He lived alone. I do not think
this peculiarity arose from any wish to withdraw his
foolishness from the rest of the camp, nor was it probable
that the combined wisdom of Five Forks ever drove him
into exile. My impression is, that he lived alone
from choice, a choice he made long before
the camp indulged in any criticism of his mental capacity.
He was much given to moody reticence, and, although
to outward appearances a strong man, was always complaining
of ill-health. Indeed, one theory of his isolation
was, that it afforded him better opportunities for
taking medicine, of which he habitually consumed large
quantities.
His folly first dawned upon Five Forks
through the post-office windows. He was, for
a long time, the only man who wrote home by every mail;
his letters being always directed to the same person, a
woman. Now, it so happened that the bulk of the
Five Forks correspondence was usually the other way.
There were many letters received (the majority being
in the female hand), but very few answered. The
men received them indifferently, or as a matter of
course. A few opened and read them on the spot,
with a barely repressed smile of self-conceit, or quite
as frequently glanced over them with undisguised impatience.
Some of the letters began with “My dear husband;”
and some were never called for. But the fact
that the only regular correspondent of Five Forks never
received any reply became at last quite notorious.
Consequently, when an envelope was received, bearing
the stamp of the “dead letter office,”
addressed to “The Fool,” under the more
conventional title of “Cyrus Hawkins,”
there was quite a fever of excitement. I do not
know how the secret leaked out; but it was eventually
known to the camp, that the envelope contained Hawkins’s
own letters returned. This was the first evidence
of his weakness. Any man who repeatedly wrote
to a woman who did not reply must be a fool.
I think Hawkins suspected that his folly was known
to the camp; but he took refuge in symptoms of chills
and fever, which he at once developed, and effected
a diversion with three bottles of Indian cholagogue
and two boxes of pills. At all events, at the
end of a week, he resumed a pen stiffened by tonics,
with all his old epistolatory pertinacity. This
time the letters had a new address.
In those days a popular belief obtained
in the mines, that luck particularly favored the foolish
and unscientific. Consequently, when Hawkins
struck a “pocket” in the hillside near
his solitary cabin, there was but little surprise.
“He will sink it all in the next hole”
was the prevailing belief, predicated upon the usual
manner in which the possessor of “nigger luck”
disposed of his fortune. To everybody’s
astonishment, Hawkins, after taking out about eight
thousand dollars, and exhausting the pocket, did not
prospect for another. The camp then waited patiently
to see what he would do with his money. I think,
however, that it was with the greatest difficulty their
indignation was kept from taking the form of a personal
assault when it became known that he had purchased
a draft for eight thousand dollars, in favor of “that
woman.” More than this, it was finally whispered
that the draft was returned to him as his letters
had been, and that he was ashamed to reclaim the money
at the express-office. “It wouldn’t
be a bad specilation to go East, get some smart gal,
for a hundred dollars, to dress herself up and represent
that ‘Hag,’ and jest freeze onto that
eight thousand,” suggested a far-seeing financier.
I may state here, that we always alluded to Hawkins’s
fair unknown as the “Hag” without having,
I am confident, the least justification for that epithet.
That the “Fool” should
gamble seemed eminently fit and proper. That he
should occasionally win a large stake, according to
that popular theory which I have recorded in the preceding
paragraph, appeared, also, a not improbable or inconsistent
fact. That he should, however, break the faro
bank which Mr. John Hamlin had set up in Five Forks,
and carry off a sum variously estimated at from ten
to twenty thousand dollars, and not return the next
day, and lose the money at the same table, really
appeared incredible. Yet such was the fact.
A day or two passed without any known investment of
Mr. Hawkins’s recently-acquired capital.
“Ef he allows to send it to that ‘Hag,’”
said one prominent citizen, “suthin’ ought
to be done. It’s jest ruinin’ the
reputation of this yer camp, this sloshin’
around o’ capital on non-residents ez don’t
claim it!” “It’s settin’ an
example o’ extravagance,” said another,
“ez is little better nor a swindle. Thais
mor’n five men in this camp, thet, hearin’
thet Hawkins hed sent home eight thousand dollars,
must jest rise up and send home their hard earnings
too! And then to think thet thet eight thousand
was only a bluff, after all, and thet it’s lyin’
there on call in Adams & Co.’s bank! Well,
I say it’s one o’ them things a vigilance
committee oughter look into.”
When there seemed no possibility of
this repetition of Hawkins’s folly, the anxiety
to know what he had really done with his money became
intense. At last a self-appointed committee of
four citizens dropped artfully, but to outward appearances
carelessly, upon him in his seclusion. When some
polite formalities had been exchanged, and some easy
vituperation of a backward season offered by each of
the parties, Tom Wingate approached the subject.
“Sorter dropped heavy on Jack
Hamlin the other night, didn’t ye? He allows
you didn’t give him no show for revenge.
I said you wasn’t no such d d
fool; didn’t I, Dick?” continued the artful
Wingate, appealing to a confederate.
“Yes,” said Dick promptly.
“You said twenty thousand dollars wasn’t
goin’ to be thrown around recklessly. You
said Cyrus had suthin’ better to do with his
capital,” super-added Dick with gratuitous mendacity.
“I disremember now what partickler investment
you said he was goin’ to make with it,”
he continued, appealing with easy indifference to his
friend.
Of course Wingate did not reply, but
looked at the “Fool,” who, with a troubled
face, was rubbing his legs softly. After a pause,
he turned deprecatingly toward his visitors.
“Ye didn’t enny of ye
ever hev a sort of tremblin’ in your legs, a
kind o’ shakiness from the knee down? Suthin’,”
he continued, slightly brightening with his topic, “suthin’
that begins like chills, and yet ain’t chills?
A kind o’ sensation of goneness here, and a kind
o’ feelin’ as it you might die suddint? when
Wright’s Pills don’t somehow reach the
spot, and quinine don’t fetch you?”
“No!” said Wingate with
a curt directness, and the air of authoritatively
responding for his friends, “no, never
had. You was speakin’ of this yer investment.”
“And your bowels all the time
irregular?” continued Hawkins, blushing under
Wingate’s eye, and yet clinging despairingly
to his theme, like a shipwrecked mariner to his plank.
Wingate did not reply, but glanced
significantly at the rest. Hawkins evidently
saw this recognition of his mental deficiency, and
said apologetically, “You was saying suthin’
about my investment?”
“Yes,” said Wingate, so
rapidly as to almost take Hawkins’s breath away, “the
investment you made in”
“Rafferty’s Ditch,” said the “Fool”
timidly.
For a moment, the visitors could only
stare blankly at each other. “Rafferty’s
Ditch,” the one notorious failure of Five Forks! Rafferty’s
Ditch, the impracticable scheme of an utterly unpractical
man! Rafferty’s Ditch, a ridiculous
plan for taking water that could not be got to a place
where it wasn’t wanted! Rafferty’s
Ditch, that had buried the fortunes of Rafferty and
twenty wretched stockholders in its muddy depths!
“And thet’s it, is it?”
said Wingate, after a gloomy pause. “Thet’s
it! I see it all now, boys. That’s
how ragged Pat Rafferty went down to San Francisco
yesterday in store-clothes, and his wife and four children
went off in a kerridge to Sacramento. Thet’s
why them ten workmen of his, ez hadn’t a cent
to bless themselves with, was playin’ billiards
last night, and eatin’ isters. Thet’s
whar that money kum frum, one hundred dollars
to pay for the long advertisement of the new issue
of ditch stock in the ‘Times’ yesterday.
Thet’s why them six strangers were booked at
the Magnolia hotel yesterday. Don’t you
see? It’s thet money and that
’Fool’!”
The “Fool” sat silent. The visitors
rose without a word.
“You never took any of them
Indian Vegetable Pills?” asked Hawkins timidly
of Wingate.
“No!” roared Wingate as he opened the
door.
“They tell me, that, took with
the Panacea, they was out o’ the Panacea
when I went to the drug-store last week, they
say, that, took with the Panacea, they always effect
a certin cure.” But by this time, Wingate
and his disgusted friends had retreated, slamming the
door on the “Fool” and his ailments.
Nevertheless, in six months the whole
affair was forgotten: the money had been spent;
the “Ditch” had been purchased by a company
of Boston capitalists, fired by the glowing description
of an Eastern tourist, who had spent one drunken night
at Five Forks; and I think even the mental condition
of Hawkins might have remained undisturbed by criticism,
but for a singular incident.
It was during an exciting political
campaign, when party-feeling ran high, that the irascible
Capt. McFadden of Sacramento visited Five Forks.
During a heated discussion in the Prairie Rose Saloon,
words passed between the captain and the Hon. Calhoun
Bungstarter, ending in a challenge. The captain
bore the infelicitous reputation of being a notorious
duellist and a dead-shot. The captain was unpopular.
The captain was believed to have been sent by the
opposition for a deadly purpose; and the captain was,
moreover, a stranger. I am sorry to say that
with Five Forks this latter condition did not carry
the quality of sanctity or reverence that usually
obtains among other nomads. There was, consequently,
some little hesitation when the captain turned upon
the crowd, and asked for some one to act as his friend.
To everybody’s astonishment, and to the indignation
of many, the “Fool” stepped forward, and
offered himself in that capacity. I do not know
whether Capt. McFadden would have chosen him voluntarily;
but he was constrained, in the absence of a better
man, to accept his services.
The duel never took place. The
preliminaries were all arranged, the spot indicated;
the men were present with their seconds; there was
no interruption from without; there was no explanation
or apology passed but the duel did not
take place. It may be readily imagined that these
facts, which were all known to Five Forks, threw the
whole community into a fever of curiosity. The
principals, the surgeon, and one second left town
the next day. Only the “Fool” remained.
He resisted all questioning, declaring himself
held in honor not to divulge: in short, conducted
himself with consistent but exasperating folly.
It was not until six months had passed, that Col.
Starbottle, the second of Calhoun Bungstarter, in
a moment of weakness, superinduced by the social glass,
condescended to explain. I should not do justice
to the parties, if I did not give that explanation
in the colonel’s own words. I may remark,
in passing, that the characteristic dignity of Col.
Starbottle always became intensified by stimulants,
and that, by the same process, all sense of humor
was utterly eliminated.
“With the understanding that
I am addressing myself confidentially to men of honor,”
said the colonel, elevating his chest above the bar-room
counter of the Prairie Rose Saloon, “I trust
that it will not be necessary for me to protect myself
from levity, as I was forced to do in Sacramento on
the only other occasion when I entered into an explanation
of this delicate affair by er er calling
the individual to a personal account er.
I do not believe,” added the colonel, slightly
waving his glass of liquor in the air with a graceful
gesture of courteous deprecation, “knowing what
I do of the present company, that such a course of
action is required here. Certainly not, sir, in
the home of Mr. Hawkins er the
gentleman who represented Mr. Bungstarter, whose conduct,
ged, sir, is worthy of praise, blank me!”
Apparently satisfied with the gravity
and respectful attention of his listeners, Col.
Starbottle smiled relentingly and sweetly, closed his
eyes half-dreamily, as if to recall his wandering thoughts,
and began,
“As the spot selected was nearest
the tenement of Mr. Hawkins, it was agreed that the
parties should meet there. They did so promptly
at half-past six. The morning being chilly, Mr.
Hawkins extended the hospitalities of his house with
a bottle of Bourbon whiskey, of which all partook
but myself. The reason for that exception is,
I believe, well known. It is my invariable custom
to take brandy a wineglassful in a cup
of strong coffee immediately on rising.
It stimulates the functions, sir, without producing
any blank derangement of the nerves.”
The barkeeper, to whom, as an expert,
the colonel had graciously imparted this information,
nodded approvingly; and the colonel, amid a breathless
silence, went on.
“We were about twenty minutes
in reaching the spot. The ground was measured,
the weapons were loaded, when Mr. Bungstarter confided
to me the information that he was unwell, and in great
pain. On consultation with Mr. Hawkins, it appeared
that his principal, in a distant part of the field,
was also suffering, and in great pain. The symptoms
were such as a medical man would pronounce ‘choleraic.’
I say would have pronounced; for, on examination,
the surgeon was also found to be er in
pain, and, I regret to say, expressing himself in language
unbecoming the occasion. His impression was, that
some powerful drug had been administered. On
referring the question to Mr. Hawkins, he remembered
that the bottle of whiskey partaken by them contained
a medicine which he had been in the habit of taking,
but which, having failed to act upon him, he had concluded
to be generally ineffective, and had forgotten.
His perfect willingness to hold himself personally
responsible to each of the parties, his genuine concern
at the disastrous effect of the mistake, mingled with
his own alarm at the state of his system, which er failed
to er respond to the peculiar
qualities of the medicine, was most becoming to him
as a man of honor and a gentleman. After an hour’s
delay, both principals being completely exhausted,
and abandoned by the surgeon, who was unreasonably
alarmed at his own condition, Mr. Hawkins and I agreed
to remove our men to Markleville. There, after
a further consultation with Mr. Hawkins, an amicable
adjustment of all difficulties, honorable to both parties,
and governed by profound secrecy, was arranged.
I believe,” added the colonel, looking around,
and setting down his glass, “no gentleman has
yet expressed himself other than satisfied with the
result.”
Perhaps it was the colonel’s
manner; but, whatever was the opinion of Five Forks
regarding the intellectual display of Mr. Hawkins in
this affair, there was very little outspoken criticism
at the moment. In a few weeks the whole thing
was forgotten, except as part of the necessary record
of Hawkins’s blunders, which was already a pretty
full one. Again, some later follies conspired
to obliterate the past, until, a year later, a valuable
lead was discovered in the “Blazing Star”
tunnel, in the hill where he lived; and a large sum
was offered him for a portion of his land on the hilltop.
Accustomed as Five Forks had become to the exhibition
of his folly, it was with astonishment that they learned
that he resolutely and decidedly refused the offer.
The reason that he gave was still more astounding, he
was about to build.
To build a house upon property available
for mining-purposes was preposterous; to build at
all, with a roof already covering him, was an act
of extravagance; to build a house of the style he proposed
was simply madness.
Yet here were facts. The plans
were made, and the lumber for the new building was
already on the ground, while the shaft of the “Blazing
Star” was being sunk below. The site was,
in reality, a very picturesque one, the building itself
of a style and quality hitherto unknown in Five Forks.
The citizens, at first sceptical, during their moments
of recreation and idleness gathered doubtingly about
the locality. Day by day, in that climate of
rapid growths, the building, pleasantly known in the
slang of Five Forks as the “Idiot Asylum,”
rose beside the green oaks and clustering firs of
Hawkins Hill, as if it were part of the natural phenomena.
At last it was completed. Then Mr. Hawkins proceeded
to furnish it with an expensiveness and extravagance
of outlay quite in keeping with his former idiocy.
Carpets, sofas, mirrors, and finally a piano, the
only one known in the county, and brought at great
expense from Sacramento, kept curiosity
at a fever-heat. More than that, there were articles
and ornaments which a few married experts declared
only fit for women. When the furnishing of the
house was complete, it had occupied two
months of the speculative and curious attention of
the camp, Mr. Hawkins locked the front-door,
put the key in his pocket, and quietly retired to
his more humble roof, lower on the hillside.
I have not deemed it necessary to
indicate to the intelligent reader all of the theories
which obtained in Five Forks during the erection of
the building. Some of them may be readily imagined.
That the “Hag” had, by artful coyness
and systematic reticence, at last completely subjugated
the “Fool,” and that the new house was
intended for the nuptial bower of the (predestined)
unhappy pair, was, of course, the prevailing opinion.
But when, after a reasonable time had elapsed, and
the house still remained untenanted, the more exasperating
conviction forced itself upon the general mind, that
the “Fool” had been for the third time
imposed upon; when two months had elapsed, and there
seemed no prospect of a mistress for the new house, I
think public indignation became so strong, that, had
the “Hag” arrived, the marriage would have
been publicly prevented. But no one appeared
that seemed to answer to this idea of an available
tenant; and all inquiry of Mr. Hawkins as to his intention
in building a house, and not renting it, or occupying
it, failed to elicit any further information.
The reasons that he gave were felt to be vague, evasive,
and unsatisfactory. He was in no hurry to move,
he said. When he was ready, it surely was
not strange that he should like to have his house
all ready to receive him. He was often seen upon
the veranda, of a summer evening, smoking a cigar.
It is reported that one night the house was observed
to be brilliantly lighted from garret to basement;
that a neighbor, observing this, crept toward the
open parlor-window, and, looking in, espied the “Fool”
accurately dressed in evening costume, lounging upon
a sofa in the drawing-room, with the easy air of socially
entertaining a large party. Notwithstanding this,
the house was unmistakably vacant that evening, save
for the presence of the owner, as the witness afterward
testified. When this story was first related,
a few practical men suggested the theory that Mr.
Hawkins was simply drilling himself in the elaborate
duties of hospitality against a probable event in his
history. A few ventured the belief that the house
was haunted. The imaginative editor of the Five
Forks “Record” evolved from the depths
of his professional consciousness a story that Hawkins’s
sweetheart had died, and that he regularly entertained
her spirit in this beautifully furnished mausoleum.
The occasional spectacle of Hawkins’s tall figure
pacing the veranda on moonlight nights lent some credence
to this theory, until an unlooked-for incident diverted
all speculation into another channel.
It was about this time that a certain
wild, rude valley, in the neighborhood of Five Forks,
had become famous as a picturesque resort. Travellers
had visited it, and declared that there were more cubic
yards of rough stone cliff, and a waterfall of greater
height, than any they had visited. Correspondents
had written it up with extravagant rhetoric and inordinate
poetical quotation. Men and women who had never
enjoyed a sunset, a tree, or a flower, who had never
appreciated the graciousness or meaning of the yellow
sunlight that flecked their homely doorways, or the
tenderness of a midsummer’s night, to whose moonlight
they bared their shirt-sleeves or their tulle dresses,
came from thousands of miles away to calculate the
height of this rock, to observe the depth of this
chasm, to remark upon the enormous size of this unsightly
tree, and to believe with ineffable self-complacency
that they really admired Nature. And so it came
to pass, that, in accordance with the tastes or weaknesses
of the individual, the more prominent and salient points
of the valley were christened; and there was a “Lace
Handkerchief Fall,” and the “Tears of
Sympathy Cataract,” and one distinguished orator’s
“Peak,” and several “Mounts”
of various noted people, living or dead, and an “Exclamation-Point,”
and a “Valley of Silent Adoration.”
And, in course of time, empty soda-water bottles were
found at the base of the cataract, and greasy newspapers,
and fragments of ham-sandwiches, lay at the dusty
roots of giant trees. With this, there were frequent
irruptions of closely-shaven and tightly-cravated men,
and delicate, flower-faced women, in the one long
street of Five Forks, and a scampering of mules, and
an occasional procession of dusty brown-linen cavalry.
A year after “Hawkins’s
Idiot Asylum” was completed, one day there drifted
into the valley a riotous cavalcade of “school-marms,”
teachers of the San Francisco public schools, out for
a holiday. Not severely-spectacled Minervas,
and chastely armed and mailed Pallases, but, I fear,
for the security of Five Forks, very human, charming,
and mischievous young women. At least, so the
men thought, working in the ditches, and tunnelling
on the hillside; and when, in the interests of science,
and the mental advancement of juvenile posterity, it
was finally settled that they should stay in Five
Forks two or three days for the sake of visiting the
various mines, and particularly the “Blazing
Star” tunnel, there was some flutter of masculine
anxiety. There was a considerable inquiry for
“store-clothes,” a hopeless overhauling
of old and disused raiment, and a general demand fox
“boiled shirts” and the barber.
Meanwhile, with that supreme audacity
and impudent hardihood of the sex when gregarious,
the school-marms rode through the town, admiring openly
the handsome faces and manly figures that looked up
from the ditches, or rose behind the cars of ore at
the mouths of tunnels. Indeed, it is alleged
that Jenny Forester, backed and supported by seven
other equally shameless young women, had openly and
publicly waved her handkerchief to the florid Hercules
of Five Forks, one Tom Flynn, formerly of Virginia,
leaving that good-natured but not over-bright giant
pulling his blonde mustaches in bashful amazement.
It was a pleasant June afternoon that
Miss Milly Arnot, principal of the primary department
of one of the public schools of San Francisco, having
evaded her companions, resolved to put into operation
a plan which had lately sprung up in her courageous
and mischief-loving fancy. With that wonderful
and mysterious instinct of her sex, from whom no secrets
of the affections are hid, and to whom all hearts
are laid open, she had heard the story of Hawkins’s
folly, and the existence of the “Idiot Asylum.”
Alone, on Hawkins Hill, she had determined to penetrate
its seclusion. Skirting the underbrush at the
foot of the hill, she managed to keep the heaviest
timber between herself and the “Blazing Star”
tunnel at its base, as well as the cabin of Hawkins,
half-way up the ascent, until, by a circuitous route,
at last she reached, unobserved, the summit.
Before her rose, silent, darkened, and motionless,
the object of her search. Here her courage failed
her, with all the characteristic inconsequence of
her sex. A sudden fear of all the dangers she
had safely passed bears, tarantulas, drunken
men, and lizards came upon her. For
a moment, as she afterward expressed it, “she
thought she should die.” With this belief,
probably, she gathered three large stones, which she
could hardly lift, for the purpose of throwing a great
distance; put two hair-pins in her mouth; and carefully
re-adjusted with both hands two stray braids of her
lovely blue-black mane, which had fallen in gathering
the stones. Then she felt in the pockets of her
linen duster for her card-case, handkerchief, pocketbook,
and smelling-bottle, and, finding them intact, suddenly
assumed an air of easy, ladylike unconcern, went up
the steps of the veranda, and demurely pulled the
front doorbell, which she knew would not be answered.
After a decent pause, she walked around the encompassing
veranda, examining the closed shutters of the French
windows until she found one that yielded to her touch.
Here she paused again to adjust her coquettish hat
by the mirror-like surface of the long sash-window,
that reflected the full length of her pretty figure.
And then she opened the window, and entered the room.
Although long closed, the house had
a smell of newness and of fresh paint, that was quite
unlike the mouldiness of the conventional haunted
house. The bright carpets, the cheerful walls,
the glistening oil-cloths, were quite inconsistent
with the idea of a ghost. With childish curiosity,
she began to explore the silent house, at first timidly, opening
the doors with a violent push, and then stepping back
from the threshold to make good a possible retreat, and
then more boldly, as she became convinced of her security
and absolute loneliness. In one of the chambers the
largest there were fresh flowers in a vase,
evidently gathered that morning; and, what seemed still
more remarkable, the pitchers and ewers were freshly
filled with water. This obliged Miss Milly to
notice another singular fact, namely, that the house
was free from dust, the one most obtrusive and penetrating
visitor of Five Forks. The floors and carpets
had been recently swept, the chairs and furniture
carefully wiped and dusted. If the house was
haunted, it was possessed by a spirit who had none
of the usual indifference to decay and mould.
And yet the beds had evidently never been slept in,
the very springs of the chair in which she sat creaked
stiffly at the novelty; the closet-doors opened with
the reluctance of fresh paint and varnish; and in
spite of the warmth, cleanliness, and cheerfulness
of furniture and decoration, there was none of the
ease of tenancy and occupation. As Miss Milly
afterward confessed, she longed to “tumble things
around;” and, when she reached the parlor or
drawing-room again, she could hardly resist the desire.
Particularly was she tempted by a closed piano, that
stood mutely against the wall. She thought she
would open it just to see who was the maker.
That done, it would be no harm to try its tone.
She did so, with one little foot on the soft pedal.
But Miss Milly was too good a player, and too enthusiastic
a musician, to stop at half-measures. She tried
it again, this time so sincerely, that the whole house
seemed to spring into voice. Then she stopped
and listened. There was no response: the
empty rooms seemed to have relapsed into their old
stillness. She stepped out on the veranda.
A woodpecker recommenced his tapping on an adjacent
tree: the rattle of a cart in the rocky gulch
below the hill came faintly up. No one was to
be seen far or near. Miss Milly, re-assured,
returned. She again ran her fingers over the
keys, stopped, caught at a melody running in her mind,
half played it, and then threw away all caution.
Before five minutes had elapsed, she had entirely
forgotten herself, and with her linen duster thrown
aside, her straw hat flung on the piano, her white
hands bared, and a black loop of her braided hair
hanging upon her shoulder, was fairly embarked upon
a flowing sea of musical recollection.
She had played, perhaps, half an hour,
when having just finished an elaborate symphony, and
resting her hands on the keys, she heard very distinctly
and unmistakably the sound of applause from without.
In an instant the fires of shame and indignation leaped
into her cheeks; and she rose from the instrument,
and ran to the window, only in time to catch sight
of a dozen figures in blue and red flannel shirts vanishing
hurriedly through the trees below.
Miss Milly’s mind was instantly
made up. I think I have already intimated, that,
under the stimulus of excitement, she was not wanting
in courage; and as she quietly resumed her gloves,
hat, and duster, she was not, perhaps, exactly the
young person that it would be entirely safe for the
timid, embarrassed, or inexperienced of my sex to meet
alone. She shut down the piano; and having carefully
reclosed all the windows and doors, and restored the
house to its former desolate condition, she stepped
from the veranda, and proceeded directly to the cabin
of the unintellectual Hawkins, that reared its adobe
chimney above the umbrage a quarter of a mile below.
The door opened instantly to her impulsive
knock, and the “Fool of Five Forks” stood
before her. Miss Milly had never before seen the
man designated by this infelicitous title; and as
he stepped backward, in half courtesy and half astonishment,
she was, for the moment, disconcerted. He was
tall, finely formed, and dark-bearded. Above cheeks
a little hollowed by care and ill-health shone a pair
of hazel eyes, very large, very gentle, but inexpressibly
sad and mournful. This was certainly not the
kind of man Miss Milly had expected to see; yet, after
her first embarrassment had passed, the very circumstance,
oddly enough, added to her indignation, and stung
her wounded pride still more deeply. Nevertheless,
the arch hypocrite instantly changed her tactics with
the swift intuition of her sex.
“I have come,” she said
with a dazzling smile, infinitely more dangerous than
her former dignified severity, “I
have come to ask your pardon for a great liberty I
have just taken. I believe the new house above
us on the hill is yours. I was so much pleased
with its exterior, that I left my friends for a moment
below here,” she continued artfully, with a
slight wave of the hand, as if indicating a band of
fearless Amazons without, and waiting to avenge any
possible insult offered to one of their number, “and
ventured to enter it. Finding it unoccupied, as
I had been told, I am afraid I had the audacity to
sit down and amuse myself for a few moments at the
piano, while waiting for my friends.”
Hawkins raised his beautiful eyes
to hers. He saw a very pretty girl, with frank
gray eyes glistening with excitement, with two red,
slightly freckled cheeks glowing a little under his
eyes, with a short scarlet upper-lip turned back,
like a rose-leaf, over a little line of white teeth,
as she breathed somewhat hurriedly in her nervous excitement.
He saw all this calmly, quietly, and, save for the
natural uneasiness of a shy, reticent man, I fear
without a quickening of his pulse.
“I knowed it,” he said simply. “I
heerd ye as I kem up.”
Miss Milly was furious at his grammar,
his dialect, his coolness, and, still more, at the
suspicion that he was an active member of her in visible
elaque.
“Ah!” she said, still
smiling. “Then I think I heard you”
“I reckon not,” he interrupted
gravely. “I didn’t stay long.
I found the boys hanging round the house, and I allowed
at first I’d go in and kinder warn you; but
they promised to keep still: and you looked so
comfortable, and wrapped up in your music, that I hadn’t
the heart to disturb you, and kem away. I hope,”
he added earnestly, “they didn’t let on
ez they heerd you. They ain’t a bad lot, them
Blazin’ Star boys though they’re
a little hard at times. But they’d no more
hurt ye then they would a a a
cat!” continued Mr. Hawkins, blushing with a
faint apprehension of the inelegance of his simile.
“No, no!” said Miss Milly,
feeling suddenly very angry with herself, the “Fool,”
and the entire male population of Five Forks.
“No! I have behaved foolishly, I suppose and,
if they had, it would have served me right.
But I only wanted to apologize to you. You’ll
find every thing as you left it. Good-day!”
She turned to go. Mr. Hawkins
began to feel embarrassed. “I’d have
asked ye to sit down,” he said finally, “if
it hed been a place fit for a lady. I oughter
done so, enny way. I don’t know what kept
me from it. But I ain’t well, miss.
Times I get a sort o’ dumb ager, it’s
the ditches, I think, miss, and I don’t
seem to hev my wits about me.”
Instantly Miss Arnot was all sympathy:
her quick woman’s heart was touched.
“Can I can any thing
be done?” she asked more timidly than she had
before spoken.
“No not onless ye
remember suthin’ about these pills.”
He exhibited a box containing about half a dozen.
“I forget the direction I don’t
seem to remember much, any way, these times. They’re
’Jones’s Vegetable Compound.’
If ye’ve ever took ’em, ye’ll remember
whether the reg’lar dose is eight. They
ain’t but six here. But perhaps ye never
tuk any,” he added deprecatingly.
“No,” said Miss Milly
curtly. She had usually a keen sense of the ludicrous;
but somehow Mr. Hawkins’s eccentricity only pained
her.
“Will you let me see you to
the foot of the hill?” he said again, after
another embarrassing pause.
Miss Arnot felt instantly that such
an act would condone her trespass in the eyes of the
world. She might meet some of her invisible admirers,
or even her companions; and, with all her erratic impulses,
she was, nevertheless, a woman, and did not entirely
despise the verdict of conventionality. She smiled
sweetly, and assented; and in another moment the two
were lost in the shadows of the wood.
Like many other apparently trivial
acts in an uneventful life, it was decisive.
As she expected, she met two or three of her late applauders,
whom, she fancied, looked sheepish and embarrassed;
she met, also, her companions looking for her in some
alarm, who really appeared astonished at her escort,
and, she fancied, a trifle envious of her evident
success. I fear that Miss Arnot, in response to
their anxious inquiries, did not state entirely the
truth, but, without actual assertion, led them to
believe that she had, at a very early stage of the
proceeding, completely subjugated this weak-minded
giant, and had brought him triumphantly to her feet.
From telling this story two or three times, she got
finally to believing that she had some foundation for
it, then to a vague sort of desire that it would eventually
prove to be true, and then to an equally vague yearning
to hasten that consummation. That it would redound
to any satisfaction of the “Fool” she did
not stop to doubt. That it would cure him of
his folly she was quite confident. Indeed, there
are very few of us, men or women, who do not believe
that even a hopeless love for ourselves is more conducive
to the salvation of the lover than a requited affection
for another.
The criticism of Five Forks was, as
the reader may imagine, swift and conclusive.
When it was found out that Miss Arnot was not the “Hag”
masquerading as a young and pretty girl, to the ultimate
deception of Five Forks in general, and the “Fool”
in particular, it was at once decided that nothing
but the speedy union of the “Fool” and
the “pretty school-marm” was consistent
with ordinary common sense. The singular good-fortune
of Hawkins was quite in accordance with the theory
of his luck as propounded by the camp. That,
after the “Hag” failed to make her appearance,
he should “strike a lead” in his own house,
without the trouble of “prospectin’,”
seemed to these casuists as a wonderful but inevitable
law. To add to these fateful probabilities, Miss
Arnot fell, and sprained her ankle, in the ascent
of Mount Lincoln, and was confined for some weeks
to the hotel after her companions had departed.
During this period, Hawkins was civilly but grotesquely
attentive. When, after a reasonable time had
elapsed, there still appeared to be no immediate prospect
of the occupancy of the new house, public opinion experienced
a singular change in regard to its theories of Mr.
Hawkins’s conduct. The “Hag”
was looked upon as a saint-like and long-suffering
martyr to the weaknesses and inconsistency of the
“Fool.” That, after erecting this
new house at her request, he had suddenly “gone
back” on her; that his celibacy was the result
of a long habit of weak proposal and subsequent shameless
rejection; and that he was now trying his hand on the
helpless schoolmarm, was perfectly plain to Five Forks.
That he should be frustrated in his attempts at any
cost was equally plain. Miss Milly suddenly found
herself invested with a rude chivalry that would have
been amusing, had it not been at times embarrassing;
that would have been impertinent, but for the almost
superstitious respect with which it was proffered.
Every day somebody from Five Forks rode out to inquire
the health of the fair patient. “Hez Hawkins
bin over yer to-day?” queried Tom Flynn, with
artful ease and indifference, as he leaned over Miss
Milly’s easy-chair on the veranda. Miss
Milly, with a faint pink flush on her cheek, was constrained
to answer, “No.” “Well, he sorter
sprained his foot agin a rock yesterday,” continued
Flynn with shameless untruthfulness. “You
mus’n’t think any thing o’ that,
Miss Arnot. He’ll be over yer to-morrer;
and meantime he told me to hand this yer bookay with
his re-gards, and this yer specimen.” And
Mr. Flynn laid down the flowers he had picked en route
against such an emergency, and presented respectfully
a piece of quartz and gold, which he had taken that
morning from his own sluice-box. “You mus’n’t
mind Hawkins’s ways, Miss Milly,” said
another sympathizing miner. “There ain’t
a better man in camp than that theer Cy Hawkins but
he don’t understand the ways o’ the world
with wimen. He hasn’t mixed as much with
society as the rest of us,” he added, with an
elaborate Chesterfieldian ease of manner; “but
he means well.” Meanwhile a few other sympathetic
tunnelmen were impressing upon Mr. Hawkins the necessity
of the greatest attention to the invalid. “It
won’t do, Hawkins,” they explained, “to
let that there gal go back to San Francisco and say,
that, when she was sick and alone, the only man in
Five Forks under whose roof she had rested, and at
whose table she had sat” (this was considered
a natural but pardonable exaggeration of rhetoric)
“ever threw off on her; and it sha’n’t
be done. It ain’t the square thing to Five
Forks.” And then the “Fool”
would rush away to the valley, and be received by
Miss Milly with a certain reserve of manner that finally
disappeared in a flush of color, some increased vivacity,
and a pardonable coquetry. And so the days passed.
Miss Milly grew better in health, and more troubled
in mind; and Mr. Hawkins became more and more embarrassed;
and Five Forks smiled, and rubbed its hands, and waited
for the approaching denoument. And then it came but
not, perhaps, in the manner that Five Forks had imagined.
It was a lovely afternoon in July
that a party of Eastern tourists rode into Five Forks.
They had just “done” the Valley of Big
Things; and, there being one or two Eastern capitalists
among the party, it was deemed advisable that a proper
knowledge of the practical mining-resources of California
should be added to their experience of the merely
picturesque in Nature. Thus far every thing had
been satisfactory; the amount of water which passed
over the Fall was large, owing to a backward season;
some snow still remained in the canyons near the highest
peaks; they had ridden round one of the biggest trees,
and through the prostrate trunk of another. To
say that they were delighted is to express feebly
the enthusiasm of these ladies and gentlemen, drunk
with the champagny hospitality of their entertainers,
the utter novelty of scene, and the dry, exhilarating
air of the valley. One or two had already expressed
themselves ready to live and die there; another had
written a glowing account to the Eastern press, depreciating
all other scenery in Europe and America; and, under
these circumstances, it was reasonably expected that
Five Forks would do its duty, and equally impress
the stranger after its own fashion.
Letters to this effect were sent from
San Francisco by prominent capitalists there; and,
under the able superintendence of one of their agents,
the visitors were taken in hand, shown “what
was to be seen,” carefully restrained from observing
what ought not to be visible, and so kept in a blissful
and enthusiastic condition. And so the graveyard
of Five Forks, in which but two of the occupants had
died natural deaths; the dreary, ragged cabins on
the hillsides, with their sad-eyed, cynical, broken-spirited
occupants, toiling on day by day for a miserable pittance,
and a fare that a self-respecting Eastern mechanic
would have scornfully rejected, were not
a part of the Eastern visitors’ recollection.
But the hoisting works and machinery of the “Blazing
Star Tunnel Company” was, the Blazing
Star Tunnel Company, whose “gentlemanly superintendent”
had received private information from San Francisco
to do the “proper thing” for the party.
Wherefore the valuable heaps of ore in the company’s
works were shown; the oblong bars of gold, ready for
shipment, were playfully offered to the ladies who
could lift and carry them away unaided; and even the
tunnel itself, gloomy, fateful, and peculiar, was
shown as part of the experience; and, in the noble
language of one correspondent, “The wealth of
Five Forks, and the peculiar inducements that it offered
to Eastern capitalists,” were established beyond
a doubt. And then occurred a little incident,
which, as an unbiassed spectator, I am free to say
offered no inducements to anybody whatever, but which,
for its bearing upon the central figure of this veracious
chronicle, I cannot pass over.
It had become apparent to one or two
more practical and sober-minded in the party, that
certain portions of the “Blazing Star”
tunnel (owing, perhaps, to the exigencies of a flattering
annual dividend) were economically and imperfectly
“shored” and supported, and were, consequently,
unsafe, insecure, and to be avoided. Nevertheless,
at a time when champagne corks were popping in dark
corners, and enthusiastic voices and happy laughter
rang through the half-lighted levels and galleries,
there came a sudden and mysterious silence. A
few lights dashed swiftly by in the direction of a
distant part of the gallery, and then there was a
sudden sharp issuing of orders, and a dull, ominous
rumble. Some of the visitors turned pale:
one woman fainted.
Something had happened. What?
“Nothing” (the speaker is fluent, but
uneasy) “one of the gentlemen, in
trying to dislodge a ‘specimen’ from the
wall, had knocked away a support. There had been
a ’cave’ the gentleman was
caught, and buried below his shoulders. It was
all right, they’d get him out in a moment only
it required great care to keep from extending the
‘cave.’ Didn’t know his name.
It was that little man, the husband of that lively
lady with the black eyes. Eh! Hullo, there!
Stop her! For God’s sake! Not that
way! She’ll fall from that shaft. She’ll
be killed!”
But the lively lady was already gone.
With staring black eyes, imploringly trying to pierce
the gloom, with hands and feet that sought to batter
and break down the thick darkness, with incoherent
cries and supplications following the moving
of ignis fatuus lights ahead, she ran, and
ran swiftly! ran over treacherous foundations,
ran by yawning gulfs, ran past branching galleries
and arches, ran wildly, ran despairingly, ran blindly,
and at last ran into the arms of the “Fool of
Five Forks.”
In an instant she caught at his hand.
“Oh, save him!” she cried. “You
belong here; you know this dreadful place: bring
me to him. Tell me where to go, and what to do,
I implore you! Quick, he is dying! Come!”
He raised his eyes to hers, and then,
with a sudden cry, dropped the rope and crowbar he
was carrying, and reeled against the wall.
“Annie!” he gasped slowly. “Is
it you?”
She caught at both his hands, brought
her face to his with staring eyes, murmured, “Good
God, Cyrus!” and sank upon her knees before him.
He tried to disengage the hand that
she wrung with passionate entreaty.
“No, no! Cyrus, you will
forgive me you will forget the past!
God has sent you here to-day. You will come with
me. You will you must save
him!”
“Save who?” cried Cyrus hoarsely.
“My husband!”
The blow was so direct, so strong
and overwhelming, that, even through her own stronger
and more selfish absorption, she saw it in the face
of the man, and pitied him.
“I thought you knew it,”
she faltered.
He did not speak, but looked at her
with fixed, dumb eyes. And then the sound of
distant voices and hurrying feet started her again
into passionate life. She once more caught his
hand.
“O Cyrus, hear me! If you
have loved me through all these years, you will not
fail me now. You must save him! You can!
You are brave and strong you always were,
Cyrus. You will save him, Cyrus, for my sake,
for the sake of your love for me! You will I
know it. God bless you!”
She rose as if to follow him, but,
at a gesture of command, she stood still. He
picked up the rope and crowbar slowly, and in a dazed,
blinded way, that, in her agony of impatience and
alarm, seemed protracted to cruel infinity. Then
he turned, and, raising her hand to his lips, kissed
it slowly, looked at her again, and the next moment
was gone.
He did not return; for at the end
of the next half-hour, when they laid before her the
half-conscious, breathing body of her husband, safe
and unharmed, but for exhaustion and some slight bruises,
she learned that the worst fears of the workmen had
been realized. In releasing him, a second cave
had taken place. They had barely time to snatch
away the helpless body of her husband, before the
strong frame of his rescuer, Cyrus Hawkins, was struck
and smitten down in his place.
For two hours he lay there, crushed
and broken-limbed, with a heavy beam lying across
his breast, in sight of all, conscious and patient.
For two hours they had labored around him, wildly,
despairingly, hopefully, with the wills of gods and
the strength of giants; and at the end of that time
they came to an upright timber, which rested its base
upon the beam. There was a cry for axes, and
one was already swinging in the air, when the dying
man called to them feebly,
“Don’t cut that upright!”
“Why?”
“It will bring down the whole gallery with it.”
“How?”
“It’s one of the foundations of my house.”
The axe fell from the workman’s
hand, and with a blanched face he turned to his fellows.
It was too true. They were in the uppermost gallery;
and the “cave” had taken place directly
below the new house. After a pause, the “Fool”
spoke again more feebly.
“The lady quick!”
They brought her, a wretched,
fainting creature, with pallid face and streaming
eyes, and fell back as she bent her face
above him.
“It was built for you, Annie
darling,” he said in a hurried whisper, “and
has been waiting up there for you and me all these
long days. It’s deeded to you, Annie; and
you must live there with him!
He will not mind that I shall be always near you;
for it stands above my grave.”
And he was right. In a few minutes
later, when he had passed away, they did not move
him, but sat by his body all night with a torch at
his feet and head. And the next day they walled
up the gallery as a vault; but they put no mark or
any sign thereon, trusting, rather, to the monument,
that, bright and cheerful, rose above him in the sunlight
of the hill. And those who heard the story said,
“This is not an evidence of death and gloom
and sorrow, as are other monuments, but is a sign of
life and light and hope, wherefore shall all know
that he who lies under it is what men call ’a
fool’.”