Devil's Ford
by
Bret Harte








This etext was prepared by Donald Lainson, charlie@idirect.com.





DEVIL'S FORD

by Bret Harte




DEVIL'S FORD


CHAPTER I


It was a season of unequalled prosperity in Devil's Ford. The half
a dozen cabins scattered along the banks of the North Fork, as if
by some overflow of that capricious river, had become augmented
during a week of fierce excitement by twenty or thirty others, that
were huddled together on the narrow gorge of Devil's Spur, or cast
up on its steep sides. So sudden and violent had been the change
of fortune, that the dwellers in the older cabins had not had time
to change with it, but still kept their old habits, customs, and
even their old clothes. The flour pan in which their daily bread
was mixed stood on the rude table side by side with the
"prospecting pans," half full of gold washed up from their
morning's work; the front windows of the newer tenements looked
upon the one single thoroughfare, but the back door opened upon the
uncleared wilderness, still haunted by the misshapen bulk of bear
or the nightly gliding of catamount.

Neither had success as yet affected their boyish simplicity and the
frankness of old frontier habits; they played with their new-found
riches with the naive delight of children, and rehearsed their
glowing future with the importance and triviality of school-boys.

"I've bin kalklatin'," said Dick Mattingly, leaning on his long-
handled shovel with lazy gravity, "that when I go to Rome this
winter, I'll get one o' them marble sharps to chisel me a statoo o'
some kind to set up on the spot where we made our big strike.
Suthin' to remember it by, you know."

"What kind o' statoo--Washington or Webster?" asked one of the
Kearney brothers, without looking up from his work.

"No--I reckon one o' them fancy groups--one o' them Latin goddesses
that Fairfax is always gassin' about, sorter leadin', directin' and
bossin' us where to dig."

"You'd make a healthy-lookin' figger in a group," responded
Kearney, critically regarding an enormous patch in Mattingly's
trousers. "Why don't you have a fountain instead?"

"Where'll you get the water?" demanded the first speaker, in
return. "You know there ain't enough in the North Fork to do a
week's washing for the camp--to say nothin' of its color."

"Leave that to me," said Kearney, with self-possession. "When I've
built that there reservoir on Devil's Spur, and bring the water
over the ridge from Union Ditch, there'll be enough to spare for
that."

"Better mix it up, I reckon--have suthin' half statoo, half
fountain," interposed the elder Mattingly, better known as
"Maryland Joe," "and set it up afore the Town Hall and Free Library
I'm kalklatin' to give. Do THAT, and you can count on me."

After some further discussion, it was gravely settled that Kearney
should furnish water brought from the Union Ditch, twenty miles
away, at a cost of two hundred thousand dollars, to feed a memorial
fountain erected by Mattingly, worth a hundred thousand dollars, as
a crowning finish to public buildings contributed by Maryland Joe,
to the extent of half a million more. The disposition of these
vast sums by gentlemen wearing patched breeches awakened no sense
of the ludicrous, nor did any doubt, reservation, or contingency
enter into the plans of the charming enthusiasts themselves. The
foundation of their airy castles lay already before them in the
strip of rich alluvium on the river bank, where the North Fork,
sharply curving round the base of Devil's Spur, had for centuries
swept the detritus of gulch and canyon. They had barely crossed
the threshold of this treasure-house, to find themselves rich men;
what possibilities of affluence might be theirs when they had fully
exploited their possessions? So confident were they of that
ultimate prospect, that the wealth already thus obtained was
religiously expended in engines and machinery for the boring of
wells and the conveyance of that precious water which the exhausted
river had long since ceased to yield. It seemed as if the gold
they had taken out was by some ironical compensation gradually
making its way back to the soil again through ditch and flume and
reservoir.

Such was the position of affairs at Devil's Ford on the 13th of
August, 1860. It was noon of a hot day. Whatever movement there
was in the stifling air was seen rather than felt in a tremulous,
quivering, upward-moving dust along the flank of the mountain,
through which the spires of the pines were faintly visible. There
was no water in the bared and burning bars of the river to reflect
the vertical sun, but under its direct rays one or two tinned roofs
and corrugated zinc cabins struck fire, a few canvas tents became
dazzling to the eye, and the white wooded corral of the stage
office and hotel insupportable. For two hours no one ventured in
the glare of the open, or even to cross the narrow, unshadowed
street, whose dull red dust seemed to glow between the lines of
straggling houses. The heated shells of these green unseasoned
tenements gave out a pungent odor of scorching wood and resin. The
usual hurried, feverish toil in the claim was suspended; the pick
and shovel were left sticking in the richest "pay gravel;" the
toiling millionaires themselves, ragged, dirty, and perspiring, lay
panting under the nearest shade, where the pipes went out
listlessly, and conversation sank to monosyllables.

"There's Fairfax," said Dick Mattingly, at last, with a lazy
effort. His face was turned to the hillside, where a man had just
emerged from the woods, and was halting irresolutely before the
glaring expanse of upheaved gravel and glistening boulders that
stretched between him and the shaded group. "He's going to make a
break for it," he added, as the stranger, throwing his linen coat
over his head, suddenly started into an Indian trot through the
pelting sunbeams toward them. This strange act was perfectly
understood by the group, who knew that in that intensely dry heat
the danger of exposure was lessened by active exercise and the
profuse perspiration that followed it. In another moment the
stranger had reached their side, dripping as if rained upon,
mopping his damp curls and handsome bearded face with his linen
coat, as he threw himself pantingly on the ground.

"I struck out over here first, boys, to give you a little warning,"
he said, as soon as he had gained breath. "That engineer will be
down here to take charge as soon as the six o'clock stage comes in.
He's an oldish chap, has got a family of two daughters, and--I--am--
d----d if he is not bringing them down here with him."

"Oh, go long!" exclaimed the five men in one voice, raising
themselves on their hands and elbows, and glaring at the speaker.

"Fact, boys! Soon as I found it out I just waltzed into that Jew
shop at the Crossing and bought up all the clothes that would be
likely to suit you fellows, before anybody else got a show. I
reckon I cleared out the shop. The duds are a little mixed in
style, but I reckon they're clean and whole, and a man might face a
lady in 'em. I left them round at the old Buckeye Spring, where
they're handy without attracting attention. You boys can go there
for a general wash-up, rig yourselves up without saying anything,
and then meander back careless and easy in your store clothes, just
as the stage is coming in, sabe?"

"Why didn't you let us know earlier?" asked Mattingly aggrievedly;
"you've been back here at least an hour."

"I've been getting some place ready for THEM," returned the new-
comer. "We might have managed to put the man somewhere, if he'd
been alone, but these women want family accommodation. There was
nothing left for me to do but to buy up Thompson's saloon."

"No?" interrupted his audience, half in incredulity, half in
protestation.

"Fact! You boys will have to take your drinks under canvas again,
I reckon! But I made Thompson let those gold-framed mirrors that
used to stand behind the bar go into the bargain, and they sort of
furnish the room. You know the saloon is one of them patent houses
you can take to pieces, and I've been reckoning you boys will have
to pitch in and help me to take the whole shanty over to the laurel
bushes, and put it up agin Kearney's cabin."

"What's all that?" said the younger Kearney, with an odd mingling
of astonishment and bashful gratification.

"Yes, I reckon yours is the cleanest house, because it's the
newest, so you'll just step out and let us knock in one o' the
gables, and clap it on to the saloon, and make ONE house of it,
don't you see? There'll be two rooms, one for the girls and the
other for the old man."

The astonishment and bewilderment of the party had gradually given
way to a boyish and impatient interest.

"Hadn't we better do the job at once?" suggested Dick Mattingly.

"Or throw ourselves into those new clothes, so as to be ready,"
added the younger Kearney, looking down at his ragged trousers. "I
say, Fairfax, what are the girls like, eh?"

All the others had been dying to ask the question, yet one and all
laughed at the conscious manner and blushing cheek of the
questioner.

"You'll find out quick enough," returned Fairfax, whose curt
carelessness did not, however, prevent a slight increase of color
on his own cheek. "We'd better get that job off our hands before
doing anything else. So, if you're ready, boys, we'll just waltz
down to Thompson's and pack up the shanty. He's out of it by this
time, I reckon. You might as well be perspiring to some purpose
over there as gaspin' under this tree. We won't go back to work
this afternoon, but knock off now, and call it half a day. Come!
Hump yourselves, gentlemen. Are you ready? One, two, three, and
away!"

In another instant the tree was deserted; the figures of the five
millionaires of Devil's Ford, crossing the fierce glare of the open
space, with boyish alacrity, glistened in the sunlight, and then
disappeared in the nearest fringe of thickets.


CHAPTER II


Six hours later, when the shadow of Devil's Spur had crossed the
river, and spread a slight coolness over the flat beyond, the
Pioneer coach, leaving the summit, began also to bathe its heated
bulk in the long shadows of the descent. Conspicuous among the
dusty passengers, the two pretty and youthful faces of the
daughters of Philip Carr, mining superintendent and engineer,
looked from the windows with no little anxiety towards their future
home in the straggling settlement below, that occasionally came in
view at the turns of the long zigzagging road. A slight look of
comical disappointment passed between them as they gazed upon the
sterile flat, dotted with unsightly excrescences that stood equally
for cabins or mounds of stone and gravel. It was so feeble and
inconsistent a culmination to the beautiful scenery they had passed
through, so hopeless and imbecile a conclusion to the preparation
of that long picturesque journey, with its glimpses of sylvan and
pastoral glades and canyons, that, as the coach swept down the last
incline, and the remorseless monotony of the dead level spread out
before them, furrowed by ditches and indented by pits, under cover
of shielding their cheeks from the impalpable dust that rose
beneath the plunging wheels, they buried their faces in their
handkerchiefs, to hide a few half-hysterical tears. Happily, their
father, completely absorbed in a practical, scientific, and
approving contemplation of the topography and material resources of
the scene of his future labors, had no time to notice their
defection. It was not until the stage drew up before a rambling
tenement bearing the inscription, "Hotel and Stage Office," that he
became fully aware of it.

"We can't stop HERE, papa," said Christie Carr decidedly, with a
shake of her pretty head. "You can't expect that."

Mr. Carr looked up at the building; it was half grocery, half
saloon. Whatever other accommodations it contained must have been
hidden in the rear, as the flat roof above was almost level with
the raftered ceiling of the shop.

"Certainly," he replied hurriedly; "we'll see to that in a moment.
I dare say it's all right. I told Fairfax we were coming.
Somebody ought to be here."

"But they're not," said Jessie Carr indignantly; "and the few that
were here scampered off like rabbits to their burrows as soon as
they saw us get down."

It was true. The little group of loungers before the building had
suddenly disappeared. There was the flash of a red shirt vanishing
in an adjacent doorway; the fading apparition of a pair of high
boots and blue overalls in another; the abrupt withdrawal of a
curly blond head from a sashless window over the way. Even the
saloon was deserted, although a back door in the dim recess seemed
to creak mysteriously. The stage-coach, with the other passengers,
had already rattled away.

"I certainly think Fairfax understood that I--" began Mr. Carr.

He was interrupted by the pressure of Christie's fingers on his arm
and a subdued exclamation from Jessie, who was staring down the
street.

"What are they?" she whispered in her sister's ear. "Nigger
minstrels, a circus, or what?"

The five millionaires of Devil's Ford had just turned the corner of
the straggling street, and were approaching in single file. One
glance was sufficient to show that they had already availed
themselves of the new clothing bought by Fairfax, had washed, and
one or two had shaved. But the result was startling.

Through some fortunate coincidence in size, Dick Mattingly was the
only one who had achieved an entire new suit. But it was of
funereal black cloth, and although relieved at one extremity by a
pair of high riding boots, in which his too short trousers were
tucked, and at the other by a tall white hat, and cravat of
aggressive yellow, the effect was depressing. In agreeable
contrast, his brother, Maryland Joe, was attired in a thin fawn-
colored summer overcoat, lightly worn open, so as to show the
unstarched bosom of a white embroidered shirt, and a pair of
nankeen trousers and pumps.

The Kearney brothers had divided a suit between them, the elder
wearing a tightly-fitting, single-breasted blue frock-coat and a
pair of pink striped cotton trousers, while the younger candidly
displayed the trousers of his brother's suit, as a harmonious
change to a shining black alpaca coat and crimson neckerchief.
Fairfax, who brought up the rear, had, with characteristic
unselfishness, contented himself with a French workman's blue
blouse and a pair of white duck trousers. Had they shown the least
consciousness of their finery, or of its absurdity, they would have
seemed despicable. But only one expression beamed on the five
sunburnt and shining faces--a look of unaffected boyish
gratification and unrestricted welcome.

They halted before Mr. Carr and his daughters, simultaneously
removed their various and remarkable head coverings, and waited
until Fairfax advanced and severally presented them. Jessie Carr's
half-frightened smile took refuge in the trembling shadows of her
dark lashes; Christie Carr stiffened slightly, and looked straight
before her.

"We reckoned--that is--we intended to meet you and the young ladies
at the grade," said Fairfax, reddening a little as he endeavored to
conceal his too ready slang, "and save you from trapesing--from
dragging yourselves up grade again to your house."

"Then there IS a house?" said Jessie, with an alarming frank laugh
of relief, that was, however, as frankly reflected in the boyishly
appreciative eyes of the young men.

"Such as it is," responded Fairfax, with a shade of anxiety, as he
glanced at the fresh and pretty costumes of the young women, and
dubiously regarded the two Saratoga trunks resting hopelessly on
the veranda. "I'm afraid it isn't much, for what you're accustomed
to. But," he added more cheerfully, "it will do for a day or two,
and perhaps you'll give us the pleasure of showing you the way
there now."

The procession was quickly formed. Mr. Carr, alive only to the
actual business that had brought him there, at once took possession
of Fairfax, and began to disclose his plans for the working of the
mine, occasionally halting to look at the work already done in the
ditches, and to examine the field of his future operations.
Fairfax, not displeased at being thus relieved of a lighter
attendance on Mr. Carr's daughters, nevertheless from time to time
cast a paternal glance backwards upon their escorts, who had each
seized a handle of the two trunks, and were carrying them in
couples at the young ladies' side. The occupation did not offer
much freedom for easy gallantry, but no sign of discomfiture or
uneasiness was visible in the grateful faces of the young men. The
necessity of changing hands at times with their burdens brought a
corresponding change of cavalier at the lady's side, although it
was observed that the younger Kearney, for the sake of continuing a
conversation with Miss Jessie, kept his grasp of the handle nearest
the young lady until his hand was nearly cut through, and his arm
worn out by exhaustion.

"The only thing on wheels in the camp is a mule wagon, and the
mules are packin' gravel from the river this afternoon," explained
Dick Mattingly apologetically to Christie, "or we'd have toted--I
mean carried--you and your baggage up to the shant--the--your
house. Give us two weeks more, Miss Carr--only two weeks to wash
up our work and realize--and we'll give you a pair of 2.40 steppers
and a skeleton buggy to meet you at the top of the hill and drive
you over to the cabin. Perhaps you'd prefer a regular carriage;
some ladies do. And a nigger driver. But what's the use of
planning anything? Afore that time comes we'll have run you up a
house on the hill, and you shall pick out the spot. It wouldn't
take long--unless you preferred brick. I suppose we could get
brick over from La Grange, if you cared for it, but it would take
longer. If you could put up for a time with something of stained
glass and a mahogany veranda--"

In spite of her cold indignation, and the fact that she could
understand only a part of Mattingly's speech, Christie comprehended
enough to make her lift her clear eyes to the speaker, as she
replied freezingly that she feared she would not trouble them long
with her company.

"Oh, you'll get over that," responded Mattingly, with an
exasperating confidence that drove her nearly frantic, from the
manifest kindliness of intent that made it impossible for her to
resent it. "I felt that way myself at first. Things will look
strange and unsociable for a while, until you get the hang of them.
You'll naturally stamp round and cuss a little--" He stopped in
conscious consternation.

With ready tact, and before Christie could reply, Maryland Joe had
put down the trunk and changed hands with his brother.

"You mustn't mind Dick, or he'll go off and kill himself with
shame," he whispered laughingly in her ear. "He means all right,
but he's picked up so much slang here that he's about forgotten how
to talk English, and it's nigh on to four years since he's met a
young lady."

Christie did not reply. Yet the laughter of her sister in advance
with the Kearney brothers seemed to make the reserve with which she
tried to crush further familiarity only ridiculous.

"Do you know many operas, Miss Carr?"

She looked at the boyish, interested, sunburnt face so near to her
own, and hesitated. After all, why should she add to her other
real disappointments by taking this absurd creature seriously?

"In what way?" she returned, with a half smile.

"To play. On the piano, of course. There isn't one nearer here
than Sacramento; but I reckon we could get a small one by Thursday.
You couldn't do anything on a banjo?" he added doubtfully;
"Kearney's got one."

"I imagine it would be very difficult to carry a piano over those
mountains," said Christie laughingly, to avoid the collateral of
the banjo.

"We got a billiard-table over from Stockton," half bashfully
interrupted Dick Mattingly, struggling from his end of the trunk to
recover his composure, "and it had to be brought over in sections
on the back of a mule, so I don't see why--" He stopped short
again in confusion, at a sign from his brother, and then added, "I
mean, of course, that a piano is a heap more delicate, and
valuable, and all that sort of thing, but it's worth trying for."

"Fairfax was always saying he'd get one for himself, so I reckon
it's possible," said Joe.

"Does he play?" asked Christie.

"You bet," said Joe, quite forgetting himself in his enthusiasm.
"He can snatch Mozart and Beethoven bald-headed."

In the embarrassing silence that followed this speech the fringe of
pine wood nearest the flat was reached. Here there was a rude
"clearing," and beneath an enormous pine stood the two recently
joined tenements. There was no attempt to conceal the point of
junction between Kearney's cabin and the newly-transported saloon
from the flat--no architectural illusion of the palpable collusion
of the two buildings, which seemed to be telescoped into each
other. The front room or living room occupied the whole of
Kearney's cabin. It contained, in addition to the necessary
articles for housekeeping, a "bunk" or berth for Mr. Carr, so as to
leave the second building entirely to the occupation of his
daughters as bedroom and boudoir.

There was a half-humorous, half-apologetic exhibition of the rude
utensils of the living room, and then the young men turned away as
the two girls entered the open door of the second room. Neither
Christie nor Jessie could for a moment understand the delicacy
which kept these young men from accompanying them into the room
they had but a few moments before decorated and arranged with their
own hands, and it was not until they turned to thank their strange
entertainers that they found that they were gone.

The arrangement of the second room was rude and bizarre, but not
without a singular originality and even tastefulness of conception.
What had been the counter or "bar" of the saloon, gorgeous in white
and gold, now sawn in two and divided, was set up on opposite sides
of the room as separate dressing-tables, decorated with huge
bunches of azaleas, that hid the rough earthenware bowls, and gave
each table the appearance of a vestal altar.

The huge gilt plate-glass mirror which had hung behind the bar
still occupied one side of the room, but its length was artfully
divided by an enormous rosette of red, white, and blue muslin--one
of the surviving Fourth of July decorations of Thompson's saloon.
On either side of the door two pathetic-looking, convent-like cots,
covered with spotless sheeting, and heaped up in the middle, like a
snow-covered grave, had attracted their attention. They were still
staring at them when Mr. Carr anticipated their curiosity.

"I ought to tell you that the young men confided to me the fact
that there was neither bed nor mattress to be had on the Ford.
They have filled some flour sacks with clean dry moss from the
woods, and put half a dozen blankets on the top, and they hope you
can get along until the messenger who starts to-night for La Grange
can bring some bedding over."

Jessie flew with mischievous delight to satisfy herself of the
truth of this marvel. "It's so, Christie," she said laughingly--
"three flour-sacks apiece; but I'm jealous: yours are all marked
'superfine,' and mine 'middlings.'"

Mr. Carr had remained uneasily watching Christie's shadowed face.

"What matters?" she said drily. "The accommodation is all in
keeping."

"It will be better in a day or two," he continued, casting a
longing look towards the door--the first refuge of masculine
weakness in an impending domestic emergency. "I'll go and see what
can be done," he said feebly, with a sidelong impulse towards the
opening and freedom. "I've got to see Fairfax again to-night any
way."

"One moment, father," said Christie, wearily. "Did you know
anything of this place and these--these people--before you came?"

"Certainly--of course I did," he returned, with the sudden
testiness of disturbed abstraction. "What are you thinking of? I
knew the geological strata and the--the report of Fairfax and his
partners before I consented to take charge of the works. And I can
tell you that there is a fortune here. I intend to make my own
terms, and share in it."

"And not take a salary or some sum of money down?" said Christie,
slowly removing her bonnet in the same resigned way.

"I am not a hired man, or a workman, Christie," said her father
sharply. "You ought not to oblige me to remind you of that."

"But the hired men--the superintendent and his workmen--were the
only ones who ever got anything out of your last experience with
Colonel Waters at La Grange, and--and we at least lived among
civilized people there."

"These young men are not common people, Christie; even if they have
forgotten the restraints of speech and manners, they're gentlemen."

"Who are willing to live like--like negroes."

"You can make them what you please."

Christie raised her eyes. There was a certain cynical ring in her
father's voice that was unlike his usual hesitating abstraction.
It both puzzled and pained her.

"I mean," he said hastily, "that you have the same opportunity to
direct the lives of these young men into more regular, disciplined
channels that I have to regulate and correct their foolish waste of
industry and material here. It would at least beguile the time for
you."

Fortunately for Mr. Carr's escape and Christie's uneasiness,
Jessie, who had been examining the details of the living-room,
broke in upon this conversation.

"I'm sure it will be as good as a perpetual picnic. George Kearney
says we can have a cooking-stove under the tree outside at the
back, and as there will be no rain for three months we can do the
cooking there, and that will give us more room for--for the piano
when it comes; and there's an old squaw to do the cleaning and
washing-up any day--and--and--it will be real fun."

She stopped breathlessly, with glowing cheeks and sparkling eyes--a
charming picture of youth and trustfulness. Mr. Carr had seized
the opportunity to escape.

"Really, now, Christie," said Jessie confidentially, when they were
alone, and Christie had begun to unpack her trunk, and to
mechanically put her things away, "they're not so bad."

"Who?" asked Christie.

"Why, the Kearneys, and Mattinglys, and Fairfax, and the lot,
provided you don't look at their clothes. And think of it! they
told me--for they tell one EVERYTHING in the most alarming way--
that those clothes were bought to please US. A scramble of things
bought at La Grange, without reference to size or style. And to
hear these creatures talk, why, you'd think they were Astors or
Rothschilds. Think of that little one with the curls--I don't
believe he is over seventeen, for all his baby moustache--says he's
going to build an assembly hall for us to give a dance in next
month; and apologizes the next breath to tell us that there isn't
any milk to be had nearer than La Grange, and we must do without
it, and use syrup in our tea to-morrow."

"And where is all this wealth?" said Christie, forcing herself to
smile at her sister's animation.

"Under our very feet, my child, and all along the river. Why, what
we thought was pure and simple mud is what they call 'gold-bearing
cement.'"

"I suppose that is why they don't brush their boots and trousers,
it's so precious," returned Christie drily. "And have they ever
translated this precious dirt into actual coin?"

"Bless you, yes. Why, that dirty little gutter, you know, that ran
along the side of the road and followed us down the hill all the
way here, that cost them--let me see--yes, nearly sixty thousand
dollars. And fancy! papa's just condemned it--says it won't do;
and they've got to build another."

An impatient sigh from Christie drew Jessie's attention to her
troubled eyebrows.

"Don't worry about our disappointment, dear. It isn't so very
great. I dare say we'll be able to get along here in some way,
until papa is rich again. You know they intend to make him share
with them."

"It strikes me that he is sharing with them already," said
Christie, glancing bitterly round the cabin; "sharing everything--
ourselves, our lives, our tastes."

"Ye-e-s!" said Jessie, with vaguely hesitating assent. "Yes, even
these:" she showed two dice in the palm of her little hand. "I
found 'em in the drawer of our dressing-table."

"Throw them away," said Christie impatiently.

But Jessie's small fingers closed over the dice. "I'll give them
to the little Kearney. I dare say they were the poor boy's
playthings."

The appearance of these relics of wild dissipation, however, had
lifted Christie out of her sublime resignation. "For Heaven's
sake, Jessie," she said, "look around and see if there is anything
more!"

To make sure, they each began to scrimmage; the broken-spirited
Christie exhibiting both alacrity and penetration in searching
obscure corners. In the dining-room, behind the dresser, three or
four books were discovered: an odd volume of Thackeray, another of
Dickens, a memorandum-book or diary. "This seems to be Latin,"
said Jessie, fishing out a smaller book. "I can't read it."

"It's just as well you shouldn't," said Christie shortly, whose
ideas of a general classical impropriety had been gathered from
pages of Lempriere's dictionary. "Put it back directly."

Jessie returned certain odes of one Horatius Flaccus to the corner,
and uttered an exclamation. "Oh, Christie! here are some letters
tied up with a ribbon."

They were two or three prettily written letters, exhaling a faint
odor of refinement and of the pressed flowers that peeped from
between the loose leaves. "I see, 'My darling Fairfax.' It's from
some woman."

"I don't think much of her, whosoever she is," said Christie,
tossing the intact packet back into the corner.

"Nor I," echoed Jessie.

Nevertheless, by some feminine inconsistency, evidently the
circumstance did make them think more of HIM, for a minute later,
when they had reentered their own room, Christie remarked, "The
idea of petting a man by his family name! Think of mamma ever
having called papa 'darling Carr'!"

"Oh, but his family name isn't Fairfax," said Jessie hastily;
"that's his FIRST name, his Christian name. I forget what's his
other name, but nobody ever calls him by it."

"Do you mean," said Christie, with glistening eyes and awful
deliberation--"do you mean to say that we're expected to fall in
with this insufferable familiarity? I suppose they'll be calling
US by our Christian names next."

"Oh, but they do!" said Jessie, mischievously.

"What!"

"They call me Miss Jessie; and Kearney, the little one, asked me if
Christie played."

"And what did you say?"

"I said that you did," answered Jessie, with an affectation of
cherubic simplicity. "You do, dear; don't you? . . . There, don't
get angry, darling; I couldn't flare up all of a sudden in the face
of that poor little creature; he looked so absurd--and so--so
honest."

Christie turned away, relapsing into her old resigned manner, and
assuming her household duties in a quiet, temporizing way that was,
however, without hope or expectation.

Mr. Carr, who had dined with his friends under the excuse of not
adding to the awkwardness of the first day's housekeeping returned
late at night with a mass of papers and drawings, into which he
afterwards withdrew, but not until he had delivered himself of a
mysterious package entrusted to him by the young men for his
daughters. It contained a contribution to their board in the shape
of a silver spoon and battered silver mug, which Jessie chose to
facetiously consider as an affecting reminiscence of the youthful
Kearney's christening days--which it probably was.

The young girls retired early to their white snow-drifts: Jessie
not without some hilarious struggles with hers, in which she was,
however, quickly surprised by the deep and refreshing sleep of
youth; Christie to lie awake and listen to the night wind, that had
changed from the first cool whispers of sunset to the sturdy breath
of the mountain. At times the frail house shook and trembled.
Wandering gusts laden with the deep resinous odors of the wood
found their way through the imperfect jointure of the two cabins,
swept her cheek and even stirred her long, wide-open lashes. A
broken spray of pine needles rustled along the roof, or a pine cone
dropped with a quick reverberating tap-tap that for an instant
startled her. Lying thus, wide awake, she fell into a dreamy
reminiscence of the past, hearing snatches of old melody in the
moving pines, fragments of sentences, old words, and familiar
epithets in the murmuring wind at her ear, and even the faint
breath of long-forgotten kisses on her cheek. She remembered her
mother--a pallid creature, who had slowly faded out of one of her
father's vague speculations in a vaguer speculation of her own,
beyond his ken--whose place she had promised to take at her
father's side. The words, "Watch over him, Christie; he needs a
woman's care," again echoed in her ears, as if borne on the night
wind from the lonely grave in the lonelier cemetery by the distant
sea. She had devoted herself to him with some little sacrifices of
self, only remembered now for their uselessness in saving her
father the disappointment that sprang from his sanguine and one-
idea'd temperament. She thought of him lying asleep in the other
room, ready on the morrow to devote those fateful qualities to the
new enterprise that with equally fateful disposition she believed
would end in failure. It did not occur to her that the doubts of
her own practical nature were almost as dangerous and illogical as
his enthusiasm, and that for that reason she was fast losing what
little influence she possessed over him. With the example of her
mother's weakness before her eyes, she had become an unsparing and
distrustful critic, with the sole effect of awakening his distrust
and withdrawing his confidence from her.

He was beginning to deceive her as he had never deceived her
mother. Even Jessie knew more of this last enterprise than she did
herself.

All that did not tend to decrease her utter restlessness. It was
already past midnight when she noticed that the wind had again
abated. The mountain breeze had by this time possessed the
stifling valleys and heated bars of the river in its strong, cold
embraces; the equilibrium of Nature was restored, and a shadowy
mist rose from the hollow. A stillness, more oppressive and
intolerable than the previous commotion, began to pervade the house
and the surrounding woods. She could hear the regular breathing of
the sleepers; she even fancied she could detect the faint impulses
of the more distant life in the settlement. The far-off barking of
a dog, a lost shout, the indistinct murmur of some nearer
watercourse--mere phantoms of sound--made the silence more
irritating. With a sudden resolution she arose, dressed herself
quietly and completely, threw a heavy cloak over her head and
shoulders, and opened the door between the living-room and her own.
Her father was sleeping soundly in his bunk in the corner. She
passed noiselessly through the room, opened the lightly fastened
door, and stepped out into the night.

In the irritation and disgust of her walk hither, she had never
noticed the situation of the cabin, as it nestled on the slope at
the fringe of the woods; in the preoccupation of her disappointment
and the mechanical putting away of her things, she had never looked
once from the window of her room, or glanced backward out of the
door that she had entered. The view before her was a revelation--a
reproach, a surprise that took away her breath. Over her shoulders
the newly risen moon poured a flood of silvery light, stretching
from her feet across the shining bars of the river to the opposite
bank, and on up to the very crest of the Devil's Spur--no longer a
huge bulk of crushing shadow, but the steady exaltation of plateau,
spur, and terrace clothed with replete and unutterable beauty. In
this magical light that beauty seemed to be sustained and carried
along by the river winding at its base, lifted again to the broad
shoulder of the mountain, and lost only in the distant vista of
death-like, overcrowning snow. Behind and above where she stood
the towering woods seemed to be waiting with opened ranks to absorb
her with the little cabin she had quitted, dwarfed into
insignificance in the vast prospect; but nowhere was there another
sign or indication of human life and habitation. She looked in
vain for the settlement, for the rugged ditches, the scattered
cabins, and the unsightly heaps of gravel. In the glamour of the
moonlight they had vanished; a veil of silver-gray vapor touched
here and there with ebony shadows masked its site. A black strip
beyond was the river bank. All else was changed. With a sudden
sense of awe and loneliness she turned to the cabin and its
sleeping inmates--all that seemed left to her in the vast and
stupendous domination of rock and wood and sky.

But in another moment the loneliness passed. A new and delicious
sense of an infinite hospitality and friendliness in their silent
presence began to possess her. This same slighted, forgotten,
uncomprehended, but still foolish and forgiving Nature seemed to be
bending over her frightened and listening ear with vague but
thrilling murmurings of freedom and independence. She felt her
heart expand with its wholesome breath, her soul fill with its
sustaining truth.

She felt--

What was that?

An unmistakable outburst of a drunken song at the foot of the
slope:--


"Oh, my name it is Johnny from Pike,
I'm h-ll on a spree or a strike" . . .


She stopped as crimson with shame and indignation as if the
viewless singer had risen before her.


"I knew when to bet, and get up and get--"


"Hush! D--n it all. Don't you hear?"

There was the sound of hurried whispers, a "No" and "Yes," and then
a dead silence.

Christie crept nearer to the edge of the slope in the shadow of a
buckeye. In the clearer view she could distinguish a staggering
figure in the trail below who had evidently been stopped by two
other expostulating shadows that were approaching from the shelter
of a tree.

"Sho!--didn't know!"

The staggering figure endeavored to straighten itself, and then
slouched away in the direction of the settlement. The two
mysterious shadows retreated again to the tree, and were lost in
its deeper shadow. Christie darted back to the cabin, and softly
reentered her room.

"I thought I heard a noise that woke me, and I missed you," said
Jessie, rubbing her eyes. "Did you see anything?"

"No," said Christie, beginning to undress.

"You weren't frightened, dear?"

"Not in the least," said Christie, with a strange little laugh.
"Go to sleep."


CHAPTER III


The five impulsive millionaires of Devil's Ford fulfilled not a few
of their most extravagant promises. In less than six weeks Mr.
Carr and his daughters were installed in a new house, built near
the site of the double cabin, which was again transferred to the
settlement, in order to give greater seclusion to the fair guests.
It was a long, roomy, one-storied villa, with a not unpicturesque
combination of deep veranda and trellis work, which relieved the
flat monotony of the interior and the barrenness of the freshly-
cleared ground. An upright piano, brought from Sacramento,
occupied the corner of the parlor. A suite of gorgeous furniture,
whose pronounced and extravagant glories the young girls
instinctively hid under home-made linen covers, had also been
spoils from afar. Elsewhere the house was filled with ornaments
and decorations that in their incongruity forcibly recalled the
gilded plate-glass mirrors of the bedroom in the old cabin. In the
hasty furnishing of this Aladdin's palace, the slaves of the ring
had evidently seized upon anything that would add to its glory,
without reference always to fitness.

"I wish it didn't look so cussedly like a robber's cave," said
George Kearney, when they were taking a quiet preliminary survey of
the unclassified treasures, before the Carrs took possession.

"Or a gambling hell," said his brother reflectively.

"It's about the same thing, I reckon," said Dick Mattingly, who was
supposed, in his fiery youth, to have encountered the similarity.

Nevertheless, the two girls managed to bestow the heterogeneous
collection with tasteful adaptation to their needs. A crystal
chandelier, which had once lent a fascinating illusion to the game
of Monte, hung unlighted in the broad hall, where a few other
bizarre and public articles were relegated. A long red sofa or
bench, which had done duty beside a billiard-table found a place
here also. Indeed, it is to be feared that some of the more rustic
and bashful youths of Devil's Ford, who had felt it incumbent upon
them to pay their respects to the new-comers, were more at ease in
this vestibule than in the arcana beyond, whose glories they could
see through the open door. To others, it represented a recognized
state of probation before their re-entree into civilization again.
"I reckon, if you don't mind, miss," said the spokesman of one
party, "ez this is our first call, we'll sorter hang out in the
hall yer, until you'r used to us." On another occasion, one
Whiskey Dick, impelled by a sense of duty, paid a visit to the new
house and its fair occupants, in a fashion frankly recounted by him
afterwards at the bar of the Tecumseh Saloon.

"You see, boys, I dropped in there the other night, when some of
you fellers was doin' the high-toned 'thankee, marm' business in
the parlor. I just came to anchor in the corner of the sofy in the
hall, without lettin' on to say that I was there, and took up a
Webster's dictionary that was on the table and laid it open--
keerless like, on my knees, ez if I was sorter consultin' it--and
kinder dozed off there, listenin' to you fellows gassin' with the
young ladies, and that yer Miss Christie just snakin' music outer
that pianner, and I reckon I fell asleep. Anyhow, I was there nigh
on to two hours. It's mighty soothin', them fashionable calls;
sorter knocks the old camp dust outer a fellow, and sets him up
again."

It would have been well if the new life of the Devil's Ford had
shown no other irregularity than the harmless eccentricities of its
original locaters. But the news of its sudden fortune, magnified
by report, began presently to flood the settlement with another
class of adventurers. A tide of waifs, strays, and malcontents of
old camps along the river began to set towards Devil's Ford, in
very much the same fashion as the debris, drift, and alluvium had
been carried down in bygone days and cast upon its banks. A few
immigrant wagons, diverted from the highways of travel by the fame
of the new diggings, halted upon the slopes of Devil's Spur and on
the arid flats of the Ford, and disgorged their sallow freight of
alkali-poisoned, prematurely-aged women and children and maimed and
fever-stricken men. Against this rude form of domesticity were
opposed the chromo-tinted dresses and extravagant complexions of a
few single unattended women--happily seen more often at night
behind gilded bars than in the garish light of day--and an equal
number of pale-faced, dark-moustached, well-dressed, and
suspiciously idle men. A dozen rivals of Thompson's Saloon had
sprung up along the narrow main street. There were two new hotels--
one a "Temperance House," whose ascetic quality was confined only
to the abnegation of whiskey--a rival stage office, and a small
one-storied building, from which the "Sierran Banner" fluttered
weekly, for "ten dollars a year, in advance." Insufferable in the
glare of a Sabbath sun, bleak, windy, and flaring in the gloom of a
Sabbath night, and hopelessly depressing on all days of the week,
the First Presbyterian Church lifted its blunt steeple from the
barrenest area of the flats, and was hideous! The civic
improvements so enthusiastically contemplated by the five
millionaires in the earlier pages of this veracious chronicle--the
fountain, reservoir, town-hall, and free library--had not yet been
erected. Their sites had been anticipated by more urgent buildings
and mining works, unfortunately not considered in the sanguine
dreams of the enthusiasts, and, more significant still, their cost
and expense had been also anticipated by the enormous outlay of
their earnings in the work upon Devil's Ditch.

Nevertheless, the liberal fulfilment of their promise in the new
house in the suburbs blinded the young girls' eyes to their
shortcomings in the town. Their own remoteness and elevation above
its feverish life kept them from the knowledge of much that was
strange, and perhaps disturbing to their equanimity. As they did
not mix with the immigrant women--Miss Jessie's good-natured
intrusion into one of their half-nomadic camps one day having been
met with rudeness and suspicion--they gradually fell into the way
of trusting the responsibility of new acquaintances to the hands of
their original hosts, and of consulting them in the matter of local
recreation. It thus occurred that one day the two girls, on their
way to the main street for an hour's shopping at the Villa de Paris
and Variety Store, were stopped by Dick Mattingly a few yards from
their house, with the remark that, as the county election was then
in progress, it would be advisable for them to defer their
intention for a few hours. As he did not deem it necessary to add
that two citizens, in the exercise of a freeman's franchise, had
been supplementing their ballots with bullets, in front of an
admiring crowd, they knew nothing of that accident that removed
from Devil's Ford an entertaining stranger, who had only the night
before partaken of their hospitality.

A week or two later, returning one morning from a stroll in the
forest, Christie and Jessie were waylaid by George Kearney and
Fairfax, and, under pretext of being shown a new and romantic
trail, were diverted from the regular path. This enabled Mattingly
and Maryland Joe to cut down the body of a man hanged by the
Vigilance Committee a few hours before on the regular trail, and to
remonstrate with the committee on the incompatibility of such
exhibitions with a maidenly worship of nature.

"With the whole county to hang a man in," expostulated Joe, "you
might keep clear of Carr's woods."

It is needless to add that the young girls never knew of this act
of violence, or the delicacy that kept them in ignorance of it.
Mr. Carr was too absorbed in business to give heed to what he
looked upon as a convulsion of society as natural as a geological
upheaval, and too prudent to provoke the criticism of his daughters
by comment in their presence.

An equally unexpected confidence, however, took its place. Mr.
Carr having finished his coffee one morning, lingered a moment over
his perfunctory paternal embraces, with the awkwardness of a
preoccupied man endeavoring by the assumption of a lighter interest
to veil another abstraction.

"And what are we doing to-day, Christie?" he asked, as Jessie left
the dining-room.

"Oh, pretty much the usual thing--nothing in particular. If George
Kearney gets the horses from the summit, we're going to ride over
to Indian Spring to picnic. Fairfax--Mr. Munroe--I always forget
that man's real name in this dreadfully familiar country--well,
he's coming to escort us, and take me, I suppose--that is, if
Kearney takes Jessie."

"A very nice arrangement," returned her father, with a slight
nervous contraction of the corners of his mouth and eyelids to
indicate mischievousness. "I've no doubt they'll both be here.
You know they usually are--ha! ha! And what about the two
Mattinglys and Philip Kearney, eh?" he continued; "won't they be
jealous?"

"It isn't their turn," said Christie carelessly; "besides, they'll
probably be there."

"And I suppose they're beginning to be resigned," said Carr,
smiling.

"What on earth are you talking of, father?"

She turned her clear brown eyes upon him, and was regarding him
with such manifest unconsciousness of the drift of his speech, and,
withal, a little vague impatience of his archness, that Mr. Carr
was feebly alarmed. It had the effect of banishing his assumed
playfulness, which made his serious explanation the more
irritating.

"Well, I rather thought that--that young Kearney was paying
considerable attention to--to--to Jessie," replied her father, with
hesitating gravity.

"What! that boy?"

"Young Kearney is one of the original locators, and an equal
partner in the mine. A very enterprising young fellow. In fact,
much more advanced and bolder in his conceptions than the others.
I find no difficulty with him."

At another time Christie would have questioned the convincing
quality of this proof, but she was too much shocked at her father's
first suggestion, to think of anything else.

"You don't mean to say, father, that you are talking seriously of
these men--your friends--whom we see every day--and our only
company?"

"No, no!" said Mr. Carr hastily; "you misunderstand. I don't
suppose that Jessie or you--"

"Or ME! Am I included?"

"You don't let me speak, Christie. I mean, I am not talking
seriously," continued Mr. Carr, with his most serious aspect, "of
you and Jessie in this matter; but it may be a serious thing to
these young men to be thrown continually in the company of two
attractive girls."

"I understand--you mean that we should not see so much of them,"
said Christie, with a frank expression of relief so genuine as to
utterly discompose her father. "Perhaps you are right, though I
fail to discover anything serious in the attentions of young
Kearney to Jessie--or--whoever it may be--to me. But it will be
very easy to remedy it, and see less of them. Indeed, we might
begin to-day with some excuse."

"Yes--certainly. Of course!" said Mr. Carr, fully convinced of his
utter failure, but, like most weak creatures, consoling himself
with the reflection that he had not shown his hand or committed
himself. "Yes; but it would perhaps be just as well for the
present to let things go on as they were. We'll talk of it again--
I'm in a hurry now," and, edging himself through the door, he
slipped away.

"What do you think is father's last idea?" said Christie, with, I
fear, a slight lack of reverence in her tone, as her sister
reentered the room. "He thinks George Kearney is paying you too
much attention."

"No!" said Jessie, replying to her sister's half-interrogative,
half-amused glance with a frank, unconscious smile.

"Yes, and he says that Fairfax--I think it's Fairfax--is equally
fascinated with ME."

Jessie's brow slightly contracted as she looked curiously at her
sister.

"Of all things," she said, "I wonder if any one has put that idea
into his dear old head. He couldn't have thought it himself."

"I don't know," said Christie musingly; "but perhaps it's just as
well if we kept a little more to ourselves for a while."

"Did father say so?" said Jessie quickly.

"No, but that is evidently what he meant."

"Ye-es," said Jessie slowly, "unless--"

"Unless what?" said Christie sharply. "Jessie, you don't for a
moment mean to say that you could possibly conceive of anything
else?"

"I mean to say," said Jessie, stealing her arm around her sister's
waist demurely, "that you are perfectly right. We'll keep away
from these fascinating Devil's Forders, and particularly the
youngest Kearney. I believe there has been some ill-natured
gossip. I remember that the other day, when we passed the shanty
of that Pike County family on the slope, there were three women at
the door, and one of them said something that made poor little
Kearney turn white and pink alternately, and dance with suppressed
rage. I suppose the old lady--M'Corkle, that's her name--would
like to have a share of our cavaliers for her Euphemy and Mamie. I
dare say it's only right; I would lend them the cherub
occasionally, and you might let them have Mr. Munroe twice a week."

She laughed, but her eyes sought her sister's with a certain
watchfulness of expression.

Christie shrugged her shoulders, with a suggestion of disgust.

"Don't joke. We ought to have thought of all this before."

"But when we first knew them, in the dear old cabin, there wasn't
any other woman and nobody to gossip, and that's what made it so
nice. I don't think so very much of civilization, do you?" said
the young lady pertly.

Christie did not reply. Perhaps she was thinking the same thing.
It certainly had been very pleasant to enjoy the spontaneous and
chivalrous homage of these men, with no further suggestion of
recompense or responsibility than the permission to be worshipped;
but beyond that she racked her brain in vain to recall any look or
act that proclaimed the lover. These men, whom she had found so
relapsed into barbarism that they had forgotten the most ordinary
forms of civilization; these men, even in whose extravagant
admiration there was a certain loss of self-respect, that as a
woman she would never forgive; these men, who seemed to belong to
another race--impossible! Yet it was so.

"What construction must they have put upon her father's acceptance
of their presents--of their company--of her freedom in their
presence? No! they must have understood from the beginning that
she and her sister had never looked upon them except as transient
hosts and chance acquaintances. Any other idea was preposterous.
And yet--"

It was the recurrence of this "yet" that alarmed her. For she
remembered now that but for their slavish devotion they might claim
to be her equal. According to her father's account, they had come
from homes as good as their own; they were certainly more than her
equal in fortune; and her father had come to them as an employee,
until they had taken him into partnership. If there had only been
sentiment of any kind connected with any of them! But they were
all alike, brave, unselfish, humorous--and often ridiculous. If
anything, Dick Mattingly was funniest by nature, and made her laugh
more. Maryland Joe, his brother, told better stories (sometimes of
Dick), though not so good a mimic as the other Kearney, who had a
fairly sympathetic voice in singing. They were all good-looking
enough; perhaps they set store on that--men are so vain.

And as for her own rejected suitor, Fairfax Munroe, except for a
kind of grave and proper motherliness about his protecting manner,
he absolutely was the most indistinctive of them all. He had once
brought her some rare tea from the Chinese camp, and had taught her
how to make it; he had cautioned her against sitting under the
trees at nightfall; he had once taken off his coat to wrap around
her. Really, if this were the only evidence of devotion that could
be shown, she was safe!

"Well," said Jessie, "it amuses you, I see."

Christie checked the smile that had been dimpling the cheek nearest
Jessie, and turned upon her the face of an elder sister.

"Tell me, have YOU noticed this extraordinary attention of Mr.
Munroe to me?"

"Candidly?" asked Jessie, seating herself comfortably on the table
sideways, and endeavoring, to pull her skirt over her little feet.
"Honest Injun?"

"Don't be idiotic, and, above all, don't be slangy! Of course,
candidly."

"Well, no. I can't say that I have."

"Then," said Christie, "why in the name of all that's preposterous,
do they persist in pairing me off with the least interesting man of
the lot?"

Jessie leaped from the table.

"Come now," she said, with a little nervous laugh, "he's not so bad
as all that. You don't know him. But what does it matter now, as
long as we're not going to see them any more?"

"They're coming here for the ride to-day," said Christie
resignedly. "Father thought it better not to break it off at
once."

"Father thought so!" echoed Jessie, stopping with her hand on the
door.

"Yes; why do you ask?"

But Jessie had already left the room, and was singing in the hall.


CHAPTER IV


The afternoon did not, however, bring their expected visitors. It
brought, instead, a brief note by the hands of Whiskey Dick from
Fairfax, apologizing for some business that kept him and George
Kearney from accompanying the ladies. It added that the horses
were at the disposal of themselves and any escort they might
select, if they would kindly give the message to Whiskey Dick.

The two girls looked at each other awkwardly; Jessie did not
attempt to conceal a slight pout.

"It looks as if they were anticipating us," she said, with a half-
forced smile. "I wonder, now, if there really has been any gossip?
But no! They wouldn't have stopped for that, unless--" She looked
curiously at her sister.

"Unless what?" repeated Christie; "you are horribly mysterious this
morning."

"Am I? It's nothing. But they're wanting an answer. Of course
you'll decline."

"And intimate we only care for their company! No! We'll say we're
sorry they can't come, and--accept their horses. We can do without
an escort, we two."

"Capital!" said Jessie, clapping her hands. "We'll show them--"

"We'll show them nothing," interrupted Christie decidedly. "In our
place there's only the one thing to do. Where is this--Whiskey
Dick?"

"In the parlor."

"The parlor!" echoed Christie. "Whiskey Dick? What--is he--"

"Yes; he's all right," said Jessie confidently. "He's been here
before, but he stayed in the hall; he was so shy. I don't think
you saw him."

"I should think not--Whiskey Dick!"

"Oh, you can call him Mr. Hall, if you like," said Jessie,
laughing. "His real name is Dick Hall. If you want to be funny,
you can say Alky Hall, as the others do."

Christie's only reply to this levity was a look of superior
resignation as she crossed the hall and entered the parlor.

Then ensued one of those surprising, mystifying, and utterly
inexplicable changes that leave the masculine being so helpless in
the hands of his feminine master. Before Christie opened the door
her face underwent a rapid transformation: the gentle glow of a
refined woman's welcome suddenly beamed in her interested eyes; the
impulsive courtesy of an expectant hostess eagerly seizing a long-
looked-for opportunity broke in a smile upon her lips as she swept
across the room, and stopped with her two white outstretched hands
before Whiskey Dick.

It needed only the extravagant contrast presented by that gentleman
to complete the tableau. Attired in a suit of shining black
alpaca, the visitor had evidently prepared himself with some care
for a possible interview. He was seated by the French window
opening upon the veranda, as if to secure a retreat in case of an
emergency. Scrupulously washed and shaven, some of the soap
appeared to have lingered in his eyes and inflamed the lids, even
while it lent a sleek and shining lustre, not unlike his coat, to
his smooth black hair. Nevertheless, leaning back in his chair, he
had allowed a large white handkerchief to depend gracefully from
his fingers--a pose at once suggesting easy and elegant langour.

"How kind of you to give me an opportunity to make up for my
misfortune when you last called! I was so sorry to have missed
you. But it was entirely my fault! You were hurried, I think--you
conversed with others in the hall--you--"

She stopped to assist him to pick up the handkerchief that had
fallen, and the Panama hat that had rolled from his lap towards the
window when he had started suddenly to his feet at the apparition
of grace and beauty. As he still nervously retained the two hands
he had grasped, this would have been a difficult feat, even had he
not endeavored at the same moment, by a backward furtive kick, to
propel the hat out of the window, at which she laughingly broke
from his grasp and flew to the rescue.

"Don't mind it, miss," he said hurriedly. "It is not worth your
demeaning yourself to touch it. Leave it outside thar, miss. I
wouldn't have toted it in, anyhow, if some of those high-falutin'
fellows hadn't allowed, the other night, ez it were the reg'lar
thing to do; as if, miss, any gentleman kalkilated to ever put on
his hat in the house afore a lady!"

But Christie had already possessed herself of the unlucky object,
and had placed it upon the table. This compelled Whiskey Dick to
rise again, and as an act of careless good breeding to drop his
handkerchief in it. He then leaned one elbow upon the piano, and,
crossing one foot over the other, remained standing in an attitude
he remembered to have seen in the pages of an illustrated paper as
portraying the hero in some drawing-room scene. It was easy and
effective, but seemed to be more favorable to revery than
conversation. Indeed, he remembered that he had forgotten to
consult the letterpress as to which it represented.

"I see you agree with me, that politeness is quite a matter of
intention," said Christie, "and not of mere fashion and rules.
Now, for instance," she continued, with a dazzling smile, "I
suppose, according to the rules, I ought to give you a note to Mr.
Munroe, accepting his offer. That is all that is required; but it
seems so much nicer, don't you think, to tell it to YOU for HIM,
and have the pleasure of your company and a little chat at the same
time."

"That's it, that's just it, Miss Carr; you've hit it in the centre
this time," said Whiskey Dick, now quite convinced that his
attitude was not intended for eloquence, and shifting back to his
own seat, hat and all; "that's tantamount to what I said to the
boys just now. 'You want an excuse,' sez I, 'for not goin' out
with the young ladies. So, accorden' to rules, you writes a letter
allowin' buzziness and that sorter thing detains you. But wot's
the facts? You're a gentleman, and as gentlemen you and George
comes to the opinion that you're rather playin' it for all it's
worth in this yer house, you know--comin' here night and day, off
and on, reg'lar sociable and fam'ly like, and makin' people talk
about things they ain't any call to talk about, and, what's a
darned sight more, YOU FELLOWS ain't got any right YET to allow 'em
to talk about, d'ye see?" he paused, out of breath.

It was Miss Christie's turn to move about. In changing her seat to
the piano-stool, so as to be nearer her visitor, she brushed down
some loose music, which Whiskey Dick hastened to pick up.

"Pray don't mind it," she said, "pray don't, really--let it be--"
But Whiskey Dick, feeling himself on safe ground in this attention,
persisted to the bitter end of a disintegrated and well-worn
"Travatore." "So that is what Mr. Munroe said," she remarked
quietly.

"Not just then, in course, but it's what's bin on his mind and in
his talk for days off and on," returned Dick, with a knowing smile
and a nod of mysterious confidence. "Bless your soul, Miss Carr,
folks like you and me don't need to have them things explained.
That's what I said to him, sez I. 'Don't send no note, but just go
up there and hev it out fair and square, and say what you do mean.'
But they would hev the note, and I kalkilated to bring it. But
when I set my eyes on you, and heard you express yourself as you
did just now, I sez to myself, sez I, 'Dick, yer's a young lady,
and a fash'nable lady at that, ez don't go foolin' round on rules
and etiketts'--excuse my freedom, Miss Carr--'and you and her, sez
I, 'kin just discuss this yer matter in a sociable, off-hand,
fash'nable way.' They're a good lot o' boys, Miss Carr, a square
lot--white men all of 'em; but they're a little soft and green, may
be, from livin' in these yer pine woods along o' the other sap.
They just worship the ground you and your sister tread on--certain!
of course! of course!" he added hurriedly, recognizing Christie's
half-conscious, deprecating gesture with more exaggerated
deprecation. "I understand. But what I wanter say is that they'd
be willin' to be that ground, and lie down and let you walk over
them--so to speak, Miss Carr, so to speak--if it would keep the hem
of your gown from gettin' soiled in the mud o' the camp. But it
wouldn't do for them to make a reg'lar curderoy road o' themselves
for the houl camp to trapse over, on the mere chance of your some
time passin' that way, would it now?"

"Won't you let me offer you some refreshment, Mr. Hall?" said
Christie, rising, with a slight color. "I'm really ashamed of my
forgetfulness again, but I'm afraid it's partly YOUR fault for
entertaining me to the exclusion of yourself. No, thank you, let
me fetch it for you."

She turned to a handsome sideboard near the door, and presently
faced him again with a decanter of whiskey and a glass in her hand,
and a return of the bewitching smile she had worn on entering.

"But perhaps you don't take whiskey?" suggested the arch deceiver,
with a sudden affected but pretty perplexity of eye, brow, and
lips.

For the first time in his life Whiskey Dick hesitated between two
forms of intoxication. But he was still nervous and uneasy; habit
triumphed, and he took the whiskey. He, however, wiped his lips
with a slight wave of his handkerchief, to support a certain easy
elegance which he firmly believed relieved the act of any vulgar
quality.

"Yes, ma'am," he continued, after an exhilarated pause. "Ez I said
afore, this yer's a matter you and me can discuss after the fashion
o' society. My idea is that these yer boys should kinder let up on
you and Miss Jessie for a while, and do a little more permiskus
attention round the Ford. There's one or two families yer with
grown-up gals ez oughter be squared; that is--the boys mighter put
in a few fancy touches among them--kinder take 'em buggy riding--or
to church--once in a while--just to take the pizen outer their
tongues, and make a kind o' bluff to the parents, d'ye see? That
would sorter divert their own minds; and even if it didn't, it
would kinder get 'em accustomed agin to the old style and their own
kind. I want to warn ye agin an idea that might occur to you in a
giniral way. I don't say you hev the idea, but it's kind o'
nat'ral you might be thinkin' of it some time, and I thought I'd
warn you agin it."

"I think we understand each other too well to differ much, Mr.
Hall," said Christie, still smiling; "but what is the idea?"

The delicate compliment to their confidential relations and the
slight stimulus of liquor had tremulously exalted Whiskey Dick.
Affecting to look cautiously out of the window and around the room,
he ventured to draw nearer the young woman with a half-paternal,
half-timid familiarity.

"It might have occurred to you," he said, laying his handkerchief
as if to veil mere vulgar contact, on Christie's shoulder, "that it
would be a good thing on YOUR side to invite down some of your
high-toned gentlemen friends from 'Frisco to visit you and escort
you round. It seems quite nat'ral like, and I don't say it ain't,
but--the boys wouldn't stand for it."

In spite of her self-possession, Christie's eyes suddenly darkened,
and she involuntarily drew herself up. But Whiskey Dick, guiltily
attributing the movement to his own indiscreet gesture, said,
"Excuse me, miss," recovered himself by lightly dusting her
shoulder with his handkerchief, as if to remove the impression, and
her smile returned.

"They wouldn't stand for it," said Dick, "and there'd be some
shooting! Not afore you, miss--not afore you, in course! But
they'd adjourn to the woods some morning with them city folks, and
hev it out with rifles at a hundred yards. Or, seein' ez they're
city folks, the boys would do the square thing with pistols at
twelve paces. They're good boys, as I said afore; but they're
quick and tetchy--George, being the youngest, nat'rally is the
tetchiest. You know how it is, Miss Carr; his pretty, gal-like
face and little moustaches haz cost him half a dozen scrimmages
already. He'z had a fight for every hair that's growed in his
moustache since he kem here."

"Say no more, Mr. Hall!" said Christie, rising and pressing her
hands lightly on Dick's tremulous fingers. "If I ever had any such
idea, I should abandon it now; you are quite right in this as in
your other opinions. I shall never cease to be thankful to Mr.
Munroe and Mr. Kearney that they intrusted this delicate matter to
your hands."

"Well," said the gratified and reddening visitor, "it ain't perhaps
the square thing to them or myself to say that they reckoned to
have me discuss their delicate affairs for them, but--"

"I understand," interrupted Christie. "They simply gave you the
letter as a friend. It was my good fortune to find you a
sympathizing and liberal man of the world." The delighted Dick,
with conscious vanity beaming from every feature of his shining
face, lightly waved the compliment aside with his handkerchief, as
she continued, "But I am forgetting the message. We accept the
horses. Of course we COULD do without an escort; but forgive my
speaking so frankly, are YOU engaged this afternoon?"

"Excuse me, miss, I don't take--" stammered Dick, scarcely
believing his ears.

"Could you give us your company as an escort?" repeated Christie
with a smile.

Was he awake or dreaming, or was this some trick of liquor in his
often distorted fancy? He, Whiskey Dick! the butt of his friends,
the chartered oracle of the barrooms, even in whose wretched vanity
there was always the haunting suspicion that he was despised and
scorned; he, who had dared so much in speech, and achieved so
little in fact! he, whose habitual weakness had even led him into
the wildest indiscretion here; he--now offered a reward for that
indiscretion! He, Whiskey Dick, the solicited escort of these two
beautiful and peerless girls! What would they say at the Ford?
What would his friends think? It would be all over the Ford the
next day. His past would be vindicated, his future secured. He
grew erect at the thought. It was almost in other voice, and with
no trace of his previous exaggeration, that he said, "With
pleasure."

"Then, if you will bring the horses at once, we shall be ready when
you return."

In another instant he had vanished, as if afraid to trust the
reality of his good fortune to the dangers of delay. At the end of
half an hour he reappeared, leading the two horses, himself mounted
on a half-broken mustang. A pair of large, jingling silver spurs
and a stiff sombrero, borrowed with the mustang from some
mysterious source, were donned to do honor to the occasion.

The young girls were not yet ready, but he was shown by the Chinese
servant into the parlor to wait for them. The decanter of whiskey
and glasses were still invitingly there. He was hot, trembling,
and flushed with triumph. He walked to the table and laid his hand
on the decanter, when an odd thought flashed upon him. He would
not drink this time. No, it should not be said that he, the
selected escort of the elite of Devil's Ford, had to fill himself
up with whiskey before they started. The boys might turn to each
other in their astonishment, as he proudly passed with his fair
companions, and say, "It's Whiskey Dick," but he'd be d----d if they
should add, "and full as ever." No, sir! Nor when he was riding
beside these real ladies, and leaning over them at some
confidential moment, should they even know it from his breath!
No. . . . Yet a thimbleful, taken straight, only a thimbleful,
wouldn't be much, and might help to pull him together. He again
reached his trembling hand for the decanter, hesitated, and then,
turning his back upon it, resolutely walked to the open window.
Almost at the same instant he found himself face to face with
Christie on the veranda.

She looked into his bloodshot eyes, and cast a swift glance at the
decanter.

"Won't you take something before you go?" she said sweetly.

"I--reckon--not, jest now," stammered Whiskey Dick, with a heroic
effort.

"You're right," said Christie. "I see you are like me. It's too
hot for anything fiery. Come with me."

She led him into the dining-room, and pouring out a glass of iced
tea handed it to him. Poor Dick was not prepared for this terrible
culmination. Whiskey Dick and iced tea! But under pretence of
seeing if it was properly flavored, Christie raised it to her own
lips.

"Try it, to please me."

He drained the goblet.

"Now, then," said Christie gayly, "let's find Jessie, and be off!"


CHAPTER V


Whatever might have been his other deficiencies as an escort,
Whiskey Dick was a good horseman, and, in spite of his fractious
brute, exhibited such skill and confidence as to at once satisfy
the young girls of his value to them in the management of their own
horses, to whom side-saddles were still an alarming novelty.
Jessie, who had probably already learned from her sister the
purport of Dick's confidences, had received him with equal
cordiality and perhaps a more unqualified amusement; and now, when
fairly lifted into the saddle by his tremulous but respectful
hands, made a very charming picture of youthful and rosy
satisfaction. And when Christie, more fascinating than ever in her
riding-habit, took her place on the other side of Dick, as they
sallied from the gate, that gentleman felt his cup of happiness
complete. His triumphal entree into the world of civilization and
fashion was secure. He did not regret the untasted liquor; here
was an experience in after years to lean his back against
comfortably in bar-rooms, to entrance or defy mankind. He had even
got so far as to formulate in fancy the sentence: "I remember,
gentlemen, that one afternoon, being on a pasear with two
fash'nable young ladies," etc., etc.

At present, however, he was obliged to confine himself to the
functions of an elegant guide and cicerone--when not engaged in
"having it out" with his horse. Their way lay along the slope,
crossing the high-road at right angles, to reach the deeper woods
beyond. Dick would have lingered on the highway--ostensibly to
point out to his companions the new flume that had taken the place
of the condemned ditch, but really in the hope of exposing himself
in his glory to the curious eyes of the wayfaring world.

Unhappily the road was deserted in the still powerful sunlight, and
he was obliged to seek the cover of the woods, with a passing
compliment to the parent of his charges. Waving his hands towards
the flume, he said, "Look at that work of your father's; there
ain't no other man in Californy but Philip Carr ez would hev the
grit to hold up such a bluff agin natur and agin luck ez that yer
flume stands for. I don't say it 'cause you're his daughters,
ladies! That ain't the style, ez YOU know, in sassiety, Miss
Carr," he added, turning to Christie as the more socially
experienced. "No! but there ain't another man to be found ez could
do it. It cost already two hundred thousand; it'll cost five
hundred thousand afore it's done; and every cent of it is got out
of the yearth beneath it, or HEZ got to be out of it. 'Tain't
ev'ry man, Miss Carr, ez hev got the pluck to pledge not only what
he's got, but what he reckons to git."

"But suppose he don't get it?" said Christie, slightly contracting
her brows.

"Then there's the flume to show for it," said Dick.

"But of what use is the flume, if there isn't any more gold?"
continued Christie, almost angrily.

"That's good from YOU, miss," said Dick, giving way to a fit of
hilarity. "That's good for a fash'nable young lady--own daughter
of Philip Carr. She sez, says she," continued Dick, appealing to
the sedate pines for appreciation of Christie's rare humor, "'Wot's
the use of a flume, when gold ain't there?' I must tell that to
the boys."

"And what's the use of the gold in the ground when the flume isn't
there to work it out?" said Jessie to her sister, with a cautioning
glance towards Dick.

But Dick did not notice the look that passed between the sisters.
The richer humor of Jessie's retort had thrown him into convulsions
of laughter.

"And now SHE says, wot's the use o' the gold without the flume?
'Xcuse me, ladies, but that's just puttin' the hull question that's
agitatin' this yer camp inter two speeches as clear as crystal.
There's the hull crowd outside--and some on 'em inside, like
Fairfax, hez their doubts--ez says with Miss Christie; and there's
all of us inside, ez holds Miss Jessie's views."

"I never heard Mr. Munroe say that the flume was wrong," said
Jessie quickly.

"Not to you, nat'rally," said Dick, with a confidential look at
Christie; "but I reckon he'd like some of the money it cost laid
out for suthin' else. But what's the odds? The gold is there, and
WE'RE bound to get it."

Dick was the foreman of a gang of paid workmen, who had replaced
the millionaires in mere manual labor, and the WE was a polite
figure of speech.

The conversation seemed to have taken an unfortunate turn, and both
the girls experienced a feeling of relief when they entered the
long gulch or defile that led to Indian Spring. The track now
becoming narrow, they were obliged to pass in single file along the
precipitous hillside, led by this escort. This effectually
precluded any further speech, and Christie at once surrendered
herself to the calm, obliterating influences of the forest. The
settlement and its gossip were far behind and forgotten. In the
absorption of nature, her companions passed out of her mind, even
as they sometimes passed out of her sight in the windings of the
shadowy trail. As she rode alone, the fronds of breast-high ferns
seemed to caress her with outstretched and gently-detaining hands;
strange wildflowers sprang up through the parting underbrush; even
the granite rocks that at times pressed closely upon the trail
appeared as if cushioned to her contact with star-rayed mosses, or
lightly flung after her long lassoes of delicate vines. She
recalled the absolute freedom of their al-fresco life in the old
double cabin, when she spent the greater part of her waking hours
under the mute trees in the encompassing solitude, and, half
regretting the more civilized restraints of this newer and more
ambitious abode, forgot that she had ever rebelled against it. The
social complication that threatened her now seemed to her rather
the outcome of her half-civilized parlor than of the sylvan glade.
How easy it would have been to have kept the cabin, and then to
have gone away entirely, than for her father to have allowed them
to be compromised with the growing fortunes of the settlement! The
suspicions and distrust that she had always felt of their fortunes
seemed to grow with the involuntary admission of Whiskey Dick that
they were shared by others who were practical men. She was fain to
have recourse to the prospect again to banish these thoughts, and
this opened her eyes to the fact that her companions had been
missing from the trail ahead of her for some time. She quickened
her pace slightly to reach a projecting point of rock that gave her
a more extended prospect. But they had evidently disappeared.

She was neither alarmed nor annoyed. She could easily overtake
them soon, for they would miss her, and return or wait for her at
the spring. At the worst she would have no difficulty in retracing
her steps home. In her present mood, she could readily spare their
company; indeed she was not sorry that no other being should
interrupt that sympathy with the free woods which was beginning to
possess her.

She was destined, however, to be disappointed. She had not
proceeded a hundred yards before she noticed the moving figure of a
man beyond her in the hillside chaparral above the trail. He
seemed to be going in the same direction as herself, and, as she
fancied, endeavoring to avoid her. This excited her curiosity to
the point of urging her horse forward until the trail broadened
into the level forest again, which she now remembered was a part of
the environs of Indian Spring. The stranger hesitated, pausing
once or twice with his back towards her, as if engaged in carefully
examining the dwarf willows to select a switch. Christie slightly
checked her speed as she drew nearer; when, as if obedient to a
sudden resolution, he turned and advanced towards her. She was
relieved and yet surprised to recognize the boyish face and figure
of George Kearney. He was quite pale and agitated, although
attempting, by a jaunty swinging of the switch he had just cut, to
assume the appearance of ease and confidence.

Here was an opportunity. Christie resolved to profit by it. She
did not doubt that the young fellow had already passed her sister
on the trail, but, from bashfulness, had not dared to approach her.
By inviting his confidence, she would doubtless draw something from
him that would deny or corroborate her father's opinion of his
sentiments. If he was really in love with Jessie, she would learn
what reasons he had for expecting a serious culmination of his
suit, and perhaps she might be able delicately to open his eyes to
the truth. If, as she believed, it was only a boyish fancy, she
would laugh him out of it with that camaraderie which had always
existed between them. A half motherly sympathy, albeit born quite
as much from a contemplation of his beautiful yearning eyes as from
his interesting position, lightened the smile with which she
greeted him.

"So you contrived to throw over your stupid business and join us,
after all," she said; "or was it that you changed your mind at the
last moment?" she added mischievously. "I thought only we women
were permitted that!" Indeed, she could not help noticing that
there was really a strong feminine suggestion in the shifting color
and slightly conscious eyelids of the young fellow.

"Do young girls always change their minds?" asked George, with an
embarrassed smile.

"Not, always; but sometimes they don't know their own mind--
particularly if they are very young; and when they do at last, you
clever creatures of men, who have interpreted their ignorance to
please yourselves, abuse them for being fickle." She stopped to
observe the effect of what she believed a rather clear and
significant exposition of Jessie's and George's possible situation.
But she was not prepared for the look of blank resignation that
seemed to drive the color from his face and moisten the fire of his
dark eyes.

"I reckon you're right," he said, looking down.

"Oh! we're not accusing you of fickleness," said Christie gayly;
"although you didn't come, and we were obliged to ask Mr. Hall to
join us. I suppose you found him and Jessie just now?"

But George made no reply. The color was slowly coming back to his
face, which, as she glanced covertly at him, seemed to have grown
so much older that his returning blood might have brought two or
three years with it.

"Really, Mr. Kearney," she said dryly, "one would think that some
silly, conceited girl"--she was quite earnest in her epithets, for
a sudden, angry conviction of some coquetry and disingenuousness in
Jessie had come to her in contemplating its effects upon the young
fellow at her side--"some country jilt, had been trying her rustic
hand upon you."

"She is not silly, conceited, nor countrified," said George, slowly
raising his beautiful eyes to the young girl half reproachfully.
"It is I who am all that. No, she is right, and you know it."

Much as Christie admired and valued her sister's charms, she
thought this was really going too far. What had Jessie ever done--
what was Jessie--to provoke and remain insensible to such a blind
devotion as this? And really, looking at him now, he was not so
VERY YOUNG for Jessie; whether his unfortunate passion had brought
out all his latent manliness, or whether he had hitherto kept his
serious nature in the background, certainly he was not a boy. And
certainly his was not a passion that he could be laughed out of.
It was getting very tiresome. She wished she had not met him--at
least until she had had some clearer understanding with her sister.
He was still walking beside her, with his hand on her bridle rein,
partly to lead her horse over some boulders in the trail, and
partly to conceal his first embarrassment. When they had fairly
reached the woods, he stopped.

"I am going to say good-by, Miss Carr."

"Are you not coming further? We must be near Indian Spring, now;
Mr. Hall and--and Jessie--cannot be far away. You will keep me
company until we meet them?"

"No," he replied quietly. "I only stopped you to say good-by. I
am going away."

"Not from Devil's Ford?" she asked, in half-incredulous astonishment.
"At least, not for long?"

"I am not coming back," he replied.

"But this is very abrupt," she said hurriedly, feeling that in some
ridiculous way she had precipitated an equally ridiculous
catastrophe. "Surely you are not going away in this fashion,
without saying good-by to Jessie and--and father?"

"I shall see your father, of course--and you will give my regards
to Miss Jessie."

He evidently was in earnest. Was there ever anything so perfectly
preposterous? She became indignant.

"Of course," she said coldly, "I won't detain you; your business
must be urgent, and I forgot--at least I had forgotten until to-
day--that you have other duties more important than that of squire
of dames. I am afraid this forgetfulness made me think you would
not part from us in quite such a business fashion. I presume, if
you had not met me just now, we should none of us have seen you
again?"

He did not reply.

"Will you say good-by, Miss Carr?"

He held out his hand.

"One moment, Mr. Kearney. If I have said anything which you think
justifies this very abrupt leave-taking, I beg you will forgive and
forget it--or, at least, let it have no more weight with you than
the idle words of any woman. I only spoke generally. You know--I--
I might be mistaken."

His eyes, which had dilated when she began to speak, darkened; his
color, which had quickly come, as quickly sank when she had ended.

"Don't say that, Miss Carr. It is not like you, and--it is
useless. You know what I meant a moment ago. I read it in your
reply. You meant that I, like others, had deceived myself. Did
you not?"

She could not meet those honest eyes with less than equal honesty.
She knew that Jessie did not love him--would not marry him--
whatever coquetry she might have shown.

"I did not mean to offend you," she said hesitatingly; "I only half
suspected it when I spoke."

"And you wish to spare me the avowal?" he said bitterly.

"To me, perhaps, yes, by anticipating it. I could not tell what
ideas you might have gathered from some indiscreet frankness of
Jessie--or my father," she added, with almost equal bitterness.

"I have never spoken to either," he replied quickly. He stopped,
and added, after a moment's mortifying reflection, "I've been
brought up in the woods, Miss Carr, and I suppose I have followed
my feelings, instead of the etiquette of society."

Christie was too relieved at the rehabilitation of Jessie's
truthfulness to notice the full significance of his speech.

"Good-by," he said again, holding out his hand.

"Good-by!"

She extended her own, ungloved, with a frank smile. He held it for
a moment, with his eyes fixed upon hers. Then suddenly, as if
obeying an uncontrollable impulse, he crushed it like a flower
again and again against his burning lips, and darted away.

Christie sank back in her saddle with a little cry, half of pain
and half of frightened surprise. Had the poor boy suddenly gone
mad, or was this vicarious farewell a part of the courtship of
Devil's Ford? She looked at her little hand, which had reddened
under the pressure, and suddenly felt the flush extending to her
cheeks and the roots of her hair. This was intolerable.

"Christie!"

It was her sister emerging from the wood to seek her. In another
moment she was at her side.

"We thought you were following," said Jessie. "Good heavens! how
you look! What has happened?"

"Nothing. I met Mr. Kearney a moment ago on the trail. He is
going away, and--and--" She stopped, furious and flushing.

"And," said Jessie, with a burst of merriment, "he told you at last
he loved you. Oh, Christie!"


CHAPTER VI


The abrupt departure of George Kearney from Devil's Ford excited
but little interest in the community, and was soon forgotten. It
was generally attributed to differences between himself and his
partners on the question of further outlay of their earnings on
mining improvements--he and Philip Carr alone representing a
sanguine minority whose faith in the future of the mine accepted
any risks. It was alleged by some that he had sold out to his
brother; it was believed by others that he had simply gone to
Sacramento to borrow money on his share, in order to continue the
improvements on his own responsibility. The partners themselves
were uncommunicative; even Whiskey Dick, who since his remarkable
social elevation had become less oracular, much to his own
astonishment, contributed nothing to the gossip except a suggestion
that as the fiery temper of George Kearney brooked no opposition,
even from his brother, it was better they should separate before
the estrangement became serious.

Mr. Carr did not disguise his annoyance at the loss of his young
disciple and firm ally. But an unlucky allusion to his previous
remarks on Kearney's attentions to Jessie, and a querulous regret
that he had permitted a disruption of their social intimacy,
brought such an ominous and frigid opposition, not only from
Christie, but even the frivolous Jessie herself, that Carr sank
back in a crushed and terrified silence. "I only meant to say," he
stammered after a pause, in which he, however, resumed his
aggrieved manner, "that FAIRFAX seems to come here still, and HE is
not such a particular friend of mine."

"But she is--and has your interest entirely at heart," said Jessie,
stoutly, "and he only comes here to tell us how things are going on
at the works."

"And criticise your father, I suppose," said Mr. Carr, with an
attempt at jocularity that did not, however, disguise an irritated
suspiciousness. "He really seems to have supplanted ME as he has
poor Kearney in your estimation."

"Now, father," said Jessie, suddenly seizing him by the shoulders
in affected indignation, but really to conceal a certain
embarrassment that sprang quite as much from her sister's quietly
observant eye as her father's speech, "you promised to let this
ridiculous discussion drop. You will make me and Christie so
nervous that we will not dare to open the door to a visitor, until
he declares his innocence of any matrimonial intentions. You don't
want to give color to the gossip that agreement with your views
about the improvements is necessary to getting on with us."

"Who dares talk such rubbish?" said Carr, reddening; "is that the
kind of gossip that Fairfax brings here?"

"Hardly, when it's known that he don't quite agree with you, and
DOES come here. That's the best denial of the gossip."

Christie, who had of late loftily ignored these discussions, waited
until her father had taken his departure.

"Then that is the reason why you still see Mr. Munroe, after what
you said," she remarked quietly to Jessie.

Jessie, who would have liked to escape with her father, was obliged
to pause on the threshold of the door, with a pretty assumption of
blank forgetfulness in her blue eyes and lifted eyebrows.

"Said what? when?" she asked vacantly.

"When--when Mr. Kearney that day--in the woods--went away," said
Christie, faintly coloring.

"Oh! THAT day," said Jessie briskly; "the day he just gloved your
hand with kisses, and then fled wildly into the forest to conceal
his emotion."

"The day he behaved very foolishly," said Christie, with
reproachful calmness, that did not, however, prevent a suspicion of
indignant moisture in her eyes--"when you explained"--

"That it wasn't meant for ME," interrupted Jessie.

"That it was to you that MR. MUNROE'S attentions were directed.
And then we agreed that it was better to prevent any further
advances of this kind by avoiding any familiar relations with
either of them."

"Yes," said Jessie, "I remember; but you're not confounding my
seeing Fairfax occasionally now with that sort of thing. HE
doesn't kiss my hand like anything," she added, as if in abstract
reflection.

"Nor run away, either," suggested the trodden worm, turning.

There was an ominous silence.

"Do you know we are nearly out of coffee?" said Jessie choking, but
moving towards the door with Spartan-like calmness.

"Yes. And something must be done this very day about the washing,"
said Christie, with suppressed emotion, going towards the opposite
entrance.

Tears stood in each other's eyes with this terrible exchange of
domestic confidences. Nevertheless, after a moment's pause, they
deliberately turned again, and, facing each other with frightful
calmness, left the room by purposeless and deliberate exits other
than those they had contemplated--a crushing abnegation of self,
that, to some extent, relieved their surcharged feelings.

Meantime the material prosperity of Devil's Ford increased, if a
prosperity based upon no visible foundation but the confidences and
hopes of its inhabitants could be called material. Few, if any,
stopped to consider that the improvements, buildings, and business
were simply the outlay of capital brought from elsewhere, and as
yet the settlement or town, as it was now called, had neither
produced nor exported capital of itself equal to half the amount
expended. It was true that some land was cultivated on the further
slope, some mills erected and lumber furnished from the
inexhaustible forest; but the consumers were the inhabitants
themselves, who paid for their produce in borrowed capital or
unlimited credit. It was never discovered that while all roads led
to Devil's Ford, Devil's Ford led to nowhere. The difficulties
overcome in getting things into the settlement were never
surmounted for getting things out of it. The lumber was
practically valueless for export to other settlements across the
mountain roads, which were equally rich in timber. The theory so
enthusiastically held by the original locators, that Devil's Ford
was a vast sink that had, through ages, exhausted and absorbed the
trickling wealth of the adjacent hills and valleys, was suffering
an ironical corroboration.

One morning it was known that work was stopped at the Devil's Ford
Ditch--temporarily only, it was alleged, and many of the old
workmen simply had their labor for the present transferred to
excavating the river banks, and the collection of vast heaps of
"pay gravel." Specimens from these mounds, taken from different
localities, and at different levels, were sent to San Francisco for
more rigid assay and analysis. It was believed that this would
establish the fact of the permanent richness of the drifts, and not
only justify past expenditure, but a renewed outlay of credit and
capital. The suspension of engineering work gave Mr. Carr an
opportunity to visit San Francisco on general business of the mine,
which could not, however, prevent him from arranging further
combinations with capital. His two daughters accompanied him. It
offered an admirable opportunity for a shopping expedition, a
change of scene, and a peaceful solution of their perplexing and
anomalous social relations with Devil's Ford. In the first flush
of gratitude to their father for this opportune holiday, something
of harmony had been restored to the family circle that had of late
been shaken by discord.

But their sanguine hopes of enjoyment were not entirely fulfilled.
Both Jessie and Christie were obliged to confess to a certain
disappointment in the aspect of the civilization they were now
reentering. They at first attributed it to the change in their own
habits during the last three months, and their having become
barbarous and countrified in their seclusion. Certainly in the
matter of dress they were behind the fashions as revealed in
Montgomery Street. But when the brief solace afforded them by the
modiste and dressmaker was past, there seemed little else to be
gained. They missed at first, I fear, the chivalrous and loyal
devotion that had only amused them at Devil's Ford, and were the
more inclined, I think, to distrust the conscious and more
civilized gallantry of the better dressed and more carefully
presented men they met. For it must be admitted that, for obvious
reasons, their criticisms were at first confined to the sex they
had been most in contact with. They could not help noticing that
the men were more eager, annoyingly feverish, and self-asserting in
their superior elegance and external show than their old associates
were in their frank, unrestrained habits. It seemed to them that
the five millionaires of Devil's Ford, in their radical simplicity
and thoroughness, were perhaps nearer the type of true
gentlemanhood than these citizens who imitated a civilization they
were unable yet to reach.

The women simply frightened them, as being, even more than the men,
demonstrative and excessive in their fine looks, their fine
dresses, their extravagant demand for excitement. In less than a
week they found themselves regretting--not the new villa on the
slope of Devil's Ford, which even in its own bizarre fashion was
exceeded by the barbarous ostentation of the villas and private
houses around them--but the double cabin under the trees, which now
seemed to them almost aristocratic in its grave simplicity and
abstention. In the mysterious forests of masts that thronged the
city's quays they recalled the straight shafts of the pines on
Devil's slopes, only to miss the sedate repose and infinite calm
that used to environ them. In the feverish, pulsating life of the
young metropolis they often stopped oppressed, giddy, and choking;
the roar of the streets and thoroughfares was meaningless to them,
except to revive strange memories of the deep, unvarying monotone
of the evening wind over their humbler roof on the Sierran
hillside. Civic bred and nurtured as they were, the recurrence of
these sensations perplexed and alarmed them.

"It seems so perfectly ridiculous," said Jessie, "for us to feel as
out of place here as that Pike County servant girl in Sacramento
who had never seen a steamboat before; do you know, I quite had a
turn the other day at seeing a man on the Stockton wharf in a red
shirt, with a rifle on his shoulder."

"And you wanted to go and speak to him?" said Christie, with a sad
smile.

"No, that's just it; I felt awfully hurt and injured that he did
not come up and speak to ME! I wonder if we got any fever or that
sort of thing up there; it makes one quite superstitious."

Christie did not reply; more than once before she had felt that
inexplicable misgiving. It had sometimes seemed to her that she
had never been quite herself since that memorable night when she
had slipped out of their sleeping-cabin, and stood alone in the
gracious and commanding presence of the woods and hills. In the
solitude of night, with the hum of the great city rising below her--
at times even in theatres or crowded assemblies of men and women--
she forgot herself, and again stood in the weird brilliancy of that
moonlight night in mute worship at the foot of that slowly-rising
mystic altar of piled terraces, hanging forests, and lifted
plateaus that climbed forever to the lonely skies. Again she felt
before her the expanding and opening arms of the protecting woods.
Had they really closed upon her in some pantheistic embrace that
made her a part of them? Had she been baptized in that moonlight
as a child of the great forest? It was easy to believe in the
myths of the poets of an idyllic life under those trees, where,
free from conventional restrictions, one loved and was loved. If
she, with her own worldly experience, could think of this now, why
might not George Kearney have thought? . . . She stopped, and
found herself blushing even in the darkness. As the thought and
blush were the usual sequel of her reflections, it is to be feared
that they may have been at times the impelling cause.

Mr. Carr, however, made up for his daughters' want of sympathy with
metropolitan life. To their astonishment, he not only plunged into
the fashionable gayeties and amusements of the town, but in dress
and manner assumed the role of a leader of society. The invariable
answer to their half-humorous comment was the necessities of the
mine, and the policy of frequenting the company of capitalists, to
enlist their support and confidence. There was something in this
so unlike their father, that what at any other time they would have
hailed as a relief to his habitual abstraction now half alarmed
them. Yet he was not dissipated--he did not drink nor gamble.
There certainly did not seem any harm in his frequenting the
society of ladies, with a gallantry that appeared to be forced and
a pleasure that to their critical eyes was certainly apocryphal.
He did not drag his daughters into the mixed society of that
period; he did not press upon them the company of those he most
frequented, and whose accepted position in that little world of
fashion was considered equal to their own. When Jessie strongly
objected to the pronounced manners of a certain widow, whose actual
present wealth and pecuniary influence condoned for a more
uncertain prehistoric past, Mr. Carr did not urge a further
acquaintance. "As long as you're not thinking of marrying again,
papa," Jessie had said finally, "I don't see the necessity of our
knowing her." "But suppose I were," had replied Mr. Carr with
affected humor. "Then you certainly wouldn't care for any one like
her," his daughter had responded triumphantly. Mr. Carr smiled,
and dropped the subject, but it is probable that his daughters'
want of sympathy with his acquaintances did not in the least
interfere with his social prestige. A gentleman in all his
relations and under all circumstances, even his cold scientific
abstraction was provocative; rich men envied his lofty ignorance of
the smaller details of money-making, even while they mistrusted his
judgment. A man still well preserved, and free from weakening
vices, he was a dangerous rival to younger and faster San
Francisco, in the eyes of the sex, who knew how to value a repose
they did not themselves possess.

Suddenly Mr. Carr announced his intention of proceeding to
Sacramento, on further business of the mine, leaving his two
daughters in the family of a wealthy friend until he should return
for them. He opposed their ready suggestion to return to Devil's
Ford with a new and unnecessary inflexibility: he even met their
compromise to accompany him to Sacramento with equal decision.

"You will be only in my way," he said curtly. "Enjoy yourselves
here while you can."

Thus left to themselves, they tried to accept his advice. Possibly
some slight reaction to their previous disappointment may have
already set in; perhaps they felt any distraction to be a relief to
their anxiety about their father. They went out more; they
frequented concerts and parties; they accepted, with their host and
his family, an invitation to one of those opulent and barbaric
entertainments with which a noted San Francisco millionaire
distracted his rare moments of reflection in his gorgeous palace on
the hills. Here they could at least be once more in the country
they loved, albeit of a milder and less heroic type, and a little
degraded by the overlapping tinsel and scattered spangles of the
palace.

It was a three days' fete; the style and choice of amusements left
to the guests, and an equal and active participation by no means
necessary or indispensable. Consequently, when Christie and Jessie
Carr proposed a ride through the adjacent canyon on the second
morning, they had no difficulty in finding horses in the well-
furnished stables of their opulent entertainers, nor cavaliers
among the other guests, who were too happy to find favor in the
eyes of the two pretty girls who were supposed to be abnormally
fastidious and refined. Christie's escort was a good-natured young
banker, shrewd enough to avoid demonstrative attentions, and lucky
enough to interest her during the ride with his clear and half-
humorous reflections on some of the business speculations of the
day. If his ideas were occasionally too clever, and not always
consistent with a high sense of honor, she was none the less
interested to know the ethics of that world of speculation into
which her father had plunged, and the more convinced, with mingled
sense of pride and anxiety, that his still dominant gentlemanhood
would prevent his coping with it on equal terms. Nor could she
help contrasting the conversation of the sharp-witted man at her
side with what she still remembered of the vague, touching, boyish
enthusiasm of the millionaires of Devil's Ford. Had her escort
guessed the result of this contrast, he would hardly have been as
gratified as he was with the grave attention of her beautiful eyes.

The fascination of a gracious day and the leafy solitude of the
canyon led them to prolong their ride beyond the proposed limit,
and it became necessary towards sunset for them to seek some
shorter cut home.

"There's a vaquero in yonder field," said Christie's escort, who
was riding with her a little in advance of the others, "and those
fellows know every trail that a horse can follow. I'll ride on,
intercept him, and try my Spanish on him. If I miss him, as he's
galloping on, you might try your hand on him yourself. He'll
understand your eyes, Miss Carr, in any language."

As he dashed away, to cover his first audacity of compliment,
Christie lifted the eyes thus apostrophized to the opposite field.
The vaquero, who was chasing some cattle, was evidently too
preoccupied to heed the shouts of her companion, and wheeling round
suddenly to intercept one of the deviating fugitives, permitted
Christie's escort to dash past him before that gentleman could rein
in his excited steed. This brought the vaquero directly in her
path. Perceiving her, he threw his horse back on its haunches, to
prevent a collision. Christie rode up to him, suddenly uttered a
cry, and halted. For before her, sunburnt in cheek and throat,
darker in the free growth of moustache and curling hair, clad in
the coarse, picturesque finery of his class, undisguised only in
his boyish beauty, sat George Kearney.

The blood, that had forsaken her astonished face, rushed as quickly
back. His eyes, which had suddenly sparkled with an electrical
glow, sank before hers. His hand dropped, and his cheek flushed
with a dark embarrassment.

"You here, Mr. Kearney? How strange!--but how glad I am to meet
you again!"

She tried to smile; her voice trembled, and her little hand shook
as she extended it to him.

He raised his dark eyes quickly, and impulsively urged his horse to
her side. But, as if suddenly awakening to the reality of the
situation, he glanced at her hurriedly, down at his barbaric
finery, and threw a searching look towards her escort.

In an instant Christie saw the infelicity of her position, and its
dangers. The words of Whiskey Dick, "He wouldn't stand that,"
flashed across her mind. There was no time to lose. The banker
had already gained control over his horse, and was approaching
them, all unconscious of the fixed stare with which George was
regarding him. Christie hastily seized the hand which he had
allowed to fall at his side, and said quickly:--

"Will you ride with me a little way, Mr. Kearney?"

He turned the same searching look upon her. She met it clearly and
steadily; he even thought reproachfully.

"Do!" she said hurriedly. "I ask it as a favor. I want to speak
to you. Jessie and I are here alone. Father is away. YOU are one
of our oldest friends."

He hesitated. She turned to the astonished young banker, who rode up.

"I have just met an old friend. Will you please ride back as
quickly as you can, and tell Jessie that Mr. Kearney is here, and
ask her to join us?"

She watched her dazed escort, still speechless from the spectacle
of the fastidious Miss Carr tete-a-tete with a common Mexican
vaquero, gallop off in the direction of the canyon, and then turned
to George.

"Now take me home, the shortest way, as quick as you can."

"Home?" echoed George.

"I mean to Mr. Prince's house. Quick! before they can come up to
us."

He mechanically put spurs to his horse; she followed. They
presently struck into a trail that soon diverged again into a
disused logging track through the woods.

"This is the short cut to Prince's, by two miles," he said, as they
entered the woods.

As they were still galloping, without exchanging a word, Christie
began to slacken her speed; George did the same. They were safe
from intrusion at the present, even if the others had found the
short cut. Christie, bold and self-reliant a moment ago, suddenly
found herself growing weak and embarrassed. What had she done?

She checked her horse suddenly.

"Perhaps we had better wait for them," she said timidly.

George had not raised his eyes to hers.

"You said you wanted to hurry home," he replied gently, passing his
hand along his mustang's velvety neck, "and--and you had something
to say to me."

"Certainly," she answered, with a faint laugh. "I'm so astonished
at meeting you here. I'm quite bewildered. You are living here;
you have forsaken us to buy a ranche?" she continued, looking at
him attentively.

His brow colored slightly.

"No, I'm living here, but I have bought no ranche. I'm only a
hired man on somebody else's ranche, to look after the cattle."

He saw her beautiful eyes fill with astonishment and--something
else. His brow cleared; he went on, with his old boyish laugh:

"No, Miss Carr. The fact is, I'm dead broke. I've lost everything
since I saw you last. But as I know how to ride, and I'm not
afraid of work, I manage to keep along."

"You have lost money in--in the mines?" said Christie suddenly.

"No"--he replied quickly, evading her eyes. "My brother has my
interest, you know. I've been foolish on my own account solely.
You know I'm rather inclined to that sort of thing. But as long as
my folly don't affect others, I can stand it."

"But it may affect others--and THEY may not think of it as folly--"
She stopped short, confused by his brightening color and eyes. "I
mean-- Oh, Mr. Kearney, I want you to be frank with me. I know
nothing of business, but I know there has been trouble about the
mine at Devil's Ford. Tell me honestly, has my father anything to
do with it? If I thought that through any imprudence of his, you
had suffered--if I believed that you could trace any misfortune of
yours to him--to US--I should never forgive myself"--she stopped
and flashed a single look at him--"I should never forgive YOU for
abandoning us."

The look of pain which had at first shown itself in his face, which
never concealed anything, passed, and a quick smile followed her
feminine anticlimax.

"Miss Carr," he said, with boyish eagerness, "if any man suggested
to me that your father wasn't the brightest and best of his kind--
too wise and clever for the fools about him to understand--I'd--I'd
shoot him."

Confused by his ready and gracious disclaimer of what she had NOT
intended to say, there was nothing left for her but to rush upon
what she really intended to say, with what she felt was shameful
precipitation.

"One word more, Mr. Kearney," she began, looking down, but feeling
the color come to her face as she spoke. "When you spoke to me the
day you left, you must have thought me hard and cruel. When I tell
you that I thought you were alluding to Jessie and some feeling you
had for her--"

"For Jessie!" echoed George.

"You will understand that--that--"

"That what?" said George, drawing nearer to her.

"That I was only speaking as she might have spoken had you talked
to her of me," added Christie hurriedly, slightly backing her horse
away from him.

But this was not so easy, as George was the better rider, and by an
imperceptible movement of his wrist and foot had glued his horse to
her side. "He will go now," she had thought, but he didn't.

"We must ride on," she suggested faintly.

"No," he said with a sudden dropping of his boyish manner and a
slight lifting of his head. "We must ride together no further,
Miss Carr. I must go back to the work I am hired to do, and you
must go on with your party, whom I hear coming. But when we part
here you must bid me good-by--not as Jessie's sister--but as
Christie--the one--the only woman that I love, or that I ever have
loved."

He held out his hand. With the recollection of their previous
parting, she tremblingly advanced her own. He took it, but did not
raise it to his lips. And it was she who found herself half
confusedly retaining his hand in hers, until she dropped it with a
blush.

"Then is this the reason you give for deserting us as you have
deserted Devil's Ford?" she said coldly.

He lifted his eyes to her with a strange smile, and said, "Yes,"
wheeled his horse, and disappeared in the forest.

He had left her thus abruptly once before, kissed, blushing, and
indignant. He was leaving her now, unkissed, but white and
indignant. Yet she was so self-possessed when the party joined
her, that the singular rencontre and her explanation of the
stranger's sudden departure excited no further comment. Only
Jessie managed to whisper in her ear,--

"I hope you are satisfied now that it wasn't me he meant?"

"Not at all," said Christie coldly.


CHAPTER VII


A few days after the girls had returned to San Francisco, they
received a letter from their father. His business, he wrote, would
detain him in Sacramento some days longer. There was no reason why
they should return to Devil's Ford in the heat of the summer; their
host had written to beg him to allow them a more extended visit,
and, if they were enjoying themselves, he thought it would be well
not to disoblige an old friend. He had heard they had a pleasant
visit to Mr. Prince's place, and that a certain young banker had
been very attentive to Christie.

"Do you know what all this means, dear?" asked Jessie, who had been
watching her sister with an unusually grave face.

Christie whose thoughts had wandered from the letter, replied
carelessly,--

"I suppose it means that we are to wait here until father sends for
us."

"It means a good deal more. It means that papa has had another
reverse; it means that the assay has turned out badly for the mine--
that the further they go from the flat the worse it gets--that all
the gold they will probably ever see at Devil's Ford is what they
have already found or will find on the flat; it means that all
Devil's Ford is only a 'pocket,' and not a 'lead.'" She stopped,
with unexpected tears in her eyes.

"Who told you this?" asked Christie breathlessly.

"Fairfax--Mr. Munroe," stammered her sister, "writes to me as if we
already knew it--tells me not to be alarmed, that it isn't so bad--
and all that."

"How long has this happened, Jessie?" said Christie, taking her
hand, with a white but calm face.

"Nearly ever since we've been here, I suppose. It must be so, for
he says poor papa is still hopeful of doing something yet."

"And Mr. Munroe writes to you?" said Christie abstractedly.

"Of course," said Jessie quickly. "He feels interested in--us."

"Nobody tells ME anything," said Christie.

"Didn't--"

"No," said Christie bitterly.

"What on earth DID you talk about? But people don't confide in you
because they're afraid of you. You're so--"

"So what?"

"So gently patronizing, and so 'I-don't-suppose-you-can-help-it,-
poor-thing,' in your general style," said Jessie, kissing her.
"There! I only wish I was like you. What do you say if we write
to father that we'll go back to Devil's Ford? Mr. Munroe thinks we
will be of service there just now. If the men are dissatisfied,
and think we're spending money--"

"I'm afraid Mr. Munroe is hardly a disinterested adviser. At
least, I don't think it would look quite decent for you to fly back
without your father, at his suggestion," said Christie coldly. "He
is not the only partner. We are spending no money. Besides, we
have engaged to go to Mr. Prince's again next week."

"As you like, dear," said Jessie, turning away to hide a faint
smile.

Nevertheless, when they returned from their visit to Mr. Prince's,
and one or two uneventful rides, Christie looked grave. It was
only a few days later that Jessie burst upon her one morning.

"You were saying that nobody ever tells you anything. Well, here's
your chance. Whiskey Dick is below."

"Whiskey Dick?" repeated Christie. "What does he want?"

"YOU, love. Who else? You know he always scorns me as not being
high-toned and elegant enough for his social confidences. He asked
for you only."

With an uneasy sense of some impending revelation, Christie
descended to the drawing-room. As she opened the door, a strong
flavor of that toilet soap and eau de Cologne with which Whiskey
Dick was in the habit of gracefully effacing the traces of
dissipation made known his presence. In spite of a new suit of
clothes, whose pristine folds refused to adapt themselves entirely
to the contour of his figure, he was somewhat subdued by the
unexpected elegance of the drawing-room of Christie's host. But a
glance at Christie's sad but gracious face quickly reassured him.
Taking from his hat a three-cornered parcel, he unfolded a handsome
saffrona rose, which he gravely presented to her. Having thus
reestablished his position, he sank elegantly into a tete-a-tete
ottoman. Finding the position inconvenient to face Christie, who
had seated herself on a chair, he transferred himself to the other
side of the ottoman, and addressed her over its back as from a
pulpit.

"Is this really a fortunate accident, Mr. Hall, or did you try to
find us?" said Christie pleasantly.

"Partly promiskuss, and partly coincident, Miss Christie, one up
and t'other down," said Dick lightly. "Work being slack at present
at Devil's Ford, I reck'ned I'd take a pasear down to 'Frisco, and
dip into the vortex o' fash'nable society and out again." He
lightly waved a new handkerchief to illustrate his swallow-like
intrusion. "This yer minglin' with the bo-tong is apt to be
wearisome, ez you and me knows, unless combined with experience and
judgment. So when them boys up there allows that there's a little
too much fash'nable society and San Francisco capital and high-
falutin' about the future goin' on fer square surface mining, I
sez, 'Look yere, gentlemen,' sez I, 'you don't see the pint. The
pint is to get the pop'lar eye fixed, so to speak, on Devil's Ford.
When a fash'nable star rises above the 'Frisco horizon--like Miss
Carr--and, so to speak, dazzles the gineral eye, people want to
know who she is. And when people say that's the accomplished
daughter o' the accomplished superintendent of the Devil's Ford
claim--otherwise known as the Star-eyed Goddess o' Devil's Ford--
every eye is fixed on the mine, and Capital, so to speak, tumbles
to her.' And when they sez that the old man--excuse my freedom,
but that's the way the boys talk of your father, meaning no harm--
the old man, instead o' trying to corral rich widders--grass or
otherwise--to spend their money on the big works for the gold that
ain't there yet--should stay in Devil's Ford and put all his sabe
and genius into grindin' out the little gold that is there, I sez
to them that it ain't your father's style. 'His style,' sez I, 'ez
to go in and build them works.' When they're done he turns round
to Capital, and sez he--'Look yer,' sez he, 'thar's all the works
you want, first quality--cost a million; thar's all the water you
want, onlimited--cost another million; thar's all the pay gravel
you want in and outer the ground--call it two millions more. Now
my time's too vally'ble; my professhun's too high-toned to WORK
mines. I MAKE 'em. Hand me over a check for ten millions and call
it square, and work it for yourself.' So Capital hands over the
money and waltzes down to run the mine, and you original locators
walks round with yer hands in yer pockets a-top of your six million
profit, and you let's Capital take the work and the responsibility."

Preposterous as this seemed from the lips of Whiskey Dick, Christie
had a haunting suspicion that it was not greatly unlike the
theories expounded by the clever young banker who had been her
escort. She did not interrupt his flow of reminiscent criticism;
when he paused for breath, she said, quietly:

"I met Mr. George Kearney the other day in the country."

Whiskey Dick stopped awkwardly, glanced hurriedly at Christie, and
coughed behind his handkerchief.

"Mr. Kearney--eh--er--certengly--yes--er--met him, you say. Was
he--er--er--well?"

"In health, yes; but otherwise he has lost everything," said
Christie, fixing her eyes on the embarrassed Dick.

"Yes--er--in course--in course--" continued Dick, nervously
glancing round the apartment as if endeavoring to find an opening
to some less abrupt statement of the fact.

"And actually reduced to take some menial employment," added
Christie, still regarding Dick with her clear glance.

"That's it--that's just it," said Dick, beaming as he suddenly
found his delicate and confidential opportunity. "That's it, Miss
Christie; that's just what I was sayin' to the boys. 'Ez it the
square thing,' sez I, 'jest because George hez happened to
hypothecate every dollar he has, or expects to hev, to put into
them works, only to please Mr. Carr, and just because he don't want
to distress that intelligent gentleman by letting him see he's dead
broke--for him to go and demean himself and Devil's Ford by rushing
away and hiring out as a Mexican vaquero on Mexican wages? Look,'
sez I, 'at the disgrace he brings upon a high-toned, fash'nable
girl, at whose side he's walked and danced, and passed rings, and
sentiments, and bokays in the changes o' the cotillion and the
mizzourka. And wot,' sez I, 'if some day, prancing along in a
fash'nable cavalcade, she all of a suddents comes across him
drivin' a Mexican steer?' That's what I said to the boys. And so
you met him, Miss Christie, as usual," continued Dick, endeavoring
under the appearance of a large social experience to conceal an
eager anxiety to know the details--"so you met him; and, in course,
you didn't let on yer knew him, so to speak, nat'rally, or p'raps
you kinder like asked him to fix your saddle-girth, and give him a
five-dollar piece--eh?"

Christie, who had risen and gone to the window, suddenly turned a
very pale face and shining eyes on Dick.

"Mr. Hall," she said, with a faint attempt at a smile, "we are old
friends, and I feel I can ask you a favor. You once before acted
as our escort--it was for a short but a happy time--will you accept
a larger trust? My father is busy in Sacramento for the mine: will
you, without saying anything to anybody, take Jessie and me back at
once to Devil's Ford?"

"Will I? Miss Christie," said Dick, choking between an intense
gratification and a desire to keep back its vulgar exhibition, "I
shall be proud!"

"When I say keep it a secret"--she hesitated--"I don't mean that I
object to your letting Mr. Kearney, if you happen to know where he
is, understand that we are going back to Devil's Ford."

"Cert'nly--nat'rally," said Dick, waving his hand gracefully;
"sorter drop him a line, saying that bizness of a social and
delicate nature--being the escort of Miss Christie and Jessie Carr
to Devil's Ford--prevents my having the pleasure of calling."

"That will do very well, Mr. Hall," said Christie, faintly smiling
through her moist eyelashes. "Then will you go at once and secure
tickets for to-night's boat, and bring them here? Jessie and I
will arrange everything else."

"Cert'nly," said Dick impulsively, and preparing to take a graceful
leave.

"We'll be impatient until you return with the tickets," said
Christie graciously.

Dick shook hands gravely, got as far as the door, and paused.

"You think it better to take the tickets now?" he said dubiously.

"By all means," said Christie impetuously. "I've set my heart on
going to-night--and unless you secure berths early--"

"In course--in course," interrupted Dick nervously. "But--"

"But what?" said Christie impatiently.

Dick hesitated, shut the door carefully, and, looking round the
room, lightly shook out his handkerchief, apparently flicked away
an embarrassing suggestion, and said, with a little laugh:

"It's ridiklous, perfectly ridiklous, Miss Christie; but not bein'
in the habit of carryin' ready money, and havin' omitted to cash a
draft on Wells, Fargo & Co.--"

"Of course," said Christie rapidly. "How forgetful I am! Pray
forgive me, Mr. Hall. I didn't think. I'll run up and get it from
our host; he will be glad to be our banker."

"One moment, Miss Christie," said Dick lightly, as his thumb and
finger relaxed in his waistcoat pocket over the only piece of money
in the world that had remained to him after his extravagant
purchase of Christie's saffrona rose, "one moment: in this yer
monetary transaction, if you like, you are at liberty to use MY
name."


CHAPTER VIII


As Christie and Jessie Carr looked from the windows of the coach,
whose dust-clogged wheels were slowly dragging them, as if
reluctant, nearer the last stage of their journey to Devil's Ford,
they were conscious of a change in the landscape, which they could
not entirely charge upon their changed feelings. The few bared
open spaces on the upland, the long stretch of rocky ridge near the
summit, so vivid and so velvety during their first journey, were
now burnt and yellow; even the brief openings in the forest were
seared as if by a hot iron in the scorching rays of a half year's
sun. The pastoral slopes of the valley below were cloaked in
lustre-leather: the rare watercourses along the road had faded from
the waiting eye and ear; it seemed as if the long and dry summer
had even invaded the close-set ranks of pines, and had blown a
simoom breath through the densest woods, leaving its charred red
ashes on every leaf and spray along the tunnelled shade. As they
leaned out of the window and inhaled the half-dead spices of the
evergreens, they seemed to have entered the atmosphere of some
exhausted passion--of some fierce excitement that was even now
slowly burning itself out.

It was a relief at last to see the straggling houses of Devil's
Ford far below come once more into view, as they rounded the
shoulder of Devil's Spur and began the long descent. But as they
entered the town a change more ominous and startling than the
desiccation of the landscape forced itself upon them. The town was
still there, but where were the inhabitants? Four months ago they
had left the straggling street thronged with busy citizens--groups
at every corner, and a chaos of merchandise and traders in the open
plaza or square beside the Presbyterian church. Now all was
changed. Only a few wayfarers lifted their heads lazily as the
coach rattled by, crossing the deserted square littered with empty
boxes, and gliding past empty cabins or vacant shop windows, from
which not only familiar faces, but even the window sashes
themselves, were gone. The great unfinished serpent-like flume,
crossing the river on gigantic trestles, had advanced as far as the
town, stooping over it like some enormous reptile that had sucked
its life blood and was gorged with its prey.

Whiskey Dick, who had left the stage on the summit to avail himself
of a shorter foot trail to the house, that would give him half an
hour's grace to make preparations, met them at the stage office
with a buggy. A glance at the young girls, perhaps, convinced him
that the graces of elegant worldly conversation were out of place
with the revelation he read on their faces. Perhaps, he, too, was
a trifle indisposed. The short journey to the house was made in
profound silence.

The villa had been repainted and decorated, and it looked fresher,
and even, to their preoccupied minds, appeared more attractive than
ever. Thoughtful hands had taken care of the vines and rose-bushes
on the trellises; water--that precious element in Devil's Ford--had
not been spared in keeping green through the long drought the
plants which the girls had so tenderly nurtured. It was the one
oasis in which the summer still lingered; and yet a singular sense
of loss came over the girls as they once more crossed its
threshold. It seemed no longer their own.

"Ef I was you, Miss Christie, I'd keep close to the house for a day
or two, until--until--things is settled," said Dick; "there's a
heap o' tramps and sich cattle trapsin' round. P'raps you wouldn't
feel so lonesome if you was nearer town--for instance, 'bout wher'
you useter live."

"In the dear old cabin," said Christie quickly; "I remember it; I
wish we were there now."

"Do you really? Do you?" said Whiskey Dick, with suddenly
twinkling eyes. "That's like you to say it. That's what I allus
said," continued Dick, addressing space generally; "if there's any
one ez knows how to come square down to the bottom rock without
flinchin', it's your high-toned, fash'nable gals. But I must
meander back to town, and let the boys know you're in possession,
safe and sound. It's right mean that Fairfax and Mattingly had to
go down to Lagrange on some low business yesterday, but they'll be
back to-morrow. So long."

Left alone, the girls began to realize their strange position.
They had conceived no settled plan. The night they left San
Francisco they had written an earnest letter to their father,
telling him that on learning the truth about the reverses of
Devil's Ford, they thought it their duty to return and share them
with others, without obliging him to prefer the request, and with
as little worry to him as possible. He would find them ready to
share his trials, and in what must be the scene of their work
hereafter.

"It will bring father back," said Christie; "he won't leave us here
alone; and then together we must come to some understanding with
him--with THEM--for somehow I feel as if this house belonged to us
no longer."

Her surmise was not far wrong. When Mr. Carr arrived hurriedly
from Sacramento the next evening, he found the house deserted. His
daughters were gone; there were indications that they had arrived,
and, for some reason, suddenly departed. The vague fear that had
haunted his guilty soul after receiving their letter, and during
his breathless journey, now seemed to be realized. He was turning
from the empty house, whose reproachful solitude frightened him,
when he was confronted on the threshold by the figure of Fairfax
Munroe.

"I came to the stage office to meet you," he said; "you must have
left the stage at the summit."

"I did," said Carr angrily. "I was anxious to meet my daughters
quickly, to know the reason of their foolish alarm, and to know
also who had been frightening them. Where are they?"

"They are safe in the old cabin beyond, that has been put up ready
to receive them again," said Fairfax quietly.

"But what is the meaning of this? Why are they not here?" demanded
Carr, hiding his agitation in a burst of querulous rage.

"Do YOU ask, Mr. Carr?" said Fairfax sadly. "Did you expect them
to remain here until the sheriff took possession? No one knows
better than yourself that the money advanced you on the deeds of
this homestead has never been repaid."

Carr staggered, but recovered himself with feeble violence.

"Since you know so much of my affairs, how do you know that this
claim will ever be pressed for payment? How do you know it is not
the advance of a--a--friend?"

"Because I have seen the woman who advanced it," said Fairfax
hopelessly. "She was here to look at the property before your
daughters came."

"Well?" said Carr nervously.

"Well! You force me to tell you something I should like to forget.
You force me to anticipate a disclosure I expected to make to you
only when I came to ask permission to woo your daughter Jessie; and
when I tell you what it is, you will understand that I have no
right to criticise your conduct. I am only explaining my own."

"Go on," said Carr impatiently.

"When I first came to this country, there was a woman I loved
passionately. She treated me as women of her kind only treat men
like me; she ruined me, and left me. That was four years ago. I
love your daughter, Mr. Carr, but she has never heard it from my
lips. I would not woo her until I had told you all. I have tried
to do it ere this, and failed. Perhaps I should not now, but--"

"But what?" said Carr furiously; "speak out!"

"But this. Look!" said Fairfax, producing from his pocket the
packet of letters Jessie had found; "perhaps you know the
handwriting?"

"What do you mean?" gasped Carr.

"That woman--my mistress--is the woman who advanced you money, and
who claims this house."


The interview, and whatever came of it, remained a secret with the
two men. When Mr. Carr accepted the hospitality of the old cabin
again, it was understood that he had sacrificed the new house and
its furniture to some of the more pressing debts of the mine, and
the act went far to restore his waning popularity. But a more
genuine feeling of relief was experienced by Devil's Ford when it
was rumored that Fairfax Munroe had asked for the hand of Jessie
Carr, and that some promise contingent upon the equitable
adjustment of the affairs of the mine had been given by Mr. Carr.
To the superstitious mind of Devil's Ford and its few remaining
locators, this new partnership seemed to promise that unity of
interest and stability of fortune that Devil's Ford had lacked.
But nothing could be done until the rainy season had fairly set in;
until the long-looked-for element that was to magically separate
the gold from the dross in those dull mounds of dust and gravel had
come of its own free will, and in its own appointed channels,
independent of the feeble auxiliaries that had hopelessly riven the
rocks on the hillside, or hung incomplete and unfinished in lofty
scaffoldings above the settlement.

The rainy season came early. At first in gathered mists on the
higher peaks that were lifted in the morning sun only to show a
fresher field of dazzling white below; in white clouds that at
first seemed to be mere drifts blown across from those fresh
snowfields, and obscuring the clear blue above; in far-off murmurs
in the hollow hills and gulches; in nearer tinkling melody and baby
prattling in the leaves. It came with bright flashes of sunlight
by day, with deep, monotonous shadow at night; with the onset of
heavy winds, the roar of turbulent woods, the tumultuous tossing of
leafy arms, and with what seemed the silent dissolution of the
whole landscape in days of steady and uninterrupted downfall. It
came extravagantly, for every canyon had grown into a torrent,
every gulch a waterspout, every watercourse a river, and all
pouring into the North Fork, that, rushing past the settlement,
seemed to threaten it with lifted crest and flying mane. It came
dangerously, for one night the river, leaping the feeble barrier of
Devil's Ford, swept away houses and banks, scattered with
unconscious irony the laboriously collected heaps of gravel left
for hydraulic machinery, and spread out a vast and silent lake
across the submerged flat.

In the hurry and confusion of that night the girls had thrown open
their cabin to the escaping miners, who hurried along the slope
that was now the bank of the river. Suddenly Christie felt her arm
grasped, and she was half-led, half-dragged, into the inner room.
Her father stood before her.

"Where is George Kearney?" he asked tremulously.

"George Kearney!" echoed Christie, for a moment believing the
excitement had turned her father's brain. "You know he is not
here; he is in San Francisco."

"He is here--I tell you," said Carr impatiently; "he has been here
ever since the high water, trying to save the flume and reservoir."

"George--here!" Christie could only gasp.

"Yes! He passed here a few moments ago, to see if you were all
safe, and he has gone on towards the flume. But what he is trying
to do is madness. If you see him, implore him to do no more. Let
him abandon the accursed flume to its fate. It has worked already
too much woe upon us all; why should it carry his brave and
youthful soul down with it?"

The words were still ringing in her ears, when he suddenly passed
away, with the hurrying crowd. Scarcely knowing what she did, she
ran out, vaguely intent only on one thought, seeking only the one
face, lately so dear in recollection that she felt she would die if
she never saw it again. Perplexed by confused voices in the woods,
she lost track of the crowd, until the voices suddenly were raised
in one loud outcry, followed by the crashing of timber, the
splashing of water, a silence, and then a dull, continuous roar.
She ran vaguely on in the direction of the reservoir, with her
father's injunction still in her mind, until a terrible idea
displaced it, and she turned at right angles suddenly, and ran
towards the slope leading down to the submerged flat. She had
barely left the shelter of the trees behind her before the roar of
water seemed to rise at her very feet. She stopped, dazed,
bewildered, and horror-stricken, on the edge of the slope. It was
the slope no longer, but the bank of the river itself!

Even in the gray light of early morning, and with inexperienced
eyes, she saw all too clearly now. The trestle-work had given way;
the curving mile of flume, fallen into the stream, and, crushed and
dammed against the opposite shore, had absolutely turned the whole
river through the half-finished ditch and partly excavated mine in
its way, a few rods further on to join the old familiar channel.
The bank of the river was changed; the flat had become an island,
between which and the slope where she stood the North Fork was
rolling its resistless yellow torrent. As she gazed spellbound, a
portion of the slope beneath her suddenly seemed to sink and
crumble, and was swallowed up in the rushing stream. She heard a
cry of warning behind her, but, rooted to the spot by a fearful
fascination, she heeded it not.

Again there was a sudden disruption, and another part of the slope
sank to rise no more; but this time she felt herself seized by the
waist and dragged back. It was her father standing by her side.

He was flushed and excited, gazing at the water with a strange
exultation.

"Do you see it? Do you know what has happened?" he asked quickly.

"The flume has fallen and turned the river," said Christie
hurriedly. "But--have you seen him--is he safe?"

"He--who?" he answered vacantly.

"George Kearney!"

"He is safe," he said impatiently. "But, do you see, Christie? Do
you know what this means?"

He pointed with his tremulous hand to the stream before them.

"It means we are ruined," said Christie coldly.

"Nothing of the kind! It means that the river is doing the work of
the flume. It is sluicing off the gravel, deepening the ditch, and
altering the slope which was the old bend of the river. It will do
in ten minutes the work that would take us a year. If we can stop
it in time, or control it, we are safe; but if we can not, it will
carry away the bed and deposit with the rest, and we are ruined
again."

With a gesture of impotent fury, he dashed away in the direction of
an equally excited crowd, that on a point of the slope nearer the
island were gesticulating and shouting to a second group of men,
who on the opposite shore were clambering on over the choked debris
of the flume that had dammed and diverted the current. It was
evident that the same idea had occurred to them, and they were
risking their lives in the attempt to set free the impediments.
Shocked and indignant as Christie had been at the degrading
absorption of material interests at such a moment, the element of
danger lifted the labors of these men into heroism, and she began
to feel a strange exultation as she watched them. Under the
skilful blows of their axes, in a few moments the vast body of
drift began to disintegrate, and then to swing round and move
towards the old channel. A cheer went up, but as suddenly died
away again. An overlapping fringe of wreckage had caught on the
point of the island and arrested the whole mass.

The men, who had gained the shore with difficulty, looked back with
a cry of despair. But the next moment from among them leaped a
figure, alert, buoyant, invincible, and, axe in hand, once more
essayed the passage. Springing from timber to timber, he at last
reached the point of obstruction. A few strokes of the axe were
sufficient to clear it; but at the first stroke it was apparent
that the striker was also losing his hold upon the shore, and that
he must inevitably be carried away with the tossing debris. But
this consideration did not seem to affect him; the last blow was
struck, and as the freed timbers rolled on, over and over, he
boldly plunged into the flood. Christie gave a little cry--her
heart had bounded with him; it seemed as if his plunge had splashed
the water in her eyes. He did not come to the surface until he had
passed the point below where her father stood, and then struggling
feebly, as if stunned or disabled by a blow. It seemed to her that
he was trying to approach the side of the river where she was.
Would he do it? Could she help him? She was alone; he was hidden
from the view of the men on the point, and no succor could come
from them. There was a fringe of alder nearly opposite their cabin
that almost overhung the stream. She ran to it, clutched it with a
frantic hand, and, leaning over the boiling water, uttered for the
first time his name:

"George!"

As if called to the surface by the magic of her voice, he rose a
few yards from her in mid-current, and turned his fading eyes
towards the bank. In another moment he would have been swept
beyond her reach, but with a supreme effort he turned on one side;
the current, striking him sideways, threw him towards the bank, and
she caught him by his sleeve. For an instant it seemed as if she
would be dragged down with him. For one dangerous moment she did
not care, and almost yielded to the spell; but as the rush of water
pressed him against the bank, she recovered herself, and managed to
lift him beyond its reach. And then she sat down, half-fainting,
with his white face and damp curls upon her breast.

"George, darling, speak to me! Only one word! Tell me, have I
saved you?"

His eyes opened. A faint twinkle of the old days came to them--a
boyish smile played upon his lips.

"For yourself--or Jessie?"

She looked around her with a little frightened air. They were
alone. There was but one way of sealing those mischievous lips,
and she found it!


"That's what I allus said, gentlemen," lazily remarked Whiskey
Dick, a few weeks later, leaning back against the bar, with his
glass in his hand. "'George,' sez I, 'it ain't what you SAY to a
fash'nable, high-toned young lady; it's what you DOES ez makes or
breaks you.' And that's what I sez gin'rally o' things in the
Ford. It ain't what Carr and you boys allows to do; it's the
gin'ral average o' things ez IS done that gives tone to the hull,
and hez brought this yer new luck to you all!"







 


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