He always thought it must have been
fate. Certainly nothing could have been more
inconsistent with his habits than to have been in the
Plaza at seven o’clock of that midsummer morning.
The sight of his colorless face in Sacramento was
rare at that season, and, indeed, at any season, anywhere
publicly, before two o’clock in the afternoon.
Looking back upon it in after-years in the light of
a chanceful life, he determined, with the characteristic
philosophy of his profession, that it must have been
fate.
Yet it is my duty, as a strict chronicler
of facts, to state that Mr. Oakhurst’s presence
there that morning was due to a very simple cause.
At exactly half-past six, the bank being then a winner
to the amount of twenty thousand dollars, he had risen
from the faro-table, relinquished his seat to an accomplished
assistant, and withdrawn quietly, without attracting
a glance from the silent, anxious faces bowed over
the table. But when he entered his luxurious
sleeping-room, across the passage-way, he was a little
shocked at finding the sun streaming through an inadvertently
opened window. Something in the rare beauty of
the morning, perhaps something in the novelty of the
idea, struck him as he was about to close the blinds;
and he hesitated. Then, taking his hat from the
table, he stepped down a private staircase into the
street.
The people who were abroad at that
early hour were of a class quite unknown to Mr. Oakhurst.
There were milkmen and hucksters delivering their
wares, small tradespeople opening their shops, housemaids
sweeping doorsteps, and occasionally a child.
These Mr. Oakhurst regarded with a certain cold curiosity,
perhaps quite free from the cynical disfavor with
which he generally looked upon the more pretentious
of his race whom he was in the habit of meeting.
Indeed, I think he was not altogether displeased with
the admiring glances which these humble women threw
after his handsome face and figure, conspicuous even
in a country of fine-looking men. While it is
very probable that this wicked vagabond, in the pride
of his social isolation, would have been coldly indifferent
to the advances of a fine lady, a little girl who ran
admiringly by his side in a ragged dress had the power
to call a faint flush into his colorless cheek.
He dismissed her at last, but not until she had found
out what, sooner or later, her large-hearted
and discriminating sex inevitably did that
he was exceedingly free and open-handed with his money,
and also what, perhaps, none other of her
sex ever did that the bold black eyes of
this fine gentleman were in reality of a brownish
and even tender gray.
There was a small garden before a
white cottage in a side-street, that attracted Mr.
Oakhurst’s attention. It was filled with
roses, heliotrope, and verbena, flowers
familiar enough to him in the expensive and more portable
form of bouquets, but, as it seemed to him then, never
before so notably lovely. Perhaps it was because
the dew was yet fresh upon them; perhaps it was because
they were unplucked: but Mr. Oakhurst admired
them not as a possible future tribute to
the fascinating and accomplished Miss Ethelinda, then
performing at the Varieties, for Mr. Oakhurst’s
especial benefit, as she had often assured him; nor
yet as a douceur to the inthralling Miss Montmorrissy,
with whom Mr. Oakhurst expected to sup that evening;
but simply for himself, and, mayhap, for the flowers’
sake. Howbeit he passed on, and so out into the
open Plaza, where, finding a bench under a cottonwood-tree,
he first dusted the seat with his handkerchief, and
then sat down.
It was a fine morning. The air
was so still and calm, that a sigh from the sycamores
seemed like the deep-drawn breath of the just awakening
tree, and the faint rustle of its boughs as the outstretching
of cramped and reviving limbs. Far away the Sierras
stood out against a sky so remote as to be of no positive
color, so remote, that even the sun despaired
of ever reaching it, and so expended its strength recklessly
on the whole landscape, until it fairly glittered in
a white and vivid contrast. With a very rare
impulse, Mr. Oakhurst took off his hat, and half reclined
on the bench, with his face to the sky. Certain
birds who had taken a critical attitude on a spray
above him, apparently began an animated discussion
regarding his possible malevolent intentions.
One or two, emboldened by the silence, hopped on the
ground at his feet, until the sound of wheels on the
gravel-walk frightened them away.
Looking up, he saw a man coming slowly
toward him, wheeling a nondescript vehicle, in which
a woman was partly sitting, partly reclining.
Without knowing why, Mr. Oakhurst instantly conceived
that the carriage was the invention and workmanship
of the man, partly from its oddity, partly from the
strong, mechanical hand that grasped it, and partly
from a certain pride and visible consciousness in the
manner in which the man handled it. Then Mr.
Oakhurst saw something more: the man’s
face was familiar. With that regal faculty of
not forgetting a face that had ever given him professional
audience, he instantly classified it under the following
mental formula: “At ’Frisco, Polka
Saloon. Lost his week’s wages. I reckon seventy
dollars on red. Never came again.”
There was, however, no trace of this in the calm eyes
and unmoved face that he turned upon the stranger,
who, on the contrary, blushed, looked embarrassed,
hesitated and then stopped with an involuntary motion
that brought the carriage and its fair occupant face
to face with Mr. Oakhurst.
I should hardly do justice to the
position she will occupy in this veracious chronicle
by describing the lady now, if, indeed, I am able to
do it at all. Certainly the popular estimate was
conflicting. The late Col. Starbottle to
whose large experience of a charming sex I have before
been indebted for many valuable suggestions had,
I regret to say, depreciated her fascinations.
“A yellow-faced cripple, by dash! a sick woman,
with mahogany eyes; one of your blanked spiritual
creatures with no flesh on her bones.”
On the other hand, however, she enjoyed later much
complimentary disparagement from her own sex.
Miss Celestina Howard, second leader in the ballet
at the Varieties, had, with great alliterative directness,
in after-years, denominated her as an “aquiline
asp.” Mlle. Brimborion remembered that
she had always warned “Mr. Jack” that
this woman would “empoison” him. But
Mr. Oakhurst, whose impressions are perhaps the most
important, only saw a pale, thin, deep-eyed woman,
raised above the level of her companion by the refinement
of long suffering and isolation, and a certain shy
virginity of manner. There was a suggestion of
physical purity in the folds of her fresh-looking
robe, and a certain picturesque tastefulness in the
details, that, without knowing why, made him think
that the robe was her invention and handiwork, even
as the carriage she occupied was evidently the work
of her companion. Her own hand, a trifle too thin,
but well-shaped, subtle-fingered, and gentle-womanly,
rested on the side of the carriage, the counterpart
of the strong mechanical grasp of her companion’s.
There was some obstruction to the
progress of the vehicle; and Mr. Oakhurst stepped
forward to assist. While the wheel was being lifted
over the curbstone, it was necessary that she should
hold his arm; and for a moment her thin hand rested
there, light and cold as a snowflake, and then, as
it seemed to him, like a snow-flake melted away.
Then there was a pause, and then conversation, the
lady joining occasionally and shyly.
It appeared that they were man and
wife; that for the past two years she had been a great
invalid, and had lost the use of her lower limbs from
rheumatism; that until lately she had been confined
to her bed, until her husband who was a
master-carpenter had bethought himself to
make her this carriage. He took her out regularly
for an airing before going to work, because it was
his only time, and they attracted less
attention. They had tried many doctors, but without
avail. They had been advised to go to the Sulphur
Springs; but it was expensive. Mr. Decker, the
husband, had once saved eighty dollars for that purpose,
but while in San Francisco had his pocket picked Mr
Decker was so senseless! (The intelligent reader
need not be told that it is the lady who is speaking.)
They had never been able to make up the sum again,
and they had given up the idea. It was a dreadful
thing to have one’s pocket picked. Did
he not think so?
Her husband’s face was crimson;
but Mr. Oakhurst’s countenance was quite calm
and unmoved, as he gravely agreed with her, and walked
by her side until they passed the little garden that
he had admired. Here Mr. Oakhurst commanded a
halt, and, going to the door, astounded the proprietor
by a preposterously extravagant offer for a choice
of the flowers. Presently he returned to the
carriage with his arms full of roses, heliotrope,
and verbena, and cast them in the lap of the invalid.
While she was bending over them with childish delight,
Mr. Oakhurst took the opportunity of drawing her husband
aside.
“Perhaps,” he said in
a low voice, and a manner quite free from any personal
annoyance, “perhaps it’s just
as well that you lied to her as you did. You
can say now that the pick-pocket was arrested the other
day, and you got your money back.” Mr. Oakhurst
quietly slipped four twenty-dollar gold-pieces into
the broad hand of the bewildered Mr. Decker.
“Say that or any thing you like but
the truth. Promise me you won’t say that.”
The man promised. Mr. Oakhurst
quietly returned to the front of the little carriage.
The sick woman was still eagerly occupied with the
flowers, and, as she raised her eyes to his, her faded
cheek seemed to have caught some color from the roses,
and her eyes some of their dewy freshness. But
at that instant Mr. Oakhurst lifted his hat, and before
she could thank him was gone.
I grieve to say that Mr. Decker shamelessly
broke his promise. That night, in the very goodness
of his heart and uxorious self-abnegation, he, like
all devoted husbands, not only offered himself, but
his friend and benefactor, as a sacrifice on the family-altar.
It is only fair, however, to add that he spoke with
great fervor of the generosity of Mr. Oakhurst, and
dwelt with an enthusiasm quite common with his class
on the mysterious fame and prodigal vices of the gambler.
“And now, Elsie dear, say that
you’ll forgive me,” said Mr. Decker, dropping
on one knee beside his wife’s couch. “I
did it for the best. It was for you, dearey,
that I put that money on them cards that night in
’Frisco. I thought to win a heap enough
to take you away, and enough left to get you a new
dress.”
Mrs. Decker smiled, and pressed her
husband’s hand. “I do forgive you,
Joe dear,” she said, still smiling, with eyes
abstractedly fixed on the ceiling; “and you
ought to be whipped for deceiving me so, you bad boy!
and making me make such a speech. There, say no
more about it. If you’ll be very good hereafter,
and will just now hand me that cluster of roses, I’ll
forgive you.” She took the branch in her
angers, lifted the roses to her face, and presently
said, behind their leaves,
“Joe!”
“What is it, lovey?”
“Do you think that this Mr. what
do you call him? Jack Oakhurst would have
given that money back to you, if I hadn’t made
that speech?”
“Yes.”
“If he hadn’t seen me at all?”
Mr. Decker looked up. His wife
had managed in some way to cover up her whole face
with the roses, except her eyes, which were dangerously
bright.
“No! It was you, Elsie it
was all along of seeing you that made him do it.”
“A poor sick woman like me?”
“A sweet, little, lovely, pooty
Elsie Joe’s own little wifey! how
could he help it?”
Mrs. Decker fondly cast one arm around
her husband’s neck, still keeping the roses
to her face with the other. From behind them she
began to murmur gently and idiotically, “Dear,
olé square Joey. Elsie’s oney
booful big bear.” But, really, I do not
see that my duty as a chronicler of facts compels
me to continue this little lady’s speech any
further; and, out of respect to the unmarried reader,
I stop.
Nevertheless, the next morning Mrs.
Decker betrayed some slight and apparently uncalled
for irritability on reaching the Plaza, and presently
desired her husband to wheel her back home. Moreover,
she was very much astonished at meeting Mr. Oakhurst
just as they were returning, and even doubted if it
were he, and questioned her husband as to his identity
with the stranger of yesterday as he approached.
Her manner to Mr. Oakhurst, also, was quite in contrast
with her husband’s frank welcome. Mr. Oakhurst
instantly detected it. “Her husband has
told her all, and she dislikes me,” he said to
himself, with that fatal appreciation of the half-truths
of a woman’s motives that causes the wisest
masculine critic to stumble. He lingered only
long enough to take the business address of the husband,
and then lifting his hat gravely, without looking
at the lady, went his way. It struck the honest
master-carpenter as one of the charming anomalies of
his wife’s character, that, although the meeting
was evidently very much constrained and unpleasant,
instantly afterward his wife’s spirits began
to rise. “You was hard on him, a leetle
hard; wasn’t you, Elsie?” said Mr. Decker
deprecatingly. “I’m afraid he may
think I’ve broke my promise.” “Ah,
indeed!” said the lady indifferently. Mr.
Decker instantly stepped round to the front of the
vehicle. “You look like an A 1 first-class
lady riding down Broadway in her own carriage, Elsie,”
said he. “I never seed you lookin’
so peart and sassy before.”
A few days later, the proprietor of
the San Isabel Sulphur Springs received the following
note in Mr. Oakhurst’s well-known, dainty hand:
“Dear Steve, I’ve
been thinking over your proposition to buy Nichols’s
quarter-interest, and have concluded to go in.
But I don’t see how the thing will pay until
you have more accommodation down there, and for the
best class, I mean my customers.
What we want is an extension to the main building,
and two or three cottages put up. I send down
a builder to take hold of the job at once. He
takes his sick wife with him; and you are to look
after them as you would for one of us.
“I may run down there myself
after the races, just to look after things; but I
sha’n’t set up any game this season.
“Yours always,
“John Oakhurst.”
It was only the last sentence of this
letter that provoked criticism. “I can
understand,” said Mr. Hamlin, a professional
brother, to whom Mr. Oakhurst’s letter was shown, “I
can understand why Jack goes in heavy and builds;
for it’s a sure spec, and is bound to be a mighty
soft thing in time, if he comes here regularly.
But why in blank he don’t set up a bank this
season, and take the chance of getting some of the
money back that he puts into circulation in building,
is what gets me. I wonder now,” he mused
deeply, “what is his little game.”
The season had been a prosperous one
to Mr Oakhurst, and proportionally disastrous to several
members of the legislature, judges, colonels, and
others who had enjoyed but briefly the pleasure of
Mr. Oakhurst’s midnight society. And yet
Sacramento had become very dull to him. He had
lately formed a habit of early morning walks, so unusual
and startling to his friends, both male and female,
as to occasion the intensest curiosity. Two or
three of the latter set spies upon his track; but the
inquisition resulted only in the discovery that Mr.
Oakhurst walked to the Plaza, sat down upon one particular
bench for a few moments, and then returned without
seeing anybody; and the theory that there was a woman
in the case was abandoned. A few superstitious
gentlemen of his own profession believed that he did
it for “luck.” Some others, more
practical, declared that he went out to “study
points.”
After the races at Marysville, Mr.
Oakhurst went to San Francisco; from that place he
returned to Marysville, but a few days after was seen
at San Jose, Santa Cruz, and Oakland. Those who
met him declared that his manner was restless and
feverish, and quite unlike his ordinary calmness and
phlegm. Col. Starbottle pointed out the fact,
that at San Francisco, at the club, Jack had declined
to deal. “Hand shaky, sir; depend upon
it. Don’t stimulate enough blank
him!”
From San Jose he started to go to
Oregon by land with a rather expensive outfit of horses
and camp equipage; but, on reaching Stockton, he suddenly
diverged, and four hours later found him with a single
horse entering the canyon of the San Isabel Warm Sulphur
Springs.
It was a pretty triangular valley
lying at the foot of three sloping mountains, dark
with pines, and fantastic with madroño and manzanita.
Nestling against the mountain-side, the straggling
buildings and long piazza of the hotel glittered through
the leaves, and here and there shone a white toy-like
cottage. Mr. Oakhurst was not an admirer of Nature;
but he felt something of the same novel satisfaction
in the view, that he experienced in his first morning
walk in Sacramento. And now carriages began to
pass him on the road filled with gayly-dressed women;
and the cold California outlines of the landscape began
to take upon themselves somewhat of a human warmth
and color. And then the long hotel piazza came
in view, efflorescent with the full-toiletted fair.
Mr. Oakhurst, a good rider after the California fashion,
did not check his speed as he approached his destination,
but charged the hotel at a gallop, threw his horse
on his haunches within a foot of the piazza, and then
quietly emerged from the cloud of dust that veiled
his dismounting.
Whatever feverish excitement might
have raged within, all his habitual calm returned
as he stepped upon the piazza. With the instinct
of long habit, he turned and faced the battery of
eyes with the same cold indifference with which he
had for years encountered the half-hidden sneers of
men and the half-frightened admiration of women.
Only one person stepped forward to welcome him.
Oddly enough, it was Dick Hamilton, perhaps the only
one present, who by birth, education, and position,
might have satisfied the most fastidious social critic.
Happily for Mr. Oakhurst’s reputation, he was
also a very rich banker and social leader. “Do
you know who that is you spoke to?” asked young
Parker with an alarmed expression. “Yes,”
replied Hamilton with characteristic effrontery.
“The man you lost a thousand dollars to last
week. I only know him socially.”
“But isn’t he a gambler?” queried
the youngest Miss Smith. “He is,”
replied Hamilton; “but I wish, my dear young
lady, that we all played as open and honest a game
as our friend yonder, and were as willing as he is
to abide by its fortunes.”
But Mr. Oakhurst was happily out of
hearing of this colloquy, and was even then lounging
listlessly yet watchfully along the upper hall.
Suddenly he heard a light footstep behind him, and
then his name called in a familiar voice that drew
the blood quickly to his heart. He turned, and
she stood before him.
But how transformed! If I have
hesitated to describe the hollow-eyed cripple, the
quaintly-dressed artisan’s wife, a few pages
ago, what shall I do with this graceful, shapely,
elegantly-attired gentlewoman into whom she has been
merged within these two months? In good faith
she was very pretty. You and I, my dear madam,
would have been quick to see that those charming dimples
were misplaced for true beauty, and too fixed in their
quality for honest mirthfulness; that the delicate
lines around these aquiline nostrils were cruel and
selfish; that the sweet virginal surprise of these
lovely eyes were as apt to be opened on her plate
as upon the gallant speeches of her dinner partner;
that her sympathetic color came and went more with
her own spirits than yours. But you and I are
not in love with her, dear madam, and Mr. Oakhurst
is. And, even in the folds of her Parisian gown,
I am afraid this poor fellow saw the same subtle strokes
of purity that he had seen in her homespun robe.
And then there was the delightful revelation that she
could walk, and that she had dear little feet of her
own in the tiniest slippers of her French shoemaker,
with such preposterous blue bows, and Chappell’s
own stamp Rue de something or other, Paris on
the narrow sole.
He ran toward her with a heightened
color and outstretched hands. But she whipped
her own behind her, glanced rapidly up and down the
long hall, and stood looking at him with a half-audacious,
half-mischievous admiration, in utter contrast to
her old reserve.
“I’ve a great mind not
to shake hands with you at all. You passed me
just now on the piazza without speaking; and I ran
after you, as I suppose many another poor woman has
done.”
Mr. Oakhurst stammered that she was so changed.
“The more reason why you should
know me. Who changed me? You. You have
re-created me. You found a helpless, crippled,
sick, poverty-stricken woman, with one dress to her
back, and that her own make, and you gave her life,
health, strength, and fortune. You did; and you
know it, sir. How do you like your work?”
She caught the side-seams of her gown in either hand,
and dropped him a playful courtesy. Then, with
a sudden, relenting gesture, she gave him both her
hands.
Outrageous as this speech was, and
unfeminine as I trust every fair reader will deem
it, I fear it pleased Mr. Oakhurst. Not but that
he was accustomed to a certain frank female admiration;
but then it was of the coulisse, and not of the
cloister, with which he always persisted in associating
Mrs. Decker. To be addressed in this way by an
invalid Puritan, a sick saint with the austerity of
suffering still clothing her, a woman who had a Bible
on the dressing-table, who went to church three times
a day, and was devoted to her husband, completely bowled
him over. He still held her hands as she went
on,
“Why didn’t you come before?
What were you doing in Marysville, in San Jose, in
Oakland? You see I have followed you. I saw
you as you came down the canyon, and knew you at once.
I saw your letter to Joseph, and knew you were coming.
Why didn’t you write to me? You will some
time! Good-evening, Mr. Hamilton.”
She had withdrawn her hands, but not
until Hamilton, ascending the staircase, was nearly
abreast of them. He raised his hat to her with
well-bred composure, nodded familiarly to Oakhurst,
and passed on. When he had gone, Mrs. Decker
lifted her eyes to Mr. Oakhurst. “Some day
I shall ask a great favor of you.”
Mr. Oakhurst begged that it should be now.
“No, not until you know me better.
Then, some day, I shall want you to kill
that man!”
She laughed such a pleasant little
ringing laugh, such a display of dimples, albeit
a little fixed in the corners of her mouth, such
an innocent light in her brown eyes, and such a lovely
color in her cheeks, that Mr. Oakhurst (who seldom
laughed) was fain to laugh too. It was as if
a lamb had proposed to a fox a foray into a neighboring
sheepfold.
A few evenings after this, Mrs. Decker
arose from a charmed circle of her admirers on the
hotel piazza, excused herself for a few moments, laughingly
declined an escort, and ran over to her little cottage one
of her husband’s creation across the
road. Perhaps from the sudden and unwonted exercise
in her still convalescent state, she breathed hurriedly
and feverishly as she entered her boudoir, and once
or twice placed her hand upon her breast. She
was startled on turning up the light to find her husband
lying on the sofa.
“You look hot and excited, Elsie
love,” said Mr. Decker. “You ain’t
took worse, are you?”
Mrs Decker’s face had paled,
but now flushed again. “No,” she said;
“only a little pain here,” as she again
placed her hand upon her corsage.
“Can I do any thing for you?”
said Mr. Decker, rising with affectionate concern.
“Run over to the hotel and get me some brandy,
quick!”
Mr. Decker ran. Mrs Decker closed
and bolted the door, and then, putting her hand to
her bosom, drew out the pain. It was folded foursquare,
and was, I grieve to say, in Mr. Oakhurst’s
handwriting.
She devoured it with burning eyes
and cheeks until there came a step upon the porch;
then she hurriedly replaced it in her bosom, and unbolted
the door. Her husband entered. She raised
the spirits to her lips, and declared herself better.
“Are you going over there again
to-night?” asked Mr. Decker submissively.
“No,” said Mrs. Decker,
with her eyes fixed dreamily on the floor.
“I wouldn’t if I was you,”
said Mr. Decker with a sigh of relief. After
a pause, he took a seat on the sofa, and, drawing his
wife to his side, said, “Do you know what I
was thinking of when you came in, Elsie?” Mrs.
Decker ran her fingers through his stiff black hair,
and couldn’t imagine.
“I was thinking of old times,
Elsie: I was thinking of the days when I built
that kerridge for you, Elsie, when I used
to take you out to ride, and was both hoss and driver.
We was poor then, and you was sick, Elsie; but we
was happy. We’ve got money now, and a house;
and you’re quite another woman. I may say,
dear, that you’re a new woman. And
that’s where the trouble comes in. I could
build you a kerridge, Elsie; I could build you a house,
Elsie but there I stopped. I couldn’t
build up you. You’re strong and pretty,
Elsie, and fresh and new. But somehow, Elsie,
you ain’t no work of mine!”
He paused. With one hand laid
gently on his forehead, and the other pressed upon
her bosom, as if to feel certain of the presence of
her pain, she said sweetly and soothingly,
“But it was your work, dear.”
Mr. Decker shook his head sorrowfully.
“No, Elsie, not mine. I had the chance
to do it once, and I let it go. It’s done
now but not by me.”
Mrs. Decker raised her surprised,
innocent eyes to his. He kissed her tenderly,
and then went on in a more cheerful voice,
“That ain’t all I was
thinking of, Elsie. I was thinking that maybe
you give too much of your company to that Mr. Hamilton.
Not that there’s any wrong in it, to you or
him; but it might make people talk. You’re
the only one here, Elsie,” said the master-carpenter,
looking fondly at his wife, “who isn’t
talked about, whose work ain’t inspected or condemned.”
Mrs. Decker was glad he had spoken
about it. She had thought so too. But she
could not well be uncivil to Mr. Hamilton, who was
a fine gentleman, without making a powerful enemy.
“And he’s always treated me as if I was
a born lady in his own circle,” added the little
woman, with a certain pride that made her husband
fondly smile. “But I have thought of a plan.
He will not stay here if I should go away. If,
for instance, I went to San Francisco to visit ma
for a few days, he would be gone before I should return.”
Mr. Decker was delighted. “By
all means,” he said, “go to-morrow.
Jack Oakhurst is going down; and I’ll put you
in his charge.”
Mrs. Decker did not think it was prudent.
“Mr. Oakhurst is our friend, Joseph; but you
know his reputation.” In fact, she did not
know that she ought to go now, knowing that he was
going the same day; but, with a kiss, Mr. Decker overcame
her scruples. She yielded gracefully. Few
women, in fact, knew how to give up a point as charmingly
as she.
She staid a week in San Francisco.
When she returned, she was a trifle thinner and paler
than she had been. This she explained as the result
of perhaps too active exercise and excitement.
“I was out of doors nearly all the time, as
ma will tell you,” she said to her husband, “and
always alone. I am getting quite independent
now,” she added gayly. “I don’t
want any escort. I believe, Joey dear, I could
get along even without you, I’m so brave!”
But her visit, apparently, had not
been productive of her impelling design. Mr.
Hamilton had not gone, but had remained, and called
upon them that very evening. “I’ve
thought of a plan, Joey dear,” said Mrs. Decker,
when he had departed. “Poor Mr. Oakhurst
has a miserable room at the hotel. Suppose you
ask him, when he returns from San Francisco, to stop
with us. He can have our spare-room. I don’t
think,” she added archly, “that Mr. Hamilton
will call often.” Her husband laughed,
intimated that she was a little coquette, pinched her
cheek, and complied. “The queer thing about
a woman,” he said afterward confidentially to
Mr. Oakhurst, “is, that, without having any plan
of her own, she’ll take anybody’s, and
build a house on it entirely different to suit herself.
And dern my skin if you’ll be able to say whether
or not you didn’t give the scale and measurements
yourself! That’s what gets me!”
The next week Mr. Oakhurst was installed
in the Deckers’ cottage. The business relations
of her husband and himself were known to all, and her
own reputation was above suspicion. Indeed, few
women were more popular. She was domestic, she
was prudent, she was pious. In a country of great
feminine freedom and latitude, she never rode or walked
with anybody but her husband. In an epoch of
slang and ambiguous expression, she was always precise
and formal in her speech. In the midst of a fashion
of ostentatious decoration, she never wore a diamond,
nor a single valuable jewel. She never permitted
an indecorum in public. She never countenanced
the familiarities of California society. She declaimed
against the prevailing tone of infidelity and scepticism
in religion. Few people who were present will
ever forget the dignified yet stately manner with
which she rebuked Mr. Hamilton in the public parlor
for entering upon the discussion of a work on materialism,
lately published; and some among them, also, will
not forget the expression of amused surprise on Mr.
Hamilton’s face, that gradually changed to sardonic
gravity, as he courteously waived his point; certainly
not Mr. Oakhurst, who, from that moment, began to
be uneasily impatient of his friend, and even if
such a term could be applied to any moral quality in
Mr. Oakhurst to fear him.
For during this time Mr. Oakhurst
had begun to show symptoms of a change in his usual
habits. He was seldom, if ever, seen in his old
haunts, in a bar-room, or with his old associates.
Pink and white notes, in distracted handwriting, accumulated
on the dressing-table in his rooms at Sacramento.
It was given out in San Francisco that he had some
organic disease of the heart, for which his physician
had prescribed perfect rest. He read more; he
took long walks; he sold his fast horses; he went
to church.
I have a very vivid recollection of
his first appearance there. He did not accompany
the Deckers, nor did he go into their pew, but came
in as the service commenced, and took a seat quietly
in one of the back-pews. By some mysterious instinct,
his presence became presently known to the congregation,
some of whom so far forgot themselves, in their curiosity,
as to face around, and apparently address their responses
to him. Before the service was over, it was pretty
well understood that “miserable sinners”
meant Mr. Oakhurst. Nor did this mysterious influence
fail to affect the officiating clergyman, who introduced
an allusion to Mr. Oakhurst’s calling and habits
in a sermon on the architecture of Solomon’s
temple, and in a manner so pointed, and yet labored,
as to cause the youngest of us to flame with indignation.
Happily, however, it was lost upon Jack: I do
not think he even heard it. His handsome, colorless
face, albeit a trifle worn and thoughtful, was inscrutable.
Only once, during the singing of a hymn, at a certain
note in the contralto’s voice, there crept into
his dark eyes a look of wistful tenderness, so yearning
and yet so hopeless, that those who were watching
him felt their own glisten. Yet I retain a very
vivid remembrance of his standing up to receive the
benediction, with the suggestion, in his manner and
tightly-buttoned coat, of taking the fire of his adversary
at ten paces. After church, he disappeared as
quietly as he had entered, and fortunately escaped
hearing the comments on his rash act. His appearance
was generally considered as an impertinence, attributable
only to some wanton fancy, or possibly a bet.
One or two thought that the sexton was exceedingly
remiss in not turning him out after discovering who
he was; and a prominent pew-holder remarked, that
if he couldn’t take his wife and daughters to
that church, without exposing them to such an influence,
he would try to find some church where he could.
Another traced Mr. Oakhurst’s presence to certain
Broad Church radical tendencies, which he regretted
to say he had lately noted in their pastor. Deacon
Sawyer, whose delicately-organized, sickly wife had
already borne him eleven children, and died in an ambitious
attempt to complete the dozen, avowed that the presence
of a person of Mr. Oakhurst’s various and indiscriminate
gallantries was an insult to the memory of the deceased,
that, as a man, he could not brook.
It was about this time that Mr. Oakhurst,
contrasting himself with a conventional world in which
he had hitherto rarely mingled, became aware that
there was something in his face, figure, and carriage
quite unlike other men, something, that,
if it did not betray his former career, at least showed
an individuality and originality that was suspicious.
In this belief, he shaved off his long, silken mustache,
and religiously brushed out his clustering curls every
morning. He even went so far as to affect a negligence
of dress, and hid his small, slim, arched feet in
the largest and heaviest walking-shoes. There
is a story told that he went to his tailor in Sacramento,
and asked him to make him a suit of clothes like everybody
else. The tailor, familiar with Mr. Oakhurst’s
fastidiousness, did not know what he meant. “I
mean,” said Mr. Oakhurst savagely, “something
respectable, something that doesn’t
exactly fit me, you know.” But, however
Mr. Oakhurst might hide his shapely limbs in homespun
and homemade garments, there was something in his carriage,
something in the pose of his beautiful head, something
in the strong and fine manliness of his presence,
something in the perfect and utter discipline and
control of his muscles, something in the high repose
of his nature, a repose not so much a matter
of intellectual ruling as of his very nature, that,
go where he would, and with whom, he was always a
notable man in ten thousand. Perhaps this was
never so clearly intimated to Mr. Oakhurst, as when,
emboldened by Mr. Hamilton’s advice and assistance,
and his own predilections, he became a San Francisco
broker. Even before objection was made to his
presence in the Board, the objection, I
remember, was urged very eloquently by Watt Sanders,
who was supposed to be the inventor of the “freezing-out”
system of disposing of poor stockholders, and who also
enjoyed the reputation of having been the impelling
cause of Briggs of Tuolumne’s ruin and suicide, even
before this formal protest of respectability against
lawlessness, the aquiline suggestions of Mr. Oakhurst’s
mien and countenance, not only prematurely fluttered
the pigeons, but absolutely occasioned much uneasiness
among the fish-hawks who circled below him with their
booty. “Dash me! but he’s as likely
to go after us as anybody,” said Joe Fielding.
It wanted but a few days before the
close of the brief summer season at San Isabel Warm
Springs. Already there had been some migration
of the more fashionable; and there was an uncomfortable
suggestion of dregs and lees in the social life that
remained. Mr. Oakhurst was moody. It was
hinted that even the secure reputation of Mrs. Decker
could no longer protect her from the gossip which
his presence excited. It is but fair to her to
say, that, during the last few weeks of this trying
ordeal, she looked like a sweet, pale martyr, and
conducted herself toward her traducers with the gentle,
forgiving manner of one who relied not upon the idle
homage of the crowd, but upon the security of a principle
that was dearer than popular favor. “They
talk about myself and Mr. Oakhurst, my dear,”
she said to a friend; “but heaven and my husband
can best answer their calumny. It never shall
be said that my husband ever turned his back upon
a friend in the moment of his adversity, because the
position was changed, because his friend
was poor, and he was rich.” This was the
first intimation to the public that Jack had lost money,
although it was known generally that the Deckers had
lately bought some valuable property in San Francisco.
A few evenings after this, an incident
occurred which seemed to unpleasantly discord with
the general social harmony that had always existed
at San Isabel. It was at dinner; and Mr. Oakhurst
and Mr. Hamilton, who sat together at a separate table,
were observed to rise in some agitation. When
they reached the hall, by a common instinct they stepped
into a little breakfast-room which was vacant, and
closed the door. Then Mr. Hamilton turned with
a half-amused, half-serious smile toward his friend,
and said,
“If we are to quarrel, Jack
Oakhurst, you and I, in the name
of all that is ridiculous, don’t let it be about
a”
I do not know what was the epithet
intended. It was either unspoken or lost; for
at that very instant Mr. Oakhurst raised a wineglass,
and dashed its contents into Hamilton’s face.
As they faced each other, the men
seemed to have changed natures. Mr. Oakhurst
was trembling with excitement, and the wineglass that
he returned to the table shivered between his fingers.
Mr. Hamilton stood there, grayish white, erect, and
dripping. After a pause, he said coldly,
“So be it. But remember,
our quarrel commences here. If I fall by your
hand, you shall not use it to clear her character:
if you fall by mine, you shall not be called a martyr.
I am sorry it has come to this; but amen, the sooner
now, the better.”
He turned proudly, dropped his lids
over cold steel-blue eyes, as if sheathing a rapier
bowed, and passed coldly out.
They met, twelve hours later, in a
little hollow two miles from the hotel, on the Stockton
road. As Mr. Oakhurst received his pistol from
Col. Starbottle’s hands, he said to him
in a low voice, “Whatever turns up or down,
I shall not return to the hotel. You will find
some directions in my room. Go there” But
his voice suddenly faltered, and he turned his glistening
eyes away, to his second’s intense astonishment.
“I’ve been out a dozen times with Jack
Oakhurst,” said Col. Starbottle afterward,
“and I never saw him anyways cut before.
Blank me if I didn’t think he was losing his
sand, till he walked to position.”
The two reports were almost simultaneous.
Mr. Oakhurst’s right arm dropped suddenly to
his side, and his pistol would have fallen from his
paralyzed fingers; but the discipline of trained nerve
and muscle prevailed, and he kept his grasp until
he had shifted it to the other hand, without changing
his position. Then there was a silence that seemed
interminable, a gathering of two or three dark figures
where a smoke-curl still lazily floated, and then
the hurried, husky, panting voice of Col. Starbottle
in his ear, “He’s hit hard through
the lungs you must run for it!”
Jack turned his dark, questioning
eyes upon his second, but did not seem to listen, rather
seemed to hear some other voice, remoter in the distance.
He hesitated, and then made a step forward in the direction
of the distant group. Then he paused again as
the figures separated, and the surgeon came hastily
toward him.
“He would like to speak with
you a moment,” said the man. “You
have little time to lose, I know; but,” he added
in a lower voice, “it is my duty to tell you
he has still less.”
A look of despair, so hopeless in
its intensity, swept over Mr. Oakhurst’s usually
impassive face, that the surgeon started. “You
are hit,” he said, glancing at Jack’s
helpless arm.
“Nothing a mere scratch,”
said Jack hastily. Then he added with a bitter
laugh, “I’m not in luck to-day. But
come: we’ll see what he wants.”
His long, feverish stride outstripped
the surgeon’s; and in another moment he stood
where the dying man lay, like most dying
men, the one calm, composed, central figure
of an anxious group. Mr. Oakhurst’s face
was less calm as he dropped on one knee beside him,
and took his hand. “I want to speak with
this gentleman alone,” said Hamilton, with something
of his old imperious manner, as he turned to those
about him. When they drew back, he looked up
in Oakhurst’s face.
“I’ve something to tell you, Jack.”
His own face was white, but not so
white as that which Mr. Oakhurst bent over him, a
face so ghastly, with haunting doubts, and a hopeless
presentiment of coming evil, a face so piteous
in its infinite weariness and envy of death, that
the dying man was touched, even in the languor of
dissolution, with a pang of compassion; and the cynical
smile faded from his lips.
“Forgive me, Jack,” he
whispered more feebly, “for what I have to say.
I don’t say it in anger, but only because it
must be said. I could not do my duty to you,
I could not die contented, until you knew it all.
It’s a miserable business at best, all around.
But it can’t be helped now. Only I ought
to have fallen by Decker’s pistol, and not yours.”
A flush like fire came into Jack’s
cheek, and he would have risen; but Hamilton held
him fast.
“Listen! In my pocket you
will find two letters. Take them there!
You will know the handwriting. But promise you
will not read them until you are in a place of safety.
Promise me.”
Jack did not speak, but held the letters
between his fingers as if they had been burning coals.
“Promise me,” said Hamilton faintly.
“Why?” asked Oakhurst, dropping his friend’s
hand coldly.
“Because,” said the dying
man with a bitter smile, “because when
you have read them you will go
back to capture and death!”
They were his last words. He
pressed Jack’s hand faintly. Then his grasp
relaxed, and he fell back a corpse.
It was nearly ten o’clock at
night, and Mrs. Decker reclined languidly upon the
sofa with a novel in her hand, while her husband discussed
the politics of the country in the bar-room of the
hotel. It was a warm night; and the French window
looking out upon a little balcony was partly open.
Suddenly she heard a foot upon the balcony, and she
raised her eyes from the book with a slight start.
The next moment the window was hurriedly thrust wide,
and a man entered.
Mrs. Decker rose to her feet with a little cry of
alarm.
“For Heaven’s sake, Jack,
are you mad? He has only gone for a little while he
may return at any moment. Come an hour later,
to-morrow, any time when I can get rid of him but
go, now, dear, at once.”
Mr. Oakhurst walked toward the door,
bolted it, and then faced her without a word.
His face was haggard; his coat-sleeve hung loosely
over an arm that was bandaged and bloody.
Nevertheless her voice did not falter
as she turned again toward him. “What has
happened, Jack. Why are you here?”
He opened his coat, and threw two letters in her lap.
“To return your lover’s
letters; to kill you and then myself,”
he said in a voice so low as to be almost inaudible.
Among the many virtues of this admirable
woman was invincible courage. She did not faint;
she did not cry out; she sat quietly down again, folded
her hands in her lap, and said calmly,
“And why should you not?”
Had she recoiled, had she shown any
fear or contrition, had she essayed an explanation
or apology, Mr. Oakhurst would have looked upon it
as an evidence of guilt. But there is no quality
that courage recognizes so quickly as courage.
There is no condition that desperation bows before
but desperation. And Mr. Oakhurst’s power
of analysis was not so keen as to prevent him from
confounding her courage with a moral quality.
Even in his fury, he could not help admiring this
dauntless invalid.
“Why should you not?”
she repeated with a smile. “You gave me
life, health, and happiness, Jack. You gave me
your love. Why should you not take what you have
given? Go on. I am ready.”
She held out her hands with that same
infinite grace of yielding with which she had taken
his own on the first day of their meeting at the hotel.
Jack raised his head, looked at her for one wild moment,
dropped upon his knees beside her, and raised the
folds of her dress to his feverish lips. But
she was too clever not to instantly see her victory:
she was too much of a woman, with all her cleverness,
to refrain from pressing that victory home. At
the same moment, as with the impulse of an outraged
and wounded woman, she rose, and, with an imperious
gesture, pointed to the window. Mr. Oakhurst
rose in his turn, cast one glance upon her, and without
another word passed out of her presence forever.
When he had gone, she closed the window
and bolted it, and, going to the chimney-piece, placed
the letters, one by one, in the flame of the candle
until they were consumed. I would not have the
reader think, that, during this painful operation,
she was unmoved. Her hand trembled, and not
being a brute for some minutes (perhaps
longer) she felt very badly, and the corners of her
sensitive mouth were depressed. When her husband
arrived, it was with a genuine joy that she ran to
him, and nestled against his broad breast with a feeling
of security that thrilled the honest fellow to the
core.
“But I’ve heard dreadful
news to-night, Elsie,” said Mr. Decker, after
a few endearments were exchanged.
“Don’t tell me any thing
dreadful, dear: I’m not well to-night,”
she pleaded sweetly.
“But it’s about Mr. Oakhurst and Hamilton.”
“Please!” Mr. Decker could
not resist the petitionary grace of those white hands
and that sensitive mouth, and took her to his arms.
Suddenly he said, “What’s that?”
He was pointing to the bosom of her
white dress. Where Mr. Oakhurst had touched her,
there was a spot of blood.
It was nothing: she had slightly
cut her hand in closing the window; it shut so hard!
If Mr. Decker had remembered to close and bolt the
shutter before he went out, he might have saved her
this. There was such a genuine irritability and
force in this remark, that Mr. Decker was quite overcome
by remorse. But Mrs. Decker forgave him with that
graciousness which I have before pointed out in these
pages. And with the halo of that forgiveness
and marital confidence still lingering above the pair,
with the reader’s permission we will leave them,
and return to Mr. Oakhurst.
But not for two weeks. At the
end of that time, he walked into his rooms in Sacramento,
and in his old manner took his seat at the faro-table.
“How’s your arm, Jack?” asked an
incautious player.
There was a smile followed the question,
which, however, ceased as Jack looked up quietly at
the speaker.
“It bothers my dealing a little;
but I can shoot as well with my left.”
The game was continued in that decorous
silence which usually distinguished the table at which
Mr. John Oakhurst presided.