Madeira Place was the old Peele Farm,
whose square brick house had been the boast of Canaan
township ever since it had been put up, out
of brick hauled by team across three counties, by
the man who had established, but failed, despite his
effort, to make permanent the fortunes of his family.
When the grandnephew, Bruce Grierson, came on, the
brick house was plastered with a mortgage that somehow
passed eventually into the hands of the then alert
young sapling land-agent, Crittenton Madeira.
Crittenton took the house, and, by and by, Bruce Grierson,
the second, took himself, with money borrowed from
Madeira, out of Canaan, never to return. It was
not long after this that Crittenton Madeira, who was
still a slight man, with a young wife and a pretty
baby out at the brick house, began to be named “our
esteemed fellow townsman” by the Canaan Call.
Madeira built a hotel for Canaan, promoted the Canaan
Short Line, and established the Bank of Canaan.
His wife died, and his little girl grew, and he became
large of girth. It was not until his daughter
was twelve that he had to share honours with anyone
as the foremost personage of Tigmore County. At
twelve the daughter began to show that she had inherited
her father’s vitality, though the sphere of
her activities was different. He bought and sold
and made money. She lassoed heifers, broke colts,
and rode up and down the Di in rickety skiffs.
The community took as much pride in her adventures
as it did in his achievements.
The Madeiras were very happy together
all through those days, and very proud of each other.
She recognised that her father was superior to the
Canaan men, that they did what he told them to do,
and he recognised that she was the most wonderful
child, and the most beautiful, that had ever come
into the world. His convictions on that score
were so profound that they seemed to him something
surer and bigger than the customary paternal pride
and affection. As the girl grew older he spent
a great deal of his money on her education and pleasure at
first blindly, guided only by a big impulse to have
her as good as the best, an impulse that resulted
in some funnily pathetic scenes where the little girl,
frightfully over-dressed, wandered through the St.
Louis shops, holding to the big man’s finger,
trying to think up something else that she might possibly
want. Later, under the girl’s own direction,
the money went to better purpose.
His daughter’s way of spending
the money early became, in Madeira’s manner
of getting at the thing, a sort of balance-wheel to
his way of making it. Although he had made money
in the same way before she was born, and although
he would have made it in the same way had she never
been born, he grew to like the feeling that what he
did he did for her, and that his desire to make money
had a soul in his desire to have her spend it.
This feeling was in the ascendant always when he was
with her. Unconsciously she fanned it within
him. She had spent her young life couched rosily
on his love for her and hers for him; at home she was
lonely; at home Madeira was well-nigh perfect, and
the girl’s imagination made all her ideals live
in the big, handsome, assertive man who was at once
father to her and hero. Perceiving this, Madeira,
with her, entered into a sort of world of make-believe,
and, with her, was sometimes able to take himself
for what she held him, a man whose honour matched
his ability, and, with her, sometimes surprised in
himself the little glow that she seemed to get when
she was profoundly appreciating him.
One Sunday afternoon they were sitting,
father and daughter, in the garden, behind the brick
house, he with a St. Louis paper on his knee, his
head bare, his waistcoat loose, his feet in slippers.
His chair was tilted back against a crab-apple tree
at the side of one of the garden walks. For several
weeks his face had been showing some sort of strain,
but at this moment he looked comfortable. She
had been telling him that she was glad that he had
put up the new watering trough in Court House Square,
and the way she had talked about it had made him feel
sure that he had had some notion, when he did it,
of benefiting the community, instead of insuring that
the farmers would stop in front of the Grange store,
in which he was interested.
She sat on a bench near him, quite
idle; her gown, a tawny drapery, whose half-hidden
suggestions of blue were like shy spring flowers, was
sheathed closely about her; her eyes were following
the pale wide river below the garden; her hair, so
light that it made her eyes seem lighter, was piled
above the warm, creamy tan of her forehead; there was
a little drowsy droop on her face; the dusky-gold
radiance was all about her.
“Daddy,” she said, by
and by, “do you know that I swam the Di
once?” He laughed sleepily. He remembered.
“I wonder if I could do it now I was
pretty awful as a youngster, wasn’t I, Daddy?”
“You certainly had a reputation,” he admitted.
“Do you know that I still have
a good deal of a reputation” she turned
upon him with more directness and a little laughing
pugnacity “as though I were the same
terrible child, up to the same riotous tricks as when
I was twelve!”
“Hump-mmh, hump-mmh!”
He looked at her from under his slanted lids and shook
his head, while his big face quivered with amusement.
“You haven’t given up all your riotous
tricks even yet don’t tell me.”
He spoke with the indulgence that had allowed free
rein to her caprices all her life.
“Never you mind, I do precious
little that is riotous any more; I am getting used
to harness,” she made answer, and looked as though
she did not mean to be interfered with in the precious
little that was riotous that she still clung to, and
then looked as though she were threatening herself
with sweeping reform. “Go back to sleep,
Daddy. You will be in my way presently, anyhow.”
“Anybody coming?”
“Your Mr. Steering.”
“‘My!’” Madeira’s
face clouded over, and he thrust out his jaw grimacingly.
“If he were mine, you know what I should
do with him?” he asked, in a sharp voice.
“No, I don’t know. What would you
do with him?”
“I should send him packing back
East. This country don’t need, aw,
the people of this country are good enough for the
country and the country is good enough for them.
We don’t need outsiders.”
He was so vehement that she regarded
him questioningly. “Don’t you like
him any more?” she inquired, with a little dubious
shake of her head.
“I don’t like” Madeira
got up and walked back and forth under the crab-apple
tree “I don’t like for a man
without any practical knowledge or experience to get
a lot of ideas about a thing and bring them to a field
and try to push other chaps out, other chaps who are
already in the field.”
“Yes, but ”
It occurred to her that she was defending Steering “but
if he brings the ideas, he ought to have the credit
for originating the ideas, oughtn’t he?”
“No! No!” Madeira’s
voice rang up, urgent, strident; he did not seem conscious
that he was talking to her; he seemed rather to be
having something out with himself. The strain
of the past weeks had come back to his face.
“Plenty of people before this Steering have thought
of ore in the Canaan Tigmores. Look at old Grierson
himself! Originate the idea! Grierson had
the idea before Steering was born! We can get
ideas in this country, and work ’em out, too,
without any help from outsiders.”
“Mr. Steering is not exactly an outsider, is
he?”
“Yes, he is, too. He hasn’t
any more claim to this land now than you have; it
isn’t any more his business what’s done
here during Grierson’s lifetime than it’s
Rockefeller’s business. Not a bit.
Let Steering wait till the land is his.”
“Well,” she
was troubled, “in the meantime, what
is old Grierson going to do?”
Madeira seemed to be trying to quiet
himself. He went down to the garden fence and
looked at the oak forest on the other side of the Di,
puckered up his mouth, as though to whistle, but stopped
short of it, and came sauntering back toward his daughter.
“He is going to do what I tell him to do, Honey,”
he made answer. “And I’m telling him
to put the Canaan Mining and Development Company into
the Tigmores after zinc.”
“I should think, though,”
she said then, slowly, “that even if the matter
is in your hands now, it would be to your ultimate
advantage to have Mr. Steering in with you. He
is the next owner, and, if old Grierson should die,
whatever work you have done on the Tigmores would
go for nothing. I should think it would be almost
essential for you and Mr. Steering to be together.”
He let his chair down angrily.
“There isn’t a big enough scheme in the
universe to accommodate Steering and me together!
He is a blamed idiot,” he said doggedly.
And it became clear to her that in his bull-headed
way he had forged all the links of one of his intense
antagonisms. He had been like that all his life;
of pronounced personality himself, he had never been
able to abide pronounced personality in those with
whom he came in contact. He had ridden rough-shod
over inferior men all his life; he liked to ride rough-shod;
he was never pleased when his path crossed people
over whom he could not ride rough-shod. Generally
she had accepted his classification of those who opposed
him strongly as “blamed idiots”; sometimes
with a little of her laughing banter, but usually,
his superiority standing out sharp and clear when opposed
to the dull Canaanites, endorsing his opinion.
“I sort of wish,” he went on, with that
keen, wire-edged exasperation still sawing in his voice,
“that you wouldn’t have much to do with
that chap. He isn’t my kind of people.
I shouldn’t mind if, now that you’ve given
him a good high swing, you’d let him drop.”
“Why, Father! You oughtn’t
to forget that there was one time in your life when
he might have let you drop and didn’t!”
He saw that he had got himself before
her in too keen a light.
“Yes, but you don’t expect
me to let him hold me up by the collar forever, do
you, Pet? That’s his dog-on way, anyhow wants
to dictate. I can’t stand a man who wants
to dictate. I think we’ve had enough of
him. That’s what I mean, and all I mean.”
He patted her hands and got up from his chair again.
“There comes Samson with the mail,” he
said nervously.
A negro man rode up through the big
gate at the front of the grounds and came on to Madeira,
who took two letters from him. “One for
you, Sally,” said Madeira, “and one for
me.”
“Oh, from Elsie Gossamer!”
she cried, and took her letter and sat, unobservant
of him, for several moments, the little frown that
his words had brought out still on her brow.
Presently she looked up and saw that he had read his
letter, and had put it in his pocket; he was tilted
back against the crab-apple tree again, his forehead
knit, his eyes brilliant, a peculiar fixity in their
gaze. “Oh, here!” she cried protestingly,
“you look as though you had just decided to become
the President of the United States of America!
Stop scowling and listen; Elsie is after me again
to join her in Europe. She is fairly eloquent
with the project ”
He broke in upon her with a sudden
intensity of interest: “Do it!” he
cried. “It’s the very thing.
You go. You go and have a good time.”
“I don’t want to go so
awfully,” she began hesitatingly. “I’ve
been away from you a lot in the last two years.
I don’t care so much about it.”
“Yes, you do; you go.”
He was always keen for her pleasure, but in the present
case he seemed especially earnest.
“Want to get rid of me, huh?”
“No; you know I’ll half
die without you. But I am going to be fearfully
busy from now on,” his mouth seemed
hot and dry as he talked, “it will
suit better now than ever. You go.”
“Well, maybe,” she said.
She was accustomed to let her own fancy settle such
questions for her. “Maybe I’ll go.
Maybe I shan’t.” There was a click
at the front gate. “I expect that’s
Mr. Steering,” she announced.
Madeira got out of his chair quickly.
“If it is, I don’t want to see him,”
he said, “he oh, he irritates me,
that man, always wanting to dictate.
I’ll go in. Don’t want ever to see
him again, and say, Pet?”
“Well, Dad?”
“I’d be glad if you would
never see him again. Just stop where you are,
will you?”
She drew a long sighing breath.
“Just stop where I am? Well, I’ll
see,” she said, laughing and flushing in the
warm, rich fashion of her skin, but there was the
faint far call of uneasiness in her laughter, like
a wind-whisper of coming rain. “Tell Samson
to bring Mr. Steering out here to me,” she commanded,
and Madeira went off toward the house and disappeared
through the green-latticed porch.
Inside the house he retired to the
room that was known as his office, locked the door
and came over to his desk. As he did it a peculiar
consciousness of himself suffused him like the first
fumes of a deadly narcotic. He began to see that
he was lifting his feet stealthily, advancing them
stealthily, stealthily setting them down, with the
soundless fall of a cat’s foot on velvet.
Reaching his desk, he half fell into a chair there,
a thin line of white froth between his lips, his big
face purplish. “Eh, God?” he cried,
“what’s this? what’s this?”
The seizure passed as suddenly as
it had come. By and by he heard Steering pass
through the house under Samson’s escort.
When the sound of Steering’s foot-steps had
died away, Madeira took a letter from his pocket,
spread it open before him and read it over and over.
“Dear Crit,” [the letter
said] “I have thought this thing to a finish.
I want you to turn the Tigmores over to my cousin,
Bruce Steering. Let him start at once on the
jack trail, that primrose path of dalliance. As
for me, my dear sir, by the time this reaches you,
I shall be on the long trail. You needn’t
blow any trumpets about it, for B. G. will have no
funeral. The name that I gave you as the name
that I live here under is good enough to die here
under. The certain fact for your consideration
is that I die at once, and that the question of this
property entail is now confided to you to arrange
for my heir, young Steering. Write to the clerk
of Snow Mountain County for the documents that I have
left with him for you. They establish everything.
Tell my cousin that, besides the Tigmores, I bequeath
him my debts to you. This leaves me not at all
envious of the job ahead of him, and, as ever,
“Your blindly
devoted servant,
“BRUCE
GRIERSON.”