of the
Sylvan Hollow Mine. We have spared him because
we owe him some consideration for having been turned
out of his house at the dead of night while the sheriff
of Sierra was seeking us.” He stopped,
and then in an entirely different voice, and in a
totally changed manner, said roughly, “Tumble
in there, all of you, quick! And you, sir”
(to Key), “I’d advise you to
ride outside. Now, driver, raise so much as
a rein or a whiplash until you hear the signal and
by God! you’ll know what next.”
He stepped back, and seemed to be instantly swallowed
up in the darkness; but the light of a solitary bull’s-eye the
holder himself invisible still showed the
muzzles of the guns covering the driver. There
was a momentary stir of voices within the closed coach,
but an angry roar of “Silence!” from the
darkness hushed it.
The moments crept slowly by; all now
were breathless. Then a clear whistle rang from
the distance, the light suddenly was extinguished,
the leveled muzzles vanished with it, the driver’s
lash fell simultaneously on the backs of his horses,
and the coach leaped forward.
The jolt nearly threw Key from the
top, but a moment later it was still more difficult
to keep his seat in the headlong fury of their progress.
Again and again the lash descended upon the maddened
horses, until the whole coach seemed to leap, bound,
and swerve with every stroke. Cries of protest
and even distress began to come from the interior,
but the driver heeded it not. A window was suddenly
let down; the voice of the professional man saying,
“What’s the matter? We’re not
followed. You are imperiling our lives by this
speed,” was answered only by, “Will some
of ye throttle that d d fool?” from
the driver, and the renewed fall of the lash.
The wayside trees appeared a solid plateau before
them, opened, danced at their side, closed up again
behind them, but still they sped along.
Rushing down grades with the speed of an avalanche,
they ascended again without drawing rein, and as if
by sheer momentum; for the heavy vehicle now seemed
to have a diabolical energy of its own. It ground
scattered rocks to powder with its crushing wheels,
it swayed heavily on ticklish corners, recovering itself
with the resistless forward propulsion of the straining
teams, until the lights of Three Pine Station began
to glitter through the trees. Then a succession
of yells broke from the driver, so strong and dominant
that they seemed to outstrip even the speed of the
unabated cattle. Lesser lights were presently
seen running to and fro, and on the outermost fringe
of the settlement the stage pulled up before a crowd
of wondering faces, and the driver spoke.
“We’ve been held up on
the open road, by G d, not three miles
from whar ye men are sittin’ here yawpin’!
If thar’s a man among ye that hasn’t
got the soul of a skunk, he’ll foller and close
in upon ’em before they have a chance to get
into the brush.” Having thus relieved
himself of his duty as an enforced noncombatant, and
allowed all further responsibility to devolve upon
his recreant fellow employees, he relapsed into his
usual taciturnity, and drove a trifle less recklessly
to the station, where he grimly set down his bruised
and discomfited passengers. As Key mingled with
them, he could not help perceiving that neither the
late “orator’s” explanation of his
exemption from their fate, nor the driver’s surly
corroboration of his respectability, had pacified
them. For a time this amused him, particularly
as he could not help remembering that he first appeared
to them beside the mysterious horseman who some one
thought had been identified as one of the masks.
But he was not a little piqued to find that the fair
unknown appeared to participate in their feelings,
and his first civility to her met with a chilling
response. Even then, in the general disillusion
of his romance regarding her, this would have been
only a momentary annoyance; but it strangely revived
all his previous suspicions, and set him to thinking.
Was the singular sagacity displayed by the orator
in his search purely intuitive? Could any one
have disclosed to him the secret of the passengers’
hoards? Was it possible for her while sitting
alone in the coach to have communicated with the band?
Suddenly the remembrance flashed across him of her
opening the window for fresh air! She could have
easily then dropped some signal. If this were
so, and she really was the culprit, it was quite natural
for her own safety that she should encourage the passengers
in the absurd suspicion of himself! His dying
interest revived; a few moments ago he had half resolved
to abandon his quest and turn back at Three Pines.
Now he determined to follow her to the end.
But he did not indulge in any further sophistry regarding
his duty; yet, in a new sense of honor, he did not
dream of retaliating upon her by communicating his
suspicions to his fellow passengers. When the
coach started again, he took his seat on the top, and
remained there until they reached Jamestown in the
early evening. Here a number of his despoiled
companions were obliged to wait, to communicate with
their friends. Happily, the exemption that had
made them indignant enabled him to continue his journey
with a full purse. But he was content with a
modest surveillance of the lady from the top of the
coach.
On arriving at Stockton this surveillance
became less easy. It was the terminus of the
stage-route, and the divergence of others by boat and
rail. If he were lucky enough to discover which
one the lady took, his presence now would be more
marked, and might excite her suspicion. But
here a circumstance, which he also believed to be providential,
determined him. As the luggage was being removed
from the top of the coach, he overheard the agent
tell the expressman to check the “lady’s”
trunk to San Luis. Key was seized with an idea
which seemed to solve the difficulty, although it
involved a risk of losing the clue entirely.
There were two routes to San Luis, one was by stage,
and direct, though slower; the other by steamboat
and rail, via San Francisco. If he took the
boat, there was less danger of her discovering him,
even if she chose the same conveyance; if she took
the direct stage, and he trusted to a woman’s
avoidance of the hurry of change and transshipment
for that choice, he would still arrive at
San Luis, via San Francisco, an hour before her.
He resolved to take the boat; a careful scrutiny
from a stateroom window of the arriving passengers
on the gangplank satisfied him that she had preferred
the stage. There was still the chance that in
losing sight of her she might escape him, but the
risk seemed small. And a trifling circumstance
had almost unconsciously influenced him after
his romantic and superstitious fashion as
to this final step.
He had been singularly moved when
he heard that San Luis was the lady’s probable
destination. It did not seem to bear any relation
to the mountain wilderness and the wild life she had
just quitted; it was apparently the most antipathic,
incongruous, and inconsistent refuge she could have
taken. It offered no opportunity for the disposal
of booty, or for communication with the gang.
It was less secure than a crowded town. An
old Spanish mission and monastery college in a sleepy
pastoral plain, it had even retained its
old-world flavor amidst American improvements and
social revolution. He knew it well. From
the quaint college cloisters, where the only reposeful
years of his adventurous youth had been spent, to
the long Alameda, or double avenues of ancient trees,
which connected it with the convent of Santa Luisa,
and some of his youthful “devotions,” it
had been the nursery of his romance. He was
amused at what seemed to be the irony of fate, in
now linking it with this folly of his maturer manhood;
and yet he was uneasily conscious of being more seriously
affected by it. And it was with a greater anxiety
than this adventure had ever yet cost him that he
at last arrived at the San Jose hotel, and from a balcony
corner awaited the coming of the coach. His heart
beat rapidly as it approached. She was there!
But at her side, as she descended from the coach,
was the mysterious horseman of the Sierra road.
Key could not mistake the well-built figure, whatever
doubt there had been about the features, which had
been so carefully concealed. With the astonishment
of this rediscovery, there flashed across him again
the fatefulness of the inspiration which had decided
him not to go in the coach. His presence there
would have no doubt warned the stranger, and so estopped
this convincing denouement. It was quite possible
that her companion, by relays of horses and the advantage
of bridle cut-offs, could have easily followed the
Three Pine coach and joined her at Stockton.
But for what purpose? The lady’s trunk,
which had not been disturbed during the first part
of the journey, and had been forwarded at Stockton
untouched before Key’s eyes, could not have contained
booty to be disposed of in this forgotten old town.
The register of the hotel bore simply
the name of “Mrs. Barker,” of Stockton,
but no record of her companion, who seemed to have
disappeared as mysteriously as he came. That
she occupied a sitting-room on the same floor as his
own in which she was apparently secluded
during the rest of the day was all he knew.
Nobody else seemed to know her. Key felt an
odd hesitation, that might have been the result of
some vague fear of implicating her prematurely, in
making any marked inquiry, or imperiling his secret
by the bribed espionage of servants. Once when
he was passing her door he heard the sounds of laughter, albeit
innocent and heart-free, which seemed so
inconsistent with the gravity of the situation and
his own thoughts that he was strangely shocked.
But he was still more disturbed by a later occurrence.
In his watchfulness of the movements of his neighbor
he had been equally careful of his own, and had not
only refrained from registering his name, but had
enjoined secrecy upon the landlord, whom he knew.
Yet the next morning after his arrival, the porter
not answering his bell promptly enough, he so far
forgot himself as to walk to the staircase, which
was near the lady’s room, and call to the employee
over the balustrade. As he was still leaning
over the railing, the faint creak of a door, and a
singular magnetic consciousness of being overlooked,
caused him to turn slowly, but only in time to hear
the rustle of a withdrawing skirt as the door was
quickly closed. In an instant he felt the full
force of his foolish heedlessness, but it was too
late. Had the mysterious fugitive recognized
him? Perhaps not; their eyes had not met, and
his face had been turned away.
He varied his espionage by subterfuges,
which his knowledge of the old town made easy.
He watched the door of the hotel, himself unseen,
from the windows of a billiard saloon opposite, which
he had frequented in former days. Yet he was
surprised the same afternoon to see her, from his
coigne of vantage, reentering the hotel, where he was
sure he had left her a few moments ago. Had
she gone out by some other exit, or had
she been disguised? But on entering his room
that evening he was confounded by an incident that
seemed to him as convincing of her identity as it
was audacious. Lying on his pillow were a few
dead leaves of an odorous mountain fern, known only
to the Sierras. They were tied together by a
narrow blue ribbon, and had evidently been intended
to attract his attention. As he took them in
his hand, the distinguishing subtle aroma of the little
sylvan hollow in the hills came to him like a memory
and a revelation! He summoned the chambermaid;
she knew nothing of them, or indeed of any one who
had entered his room. He walked cautiously into
the hall; the lady’s sitting-room door was open,
the room was empty. “The occupant,”
said the chambermaid, “had left that afternoon.”
He held the proof of her identity in his hand, but
she herself had vanished! That she had recognized
him there was now no doubt: had she divined the
real object of his quest, or had she accepted it as
a mere sentimental gallantry at the moment when she
knew it was hopeless, and she herself was perfectly
safe from pursuit? In either event he had been
duped. He did not know whether to be piqued,
angry, or relieved of his irresolute quest.
Nevertheless, he spent the rest of
the twilight and the early evening in fruitlessly
wandering through the one long thoroughfare of the
town, until it merged into the bosky Alameda, or spacious
grove, that connected it with Santa Luisa. By
degrees his chagrin and disappointment were forgotten
in the memories of the past, evoked by the familiar
pathway. The moon was slowly riding overhead,
and silvering the carriage-way between the straight
ebony lines of trees, while the footpaths were diapered
with black and white checkers. The faint tinkling
of a tram-car bell in the distance apprised him of
one of the few innovations of the past. The car
was approaching him, overtook him, and was passing,
with its faintly illuminated windows, when, glancing
carelessly up, he beheld at one of them the profile
of the face which he had just thought he had lost
forever!
He stopped for an instant, not in
indecision this time, but in a grim resolution to
let no chance escape him now. The car was going
slowly; it was easy to board it now, but again the
tinkle of the bell indicated that it was stopping
at the corner of a road beyond. He checked his
pace, a lady alighted, it was
she! She turned into the cross-street, darkened
with the shadows of some low suburban tenement houses,
and he boldly followed. He was fully determined
to find out her secret, and even, if necessary, to
accost her for that purpose. He was perfectly
aware what he was doing, and all its risks and penalties;
he knew the audacity of such an introduction, but
he felt in his left-hand pocket for the sprig of fern
which was an excuse for it; he knew the danger of
following a possible confidante of desperadoes, but
he felt in his right-hand pocket for the derringer
that was equal to it. They were both there;
he was ready.
He was nearing the convent and the
oldest and most ruinous part of the town. He
did not disguise from himself the gloomy significance
of this; even in the old days the crumbling adobe
buildings that abutted on the old garden wall of the
convent were the haunts of lawless Mexicans and vagabond
péons. As the roadway began to be rough
and uneven, and the gaunt outlines of the sagging
roofs of tiles stood out against the sky above the
lurking shadows of ruined doorways, he was prepared
for the worst. As the crumbling but still massive
walls of the convent garden loomed ahead, the tall,
graceful, black-gowned figure he was following presently
turned into the shadow of the wall itself. He
quickened his pace, lest it should again escape him.
Suddenly it stopped, and remained motionless.
He stopped, too. At the same moment it vanished!
He ran quickly forward to where it
had stood, and found himself before a large iron gate,
with a smaller one in the centre, that had just clanged
to on its rusty hinges. He rubbed his eyes! the
place, the gate, the wall, were all strangely familiar!
Then he stepped back into the roadway, and looked
at it again. He was not mistaken.
He was standing before the porter’s
lodge of the Convent of the Sacred Heart.