Mrs. Demorest was so fascinated by
the company of Dona Rosita Pico and her romantic memories,
that she prevailed upon that heart-broken but scarcely
attenuated young lady to prolong her visit beyond the
fortnight she had allotted to communion with the past.
For a day or two following her singular experience
in the garden, Mrs. Demorest plied her with questions
regarding the apparition she had seen, and finally
extorted from her the admission that she could not
positively swear to its being the real Johnson, or
even a perfectly consistent shade of that faithless
man. When Joan pointed out to her that such masculine
perfections as curling raven locks, long silken mustachios,
and dark eyes, were attributes by no means exclusive
to her lover, but were occasionally seen among other
less favored and even equally dangerous Americans,
Dona Rosita assented with less objection than Joan
anticipated. “Besides, dear,” said
Joan, eying her with feline watchfulness, “it
is four years since you’ve seen him, and surely
the man has either shaved since, or else he took a
ridiculous vow never to do it, and then he would be
more fully bearded.”
But Dona Rosita only shook her pretty
head. “Ah, but he have an air a
something I know not what you call so.”
She threw her shawl over her left shoulder, and as
far as a pair of soft blue eyes and comfortably pacific
features would admit, endeavored to convey an idea
of wicked and gloomy abstraction.
“You child,” said Joan, “that’s
nothing; they all of them do that. Why, there
was a stranger at the Oriental Hotel whom I met twice
when I was there just as mysterious, romantic,
and wicked-looking. And in fact they hinted terrible
things about him. Well! so much so, that Mr.
Demorest was quite foolish about my being barely civil
to him you understand and ”
She stopped suddenly, with a heightened color under
the fire of Rosita’s laughing eyes.
“Ah so Dona
Discretion! Tell to me all. Did our hoosband
eat him?”
Joan’s features suddenly tightened
to their old puritan rigidity. “Mr. Demorest
has reasons abundant reasons to
thoroughly understand and trust me,” she replied
in an austere voice.
Rosita looked at her a moment in mystification
and then shrugged her shoulders. The conversation
dropped. Nevertheless, it is worthy of being
recorded that from that moment the usual familiar allusions,
playful and serious, to Rosita’s mysterious
visitor began to diminish in frequency and finally
ceased. Even the news brought by Demorest of some
vague rumor in the pueblo that an intended attack
on the stage-coach had been frustrated by the authorities,
and that the vicinity had been haunted by incognitos
of both parties, failed to revive the discussion.
Meantime the slight excitement that
had stirred the sluggish life of the pueblo of San
Buenaventura had subsided. The posada of Senor
Mateo had lost its feverish and perplexing dual life;
the alley behind it no longer was congested by lounging
cigarette smokers; the compartment looking upon the
silent patio was unoccupied, and its chairs and tables
were empty. The two deputy sheriffs, of whom Senor
Mateo presumably knew very little, had fled; and the
mysterious Senor Johnson, of whom he still
presumably knew still less, had also disappeared.
For Senor Mateo’s knowledge of what transpired
in and about his posada, and of the character and
purposes of those who frequented it, was tinctured
by grave and philosophical doubts. This courteous
and dignified scepticism generally took the formula
of quién sabe to all frivolous and mundane inquiry.
He would affirm with strict verity that his omelettes
were unapproachable, his beds miraculous, his aguardiente
supreme, his house was even as your own.
Beyond these were questions with which the simply
finite and always discreet human intellect declined
to grapple.
The disturbing effect of Senor Corwin
upon a mind thus gravely constituted may be easily
imagined. Besides Ezekiel’s inordinate
capacity for useless or indiscreet information, it
was undeniable that his patent medicines had effected
a certain peaceful revolutionary movement in San Buenaventura.
A simple and superstitious community that had steadily
resisted the practical domestic and agricultural American
improvements, succumbed to the occult healing influences
of the Panacea and Jones’s Bitters. The
virtues of a mysterious balsam, more or less illuminated
with a colored mythological label, deeply impressed
them; and the exhibition of a circular, whereon a
celestial visitant was represented as descending with
a gross of Rogers’ Pills to a suffering but
admiring multitude, touched their religious sympathies
to such an extent that the good Padre Jose was obliged
to warn them from the pulpit of the diabolical character
of their hérésies of healing with the
natural result of yet more dangerously advertising
Ezekiel. There were those too who spoke under
their breath of the miraculous efficacy of these nostrums.
Had not Don Victor Arguello, whose respectable digestion,
exhausted by continuous pepper and garlic, failed him
suddenly, received an unexpected and pleasurable stimulus
from the New England rum, which was the basis of the
Jones Bitters? Had not the baker, tremulous from
excessive aguardiente, been soothed and sustained
by the invisible morphia, judiciously hidden in Blogg’s
Nerve Tonic? Nor had the wily Ezekiel forgotten
the weaker sex in their maiden and maternal requirements.
Unguents, that made silken their black but somewhat
coarsely fibrous tresses, opened charming possibilities
to the Señoritas; while soothing syrups lent
a peaceful repose to many a distracted mother’s
household. The success of Ezekiel was so marked
as to justify his return at the end of three weeks
with a fresh assortment and an undiminished audacity.
It was on his second visit that the
sceptical, non-committal policy of Senor Mateo was
sorely tried. Arriving at the posada one night,
Ezekiel became aware that his host was engaged in
some mysterious conference with a visitor who had
entered through the ordinary public room. The
view which the acute Ezekiel managed to get of the
stranger, however, was productive of no further discovery
than that he bore a faint and disreputable resemblance
to Blandford, and was handsome after a conscious,
reckless fashion, with an air of mingled bravado and
conceit. But an hour later, as Corwin was taking
the cooler air of the veranda before retiring to one
of the miraculous beds of the posada, he was amazed
at seeing what was apparently Blandford himself emerge
on horseback from the alley, and after a quick glance
towards the veranda, canter rapidly up the street.
Ezekiel’s first impression was to call to him,
but the sudden recollection that he parted from his
old master on confidential terms only three days before
in San Francisco, and that it was impossible for him
to be in the pueblo, stopped him with his fingers
meditatively in his beard. Then he turned in to
the posada, and hastily summoned Mateo.
The gentleman presented himself in
a state of such profound scepticism that it seemed
to have already communicated itself to his shoulders,
and gave him the appearance of having shrugged himself
into the room.
“Ha’ow long ago did Mr.
Johnson get here?” asked Corwin, lazily.
“Ah possibly then
there has been a Mr. Johnson?” This is a polite
doubt of his own perceptions and a courteous acceptance
of his questioner’s.
“Wa’al, I guess so.
Considerin’ I jest saw him with my own eyes,”
returned Ezekiel.
“Ah!” Mateo was relieved.
Might he congratulate the Senor Corwin, who must be
also relieved, and shake his respected hand. Bueno.
And then he had met this Senor Johnson? doubtless
a friend? And he was well? and all were happy?
“Look yer, Mattayo! What
I wanter know ez this. When did that man,
who has just ridden out of your alley, come here?
Sabe that it’s a plain question.”
Ah surely, of the clearest comprehension.
Bueno. It may have been last week or
even this week or perhaps yesterday or
of a possibility to-day. The Senor Corwin, who
was wise and omniscient, would comprehend that the
difficulty lay in deciding who was that man.
Perhaps a friend of the Senor Corwin perhaps
only one who looked like him. There existed might
Mateo point out a doubt.
Ezekiel regarded Mateo with a certain
grim appreciation. “Wa’al, is there
anybody here who looks like Johnson?”
Again there were the difficulty of
ascertaining perfectly how the Senor Johnson looked.
If the Senor Johnson was Americano, doubtless
there were other Americanos who had resembled him.
It was possible. The Senor Corwin had doubtless
observed for a little space a caballero who was here,
as it were, in the instant of the appearance of Senor
Johnson? Possibly there was a resemblance, and
yet
Corwin had certainly noticed this
resemblance, but it did not suit his cautious intellect
to fall in with any prevailing scepticism of his host.
Satisfied in his mind that Mateo was concealing something
from him, and equally satisfied that he would sooner
or later find it out, he grinned diabolically in the
face of that worthy man, and sought the meditation
of his miraculous couch. When he had departed,
the sceptic turned to his wife:
“This animal has been sniffing at the trail.”
“Truly but Mother
of God where is the discretion of our friend.
If he will continue to haunt the pueblo like a lovesick
chicken, he will get his neck wrung yet.”
Following out an ingenious idea of
his own, Ezekiel called the next day on the Demorests,
and in some occult fashion obtained an invitation to
stay under their hospitable roof during his sojourn
in Buenaventura. Perfectly aware that he owed
this courtesy more to Joan than to her husband, it
is probable that his grim enjoyment was not diminished
by the fact; while Joan, for reasons of her own, preferred
the constraint which the presence of another visitor
put upon Demorest’s uxoriousness. Of late,
too, there were times when Dona Rosita’s naïve
intelligence, which was not unlike the embarrassing
perceptions of a bright and half-spoiled child, was
in her way, and she would willingly have shared the
young lady’s company with her husband had Demorest
shown any sympathy for the girl. It was in the
faint hope that Ezekiel might in some way beguile
Rosita’s wandering attention that she had invited
him. The only difficulty lay in his uncouthness,
and in presenting to the heiress of the Picos
a man who had been formerly her own servant. Had
she attempted to conceal that fact she was satisfied
that Ezekiel’s independence and natural predilection
for embarrassing situations would have inevitably
revealed it. She had even gone so far as to consider
the propriety of investing him with a poor relationship
to her family, when Dona Rosita herself happily stopped
all further trouble. On her very first introduction
to him, that charming young lady at once accepted him
as a lunatic whose brains were turned by occult, scientific,
and medical study! Ah! she, Rosita, had heard
of such cases before. Had not a paternal ancestor
of hers, one Don Diego Castro, believed he had discovered
the elixir of youth. Had he not to that end refused
even to wash him the hand, to cut him the nail of
the finger and the hair of the head! Exalted
by that discovery, had he not been unsparingly uncomplimentary
to all humanity, especially to the weaker sex?
Even as the Senor Corwin!
Far from being offended at this ingenious
interpretation of his character, Ezekiel exhibited
a dry gratification over it, and even conceived an
unwholesome admiration of the fair critic; he haunted
her presence and preoccupied her society far beyond
Joan’s most sanguine expectations. He sat
in open-mouthed enjoyment of her at the table, he
waylaid her in the garden, he attempted to teach her
English. Dona Rosita received these extraordinary
advances in a no less extraordinary manner. In
the scant masculine atmosphere of the house, and the
somewhat rigid New England reserve that still pervaded
it, perhaps she languished a little, and was not averse
to a slight flirtation, even with a madman. Besides,
she assumed the attitude of exercising a wholesome
restraint over him. “If we are not found
dead in our bed one morning, and extracted of our
blood for a cordial, you shall thank to me for it,”
she said to Joan. “Also for the not empoisoning
of the coffee!”
So she permitted him to carry a chair
or hammock for her into the garden, to fetch the various
articles which she was continually losing, and which
he found with his usual penetration; and to supply
her with information, in which, however, he exercised
an unwonted caution. On the other hand, certain
naïve recollections and admissions, which in the quality
of a voluble child she occasionally imparted to this
“madman” in return, were in the proportion
of three to one.
It had been a hot day, and even the
usual sunset breeze had failed that evening to rock
the tops of the outlying pine-trees or cool the heated
tiles of the pueblo roofs. There was a hush and
latent expectancy in the air that reacted upon the
people with feverish unrest and uneasiness; even a
lull in the faintly whispering garden around the Demorests’
casa had affected the spirits of its inmates, causing
them to wander about in vague restlessness. Joan
had disappeared; Dona Rosita, under an olive-tree
in one of the deserted paths, and attended by the faithful
Ezekiel, had said it was “earthquake weather,”
and recalled, with a sign of the cross, a certain
dreadful day of her childhood, when el temblor had
shaken down one of the Mission towers. “You
shall see it now, as he have left it so it has remain
always,” she added with superstitious gravity.
“That’s just the lazy
shiftlessness of your folks,” responded Ezekiel
with prompt ungallantry. “It ain’t
no wonder the Lord Almighty hez to stir you up
now and then to keep you goin’.”
Dona Rosita gazed at him with simple
childish pity. “Poor man; it have affect
you also in the head, this weather. So! It
was even so with the uncle of my father. Hush
up yourself, and bring to me the box of chocolates
of my table. I will gif to you one. You shall
for one time have something pleasant on the end of
your tongue, even if you must swallow him after.”
Ezekiel grinned. “Ye ain’t
afraid o’ bein’ left alone with the ghost
that haunts the garden, Miss Rosita?”
“After you never-r-r.”
“I’ll find Mrs. Demorest
and send her to ye,” said Ezekiel, hesitatingly.
“Eh, to attract here the ghost?
Thank you, no, very mooch.”
Ezekiel’s face contracted until
nothing but his bright peering gray eyes could be
seen. “Attract the ghost!” he echoed.
“Then you kalkilate that it’s ”
he stopped, insinuatingly.
Rosita brought her fan sharply over
his knuckles, and immediately opened it again over
her half-embarrassed face. “I comprehend
not anything to ‘ekalkilate.’ Will
you go, Don Fantastico; or is it for me to bring
to you?”
Ezekiel flew. He quickly found
the chocolates and returned, but was disconcerted
on arriving under the olive-tree to find Dona Rosita
no longer in the hammock. He turned into a by-path,
where an extraordinary circumstance attracted his
attention. The air was perfectly still, but the
leaves of a manzanita bush near the misshapen cactus
were slightly agitated. Presently Ezekiel saw
the stealthy figure of a man emerge from behind it
and approach the cactus. Reaching his hand cautiously
towards the plant, the stranger detached something
from one of its thorns, and instantly disappeared.
The quick eyes of Ezekiel had seen that it was a letter,
his unerring perception of faces recognized at the
same moment that the intruder was none other than
the handsome, reckless-looking man he had seen the
other day in conference with Mateo.
But Ezekiel was not the only witness
of this strange intrusion. A few paces from him,
Dona Rosita, unconscious of his return, was gazing
in a half-frightened, breathless absorption in the
direction of the stranger’s flight.
“Wa’al!” drawled Ezekiel lazily.
She started and turned towards him.
Her face was pale and alarmed, and yet to the critical
eye of Ezekiel it seemed to wear an expression of
gratified relief. She laughed faintly.
“Ef that’s the kind o’
ghost you hev about yer, it’s a healthy one,”
drawled Ezekiel. He turned and fixed his keen
eyes on Rosita’s face. “I wonder
what kind o’ fruit grows on the cactus that he’s
so fond of?”
Either she had not seen the abstraction
of the letter, or his acting was perfect, for she
returned his look unwaveringly. “The fruit,
eh? I have not comprehend.”
“Wa’al, I reckon I will,”
said Ezekiel. He walked towards the cactus; there
was nothing to be seen but its thorny spikes.
He was confronted, however, by the sudden apparition
of Joan from behind the manzanita at its side.
She looked up and glanced from Ezekiel to Dona Rosita
with an agitated air.
“Oh, you saw him too?” she said eagerly.
“I reckon,” answered Ezekiel,
with his eyes still on Rosita. “I was wondering
what on airth he was so taken with that air cactus
for.”
Rosita had become slightly pale again
in the presence of her friend. Joan quietly pushed
Ezekiel aside and put her arm around her. “Are
you frightened again?” she asked, in a low whisper.
“Not mooch,” returned Rosita, without
lifting her eyes.
“It was only some peon, trespassing
to pick blossoms for his sweetheart,” she said
significantly, with a glance towards Ezekiel.
“Let us go in.”
She passed her hand through Rosita’s
passive arm and led her towards the house, Ezekiel’s
penetrating eyes still following Rosita with an expression
of gratified doubt.
For once, however, that astute observer
was wrong. When Mrs. Demorest had reached the
house she slipped into her own room, and, bolting the
door, drew from her bosom a letter which she had
picked from the cactus thorn, and read it with a flushed
face and eager eyes.
It may have been the effect of the
phenomenal weather, but the next day a malign influence
seemed to pervade the Demorest household. Dona
Rosita was confined to her room by an attack of languid
nerves, superinduced, as she was still voluble enough
to declare, by the narcotic effect of some unknown
herb which the lunatic Ezekiel had no doubt mysteriously
administered to her with a view of experimenting on
its properties. She even avowed that she must
speedily return to Los Osos, before Ezekiel should
further compromise her reputation by putting her on
a colored label in place of the usual Celestial Distributer
of the Panacea. Ezekiel himself, who had been
singularly abstracted and reticent, and had absolutely
foregone one or two opportunities of disagreeable
criticism, had gone to the pueblo early that morning.
The house was comparatively silent and deserted when
Demorest walked into his wife’s boudoir.
It was a pretty room, looking upon
the garden, furnished with a singular mingling of
her own inherited formal tastes and the more sensuous
coloring and abandon of her new life. There were
a great many rugs and hangings scattered in disorder
around the room, and apparently purposeless, except
for color; there was a bamboo lounge as large as a
divan, with two or three cushions disposed on it, and
a low chair that seemed the incarnation of indolence.
Opposed to this, on the wall, was the rigid picture
of her grandfather, who had apparently retired with
his volume further into the canvas before the spectacle
of this ungodly opulence; a large Bible on a funereal
trestle-like stand, and the primmest and barest of
writing-tables, before which she was standing as at
a sacrificial altar. With an almost mechanical
movement she closed her portfolio as her husband entered,
and also shut the lid of a small box with a slight
snap. This suggested exclusion of him from her
previous occupation, whatever it might have been, caused
a faint shadow of pain to pass across his loving eyes.
He cast a glance at his wife as if mutely asking her
to sit beside him, but she drew a chair to the table,
and with her elbow resting on the box, resignedly awaited
his speech.
“I don’t mean to disturb
you, darling,” he said, gently, “but as
we were alone, I thought we might have one of our
old-fashioned talks, and ”
“Don’t let it be so old-fashioned
as to include North Liberty again,” she interrupted,
wearily. “We’ve had quite enough of
that since I returned.”
“I thought you found fault with
me then for forgetting the past. But let that
pass, dear; it is not our affairs I wanted to
talk to you about now,” he said, stifling a
sigh, “it’s about your friend. Please
don’t misunderstand what I am going to say;
nor that I interpose except from necessity.”
She turned her dark brown eyes in
his direction, but her glance passed abstractedly
over his head into the garden.
“It’s a matter perfectly
well known to me and, I fear, to all our
servants also that somebody is making clandestine
visits to our garden. I would not trouble you
before, until I ascertained the object of these visits.
It is quite plain to me now that Dona Rosita is that
object, and that communications are secretly carried
on between her and some unknown stranger. He
has been here once or twice before; he was here again
yesterday. Ezekiel saw him and saw her.”
“Together?” asked Mrs. Demorest, sharply.
“No; but it was evident that
there was some understanding, and that some communication
passed between them.”
“Well?” said Mrs. Demorest, with repressed
impatience.
“It is equally evident, Joan,
that this stranger is a man who does not dare to approach
your friend in her own house, nor more openly in this;
but who, with her connivance, uses us to carry on an
intrigue which may be perfectly innocent, but is certainly
compromising to all concerned. I am quite willing
to believe that Dona Rosita is only romantic and reckless,
but that will not prevent her from becoming a dupe
of some rascal who dare not face us openly, and who
certainly does not act as her equal.”
“Well, Rosita is no chicken,
and you are not her guardian.”
There was a vague heartlessness, more
in her voice than in her words, that touched him as
her cold indifference to himself had never done, and
for an instant stung his crushed spirit to revolt.
“No” he said, sternly, “but I am
her father’s friend, and I shall not allow
his daughter to be compromised under my roof.”
Her eyes sprang up to meet his in
hatred as promptly as they once had met in love.
“And since when, Richard Demorest, have you become
so particular?” she began, with dry asperity.
“Since you lured me from the side of my
wedded husband? Since you met me clandestinely
in trains and made love to me under an assumed
name? Since you followed me to my house
under the pretext of being my husband’s friend,
and forced me yes, forced me to
see you secretly under my mother’s roof?
Did you think of compromising me then? Did
you think of ruining my reputation, of driving my
husband from his home in despair? Did you call
yourself a rascal then? Did you ”
“Stop!” he said, in a
voice that shook the rafters; “I command you,
stop!”
She had gradually worked herself from
a deliberately insulting precision into an hysterical,
and it is to be feared a virtuous, conviction of her
wrongs. Beginning only with the instinct to taunt
and wound the man before her, she had been led by
a secret consciousness of something else he did not
know to anticipate his reproach and justify herself
in a wild feminine abandonment of emotion. But
she stopped at his words. For a moment she was
even thrilled again by the strength and imperiousness
she had loved.
They were facing each other after
five years of mistaken passion, even as they had faced
each other that night in her mother’s kitchen.
But the grave of that dead passion yawned between
them. It was Joan who broke the silence, that
after her single outburst seemed to fill and oppress
the room.
“As far as Rosita is concerned,”
she said, with affected calmness, “she is going
to-night. And you probably will not be troubled
any longer by your mysterious visitor.”
Whether he heeded the sarcastic significance
of her last sentence, or even heard her at all, he
did not reply. For a moment he turned his blazing
eyes full upon her, and then without a word strode
from the room.
She walked to the door and stood uneasily
listening in the passage until she heard the clatter
of hoofs in the paved patio, and knew that he had
ordered his horse. Then she turned back relieved
to her room.
It was already sunset when Demorest
drew rein again at the entrance of the corral, and
the last stroke of the Angelus was ringing from the
Mission tower. He looked haggard and exhausted,
and his horse was flecked with foam and dirt.
Wherever he had been, or for what object, or whether,
objectless and dazed, he had simply sought to lose
himself in aimlessly wandering over the dry yellow
hills or in careering furiously among his own wild
cattle on the arid, brittle plain; whether he had
beaten all thought from his brain with the jarring
leap of his horse, or whether he had pursued some
vague and elusive determination to his own door, is
not essential to this brief chronicle. Enough
that when he dismounted he drew a pistol from his
holster and replaced it in his pocket.
He had just pushed open the gate of
the corral as he led in his horse by the bridle, when
he noticed another horse tethered among some cotton
woods that shaded the outer wall of his garden.
As he gazed, the figure of a man swung lightly from
one of the upper boughs of a cotton-wood on the wall
and disappeared on the other side. It was evidently
the clandestine visitor. Demorest was in no mood
for trifling. Hurriedly driving his horse into
the enclosure with a sharp cut of his riata, he closed
the gate upon him, slipped past the intervening space
into the patio, and then unnoticed into the upper
part of the garden. Taking a narrow by-path in
the direction of the cotton woods that could be seen
above the wall, he presently came in sight of the object
of his search moving stealthily towards the house.
It was the work of a moment only to dash forward and
seize him, to find himself engaged in a sharp wrestle,
to half draw his pistol as he struggled with his captive
in the open. But once in the clearer light, he
started, his grasp of the stranger relaxed, and he
fell back in bewildered terror.
“Edward Blandford! Good God!”
The pistol had dropped from his hand
as he leaned breathless against a tree. The stranger
kicked the weapon contemptuously aside. Then quietly
adjusting his disordered dress, and picking the brambles
from his sleeve, he said with the same air of disdain,
“Yes! Edward Blandford, whom you thought
dead! There! I’m not a ghost though
you tried to make me one this time,” he said,
pointing to the pistol.
Demorest passed his hand across his
white face. “Then it’s you and
you have come here for for Joan?”
“For Joan?” echoed Blandford,
with a quick scornful laugh, that made the blood flow
back into Demorest’s face as from a blow, and
recalled his scattered senses. “For Joan,”
he repeated. “Not much!”
The two men were facing each other
in irreconcilable yet confused antagonism. Both
were still excited and combative from their late physical
struggle, but with feelings so widely different that
it would have been impossible for either to have comprehended
the other. In the figure that had apparently
risen from the dead to confront him, Demorest only
saw the man he had unconsciously wronged the
man who had it in his power to claim Joan and exact
a terrible retribution! But it was part of this
monstrous and irreconcilable situation that Blandford
had ceased to contemplate it, and in his preoccupation
only saw the actual interference of a man whom he
no longer hated, but had begun to pity and despise.
He glanced coolly around him.
“Whatever we’ve got to say to each other,”
he said deliberately, “had better not be overheard.
At least what I have got to say to you.”