He was a very quiet, self-possessed
sort of man, sitting a moment on top of the wall to
sound the damp darkness for warnings of the dangers
it might conceal. But the plummet of his hearing
brought nothing to him save the moaning of wind through
invisible trees and the rustling of leaves on swaying
branches. A heavy fog drifted and drove before
the wind, and though he could not see this fog, the
wet of it blew upon his face, and the wall on which
he sat was wet.
Without noise he had climbed to the
top of the wall from the outside, and without noise
he dropped to the ground on the inside. From his
pocket he drew an electric night-stick, but he did
not use it. Dark as the way was, he was not anxious
for light. Carrying the night-stick in his hand,
his finger on the button, he advanced through the darkness.
The ground was velvety and springy to his feet, being
carpeted with dead pine-needles and leaves and mold
which evidently had been undisturbed for years.
Leaves and branches brushed against his body, but so
dark was it that he could not avoid them. Soon
he walked with his hand stretched out gropingly before
him, and more than once the hand fetched up against
the solid trunks of massive trees. All about him
he knew were these trees; he sensed the loom of them
everywhere; and he experienced a strange feeling of
microscopic smallness in the midst of great bulks
leaning toward him to crush him. Beyond, he knew,
was the house, and he expected to find some trail
or winding path that would lead easily to it.
Once, he found himself trapped.
On every side he groped against trees and branches,
or blundered into thickets of underbrush, until there
seemed no way out. Then he turned on his light,
circumspectly, directing its rays to the ground at
his feet. Slowly and carefully he moved it about
him, the white brightness showing in sharp detail all
the obstacles to his progress. He saw, an opening
between huge-trunked trees, and advanced through it,
putting out the light and treading on dry footing
as yet protected from the drip of the fog by the dense
foliage overhead. His sense of direction was good,
and he knew he was going toward the house.
And then the thing happened the
thing unthinkable and unexpected. His descending
foot came down upon something that was soft and alive,
and that arose with a snort under the weight of his
body. He sprang clear, and crouched for another
spring, anywhere, tense and expectant, keyed for the
onslaught of the unknown. He waited a moment,
wondering what manner of animal it was that had arisen
from under his foot and that now made no sound nor
movement and that must be crouching and waiting just
as tensely and expectantly as he. The strain became
unbearable. Holding the night-stick before him,
he pressed the button, saw, and screamed aloud in
terror. He was prepared for anything, from a frightened
calf or fawn to a belligerent lion, but he was not
prepared for what he saw. In that instant his
tiny searchlight, sharp and white, had shown him what
a thousand years would not enable him to forget a
man, huge and blond, yellow-haired and yellow-bearded,
naked except for soft-tanned moccasins and what seemed
a goat-skin about his middle. Arms and legs were
bare, as were his shoulders and most of his chest.
The skin was smooth and hairless, but browned by sun
and wind, while under it heavy muscles were knotted
like fat snakes. Still, this alone, unexpected
as it well was, was not what had made the man scream
out. What had caused his terror was the unspeakable
ferocity of the face, the wild-animal glare of the
blue eyes scarcely dazzled by the light, the pine-needles
matted and clinging in the beard and hair, and the
whole formidable body crouched and in the act of springing
at him. Practically in the instant he saw all
this, and while his scream still rang, the thing leaped,
he flung his night-stick full at it, and threw himself
to the ground. He felt its feet and shins strike
against his ribs, and he bounded up and away while
the thing itself hurled onward in a heavy crashing
fall into the underbrush.
As the noise of the fall ceased, the
man stopped and on hands and knees waited. He
could hear the thing moving about, searching for him,
and he was afraid to advertise his location by attempting
further flight. He knew that inevitably he would
crackle the underbrush and be pursued. Once he
drew out his revolver, then changed his mind.
He had recovered his composure and hoped to get away
without noise. Several times he heard the thing
beating up the thickets for him, and there were moments
when it, too, remained still and listened. This
gave an idea to the man. One of his hands was
resting on a chunk of dead wood. Carefully, first
feeling about him in the darkness to know that the
full swing of his arm was clear, he raised the chunk
of wood and threw it. It was not a large piece,
and it went far, landing noisily in a bush. He
heard the thing bound into the bush, and at the same
time himself crawled steadily away. And on hands
and knees, slowly and cautiously, he crawled on, till
his knees were wet on the soggy mold, When he listened
he heard naught but the moaning wind and the drip-drip
of the fog from the branches. Never abating his
caution, he stood erect and went on to the stone wall,
over which he climbed and dropped down to the road
outside.
Feeling his way in a clump of bushes,
he drew out a bicycle and prepared to mount.
He was in the act of driving the gear around with his
foot for the purpose of getting the opposite pedal
in position, when he heard the thud of a heavy body
that landed lightly and evidently on its feet.
He did not wait for more, but ran, with hands on the
handles of his bicycle, until he was able to vault
astride the saddle, catch the pedals, and start a
spurt. Behind he could hear the quick thud-thud
of feet on the dust of the road, but he drew away from
it and lost it. Unfortunately, he had started
away from the direction of town and was heading higher
up into the hills. He knew that on this particular
road there were no cross roads. The only way
back was past that terror, and he could not steel
himself to face it. At the end of half an hour,
finding himself on an ever increasing grade, he dismounted.
For still greater safety, leaving the wheel by the
roadside, he climbed through a fence into what he
decided was a hillside pasture, spread a newspaper
on the ground, and sat down.
“Gosh!” he said aloud,
mopping the sweat and fog from his face.
And “Gosh!” he said once
again, while rolling a cigarette and as he pondered
the problem of getting back.
But he made no attempt to go back.
He was resolved not to face that road in the dark,
and with head bowed on knees, he dozed, waiting for
daylight.
How long afterward he did not know,
he was awakened by the yapping bark of a young coyote.
As he looked about and located it on the brow of the
hill behind him, he noted the change that had come
over the face of the night. The fog was gone;
the stars and moon were out; even the wind had died
down. It had transformed into a balmy California
summer night. He tried to doze again, but the
yap of the coyote disturbed him. Half asleep,
he heard a wild and eery chant. Looking about
him, he noticed that the coyote had ceased its noise
and was running away along the crest of the hill,
and behind it, in full pursuit, no longer chanting,
ran the naked creature he had encountered in the garden.
It was a young coyote, and it was being overtaken
when the chase passed from view. The man trembled
as with a chill as he started to his feet, clambered
over the fence, and mounted his wheel. But it
was his chance and he knew it. The terror was
no longer between him and Mill Valley.
He sped at a breakneck rate down the
hill, but in the turn at the bottom, in the deep shadows,
he encountered a chuck-hole and pitched headlong over
the handle bar.
“It’s sure not my night,”
he muttered, as he examined the broken fork of the
machine.
Shouldering the useless wheel, he
trudged on. In time he came to the stone wall,
and, half disbelieving his experience, he sought in
the road for tracks, and found them moccasin
tracks, large ones, deep-bitten into the dust at the
toes. It was while bending over them, examining,
that again he heard the eery chant. He had seen
the thing pursue the coyote, and he knew he had no
chance on a straight run. He did not attempt
it, contenting himself with hiding in the shadows on
the off side of the road.
And again he saw the thing that was
like a naked man, running swiftly and lightly and
singing as it ran. Opposite him it paused, and
his heart stood still. But instead of coming
toward his hiding-place, it leaped into the air, caught
the branch of a roadside tree, and swung swiftly upward,
from limb to limb, like an ape. It swung across
the wall, and a dozen feet above the top, into the
branches of another tree, and dropped out of sight
to the ground. The man waited a few wondering
minutes, then started on.
II-
Dave Slotter leaned belligerently
against the desk that barred the way to the private
office of James Ward, senior partner of the firm of
Ward, Knowles & Co. Dave was angry. Every
one in the outer office had looked him over suspiciously,
and the man who faced him was excessively suspicious.
“You just tell Mr. Ward it’s important,”
he urged.
“I tell you he is dictating
and cannot be disturbed,” was the answer.
“Come to-morrow.”
“To-morrow will be too late.
You just trot along and tell Mr. Ward it’s a
matter of life and death.”
The secretary hesitated and Dave seized the advantage.
“You just tell him I was across
the bay in Mill Valley last night, and that I want
to put him wise to something.”
“What name?” was the query.
“Never mind the name. He don’t know
me.”
When Dave was shown into the private
office, he was still in the belligerent frame of mind,
but when he saw a large fair man whirl in a revolving
chair from dictating to a stenographer to face him,
Dave’s demeanor abruptly changed. He did
not know why it changed, and he was secretly angry
with himself.
“You are Mr. Ward?” Dave
asked with a fatuousness that still further irritated
him. He had never intended it at all.
“Yes,” came the answer.
“And who are you?”
“Harry Bancroft,” Dave
lied. “You don’t know me, and my name
don’t matter.”
“You sent in word that you were in Mill Valley
last night?”
“You live there, don’t
you?” Dave countered, looking suspiciously at
the stenographer.
“Yes. What do you mean to see me about?
I am very busy.”
“I’d like to see you alone, sir.”
Mr. Ward gave him a quick, penetrating
look, hesitated, then made up his mind.
“That will do for a few minutes, Miss Potter.”
The girl arose, gathered her notes
together, and passed out. Dave looked at Mr.
James Ward wonderingly, until that gentleman broke
his train of inchoate thought.
“Well?”
“I was over in Mill Valley last night,”
Dave began confusedly.
“I’ve heard that before. What do
you want?”
And Dave proceeded in the face of
a growing conviction that was unbelievable. “I
was at your house, or in the grounds, I mean.”
“What were you doing there?”
“I came to break in,” Dave answered in
all frankness.
“I heard you lived all alone
with a Chinaman for cook, and it looked good to me.
Only I didn’t break in. Something happened
that prevented. That’s why I’m here.
I come to warn you. I found a wild man loose in
your grounds a regular devil. He could
pull a guy like me to pieces. He gave me the
run of my life. He don’t wear any clothes
to speak of, he climbs trees like a monkey, and he
runs like a deer. I saw him chasing a coyote,
and the last I saw of it, by God, he was gaining on
it.”
Dave paused and looked for the effect
that would follow his words. But no effect came.
James Ward was quietly curious, and that was all.
“Very remarkable, very remarkable,”
he murmured. “A wild man, you say.
Why have you come to tell me?”
“To warn you of your danger.
I’m something of a hard proposition myself,
but I don’t believe in killing people... that
is, unnecessarily. I realized that you was in
danger. I thought I’d warn you. Honest,
that’s the game. Of course, if you wanted
to give me anything for my trouble, I’d take
it. That was in my mind, too. But I don’t
care whether you give me anything or not. I’ve
warned you any way, and done my duty.”
Mr. Ward meditated and drummed on
the surface of his desk. Dave noticed they were
large, powerful hands, withal well-cared for despite
their dark sunburn. Also, he noted what had already
caught his eye before a tiny strip of flesh-colored
courtplaster on the forehead over one eye. And
still the thought that forced itself into his mind
was unbelievable.
Mr. Ward took a wallet from his inside
coat pocket, drew out a greenback, and passed it to
Dave, who noted as he pocketed it that it was for
twenty dollars.
“Thank you,” said Mr.
Ward, indicating that the interview was at an end.
“I shall have the matter investigated.
A wild man running loose is dangerous.”
But so quiet a man was Mr. Ward, that
Dave’s courage returned. Besides, a new
theory had suggested itself. The wild man was
evidently Mr. Ward’s brother, a lunatic privately
confined. Dave had heard of such things.
Perhaps Mr. Ward wanted it kept quiet. That was
why he had given him the twenty dollars.
“Say,” Dave began, “now
I come to think of it that wild man looked a lot like
you ”
That was as far as Dave got, for at
that moment he witnessed a transformation and found
himself gazing into the same unspeakably ferocious
blue eyes of the night before, at the same clutching
talon-like hands, and at the same formidable bulk in
the act of springing upon him. But this time
Dave had no night-stick to throw, and he was caught
by the biceps of both arms in a grip so terrific that
it made him groan with pain. He saw the large
white teeth exposed, for all the world as a dog’s
about to bite. Mr. Ward’s beard brushed
his face as the teeth went in for the grip on his
throat. But the bite was not given. Instead,
Dave felt the other’s body stiffen as with an
iron restraint, and then he was flung aside, without
effort but with such force that only the wall stopped
his momentum and dropped him gasping to the floor.
“What do you mean by coming
here and trying to blackmail me?” Mr. Ward was
snarling at him. “Here, give me back that
money.”
Dave passed the bill back without a word.
“I thought you came here with
good intentions. I know you now. Let me
see and hear no more of you, or I’ll put you
in prison where you belong. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir,” Dave gasped.
“Then go.”
And Dave went, without further word,
both his biceps aching intolerably from the bruise
of that tremendous grip. As his hand rested on
the door knob, he was stopped.
“You were lucky,” Mr.
Ward was saying, and Dave noted that his face and
eyes were cruel and gloating and proud.
“You were lucky. Had I
wanted, I could have torn your muscles out of your
arms and thrown them in the waste basket there.”
“Yes, sir,” said Dave;
and absolute conviction vibrated in his voice.
He opened the door and passed out.
The secretary looked at him interrogatively.
“Gosh!” was all Dave vouchsafed,
and with this utterance passed out of the offices
and the story.
III-
James G. Ward was forty years of age,
a successful business man, and very unhappy.
For forty years he had vainly tried to solve a problem
that was really himself and that with increasing years
became more and more a woeful affliction. In
himself he was two men, and, chronologically speaking,
these men were several thousand years or so apart.
He had studied the question of dual personality probably
more profoundly than any half dozen of the leading
specialists in that intricate and mysterious psychological
field. In himself he was a different case from
any that had been recorded. Even the most fanciful
flights of the fiction-writers had not quite hit upon
him. He was not a Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, nor
was he like the unfortunate young man in Kipling’s
“Greatest Story in the World.” His
two personalities were so mixed that they were practically
aware of themselves and of each other all the time.
His other self he had located as a
savage and a barbarian living under the primitive
conditions of several thousand years before. But
which self was he, and which was the other, he could
never tell. For he was both selves, and both
selves all the time. Very rarely indeed did it
happen that one self did not know what the other was
doing. Another thing was that he had no visions
nor memories of the past in which that early self
had lived. That early self lived in the present;
but while it lived in the present, it was under the
compulsion to live the way of life that must have
been in that distant past.
In his childhood he had been a problem
to his father and mother, and to the family doctors,
though never had they come within a thousand miles
of hitting upon the clue to his erratic, conduct.
Thus, they could not understand his excessive somnolence
in the forenoon, nor his excessive activity at night.
When they found him wandering along the hallways at
night, or climbing over giddy roofs, or running in
the hills, they decided he was a somnambulist.
In reality he was wide-eyed awake and merely under
the nightroaming compulsion of his early self.
Questioned by an obtuse medico, he once told the truth
and suffered the ignominy of having the revelation
contemptuously labeled and dismissed as “dreams.”
The point was, that as twilight and
evening came on he became wakeful. The four walls
of a room were an irk and a restraint. He heard
a thousand voices whispering to him through the darkness.
The night called to him, for he was, for that period
of the twenty-four hours, essentially a night-prowler.
But nobody understood, and never again did he attempt
to explain. They classified him as a sleep-walker
and took precautions accordingly precautions
that very often were futile. As his childhood
advanced, he grew more cunning, so that the major portion
of all his nights were spent in the open at realizing
his other self. As a result, he slept in the
forenoons. Morning studies and schools were impossible,
and it was discovered that only in the afternoons,
under private teachers, could he be taught anything.
Thus was his modern self educated and developed.
But a problem, as a child, he ever
remained. He was known as a little demon, of
insensate cruelty and viciousness. The family
medicos privately adjudged him a mental monstrosity
and degenerate. Such few boy companions as he
had, hailed him as a wonder, though they were all
afraid of him. He could outclimb, outswim, outrun,
outdevil any of them; while none dared fight with
him. He was too terribly strong, madly furious.
When nine years of age he ran away
to the hills, where he flourished, night-prowling,
for seven weeks before he was discovered and brought
home. The marvel was how he had managed to subsist
and keep in condition during that time. They
did not know, and he never told them, of the rabbits
he had killed, of the quail, young and old, he had
captured and devoured, of the farmers’ chicken-roosts
he had raided, nor of the cave-lair he had made and
carpeted with dry leaves and grasses and in which
he had slept in warmth and comfort through the forenoons
of many days.
At college he was notorious for his
sleepiness and stupidity during the morning lectures
and for his brilliance in the afternoon. By collateral
reading and by borrowing the notebook of his fellow
students he managed to scrape through the detestable
morning courses, while his afternoon courses were
triumphs. In football he proved a giant and a
terror, and, in almost every form of track athletics,
save for strange Berserker rages that were sometimes
displayed, he could be depended upon to win.
But his fellows were afraid to box with him, and he
signalized his last wrestling bout by sinking his
teeth into the shoulder of his opponent.
After college, his father, in despair,
sent him among the cow-punchers of a Wyoming ranch.
Three months later the doughty cowmen confessed he
was too much for them and telegraphed his father to
come and take the wild man away. Also, when the
father arrived to take him away, the cowmen allowed
that they would vastly prefer chumming with howling
cannibals, gibbering lunatics, cavorting gorillas,
grizzly bears, and man-eating tigers than with this
particular Young college product with hair parted
in the middle.
There was one exception to the lack
of memory of the life of his early self, and that
was language. By some quirk of atavism, a certain
portion of that early self’s language had come
down to him as a racial memory. In moments of
happiness, exaltation, or battle, he was prone to burst
out in wild barbaric songs or chants. It was by
this means that he located in time and space that
strayed half of him who should have been dead and
dust for thousands of years. He sang, once, and
deliberately, several of the ancient chants in the
presence of Professor Wertz, who gave courses in old
Saxon and who was a philogist of repute and passion.
At the first one, the professor pricked up his ears
and demanded to know what mongrel tongue or hog-German
it was. When the second chant was rendered, the
professor was highly excited. James Ward then
concluded the performance by giving a song that always
irresistibly rushed to his lips when he was engaged
in fierce struggling or fighting. Then it was
that Professor Wertz proclaimed it no hog-German, but
early German, or early Teuton, of a date that must
far precede anything that had ever been discovered
and handed down by the scholars. So early was
it that it was beyond him; yet it was filled with
haunting reminiscences of word-forms he knew and which
his trained intuition told him were true and real.
He demanded the source of the songs, and asked to borrow
the precious book that contained them. Also,
he demanded to know why young Ward had always posed
as being profoundly ignorant of the German language.
And Ward could neither explain his ignorance nor lend
the book. Whereupon, after pleadings and entreaties
that extended through weeks, Professor Wert took a
dislike to the young man, believed him a liar, and
classified him as a man of monstrous selfishness for
not giving him a glimpse of this wonderful screed
that was older than the oldest any philologist had
ever known or dreamed.
But little good did it do this much-mixed
young man to know that half of him was late American
and the other half early Teuton. Nevertheless,
the late American in him was no weakling, and he (if
he were a he and had a shred of existence outside
of these two) compelled an adjustment or compromise
between his one self that was a nightprowling savage
that kept his other self sleepy of mornings, and that
other self that was cultured and refined and that
wanted to be normal and live and love and prosecute
business like other people. The afternoons and
early evenings he gave to the one, the nights to the
other; the forenoons and parts of the nights were
devoted to sleep for the twain. But in the mornings
he slept in bed like a civilized man. In the
night time he slept like a wild animal, as he had
slept Dave Slotter stepped on him in the woods.
Persuading his father to advance the
capital, he went into business and keen and successful
business he made of it, devoting his afternoons whole-souled
to it, while his partner devoted the mornings.
The early evenings he spent socially, but, as the
hour grew to nine or ten, an irresistible restlessness
overcame him and he disappeared from the haunts of
men until the next afternoon. Friends and acquaintances
thought that he spent much of his time in sport.
And they were right, though they never would have
dreamed of the nature of the sport, even if they had
seen him running coyotes in night-chases over the hills
of Mill Valley. Neither were the schooner captains
believed when they reported seeing, on cold winter
mornings, a man swimming in the tide-rips of Raccoon
Straits or in the swift currents between Goat island
and Angel Island miles from shore.
In the bungalow at Mill Valley he
lived alone, save for Lee Sing, the Chinese cook and
factotum, who knew much about the strangeness of his
master, who was paid well for saying nothing, and who
never did say anything. After the satisfaction
of his nights, a morning’s sleep, and a breakfast
of Lee Sing’s, James Ward crossed the bay to
San Francisco on a midday ferryboat and went to the
club and on to his office, as normal and conventional
a man of business as could be found in the city.
But as the evening lengthened, the night called to
him. There came a quickening of all his perceptions
and a restlessness. His hearing was suddenly
acute; the myriad night-noises told him a luring and
familiar story; and, if alone, he would begin to pace
up and down the narrow room like any caged animal
from the wild.
Once, he ventured to fall in love.
He never permitted himself that diversion again.
He was afraid. And for many a day the young lady,
scared at least out of a portion of her young ladyhood,
bore on her arms and shoulders and wrists divers black-and-blue
bruises tokens of caresses which he had
bestowed in all fond gentleness but too late at night.
There was the mistake. Had he ventured love-making
in the afternoon, all would have been well, for it
would have been as the quiet gentleman that he would
have made love but at night it was the uncouth,
wife-stealing savage of the dark German forests.
Out of his wisdom, he decided that afternoon love-making
could be prosecuted successfully; but out of the same
wisdom he was convinced that marriage as would prove
a ghastly failure. He found it appalling to imagine
being married and encountering his wife after dark.
So he had eschewed all love-making,
regulated his dual life, cleaned up a million in business,
fought shy of match-making mamás and bright-eyed
and eager young ladies of various ages, met Lilian
Gersdale and made it a rigid observance never to see
her later than eight o’clock in the evening,
run of nights after his coyotes, and slept in forest
lairs and through it all had kept his secret
safe save Lee Sing... and now, Dave Slotter.
It was the latter’s discovery of both his selves
that frightened him. In spite of the counter
fright he had given the burglar, the latter might
talk. And even if he did not, sooner or later
he would be found out by some one else.
Thus it was that James Ward made a
fresh and heroic effort to control the Teutonic barbarian
that was half of him. So well did he make it
a point to see Lilian in the afternoons, that the time
came when she accepted him for better or worse, and
when he prayed privily and fervently that it was not
for worse. During this period no prize-fighter
ever trained more harshly and faithfully for a contest
than he trained to subdue the wild savage in him.
Among other things, he strove to exhaust himself during
the day, so that sleep would render him deaf to the
call of the night. He took a vacation from the
office and went on long hunting trips, following the
deer through the most inaccessible and rugged country
he could find and always in the daytime.
Night found him indoors and tired. At home he
installed a score of exercise machines, and where
other men might go through a particular movement ten
times, he went hundreds. Also, as a compromise,
he built a sleeping porch on the second story.
Here he at least breathed the blessed night air.
Double screens prevented him from escaping into the
woods, and each night Lee Sing locked him in and each
morning let him out.
The time came, in the month of August,
when he engaged additional servants to assist Lee
Sing and dared a house party in his Mill Valley bungalow.
Lilian, her mother and brother, and half a dozen mutual
friends, were the guests. For two days and nights
all went well. And on the third night, playing
bridge till eleven o’clock, he had reason to
be proud of himself. His restlessness fully hid,
but as luck would have it, Lilian Gersdale was his
opponent on his right. She was a frail delicate
flower of a woman, and in his night-mood her very frailty
incensed him. Not that he loved her less, but
that he felt almost irresistibly impelled to reach
out and paw and maul her. Especially was this
true when she was engaged in playing a winning hand
against him.
He had one of the deer-hounds brought
in and, when it seemed he must fly to pieces with
the tension, a caressing hand laid on the animal brought
him relief. These contacts with the hairy coat
gave him instant easement and enabled him to play
out the evening. Nor did anyone guess the while
terrible struggle their host was making, the while
he laughed so carelessly and played so keenly and
deliberately.
When they separated for the night,
he saw to it that he parted from Lilian in the presence
or the others. Once on his sleeping porch and
safely locked in, he doubled and tripled and even quadrupled
his exercises until, exhausted, he lay down on the
couch to woo sleep and to ponder two problems that
especially troubled him. One was this matter
of exercise. It was a paradox. The more he
exercised in this excessive fashion, the stronger
he became. While it was true that he thus quite
tired out his night-running Teutonic self, it seemed
that he was merely setting back the fatal day when
his strength would be too much for him and overpower
him, and then it would be a strength more terrible
than he had yet known. The other problem was
that of his marriage and of the stratagems he must
employ in order to avoid his wife after dark.
And thus, fruitlessly pondering, he fell asleep.
Now, where the huge grizzly bear came
from that night was long a mystery, while the people
of the Springs Brothers’ Circus, showing at
Sausalito, searched long and vainly for “Big
Ben, the Biggest Grizzly in Captivity.”
But Big Ben escaped, and, out of the mazes of half
a thousand bungalows and country estates, selected
the grounds of James J. Ward for visitation.
The self first Mr. Ward knew was when he found him
on his feet, quivering and tense, a surge of battle
in his breast and on his lips the old war-chant.
From without came a wild baying and bellowing of the
hounds. And sharp as a knife-thrust through the
pandemonium came the agony of a stricken dog his
dog, he knew.
Not stopping for slippers, pajama-clad,
he burst through the door Lee Sing had so carefully
locked, and sped down the stairs and out into the
night. As his naked feet struck the graveled driveway,
he stopped abruptly, reached under the steps to a
hiding-place he knew well, and pulled forth a huge
knotty club his old companion on many a
mad night adventure on the hills. The frantic
hullabaloo of the dogs was coming nearer, and, swinging
the club, he sprang straight into the thickets to
meet it.
The aroused household assembled on
the wide veranda. Somebody turned on the electric
lights, but they could see nothing but one another’s
frightened faces. Beyond the brightly illuminated
driveway the trees formed a wall of impenetrable blackness.
Yet somewhere in that blackness a terrible struggle
was going on. There was an infernal outcry of
animals, a great snarling and growling, the sound of
blows being struck and a smashing and crashing of
underbrush by heavy bodies.
The tide of battle swept out from
among the trees and upon the driveway just beneath
the onlookers. Then they saw. Mrs. Gersdale
cried out and clung fainting to her son. Lilian,
clutching the railing so spasmodically that a bruising
hurt was left in her finger-ends for days, gazed horror-stricken
at a yellow-haired, wild-eyed giant whom she recognized
as the man who was to be her husband. He was swinging
a great club, and fighting furiously and calmly with
a shaggy monster that was bigger than any bear she
had ever seen. One rip of the beast’s claws
had dragged away Ward’s pajama-coat and streaked
his flesh with blood.
While most of Lilian Gersdale’s
fright was for the man beloved, there was a large
portion of it due to the man himself. Never had
she dreamed so formidable and magnificent a savage
lurked under the starched shirt and conventional garb
of her betrothed. And never had she had any conception
of how a man battled. Such a battle was certainly
not modern; nor was she there beholding a modern man,
though she did not know it. For this was not
Mr. James J. Ward, the San Francisco business man,
but one, unnamed and unknown, a crude, rude savage
creature who, by some freak of chance, lived again
after thrice a thousand years.
The hounds, ever maintaining their
mad uproar, circled about the fight, or dashed in
and out, distracting the bear. When the animal
turned to meet such flanking assaults, the man leaped
in and the club came down. Angered afresh by
every such blow, the bear would rush, and the man,
leaping and skipping, avoiding the dogs, went backwards
or circled to one side or the other. Whereupon
the dogs, taking advantage of the opening, would again
spring in and draw the animal’s wrath to them.
The end came suddenly. Whirling,
the grizzly caught a hound with a wide sweeping cuff
that sent the brute, its ribs caved in and its back
broken, hurtling twenty feet. Then the human brute
went mad. A foaming rage flecked the lips that
parted with a wild inarticulate cry, as it sprang
in, swung the club mightily in both hands, and brought
it down full on the head of the uprearing grizzly.
Not even the skull of a grizzly could withstand the
crushing force of such a blow, and the animal went
down to meet the worrying of the hounds. And through
their scurrying leaped the man, squarely upon the
body, where, in the white electric light, resting
on his club, he chanted a triumph in an unknown tongue a
song so ancient that Professor Wertz would have given
ten years of his life for it.
His guests rushed to possess him and
acclaim him, but James Ward, suddenly looking out
of the eyes of the early Teuton, saw the fair frail
Twentieth Century girl he loved, and felt something
snap in his brain. He staggered weakly toward
her, dropped the club, and nearly fell. Something
had gone wrong with him. Inside his brain was
an intolerable agony. It seemed as if the soul
of him were flying asunder. Following the excited
gaze of the others, he glanced back and saw the carcass
of the bear. The sight filled him with fear.
He uttered a cry and would have fled, had they not
restrained him and led him into the bungalow.
James J. Ward is still at the head
of the firm of Ward, Knowles & Co. But he no
longer lives in the country; nor does he run of nights
after the coyotes under the moon. The early Teuton
in him died the night of the Mill Valley fight with
the bear. James J. Ward is now wholly James J.
Ward, and he shares no part of his being with any vagabond
anachronism from the younger world. And so wholly
is James J. Ward modern, that he knows in all its
bitter fullness the curse of civilized fear.
He is now afraid of the dark, and night in the forest
is to him a thing of abysmal terror. His city
house is of the spick and span order, and he evinces
a great interest in burglarproof devices. His
home is a tangle of electric wires, and after bed-time
a guest can scarcely breathe without setting off an
alarm. Also, he had invented a combination keyless
door-lock that travelers may carry in their vest pockets
and apply immediately and successfully under all circumstances.
But his wife does not deem him a coward. She knows
better. And, like any hero, he is content to
rest on his laurels. His bravery is never questioned
by those friends who are aware of the Mill Valley episode.