When the two isolated mining companies
encamped on Sycamore Creek discovered on the same
day the great “Excelsior Lead,” they met
around a neutral camp fire with that grave and almost
troubled demeanor which distinguished the successful
prospector in those days. Perhaps the term “prospectors”
could hardly be used for men who had labored patiently
and light-heartedly in the one spot for over three
years to gain a daily yield from the soil which gave
them barely the necessaries of life. Perhaps
this was why, now that their reward was beyond their
most sanguine hopes, they mingled with this characteristic
gravity an ambition and resolve peculiarly their own.
Unlike most successful miners, they had no idea of
simply realizing their wealth and departing to invest
or spend it elsewhere, as was the common custom.
On the contrary, that night they formed a high resolve
to stand or fall by their claims, to develop the resources
of the locality, to build up a town, and to devote
themselves to its growth and welfare. And to this
purpose they bound themselves that night by a solemn
and legal compact.
Many circumstances lent themselves
to so original a determination. The locality
was healthful, picturesque, and fertile. Sycamore
Creek, a considerable tributary of the Sacramento,
furnished them a generous water supply at all seasons;
its banks were well wooded and interspersed with undulating
meadow land. Its distance from stage-coach communication nine
miles could easily be abridged by a wagon
road over a practically level country. Indeed,
all the conditions for a thriving settlement were
already there. It was natural, therefore, that
the most sanguine anticipations were indulged by the
more youthful of the twenty members of this sacred
compact. The sites of a hotel, a bank, the express
company’s office, stage office, and court-house,
with other necessary buildings, were all mapped out
and supplemented by a theatre, a public park, and
a terrace along the river bank! It was only when
Clinton Grey, an intelligent but youthful member, on
offering a plan of the town with five avenues eighty
feet wide, radiating from a central plaza and the
court-house, explained that “it could be commanded
by artillery in case of an armed attack upon the building,”
that it was felt that a line must be drawn in anticipatory
suggestion. Nevertheless, although their determination
was unabated, at the end of six months little had
been done beyond the building of a wagon road and the
importation of new machinery for the working of the
lead. The peculiarity of their design debarred
any tentative or temporary efforts; they wished the
whole settlement to spring up in equal perfection,
so that the first stage-coach over the new road could
arrive upon the completed town. “We don’t
want to show up in a ‘b’iled shirt’
and a plug hat, and our trousers stuck in our boots,”
said a figurative speaker. Nevertheless, practical
necessity compelled them to build the hotel first
for their own occupation, pending the erection of their
private dwellings on allotted sites. The hotel,
a really elaborate structure for the locality and
period, was a marvel to the workmen and casual teamsters.
It was luxuriously fitted and furnished. Yet it
was in connection with this outlay that the event
occurred which had a singular effect upon the fancy
of the members.
Washington Trigg, a Western member,
who had brought up the architect and builder from
San Francisco, had returned in a state of excitement.
He had seen at an art exhibition in that city a small
replica of a famous statue of California, and, without
consulting his fellow members, had ordered a larger
copy for the new settlement. He, however, made
up for his precipitancy by an extravagant description
of his purchase, which impressed even the most cautious.
“It’s the figger of a mighty pretty girl,
in them spirit clothes they allus wear, holding
a divinin’ rod for findin’ gold afore
her in one hand; all the while she’s hidin’
behind her, in the other hand, a branch o’ thorns
out of sight. The idea bein’ don’t
you see? that blamed old ’forty-niners
like us, or ordinary greenhorns, ain’t allowed
to see the difficulties they’ve got to go through
before reaching a strike. Mighty cute, ain’t
it? It’s to be made life-size, that
is, about the size of a girl of that kind, don’t
you see?” he explained somewhat vaguely, “and
will look powerful fetchin’ standin’ onto
a pedestal in the hall of the hotel.” In
reply to some further cautious inquiry as to the exact
details of the raiment and of any possible shock to
the modesty of lady guests at the hotel, he replied
confidently, “Oh, that’s all right!
It’s the regulation uniform of goddesses and
angels, sorter as if they’d caught
up a sheet or a cloud to fling round ’em before
coming into this world afore folks; and being an allegory,
so to speak, it ain’t as if it was me or you
prospectin’ in high water. And, being of
bronze, it”
“Looks like a squaw, eh?”
interrupted a critic, “or a cursed Chinaman?”
“And if it’s of metal,
it will weigh a ton! How are we going to get it
up here?” said another.
But here Mr. Trigg was on sure ground.
“I’ve ordered it cast holler, and, if
necessary, in two sections,” he returned triumphantly.
“A child could tote it round and set it up.”
Its arrival was therefore looked forward
to with great expectancy when the hotel was finished
and occupied by the combined Excelsior companies.
It was to come from New York via San Francisco, where,
however, there was some delay in its transshipment,
and still further delay at Sacramento. It finally
reached the settlement over the new wagon road, and
was among the first freight carried there by the new
express company, and delivered into the new express
office. The box a packing-case, nearly
three feet square by five feet long bore
superficial marks of travel and misdirection, inasmuch
as the original address was quite obliterated and
the outside lid covered with corrected labels.
It was carried to a private sitting-room in the hotel,
where its beauty was to be first disclosed to the
president of the united companies, three of the committee,
and the excited and triumphant purchaser. A less
favored crowd of members and workmen gathered curiously
outside the room. Then the lid was carefully removed,
revealing a quantity of shavings and packing paper
which still hid the outlines of the goddess.
When this was promptly lifted a stare of blank astonishment
fixed the faces of the party! It was succeeded
by a quick, hysteric laugh, and then a dead silence.
Before them lay a dressmaker’s
dummy, the wire and padded model on which dresses
are fitted and shown. With its armless and headless
bust, abruptly ending in a hooped wire skirt, it completely
filled the sides of the box.
“Shut the door,” said the president promptly.
The order was obeyed. The single
hysteric shriek of laughter had been followed by a
deadly, ironical silence. The president, with
supernatural gravity, lifted it out and set it up
on its small, round, disk-like pedestal.
“It’s some cussed fool
blunder of that confounded express company,”
burst out the unlucky purchaser. But there was
no echo to his outburst. He looked around with
a timid, tentative smile. But no other smile
followed his.
“It looks,” said the president,
with portentous gravity, “like the beginnings
of a fine woman, that might show up, if you gave
her time, into a first-class goddess. Of course
she ain’t all here; other boxes with sections
of her, I reckon, are under way from her factory, and
will meander along in the course of the year.
Considerin’ this as a sample I think,
gentlemen,” he added, with gloomy precision,
“we are prepared to accept it, and signify we’ll
take more.”
“It ain’t, perhaps, exactly
the idée that we’ve been led to expect from
previous description,” said Dick Flint, with
deeper seriousness; “for instance, this yer
branch of thorns we heard of ez bein’ held behind
her is wantin’, as is the arms that held it;
but even if they had arrived, anybody could see the
thorns through them wires, and so give the hull show
away.”
“Jam it into its box again,
and we’ll send it back to the confounded express
company with a cussin’ letter,” again thundered
the wretched purchaser.
“No, sonny,” said the
president with gentle but gloomy determination, “we’ll
fasten on to this little show jest as it is, and see
what follows. It ain’t every day that a
first-class sell like this is worked off on us accidentally.”
It was quite true! The settlement
had long since exhausted every possible form of practical
joking, and languished for a new sensation. And
here it was! It was not a thing to be treated
angrily, nor lightly, nor dismissed with that single
hysteric laugh. It was capable of the greatest
possibilities! Indeed, as Washington Trigg looked
around on the imperturbably ironical faces of his
companions, he knew that they felt more true joy over
the blunder than they would in the possession of the
real statue. But an exclamation from the fifth
member, who was examining the box, arrested their
attention.
“There’s suthin’ else here!”
He had found under the heavier wrapping
a layer of tissue-paper, and under that a further
envelope of linen, lightly stitched together.
A knife blade quickly separated the stitches, and
the linen was carefully unfolded. It displayed
a beautifully trimmed evening dress of pale blue satin,
with a dressing-gown of some exquisite white fabric
armed with lace. The men gazed at it in silence,
and then the one single expression broke from their
lips,
“Her duds!”
“Stop, boys,” said “Clint”
Grey, as a movement was made to lift the dress towards
the model, “leave that to a man who knows.
What’s the use of my having left five grown-up
sisters in the States if I haven’t brought a
little experience away with me? This sort of thing
ain’t to be ‘pulled on’ like trousers.
No, sir! This is the way she’s
worked.”
With considerable dexterity, unexpected
gentleness, and some taste, he shook out the folds
of the skirt delicately and lifted it over the dummy,
settling it skillfully upon the wire hoops, and drawing
the bodice over the padded shoulders. This he
then proceeded to fasten with hooks and eyes, a
work of some patience. Forty eager fingers stretched
out to assist him, but were waved aside, with a look
of pained decorum as he gravely completed his task.
Then falling back, he bade the others do the same,
and they formed a contemplative semicircle before the
figure.
Up to that moment a delighted but
unsmiling consciousness of their own absurdities,
a keen sense of the humorous possibilities of the
original blunder, and a mischievous recognition of
the mortification of Trigg whose only safety
now lay in accepting the mistake in the same spirit had
determined these grown-up schoolboys to artfully protract
a joke that seemed to be providentially delivered into
their hands. But now an odd change crept
on them. The light from the open window that
gave upon the enormous pines and the rolling prospect
up to the dim heights of the Sierras fell upon this
strange, incongruous, yet perfectly artistic figure.
For the dress was the skillful creation of a great
Parisian artist, and in its exquisite harmony of color,
shape, and material it not only hid the absurd model,
but clothed it with an alarming grace and refinement!
A queer feeling of awe, of shame, and of unwilling
admiration took possession of them. Some of them from
remote Western towns had never seen the
like before; those who had had forgotten it in
those five years of self-exile, of healthy independence,
and of contiguity to Nature in her unaffected simplicity.
All had been familiar with the garish, extravagant,
and dazzling femininity of the Californian towns and
cities, but never had they known anything approaching
the ideal grace of this type of exalted, even if artificial,
womanhood. And although in the fierce freedom
of their little republic they had laughed to scorn
such artificiality, a few yards of satin and lace
cunningly fashioned, and thrown over a frame of wood
and wire, touched them now with a strange sense of
its superiority. The better to show its attractions,
Clinton Grey had placed the figure near a full-length,
gold-framed mirror, beside a marble-topped table.
Yet how cheap and tawdry these splendors showed beside
this work of art! How cruel was the contrast
of their own rough working clothes to this miracle
of adornment which that same mirror reflected!
And even when Clinton Grey, the enthusiast, looked
towards his beloved woods for relief, he could not
help thinking of them as a more fitting frame for
this strange goddess than this new house into which
she had strayed. Their gravity became real; their
gibes in some strange way had vanished.
“Must have cost a pile of money,”
said one, merely to break an embarrassing silence.
“My sister had a friend who
brought over a dress from Paris, not as high-toned
as that, that cost five hundred dollars,” said
Clinton Grey.
“How much did you say that spirit-clad
old rag of yours cost thorns and all?”
said the president, turning sharply on Trigg.
Trigg swallowed this depreciation
of his own purchase meekly. “Seven hundred
and fifty dollars, without the express charges.”
“That’s only two-fifty
more,” said the president thoughtfully, “if
we call it quits.”
“But,” said Trigg in alarm, “we
must send it back.”
“Not much, sonny,” said
the president promptly. “We’ll hang
on to this until we hear where that thorny old chump
of yours has fetched up and is actin’ her conundrums,
and mebbe we can swap even.”
“But how will we explain it
to the boys?” queried Trigg. “They’re
waitin’ outside to see it.”
“There won’t be any
explanation,” said the president, in the same
tone of voice in which he had ordered the door shut.
“We’ll just say that the statue hasn’t
come, which is the frozen truth; and this box only
contained some silk curtain decorations we’d
ordered, which is only half a lie. And,”
still more firmly, “This secret doesn’t
go out of this room, gentlemen or
I ain’t your president! I’m not going
to let you give yourselves away to that crowd outside you
hear me? Have you ever allowed your unfettered
intellect to consider what they’d say about
this, what a godsend it would be to every
man we’d ever had a ‘pull’ on in
this camp? Why, it would last ’em a whole
year; we’d never hear the end of it! No,
gentlemen! I prefer to live here without shootin’
my fellow man, but I can’t promise it if they
once start this joke agin us!”
There was a swift approval of this
sentiment, and the five members shook hands solemnly.
“Now,” said the president,
“we’ll just fold up that dress again, and
put it with the figure in this closet” he
opened a large dressing-chest in the suite of rooms
in which they stood “and we’ll
each keep a key. We’ll retain this room
for committee purposes, so that no one need see the
closet. See? Now take off the dress!
Be careful there! You’re not handlin’
pay dirt, though it’s about as expensive!
Steady!”
Yet it was wonderful to see the solicitude
and care with which the dress was re-covered and folded
in its linen wrapper.
“Hold on,” exclaimed Trigg, as
the dummy was lifted into the chest, “we
haven’t tried on the other dress!”
“Yes! yes!” repeated the
others eagerly; “there’s another!”
“We’ll keep that for next
committee meeting, gentlemen,” said the president
decisively. “Lock her up, Trigg.”
The three following months wrought
a wonderful change in Excelsior, wonderful
even in that land of rapid growth and progress.
Their organized and matured plans, executed by a full
force of workmen from the county town, completed the
twenty cottages for the members, the bank, and the
town hall. Visitors and intending settlers flocked
over the new wagon road to see this new Utopia, whose
founders, holding the land and its improvements as
a corporate company, exercised the right of dictating
the terms on which settlers were admitted. The
feminine invasion was not yet potent enough to affect
their consideration, either through any refinement
or attractiveness, being composed chiefly of the industrious
wives and daughters of small traders or temporary artisans.
Yet it was found necessary to confide the hotel to
the management of Mr. Dexter Marsh, his wife, and
one intelligent but somewhat plain daughter, who looked
after the accounts. There were occasional lady
visitors at the hotel, attracted from the neighboring
towns and settlements by its picturesqueness and a
vague suggestiveness of its being a watering-place and
there was the occasional flash in the decorous street
of a Sacramento or San Francisco gown. It is needless
to say that to the five men who held the guilty secret
of Committee Room N it only strengthened their
belief in the super-elegance of their hidden treasure.
At their last meeting they had fitted the second dress which
turned out to be a vapory summer house-frock or morning
wrapper over the dummy, and opinions were
divided as to its equality with the first. However,
the same subtle harmony of detail and grace of proportion
characterized it.
“And you see,” said Clint
Grey, “it’s jest the sort o’ rig
in which a man would be most likely to know her and
not in her war-paint, which would be only now and
then.”
Already “She” had become an individuality!
“Hush!” said the president.
He had turned towards the door, at which some one
was knocking lightly.
“Come in.”
The door opened upon Miss Marsh, secretary
and hotel assistant. She had a business aspect,
and an open letter in her hand, but hesitated at the
evident confusion she had occasioned. Two of the
gentlemen had absolutely blushed, and the others regarded
her with inane smiles or affected seriousness.
They all coughed slightly.
“I beg your pardon,” she
said, not ungracefully, a slight color coming into
her sallow cheek, which, in conjunction with the gold
eye-glasses, gave her, at least in the eyes of the
impressible Clint, a certain piquancy. “But
my father said you were here in committee and I might
consult you. I can come again, if you are busy.”
She had addressed the president, partly
from his office, his comparatively extreme age he
must have been at least thirty! and possibly
for his extremer good looks. He said hurriedly,
“It’s just an informal meeting;”
and then, more politely, “What can we do for
you?”
“We have an application for
a suite of rooms next week,” she said, referring
to the letter, “and as we shall be rather full,
father thought you gentlemen might be willing to take
another larger room for your meetings, and give up
these, which are part of a suite and perhaps
not exactly suitable”
“Quite impossible!” “Quite
so!” “Really out of the question,”
said the members, in a rapid chorus.
The young girl was evidently taken
aback at this unanimity of opposition. She stared
at them curiously, and then glanced around the room.
“We’re quite comfortable here,” said
the president explanatorily, “and in
fact it’s just what we want.”
“We could give you a closet
like that which you could lock up, and a mirror,”
she suggested, with the faintest trace of a smile.
“Tell your father, Miss Marsh,”
said the president, with dignified politeness, “that
while we cannot submit to any change, we fully appreciate
his business foresight, and are quite prepared to see
that the hotel is properly compensated for our retaining
these rooms.” As the young girl withdrew
with a puzzled curtsy he closed the door, placed his
back against it, and said,
“What the deuce did she mean by speaking of
that closet?”
“Reckon she allowed we kept
some fancy drinks in there,” said Trigg; “and
calkilated that we wanted the marble stand and mirror
to put our glasses on and make it look like a swell
private bar, that’s all!”
“Humph,” said the president.
Their next meeting, however, was a
hurried one, and as the president arrived late, when
the door closed smartly behind him he was met by the
worried faces of his colleagues.
“Here’s a go!” said
Trigg excitedly, producing a folded paper. “The
game’s up, the hull show is busted; that cussed
old statue the reg’lar old hag herself is
on her way here! There’s a bill o’
lading and the express company’s letter, and
she’ll be trundled down here by express at any
moment.”
“Well?” said the president quietly.
“Well!” replied the members aghast.
“Do you know what that means?”
“That we must rig her up in
the hall on a pedestal, as we reckoned to do,”
returned the president coolly.
“But you don’t sabe,”
said Clinton Grey; “that’s all very well
as to the hag, but now we must give her up,”
with an adoring glance towards the closet.
“Does the letter say so?”
“No,” said Trigg hesitatingly, “no!
But I reckon we can’t keep both.”
“Why not?” said the president imperturbably,
“if we paid for ’em?”
As the men only stared in reply he condescended to
explain.
“Look here! I calculated
all these risks after our last meeting. While
you boys were just fussin’ round, doin’
nothing, I wrote to the express company that a box
of women’s damaged duds had arrived here, while
we were looking for our statue; that you chaps were
so riled at bein’ sold by them that you dumped
the whole blamed thing in the creek. But I added,
if they’d let me know what the damage was, I’d
send ’em a draft to cover it. After a spell
of waitin’ they said they’d call it square
for two hundred dollars, considering our disappointment.
And I sent the draft. That’s spurred them
up to get over our statue, I reckon. And, now
that it’s coming, it will set us right with the
boys.”
“And she,” said Clinton
Grey again, pointing to the locked chest, “belongs
to us?”
“Until we can find some lady
guest that will take her with the rooms,” returned
the president, a little cynically.
But the arrival of the real statue
and its erection in the hotel vestibule created a
new sensation. The members of the Excelsior Company
were loud in its praises except the executive committee,
whose coolness was looked upon by the others as an
affectation of superiority. It awakened the criticism
and jealousy of the nearest town.
“We hear,” said the “Red
Dog Advertiser,” “that the long-promised
statue has been put up in that high-toned Hash Dispensary
they call a hotel at Excelsior. It represents
an emaciated squaw in a scanty blanket gathering roots,
and carrying a bit of thorn-bush kindlings behind her.
The high-toned, close corporation of Excelsior may
consider this a fair allegory of California; we
should say it looks mighty like a prophetic forecast
of a hard winter on Sycamore Creek and scarcity of
provisions. However, it isn’t our funeral,
though it’s rather depressing to the casual
visitor on his way to dinner. For a long time
this work of art was missing and supposed to be lost,
but by being sternly and persistently rejected at
every express office on the route, it was at last
taken in at Excelsior.”
There was some criticism nearer home.
“What do you think of it, Miss
Marsh?” said the president politely to that
active young secretary, as he stood before it in the
hall. The young woman adjusted her eye-glasses
over her aquiline nose.
“As an idea or a woman, sir?”
“As a woman, madam,” said
the president, letting his brown eyes slip for a moment
from Miss Marsh’s corn-colored crest over her
straight but scant figure down to her smart slippers.
“Well, sir, she could wear your
boots, and there isn’t a corset in Sacramento
would go round her.”
“Thank you!” he returned
gravely, and moved away. For a moment a wild
idea of securing possession of the figure some dark
night, and, in company with his fellow-conspirators,
of trying those beautiful clothes upon her, passed
through his mind, but he dismissed it. And then
occurred a strange incident, which startled even his
cool, American sanity.
It was a beautiful moonlight night,
and he was returning to a bedroom at the hotel which
he temporarily occupied during the painting of his
house. It was quite late, he having spent the
evening with a San Francisco friend after a business
conference which assured him of the remarkable prosperity
of Excelsior. It was therefore with some human
exaltation that he looked around the sleeping settlement
which had sprung up under the magic wand of their
good fortune. The full moon had idealized their
youthful designs with something of their own youthful
coloring, graciously softening the garish freshness
of paint and plaster, hiding with discreet obscurity
the disrupted banks and broken woods at the beginning
and end of their broad avenues, paving the rough river
terrace with tessellated shadows, and even touching
the rapid stream which was the source of their wealth
with a Pactolean glitter.
The windows of the hotel before him,
darkened within, flashed in the moonbeams like the
casements of Aladdin’s palace. Mingled with
his ambition, to-night, were some softer fancies,
rarely indulged by him in his forecast of the future
of Excelsior a dream of some fair partner
in his life, after this task was accomplished, yet
always of some one moving in a larger world than his
youth had known. Rousing the half sleeping porter,
he found, however, only the spectral gold-seeker in
the vestibule, the rays of his solitary
candle falling upon her divining-rod with a quaint
persistency that seemed to point to the stairs he
was ascending. When he reached the first landing
the rising wind through an open window put out his
light, but, although the staircase was in darkness,
he could see the long corridor above illuminated by
the moonlight throughout its whole length. He
had nearly reached it when the slow but unmistakable
rustle of a dress in the distance caught his ear.
He paused, not only in the interest of delicacy, but
with a sudden nervous thrill he could not account for.
The rustle came nearer he could hear the
distinct frou-frou of satin; and then, to his bewildered
eyes, what seemed to be the figure of the dummy, arrayed
in the pale blue evening dress he knew so well, passed
gracefully and majestically down the corridor.
He could see the shapely folds of the skirt, the symmetry
of the bodice, even the harmony of the trimmings.
He raised his eyes, half affrightedly, prepared to
see the headless shoulders, but they and
what seemed to be a head were concealed
in a floating “cloud” or nubia of some
fleecy tissue, as if for protection from the evening
air. He remained for an instant motionless, dazed
by this apparent motion of an inanimate figure; but
as the absurdity of the idea struck him he hurriedly
but stealthily ascended the remaining stairs, resolved
to follow it. But he was only in time to see
it turn into the angle of another corridor, which,
when he had reached it, was empty. The figure
had vanished!
His first thought was to go to the
committee room and examine the locked closet.
But the key was in his desk at home, he had no light,
and the room was on the other side of the house.
Besides, he reflected that even the detection of the
figure would involve the exposure of the very secret
they had kept intact so long. He sought his bedroom,
and went quietly to bed. But not to sleep; a
curiosity more potent than any sense of the trespass
done him kept him tossing half the night. Who
was this woman whom the clothes fitted so well?
He reviewed in his mind the guests in the house, but
he knew none who could have carried off this masquerade
so bravely.
In the morning early he made his way
to the committee room, but as he approached was startled
to observe two pairs of boots, a man’s and a
woman’s, conjugally placed before its door.
Now thoroughly indignant, he hurried to the office,
and was confronted by the face of the fair secretary.
She colored quickly on seeing him but the
reason was obvious.
“You are coming to scold me,
sir! But it is not my fault. We were full
yesterday afternoon when your friend from San Francisco
came here with his wife. We told him those were
your rooms, but he said he would make it right
with you and my father thought you would
not be displeased for once. Everything of yours
was put into another room, and the closet remains
locked as you left it.”
Amazed and bewildered, the president
could only mutter a vague apology and turn away.
Had his friend’s wife opened the door with another
key in some fit of curiosity and disported herself
in those clothes? If so, she dare not speak
of her discovery.
An introduction to the lady at breakfast
dispelled this faint hope. She was a plump woman,
whose generous proportions could hardly have been
confined in that pale blue bodice; she was frank and
communicative, with no suggestion of mischievous concealment.
Nevertheless, he made a firm resolution.
As soon as his friends left he called a meeting of
the committee. He briefly informed them of the
accidental occupation of the room, but for certain
reasons of his own said nothing of his ghostly experience.
But he put it to them plainly that no more risks must
be run, and that he should remove the dresses and
dummy to his own house. To his considerable surprise
this suggestion was received with grave approval and
a certain strange relief.
“We kinder thought of suggesting
it to you before,” said Mr. Trigg slowly, “and
that mebbe we’ve played this little game long
enough for suthin’s happened that’s
makin’ it anything but funny. We’d
have told you before, but we dassent! Speak out,
Clint, and tell the president what we saw the other
night, and don’t mince matters.”
The president glanced quickly and
warningly around him. “I thought,”
he said sternly, “that we’d dropped all
fooling. It’s no time for practical joking
now!”
“Honest Injun it’s gospel truth!
Speak up, Clint!”
The president looked on the serious
faces around him, and was himself slightly awed.
“It’s a matter of two
or three nights ago,” said Grey slowly, “that
Trigg and I were passing through Sycamore Woods, just
below the hotel. It was after twelve bright
moonlight, so that we could see everything as plain
as day, and we were dead sober. Just as we passed
under the sycamores Trigg grabs my arm, and says,
‘Hi!’ I looked up, and there, not ten
yards away, standing dead in the moonlight, was that
dummy! She was all in white that dress
with the fairy frills, you know and had,
what’s more, A head! At least, something
white all wrapped around it, and over her shoulders.
At first we thought you or some of the boys had dressed
her up and lifted her out there for a joke, and left
her to frighten us! So we started forward, and
then it’s the gospel truth! she
moved away, gliding like the moonbeams, and
vanished among the trees!”
“Did you see her face?” asked the president.
“No; you bet! I didn’t try to it
would have haunted me forever.”
“What do you mean?”
“This I mean it was
that girl the box belonged to!
She’s dead somewhere as you’ll
find out sooner or later and has
come back for her clothes!
I’ve often heard of such things before.”
Despite his coolness, at this corroboration
of his own experience, and impressed by Grey’s
unmistakable awe, a thrill went through the president.
For an instant he was silent.
“That will do, boys,”
he said finally. “It’s a queer story;
but remember, it’s all the more reason now for
our keeping our secret. As for those things,
I’ll remove them quietly and at once.”
But he did not.
On the contrary, prolonging his stay
at the hotel with plausible reasons, he managed to
frequently visit the committee room or its vicinity,
at different and unsuspected hours of the day and night.
More than that, he found opportunities to visit the
office, and under pretexts of business connected with
the economy of the hotel management, informed himself
through Miss Marsh on many points. A few of these
details naturally happened to refer to herself, her
prospects, her tastes, and education. He learned
incidentally, what he had partly known, that her father
had been in better circumstances, and that she had
been gently nurtured though of this she
made little account in her pride in her own independence
and devotion to her duties. But in his own persistent
way he also made private notes of the breadth of her
shoulders, the size of her waist, her height, length
of her skirt, her movements in walking, and other
apparently extraneous circumstances. It was natural
that he acquired some supplemental facts, that
her eyes, under her eye-glasses, were a tender gray,
and touched with the melancholy beauty of near-sightedness;
that her face had a sensitive mobility beyond the
mere charm of color, and like most people lacking
this primitive and striking element of beauty, what
was really fine about her escaped the first sight.
As, for instance, it was only by bending over to examine
her accounts that he found that her indistinctive
hair was as delicate as floss silk and as electrical.
It was only by finding her romping with the children
of a guest one evening that he was startled by the
appalling fact of her youth! But about this time
he left the hotel and returned to his house.
On the first yearly anniversary of
the great strike at Excelsior there were some changes
in the settlement, notably the promotion of Mr. Marsh
to a more important position in the company, and the
installation of Miss Cassie Marsh as manageress of
the hotel. As Miss Marsh read the official letter,
signed by the president, conveying in complimentary
but formal terms this testimony of their approval
and confidence, her lip trembled slightly, and a tear
trickling from her light lashes dimmed her eye-glasses,
so that she was fain to go up to her room to recover
herself alone. When she did so she was startled
to find a wire dummy standing near the door, and neatly
folded upon the bed two elegant dresses. A note
in the president’s own hand lay beside them.
A swift blush stung her cheek as she read,
Dear Miss Marsh, Will
you make me happy by keeping the secret that no other
woman but yourself knows, and by accepting the clothes
that no other woman but yourself can wear?
The next moment, with the dresses
over her arm and the ridiculous dummy swinging by
its wires from her other hand, she was flying down
the staircase to Committee Room N. The door
opened upon its sole occupant, the president.
“Oh, sir, how cruel of you!”
she gasped. “It was only a joke of mine.
. . . I always intended to tell you. . . .
It was very foolish, but it seemed so funny. . . .
You see, I thought it was . . . the dress you had
bought for your future intended some young
lady you were going to marry!”
“It is!” said the president
quietly, and he closed the door behind her.
And it was.