CORONADO, JUNE 20.
I find myself more and more interested
in him. It is not, I am sure, his—do
you know any good noun corresponding to the adjective
“handsome”? One does not like to say
“beauty” when speaking of a man. He
is beautiful enough, Heaven knows; I should not even
care to trust you with him—faithfulest
of all possible wives that you are—when
he looks his best, as he always does. Nor do
I think the fascination of his manner has much to
do with it. You recollect that the charm of art
inheres in that which is undefinable, and to you and
me, my dear Irene, I fancy there is rather less of
that in the branch of art under consideration than
to girls in their first season. I fancy I know
how my fine gentleman produces many of his effects
and could perhaps give him a pointer on heightening
them. Nevertheless, his manner is something truly
delightful. I suppose what interests me chiefly
is the man’s brains. His conversation is
the best I have ever heard and altogether unlike any
one else’s. He seems to know everything,
as indeed he ought, for he has been everywhere, read
everything, seen all there is to see—sometimes
I think rather more than is good for him—and
had acquaintance with the queerest people.
And then his voice—Irene, when I hear it
I actually feel as if I ought to have paid at the
door, though of course it is my own door.
JULY 3.
I fear my remarks about Dr. Barritz
must have been, being thoughtless, very silly, or
you would not have written of him with such levity,
not to say disrespect. Believe me, dearest, he
has more dignity and seriousness (of the kind, I mean,
which is not inconsistent with a manner sometimes
playful and always charming) than any of the men that
you and I ever met. And young Raynor—you
knew Raynor at Monterey—tells me that the
men all like him and that he is treated with something
like deference everywhere. There is a mystery,
too—something about his connection with
the Blavatsky people in Northern India. Raynor
either would not or could not tell me the particulars.
I infer that Dr. Barritz is thought—don’t
you dare to laugh!—a magician. Could
anything be finer than that?
An ordinary mystery is not, of course,
so good as a scandal, but when it relates to dark
and dreadful practices—to the exercise of
unearthly powers—could anything be more
piquant? It explains, too, the singular influence
the man has upon me. It is the undefinable in
his art—black art. Seriously, dear,
I quite tremble when he looks me full in the eyes
with those unfathomable orbs of his, which I have already
vainly attempted to describe to you. How dreadful
if he has the power to make one fall in love!
Do you know if the Blavatsky crowd have that power—
outside of Sepoy?
JULY 16.
The strangest thing! Last evening
while Auntie was attending one of the hotel hops (I
hate them) Dr. Barritz called. It was scandalously
late—I actually believe that he had talked
with Auntie in the ballroom and learned from her that
I was alone. I had been all the evening contriving
how to worm out of him the truth about his connection
with the Thugs in Sepoy, and all of that black business,
but the moment he fixed his eyes on me (for I admitted
him, I’m ashamed to say) I was helpless.
I trembled, I blushed, I—O Irene, Irene,
I love the man beyond expression and you know how
it is yourself.
Fancy! I, an ugly duckling from
Redhorse—daughter (they say) of old Calamity
Jim—certainly his heiress, with no living
relation but an absurd old aunt who spoils me a thousand
and fifty ways—absolutely destitute of
everything but a million dollars and a hope in Paris,—I
daring to love a god like him! My dear, if I had
you here I could tear your hair out with mortification.
I am convinced that he is aware of
my feeling, for he stayed but a few moments, said
nothing but what another man might have said half as
well, and pretending that he had an engagement went
away. I learned to-day (a little bird told me—the
bell-bird) that he went straight to bed. How
does that strike you as evidence of exemplary habits?
JULY 17.
That little wretch, Raynor, called
yesterday and his babble set me almost wild.
He never runs down—that is to say, when
he exterminates a score of reputations, more or less,
he does not pause between one reputation and the next.
(By the way, he inquired about you, and his manifestations
of interest in you had, I confess, a good deal of
vraisemblance..) Mr. Raynor observes no game
laws; like Death (which he would inflict if slander
were fatal) he has all seasons for his own. But
I like him, for we knew each other at Redhorse when
we were young. He was known in those days as
“Giggles,” and I—O Irene, can
you ever forgive me?—I was called “Gunny.”
God knows why; perhaps in allusion to the material
of my pinafores; perhaps because the name is in alliteration
with “Giggles,” for Gig and I were inseparable
playmates, and the miners may have thought it a delicate
civility to recognize some kind of relationship between
us.
Later, we took in a third—another
of Adversity’s brood, who, like Garrick between
Tragedy and Comedy, had a chronic inability to adjudicate
the rival claims of Frost and Famine. Between
him and misery there was seldom anything more than
a single suspender and the hope of a meal which would
at the same time support life and make it insupportable.
He literally picked up a precarious living for himself
and an aged mother by “chloriding the dumps,”
that is to say, the miners permitted him to search
the heaps of waste rock for such pieces of “pay
ore” as had been overlooked; and these he sacked
up and sold at the Syndicate Mill. He became
a member of our firm—“Gunny, Giggles,
and Dumps” thenceforth—through my
favor; for I could not then, nor can I now, be indifferent
to his courage and prowess in defending against Giggles
the immemorial right of his sex to insult a strange
and unprotected female—myself. After
old Jim struck it in the Calamity and I began to wear
shoes and go to school, and in emulation Giggles took
to washing his face and became Jack Raynor, of Wells,
Fargo & Co., and old Mrs. Barts was herself chlorided
to her fathers, Dumps drifted over to San Juan Smith
and turned stage driver, and was killed by road agents,
and so forth.
Why do I tell you all this, dear?
Because it is heavy on my heart. Because I walk
the Valley of Humility. Because I am subduing
myself to permanent consciousness of my unworthiness
to unloose the latchet of Dr. Barritz’s shoe.
Because, oh dear, oh dear, there’s a cousin of
Dumps at this hotel! I haven’t spoken to
him. I never had much acquaintance with him,—but
do you suppose he has recognized me? Do, please
give me in your next your candid, sure-enough opinion
about it, and say you don’t think so. Do
you suppose He knows about me already, and that that
is why He left me last evening when He saw that I
blushed and trembled like a fool under His eyes?
You know I can’t bribe all the newspapers,
and I can’t go back on anybody who was civil
to Gunny at Redhorse—not if I’m pitched
out of society into the sea. So the skeleton sometimes
rattles behind the door. I never cared much before,
as you know, but now—now it is not
the same. Jack Raynor I am sure of—he
will not tell Him. He seems, indeed, to hold
Him in such respect as hardly to dare speak to Him
at all, and I’m a good deal that way myself.
Dear, dear! I wish I had something besides a
million dollars! If Jack were three inches taller
I’d marry him alive and go back to Redhorse and
wear sackcloth again to the end of my miserable days.
JULY 25.
We had a perfectly splendid sunset
last evening and I must tell you all about it.
I ran away from Auntie and everybody and was walking
alone on the beach. I expect you to believe,
you infidel! that I had not looked out of my window
on the seaward side of the hotel and seen Him walking
alone on the beach. If you are not lost to every
feeling of womanly delicacy you will accept my statement
without question. I soon established myself under
my sunshade and had for some time been gazing out
dreamily over the sea, when he approached, walking
close to the edge of the water—it was ebb
tide. I assure you the wet sand actually brightened
about his feet! As he approached me he lifted
his hat, saying, “Miss Dement, may I sit with
you?—or will you walk with me?”
The possibility that neither might
be agreeable seems not to have occurred to him.
Did you ever know such assurance? Assurance?
My dear, it was gall, downright gall! Well,
I didn’t find it wormwood, and replied, with
my untutored Redhorse heart in my throat, “I—I
shall be pleased to do anything.”
Could words have been more stupid? There are
depths of fatuity in me, friend o’ my soul, that
are simply bottomless!
He extended his hand, smiling, and
I delivered mine into it without a moment’s
hesitation, and when his fingers closed about it to
assist me to my feet the consciousness that it trembled
made me blush worse than the red west. I got
up, however, and after a while, observing that he
had not let go my hand I pulled on it a little, but
unsuccessfully. He simply held on, saying nothing,
but looking down into my face with some kind of smile—I
didn’t know—how could I?—whether
it was affectionate, derisive, or what, for I did
not look at him. How beautiful he was!—
with the red fires of the sunset burning in the depths
of his eyes. Do you know, dear, if the Thugs
and Experts of the Blavatsky region have any special
kind of eyes? Ah, you should have seen his superb
attitude, the god-like inclination of his head as
he stood over me after I had got upon my feet!
It was a noble picture, but I soon destroyed it, for
I began at once to sink again to the earth. There
was only one thing for him to do, and he did it; he
supported me with an arm about my waist.
“Miss Dement, are you ill?” he said.
It was not an exclamation; there was
neither alarm nor solicitude in it. If he had
added: “I suppose that is about what I am
expected to say,” he would hardly have expressed
his sense of the situation more clearly. His
manner filled me with shame and indignation, for I
was suffering acutely. I wrenched my hand out
of his, grasped the arm supporting me and pushing
myself free, fell plump into the sand and sat helpless.
My hat had fallen off in the struggle and my hair
tumbled about my face and shoulders in the most mortifying
way.
“Go away from me,” I cried,
half choking. “O please go away,
you—you Thug! How dare you think that
when my leg is asleep?”
I actually said those identical words!
And then I broke down and sobbed. Irene, I blubbered!
His manner altered in an instant—I
could see that much through my fingers and hair.
He dropped on one knee beside me, parted the tangle
of hair and said in the tenderest way: “My
poor girl, God knows I have not intended to pain you.
How should I?—I who love you—I
who have loved you for—for years and years!”
He had pulled my wet hands away from
my face and was covering them with kisses. My
cheeks were like two coals, my whole face was flaming
and, I think, steaming. What could I do?
I hid it on his shoulder—there was no other
place. And, O my dear friend, how my leg tingled
and thrilled, and how I wanted to kick!
We sat so for a long time. He
had released one of my hands to pass his arm about
me again and I possessed myself of my handkerchief
and was drying my eyes and my nose. I would not
look up until that was done; he tried in vain to push
me a little away and gaze into my face. Presently,
when all was right, and it had grown a bit dark, I
lifted my head, looked him straight in the eyes and
smiled my best—my level best, dear.
“What do you mean,” I said, “by
’years and years’?”
“Dearest,” he replied,
very gravely, very earnestly, “in the absence
of the sunken cheeks, the hollow eyes, the lank hair,
the slouching gait, the rags, dirt, and youth, can
you not—will you not understand? Gunny,
I’m Dumps!”
In a moment I was upon my feet and
he upon his. I seized him by the lapels of his
coat and peered into his handsome face in the deepening
darkness. I was breathless with excitement.
“And you are not dead?”
I asked, hardly knowing what I said.
“Only dead in love, dear.
I recovered from the road agent’s bullet, but
this, I fear, is fatal.”
“But about Jack—Mr. Raynor?
Don’t you know—”
“I am ashamed to say, darling,
that it was through that unworthy person’s suggestion
that I came here from Vienna.”
Irene, they have roped in your affectionate friend,
MARY JANE DEMENT.
P.S.—The worst of it is
that there is no mystery; that was the invention of
Jack Raynor, to arouse my curiosity. James is
not a Thug. He solemnly assures me that in all
his wanderings he has never set foot in Sepoy.