The extravagant supper party by which
Mr. James Farendell celebrated the last day of his
bachelorhood was protracted so far into the night,
that the last guest who parted from him at the door
of the principal Sacramento restaurant was for a moment
impressed with the belief that a certain ruddy glow
in the sky was already the dawn. But Mr. Farendell
had kept his head clear enough to recognize it as the
light of some burning building in a remote business
district, a not infrequent occurrence in the dry season.
When he had dismissed his guest he turned away in
that direction for further information. His own
counting-house was not in that immediate neighborhood,
but Sacramento had been once before visited by a rapid
and far-sweeping conflagration, and it behooved him
to be on the alert even on this night of festivity.
Perhaps also a certain anxiety arose
out of the occasion. He was to be married to-morrow
to the widow of his late partner, and the marriage,
besides being an attractive one, would settle many
business difficulties. He had been a fortunate
man, but, like many more fortunate men, was not blind
to the possibilities of a change of luck. The
death of his partner in a successful business had
at first seemed to betoken that change, but his successful,
though hasty, courtship of the inexperienced widow
had restored his chances without greatly shocking
the decorum of a pioneer community. Nevertheless,
he was not a contented man, and hardly a determined although
an energetic one.
A walk of a few moments brought him
to the levee of the river, a favored district,
where his counting-house, with many others, was conveniently
situated. In these early days only a few of these
buildings could be said to be permanent, fire
and flood perpetually threatened them. They were
merely temporary structures of wood, or in the case
of Mr. Farendell’s office, a shell of corrugated
iron, sheathing a one-storied wooden frame, more or
less elaborate in its interior decorations. By
the time he had reached it, the distant fire had increased.
On his way he had met and recognized many of his business
acquaintances hurrying thither, some to
save their own property, or to assist the imperfectly
equipped volunteer fire department in their unselfish
labors. It was probably Mr. Farendell’s
peculiar preoccupation on that particular night which
had prevented his joining in their brotherly zeal.
He unlocked the iron door, and lit
the hanging lamp that was used in all-night sittings
on steamer days. It revealed a smartly furnished
office, with a high desk for his clerks, and a smaller
one for himself in one corner. In the centre
of the wall stood a large safe. This he also
unlocked and took out a few important books, as well
as a small drawer containing gold coin and dust to
the amount of about five hundred dollars, the large
balance having been deposited in bank on the previous
day. The act was only precautionary, as he did
not exhibit any haste in removing them to a place
of safety, and remained meditatively absorbed in looking
over a packet of papers taken from the same drawer.
The closely shuttered building, almost hermetically
sealed against light, and perhaps sound, prevented
his observing the steadily increasing light of the
conflagration, or hearing the nearer tumult of the
firemen, and the invasion of his quiet district by
other equally solicitous tenants. The papers
seemed also to possess some importance, for, the stillness
being suddenly broken by the turning of the handle
of the heavy door he had just closed, and its opening
with difficulty, his first act was to hurriedly conceal
them, without apparently paying a thought to the exposed
gold before him. And his expression and attitude
in facing round towards the door was quite as much
of nervous secretiveness as of indignation at the
interruption.
Yet the intruder appeared, though
singular, by no means formidable. He was a man
slightly past the middle age, with a thin face, hollowed
at the cheeks and temples as if by illness or asceticism,
and a grayish beard that encircled his throat like
a soiled worsted “comforter” below his
clean-shaven chin and mouth. His manner was slow
and methodical, and even when he shot the bolt of
the door behind him, the act did not seem aggressive.
Nevertheless Mr. Farendell half rose with his hand
on his pistol-pocket, but the stranger merely lifted
his own hand with a gesture of indifferent warning,
and, drawing a chair towards him, dropped into it
deliberately.
Mr. Farendell’s angry stare
changed suddenly to one of surprised recognition.
“Josh Scranton,” he said hesitatingly.
“I reckon,” responded
the stranger slowly. “That’s the name
I allus bore, and you called yourself Farendell.
Well, we ain’t seen each other sens the spring
o’ ’50, when ye left me lying nigh petered
out with chills and fever on the Stanislaus River,
and sold the claim that me and Duffy worked under
our very feet, and skedaddled for ’Frisco!”
“I only exercised my right as
principal owner, and to secure my advances,”
began the late Mr. Farendell sharply.
But again the thin hand was raised,
this time with a slow, scornful waiving of any explanations.
“It ain’t that in partickler that I’ve
kem to see ye for to-night,” said the stranger
slowly, “nor it ain’t about your takin’
the name o’ ‘Farendell,’ that friend
o’ yours who died on the passage here with ye,
and whose papers ye borrowed! Nor it ain’t
on account o’ that wife of yours ye left behind
in Missouri, and whose letters you never answered.
It’s them things all together and
suthin’ else!”
“What the d –l
do you want, then?” said Farendell, with a desperate
directness that was, however, a tacit confession of
the truth of these accusations.
“Yer allowin’ that ye’ll
get married tomorrow?” said Scranton slowly.
“Yes, and be d d to you,”
said Farendell fiercely.
“Yer not,” returned
Scranton. “Not if I knows it. Yer goin’
to climb down. Yer goin’ to get up and
get! Yer goin’ to step down and out!
Yer goin’ to shut up your desk and your books
and this hull consarn inside of an hour, and vamose
the ranch. Arter an hour from now thar won’t
be any Mr. Farendell, and no weddin’ to-morrow.”
“If that’s your game perhaps
you’d like to murder me at once?” said
Farendell with a shifting eye, as his hand again moved
towards his revolver.
But again the thin hand of the stranger
was also lifted. “We ain’t in the
business o’ murderin’ or bein’ murdered,
or we might hev kem here together, me and Duffy.
Now if anything happens to me Duffy will be left,
and he’s got the proofs.”
Farendell seemed to recognize the
fact with the same directness. “That’s
it, is it?” he said bluntly. “Well,
how much do you want? Only, I warn you that I
haven’t much to give.”
“Wotever you’ve got, if
it was millions, it ain’t enough to buy us up,
and ye ought to know that by this time,” responded
Scranton, with a momentary flash in his eyes.
But the next moment his previous passionless deliberation
returned, and leaning his arm on the desk of the man
before him he picked up a paperweight carelessly and
turned it over as he said slowly, “The fact
is, Mr. Farendell, you’ve been making us, me
and Duffy, tired. We’ve bin watchin’
you and your doin’s, lyin’ low and sayin’
nothin’, till we concluded that it was about
time you handed in your checks and left the board.
We ain’t wanted nothin’ of ye, we ain’t
begrudged ye nothin’, but we’ve allowed
that this yer thing must stop.”
“And what if I refuse?” said Farendell.
“Thar’ll be some cussin’
and a big row from you, I kalkilate and
maybe some fightin’ all round,” said Scranton
dispassionately. “But it will be all the
same in the end. The hull thing will come out,
and you’ll hev to slide just the same.
T’otherwise, ef ye slide out now, it’s
without a row.”
“And do you suppose a business
man like me can disappear without a fuss over it?”
said Farendell angrily. “Are you mad?”
“I reckon the hole you’ll
make kin be filled up,” said Scranton dryly.
“But ef ye go now, you won’t be bothered
by the fuss, while if you stay you’ll have to
face the music, and go too!”
Farendell was silent. Possibly
the truth of this had long since been borne upon him.
No one but himself knew the incessant strain of these
years of evasion and concealment, and how he often
had been near to some such desperate culmination.
The sacrifice offered to him was not, therefore, so
great as it might have seemed. The knowledge of
this might have given him a momentary superiority
over his antagonist had Scranton’s motive been
a purely selfish or malignant one, but as it was not,
and as he may have had some instinctive idea of Farendell’s
feeling also, it made his ultimatum appear the more
passionless and fateful. And it was this quality
which perhaps caused Farendell to burst out with desperate
abruptness,
“What in h-ll ever put you up to this!”
Scranton folded his arms upon Farendell’s
desk, and slowly wiping his clean jaw with one hand,
repeated deliberately, “Wall I reckon
I told ye that before! You’ve been making
us me and Duffy tired!”
He paused for a moment, and then, rising abruptly,
with a careless gesture towards the uncovered tray
of gold, said, “Come! ye kin take enuff o’
that to get away with; the less ye take, though, the
less likely you’ll be to be followed!”
He went to the door, unlocked and
opened it. A strange light, as of a lurid storm
interspersed by sheet-like lightning, filled the outer
darkness, and the silence was now broken by dull crashes
and nearer cries and shouting. A few figures
were also dimly flitting around the neighboring empty
offices, some of which, like Farendell’s, had
been entered by their now alarmed owners.
“You’ve got a good chance
now,” continued Scranton; “ye couldn’t
hev a better. It’s a big fire a
scorcher and jest the time for a man to
wipe himself out and not be missed. Make tracks
where the crowd is thickest and whar ye’re likely
to be seen, ez ef ye were helpin’! Ther’
’ll be other men missed tomorrow beside you,”
he added with grim significance; “but nobody’ll
know that you was one who really got away.”
Where the imperturbable logic of the
strange man might have failed, the noise, the tumult,
the suggestion of swift-coming disaster, and the necessity
for some immediate action of any kind, was convincing.
Farendell hastily stuffed his pockets with gold and
the papers he had found, and moved to the door.
Already he fancied he felt the hot breath of the leaping
conflagration beyond. “And you?” he
said, turning suspiciously to Scranton.
“When you’re shut of this
and clean off, I’ll fix things and leave too but
not before. I reckon,” he added grimly,
with a glance at the sky, now streaming with sparks
like a meteoric shower, “thar won’t be
much left here in the morning.”
A few dull embers pattered on the
iron roof of the low building and bounded off in ashes.
Farendell cast a final glance around him, and then
darted from the building. The iron door clanged
behind him he was gone.
Evidently not too soon, for the other
buildings were already deserted by their would-be
salvors, who had filled the streets with piles of books
and valuables waiting to be carried away. Then
occurred a terrible phenomenon, which had once before
in such disasters paralyzed the efforts of the firemen.
A large wooden warehouse in the centre of the block
of offices, many hundred feet from the scene of active
conflagration which had hitherto remained
intact suddenly became enveloped in clouds
of smoke, and without warning burst as suddenly from
roof and upper story into vivid flame. There were
eye-witnesses who declared that a stream of living
fire seemed to leap upon it from the burning district,
and connected the space between them with an arch of
luminous heat. In another instant the whole district
was involved in a whirlwind of smoke and flame, out
of whose seething vortex the corrugated iron buildings
occasionally showed their shriveling or glowing outlines.
And then the fire swept on and away.
When the sun again arose over the
panic-stricken and devastated city, all personal incident
and disaster was forgotten in the larger calamity.
It was two or three days before the full particulars
could be gathered even while the dominant
and resistless energy of the people was erecting new
buildings upon the still-smoking ruins. It was
only on the third day afterwards that James Farendell,
on the deck of a coasting steamer, creeping out through
the fogs of the Golden Gate, read the latest news
in a San Francisco paper brought by the pilot.
As he hurriedly comprehended the magnitude of the
loss, which was far beyond his previous conception,
he experienced a certain satisfaction in finding his
position no worse materially than that of many of his
fellow workers. They were ruined like himself;
they must begin their life afresh but
then! Ah! there was still that terrible difference.
He drew his breath quickly, and read on. Suddenly
he stopped, transfixed by a later paragraph.
For an instant he failed to grasp its full significance.
Then he read it again, the words imprinting themselves
on his senses with a slow deliberation that seemed
to him as passionless as Scranton’s utterances
on that fateful night.
“The loss of life, it is now
feared, is much greater than at first imagined.
To the list that has been already published we must
add the name of James Farendell, the energetic contractor
so well known to our citizens, who was missing the
morning after the fire. His calcined remains
were found this afternoon in the warped and twisted
iron shell of his counting-house, the wooden frame
having been reduced to charcoal in the intense heat.
The unfortunate man seems to have gone there to remove
his books and papers, as was evidenced by
the iron safe being found open, but to
have been caught and imprisoned in the building through
the heat causing the metal sheathing to hermetically
seal the doors and windows. He was seen by some
neighbors to enter the building while the fire was
still distant, and his remains were identified by his
keys, which were found beneath him. A poignant
interest is added to his untimely fate by the circumstance
that he was to have been married on the following
day to the widow of his late partner, and that he had,
at the call of duty, that very evening left a dinner
party given to celebrate the last day of his bachelorhood or,
as it has indeed proved, of his earthly existence.
Two families are thus placed in mourning, and it is
a singular sequel that by this untoward calamity the
well-known firm of Farendell & Cutler may be said
to have ceased to exist.”
Mr. Farendell started to his feet.
But a lurch of the schooner as she rose on the long
swell of the Pacific sent him staggering dizzily back
to his seat, and checked his first wild impulse to
return. He saw it all now, the fire
had avenged him by wiping out his persecutor, Scranton,
but in the eyes of his contemporaries it had only erased
him! He might return to refute the story
in his own person, but the dead man’s partner
still lived with his secret, and his own rehabilitation
could only revive his former peril.
Four years elapsed before the late
Mr. Farendell again set foot in the levee of Sacramento.
The steamboat that brought him from San Francisco
was a marvel to him in size, elegance, and comfort;
so different from the little, crowded, tri-weekly
packet he remembered; and it might, in a manner, have
prepared him for the greater change in the city.
But he was astounded to find nothing to remind him
of the past, no landmark, nor even ruin,
of the place he had known. Blocks of brick buildings,
with thoroughfares having strange titles, occupied
the district where his counting-house had stood, and
even obliterated its site; equally strange names were
upon the shops and warehouses. In his four years’
wanderings he had scarcely found a place as unfamiliar.
He had trusted to the great change in his own appearance the
full beard that he wore and the tanning of a tropical
sun to prevent recognition; but the precaution
was unnecessary, there were none to recognize him in
the new faces which were the only ones he saw in the
transformed city. A cautious allusion to the
past which he had made on the boat to a fellow passenger
had brought only the surprised rejoinder, “Oh,
that must have been before the big fire,” as
if it was an historic epoch. There was something
of pain even in this assured security of his loneliness.
His obliteration was complete.
For the late Mr. Farendell had suffered
some change of mind with his other mutations.
He had been singularly lucky. The schooner in
which he had escaped brought him to Acapulco, where,
as a returning Californian, and a presumably successful
one, his services and experience were eagerly sought
by an English party engaged in developing certain disused
Mexican mines. As the post, however, was perilously
near the route of regular emigration, as soon as he
had gained a sufficient sum he embarked with some
goods to Callao, where he presently established himself
in business, resuming his real name the
unambitious but indistinctive one of “Smith.”
It is highly probable that this prudential act was
also his first step towards rectitude. For whether
the change was a question of moral ethics, or merely
a superstitious essay in luck, he was thereafter strictly
honest in business. He became prosperous.
He had been sustained in his flight by the intention
that, if he were successful elsewhere, he would endeavor
to communicate with his abandoned fiancee, and ask
her to join him, and share not his name but fortune
in exile. But as he grew rich, the difficulties
of carrying out this intention became more apparent;
he was by no means certain of her loyalty surviving
the deceit he had practiced and the revelation he
would have to make; he was doubtful of the success
of any story which at other times he would have glibly
invented to take the place of truth. Already
several months had elapsed since his supposed death;
could he expect her to be less accessible to premature
advances now than when she had been a widow?
Perhaps this made him think of the wife he had deserted
so long ago. He had been quite content to live
without regret or affection, forgetting and forgotten,
but in his present prosperity he felt there was some
need of putting his domestic affairs into a more secure
and legitimate shape, to avert any catastrophe like
the last. Here at least would be no difficulty;
husbands had deserted their wives before this in Californian
emigration, and had been heard of only after they
had made their fortune. Any plausible story would
be accepted by her in the joy of his reappearance;
or if, indeed, as he reflected with equal complacency,
she was dead or divorced from him through his desertion a
sufficient cause in her own State and re-married,
he would at least be more secure. He began, without
committing himself, by inquiry and anonymous correspondence.
His wife, he learnt, had left Missouri for Sacramento
only a month or two after his own disappearance from
that place, and her address was unknown!
A complication so unlooked for disquieted
him, and yet whetted his curiosity. The only
person she might meet in California who could possibly
identify him with the late Mr. Farendell was Duffy;
he had often wondered if that mysterious partner of
Scranton’s had been deceived with the others,
or had ever suspected that the body discovered in
the counting-house was Scranton’s. If not,
he must have accepted the strange coincidence that
Scranton had disappeared also the same night.
In the first six months of his exile he had searched
the Californian papers thoroughly, but had found no
record of any doubt having been thrown on the accepted
belief. It was these circumstances, and perhaps
a vague fascination not unlike that which impels the
malefactor to haunt the scene of his crime, that,
at the end of four years, had brought him, a man of
middle age and assured occupation and fortune, back
to the city he had fled from.
A few days at one of the new hotels
convinced him thoroughly that he was in no danger
of recognition, and gave him the assurance to take
rooms more in keeping with his circumstances and his
own frankly avowed position as the head of a South
American house. A cautious acquaintance through
the agency of his banker with a few business
men gave him some occupation, and the fact of his
South American letters being addressed to Don Diego
Smith gave a foreign flavor to his individuality,
which his tanned face and dark beard had materially
helped. A stronger test convinced him how complete
was the obliteration of his former identity.
One day at the bank he was startled at being introduced
by the manager to a man whom he at once recognized
as a former business acquaintance. But the shock
was his alone; the formal approach and unfamiliar
manner of the man showed that he had failed to recognize
even a resemblance. But would he equally escape
detection by his wife if he met her as accidentally, an
encounter not to be thought of until he knew something
more of her? He became more cautious in going
to public places, but luckily for him the proportion
of women to men was still small in California, and
they were more observed than observing.
A month elapsed; in that time he had
thoroughly exhausted the local Directories in his
cautious researches among the “Smiths,”
for in his fear of precipitating a premature disclosure
he had given up his former anonymous advertising.
And there was a certain occupation in this personal
quest that filled his business time. He was in
no hurry. He had a singular faith that he would
eventually discover her whereabouts, be able to make
all necessary inquiries into her conduct and habits,
and perhaps even enjoy a brief season of unsuspected
personal observation before revealing himself.
And this faith was as singularly rewarded.
Having occasion to get his watch repaired
one day he entered a large jeweler’s shop, and
while waiting its examination his attention was attracted
by an ordinary old-fashioned daguerreotype case in
the form of a heart-shaped locket lying on the counter
with other articles left for repairs. Something
in its appearance touched a chord in his memory; he
lifted the half-opened case and saw a much faded daguerreotype
portrait of himself taken in Missouri before he left
in the Californian emigration. He recognized
it at once as one he had given to his wife; the faded
likeness was so little like his present self that he
boldly examined it and asked the jeweler one or two
questions. The man was communicative. Yes,
it was an old-fashioned affair which had been left
for repairs a few days ago by a lady whose name and
address, written by herself, were on the card tied
to it.
Mr. James Smith had by this time fully
controlled the emotion he felt as he recognized his
wife’s name and handwriting, and knew that at
last the clue was found! He laid down the case
carelessly, gave the final directions for the repairs
of his watch, and left the shop. The address,
of which he had taken a mental note, was, to his surprise,
very near his own lodgings; but he went straight home.
Here a few inquiries of his janitor elicited the information
that the building indicated in the address was a large
one of furnished apartments and offices like his own,
and that the “Mrs. Smith” must be simply
the housekeeper of the landlord, whose name appeared
in the Directory, but not her own. Yet he waited
until evening before he ventured to reconnoitre the
premises; with the possession of his clue came a slight
cooling of his ardor and extreme caution in his further
proceedings. The house a reconstructed
wooden building offered no external indication
of the rooms she occupied in the uniformly curtained
windows that front the street. Yet he felt an
odd and pleasurable excitement in passing once or twice
before those walls that hid the goal of his quest.
As yet he had not seen her, and there was naturally
the added zest of expectation. He noticed that
there was a new building opposite, with vacant offices
to let. A project suddenly occurred to him, which
by morning he had fully matured. He hired a front
room in the first floor of the new building, had it
hurriedly furnished as a private office, and on the
second morning of his discovery was installed behind
his desk at the window commanding a full view of the
opposite house. There was nothing strange in
the South American capitalist selecting a private office
in so popular a locality.
Two or three days elapsed without
any result from his espionage. He came to know
by sight the various tenants, the two Chinese servants,
and the solitary Irish housemaid, but as yet had no
glimpse of the housekeeper. She evidently led
a secluded life among her duties; it occurred to him
that perhaps she went out, possibly to market, earlier
than he came, or later, after he had left the office.
In this belief he arrived one morning after an early
walk in a smart spring shower, the lingering straggler
of the winter rains. There were few people astir,
yet he had been preceded for two or three blocks by
a tall woman whose umbrella partly concealed her head
and shoulders from view. He had noticed, however,
even in his abstraction, that she walked well, and
managed the lifting of her skirt over her trim ankles
and well-booted feet with some grace and cleverness.
Yet it was only on her unexpectedly turning the corner
of his own street that he became interested. She
continued on until within a few doors of his office,
when she stopped to give an order to a tradesman,
who was just taking down his shutters. He heard
her voice distinctly; in the quick emotion it gave
him he brushed hurriedly past her without lifting
his eyes. Gaining his own doorway he rushed upstairs
to his office, hastily unlocked it, and ran to the
window. The lady was already crossing the street.
He saw her pause before the door of the opposite house,
open it with a latchkey, and caught a full view of
her profile in the single moment that she turned to
furl her umbrella and enter. It was his wife’s
voice he had heard; it was his wife’s face that
he had seen in profile.
Yet she was changed from the lanky
young schoolgirl he had wedded ten years ago, or,
at least, compared to what his recollection of her
had been. Had he ever seen her as she really
was? Surely somewhere in that timid, freckled,
half-grown bride he had known in the first year of
their marriage the germ of this self-possessed, matured
woman was hidden. There was the tone of her voice;
he had never recalled it before as a lover might,
yet now it touched him; her profile he certainly remembered,
but not with the feeling it now produced in him.
Would he have ever abandoned her had she been like
that? Or had he changed, and was this no
longer his old self? perhaps even a self
she would never recognize again? James Smith
had the superstitions of a gambler, and that vague
idea of fate that comes to weak men; a sudden fright
seized him, and he half withdrew from the window lest
she should observe him, recognize him, and by some
act precipitate that fate.
By lingering beyond the usual hour
for his departure he saw her again, and had even a
full view of her face as she crossed the street.
The years had certainly improved her; he wondered
with a certain nervousness if she would think they
had done the same for him. The complacency with
which he had at first contemplated her probable joy
at recovering him had become seriously shaken since
he had seen her; a woman as well preserved and good-looking
as that, holding a certain responsible and, no doubt,
lucrative position, must have many admirers and be
independent. He longed to tell her now of his
fortune, and yet shrank from the test its exposure
implied. He waited for her return until darkness
had gathered, and then went back to his lodgings a
little chagrined and ill at ease. It was rather
late for her to be out alone! After all, what
did he know of her habits or associations? He
recalled the freedom of Californian life, and the
old scandals relating to the lapses of many women
who had previously led blameless lives in the Atlantic
States. Clearly it behooved him to be cautious.
Yet he walked late that night before the house again,
eager to see if she had returned, and with whom?
He was restricted in his eagerness by the fear of
detection, but he gathered very little knowledge of
her habits; singularly enough nobody seemed to care.
A little piqued at this, he began to wonder if he
were not thinking too much of this woman to whom he
still hesitated to reveal himself. Nevertheless,
he found himself that night again wandering around
the house, and even watching with some anxiety the
shadow which he believed to be hers on the window-blind
of the room where he had by discreet inquiry located
her. Whether his memory was stimulated by his
quest he never knew, but presently he was able to
recall step by step and incident by incident his early
courtship of her and the brief days of their married
life. He even remembered the day she accepted
him, and even dwelt upon it with a sentimental thrill
that he probably never felt at the time, and it was
a distinct feature of his extraordinary state of mind
and its concentration upon this particular subject
that he presently began to look upon himself as
the abandoned and deserted conjugal partner, and to
nurse a feeling of deep injury at her hands!
The fact that he was thinking of her, and she, probably,
contented with her lot, was undisturbed by any memory
of him, seemed to him a logical deduction of his superior
affection.
It was, therefore, quite as much in
the attitude of a reproachful and avenging husband
as of a merely curious one that, one afternoon, seeing
her issue from her house at an early hour, he slipped
down the stairs and began to follow her at a secure
distance. She turned into the principal thoroughfare,
and presently made one of the crowd who were entering
a popular place of amusement where there was an afternoon
performance. So complete was his selfish hallucination,
that he smiled bitterly at this proof of heartless
indifference, and even so far overcame his previous
caution as to actually brush by her somewhat rudely
as he entered the building at the same moment.
He was conscious that she lifted her eyes a little
impatiently to the face of the awkward stranger; he
was equally, but more bitterly, conscious that she
had not recognized him! He dropped into a seat
behind her; she did not look at him again with even
a sense of disturbance; the momentary contact had
evidently left no impression upon her. She glanced
casually at her neighbors on either side, and presently
became absorbed in the performance. When it was
over she rose, and on her way out recognized and exchanged
a few words with one or two acquaintances. Again
he heard her familiar voice, almost at his elbow,
raised with no more consciousness of her contiguity
to him than if he were a mere ghost. The thought
struck him for the first time with a hideous and appalling
significance. What was he but a ghost to her to
every one! A man dead, buried, and forgotten!
His vanity and self-complacency vanished before this
crushing realization of the hopelessness of his existence.
Dazed and bewildered, he mingled blindly and blunderingly
with the departing crowd, tossed here and there as
if he were an invisible presence, stumbling over the
impeding skirts of women with a vague apology they
heeded not, and which seemed in his frightened ears
as hollow as a voice from the grave.
When he at last reached the street
he did not look back, but wandered abstractedly through
by-streets in the falling rain, scarcely realizing
where he was, until he found himself drenched through,
with his closed umbrella in his tremulous hand, standing
at the half-submerged levee beside the overflowed
river. Here again he realized how completely he
had been absorbed and concentrated in his search for
his wife during the last three weeks; he had never
been on the levee since his arrival. He had taken
no note of the excitement of the citizens over the
alarming reports of terrible floods in the mountains,
and the daily and hourly fear that they experienced
of disastrous inundation from the surcharged river.
He had never thought of it, yet he had read of it,
and even talked, and yet now for the first time in
his selfish, blind absorption was certain of it.
He stood still for some time, watching doggedly the
enormous yellow stream laboring with its burden and
drift from many a mountain town and camp, moving steadily
and fatefully towards the distant bay, and still more
distant and inevitable ocean. For a few moments
it vaguely fascinated and diverted him; then it as
vaguely lent itself to his one dominant, haunting
thought. Yes, it was pointing him the only way
out, the path to the distant ocean and utter
forgetfulness again!
The chill of his saturated clothing
brought him to himself once more, he turned and hurried
home. He went tiredly to his bedroom, and while
changing his garments there came a knock at the door.
It was the porter to say that a lady had called, and
was waiting for him in the sitting-room. She
had not given her name.
The closed door prevented the servant
from seeing the extraordinary effect produced by this
simple announcement upon the tenant. For one
instant James Smith remained spellbound in his chair.
It was characteristic of his weak nature and singular
prepossession that he passed in an instant from the
extreme of doubt to the extreme of certainty and conviction.
It was his wife! She had recognized him in that
moment of encounter at the entertainment; had found
his address, and had followed him here! He dressed
himself with feverish haste, not, however, without
a certain care of his appearance and some selection
of apparel, and quickly forecast the forthcoming interview
in his mind. For the pendulum had swung back;
Mr. James Smith was once more the self-satisfied,
self-complacent, and discreetly cautious husband that
he had been at the beginning of his quest, perhaps
with a certain sense of grievance superadded.
He should require the fullest explanations and guarantees
before committing himself, indeed, her present
call might be an advance that it would be necessary
for him to check. He even pictured her pleading
at his feet; a very little stronger effort of his Alnaschar
imagination would have made him reject her like the
fatuous Persian glass peddler.
He opened the door of the sitting-room
deliberately, and walked in with a certain formal
precision. But the figure of a woman arose from
the sofa, and with a slight outcry, half playful,
half hysterical, threw herself upon his breast with
the single exclamation, “Jim!” He started
back from the double shock. For the woman was
not his wife! A woman extravagantly dressed,
still young, but bearing, even through her artificially
heightened color, a face worn with excitement, excess,
and premature age. Yet a face that as he disengaged
himself from her arms grew upon him with a terrible
recognition, a face that he had once thought pretty,
inexperienced, and innocent, the face of
the widow of his former partner, Cutler, the woman
he was to have married on the day he fled. The
bitter revulsion of feeling and astonishment was evidently
visible in his face, for she, too, drew back for a
moment as they separated. But she had evidently
been prepared, if not pathetically inured to such
experiences. She dropped into a chair again with
a dry laugh, and a hard metallic voice, as she said,
“Well, it’s you, anyway and
you can’t get out of it.”
As he still stared at her, in her
inconsistent finery, draggled and wet by the storm,
at her limp ribbons and ostentatious jewelry, she
continued, in the same hard voice,
“I thought I spotted you once
or twice before; but you took no notice of me, and
I reckoned I was mistaken. But this afternoon
at the Temple of Music”
“Where?” said James Smith harshly.
“At the Temple the
San Francisco Troupe performance where you
brushed by me, and I heard your voice saying, ‘Beg
pardon!’ I says, ’That’s Jim Farendell.’”
“Farendell!” burst out
James Smith, half in simulated astonishment, half
in real alarm.
“Well! Smith, then, if
you like better,” said the woman impatiently;
“though it’s about the sickest and most
played-out dodge of a name you could have pitched
upon. James Smith, Don Diego Smith!” she
repeated, with a hysteric laugh. “Why,
it beats the nigger minstrels all hollow! Well,
when I saw you there, I said, ’That’s Jim
Farendell, or his twin brother;’ I didn’t
say ‘his ghost,’ mind you; for, from the
beginning, even before I knew it all, I never took
any stock in that fool yarn about your burnt bones
being found in your office.”
“Knew all, knew what?”
demanded the man, with a bravado which he nevertheless
felt was hopeless.
She rose, crossed the room, and, standing
before him, placed one hand upon her hip as she looked
at him with half-pitying effrontery.
“Look here, Jim,” she
began slowly, “do you know what you’re
doing? Well, you’re making me tired!”
In spite of himself, a half-superstitious thrill went
through him as her words and attitude recalled the
dead Scranton. “Do you suppose that I don’t
know that you ran away the night of the fire?
Do you suppose that I don’t know that you were
next to ruined that night, and that you took that
opportunity of skedaddling out of the country with
all the money you had left, and leaving folks to imagine
you were burnt up with the books you had falsified
and the accounts you had doctored! It was a mean
thing for you to do to me, Jim, for I loved you then,
and would have been fool enough to run off with you
if you’d told me all, and not left me to find
out that you had lost my money every
cent Cutler had left me in the business with
the rest.”
With the fatuousness of a weak man
cornered, he clung to unimportant details. “But
the body was believed to be mine by every one,”
he stammered angrily. “My papers and books
were burnt, there was no evidence.”
“And why was there not?”
she said witheringly, staring doggedly in his face.
“Because I stopped it! Because when I knew
those bones and rags shut up in that office weren’t
yours, and was beginning to make a row about it, a
strange man came to me and said they were the remains
of a friend of his who knew your bankruptcy and had
come that night to warn you, a man whom
you had half ruined once, a man who had probably lost
his life in helping you away. He said if I went
on making a fuss he’d come out with the whole
truth how you were a thief and a forger,
and” she stopped.
“And what else?” he asked
desperately, dreading to hear his wife’s name
next fall from her lips.
“And that as it could
be proved that his friend knew your secrets,”
she went on in a frightened, embarrassed voice, “you
might be accused of making away with him.”
For a moment James Smith was appalled;
he had never thought of this. As in all his past
villainy he was too cowardly to contemplate murder,
he was frightened at the mere accusation of it.
“But,” he stammered, forgetful of all
save this new terror, “he knew I wouldn’t
be such a fool, for the man himself told me Duffy
had the papers, and killing him wouldn’t have
helped me.”
Mrs. Cutler stared at him a moment
searchingly, and then turned wearily away. “Well,”
she said, sinking into her chair again, “he said
if I’d shut my mouth he’d shut his and I
did. And this,” she added, throwing her
hands from her lap, a gesture half of reproach and
half of contempt, “this is what I
get for it.”
More frightened than touched by the
woman’s desperation, James Smith stammered a
vague apologetic disclaimer, even while he was loathing
with a revulsion new to him her draggled finery, her
still more faded beauty, and the half-distinct consciousness
of guilt that linked her to him. But she waved
it away, a weary gesture that again reminded him of
the dead Scranton.
“Of course I ain’t what
I was, but who’s to blame for it? When you
left me alone without a cent, face to face with a
lie, I had to do something. I wasn’t brought
up to work; I like good clothes, and you know it better
than anybody. I ain’t one of your stage
heroines that go out as dependants and governesses
and die of consumption, but I thought,” she
went on with a shrill, hysterical laugh, more painful
than the weariness which inevitably followed it, “I
thought I might train myself to do it, on the
stage! and I joined Barker’s Company.
They said I had a face and figure for the stage; that
face and figure wore out before I had anything more
to show, and I wasn’t big enough to make better
terms with the manager. They kept me nearly a
year doing chambermaids and fairy queens the other
side of the footlights, where I saw you today.
Then I kicked! I suppose I might have married
some fool for his money, but I was soft enough to
think you might be sending for me when you were safe.
You seem to be mighty comfortable here,” she
continued, with a bitter glance around his handsomely
furnished room, “as ‘Don Diego Smith.’
I reckon skedaddling pays better than staying behind.”
“I have only been here a few
weeks,” he said hurriedly. “I never
knew what had become of you, or that you were still
here”
“Or you wouldn’t have
come,” she interrupted, with a bitter laugh.
“Speak out, Jim.”
“If there is anything I
can do for you,” he stammered, “I’m
sure”
“Anything you can do?”
she repeated, slowly and scornfully. “Anything
you can do now? Yes!” she screamed,
suddenly rising, crossing the room, and grasping his
arms convulsively. “Yes! Take me away
from here anywhere at once!
Look, Jim,” she went on feverishly, “let
bygones be bygones I won’t peach!
I won’t tell on you though I had it
in my heart when you gave me the go-by just now!
I’ll do anything you say go to your
farthest hiding-place work for you only
take me out of this cursed place.”
Her passionate pleading stung even
through his selfishness and loathing. He thought
of his wife’s indifference! Yes, he might
be driven to this, and at least he must secure the
only witness against his previous misconduct.
“We will see,” he said soothingly, gently
loosening her hands. “We must talk it over.”
He stopped as his old suspiciousness returned.
“But you must have some friends,” he said
searchingly, “some one who has helped you.”
“None! Only one he
helped me at first,” she hesitated “Duffy.”
“Duffy!” said James Smith, recoiling.
“Yes, when he had to tell me
all,” she said in half-frightened tones, “he
was sorry for me. Listen, Jim! He was a square
man, for all he was devoted to his partner and
you can’t blame him for that. I think he
helped me because I was alone; for nothing else, Jim.
I swear it! He helped me from time to time.
Maybe he might have wanted to marry me if he had not
been waiting for another woman that he loved, a married
woman that had been deserted years ago by her husband,
just as you might have deserted me if we’d been
married that day. He helped her and paid for
her journey here to seek her husband, and set her up
in business.”
“What are you talking about what
woman?” stammered James Smith, with a strange
presentiment creeping over him.
“A Mrs. Smith. Yes,”
she said quickly, as he started, “not a sham
name like yours, but really and truly Smith that
was her husband’s name! I’m not lying,
Jim,” she went on, evidently mistaking the cause
of the sudden contraction of the man’s face.
“I didn’t invent her nor her name; there
is such a woman, and Duffy loves her and
her only, and he never, never was anything
more than a friend to me. I swear it!”
The room seemed to swim around him.
She was staring at him, but he could see in her vacant
eyes that she had no conception of his secret, nor
knew the extent of her revelation. Duffy had not
dared to tell all! He burst into a coarse laugh.
“What matters Duffy or the silly woman he’d
try to steal away from other men.”
“But he didn’t try to
steal her, and she’s only silly because she wants
to be true to her husband while he lives. She
told Duffy she’d never marry him until she saw
her husband’s dead face. More fool she,”
she added bitterly.
“Until she saw her husband’s
dead face,” was all that James Smith heard of
this speech. His wife’s faithfulness through
years of desertion, her long waiting and truthfulness,
even the bitter commentary of the equally injured
woman before him, were to him as nothing to what that
single sentence conjured up. He laughed again,
but this time strangely and vacantly. “Enough
of this Duffy and his intrusion in my affairs until
I’m able to settle my account with him.
Come,” he added brusquely, “if we are
going to cut out of this at once I’ve got much
to do. Come here again to-morrow, early.
This Duffy does he live here?”
“No. In Marysville.”
“Good! Come early to-morrow.”
As she seemed to hesitate, he opened
a drawer of his table and took out a handful of gold,
and handed it to her. She glanced at it for a
moment with a strange expression, put it mechanically
in her pocket, and then looking up at him said, with
a forced laugh, “I suppose that means I am to
clear out?”
“Until to-morrow,” he said shortly.
“If the Sacramento don’t
sweep us away before then,” she interrupted,
with a reckless laugh; “the river’s broken
through the levee a clear sweep in two
places. Where I live the water’s up to the
doorstep. They say it’s going to be the
biggest flood yet. You’re all right here;
you’re on higher ground.”
She seemed to utter these sentences
abstractedly, disconnectedly, as if to gain time.
He made an impatient gesture.
“All right, I’m going,”
she said, compressing her lips slowly to keep them
from trembling. “You haven’t forgotten
anything?” As he turned half angrily towards
her she added, hurriedly and bitterly, “Anything for
to-morrow?”
“No!”
She opened the door and passed out.
He listened until the trail of her wet skirt had descended
the stairs, and the street door had closed behind
her. Then he went back to his table and began
collecting his papers and putting them away in his
trunks, which he packed feverishly, yet with a set
and determined face. He wrote one or two letters,
which he sealed and left upon his table. He then
went to his bedroom and deliberately shaved off his
disguising beard. Had he not been so preoccupied
in one thought, he might have been conscious of loud
voices in the street and a hurrying of feet on the
wet sidewalk. But he was possessed by only one
idea. He must see his wife that evening!
How, he knew not yet, but the way would appear when
he had reached his office in the building opposite
hers. Three hours had elapsed before he had finished
his preparations. On going downstairs he stopped
to give some directions to the porter, but his room
was empty; passing into the street he was surprised
to find it quite deserted, and the shops closed; even
a drinking saloon at the corner was quite empty.
He turned the corner of the street, and began the
slight descent towards his office. To his amazement
the lower end of the street, which was crossed by
the thoroughfare which was his destination, was blocked
by a crowd of people. As he hurried forward to
join them he suddenly saw, moving down that thoroughfare,
what appeared to his startled eyes to be the smokestacks
of some small, flat-bottomed steamer. He rubbed
his eyes; it was no illusion, for the next moment
he had reached the crowd, who were standing half a
block away from the thoroughfare, and on the edge of
a lagoon of yellow water, whose main current was the
thoroughfare he was seeking, and between whose houses,
submerged to their first stories, a steamboat was
really paddling. Other boats and rafts were adrift
on its sluggish waters, and a boatman had just landed
a passenger in the backwater of the lower half of
the street on which he stood with the crowd.
Possessed of his one idea, he fought
his way desperately to the water edge and the boat,
and demanded a passage to his office. The boatman
hesitated, but James Smith promptly offered him double
the value of his craft. The act was not deemed
singular in that extravagant epoch, and the sympathizing
crowd cheered his solitary departure, as he declined
even the services of the boatman. The next moment
he was off in mid-stream of the thoroughfare, paddling
his boat with a desperate but inexperienced hand until
he reached his office, which he entered by the window.
The building, which was new and of brick, showed very
little damage from the flood, but in far different
case was the one opposite, on which his eyes were
eagerly bent, and whose cheap and insecure foundations
he could see the flood was already undermining.
There were boats around the house, and men hurriedly
removing trunks and valuables, but the one figure
he expected to see was not there. He tied his
own boat to the window; there was evidently no chance
of an interview now, but if she were leaving there
would be still the chance of following her and knowing
her destination. As he gazed she suddenly appeared
at a window, and was helped by a boatman into a flat-bottomed
barge containing trunks and furniture. She was
evidently the last to leave. The other boats
put off at once, and none too soon; for there was a
warning cry, a quick swerving of the barge, and the
end of the dwelling slowly dropped into the flood,
seeming to sink on its knees like a stricken ox.
A great undulation of yellow water swept across the
street, inundating his office through the open window
and half swamping his boat beside it. At the
same time he could see that the current had changed
and increased in volume and velocity, and, from the
cries and warning of the boatmen, he knew that the
river had burst its banks at its upper bend.
He had barely time to leap into his boat and cast it
off before there was a foot of water on his floor.
But the new current was carrying the
boats away from the higher level, which they had been
eagerly seeking, and towards the channel of the swollen
river. The barge was first to feel its influence,
and was hurried towards the river against the strongest
efforts of its boatmen. One by one the other
and smaller boats contrived to get into the slack
water of crossing streets, and one was swamped before
his eyes. But James Smith kept only the barge
in view. His difficulty in following it was increased
by his inexperience in managing a boat, and the quantity
of drift which now charged the current. Trees
torn by their roots from some upland bank; sheds,
logs, timber, and the bloated carcasses of cattle
choked the stream. All the ruin worked by the
flood seemed to be compressed in this disastrous current.
Once or twice he narrowly escaped collision with a
heavy beam or the bed of some farmer’s wagon.
Once he was swamped by a tree, and righted his frail
boat while clinging to its branches.
And then those who watched him from
the barge and shore said afterwards that a great apathy
seemed to fall upon him. He no longer attempted
to guide the boat or struggle with the drift, but
sat in the stern with intent forward gaze and motionless
paddles. Once they strove to warn him, called
to him to make an effort to reach the barge, and did
what they could, in spite of their own peril, to alter
their course and help him. But he neither answered
nor heeded them. And then suddenly a great log
that they had just escaped seemed to rise up under
the keel of his boat, and it was gone. After
a moment his face and head appeared above the current,
and so close to the stern of the barge that there was
a slight cry from the woman in it, but the next moment,
and before the boatman could reach him, he was drawn
under it and disappeared. They lay on their oars
eagerly watching, but the body of James Smith was sucked
under the barge, and, in the mid-channel of the great
river, was carried out towards the distant sea.
There was a strange meeting that night
on the deck of a relief boat, which had been sent
out in search of the missing barge, between Mrs. Smith
and a grave and anxious passenger who had chartered
it. When he had comforted her, and pointed out,
as, indeed, he had many times before, the loneliness
and insecurity of her unprotected life, she yielded
to his arguments. But it was not until many months
after their marriage that she confessed to him on
that eventful night she thought she had seen in a
moment of great peril the vision of the dead face of
her husband uplifted to her through the water.