From the remotest beginning of things
for the Southwest, Canaan had been a “gre’t
taown.” From the beginning she had been
the county seat, and from the beginning there had
poured through her one long street, with its two or
three short tributaries, the whole volume of business
of Tigmore County; the strawberries, the chickens,
the ginseng. Almost from the beginning, too,
she had had the newspaper and the hotel and some talk
about a bank. Canaanites held their heads high.
So high that when it began to be rumoured that the
railroad was showing a disposition to curve down toward
Tigmore County, the Canaanites, unable to see past
their noses, appointed a committee to go up to Jefferson
City to protest to the Legislature against the proposed
innovation. The committee contended to the Legislature
that the railroad would cut off trade by starting
up rival towns. It also contended that ox-teams
had been used for many years and were reliable, rain
or shine, whereas in wet weather the railroad tracks
would get slick and be impracticable. Moreover,
and moreunder, there was no danger of an ox-team blowin’
up and bustin’ and killin’ somebody.
The railroad was melted to acquiescence
by the appeal, and went its way some ten miles west
of Canaan. Towns sprang into being along the line
of the serpent’s coil. Canaan said all
right, but wait till the spring rains come. The
rains came, the trains went by over the slick tracks
gracefully. Canaan said all right, but wait till
something busts. Time passed, nothing busted.
The County was careening westward. There was no
stopping it. Canaan kept her head high, but her
heart grew as cold as ice. Then the paper up
at the new railroad station of Shaleville crudely
referred to Canaan as “that benighted hamlet.”
It was too much. When Crittenton Madeira reached
Canaan from St. Louis, the first thing that he proposed
for the city of his adoption was the Canaan Short Line,
and, coming at the opportune moment, the consummation
of that proposition placed Madeira at the head of
Canaan’s municipal life for the rest of his
days. In a very short time after he came to Canaan,
Canaan not only had a railroad, but her own railroad.
Reassured, bland, she caught step with progress, by
and by saw that she was progress, and settled back
into her old superiority. Her trade prospered
anew, the cotton came to her depot, she got accustomed
to the noise of her two trains daily, and had lived
through many contented years when the twentieth of
September of 1899 opened up like a rose, fair, fragrance-laden,
warm, around her.
Out on the face of the day there was
nothing to suggest change or crisis, nothing to be
afraid of, nothing to be hopeful for, a day like yesterday,
like to-morrow, a golden link in a golden monotony.
At Court House Square, a few farm-teams, strapping
mules and big Studebakers, stood at the hitching rail.
A few people came and went up and down and across
the Square. Occasionally a mean-natured man said
“huh-y!” to a cow or “soo-y!”
to a hog in the middle of Main Street. Some coatless
clerks, with great elbow-deep sleeve protectors on
their arms and large lumps of cravats at their throats,
lounged in store doors. The most conspicuous,
as the most institutional, feature of the landscape
was the group idling on boxes in front of the old
Grange store just as they had idled on
boxes before the war. They were the same men,
it was the same store, and it was not inconceivable
that they were the same boxes. As the men idled
they spat, somewhat to the menace of the passers-by,
though in defence of this avocation it may be argued
that any truly agile person, by watching carefully
and seizing opportunity unhesitatingly, could get
by undefiled. Sometimes a vehicle rolled into
the street toward the Square, and when this happened
it was amusement to the men to say whose vehicle without
looking up jack-knives, watch-fobs, and
other valuables occasionally changing hands on an erring
guess between the slow, solemn trot of Mr. Azariah’s
Pringle’s Bess and the duck-like waddling of
Mrs. Molly Jenkins’ Tom, or between the swinging
canter of Miss Sally Madeira’s Kentucky blacks
and the running walk of the small-hoofed Texas ponies
from We-all Prairie. Once a great waggon, piled
high with cotton, creaked by; once a burnt-skinned
boy, hard as a nut, shrieking with an irrepressible
sense of being alive, loped past on a mustang.
Once a small, old man, in mean clothes and with a
fine bearing, crossed the Square, cracking his whip
nervously, his spur clicking on his boot as he walked.
Once a large florid man and a tall girl came down
the street and entered the door of a two-story brick
building next the Grange. The man had an expansive,
blustering way. The girl looked as though she
were accustomed to admire the man and to badger him;
her face was turned up to his adoringly, while her
fun-hunting eyes, just sheathed under her lids, gleamed
gaily. The building had a plate-glass window
across the front of it, and on the window, in gold
letters bordered in black, two legends were flung to
the public:
BANK OF CANAAN
CRITTENTON
MADEIRA
When the man and the girl had gone
into the Bank of Canaan, the group at the Grange stopped
gambling on the incoming teams and talked less drowsily.
“Looks like that girl gets purdier and purdier.”
“Mighty pleasant ways she keeps.
Never gone back on her raisin’. Never got
too good for Mizzourah.”
“As far as I go, I like her
ways better’n her pappy’s ways.”
“Crit is a little toploftical.”
“They mighty fond of each other,
though. Seems like she’s not in a hurry
to marry and leave her pappy.”
“Wall naow, I shouldn’t
be s’prised ef Miss Sally never did git married,
talkin’ abaout marryin’. ’Twould
not s’prise me a-tall, ’twouldn’t.”
Mr. Quin Beasley was talking. Mr. Beasley was
the keeper of the Grange store and admittedly a man
of fine conversational powers. His jaws worked
on and he seemed able to get nutriment out of his
ruminations long after a cow would have gone
back to grass hungrily. “Aint sayin’
I never am s’prised, becuz am, but do say that
that wouldn’t s’prise me, an’ no
more would it.” Mr. Beasley brought his
jaws in from their loose meanderings just as the clatter
of a horse’s hoofs became audible down the side
street that, a little way along, became the road to
Poetical.
“Name the comer, Beasley.
Up to the sugar-tree about now. Name-er, name-er!”
The challenger took from his pocket a huge horn knife,
covered it with his hand and shook it in the face
of Mr. Beasley, who responsively got his hand into
his pocket and drew forth a knife, which he held covered
after the manner of his opponent.
“Unsight, unseen,” said
Mr. Beasley. “It’s Price Mason’s
pony.”
The challenger chuckled deprecatingly
over the carelessness of judgment evinced: “Price
Mason’s pony comes down with a hippety-hop,”
he remarked pityingly “lemme
listen it’s no, taint,
aint favorin’ his right front foot it’s wy!”
the challenger suddenly twisted his head to one side
and held it there like a lean-crawed chicken deciding
where to peck. Simultaneously the other men glanced
down the side street where it came into the Square,
and when someone said, or whistled, “Wy, who
the h-e-double-l is it?” everybody was
waiting for an answer.
They had not long to wait. The
horseman in question galloped straight toward the
group and drew rein in front of them only a few minutes
later. He was a big fellow, broad and lithe of
shoulder and chest, and young and alert of face.
“Gentlemen,” he called
from his horse’s back, “I want to find
Mr. Crittenton Madeira. Ah!” he laughed,
a deep, rich note, as he saw the gold and black sign,
“gentlemen, I have found Mr. Madeira!”
He leaped from his horse and began to tether him to
a staple, set in the pavement in front of the Grange.
“Yes,” replied a member
of the Grange group, all of whom rose sociably, “Crit
and Miss Sally,” the young man laughed
again, softly, as though he could not help it, “Crit
and Miss Sally jes went into the bank; I don’t
reckin they’ve come out again.”
“Miss Sally’s come out
again,” interposed another Granger, “because
I seen her.”
“It’s the father that
I want to see,” said the horseman, with smiling
emphasis, “not the daughter, not Miss Sally.”
He passed through the bank door, still smiling, and
the Grange group looked at each other, rife with speculation
on the instant.
“Hadn’t-a said not, I’d-a
said it wuz Miss Sally he wanted to see. Looks
to me like he might be one of her beaux. Wears
sumpin the same clothes.”
“Looked like a Yank to me.”
“Uh-huh, betchew he lets his biscuits cool before
he butters ’em.”
“Haven’t heard Crit say he was looking
for a stranger.”
“Reckon if you keep up with
Crit’s business, my friend, you’ll have
to walk faster.”
While the Grangers were wondering,
supposing, reckoning, the man who probably let his
biscuits cool before he buttered them entered the Bank
of Canaan.
When the cage for the clerical force
had been put into the Bank of Canaan, there was not
a great deal of the bank left, so the man stopped
where he thought he was least apt to be scraped, in
the little space in front of the Force’s window.
The Force put his pen behind his ear, and, without
waiting for inquiry or request, called off to the rear
of the room.
“Mist’ Madeira! He’s
here! Can he come on in? If you’ll
go right down there” went on the
Force, “to that door in front of you,
you can go through it.”
The thing seemed feasible, as the
door was half open, so the visitor attempted it.
As he reached the door, however, his way was temporarily
blocked by a big red-faced man who held out both hands
to him and took possession of him with violent cordiality.
“God bless my soul! Howdy,
howdy, howdy!” cried the big man. “Been
looking for you for a week. Only last night I
told Sally that I wasn’t going to look for you
any longer. Just eternally gave you up. How
in the Sam Hill have you taken so long to get here?
Come on in and have a seat.”
As he talked, the Missourian led his
guest inside a small private office, handed him to
a chair and stood up before him, big, colossal, dominating
the younger man, or at least meaning to.
“I am very rapidly concluding
that you are Mr. Madeira, and that you know that I
am Steering,” smiled the visitor, sinking into
a chair adaptably, though he realised that, for two
men who had never seen each other before, the meeting
had been unusual. He also realised that, off
somewhere in the sphere of imponderable influences,
the effect when his hand clasped the big man’s
hand had been exactly that of the clashing of two
swords.
“Oh, God love you, there’s
no black magic about my knowing you for Steering only
stranger that’s been expected in Canaan for six
weeks!” cried Madeira, “and as for your
guessing that I’m Madeira, you don’t deserve
a bit of credit for it. My sign’s out.”
His manner conveyed that his sign was quite as much
his personality as the black and gold letters on the
window. “Yes, I’m Madeira, and you
are Steering, and we both might as well own up to
it. And now what’s kept you so long on the
road? How’d you manage to put in a whole
week between here and Springfield?” Madeira
seated himself in a swivel chair in front of his desk
and eyed his visitor with that aggressive geniality,
that tremendous sense of himself, warm and vivid in
his face and manner. And, as in the moment when
he had faced Missouri from the top of the Tigmore Hills,
Steering had a feeling that he was being claimed,
absorbed.
“Why, the explanation is of
the simplest. At the very last minute, there
at Springfield, too late to get a word of advice out
to you, I fell in with some fellows who were going
to ride across country toward the Canaan Tigmores,
and I joined them. They gave out at Bessietown,
but I’ve come every foot of the way over the
Ridge on horseback, and alone at that. I wanted
to see Missouri, get acquainted with the home of my
ancestors, at close range, as it were.”
Madeira chuckled. “God
bless you, you certainly went in at the back door
to do it,” he said. Madeira’s God-bless-you’s
and God-love-you’s were valuable crutches to
his conversation. With them and his bluster he
seemed able to cover a great deal of ground.
“And then I didn’t hurry,”
went on Steering, “because I thought, from what
you wrote me, that it would, without doubt, be some
weeks before that amiable relative of mine could be
dragged around to any real attention to our projects.”
“Ah, but that’s where
you missed out!” cried Madeira, a great ring
of triumph in his voice. He crossed his legs,
leaned back in his chair, and pushed out his chest.
“That’s where you didn’t know C.
Madeira. Young man, I’ve been hammering
at Bruce Grierson night and day ever since I got you
interested in this scheme,” Steering
looked at Madeira with a little quick motion of inquiry,
but Madeira’s arrangement of subject and object
was evidently advised; Madeira showed that it was by
repeating, “ever since I got you
interested, I’ve been trying to get Grierson
interested. We couldn’t move hand or foot
without him, you know that. The land is his,
you know, even though you are the heir apparent, and
there was no use trying to do anything with the land
without him. I had got you into it without much
trouble,” Madeira paused just long
enough to take the cigar that Steering offered him.
(Steering could always see better through smoke.)
“Yes, I had got you!” cried Madeira, biting
off the end of the cigar with a sharp snap of his
teeth, “and having got you, the next thing was
to get Grierson. Well, I got him, got him since
you left New York.” He chuckled his spill-over
chuckle again, swung around to his desk and took from
one of its pigeon-holes an envelope addressed to him
in a deep-gouging hand. The expression of geniality
lingered about the wings of his nose and the corners
of his mouth, as though it had been moulded there
by long habit, but his eyes narrowed and the play
of light from them was by now like the whisk of a sharp
knife through the air. “You know I chased
that old fellow all over Colorado with my letters
about my scheme to open up the Tigmores, until I got
him mad,” he said, holding the letter up to say
it, as though the contents would be illumined by his
saying it. Then he handed it to Steering, who
took it from its cover, flapped it open, and read:
“DEAR CRIT:
“Use this power of attorney
to open up hell if you want to, but
don’t you write to me.
“Your obedient
servant,
“B.
GRIERSON.”
It was the sort of letter to make
a man laugh, and Steering laughed. Then the phrase
“open up hell” caught his eye again, like
a sign of sinister warning.
“I’ve never been able
to understand,” he began with a questioning
inflection in his voice, “what’s the trouble
with the scion of the house of Grierson. Why
is he so indifferent to a project for the development
of his property that may mean a million to him?”
“Aw, you know he’s cracked!”
replied Madeira quickly and harshly.
“No, I don’t know him
at all, you will remember. Never saw him, never
had a line from him.”
“Well, he’s cracked.
He fooled around here in the Tigmores for twenty years
hunting silver, God bless you! Spent everything
he had riding that hobby, then got another hunch,
for zinc this time, borrowed money, sank it, borrowed
more, sank that, then got a feeling that he was abused
and went away from here declaring that the Canaan
Tigmores could slide into the Di before he would
ever raise a finger to stop them. That’s
why he wouldn’t write you. I’ve handled
his affairs what’s left of them for
years, and I’ve had enough trouble handling them,
let me tell you.” He took the letter from
Steering and replaced it in the pigeon-hole. “But
I’ve got him settled now,” he said, “and
we can go right on oh! for the matter of
going on, things are pretty far on already.”
He began rummaging through his desk in other pigeon-holes.
“I’ll just show you what I’ve drawn
up.”
Steering found himself unable to keep
up with Madeira. He took his cigar from his mouth,
conscious of a sensation that he was being jerked along
by the hair. He tried to get the best of the sensation
by leaning back comfortably in his chair and observing
Madeira leisurely. He tried to feel that he was
following Madeira voluntarily, that he didn’t
have to if he didn’t want to. When he had
quitted New York he had been sustained by an idea
that he had, in his correspondence, put before Madeira
a plan that had some merit and promise in it, in the
way that it got around the terms of a will, under
which he was heir apparent to a vast acreage of land
whose title now rested in another man, his relative.
He and Carington had worked the thing over conscientiously,
and, there in New York, they had taken some pride
in the thought that they had hacked out a good base
for the operations of a potential Steering-Grierson
Mining and Development Company. Here, in Missouri,
in Madeira’s office, before the on-roll of Madeira’s
manner, Steering was no longer sure that he and Carington
had had anything to do with the case.
“Here’s my prospectus,”
Madeira was saying, his voice ringing triumphantly
again, “and here are the articles. God bless
you, we are right up to the point where we can effect
the organisation and issue the first one hundred thousand
shares of stock. There are some Tigmore County
men that I want you to meet, some fellows who can be
used to fill out the directorate, and, first thing
you know, we’ll be filing an application for
a charter, my boy.”
“Just so,” said Steering
absently. He had the papers in his hand, and
was running them over. Both men were pulling at
their cigars with strong puffs, and the room was so
vaporous with smoke that Steering was beginning to
see very clearly indeed, as he went through the papers.
They were couched in good, clear English, the succinct
English that Carington used, with admirable changes
here and there, which brought out Carington’s
points still more clearly. “I am familiar
with these,” said Steering, looking up presently.
“You seem to have let it stand about as we drafted
it in the New York office. What changes you have
made I like.”
“Oh, God bless you! you can
rely upon liking the things of this kind that I do.”
Madeira’s assumption was comprehensive and bland.
There was absolutely no sense in going against that
manner of his at this stage of developments.
Steering began to ask questions and to wait.
“Now, according to what we set
forth here,” Steering tapped the
paper, “the object and purpose of
our corporation will be the mining of zinc and lead
ore in the Canaan Tigmores. We are projecting
upon the hypothesis that there is ore in the Tigmores,
but we can’t go too far upon hypothesis.
There in New York it seemed worth while to take up
the idea that, as there was ore all around through
southwestern Missouri, there might be ore in the Canaan
Tigmores. Then, being equipped for theorising
only, Carington and I passed easily into the consideration
of the possibilities if there were ore in the
Canaan Tigmores. You say that we are ready to
organise, but it looks to me just now as though before
we organise it might be in order to solidify hypothesis
into fact. I don’t think organisation is
the next step at all; the next step, according to
my notion, is to get off paper into the ground.
Question now is, is there any ore in the Canaan
Tigmores?”
“Question now is,” interrupted
Madeira baldly, “are there enough fools in the
United States to donate us a fortune while we are finding
out whether there is or isn’t ore in the Canaan
Tigmores? Oh, God bless you, my boy, you must
bear in mind that gold isn’t the only thing that
can be minted! You can mint a man’s thirst
for gold, if you are up to it. The Southwest
is zinc crazy right now. The time is as ripe as
a nut ”
“Well, one minute what’s
your private opinion about the chance for ore in the
Canaan Tigmores, Mr. Madeira?”
“I d’n know a thing about
it. And God bless you, I don’t care a thing
about it. I know that old Bruce Grierson butted
his brains out on the Tigmore rocks, on the jack-trail,
for twenty years, and I know, that all over the country, not
here in Tigmore County, but farther southwest, men
are drilling into rock that looks rich, and cuts blind,
quick enough to ruin them; and I know that we are not
going into this thing to lose money, but to make it,
coming and going; I know that we’ve got to stand
to win, coming and going. That’s business.”
Face to face with this sort of frank
self-commitment to “business,” Steering
was impressed into silence, and Madeira took advantage
of the silence to push on in the big way he had that
was like the broad-paddling, tooting vehemence of
a river steamer. “I’m for getting
a drill into the hills right away, just as much as
ever you can be, my boy, understand. It will
look better. We’ll do it. But Lord
love you, we won’t hold back the organisation
for that. Just leave these things to me.
I’ve got a programme arranged here that will
suit you, I think. First thing is to take you
around and let you see that document in the recorder’s
office, I believe you said you wanted to
read the Bruce Peele will, then you can
come out and have dinner with Sally and me. I’ve
got a nice place three miles out, and I’ve got
a daughter that is not to be beat, in New York or
out of it. Then this evening we’ll get
together some of the fellows that I handle around here,
and take up some of the preliminary business.”
Madeira had risen, preparatory to
conducting Steering to the recorder’s office
in accord with the first number of his programme, and
Steering got up, too. While Madeira shut up his
desk, Steering threw away the stump of his cigar and
brought his flexed arms back to his shoulders with
an expansive pull on his chest that sent a big influx
of air into his lungs. After his séance with
Madeira he felt as though he had been pummelled down
flat. Madeira had to open his desk again for something
he had forgotten and Steering passed on to the door,
impatient for some outside air. As he opened
the door, with his eyes rather thoughtfully fixed
upon the floor, he saw, peeping around the curve where
the Force’s cage elbowed its way out into the
room, a foot. Being a slender foot, in a well-fitting
walking boot, it held him an unconscionably long time,
then drew him on mandatorily, up the little space between
the Force’s cage and the wall, until he had
rounded the curve and had come out by the Force’s
window, where a bare-headed girl leaned, talking merrily,
gouging a hat-pin into the hat that she had taken off.
“Oh, it’s Mr. Steering, isn’t
it?” she asked at once, and put her hand out
to him. “I heard Father say that he was
expecting you. And then, too, a friend of yours,
who seemed much concerned about your fate over at
Poetical, rode to our house last night and made me
promise to welcome you to Canaan. I am Sally
Madeira.”
“Hi, Pet, you there?”
Madeira’s big voice came through the door of
the private office and took possession of the minute
and the girl “entertain the New Yorker
until I get through here, will you? I got to
monkey with this blasted lock again.”
“Yes, Father, I’m entertaining
him,” Madeira’s daughter called back,
while Bruce held helplessly to the hand she had given
him. A peculiar mistiness had come over his senses.
He could have sworn that through it he saw a picture
that had been with him a good deal during the past
year of his life, a picture of a woman’s flower
face, her fluffiness, as of silk and lace, lose
colour, outline, significance, like a daguerreotype
in the sunlight. A swift joy that he was in Canaan
possessed him. All he could say was, “So
you are Miss Sally?” It sounded very dull, so
dull that he hastened to add, “So you know Piney? Awfully
kind of Piney to attract your attention to me.”
Remembering with horror some of his conversation with
Piney about Miss Madeira, he repeated solemnly, “Awfully
kind.”
“Well, I think you can give
the little vagabond credit for a kind heart.”
Miss Madeira laughed softly.
“I give him credit for much
more than that,” said Bruce. He was envying
Piney, seeing that the tramp-boy’s intuitive
appreciations matched his vigorous young beauty, that
he was far more poet than vagabond, that he, Bruce,
had attempted to play clownishly upon what was a worthy
and lovely idyl in the boy’s heart. As
though she, too, had some faint, perturbing consciousness
of Piney, the girl flushed a little, laughed a little,
and turned the subject readily.
“I know yet another friend of yours,”
said she.
“I am glad of that.”
Bruce had released her hand, forgotten the business
that had brought him to Missouri, forgotten Crittenton
Madeira, and stood with his arms folded, looking down
upon her, glad that she was so tall, glad that he
was taller, glad about everything.
“Yes, another friend,”
she nodded with fleeting meaning, “I was at
Vassar with Elsie Gossamer.”
Face to face with a woman like Sally
Madeira the thought of a woman like Miss Gossamer
must necessarily stay hazy in a man’s brain.
As with another Romeo, Rosaline had but laid the velvet
up which came the surer feet of Juliet. “Well,”
said Steering happily, “all this is going to
make us acquainted, isn’t it?”
“It may, if you like.”
She had a splendid comradeship of manner. Her
father’s energy stopped short of bluster in her.
Borne up on her breezy westernism was a fragrant reserve,
a fine reticence that disengaged a tantalising promise.
“Oh, I’ll like!”
cried Bruce with conviction. “Do you live
in Canaan?”
“Out at Madeira Place.
Father said you were to come out to dine with us to-day.
I hope you will.”
“He will, he will! Trust
me for that!” Madeira came through the space
between the wall and the Force’s cage noisily.
For the first time that morning Steering felt no repugnance
to that disposition of Madeira’s to take charge
of him, and he went off with Madeira, a moment later,
across Court House Square to the recorder’s
office, with tread elastic and eyes sparkling.
When the two men had left her, the
girl moved over to the plate-glass window and watched
Steering, a little smile on her lips, an adequate
enjoyment of his undoing dancing mercilessly in her
long amber-hued eyes.
Steering stopped behind Madeira at
the door of the recorder’s office and, looking
back at the plate-glass window unexpectedly, saw the
girl’s eyes fixed demurely on the floor where
her boot showed under the hem of her long straight
gown. It was a very little moment that they stood
thus, he with his eyes on her, she with her eyes on
her boot, but it was an electric moment. With
him it was a cycle of self-abuse for the unadvised
rot that he had talked to Piney, an era of gratitude
to Piney for being the sort who would not report any
of it to Miss Madeira. (Even so little did Steering
understand that a boy like Piney would necessarily
have to tell a woman like Miss Madeira about all that
he knew; tell it exuberantly, bubblingly, without
ever being quite conscious that he was telling anything.)
Steering followed Madeira inside the recorder’s
office slowly, and the girl went on standing at the
plate-glass window, studying her foot.
“Yes, indeed, sir,” she
began calling to him soundlessly, and broke off abruptly
and stood there at the window for a time, motionless
and thoughtful. She was a tall girl, of a broad-shouldered,
athletic type, a college girl by the sign of the austere
cut of her gown, but a western girl by the sign of
the flying ends of the scarf about her throat, the
unafraid looseness of her bright hair. Her face,
lit by her amber eyes and crowned by those loose masses
of hair, had a rare, dusky-gold beauty. Despite
her hair she was dark-skinned, smooth and warm like
bisque, and that same gold-dusted radiance that was
in her hair and that same amber-gold light that was
in her eyes glowed ineffably from beneath her skin.
She was a pulse of light, colourful and vibrant.
“Yes, indeed, sir,” she resumed after
a while, jabbing the hat-pin into the hat relentlessly,
“this is what a Missouri girl is like!”