Gregory St. Vincent swiftly became
an important factor in the social life of Dawson.
As a representative of the Amalgamated Press Association,
he had brought with him the best credentials a powerful
influence could obtain, and over and beyond, he was
well qualified socially by his letters of introduction.
It developed in a quiet way that he was a wanderer
and explorer of no small parts, and that he had seen
life and strife pretty well all over the earth’s
crust. And withal, he was so mild and modest
about it, that nobody, not even among the men, was
irritated by his achievements. Incidentally,
he ran across numerous old acquaintances. Jacob
Welse he had met at St. Michael’s in the fall
of ’88, just prior to his crossing Bering Straits
on the ice. A month or so later, Father Barnum
(who had come up from the Lower River to take charge
of the hospital) had met him a couple of hundred miles
on his way north of St. Michael’s. Captain
Alexander, of the Police, had rubbed shoulders with
him in the British Legation at Peking. And Bettles,
another old-timer of standing, had met him at Fort
o’ Yukon nine years before.
So Dawson, ever prone to look askance
at the casual comer, received him with open arms.
Especially was he a favorite with the women.
As a promoter of pleasures and an organizer of amusements
he took the lead, and it quickly came to pass that
no function was complete without him. Not only
did he come to help in the theatricals, but insensibly,
and as a matter of course, he took charge. Frona,
as her friends charged, was suffering from a stroke
of Ibsen, so they hit upon the “Doll’s
House,” and she was cast for Nora. Corliss,
who was responsible, by the way, for the theatricals,
having first suggested them, was to take Torvald’s
part; but his interest seemed to have died out, or
at any rate he begged off on the plea of business
rush. So St. Vincent, without friction, took
Torvald’s lines. Corliss did manage to
attend one rehearsal. It might have been that
he had come tired from forty miles with the dogs,
and it might have been that Torvald was obliged to
put his arm about Nora at divers times and to toy
playfully with her ear; but, one way or the other,
Corliss never attended again.
Busy he certainly was, and when not
away on trail he was closeted almost continually with
Jacob Welse and Colonel Trethaway. That it was
a deal of magnitude was evidenced by the fact that
Welse’s mining interests involved alone mounted
to several millions. Corliss was primarily a
worker and doer, and on discovering that his thorough
theoretical knowledge lacked practical experience,
he felt put upon his mettle and worked the harder.
He even marvelled at the silliness of the men who
had burdened him with such responsibilities, simply
because of his pull, and he told Trethaway as much.
But the colonel, while recognizing his shortcomings,
liked him for his candor, and admired him for his
effort and for the quickness with which he came to
grasp things actual.
Del Bishop, who had refused to play
any hand but his own, had gone to work for Corliss
because by so doing he was enabled to play his own
hand better. He was practically unfettered, while
the opportunities to further himself were greatly
increased. Equipped with the best of outfits
and a magnificent dog-team, his task was mainly to
run the various creeks and keep his eyes and ears
open. A pocket-miner, first, last, and always,
he was privately on the constant lookout for pockets,
which occupation did not interfere in the least with
the duty he owed his employer. And as the days
went by he stored his mind with miscellaneous data
concerning the nature of the various placer deposits
and the lay of the land, against the summer when the
thawed surface and the running water would permit
him to follow a trace from creek-bed to side-slope
and source.
Corliss was a good employer, paid
well, and considered it his right to work men as he
worked himself. Those who took service with him
either strengthened their own manhood and remained,
or quit and said harsh things about him. Jacob
Welse noted this trait with appreciation, and he sounded
the mining engineer’s praises continually.
Frona heard and was gratified, for she liked the
things her father liked; and she was more gratified
because the man was Corliss. But in his rush
of business she saw less of him than formerly, while
St. Vincent came to occupy a greater and growing portion
of her time. His healthful, optimistic spirit
pleased her, while he corresponded well to her idealized
natural man and favorite racial type. Her first
doubt that if what he said was true had
passed away. All the evidence had gone counter.
Men who at first questioned the truth of his wonderful
adventures gave in after hearing him talk. Those
to any extent conversant with the parts of the world
he made mention of, could not but acknowledge that
he knew what he talked about. Young Soley, representing
Bannock’s News Syndicate, and Holmes of the Fairweather,
recollected his return to the world in ’91, and
the sensation created thereby. And Sid Winslow,
Pacific Coast journalist, had made his acquaintance
at the Wanderers’ Club shortly after he landed
from the United States revenue cutter which had brought
him down from the north. Further, as Frona well
saw, he bore the ear-marks of his experiences; they
showed their handiwork in his whole outlook on life.
Then the primitive was strong in him, and his was
a passionate race pride which fully matched hers.
In the absence of Corliss they were much together,
went out frequently with the dogs, and grew to know
each other thoroughly.
All of which was not pleasant to Corliss,
especially when the brief intervals he could devote
to her were usually intruded upon by the correspondent.
Naturally, Corliss was not drawn to him, and other
men, who knew or had heard of the Opera House occurrence,
only accepted him after a tentative fashion.
Trethaway had the indiscretion, once or twice, to
speak slightingly of him, but so fiercely was he defended
by his admirers that the colonel developed the good
taste to thenceforward keep his tongue between his
teeth. Once, Corliss, listening to an extravagant
panegyric bursting from the lips of Mrs. Schoville,
permitted himself the luxury of an incredulous smile;
but the quick wave of color in Frona’s face,
and the gathering of the brows, warned him.
At another time he was unwise enough
and angry enough to refer to the Opera House broil.
He was carried away, and what he might have said of
that night’s happening would have redounded neither
to St. Vincent’s credit nor to his own, had
not Frona innocently put a seal upon his lips ere
he had properly begun.
“Yes,” she said.
“Mr. St. Vincent told me about it. He
met you for the first time that night, I believe.
You all fought royally on his side, you
and Colonel Trethaway. He spoke his admiration
unreservedly and, to tell the truth, with enthusiasm.”
Corliss made a gesture of depreciation.
“No! no! From what he
said you must have behaved splendidly. And I
was most pleased to hear. It must be great to
give the brute the rein now and again, and healthy,
too. Great for us who have wandered from the
natural and softened to sickly ripeness. Just
to shake off artificiality and rage up and down! and
yet, the inmost mentor, serene and passionless, viewing
all and saying: ’This is my other self.
Behold! I, who am now powerless, am the power
behind and ruleth still! This other self, mine
ancient, violent, elder self, rages blindly as the
beast, but ’tis I, sitting apart, who discern
the merit of the cause and bid him rage or bid him
cease!’ Oh, to be a man!”
Corliss could not help a humoring
smile, which put Frona upon defence at once.
“Tell me, Vance, how did it
feel? Have I not described it rightly?
Were the symptoms yours? Did you not hold aloof
and watch yourself play the brute?”
He remembered the momentary daze which
came when he stunned the man with his fist, and nodded.
“And pride?” she demanded, inexorably.
“Or shame?”
“A a little of both,
and more of the first than the second,” he confessed.
“At the time I suppose I was madly exultant;
then afterwards came the shame, and I tossed awake
half the night.”
“And finally?”
“Pride, I guess. I couldn’t
help it, couldn’t down it. I awoke in the
morning feeling as though I had won my spurs.
In a subconscious way I was inordinately proud of
myself, and time and again, mentally, I caught myself
throwing chests. Then came the shame again, and
I tried to reason back my self-respect. And
last of all, pride. The fight was fair and open.
It was none of my seeking. I was forced into
it by the best of motives. I am not sorry, and
I would repeat it if necessary.”
“And rightly so.”
Frona’s eyes were sparkling. “And
how did Mr. St. Vincent acquit himself?”
“He? . . . . Oh, I suppose
all right, creditably. I was too busy watching
my other self to take notice.”
“But he saw you.”
“Most likely so. I acknowledge
my negligence. I should have done better, the
chances are, had I thought it would have been of interest
to you pardon me. Just my bungling
wit. The truth is, I was too much of a greenhorn
to hold my own and spare glances on my neighbors.”
So Corliss went away, glad that he
had not spoken, and keenly appreciating St. Vincent’s
craft whereby he had so adroitly forestalled adverse
comment by telling the story in his own modest, self-effacing
way.
Two men and a woman! The most
potent trinity of factors in the creating of human
pathos and tragedy! As ever in the history of
man, since the first father dropped down from his
arboreal home and walked upright, so at Dawson.
Necessarily, there were minor factors, not least
among which was Del Bishop, who, in his aggressive
way, stepped in and accelerated things. This
came about in a trail-camp on the way to Miller Creek,
where Corliss was bent on gathering in a large number
of low-grade claims which could only be worked profitably
on a large scale.
“I’ll not be wastin’
candles when I make a strike, savve!” the pocket-miner
remarked savagely to the coffee, which he was settling
with a chunk of ice. “Not on your life,
I guess rather not!”
“Kerosene?” Corliss queried,
running a piece of bacon-rind round the frying-pan
and pouring in the batter.
“Kerosene, hell! You won’t
see my trail for smoke when I get a gait on for God’s
country, my wad in my poke and the sunshine in my eyes.
Say! How’d a good juicy tenderloin strike
you just now, green onions, fried potatoes, and fixin’s
on the side? S’help me, that’s the
first proposition I’ll hump myself up against.
Then a general whoop-la! for a week Seattle
or ’Frisco, I don’t care a rap which, and
then ”
“Out of money and after a job.”
“Not on your family tree!”
Bishop roared. “Cache my sack before I
go on the tear, sure pop, and then, afterwards, Southern
California. Many’s the day I’ve had
my eye on a peach of a fruit farm down there forty
thousand’ll buy it. No more workin’
for grub-stakes and the like. Figured it out
long; ago, hired men to work the ranch,
a manager to run it, and me ownin’ the game
and livin’ off the percentage. A stable
with always a couple of bronchos handy; handy to slap
the packs and saddles on and be off and away whenever
the fever for chasin’ pockets came over me.
Great pocket country down there, to the east and
along the desert.”
“And no house on the ranch?”
“Cert! With sweet peas
growin’ up the sides, and in back a patch for
vegetables string-beans and spinach and
radishes, cucumbers and ’sparagrass, turnips,
carrots, cabbage, and such. And a woman inside
to draw me back when I get to runnin’ loco after
the pockets. Say, you know all about minin’.
Did you ever go snoozin’ round after pockets?
No? Then just steer clear. They’re
worse than whiskey, horses, or cards. Women,
when they come afterwards, ain’t in it.
Whenever you get a hankerin’ after pockets,
go right off and get married. It’s the
only thing’ll save you; and even then, mebbe,
it won’t. I ought ‘a’ done
it years ago. I might ‘a’ made something
of myself if I had. Jerusalem! the jobs I’ve
jumped and the good things chucked in my time, just
because of pockets! Say, Corliss, you want to
get married, you do, and right off. I’m
tellin’ you straight. Take warnin’
from me and don’t stay single any longer than
God’ll let you, sure!”
Corliss laughed.
“Sure, I mean it. I’m
older’n you, and know what I’m talkin’.
Now there’s a bit of a thing down in Dawson
I’d like to see you get your hands on.
You was made for each other, both of you.”
Corliss was past the stage when he
would have treated Bishop’s meddling as an impertinence.
The trail, which turns men into the same blankets
and makes them brothers, was the great leveller of
distinctions, as he had come to learn. So he
flopped a flapjack and held his tongue.
“Why don’t you waltz in
and win?” Del demanded, insistently. “Don’t
you cotton to her? I know you do, or you wouldn’t
come back to cabin, after bein’ with her, a-walkin’-like
on air. Better waltz in while you got a chance.
Why, there was Emmy, a tidy bit of flesh as women
go, and we took to each other on the jump. But
I kept a-chasin’ pockets and chasin’ pockets,
and delayin’. And then a big black lumberman,
a Kanuck, began sidlin’ up to her, and I made
up my mind to speak only I went off after
one more pocket, just one more, and when I got back
she was Mrs. Somebody Else.
“So take warnin’.
There’s that writer-guy, that skunk I poked
outside the Opera House. He’s walkin’
right in and gettin’ thick; and here’s
you, just like me, a-racin’ round all creation
and lettin’ matrimony slide. Mark my words,
Corliss! Some fine frost you’ll come slippin’
into camp and find ’em housekeepin’.
Sure! With nothin’ left for you in life
but pocketing!”
The picture was so unpleasant that
Corliss turned surly and ordered him to shut up.
“Who? Me?” Del asked
so aggrievedly that Corliss laughed.
“What would you do, then?” he asked.
“Me? In all kindness I’ll
tell you. As soon as you get back you go and
see her. Make dates with her ahead till you got
to put ’em on paper to remember ’em all.
Get a cinch on her spare time ahead so as to shut
the other fellow out. Don’t get down in
the dirt to her, she’s not that kind, but
don’t be too high and mighty, neither.
Just so-so savve? And then, some time
when you see she’s feelin’ good, and smilin’
at you in that way of hers, why up and call her hand.
Of course I can’t say what the showdown’ll
be. That’s for you to find out.
But don’t hold off too long about it. Better
married early than never. And if that writer-guy
shoves in, poke him in the breadbasket hard!
That’ll settle him plenty. Better still,
take him off to one side and talk to him. Tell’m
you’re a bad man, and that you staked that claim
before he was dry behind the ears, and that if he
comes nosin’ around tryin’ to file on it
you’ll beat his head off.”
Bishop got up, stretched, and went
outside to feed the dogs. “Don’t
forget to beat his head off,” he called back.
“And if you’re squeamish about it, just
call on me. I won’t keep ‘m waitin’
long.”