I think we all loved him. Even
after he mismanaged the affairs of the Amity Ditch
Company, we commiserated him, although most of us were
stockholders, and lost heavily. I remember that
the blacksmith went so far as to say that “them
chaps as put that responsibility on the old man oughter
be lynched.” But the blacksmith was not
a stockholder; and the expression was looked upon
as the excusable extravagance of a large, sympathizing
nature, that, when combined with a powerful frame,
was unworthy of notice. At least, that was the
way they put it. Yet I think there was a general
feeling of regret that this misfortune would interfere
with the old man’s long-cherished plan of “going
home.”
Indeed, for the last ten years he
had been “going home.” He was going
home after a six-months’ sojourn at Monte Flat;
he was going home after the first rains; he was going
home when the rains were over; he was going home when
he had cut the timber on Buckeye Hill, when there was
pasture on Dow’s Flat, when he struck pay-dirt
on Eureka Hill, when the Amity Company paid its first
dividend, when the election was over, when he had
received an answer from his wife. And so the years
rolled by, the spring rains came and went, the woods
of Buckeye Hill were level with the ground, the pasture
on Dow’s Flat grew sear and dry, Eureka Hill
yielded its pay-dirt and swamped its owner, the first
dividends of the Amity Company were made from the
assessments of stockholders, there were new county
officers at Monte Flat, his wife’s answer had
changed into a persistent question, and still old
man Plunkett remained.
It is only fair to say that he had
made several distinct essays toward going. Five
years before, he had bidden good-by to Monte Hill with
much effusion and hand-shaking. But he never
got any farther than the next town. Here he was
induced to trade the sorrel colt he was riding for
a bay mare, a transaction that at once
opened to his lively fancy a vista of vast and successful
future speculation. A few days after, Abner Dean
of Angel’s received a letter from him, stating
that he was going to Visalia to buy horses. “I
am satisfied,” wrote Plunkett, with that elevated
rhetoric for which his correspondence was remarkable, “I
am satisfied that we are at last developing the real
resources of California. The world will yet look
to Dow’s Flat as the great stock-raising centre.
In view of the interests involved, I have deferred
my departure for a month.” It was two before
he again returned to us penniless.
Six months later, he was again enabled to start for
the Eastern States; and this time he got as far as
San Francisco. I have before me a letter which
I received a few days after his arrival, from which
I venture to give an extract: “You know,
my dear boy, that I have always believed that gambling,
as it is absurdly called, is still in its infancy
in California. I have always maintained that a
perfect system might be invented, by which the game
of poker may be made to yield a certain percentage
to the intelligent player. I am not at liberty
at present to disclose the system; but before leaving
this city I intend to perfect it.” He seems
to have done so, and returned to Monte Flat with two
dollars and thirty-seven cents, the absolute remainder
of his capital after such perfection.
It was not until 1868 that he appeared
to have finally succeeded in going home. He left
us by the overland route, a route which
he declared would give great opportunity for the discovery
of undeveloped resources. His last letter was
dated Virginia City. He was absent three years.
At the close of a very hot day in midsummer, he alighted
from the Wingdam stage, with hair and beard powdered
with dust and age. There was a certain shyness
about his greeting, quite different from his usual
frank volubility, that did not, however, impress us
as any accession of character. For some days
he was reserved regarding his recent visit, contenting
himself with asserting, with more or less aggressiveness,
that he had “always said he was going home, and
now he had been there.” Later he grew more
communicative, and spoke freely and critically of
the manners and customs of New York and Boston, commented
on the social changes in the years of his absence,
and, I remember, was very hard upon what he deemed
the follies incidental to a high state of civilization.
Still later he darkly alluded to the moral laxity of
the higher planes of Eastern society; but it was not
long before he completely tore away the veil, and
revealed the naked wickedness of New York social life
in a way I even now shudder to recall. Vinous
intoxication, it appeared, was a common habit of the
first ladies of the city. Immoralities which he
scarcely dared name were daily practised by the refined
of both sexes. Niggardliness and greed were the
common vices of the rich. “I have always
asserted,” he continued, “that corruption
must exist where luxury and riches are rampant, and
capital is not used to develop the natural resources
of the country. Thank you I will take
mine without sugar.” It is possible that
some of these painful details crept into the local
journals. I remember an editorial in “The
Monte Flat Monitor,” entitled “The Effete
East,” in which the fatal decadence of New York
and New England was elaborately stated, and California
offered as a means of natural salvation. “Perhaps,”
said “The Monitor,” “we might add
that Calaveras County offers superior inducements
to the Eastern visitor with capital.”
Later he spoke of his family.
The daughter he had left a child had grown into beautiful
womanhood. The son was already taller and larger
than his father; and, in a playful trial of strength,
“the young rascal,” added Plunkett, with
a voice broken with paternal pride and humorous objurgation,
had twice thrown his doting parent to the ground.
But it was of his daughter he chiefly spoke.
Perhaps emboldened by the evident interest which masculine
Monte Flat held in feminine beauty, he expatiated
at some length on her various charms and accomplishments,
and finally produced her photograph, that
of a very pretty girl, to their infinite
peril. But his account of his first meeting with
her was so peculiar, that I must fain give it after
his own methods, which were, perhaps, some shades
less precise and elegant than his written style.
“You see, boys, it’s always
been my opinion that a man oughter be able to tell
his own flesh and blood by instinct. It’s
ten years since I’d seen my Melindy; and she
was then only seven, and about so high. So, when
I went to New York, what did I do? Did I go straight
to my house, and ask for my wife and daughter, like
other folks? No, sir! I rigged myself up
as a peddler, as a peddler, sir; and I rung the bell.
When the servant came to the door, I wanted don’t
you see? to show the ladies some trinkets.
Then there was a voice over the banister says, ’Don’t
want any thing: send him away.’ ’Some
nice laces, ma’am, smuggled,’ I says,
looking up. ‘Get out, you wretch!’
says she. I knew the voice, boys: it was
my wife, sure as a gun. Thar wasn’t any
instinct thar. ‘Maybe the young ladies
want somethin’,’ I said. ‘Did
you hear me?’ says she; and with that she jumps
forward, and I left. It’s ten years, boys,
since I’ve seen the old woman; but somehow, when
she fetched that leap, I naterally left.”
He had been standing beside the bar his
usual attitude when he made this speech;
but at this point he half faced his auditors with a
look that was very effective. Indeed, a few who
had exhibited some signs of scepticism and lack of
interest, at once assumed an appearance of intense
gratification and curiosity as he went on,
“Well, by hangin round there
for a day or two, I found out at last it was to be
Melindy’s birthday next week, and that she was
goin’ to have a big party. I tell ye what,
boys, it weren’t no slouch of a reception.
The whole house was bloomin’ with flowers, and
blazin’ with lights; and there was no end of
servants and plate and refreshments and fixin’s”
“Uncle Joe.”
“Well?”
“Where did they get the money?”
Plunkett faced his interlocutor with
a severe glance. “I always said,”
he replied slowly, “that, when I went home, I’d
send on ahead of me a draft for ten thousand dollars.
I always said that, didn’t I? Eh? And
I said I was goin’ home and I’ve
been home, haven’t I? Well?”
Either there was something irresistibly
conclusive in this logic, or else the desire to hear
the remainder of Plunkett’s story was stronger;
but there was no more interruption. His ready
good-humor quickly returned, and, with a slight chuckle,
he went on,
“I went to the biggest jewelry
shop in town, and I bought a pair of diamond ear-rings,
and put them in my pocket, and went to the house.
‘What name?’ says the chap who opened the
door; and he looked like a cross ’twixt a restaurant
waiter and a parson. ‘Skeesicks,’
said I. He takes me in; and pretty soon my wife comes
sailin’ into the parlor, and says, ‘Excuse
me; but I don’t think I recognize the name.’
She was mighty polite; for I had on a red wig and
side-whiskers. ’A friend of your husband’s
from California, ma’am, with a present for your
daughter, Miss ,’ and I made as I
had forgot the name. But all of a sudden a voice
said, ‘That’s too thin;’ and in walked
Melindy. ‘It’s playin’ it rather
low down, father, to pretend you don’t know your
daughter’s name; ain’t it, now? How
are you, old man?’ And with that she tears off
my wig and whiskers, and throws her arms around my
neck instinct, sir, pure instinct!”
Emboldened by the laughter which followed
his description of the filial utterances of Melinda,
he again repeated her speech, with more or less elaboration,
joining in with, and indeed often leading, the hilarity
that accompanied it, and returning to it, with more
or less incoherency, several times during the evening.
And so, at various times and at various
places, but chiefly in bar-rooms, did this Ulysses
of Monte Flat recount the story of his wanderings.
There were several discrepancies in his statement;
there was sometimes considerable prolixity of detail;
there was occasional change of character and scenery;
there was once or twice an absolute change in the
denoument: but always the fact of his having visited
his wife and children remained. Of course, in
a sceptical community like that of Monte Flat, a
community accustomed to great expectation and small
realization, a community wherein, to use
the local dialect, “they got the color, and
struck hardpan,” more frequently than any other
mining-camp, in such a community, the fullest
credence was not given to old man Plunkett’s
facts. There was only one exception to the general
unbelief, Henry York of Sandy Bar.
It was he who was always an attentive listener; it
was his scant purse that had often furnished Plunkett
with means to pursue his unprofitable speculations;
it was to him that the charms of Melinda were more
frequently rehearsed; it was he that had borrowed
her photograph; and it was he that, sitting alone in
his little cabin one night, kissed that photograph,
until his honest, handsome face glowed again in the
firelight.
It was dusty in Monte Flat. The
ruins of the long dry season were crumbling everywhere:
everywhere the dying summer had strewn its red ashes
a foot deep, or exhaled its last breath in a red cloud
above the troubled highways. The alders and cottonwoods,
that marked the line of the water-courses, were grimy
with dust, and looked as if they might have taken
root in the open air. The gleaming stones of the
parched water-courses themselves were as dry bones
in the valley of death. The dusty sunset at times
painted the flanks of the distant hills a dull, coppery
hue: on other days, there was an odd, indefinable
earthquake halo on the volcanic cones of the farther
coast-spurs. Again an acrid, resinous smoke from
the burning wood on Heavytree Hill smarted the eyes,
and choked the free breath of Monte Flat; or a fierce
wind, driving every thing, including the shrivelled
summer, like a curled leaf before it, swept down the
flanks of the Sierras, and chased the inhabitants to
the doors of their cabins, and shook its red fist in
at their windows. And on such a night as this,
the dust having in some way choked the wheels of material
progress in Monte Flat, most of the inhabitants were
gathered listlessly in the gilded bar-room of the Moquelumne
Hotel, spitting silently at the red-hot stove that
tempered the mountain winds to the shorn lambs of
Monte Flat, and waiting for the rain.
Every method known to the Flat of
beguiling the time until the advent of this long-looked-for
phenomenon had been tried. It is true, the methods
were not many, being limited chiefly to that form of
popular facetiae known as practical joking; and even
this had assumed the seriousness of a business-pursuit.
Tommy Roy, who had spent two hours in digging a ditch
in front of his own door, into which a few friends
casually dropped during the evening, looked ennuye
and dissatisfied. The four prominent citizens,
who, disguised as foot-pads, had stopped the county
treasurer on the Wingdam road, were jaded from their
playful efforts next morning. The principal physician
and lawyer of Monte Flat, who had entered into an
unhallowed conspiracy to compel the sheriff of Calaveras
and his posse to serve a writ of ejectment on a grizzly
bear, feebly disguised under the name of one “Major
Ursus,” who haunted the groves of Heavytree
Hill, wore an expression of resigned weariness.
Even the editor of “The Monte Flat Monitor,”
who had that morning written a glowing account of
a battle with the Wipneck Indians, for the benefit
of Eastern readers, even he looked
grave and worn. When, at last, Abner Dean of
Angel’s, who had been on a visit to San Francisco,
walked into the room, he was, of course, victimized
in the usual way by one or two apparently honest questions,
which ended in his answering them, and then falling
into the trap of asking another, to his utter and complete
shame and mortification; but that was all. Nobody
laughed; and Abner, although a victim, did not lose
his good-humor. He turned quietly on his tormentors,
and said,
“I’ve got something better
than that you know old man Plunkett?”
Everybody simultaneously spat at the
stove, and nodded his head.
“You know he went home three
years ago?” Two or three changed the position
of their legs from the backs of different chairs; and
one man said, “Yes.”
“Had a good time, home?”
Everybody looked cautiously at the
man who had said, “Yes;” and he, accepting
the responsibility with a faint-hearted smile, said,
“Yes,” again, and breathed hard.
“Saw his wife and child purty gal?”
said Abner cautiously. “Yes,” answered
the man doggedly. “Saw her photograph,
perhaps?” continued Abner Dean quietly.
The man looked hopelessly around for
support. Two or three, who had been sitting near
him, and evidently encouraging him with a look of interest,
now shamelessly abandoned him and looked another way.
Henry York flushed a little, and veiled his gray eyes.
The man hesitated, and then with a sickly smile, that
was intended to convey the fact that he was perfectly
aware of the object of this questioning, and was only
humoring it from abstract good feeling, returned,
“Yes,” again.
“Sent home let’s
see ten thousand dollars, wasn’t it?”
Abner Dean went on. “Yes,” reiterated
the man with the same smile.
“Well, I thought so,”
said Abner quietly. “But the fact is, you
see, that he never went home at all nary
time.”
Everybody stared at Abner in genuine
surprise and interest, as, with provoking calmness
and a half-lazy manner, he went on,
“You see, thar was a man down
in ’Frisco as knowed him, and saw him in Sonora
during the whole of that three years. He was herding
sheep, or tending cattle, or spekilating all that
time, and hadn’t a red cent. Well it ’mounts
to this, that ’ar Plunkett ain’t
been east of the Rocky Mountains since ’49.”
The laugh which Abner Dean had the
right to confidently expect came; but it was bitter
and sardonic. I think indignation was apparent
in the minds of his hearers. It was felt, for
the first time, that there was a limit to practical
joking. A deception carried on for a year, compromising
the sagacity of Monte Flat, was deserving the severest
reprobation. Of course, nobody had believed Plunkett;
but then the supposition that it might be believed
in adjacent camps that they had believed him
was gall and bitterness. The lawyer thought that
an indictment for obtaining money under false pretences
might be found. The physician had long suspected
him of insanity, and was not certain but that he ought
to be confined. The four prominent merchants thought
that the business-interests of Monte Flat demanded
that something should be done. In the midst of
an excited and angry discussion, the door slowly opened,
and old man Plunkett staggered into the room.
He had changed pitifully in the last
six months. His hair was a dusty, yellowish gray,
like the chemisal on the flanks of Heavytree Hill;
his face was waxen white, and blue and puffy under
the eyes; his clothes were soiled and shabby, streaked
in front with the stains of hurriedly eaten luncheons,
and fluffy behind with the wool and hair of hurriedly-extemporized
couches. In obedience to that odd law, that, the
more seedy and soiled a man’s garments become,
the less does he seem inclined to part with them,
even during that portion of the twenty-four hours
when they are deemed less essential, Plunkett’s
clothes had gradually taken on the appearance of a
kind of a bark, or an outgrowth from within, for which
their possessor was not entirely responsible.
Howbeit, as he entered the room, he attempted to button
his coat over a dirty shirt, and passed his fingers,
after the manner of some animal, over his cracker-strewn
beard, in recognition of a cleanly public sentiment.
But, even as he did so, the weak smile faded from his
lips; and his hand, after fumbling aimlessly around
a button, dropped helplessly at his side. For
as he leaned his back against the bar, and faced the
group, he, for the first time, became aware that every
eye but one was fixed upon him. His quick, nervous
apprehension at once leaped to the truth. His
miserable secret was out, and abroad in the very air
about him. As a last resort, he glanced despairingly
at Henry York; but his flushed face was turned toward
the windows.
No word was spoken. As the bar-keeper
silently swung a decanter and glass before him, he
took a cracker from a dish, and mumbled it with affected
unconcern. He lingered over his liquor until its
potency stiffened his relaxed sinews, and dulled the
nervous edge of his apprehension, and then he suddenly
faced around. “It don’t look as if
we were goin’ to hev any rain much afore Christmas,”
he said with defiant ease.
No one made any reply.
“Just like this in ’52,
and again in ’60. It’s always been
my opinion that these dry seasons come reg’lar.
I’ve said it afore. I say it again.
It’s jist as I said about going home, you know,”
he added with desperate recklessness.
“Thar’s a man,”
said Abner Dean lazily, “ez sez you never went
home. Thar’s a man ez sez you’ve
been three years in Sonora. Thar’s a man
ez sez you hain’t seen your wife and daughter
since ’49. Thar’s a man ez sez you’ve
been playin’ this camp for six months.”
There was a dead silence. Then
a voice said quite as quietly,
“That man lies.”
It was not the old man’s voice.
Everybody turned as Henry York slowly rose, stretching
out his six feet of length, and, brushing away the
ashes that had fallen from his pipe upon his breast,
deliberately placed himself beside Plunkett, and faced
the others.
“That man ain’t here,”
continued Abner Dean, with listless indifference of
voice, and a gentle pre-occupation of manner, as he
carelessly allowed his right hand to rest on his hip
near his revolver. “That man ain’t
here; but, if I’m called upon to make good what
he says, why, I’m on hand.”
All rose as the two men perhaps
the least externally agitated of them all approached
each other. The lawyer stepped in between them.
“Perhaps there’s some
mistake here. York, do you know that the
old man has been home?”
“Yes.”
“How do you know it?”
York turned his clear, honest, frank
eyes on his questioner, and without a tremor told
the only direct and unmitigated lie of his life.
“Because I’ve seen him there.”
The answer was conclusive. It
was known that York had been visiting the East during
the old man’s absence. The colloquy had
diverted attention from Plunkett, who, pale and breathless,
was staring at his unexpected deliverer. As he
turned again toward his tormentors, there was something
in the expression of his eye that caused those that
were nearest to him to fall back, and sent a strange,
indefinable thrill through the boldest and most reckless.
As he made a step forward, the physician, almost unconsciously,
raised his hand with a warning gesture; and old man
Plunkett, with his eyes fixed upon the red-hot stove,
and an odd smile playing about his mouth, began,
“Yes of course you
did. Who says you didn’t? It ain’t
no lie. I said I was goin’ home and
I’ve been home. Haven’t I? My
God! I have. Who says I’ve been lyin’?
Who says I’m dreamin’? Is it true why
don’t you speak? It is true, after all.
You say you saw me there: why don’t you
speak again? Say, say! is it true?
It’s going now. O my God! it’s going
again. It’s going now. Save me!”
And with a fierce cry he fell forward in a fit upon
the floor.
When the old man regained his senses,
he found himself in York’s cabin. A flickering
fire of pine-boughs lit up the rude rafters, and fell
upon a photograph tastefully framed with fir-cones,
and hung above the brush whereon he lay. It was
the portrait of a young girl. It was the first
object to meet the old man’s gaze; and it brought
with it a flush of such painful consciousness, that
he started, and glanced quickly around. But his
eyes only encountered those of York, clear,
gray, critical, and patient, and they fell
again.
“Tell me, old man,” said
York not unkindly, but with the same cold, clear tone
in his voice that his eye betrayed a moment ago, “tell
me, is that a lie too?” and he pointed
to the picture.
The old man closed his eyes, and did
not reply. Two hours before, the question would
have stung him into some evasion or bravado. But
the revelation contained in the question, as well
as the tone of York’s voice, was to him now,
in his pitiable condition, a relief. It was plain,
even to his confused brain, that York had lied when
he had indorsed his story in the bar-room; it was
clear to him now that he had not been home, that he
was not, as he had begun to fear, going mad.
It was such a relief, that, with characteristic weakness,
his former recklessness and extravagance returned.
He began to chuckle, finally to laugh uproariously.
York, with his eyes still fixed on
the old man, withdrew the hand with which he had taken
his.
“Didn’t we fool ’em
nicely; eh, Yorky! He, he! The biggest thing
yet ever played in this camp! I always said I’d
play ’em all some day, and I have played
’em for six months. Ain’t it rich? ain’t
it the richest thing you ever seed? Did you see
Abner’s face when he spoke ’bout that
man as seed me in Sonora? Warn’t it good
as the minstrels? Oh, it’s too much!”
and, striking his leg with the palm of his hand, he
almost threw himself from the bed in a paroxysm of
laughter, a paroxysm that, nevertheless,
appeared to be half real and half affected.
“Is that photograph hers?”
said York in a low voice, after a slight pause.
“Hers? No! It’s
one of the San Francisco actresses. He, he!
Don’t you see? I bought it for two bits
in one of the bookstores. I never thought they’d
swaller that too; but they did! Oh, but the
old man played ’em this time didn’t he eh?”
and he peered curiously in York’s face.
“Yes, and he played me
too,” said York, looking steadily in the old
man’s eye.
“Yes, of course,” interposed
Plunkett hastily; “but you know, Yorky, you
got out of it well! You’ve sold ’em
too. We’ve both got em on a string now you
and me got to stick together now. You
did it well, Yorky: you did it well. Why,
when you said you’d seen me in York City, I’m
d d if I didn’t”
“Didn’t what?” said
York gently; for the old man had stopped with a pale
face and wandering eye.
“Eh?”
“You say when I said I had seen you in New York
you thought”
“You lie!” said the old
man fiercely. “I didn’t say I thought
any thing. What are you trying to go back on
me for, eh?” His hands were trembling as he
rose muttering from the bed, and made his way toward
the hearth.
“Gimme some whiskey,”
he said presently “and dry up. You oughter
treat anyway. Them fellows oughter treated last
night. By hookey, I’d made ’em only
I fell sick.”
York placed the liquor and a tin cup
on the table beside him, and, going to the door, turned
his back upon his guest, and looked out on the night.
Although it was clear moonlight, the familiar prospect
never to him seemed so dreary. The dead waste
of the broad Wingdam highway never seemed so monotonous,
so like the days that he had passed, and were to come
to him, so like the old man in its suggestion of going
sometime, and never getting there. He turned,
and going up to Plunkett put his hand upon his shoulder,
and said,
“I want you to answer one question fairly and
squarely.”
The liquor seemed to have warmed the
torpid blood in the old man’s veins, and softened
his acerbity; for the face he turned up to York was
mellowed in its rugged outline, and more thoughtful
in expression, as he said,
“Go on, my boy.”
“Have you a wife and daughter?”
“Before God I have!”
The two men were silent for a moment,
both gazing at the fire. Then Plunkett began
rubbing his knees slowly.
“The wife, if it comes to that,
ain’t much,” he began cautiously, “being
a little on the shoulder, you know, and wantin’,
so to speak a liberal California education, which
makes, you know, a bad combination. It’s
always been my opinion, that there ain’t any
worse. Why, she’s as ready with her tongue
as Abner Dean is with his revolver, only with the
difference that she shoots from principle, as she calls
it; and the consequence is, she’s always layin’
for you. It’s the effete East, my boy,
that’s ruinin’ her. It’s them
ideas she gets in New York and Boston that’s
made her and me what we are. I don’t mind
her havin’ ’em, if she didn’t shoot.
But, havin’ that propensity, them principles
oughtn’t to be lying round loose no more’n
firearms.”
“But your daughter?” said York.
The old man’s hands went up
to his eyes here, and then both hands and head dropped
forward on the table. “Don’t say any
thing ’bout her, my boy, don’t ask me
now.” With one hand concealing his eyes,
he fumbled about with the other in his pockets for
his handkerchief but vainly. Perhaps
it was owing to this fact, that he repressed his tears;
for, when he removed his hand from his eyes, they
were quite dry. Then he found his voice.
“She’s a beautiful girl,
beautiful, though I say it; and you shall see her,
my boy, you shall see her sure. I’ve
got things about fixed now. I shall have my plan
for reducin’ ores perfected a day or two; and
I’ve got proposals from all the smeltin’
works here” (here he hastily produced a bundle
of papers that fell upon the floor), “and I’m
goin’ to send for ’em. I’ve
got the papers here as will give me ten thousand dollars
clear in the next month,” he added, as he strove
to collect the valuable documents again. “I’ll
have ’em here by Christmas, if I live; and you
shall eat your Christmas dinner with me, York, my boy, you
shall sure.”
With his tongue now fairly loosened
by liquor and the suggestive vastness of his prospects,
he rambled on more or less incoherently, elaborating
and amplifying his plans, occasionally even speaking
of them as already accomplished, until the moon rode
high in the heavens, and York led him again to his
couch. Here he lay for some time muttering to
himself, until at last he sank into a heavy sleep.
When York had satisfied himself of the fact, he gently
took down the picture and frame, and, going to the
hearth, tossed them on the dying embers, and sat down
to see them burn.
The fir-cones leaped instantly into
flame; then the features that had entranced San Francisco
audiences nightly, flashed up and passed away (as
such things are apt to pass); and even the cynical
smile on York’s lips faded too. And then
there came a supplemental and unexpected flash as
the embers fell together, and by its light York saw
a paper upon the floor. It was one that had fallen
from the old man’s pocket. As he picked
it up listlessly, a photograph slipped from its folds.
It was the portrait of a young girl; and on its reverse
was written in a scrawling hand, “Melinda to
father.”
It was at best a cheap picture, but,
ah me! I fear even the deft graciousness of the
highest art could not have softened the rigid angularities
of that youthful figure, its self-complacent vulgarity,
its cheap finery, its expressionless ill-favor.
York did not look at it a second time. He turned
to the letter for relief.
It was misspelled; it was unpunctuated;
it was almost illegible; it was fretful in tone, and
selfish in sentiment. It was not, I fear, even
original in the story of its woes. It was the
harsh recital of poverty, of suspicion, of mean makeshifts
and compromises, of low pains and lower longings,
of sorrows that were degrading, of a grief that was
pitiable. Yet it was sincere in a certain kind
of vague yearning for the presence of the degraded
man to whom it was written, an affection
that was more like a confused instinct than a sentiment.
York folded it again carefully, and
placed it beneath the old man’s pillow.
Then he returned to his seat by the fire. A smile
that had been playing upon his face, deepening the
curves behind his mustache, and gradually overrunning
his clear gray eyes, presently faded away. It
was last to go from his eyes; and it left there, oddly
enough to those who did not know him, a tear.
He sat there for a long time, leaning
forward, his head upon his hands. The wind that
had been striving with the canvas roof all at once
lifted its edges, and a moonbeam slipped suddenly
in, and lay for a moment like a shining blade upon
his shoulder; and, knighted by its touch, straightway
plain Henry York arose, sustained, high-purposed and
self-reliant.
The rains had come at last. There
was already a visible greenness on the slopes of Heavytree
Hill; and the long, white track of the Wingdam road
was lost in outlying pools and ponds a hundred rods
from Monte Flat. The spent water-courses, whose
white bones had been sinuously trailed over the flat,
like the vertebrae of some forgotten saurian, were
full again; the dry bones moved once more in the valley;
and there was joy in the ditches, and a pardonable
extravagance in the columns of “The Monte Flat
Monitor.” “Never before in the history
of the county has the yield been so satisfactory.
Our contemporary of ‘The Hillside Beacon,’
who yesterday facetiously alluded to the fact (?)
that our best citizens were leaving town in ‘dugouts,’
on account of the flood, will be glad to hear that
our distinguished fellow-townsman, Mr. Henry York,
now on a visit to his relatives in the East, lately
took with him in his ‘dugout’ the modest
sum of fifty thousand dollars, the result of one week’s
clean-up. We can imagine,” continued that
sprightly journal, “that no such misfortune
is likely to overtake Hillside this season. And
yet we believe ‘The Beacon’ man wants
a railroad.” A few journals broke out into
poetry. The operator at Simpson’s Crossing
telegraphed to “The Sacramento Universe”
“All day the low clouds have shook their garnered
fulness down.” A San Francisco journal lapsed
into noble verse, thinly disguised as editorial prose:
“Rejoice: the gentle rain has come, the
bright and pearly rain, which scatters blessings on
the hills, and sifts them o’er the plain.
Rejoice,” &c. Indeed, there was only one
to whom the rain had not brought blessing, and that
was Plunkett. In some mysterious and darksome
way, it had interfered with the perfection of his
new method of reducing ores, and thrown the advent
of that invention back another season. It had
brought him down to an habitual seat in the bar-room,
where, to heedless and inattentive ears, he sat and
discoursed of the East and his family.
No one disturbed him. Indeed,
it was rumored that some funds had been lodged with
the landlord, by a person or persons unknown, whereby
his few wants were provided for. His mania for
that was the charitable construction which Monte Flat
put upon his conduct was indulged, even
to the extent of Monte Flat’s accepting his invitation
to dine with his family on Christmas Day, an
invitation extended frankly to every one with whom
the old man drank or talked. But one day, to everybody’s
astonishment, he burst into the bar-room, holding an
open letter in his hand. It read as follows:
“Be ready to meet your family
at the new cottage on Heavytree Hill on Christmas
Day. Invite what friends you choose.
“Henry York.”
The letter was handed round in silence.
The old man, with a look alternating between hope
and fear, gazed in the faces of the group. The
doctor looked up significantly, after a pause.
“It’s a forgery evidently,” he said
in a low voice. “He’s cunning enough
to conceive it (they always are); but you’ll
find he’ll fail in executing it. Watch his
face! Old man,” he said suddenly,
in a loud peremptory tone, “this is a trick,
a forgery, and you know it. Answer me squarely,
and look me in the eye. Isn’t it so?”
The eyes of Plunkett stared a moment,
and then dropped weakly. Then, with a feebler
smile, he said, “You’re too many for me,
boys. The Doc’s right. The little
game’s up. You can take the old man’s
hat;” and so, tottering, trembling, and chuckling,
he dropped into silence and his accustomed seat.
But the next day he seemed to have forgotten this
episode, and talked as glibly as ever of the approaching
festivity.
And so the days and weeks passed until
Christmas a bright, clear day, warmed with
south winds, and joyous with the resurrection of springing
grasses broke upon Monte Flat. And
then there was a sudden commotion in the hotel bar-room;
and Abner Dean stood beside the old man’s chair,
and shook him out of a slumber to his feet. “Rouse
up, old man. York is here, with your wife and
daughter, at the cottage on Heavytree. Come,
old man. Here, boys, give him a lift;” and
in another moment a dozen strong and willing hands
had raised the old man, and bore him in triumph to
the street up the steep grade of Heavytree Hill, and
deposited him, struggling and confused, in the porch
of a little cottage. At the same instant two
women rushed forward, but were restrained by a gesture
from Henry York. The old man was struggling to
his feet. With an effort at last, he stood erect,
trembling, his eye fixed, a gray pallor on his cheek,
and a deep resonance in his voice.
“It’s all a trick, and
a lie! They ain’t no flesh and blood or
kin o’ mine. It ain’t my wife, nor
child. My daughter’s a beautiful girl a
beautiful girl, d’ye hear? She’s in
New York with her mother, and I’m going to fetch
her here. I said I’d go home, and I’ve
been home: d’ye hear me? I’ve
been home! It’s a mean trick you’re
playin’ on the old man. Let me go:
d’ye hear? Keep them women off me!
Let me go! I’m going I’m
going home!”
His hands were thrown up convulsively
in the air, and, half turning round, he fell sideways
on the porch, and so to the ground. They picked
him up hurriedly, but too late. He had gone home.