A legend of San Francisco.
One pleasant New Year’s Eve,
about forty years ago, Padre Vicentio was slowly picking
his way across the sand-hills from the Mission Dolores.
As he climbed the crest of the ridge beside Mission
Creek, his broad, shining face might have been easily
mistaken for the beneficent image of the rising moon,
so bland was its smile and so indefinite its features.
For the Padre was a man of notable reputation and character;
his ministration at the mission of San Jose had been
marked with cordiality and unction; he was adored
by the simple-minded savages, and had succeeded in
impressing his individuality so strongly upon them
that the very children were said to have miraculously
resembled him in feature.
As the holy man reached the loneliest
portion of the road, he naturally put spurs to his
mule as if to quicken that decorous pace which the
obedient animal had acquired through long experience
of its master’s habits. The locality had
an unfavorable reputation. Sailors deserters
from whaleships had been seen lurking about
the outskirts of the town, and low scrub oaks which
everywhere beset the trail might have easily concealed
some desperate runaway. Besides these material
obstructions, the devil, whose hostility to the church
was well known, was said to sometimes haunt the vicinity
in the likeness of a spectral whaler, who had met
his death in a drunken bout, from a harpoon in the
hands of a companion. The ghost of this unfortunate
mariner was frequently observed sitting on the hill
toward the dusk of evening, armed with his favorite
weapon and a tub containing a coil of line, looking
out for some belated traveller on whom to exercise
his professional skill. It is related that the
good Father Jose Maria of the Mission Dolores had been
twice attacked by this phantom sportsman; that once,
on returning from San Francisco, and panting with
exertion from climbing the hill, he was startled by
a stentorian cry of “There she blows!”
quickly followed by a hurtling harpoon, which buried
itself in the sand beside him; that on another occasion
he narrowly escaped destruction, his serapa having
been transfixed by the diabolical harpoon and dragged
away in triumph. Popular opinion seems to have
been divided as to the reason for the devil’s
particular attention to Father Jose, some asserting
that the extreme piety of the Padre excited the Evil
One’s animosity, and others that his adipose
tendency simply rendered him, from a professional
view-point, a profitable capture.
Had Father Vicentio been inclined
to scoff at this apparition as a heretical innovation,
there was still the story of Concepcion, the Demon
Vaquero, whose terrible riata was fully as potent as
the whaler’s harpoon. Concepcion, when
in the flesh, had been a celebrated herder of cattle
and wild horses, and was reported to have chased the
devil in the shape of a fleet pinto colt all the way
from San Luis Obispo to San Francisco, vowing
not to give up the chase until he had overtaken the
disguised Arch-Enemy. This the devil prevented
by resuming his own shape, but kept the unfortunate
vaquero to the fulfilment of his rash vow; and Concepcion
still scoured the coast on a phantom steed, beguiling
the monotony of his eternal pursuit by lassoing travellers,
dragging them at the heels of his unbroken mustang
until they were eventually picked up, half-strangled,
by the roadside. The Padre listened attentively
for the tramp of this terrible rider. But no
footfall broke the stillness of the night; even the
hoofs of his own mule sank noiselessly in the shifting
sand. Now and then a rabbit bounded lightly by
him, or a quail ran into the bushes. The melancholy
call of plover from the adjoining marshes of Mission
Creek came to him so faintly and fitfully that it
seemed almost a recollection of the past rather than
a reality of the present.
To add to his discomposure one of
those heavy sea-fogs peculiar to the locality began
to drift across the hills and presently encompassed
him. While endeavoring to evade its cold embraces,
Padre Vicentio incautiously drove his heavy spurs
into the flanks of his mule as that puzzled animal
was hesitating on the brink of a steep declivity.
Whether the poor beast was indignant at this novel
outrage, or had been for some time reflecting on the
evils of being priest-ridden, has not transpired;
enough that he suddenly threw up his heels, pitching
the reverend man over his head, and, having accomplished
this feat, coolly dropped on his knees and tumbled
after his rider.
Over and over went the Padre, closely
followed by his faithless mule. Luckily the little
hollow which received the pair was of sand that yielded
to the superincumbent weight, half burying them without
further injury. For some moments the poor man
lay motionless, vainly endeavoring to collect his
scattered senses. A hand irreverently laid upon
his collar, and a rough shake, assisted to recall
his consciousness. As the Padre staggered to
his feet he found himself confronted by a stranger.
Seen dimly through the fog, and under
circumstances that to say the least were not prepossessing,
the new-comer had an inexpressibly mysterious and
brigand-like aspect. A long boat-cloak concealed
his figure, and a slouched hat hid his features, permitting
only his eyes to glisten in the depths. With
a deep groan the Padre slipped from the stranger’s
grasp and subsided into the soft sand again.
“Gad’s life!” said
the stranger, pettishly, “hast no more bones
in thy fat carcass than a jellyfish? Lend a hand,
here! Yo, heave ho!” and he dragged the
Padre into an upright position. “Now, then,
who and what art thou?”
The Padre could not help thinking
that the question might have more properly been asked
by himself; but with an odd mixture of dignity and
trepidation he began enumerating his different titles,
which were by no means brief, and would have been
alone sufficient to strike awe in the bosom of an
ordinary adversary. The stranger irreverently
broke in upon his formal phrases, and assuring him
that a priest was the very person he was looking for,
coolly replaced the old man’s hat, which had
tumbled off, and bade him accompany him at once on
an errand of spiritual counsel to one who was even
then lying in extremity. “To think,”
said the stranger, “that I should stumble upon
the very man I was seeking! Body of Bacchus!
but this is lucky! Follow me quickly, for there
is no time to lose.”
Like most easy natures the positive
assertion of the stranger, and withal a certain authoritative
air of command, overcame what slight objections the
Padre might have feebly nurtured during this remarkable
interview. The spiritual invitation was one, also,
that he dared not refuse; not only that; but it tended
somewhat to remove the superstitious dread with which
he had begun to regard the mysterious stranger.
But, following at a respectful distance, the Padre
could not help observing with a thrill of horror that
the stranger’s footsteps made no impression
on the sand, and his figure seemed at times to blend
and incorporate itself with the fog, until the holy
man was obliged to wait for its reappearance.
In one of these intervals of embarrassment he heard
the ringing of the far-off Mission bell, proclaiming
the hour of midnight. Scarcely had the last stroke
died away before the announcement was taken up and
repeated by a multitude of bells of all sizes, and
the air was filled with the sound of striking clocks
and the pealing of steeple chimes. The old man
uttered a cry of alarm. The stranger sharply
demanded the cause. “The bells! did you
not hear them?” gasped Padre Vicentio.
“Tush! tush!” answered the stranger, “thy
fall hath set triple bob-majors ringing in thine ears.
Come on!”
The Padre was only too glad to accept
the explanation conveyed in this discourteous answer.
But he was destined for another singular experience.
When they had reached the summit of the eminence now
known as Russian Hill, an exclamation again burst
from the Padre. The stranger turned to his companion
with an impatient gesture; but the Padre heeded him
not. The view that burst upon his sight was such
as might well have engrossed the attention of a more
enthusiastic temperament. The fog had not yet
reached the hill, and the long valleys and hillsides
of the embarcadero below were glittering with the
light of a populous city. “Look!”
said the Padre, stretching his hand over the spreading
landscape. “Look, dost thou not see the
stately squares and brilliantly lighted avenues of
a mighty metropolis. Dost thou not see, as it
were, another firmament below?”
“Avast heaving, reverend man,
and quit this folly,” said the strange; dragging
the bewildered Padre after him. “Behold
rather the stars knocked out of thy hollow noddle
by the fall thou hast had. Prithee, get over
thy visions and rhapsodies, for the time is wearing
apace.”
The Padre humbly followed without
another word. Descending the hill toward the
north, the stranger leading the way, in a few moments
the Padre detected the wash of waves, and presently
his feet struck the firmer sand of the beach.
Here the stranger paused, and the Padre perceived
a boat lying in readiness hard by. As he stepped
into the stern sheets, in obedience to the command
of his companion, he noticed that the rowers seemed
to partake of the misty incorporeal texture of his
companion, a similarity that became the more distressing
when he perceived also that their oars in pulling
together made no noise. The stranger, assuming
the helm, guided the boat on quietly, while the fog,
settling over the face of the water and closing around
them, seemed to interpose a muffled wall between themselves
and the rude jarring of the outer world. As they
pushed further into this penetralia, the Padre listened
anxiously for the sound of creaking blocks and the
rattling of cordage, but no vibration broke the veiled
stillness or disturbed the warm breath of the fleecy
fog. Only one incident occurred to break the
monotony of their mysterious journey. A one-eyed
rower, who sat in front of the Padre, catching the
devout father’s eye, immediately grinned such
a ghastly smile, and winked his remaining eye with
such diabolical intensity of meaning that the Padre
was constrained to utter a pious ejaculation, which
had the disastrous effect of causing the marine Cocles
to “catch a crab,” throwing his heels in
the air and his head into the bottom of the boat.
But even this accident did not disturb the gravity
of the rest of the ghastly boat’s crew.
When, as it seemed to the Padre, ten
minutes had elapsed, the outline of a large ship loomed
up directly across their bow. Before he could
utter the cry of warning that rose to his lips, or
brace himself against the expected shock, the boat
passed gently and noiselessly through the sides of
the vessel, and the holy man found himself standing
on the berth deck of what seemed to be an ancient
caravel. The boat and boat’s crew had vanished.
Only his mysterious friend, the stranger, remained.
By the light of a swinging lamp the Padre beheld him
standing beside a hammock, whereon, apparently, lay
the dying man to whom he had been so mysteriously
summoned. As the Padre, in obedience to a sign
from his companion, stepped to the side of the sufferer,
he feebly opened his eyes and thus addressed him:
“Thou seest before thee, reverend
father, a helpless mortal, struggling not only with
the last agonies of the flesh, but beaten down and
tossed with sore anguish of the spirit. It matters
little when or how I became what thou now seest me.
Enough that my life has been ungodly and sinful, and
that my only hope of absolution lies in my imparting
to thee a secret which is of vast importance to the
holy Church, and affects greatly her power, wealth,
and dominion on these shores. But the terms of
this secret and the conditions of my absolution are
peculiar. I have but five minutes to live.
In that time I must receive the extreme unction of
the Church.”
“And thy secret?” said the holy father.
“Shall be told afterwards,”
answered the dying man. “Come, my time is
short. Shrive me quickly.”
The Padre hesitated. “Couldst
thou not tell this secret first?”
“Impossible!” said the
dying man, with what seemed to the Padre a momentary
gleam of triumph. Then, as his breath grew feebler,
he called impatiently, “Shrive me! shrive me!”
“Let me know at least what this
secret concerns?” suggested the Padre, insinuatingly.
“Shrive me first,” said the dying man.
But the priest still hesitated, parleying
with the sufferer until the ship’s bell struck,
when, with a triumphant, mocking laugh from the stranger,
the vessel suddenly fell to pieces, amid the rushing
of waters which at once involved the dying man, the
priest, and the mysterious stranger.
The Padre did not recover his consciousness
until high noon the next day, when he found himself
lying in a little hollow between the Mission Hills,
and his faithful mule a few paces from him, cropping
the sparse herbage. The Padre made the best of
his way home, but wisely abstained from narrating
the facts mentioned above, until after the discovery
of gold, when the whole of this veracious incident
was related, with the assertion of the padre that
the secret which was thus mysteriously snatched from
his possession was nothing more than the discovery
of gold, years since, by the runaway sailors from
the expedition of Sir Francis Drake.