This Mr. Jefferson Doman was from
Elizabethtown, New Jersey, where six years before
he had left his heart in the keeping of a golden-haired,
demure-mannered young woman named Mary Matthews, as
collateral security for his return to claim her hand.
“I just know you’ll
never get back alive—you never do succeed
in anything,” was the remark which illustrated
Miss Matthews’s notion of what constituted success
and, inferentially, her view of the nature of encouragement.
She added: “If you don’t I’ll
go to California too. I can put the coins in
little bags as you dig them out.”
This characteristically feminine theory
of auriferous deposits did not commend itself to the
masculine intelligence: it was Mr. Doman’s
belief that gold was found in a liquid state.
He deprecated her intent with considerable enthusiasm,
suppressed her sobs with a light hand upon her mouth,
laughed in her eyes as he kissed away her tears, and
with a cheerful “Ta-ta” went to California
to labor for her through the long, loveless years,
with a strong heart, an alert hope and a steadfast
fidelity that never for a moment forgot what it was
about. In the mean time, Miss Matthews had granted
a monopoly of her humble talent for sacking up coins
to Mr. Jo. Seeman, of New York, gambler, by whom
it was better appreciated than her commanding genius
for unsacking and bestowing them upon his local rivals.
Of this latter aptitude, indeed, he manifested his
disapproval by an act which secured him the position
of clerk of the laundry in the State prison, and for
her the sobriquet of “Split-faced Moll.”
At about this time she wrote to Mr. Doman a touching
letter of renunciation, inclosing her photograph to
prove that she had no longer had a right to indulge
the dream of becoming Mrs. Doman, and recounting so
graphically her fall from a horse that the staid “plug”
upon which Mr. Doman had ridden into Red Dog to get
the letter made vicarious atonement under the spur
all the way back to camp. The letter failed in
a signal way to accomplish its object; the fidelity
which had before been to Mr. Doman a matter of love
and duty was thenceforth a matter of honor also; and
the photograph, showing the once pretty face sadly
disfigured as by the slash of a knife, was duly instated
in his affections and its more comely predecessor treated
with contumelious neglect. On being informed
of this, Miss Matthews, it is only fair to say, appeared
less surprised than from the apparently low estimate
of Mr. Doman’s generosity which the tone of her
former letter attested one would naturally have expected
her to be. Soon after, however, her letters grew
infrequent, and then ceased altogether.
But Mr. Doman had another correspondent,
Mr. Barney Bree, of Hurdy-Gurdy, formerly of Red Dog.
This gentleman, although a notable figure among miners,
was not a miner. His knowledge of mining consisted
mainly in a marvelous command of its slang, to which
he made copious contributions, enriching its vocabulary
with a wealth of uncommon phrases more remarkable
for their aptness than their refinement, and which
impressed the unlearned “tenderfoot” with
a lively sense of the profundity of their inventor’s
acquirements. When not entertaining a circle
of admiring auditors from San Francisco or the East
he could commonly be found pursuing the comparatively
obscure industry of sweeping out the various dance
houses and purifying the cuspidors.
Barney had apparently but two passions
in life—love of Jefferson Doman, who had
once been of some service to him, and love of whisky,
which certainly had not. He had been among the
first in the rush to Hurdy-Gurdy, but had not prospered,
and had sunk by degrees to the position of grave digger.
This was not a vocation, but Barney in a desultory
way turned his trembling hand to it whenever some local
misunderstanding at the card table and his own partial
recovery from a prolonged debauch occurred coincidently
in point of time. One day Mr. Doman received,
at Red Dog, a letter with the simple postmark, “Hurdy,
Cal.,” and being occupied with another matter,
carelessly thrust it into a chink of his cabin for
future perusal. Some two years later it was accidentally
dislodged and he read it. It ran as follows:—
HURDY, June 6.
FRIEND JEFF: I’ve hit her hard
in the boneyard. She’s blind and lousy.
I’m on the divvy—that’s
me, and mum’s my lay till you toot.
Yours, BARNEY.
P.S.—I’ve clayed her
with Scarry.
With some knowledge of the general
mining camp argot and of Mr. Bree’s private
system for the communication of ideas Mr. Doman had
no difficulty in understanding by this uncommon epistle
that Barney while performing his duty as grave digger
had uncovered a quartz ledge with no outcroppings;
that it was visibly rich in free gold; that, moved
by considerations of friendship, he was willing to
accept Mr. Doman as a partner and awaiting that gentleman’s
declaration of his will in the matter would discreetly
keep the discovery a secret. From the postscript
it was plainly inferable that in order to conceal the
treasure he had buried above it the mortal part of
a person named Scarry.
From subsequent events, as related
to Mr. Doman at Red Dog, it would appear that before
taking this precaution Mr. Bree must have had the
thrift to remove a modest competency of the gold; at
any rate, it was at about that time that he entered
upon that memorable series of potations and treatings
which is still one of the cherished traditions of the
San Juan Smith country, and is spoken of with respect
as far away as Ghost Rock and Lone Hand. At its
conclusion some former citizens of Hurdy-Gurdy, for
whom he had performed the last kindly office at the
cemetery, made room for him among them, and he rested
well.