Eagle’s Court, one of the highest
canyons of the Sierras, was in reality a plateau of
table-land, embayed like a green lake in a semi-circular
sweep of granite, that, lifting itself three thousand
feet higher, became a foundation for the eternal snows.
The mountain genii of space and atmosphere jealously
guarded its seclusion and surrounded it with illusions;
it never looked to be exactly what it was: the
traveller who saw it from the North Ridge apparently
at his feet in descending found himself separated
from it by a mile-long abyss and a rushing river;
those who sought it by a seeming direct trail at the
end of an hour lost sight of it completely, or, abandoning
the quest and retracing their steps, suddenly came
upon the gap through which it was entered. That
which from the Ridge appeared to be a copse of bushes
beside the tiny dwelling were trees three hundred
feet high; the cultivated lawn before it, which might
have been covered by the traveller’s handkerchief,
was a field of a thousand acres.
The house itself was a long, low,
irregular structure, chiefly of roof and veranda,
picturesquely upheld by rustic pillars of pine, with
the bark still adhering, and covered with vines and
trailing roses. Yet it was evident that the coolness
produced by this vast extent of cover was more than
the architect, who had planned it under the influence
of a staring and bewildering sky, had trustfully conceived,
for it had to be mitigated by blazing fires in open
hearths when the thermometer marked a hundred degrees
in the field beyond. The dry, restless wind that
continually rocked the tall masts of the pines with
a sound like the distant sea, while it stimulated
out-door physical exertion and defied fatigue, left
the sedentary dwellers in these altitudes chilled in
the shade they courted, or scorched them with heat
when they ventured to bask supinely in the sun.
White muslin curtains at the French windows, and rugs,
skins, and heavy furs dispersed in the interior, with
certain other charming but incongruous details of furniture,
marked the inconsistencies of the climate.
There was a coquettish indication
of this in the costume of Miss Kate Scott as she stepped
out on the veranda that morning. A man’s
broad-brimmed Panama hat, partly unsexed by a twisted
gayly-colored scarf, but retaining enough character
to give piquancy to the pretty curves of the face
beneath, protected her from the sun; a red flannel
shirt another spoil from the enemy and
a thick jacket shielded her from the austerities of
the morning breeze. But the next inconsistency
was peculiarly her own. Miss Kate always wore
the freshest and lightest of white cambric skirts,
without the least reference to the temperature.
To the practical sanatory remonstrances of her brother-in-law,
and to the conventional criticism of her sister, she
opposed the same defence: “How else is
one to tell when it is summer in this ridiculous climate?
And then, woollen is stuffy, color draws the sun, and
one at least knows when one is clean or dirty.”
Artistically the result was far from unsatisfactory.
It was a pretty figure under the sombre pines, against
the gray granite and the steely sky, and seemed to
lend the yellowing fields from which the flowers had
already fled a floral relief of color. I do not
think the few masculine wayfarers of that locality
objected to it; indeed, some had betrayed an indiscreet
admiration, and had curiously followed the invitation
of Miss Kate’s warmly-colored figure until they
had encountered the invincible indifference of Miss
Kate’s cold gray eyes. With these manifestations
her brother-in-law did not concern himself; he had
perfect confidence in her unqualified disinterest
in the neighboring humanity, and permitted her to wander
in her solitary picturesqueness, or accompanied her
when she rode in her dark green habit, with equal
freedom from anxiety.
For Miss Scott, although only twenty,
had already subjected most of her maidenly illusions
to mature critical analyses. She had voluntarily
accompanied her sister and mother to California, in
the earnest hope that nature contained something worth
saying to her, and was disappointed to find she had
already discounted its value in the pages of books.
She hoped to find a vague freedom in this unconventional
life thus opened to her, or rather to show others that
she knew how intelligently to appreciate it, but as
yet she was only able to express it in the one detail
of dress already alluded to. Some of the men,
and nearly all the women, she had met thus far, she
was amazed to find, valued the conventionalities she
believed she despised, and were voluntarily assuming
the chains she thought she had thrown off. Instead
of learning anything from them, these children of nature
had bored her with eager questionings regarding the
civilization she had abandoned, or irritated her with
crude imitations of it for her benefit. “Fancy,”
she had written to a friend in Boston, “my calling
on Sue Murphy, who remembered the Donner tragedy,
and who once shot a grizzly that was prowling round
her cabin, and think of her begging me to lend her
my sack for a pattern, and wanting to know if ‘polonays’
were still worn.” She remembered more bitterly
the romance that had tickled her earlier fancy, told
of two college friends of her brother-in-law’s
who were living the “perfect life” in
the mines, laboring in the ditches with a copy of
Homer in their pockets, and writing letters of the
purest philosophy under the free air of the pines.
How, coming unexpectedly on them in their Arcadia,
the party found them unpresentable through dirt, and
thenceforth unknowable through domestic complications
that had filled their Arcadian cabin with half-breed
children.
Much of this disillusion she had kept
within her own heart, from a feeling of pride, or
only lightly touched upon it in her relations with
her mother and sister. For Mrs. Hale and Mrs.
Scott had no idols to shatter, no enthusiasm to subdue.
Firmly and unalterably conscious of their own superiority
to the life they led and the community that surrounded
them, they accepted their duties cheerfully, and performed
them conscientiously. Those duties were loyalty
to Hale’s interests and a vague missionary work
among the neighbors, which, like most missionary work,
consisted rather in making their own ideas understood
than in understanding the ideas of their audience.
Old Mrs. Scott’s zeal was partly religious,
an inheritance from her Puritan ancestry; Mrs. Hale’s
was the affability of a gentlewoman and the obligation
of her position. To this was added the slight
languor of the cultivated American wife, whose health
has been affected by the birth of her first child,
and whose views of marriage and maternity were slightly
tinged with gentle scepticism. She was sincerely
attached to her husband, “who dominated the
household” like the rest of his “women
folk,” with the faint consciousness of that
division of service which renders the position of
the sultan of a seraglio at once so prominent and so
precarious. The attitude of John Hale in his
family circle was dominant because it had never been
subjected to criticism or comparison; and perilous
for the same reason.
Mrs. Hale presently joined her sister
in the veranda, and, shading her eyes with a narrow
white hand, glanced on the prospect with a polite
interest and ladylike urbanity. The searching
sun, which, as Miss Kate once intimated, was “vulgarity
itself,” stared at her in return, but could
not call a blush to her somewhat sallow cheek.
Neither could it detract, however, from the delicate
prettiness of her refined face with its soft gray
shadows, or the dark gentle eyes, whose blue-veined
lids were just then wrinkled into coquettishly mischievous
lines by the strong light. She was taller and
thinner than Kate, and had at times a certain shy,
coy sinuosity of movement which gave her a more virginal
suggestion than her unmarried sister. For Miss
Kate, from her earliest youth, had been distinguished
by that matronly sedateness of voice and step, and
completeness of figure, which indicates some members
of the gallinaceous tribe from their callow infancy.
“I suppose John must have stopped
at the Summit on some business,” said Mrs. Hale,
“or he would have been here already. It’s
scarcely worth while waiting for him, unless you choose
to ride over and meet him. You might change your
dress,” she continued, looking doubtfully at
Kate’s costume. “Put on your riding-habit,
and take Manuel with you.”
“And take the only man we have,
and leave you alone?” returned Kate slowly.
“No!”
“There are the Chinese field
hands,” said Mrs. Hale; “you must correct
your ideas, and really allow them some humanity, Kate.
John says they have a very good compulsory school
system in their own country, and can read and write.”
“That would be of little use
to you here alone if if ”
Kate hesitated.
“If what?” said Mrs. Hale
smiling. “Are you thinking of Manuel’s
dreadful story of the grizzly tracks across the fields
this morning? I promise you that neither I, nor
mother, nor Minnie shall stir out of the house until
you return, if you wish it.”
“I wasn’t thinking of
that,” said Kate; “though I don’t
believe the beating of a gong and the using of strong
language is the best way to frighten a grizzly from
the house. Besides, the Chinese are going down
the river to-day to a funeral, or a wedding, or a feast
of stolen chickens they’re all the
same and won’t be here.”
“Then take Manuel,” repeated
Mrs. Hale. “We have the Chinese servants
and Indian Molly in the house to protect us from Heaven
knows what! I have the greatest confidence in
Chy-Lee as a warrior, and in Chinese warfare generally.
One has only to hear him pipe in time of peace to
imagine what a terror he might become in war time.
Indeed, anything more deadly and soul-harrowing than
that love song he sang for us last night I cannot
conceive. But really, Kate, I am not afraid to
stay alone. You know what John says: we
ought to be always prepared for anything that might
happen.
“My dear Josie,” returned
Kate, putting her arm around her sister’s waist,
“I am perfectly convinced that if three-fingered
Jack, or two-toed Bill, or even Joaquim Murietta himself,
should step, red-handed, on that veranda, you would
gently invite him to take a cup of tea, inquire about
the state of the road, and refrain delicately from
any allusions to the sheriff. But I shan’t
take Manuel from you. I really cannot undertake
to look after his morals at the station, and keep
him from drinking aguardiente with suspicious
characters at the bar. It is true he ‘kisses
my hand’ in his speech, even when it is thickest,
and offers his back to me for a horse-block, but I
think I prefer the sober and honest familiarity of
even that Pike County landlord who is satisfied to
say, ‘Jump, girl, and I’ll ketch ye!’”
“I hope you didn’t change
your manner to either of them for that,” said
Mrs. Hale with a faint sigh. “John wants
to be good friends with them, and they are behaving
quite decently lately, considering that they can’t
speak a grammatical sentence nor know the use of a
fork.”
“And now the man puts on gloves
and a tall hat to come here on Sundays, and the woman
won’t call until you’ve called first,”
retorted Kate; “perhaps you call that improvement.
The fact is, Josephine,” continued the young
girl, folding her arms demurely, “we might as
well admit it at once these people don’t
like us.”
“That’s impossible!”
said Mrs. Hale, with sublime simplicity. “You
don’t like them, you mean.”
“I like them better than you
do, Josie, and that’s the reason why I feel
it and you don’t.” She checked
herself, and after a pause resumed in a lighter tone:
“No; I sha’n’t go to the station;
I’ll commune with nature to-day, and won’t
‘take any humanity in mine, thank you,’
as Bill the driver says. Adios.”
“I wish Kate would not use that
dreadful slang, even in jest,” said Mrs. Scott,
in her rocking-chair at the French window, when Josephine
reentered the parlor as her sister walked briskly away.
“I am afraid she is being infected by the people
at the station. She ought to have a change.”
“I was just thinking,”
said Josephine, looking abstractedly at her mother,
“that I would try to get John to take her to
San Francisco this winter. The Careys are expected,
you know; she might visit them.”
“I’m afraid, if she stays
here much longer, she won’t care to see them
at all. She seems to care for nothing now that
she ever liked before,” returned the old lady
ominously.
Meantime the subject of these criticisms
was carrying away her own reflections tightly buttoned
up in her short jacket. She had driven back her
dog Spot another one of her disillusions,
who, giving way to his lower nature, had once killed
a sheep as she did not wish her Jacques-like
contemplation of any wounded deer to be inconsistently
interrupted by a fresh outrage from her companion.
The air was really very chilly, and for the first
time in her mountain experience the direct rays of
the sun seemed to be shorn of their power. This
compelled her to walk more briskly than she was conscious
of, for in less than an hour she came suddenly and
breathlessly upon the mouth of the canyon, or natural
gateway to Eagle’s Court.
To her always a profound spectacle
of mountain magnificence, it seemed to-day almost
terrible in its cold, strong grandeur. The narrowing
pass was choked for a moment between two gigantic
buttresses of granite, approaching each other so closely
at their towering summits that trees growing in opposite
clefts of the rock intermingled their branches and
pointed the soaring Gothic arch of a stupendous gateway.
She raised her eyes with a quickly beating heart.
She knew that the interlacing trees above her were
as large as those she had just quitted; she knew also
that the point where they met was only half-way up
the cliff, for she had once gazed down upon them,
dwindled to shrubs from the airy summit; she knew
that their shaken cones fell a thousand feet perpendicularly,
or bounded like shot from the scarred walls they bombarded.
She remembered that one of these pines, dislodged
from its high foundations, had once dropped like a
portcullis in the archway, blocking the pass, and
was only carried afterwards by assault of steel and
fire. Bending her head mechanically, she ran
swiftly through the shadowy passage, and halted only
at the beginning of the ascent on the other side.
It was here that the actual position
of the plateau, so indefinite of approach, began to
be realized. It now appeared an independent elevation,
surrounded on three sides by gorges and watercourses,
so narrow as to be overlooked from the principal mountain
range, with which it was connected by a long canyon
that led to the ridge. At the outlet of this
canyon in bygone ages a mighty river it
had the appearance of having been slowly raised by
the diluvium of that river, and the debris washed
down from above a suggestion repeated in
miniature by the artificial plateaus of excavated
soil raised before the mouths of mining tunnels in
the lower flanks of the mountain. It was the realization
of a fact often forgotten by the dwellers
in Eagle’s Court that the valley
below them, which was their connecting link with the
surrounding world, was only reached by ascending the
mountain, and the nearest road was over the higher
mountain ridge. Never before had this impressed
itself so strongly upon the young girl as when she
turned that morning to look upon the plateau below
her. It seemed to illustrate the conviction that
had been slowly shaping itself out of her reflections
on the conversation of that morning. It was possible
that the perfect understanding of a higher life was
only reached from a height still greater, and that
to those half-way up the mountain the summit was never
as truthfully revealed as to the humbler dwellers in
the valley.
I do not know that these profound
truths prevented her from gathering some quaint ferns
and berries, or from keeping her calm gray eyes open
to certain practical changes that were taking place
around her. She had noticed a singular thickening
in the atmosphere that seemed to prevent the passage
of the sun’s rays, yet without diminishing the
transparent quality of the air. The distant snow-peaks
were as plainly seen, though they appeared as if in
moonlight. This seemed due to no cloud or mist,
but rather to a fading of the sun itself. The
occasional flurry of wings overhead, the whirring
of larger birds in the cover, and a frequent rustling
in the undergrowth, as of the passage of some stealthy
animal, began equally to attract her attention.
It was so different from the habitual silence of these
sedate solitudes. Kate had no vague fear of wild
beasts; she had been long enough a mountaineer to understand
the general immunity enjoyed by the unmolesting wayfarer,
and kept her way undismayed. She was descending
an abrupt trail when she was stopped by a sudden crash
in the bushes. It seemed to come from the opposite
incline, directly in a line with her, and apparently
on the very trail that she was pursuing. The
crash was then repeated again and again lower down,
as of a descending body. Expecting the apparition
of some fallen tree, or detached boulder bursting
through the thicket, in its way to the bottom of the
gulch, she waited. The foliage was suddenly brushed
aside, and a large grizzly bear half rolled, half
waddled, into the trail on the opposite side of the
hill. A few moments more would have brought them
face to face at the foot of the gulch; when she stopped
there were not fifty yards between them.
She did not scream; she did not faint;
she was not even frightened. There did not seem
to be anything terrifying in this huge, stupid beast,
who, arrested by the rustle of a stone displaced by
her descending feet, rose slowly on his haunches and
gazed at her with small, wondering eyes. Nor
did it seem strange to her, seeing that he was in her
way, to pick up a stone, throw it in his direction,
and say simply, “Sho! get away!” as she
would have done to an intruding cow. Nor did it
seem odd that he should actually “go away”
as he did, scrambling back into the bushes again,
and disappearing like some grotesque figure in a transformation
scene. It was not until after he had gone that
she was taken with a slight nervousness and giddiness,
and retraced her steps somewhat hurriedly, shying
a little at every rustle in the thicket. By the
time she had reached the great gateway she was doubtful
whether to be pleased or frightened at the incident,
but she concluded to keep it to herself.
It was still intensely cold.
The light of the midday sun had decreased still more,
and on reaching the plateau again she saw that a dark
cloud, not unlike the precursor of a thunder-storm,
was brooding over the snowy peaks beyond. In
spite of the cold this singular suggestion of summer
phenomena was still borne out by the distant smiling
valley, and even in the soft grasses at her feet.
It seemed to her the crowning inconsistency of the
climate, and with a half-serious, half-playful protest
on her lips she hurried forward to seek the shelter
of the house.