The four men on the “Zip Coon”
Ledge had not got fairly settled to their morning’s
work. There was the usual lingering hesitation
which is apt to attend the taking-up of any regular
or monotonous performance, shown in this instance
in the prolonged scrutiny of a pick’s point,
the solemn selection of a shovel, or the “hefting”
or weighing of a tapping-iron or drill. One member,
becoming interested in a funny paragraph he found in
the scrap of newspaper wrapped around his noonday cheese,
shamelessly sat down to finish it, regardless of the
prospecting pan thrown at him by another. They
had taken up their daily routine of mining life like
schoolboys at their tasks.
“Hello!” said Ned Wyngate,
joyously recognizing a possible further interruption.
“Blamed if the Express rider ain’t comin’
here!”
He was shading his eyes with his hand
as he gazed over the broad sun-baked expanse of broken
“flat” between them and the highroad.
They all looked up, and saw the figure of a mounted
man, with a courier’s bag thrown over his shoulder,
galloping towards them. It was really an event,
as their letters were usually left at the grocery at
the crossroads.
“I knew something was goin’
to happen,” said Wyngate. “I didn’t
feel a bit like work this morning.”
Here one of their number ran off to
meet the advancing horseman. They watched him
until they saw the latter rein up, and hand a brown
envelope to their messenger, who ran breathlessly
back with it to the Ledge as the horseman galloped
away again.
“A telegraph for Jackson Wells,”
he said, handing it to the young man who had been
reading the scrap of paper.
There was a dead silence. Telegrams
were expensive rarities in those days, especially
with the youthful Bohemian miners of the Zip Coon
Ledge. They were burning with curiosity, yet a
singular thing happened. Accustomed as they had
been to a life of brotherly familiarity and unceremoniousness,
this portentous message from the outside world of
civilization recalled their old formal politeness.
They looked steadily away from the receiver of the
telegram, and he on his part stammered an apologetic
“Excuse me, boys,” as he broke the envelope.
There was another pause, which seemed
to be interminable to the waiting partners. Then
the voice of Wells, in quite natural tones, said, “By
gum! that’s funny! Read that, Dexter, read
it out loud.”
Dexter Rice, the foreman, took the
proffered telegram from Wells’s hand, and read
as follows:
Your uncle, Quincy Wells, died yesterday,
leaving you sole heir. Will attend you to-morrow
for instructions.
Baker and Twiggs,
Attorneys, Sacramento.
The three miners’ faces lightened
and turned joyously to Wells; but his face looked
puzzled.
“May we congratulate you, Mr.
Wells?” said Wyngate, with affected politeness;
“or possibly your uncle may have been English,
and a title goes with the ‘prop,’ and
you may be Lord Wells, or Very Wells at
least.”
But here Jackson Wells’s youthful
face lost its perplexity, and he began to laugh long
and silently to himself. This was protracted to
such an extent that Dexter asserted himself, as
foreman and senior partner.
“Look here, Jack! don’t
sit there cackling like a chuckle-headed magpie, if
you are the heir.”
“I can’t help
it,” gasped Jackson. “I am the heir but
you see, boys, there ain’t any property.”
“What do you mean? Is all that a sell?”
demanded Rice.
“Not much! Telegraph’s
too expensive for that sort o’ feelin’.
You see, boys, I’ve got an Uncle Quincy, though
I don’t know him much, and he may be dead.
But his whole fixin’s consisted of a claim the
size of ours, and played out long ago: a ramshackle
lot o’ sheds called a cottage, and a kind of
market garden of about three acres, where he reared
and sold vegetables. He was always poor, and
as for calling it ‘property,’ and me
the ’heir’ good Lord!”
“A miser, as sure as you’re
born!” said Wyngate, with optimistic decision.
“That’s always the way. You’ll
find every crack of that blessed old shed stuck full
of greenbacks and certificates of deposit, and lots
of gold dust and coin buried all over that cow patch!
And of course no one suspected it! And of course
he lived alone, and never let any one get into his
house and nearly starved himself! Lord
love you! There’s hundreds of such cases.
The world is full of ’em!”
“That’s so,” chimed
in Pulaski Briggs, the fourth partner, “and I
tell you what, Jacksey, we’ll come over with
you the day you take possession, and just ‘prospect’
the whole blamed shanty, pigsties, and potato patch,
for fun and won’t charge you anything.”
For a moment Jackson’s face
had really brightened under the infection of enthusiasm,
but it presently settled into perplexity again.
“No! You bet the boys around
Buckeye Hollow would have spotted anything like that
long ago.”
“Buckeye Hollow!” repeated Rice and his
partners.
“Yes! Buckeye Hollow, that’s
the place; not twenty miles from here, and a God-forsaken
hole, as you know.”
A cloud had settled on Zip Coon Ledge.
They knew of Buckeye Hollow, and it was evident that
no good had ever yet come out of that Nazareth.
“There’s no use of talking
now,” said Rice conclusively. “You’ll
draw it all from that lawyer shark who’s coming
here tomorrow, and you can bet your life he wouldn’t
have taken this trouble if there wasn’t suthin’
in it. Anyhow, we’ll knock off work now
and call it half a day, in honor of our distinguished
young friend’s accession to his baronial estates
of Buckeye Hollow. We’ll just toddle down
to Tomlinson’s at the cross-roads, and have
a nip and a quiet game of old sledge at Jacksey’s
expense. I reckon the estate’s good for
that,” he added, with severe gravity.
“And, speaking as a fa’r-minded man and
the president of this yer Company, if Jackson would
occasionally take out and air that telegraphic dispatch
of his while we’re at Tomlinson’s, it might
do something for that Company’s credit with
Tomlinson! We’re wantin’ some new
blastin’ plant bad!”
Oddly enough the telegram accidentally
shown at Tomlinson’s produced a gratifying
effect, and the Zip Coon Ledge materially advanced
in public estimation. With this possible infusion
of new capital into its resources, the Company was
beset by offers of machinery and goods; and it was
deemed expedient by the sapient Rice, that to prevent
the dissemination of any more accurate information
regarding Jackson’s property the next day, the
lawyer should be met at the stage office by one of
the members, and conveyed secretly past Tomlinson’s
to the Ledge.
“I’d let you go,”
he said to Jackson, “only it won’t do for
that d d skunk of a lawyer to think
you’re too anxious sabe? We want
to rub into him that we are in the habit out yer of
havin’ things left to us, and a fortin’
more or less, falling into us now and then, ain’t
nothin’ alongside of the Zip Coon claim.
It won’t hurt ye to keep up a big bluff on that
hand of yours. Nobody would dare to ‘call’
you.”
Indeed this idea was carried out with
such elaboration the next day that Mr. Twiggs, the
attorney, was considerably impressed both by the conduct
of his guide, who (although burning with curiosity)
expressed absolute indifference regarding Jackson
Wells’s inheritance, and the calmness of Jackson
himself, who had to be ostentatiously called from his
work on the Ledge to meet him, and who even gave him
an audience in the hearing of his partners. Forced
into an apologetic attitude, he expressed his regret
at being obliged to bother Mr. Wells with an affair
of such secondary importance, but he was obliged to
carry out the formalities of the law.
“What do you suppose the estate
is worth?” asked Wells carelessly.
“I should not think that the
house, the claim, and the land would bring more than
fifteen hundred dollars,” replied Twiggs submissively.
To the impecunious owners of Zip Coon
Ledge it seemed a large sum, but they did not show
it.
“You see,” continued Mr.
Twiggs, “it’s really a case of ‘willing
away’ property from its obvious or direct inheritors,
instead of a beneficial grant. I take it that
you and your uncle were not particularly intimate, at
least, so I gathered when I made the will, and
his simple object was to disinherit his only daughter,
with whom he had had some quarrel, and who had left
him to live with his late wife’s brother, Mr.
Morley Brown, who is quite wealthy and residing in
the same township. Perhaps you remember the young
lady?”
Jackson Wells had a dim recollection
of this cousin, a hateful, red-haired schoolgirl,
and an equally unpleasant memory of this other uncle,
who was purse-proud and had never taken any notice
of him. He answered affirmatively.
“There may be some attempt to
contest the will,” continued Mr. Twiggs, “as
the disinheriting of an only child and a daughter offends
the sentiment of the people and of judges and jury,
and the law makes such a will invalid, unless a reason
is given. Fortunately your uncle has placed his
reasons on record. I have a copy of the will here,
and can show you the clause.” He took it
from his pocket, and read as follows: “’I
exclude my daughter, Jocelinda Wells, from any benefit
or provision of this my will and testament, for the
reason that she has voluntarily abandoned her father’s
roof for the house of her mother’s brother,
Morley Brown; has preferred the fleshpots of Egypt
to the virtuous frugalities of her own home, and has
discarded the humble friends of her youth, and the
associates of her father, for the meretricious and
slavish sympathy of wealth and position. In lieu
thereof, and as compensation therefor, I do hereby
give and bequeath to her my full and free permission
to gratify her frequently expressed wish for another
guardian in place of myself, and to become the adopted
daughter of the said Morley Brown, with the privilege
of assuming the name of Brown as aforesaid.’
You see,” he continued, “as the young lady’s
present position is a better one than it would be
if she were in her father’s house, and was evidently
a compromise, the sentimental consideration of her
being left homeless and penniless falls to the ground.
However, as the inheritance is small, and might be
of little account to you, if you choose to waive it,
I dare say we may make some arrangement.”
This was an utterly unexpected idea
to the Zip Coon Company, and Jackson Wells was for
a moment silent. But Dexter Rice was equal to
the emergency, and turned to the astonished lawyer
with severe dignity.
“You’ll excuse me for
interferin’, but, as the senior partner of this
yer Ledge, and Jackson Wells yer bein’ a most
important member, what affects his usefulness on this
claim affects us. And we propose to carry out
this yer will, with all its dips and spurs and angles!”
As the surprised Twiggs turned from
one to the other, Rice continued, “Ez far as
we kin understand this little game, it’s the
just punishment of a high-flying girl as breaks her
pore old father’s heart, and the re-ward of
a young feller ez has bin to our knowledge ez devoted
a nephew as they make ’em. Time and time
again, sittin’ around our camp fire at night,
we’ve heard Jacksey say, kinder to
himself, and kinder to us, ‘Now I wonder what’s
gone o’ old uncle Quincy;’ and he never
sat down to a square meal, or ever rose from a square
game, but what he allus said, ’If old uncle
Quince was only here now, boys, I’d die happy.’
I leave it to you, gentlemen, if that wasn’t
Jackson Wells’s gait all the time?”
There was a prolonged murmur of assent,
and an affecting corroboration from Ned Wyngate of
“That was him; that was Jacksey all the time!”
“Indeed, indeed,” said
the lawyer nervously. “I had quite the idea
that there was very little fondness”
“Not on your side not
on your side,” said Rice quickly. “Uncle
Quincy may not have anted up in this matter o’
feelin’, nor seen his nephew’s rise.
You know how it is yourself in these things being
a lawyer and a fa’r-minded man it’s
all on one side, ginerally! There’s always
one who loves and sacrifices, and all that, and there’s
always one who rakes in the pot! That’s
the way o’ the world; and that’s why,”
continued Rice, abandoning his slightly philosophical
attitude, and laying his hand tenderly, and yet with
a singularly significant grip, on Wells’s arm,
“we say to him, ‘Hang on to that will,
and uncle Quincy’s memory.’ And we
hev to say it. For he’s that tender-hearted
and keerless of money having his own share
in this Ledge that ef that girl came whimperin’
to him he’d let her take the ‘prop’
and let the hull thing slide! And then he’d
remember that he had rewarded that gal that broke
the old man’s heart, and that would upset him
again in his work. And there, you see, is just
where we come in! And we say, ’Hang
on to that will like grim death!’”
The lawyer looked curiously at Rice
and his companions, and then turned to Wells:
“Nevertheless, I must look to you for instructions,”
he said dryly.
But by this time Jackson Wells, although
really dubious about supplanting the orphan, had gathered
the sense of his partners, and said with a frank show
of decision, “I think I must stand by the will.”
“Then I’ll have it proved,”
said Twiggs, rising. “In the meantime, if
there is any talk of contesting”
“If there is, you might say,”
suggested Wyngate, who felt he had not had a fair
show in the little comedy, “ye might
say to that old skeesicks of a wife’s brother,
if he wants to nipple in, that there are four men
on the Ledge and four revolvers! We
are gin’rally fa’r-minded, peaceful men,
but when an old man’s heart is broken, and his
gray hairs brought down in sorrow to the grave, so
to speak, we’re bound to attend the funeral sabe?”
When Mr. Twiggs had departed again,
accompanied by a partner to guide him past the dangerous
shoals of Tomlinson’s grocery, Rice clapped his
hand on Wells’s shoulder. “If it hadn’t
been for me, sonny, that shark would have landed you
into some compromise with that red-haired gal!
I saw you weakenin’, and then I chipped in.
I may have piled up the agony a little on your love
for old Quince, but if you aren’t an ungrateful
cub, that’s how you ought to hev been feein’,
anyhow!”
Nevertheless, the youthful Wells,
although touched by his elder partner’s loyalty,
and convinced of his own disinterestedness, felt a
painful sense of lost chivalrous opportunity.
On mature consideration it was finally
settled that Jackson Wells should make his preliminary
examination of his inheritance alone, as it might
seem inconsistent with the previous indifferent attitude
of his partners if they accompanied him. But
he was implored to yield to no blandishments of the
enemy, and to even make his visit a secret.
He went. The familiar flower-spiked
trees which had given their name to Buckeye Hollow
had never yielded entirely to improvements and the
incursions of mining enterprise, and many of them had
even survived the disused ditches, the scarred flats,
the discarded levels, ruined flumes, and roofless
cabins of the earlier occupation, so that when Jackson
Wells entered the wide, straggling street of Buckeye,
that summer morning was filled with the radiance of
its blossoms and fragrant with their incense.
His first visit there, ten years ago, had been a purely
perfunctory and hasty one, yet he remembered the ostentatious
hotel, built in the “flush time” of its
prosperity, and already in a green premature decay;
he recalled the Express Office and Town Hall, also
passing away in a kind of similar green deliquescence;
the little zinc church, now overgrown with fern and
brambles, and the two or three fine substantial houses
in the outskirts, which seemed to have sucked the
vitality of the little settlement. One of these he
had been told was the property of his rich
and wicked maternal uncle, the hated appropriator
of his red-headed cousin’s affections. He
recalled his brief visit to the departed testator’s
claim and market garden, and his by no means favorable
impression of the lonely, crabbed old man, as well
as his relief that his objectionable cousin, whom he
had not seen since he was a boy, was then absent at
the rival uncle’s. He made his way across
the road to a sunny slope where the market garden of
three acres seemed to roll like a river of green rapids
to a little “run” or brook, which, even
in the dry season, showed a trickling rill. But
here he was struck by a singular circumstance.
The garden rested in a rich, alluvial soil, and under
the quickening Californian sky had developed far beyond
the ability of its late cultivator to restrain or keep
it in order. Everything had grown luxuriantly,
and in monstrous size and profusion. The garden
had even trespassed its bounds, and impinged upon the
open road, the deserted claims, and the ruins of the
past. Stimulated by the little cultivation Quincy
Wells had found time to give it, it had leaped its
three acres and rioted through the Hollow. There
were scarlet runners crossing the abandoned sluices,
peas climbing the court-house wall, strawberries matting
the trail, while the seeds and pollen of its few homely
Eastern flowers had been blown far and wide through
the woods. By a grim satire, Nature seemed to
have been the only thing that still prospered in that
settlement of man.
The cabin itself, built of unpainted
boards, consisted of a sitting-room, dining-room,
kitchen, and two bedrooms, all plainly furnished,
although one of the bedrooms was better ordered, and
displayed certain signs of feminine decoration, which
made Jackson believe it had been his cousin’s
room. Luckily, the slight, temporary structure
bore no deep traces of its previous occupancy to disturb
him with its memories, and for the same reason it
gained in cleanliness and freshness. The dry,
desiccating summer wind that blew through it had carried
away both the odors and the sense of domesticity; even
the adobe hearth had no fireside tales to tell, its
very ashes had been scattered by the winds; and the
gravestone of its dead owner on the hill was no more
flavorless of his personality than was this plain house
in which he had lived and died. The excessive
vegetation produced by the stirred-up soil had covered
and hidden the empty tin cans, broken boxes, and fragments
of clothing which usually heaped and littered the tent-pegs
of the pioneer. Nature’s own profusion had
thrust them into obscurity. Jackson Wells smiled
as he recalled his sanguine partner’s idea of
a treasure-trove concealed and stuffed in the crevices
of this tenement, already so palpably picked clean
by those wholesome scavengers of California, the dry
air and burning sun. Yet he was not displeased
at this obliteration of a previous tenancy; there
was the better chance for him to originate something.
He whistled hopefully as he lounged, with his hands
in his pockets, towards the only fence and gate that
gave upon the road. Something stuck up on the
gate-post attracted his attention. It was a sheet
of paper bearing the inscription in a large hand:
“Notice to trespassers. Look out for the
Orphan Robber!” A plain signboard in faded black
letters on the gate, which had borne the legend:
“Quincy Wells, Dealer in Fruit and Vegetables,”
had been rudely altered in chalk to read: “Jackson
Wells, Double Dealer in Wills and Codicils,”
and the intimation “Bouquets sold here”
had been changed to “Bequests stole here.”
For an instant the simple-minded Jackson failed to
discover any significance of this outrage, which seemed
to him to be merely the wanton mischief of a schoolboy.
But a sudden recollection of the lawyer’s caution
sent the blood to his cheeks and kindled his indignation.
He tore down the paper and rubbed out the chalk interpolation and
then laughed at his own anger. Nevertheless, he
would not have liked his belligerent partners to see
it.
A little curious to know the extent
of this feeling, he entered one of the shops, and
by one or two questions which judiciously betrayed
his ownership of the property, he elicited only a
tradesman’s interest in a possible future customer,
and the ordinary curiosity about a stranger.
The barkeeper of the hotel was civil, but brief and
gloomy. He had heard the property was “willed
away on account of some family quarrel which ’warn’t
none of his’.” Mr. Wells would find
Buckeye Hollow a mighty dull place after the mines.
It was played out, sucked dry by two or three big
mine owners who were trying to “freeze out”
the other settlers, so as they might get the place
to themselves and “boom it.” Brown,
who had the big house over the hill, was the head
devil of the gang! Wells felt his indignation
kindle anew. And this girl that he had ousted
was Brown’s friend. Was it possible that
she was a party to Brown’s designs to get this
three acres with the other lands? If so, his long-suffering
uncle was only just in his revenge.
He put all this diffidently before
his partners on his return, and was a little startled
at their adopting it with sanguine ferocity. They
hoped that he would put an end to his thoughts of
backing out of it. Such a course now would be
dishonorable to his uncle’s memory. It was
clearly his duty to resist these blasted satraps
of capitalists; he was providentially selected for
the purpose a village Hampden to withstand
the tyrant. “And I reckon that shark of
a lawyer knew all about it when he was gettin’
off that ‘purp stuff’ about people’s
sympathies with the girl,” said Rice belligerently.
“Contest the will, would he? Why, if we
caught that Brown with a finger in the pie we’d
just whip up the boys on this Ledge and lynch him.
You hang on to that three acres and the garden patch
of your forefathers, sonny, and we’ll see you
through!”
Nevertheless, it was with some misgivings
that Wells consented that his three partners should
actually accompany him and see him put in peaceable
possession of his inheritance. His instinct told
him that there would be no contest of the will, and
still less any opposition on the part of the objectionable
relative, Brown. When the wagon which contained
his personal effects and the few articles of furniture
necessary for his occupancy of the cabin arrived, the
exaggerated swagger which his companions had put on
in their passage through the settlement gave way to
a pastoral indolence, equally half real, half affected.
Lying on their backs under a buckeye, they permitted
Rice to voice the general sentiment. “There’s
a suthin’ soothin’ and dreamy in this
kind o’ life, Jacksey, and we’ll make a
point of comin’ here for a couple of days every
two weeks to lend you a hand; it will be a mighty
good change from our nigger work on the claim.”
In spite of this assurance, and the
fact that they had voluntarily come to help him put
the place in order, they did very little beyond lending
a cheering expression of unqualified praise and unstinted
advice. At the end of four hours’ weeding
and trimming the boundaries of the garden, they unanimously
gave their opinion that it would be more systematic
for him to employ Chinese labor at once.
“You see,” said Ned Wyngate,
“the Chinese naturally take to this kind o’
business. Why, you can’t take up a china
plate or saucer but you see ’em pictured there
working at jobs like this, and they kin live on green
things and rice that cost nothin’, and chickens.
You’ll keep chickens, of course.”
Jackson thought that his hands would
be full enough with the garden, but he meekly assented.
“I’ll get a pair you
only want two to begin with,” continued Wyngate
cheerfully, “and in a month or two you’ve
got all you want, and eggs enough for market.
On second thoughts, I don’t know whether you
hadn’t better begin with eggs first. That
is, you borry some eggs from one man and a hen from
another. Then you set ’em, and when the
chickens are hatched out you just return the hen to
the second man, and the eggs, when your chickens begin
to lay, to the first man, and you’ve got your
chickens for nothing and there you are.”
This ingenious proposition, which
was delivered on the last slope of the domain, where
the partners were lying exhausted from their work,
was broken in upon by the appearance of a small boy,
barefooted, sunburnt, and tow-headed, who, after a
moment’s hurried scrutiny of the group, threw
a letter with unerring precision into the lap of Jackson
Wells, and then fled precipitately. Jackson instinctively
suspected he was connected with the outrage on his
fence and gate-post, but as he had avoided telling
his partners of the incident, fearing to increase their
belligerent attitude, he felt now an awkward consciousness
mingled with his indignation as he broke the seal
and read as follows:
Sir, This is to inform
you that although you have got hold of the property
by underhanded and sneaking ways, you ain’t no
right to touch or lay your vile hands on the Cherokee
Rose alongside the house, nor on the Giant of Battles,
nor on the Maiden’s Pride by the gate the
same being the property of Miss Jocelinda Wells, and
planted by her, under the penalty of the Law.
And if you, or any of your gang of ruffians, touches
it or them, or any thereof, or don’t deliver
it up when called for in good order, you will be persecuted
by them.
Avenger.
It is to be feared that Jackson would
have suppressed this also, but the keen eyes of his
partners, excited by the abruptness of the messenger,
were upon him. He smiled feebly, and laid the
letter before them. But he was unprepared for
their exaggerated indignation, and with difficulty
restrained them from dashing off in the direction of
the vanished herald. “And what could you
do?” he said. “The boy’s only
a messenger.”
“I’ll get at that d d
skunk Brown, who’s back of him,” said Dexter
Rice.
“And what then?” persisted
Jackson, with a certain show of independence.
“If this stuff belongs to the girl, I’m
not certain I shan’t give them up without any
fuss. Lord! I want nothing but what the old
man left me and certainly nothing of hers.”
Here Ned Wyngate was heard to murmur
that Jackson was one of those men who would lie down
and let coyotes crawl over him if they first presented
a girl’s visiting card, but he was stopped by
Rice demanding paper and pencil. The former being
torn from a memorandum book, and a stub of the latter
produced from another pocket, he wrote as follows:
Sir, In reply to the
hogwash you have kindly exuded in your letter of to-day,
I have to inform you that you can have what you ask
for Miss Wells, and perhaps a trifle on your own account,
by calling this afternoon on Yours truly
“Now, sign it,” continued Rice, handing
him the pencil.
“But this will look as if we
were angry and wanted to keep the plants,” protested
Wells.
“Never you mind, sonny, but
sign! Leave the rest to your partners, and when
you lay your head on your pillow to-night return thanks
to an overruling Providence for providing you with
the right gang of ruffians to look after you!”
Wells signed reluctantly, and Wyngate
offered to find a Chinaman in the gulch who would
take the missive. “And being a Chinaman,
Brown can do any cussin’ or buck talk through
him!” he added.
The afternoon wore on; the tall Douglas
pines near the water pools wheeled their long shadows
round and halfway up the slope, and the sun began
to peer into the faces of the reclining men. Subtle
odors of mint and southern-wood, stragglers from the
garden, bruised by their limbs, replaced the fumes
of their smoked-out pipes, and the hammers of the
woodpeckers were busy in the grove as they lay lazily
nibbling the fragrant leaves like peaceful ruminants.
Then came the sound of approaching wheels along the
invisible highway beyond the buckeyes, and then a
halt and silence. Rice rose slowly, bright pin
points in the pupils of his gray eyes.
“Bringin’ a wagon with
him to tote the hull shanty away,” suggested
Wyngate.
“Or fetched his own ambulance,” said Briggs.
Nevertheless, after a pause, the wheels presently
rolled away again.
“We’d better go and meet
him at the gate,” said Rice, hitching his revolver
holster nearer his hip. “That wagon stopped
long enough to put down three or four men.”
They walked leisurely but silently
to the gate. It is probable that none of them
believed in a serious collision, but now the prospect
had enough possibility in it to quicken their pulses.
They reached the gate. But it was still closed;
the road beyond it empty.
“Mebbe they’ve sneaked
round to the cabin,” said Briggs, “and
are holdin’ it inside.”
They were turning quickly in that
direction, when Wyngate said, “Hush! some
one’s there in the brush under the buckeyes.”
They listened; there was a faint rustling in the shadows.
“Come out o’ that, Brown into
the open. Don’t be shy,” called out
Rice in cheerful irony. “We’re waitin’
for ye.”
But Briggs, who was nearest the wood,
here suddenly uttered an exclamation, “B’gosh!”
and fell back, open-mouthed, upon his companions.
They too, in another moment, broke into a feeble laugh,
and lapsed against each other in sheepish silence.
For a very pretty girl, handsomely dressed, swept
out of the wood and advanced towards them.
Even at any time she would have been
an enchanting vision to these men, but in the glow
of exercise and sparkle of anger she was bewildering.
Her wonderful hair, the color of freshly hewn redwood,
had escaped from her hat in her passage through the
underbrush, and even as she swept down upon them in
her majesty she was jabbing a hairpin into it with
a dexterous feminine hand.
The three partners turned quite the
color of her hair; Jackson Wells alone remained white
and rigid. She came on, her very short upper lip
showing her white teeth with her panting breath.
Rice was first to speak. “I
beg your pardon, Miss I thought
it was Brown you know,” he stammered.
But she only turned a blighting brown
eye on the culprit, curled her short lip till it almost
vanished in her scornful nostrils, drew her skirt
aside with a jerk, and continued her way straight to
Jackson Wells, where she halted.
“We did not know you were here
alone,” he said apologetically.
“Thought I was afraid to come
alone, didn’t you? Well, you see, I’m
not. There!” She made another dive at her
hat and hair, and brought the hat down wickedly over
her eyebrows. “Gimme my plants.”
Jackson had been astonished.
He would have scarcely recognized in this willful
beauty the red-haired girl whom he had boyishly hated,
and with whom he had often quarreled. But there
was a recollection and with that recollection
came an instinct of habit. He looked her squarely
in the face, and, to the horror of his partners, said,
“Say please!”
They had expected to see him fall,
smitten with the hairpin! But she only stopped,
and then in bitter irony said, “Please, Mr. Jackson
Wells.”
“I haven’t dug them up
yet and it would serve you just right if
I made you get them for yourself. But perhaps
my friends here might help you if you were
civil.”
The three partners seized spades and
hoes and rushed forward eagerly. “Only
show us what you want,” they said in one voice.
The young girl stared at them, and at Jackson.
Then with swift determination she turned her back
scornfully upon him, and with a dazzling smile which
reduced the three men to absolute idiocy, said to
the others, “I’ll show you,”
and marched away to the cabin.
“Ye mustn’t mind Jacksey,”
said Rice, sycophantically edging to her side, “he’s
so cut up with losin’ your father that he loved
like a son, he isn’t himself, and don’t
seem to know whether to ante up or pass out.
And as for yourself, Miss why What
was it he was sayin’ only just as the young
lady came?” he added, turning abruptly to Wyngate.
“Everything that cousin Josey
planted with her own hands must be took up carefully
and sent back even though it’s killin’
me to part with it,” quoted Wyngate unblushingly,
as he slouched along on the other side.
Miss Wells’s eyes glared at
them, though her mouth still smiled ravishingly.
“I’m sure I’m troubling you.”
In a few moments the plants were dug
up and carefully laid together; indeed, the servile
Briggs had added a few that she had not indicated.
“Would you mind bringing them
as far as the buggy that’s coming down the hill?”
she said, pointing to a buggy driven by a small boy
which was slowly approaching the gate. The men
tenderly lifted the uprooted plants, and proceeded
solemnly, Miss Wells bringing up the rear, towards
the gate, where Jackson Wells was still surlily lounging.
They passed out first. Miss Wells
lingered for an instant, and then advancing her beautiful
but audacious face within an inch of Jackson’s,
hissed out, “Make-believe! and hypocrite!”
“Cross-patch and sauce-box!”
returned Jackson readily, still under the malign influence
of his boyish past, as she flounced away.
Presently he heard the buggy rattle
away with his persecutor. But his partners still
lingered on the road in earnest conversation, and when
they did return it was with a singular awkwardness
and embarrassment, which he naturally put down to
a guilty consciousness of their foolish weakness in
succumbing to the girl’s demands.
But he was a little surprised when
Dexter Rice approached him gloomily. “Of
course,” he began, “it ain’t no call
of ours to interfere in family affairs, and you’ve
a right to keep ’em to yourself, but if you’d
been fair and square and above board in what you got
off on us about this per ”
“What do you mean?” demanded the astonished
Wells.
“Well callin’ her a ‘red-haired
gal.’”
“Well she is a red-haired girl!”
said Wells impatiently.
“A man,” continued Rice
pityingly, “that is so prejudiced as to apply
such language to a beautiful orphan torn
with grief at the loss of a beloved but d d
misconstruing parent merely because she
begs a few vegetables out of his potato patch, ain’t
to be reasoned with. But when you come to look
at this thing by and large, and as a fa’r-minded
man, sonny, you’ll agree with us that the sooner
you make terms with her the better. Considerin’
your interest, Jacksey, let alone the claims
of humanity, we’ve concluded to withdraw
from here until this thing is settled. She’s
sort o’ mixed us up with your feelings agin her,
and naturally supposed we object to the color of her
hair! and bein’ a penniless orphan, rejected
by her relations”
“What stuff are you talking?”
burst in Jackson. “Why, you saw she
treated you better than she did me.”
“Steady! There you go with
that temper of yours that frightened the girl!
Of course she could see that we were fa’r-minded
men, accustomed to the ways of society, and not upset
by the visit of a lady, or the givin’ up of
a few green sticks! But let that slide! We’re
goin’ back home to-night, sonny, and when you’ve
thought this thing over and are straightened up and
get your right bearin’s, we’ll stand by
you as before. We’ll put a man on to do
your work on the Ledge, so ye needn’t worry
about that.”
They were quite firm in this decision, however
absurd or obscure their conclusions, and
Jackson, after his first flash of indignation, felt
a certain relief in their departure. But strangely
enough, while he had hesitated about keeping the property
when they were violently in favor of it, he now felt
he was right in retaining it against their advice to
compromise. The sentimental idea had vanished
with his recognition of his hateful cousin in the
rôle of the injured orphan. And for the same
odd reason her prettiness only increased his resentment.
He was not deceived, it was the same capricious,
willful, red-haired girl.
The next day he set himself to work
with that dogged steadiness that belonged to his simple
nature, and which had endeared him to his partners.
He set half a dozen Chinamen to work, and followed,
although apparently directing, their methods.
The great difficulty was to restrain and control the
excessive vegetation, and he matched the small economies
of the Chinese against the opulence of the Californian
soil. The “garden patch” prospered;
the neighbors spoke well of it and of him. But
Jackson knew that this fierce harvest of early spring
was to be followed by the sterility of the dry season,
and that irrigation could alone make his work profitable
in the end. He brought a pump to force the water
from the little stream at the foot of the slope to
the top, and allowed it to flow back through parallel
trenches. Again Buckeye applauded! Only
the gloomy barkeeper shook his head. “The
moment you get that thing to pay, Mr. Wells, you’ll
find the hand of Brown, somewhere, getting ready to
squeeze it dry!”
But Jackson Wells did not trouble
himself about Brown, whom he scarcely knew. Once
indeed, while trenching the slope, he was conscious
that he was watched by two men from the opposite bank;
but they were apparently satisfied by their scrutiny,
and turned away. Still less did he concern himself
with the movements of his cousin, who once or twice
passed him superciliously in her buggy on the road.
Again, she met him as one of a cavalcade of riders,
mounted on a handsome but ill-tempered mustang, which
she was managing with an ill-temper and grace equal
to the brute’s, to the alternate delight and
terror of her cavalier. He could see that she
had been petted and spoiled by her new guardian and
his friends far beyond his conception. But why
she should grudge him the little garden and the pastoral
life for which she was so unsuited, puzzled him greatly.
One afternoon he was working near
the road, when he was startled by an outcry from his
Chinese laborers, their rapid dispersal from the strawberry
beds where they were working, the splintering crash
of his fence rails, and a commotion among the buckeyes.
Furious at what seemed to him one of the usual wanton
attacks upon coolie labor, he seized his pick and
ran to their assistance. But he was surprised
to find Jocelinda’s mustang caught by the saddle
and struggling between two trees, and its unfortunate
mistress lying upon the strawberry bed. Shocked
but cool-headed, Jackson released the horse first,
who was lashing out and destroying everything within
his reach, and then turned to his cousin. But
she had already lifted herself to her elbow, and with
a trickle of blood and mud on one fair cheek was surveying
him scornfully under her tumbled hair and hanging
hat.
“You don’t suppose I was
trespassing on your wretched patch again, do you?”
she said in a voice she was trying to keep from breaking.
“It was that brute who bolted.”
“I don’t suppose you were
bullying me this time,” he said, “but
you were your horse or it wouldn’t
have happened. Are you hurt?”
She tried to move; he offered her
his hand, but she shied from it and struggled to her
feet. She took a step forward but limped.
“If you don’t want my
arm, let me call a Chinaman,” he suggested.
She glared at him. “If
you do I’ll scream!” she said in a low
voice, and he knew she would. But at the same
moment her face whitened, at which he slipped his
arm under hers in a dexterous, business-like way, so
as to support her weight. Then her hat got askew,
and down came a long braid over his shoulder.
He remembered it of old, only it was darker than then
and two or three feet longer.
“If you could manage to limp
as far as the gate and sit down on the bank, I’d
get your horse for you,” he said. “I
hitched it to a sapling.”
“I saw you did before
you even offered to help me,” she said scornfully.
“The horse would have got away you
couldn’t.”
“If you only knew how I hated
you,” she said, with a white face, but a trembling
lip.
“I don’t see how that
would make things any better,” he said.
“Better wipe your face; it’s scratched
and muddy, and you’ve been rubbing your nose
in my strawberry bed.”
She snatched his proffered handkerchief
suddenly, applied it to her face, and said: “I
suppose it looks dreadful.”
“Like a pig’s,” he returned cheerfully.
She walked a little more firmly after
this, until they reached the gate. He seated
her on the bank, and went back for the mustang.
That beautiful brute, astounded and sore from its
contact with the top rail and brambles, was cowed
and subdued as he led it back.
She had finished wiping her face,
and was hurriedly disentangling two stinging tears
from her long lashes, before she threw back his handkerchief.
Her sprained ankle obliged him to lift her into the
saddle and adjust her little shoe in the stirrup.
He remembered when it was still smaller. “You
used to ride astride,” he said, a flood of recollection
coming over him, “and it’s much safer with
your temper and that brute.”
“And you,” she said in
a lower voice, “used to be” But
the rest of her sentence was lost in the switch of
the whip and the jump of her horse, but he thought
the word was “kinder.”
Perhaps this was why, after he watched
her canter away, he went back to the garden, and from
the bruised and trampled strawberry bed gathered a
small basket of the finest fruit, covered them with
leaves, added a paper with the highly ingenious witticism,
“Picked up with you,” and sent them to
her by one of the Chinamen. Her forcible entry
moved Li Sing, his foreman, also chief laundryman
to the settlement, to reminiscences:
“Me heap knew Missy Wells and
olé man, who go dead. Olé man allée
time make chin music to Missy. Allee time jaw
jaw allée time make lows allée
time cuttee up Missy! Plenty time lockee up Missy
topside house; no can walkee no can talkee no
hab got how can get? must
washee washee allée same Chinaman. Olé
man go dead Missy all lightee now.
Plenty fun. Plenty stay in Blown’s big house,
top-side hill; Blown first-chop man.”
Had he inquired he might have found
this pagan testimony, for once, corroborated by the
Christian neighbors.
But another incident drove all this
from his mind. The little stream the
life blood of his garden ran dry! Inquiry
showed that it had been diverted two miles away into
Brown’s ditch! Wells’s indignant
protest elicited a formal reply from Brown, stating
that he owned the adjacent mining claims, and reminding
him that mining rights to water took precedence of
the agricultural claim, but offering, by way of compensation,
to purchase the land thus made useless and sterile.
Jackson suddenly recalled the prophecy of the gloomy
barkeeper. The end, had come! But what could
the scheming capitalist want with the land, equally
useless as his uncle had proved for
mining purposes? Could it be sheer malignity,
incited by his vengeful cousin? But here he paused,
rejecting the idea as quickly as it came. No!
his partners were right! He was a trespasser
on his cousin’s heritage there was
no luck in it he was wrong, and this was
his punishment! Instead of yielding gracefully
as he might, he must back down now, and she would never
know his first real feelings. Even now he would
make over the property to her as a free gift.
But his partners had advanced him money from their
scanty means to plant and work it. He believed
that an appeal to their feelings would persuade them
to forego even that, but he shrank even more from
confessing his defeat to them than to her.
He had little heart in his labors
that day, and dismissed the Chinamen early. He
again examined his uncle’s old mining claim on
the top of the slope, but was satisfied that it had
been a hopeless enterprise and wisely abandoned.
It was sunset when he stood under the buckeyes, gloomily
looking at the glow fade out of the west, as it had
out of his boyish hopes. He had grown to like
the place. It was the hour, too, when the few
flowers he had cultivated gave back their pleasant
odors, as if grateful for his care. And then
he heard his name called.
It was his cousin, standing a few
yards from him in evident hesitation. She was
quite pale, and for a moment he thought she was still
suffering from her fall, until he saw in her nervous,
half-embarrassed manner that it had no physical cause.
Her old audacity and anger seemed gone, yet there
was a queer determination in her pretty brows.
“Good-evening,” he said.
She did not return his greeting, but
pulling uneasily at her glove, said hesitatingly:
“Uncle has asked you to sell him this land?”
“Yes.”
“Well don’t!” she burst
out abruptly.
He stared at her.
“Oh, I’m not trying to
keep you here,” she went on, flashing back into
her old temper; “so you needn’t stare like
that. I say, ‘Don’t,’ because
it ain’t right, it ain’t fair.”
“Why, he’s left me no alternative,”
he said.
“That’s just it that’s
why it’s mean and low. I don’t care
if he is our uncle.”
Jackson was bewildered and shocked.
“I know it’s horrid to
say it,” she said, with a white face; “but
it’s horrider to keep it in! Oh, Jack!
when we were little, and used to fight and quarrel,
I never was mean was I? I never was
underhanded was I? I never lied did
I? And I can’t lie now. Jack,”
she looked hurriedly around her, “He wants
to get hold of the land he thinks there’s
gold in the slope and bank by the stream. He
says dad was a fool to have located his claim so high
up. Jack! did you ever prospect the bank?”
A dawning of intelligence came upon
Jackson. “No,” he said; “but,”
he added bitterly, “what’s the use?
He owns the water now, I couldn’t
work it.”
“But, Jack, if you found
the color, this would be a mining claim!
You could claim the water right; and, as it’s
your land, your claim would be first!”
Jackson was startled. “Yes, if I found
the color.”
“You would find it.”
“Would?”
“Yes! I did on
the sly! Yesterday morning on your slope by the
stream, when no one was up! I washed a panful
and got that.” She took a piece of tissue
paper from her pocket, opened it, and shook into her
little palm three tiny pin points of gold.
“And that was your own idea, Jossy?”
“Yes!”
“Your very own?”
“Honest Injin!”
“Wish you may die?”
“True, O King!”
He opened his arms, and they mutually
embraced. Then they separated, taking hold of
each other’s hands solemnly, and falling back
until they were at arm’s length. Then they
slowly extended their arms sideways at full length,
until this action naturally brought their faces and
lips together. They did this with the utmost
gravity three times, and then embraced again, rocking
on pivoted feet like a metronome. Alas! it was
no momentary inspiration. The most casual and
indifferent observer could see that it was the result
of long previous practice and shameless experience.
And as such it was a revelation and an explanation.
“I always suspected that Jackson
was playin’ us about that red-haired cousin,”
said Rice two weeks later; “but I can’t
swallow that purp stuff about her puttin’ him
up to that dodge about a new gold discovery on a fresh
claim, just to knock out Brown. No, sir.
He found that gold in openin’ these irrigatin’
trenches, the usual nigger luck, findin’
what you’re not lookin’ arter.”
“Well, we can’t complain,
for he’s offered to work it on shares with us,”
said Briggs.
“Yes until he’s ready to take
in another partner.”
“Not Brown?” said his horrified
companions.
“No! but Brown’s adopted daughter that
red-haired cousin!”