An hour later they assembled in the
plaza to start for the bear hunt. Reinaldo was
not of the party.
Estenega lifted Chonita to her horse
and stood beside her for a moment while the others
mounted. He touched her hand with his:
“We could not have a more beautiful
night,” he said, significantly. “And
I have often wished that my father had included this
spot when he applied for his grant. I should
like to live with you here. Even when the winds
rage and hurl the rain through the very window pane,
I know of no more enchanting spot than Fort Ross.
The Russians are going; some day I will buy it for
you.”
She made no reply, but she did not
withdraw her hand, and he held it closely and glanced
slowly about him. Always, despite his bitter
intimacy with life, in kinship with nature, perhaps
in that moment it had a deeper meaning, for he saw
with double vision: She was there; and, with
him, sensible not only of the beauty of the night,
but of the indefinable mystery which broods over California
the moment the sun falls. Perhaps, too, he was
troubled by a vague foreboding, such as comes to mortals
sometimes in spite of their limitations: he never
saw Fort Ross again.
On the horizon the fog crouched and
moved; marched like a battalion of ocean’s ghosts;
suddenly cohered and sent out light puffs of smoke,
as from the crater of a spectral volcano. The
moon, full and bright and cold, hung low in the dark
sky: one hardly noted the stars. The vast
sweep of water was as calm as a lake, dark and metallic
like the sky, barely reflecting the silver light between.
But although calm it was not quiet. It greeted
the forbidding rocks beyond the shore, the long irregular
line of stark, storm-beaten cliffs, with ominous mutter,
now and again throwing a cloud of spray high in the
air, as if in derisive proof that even in sleep it
was sensible of its power. Occasionally it moaned,
as if sounding a dirge along the mass of stones which
storms had hurled or waves had wrenched from the crags
above,—a dirge for beheaded Russians, for
him who had walked the plank, or for the lover of
Natalie Ivanhoff.
Here and there the cliffs were intersected
by deep straggling gulches, out of whose sides grew
low woods of brush; but the three tables rising successively
from the ocean to the forest on the mountain, were
almost bare. On the highest, between two gulches,
on a knoll so bare and black and isolated that its
destiny was surely taken into account at creation,
was a tall rude cross and a half hundred neglected
graves. The forest seemed blacker just behind
it, the shadows thicker in the gorges that embraced
it, the ocean grayer and more illimitable before it.
“Natalie Ivanhoff is there in her copper coffin,”
said Estenega, “forgotten already.”
The curve of the mountain was so perfect
that it seemed to reach down a long arm on either
side and grasp the cliffs. The redwoods on its
crown and upper slopes were a mass of rigid shadows,
the points, only, sharply etched on the night sky.
They might have been a wall about an undiscovered
country.
“Come,” cried Rotscheff,
“we are ready to start.” And Estenega
sprang to his horse.
“I don’t envy you,”
said the Princess Hélène from the veranda, her silveren
head barely visible above the furs which enveloped
her. “I prefer the fire.”
“You are warmly clad?”
asked Estenega of Chonita. “But you have
the blood of the South in your veins.”
They climbed the steep road between
the levels, slowly, the women chattering and asking
questions, the men explaining and advising. Estenega
and Chonita having much to say, said nothing.
A cold volume of air, the muffled
roar of a mountain torrent, rushed out of the forest,
startling with the suddenness of its impact. Once
a panther uttered its human cry.
They entered the forest. It was
so dark here that the horses wandered from the trail
and into the brush again and again. Conversation
ceased; except for the muffled footfalls of the horses
and the speech of the waters there was no sound.
Chonita had never known a stillness so profound; the
giant trees crowding together seemed to resent intrusion,
to menace an eternal silence. She moved her horse
close to Estenega’s and he took her hand.
Occasionally there was an opening, a well of blackness,
for the moon had not yet come to the forest.
They reached the summit, and descended.
Half-way down the mountain they rode into a farm in
a valley formed by one of the many basins.
The Indians were waiting, and killed
a bullock at once, placing the carcass in a conspicuous
place. Then all retired to the shade of the trees.
In less than a half-hour a bear came prowling out of
the forest and began upon the meal so considerately
provided for him. When his attention was fully
engaged, Rotscheff and the officers, mounted, dashed
down upon him, swinging their lassos. The bear
showed fight and stood his ground, but this was an
occasion when the bear always got the worst of it.
One lasso caught his neck, another his hind foot,
and he was speedily strained and strangled to death.
No sooner was he despatched than another appeared,
then another, and the sport grew very exciting, absorbing
the attention of the women as well as the energies
of the men.
Estenega lifted Chonita from her horse.
“Let us walk,” he said. “They
will not miss us. A few yards farther, and you
will be on my territory. I want you there.”
She made no protest, and they entered
the forest. The moon shone down through the lofty
redwoods that seemed to scrape its crystal; the monotone
of the distant sea blended with the faint roar of the
tree-tops. The vast gloomy aisles were unbroken
by other sound.
He took her hand and held it a moment,
then drew it through his arm. “Now tell
me all,” he said, “They will be occupied
for a long while. The night is ours.”
“I have come here to tell you
that I love you,” she said. “Ah, can
I make you tremble? It was impossible
for me not to tell you this; I could not rest in my
retreat without having the last word with you, without
having you know me. And I want to tell you that
I have suffered horribly; you may care to know that,
for no one else in the world could have made me, no
one else ever can. Only your fingers could twist
in my heart-strings and tear my heart out of my body.
I suffered first because I doubted you, then because
I loved you, then the torture of jealousy and the
pangs of parting, then those dreadful three months
when I heard no word. I could not stay at Casa
Grande; everything associated with you drove me wild.
Oh, I have gone through all varieties! But the
last was the worst, after I heard from you again,
and all other causes were removed, and I knew that
you were well and still loved me: the knowledge
that I never could be anything to you,—and
I could be so much! The torment of this knowledge
was so bitter that there was but one refuge,—imagination.
I shut my eyes to my little world and lived with you;
and it seemed to me that I grew into absolute knowledge
of you. Let me tell you what I divined. You
may tell me that I am wrong, but I do not believe that
you will. I think that in the little time we
were together I absorbed you.
“It seemed to me that your soul
reached always for something just above the attainable,
restless in the moments which would satisfy another,
fretted with a perverse desire for something different
when an ardent wish was granted, steeped, under all
wanton determined enjoyment of life, with the bitter
knowing of life’s sure impotence to satisfy.
Could the dissatisfied darting mind loiter long enough
to give a woman more than the promise of happiness?—but
never mind that.
“With this knowledge of you
my own resistless desire for variety left me:
my nature concentrated into one paramount wish,—to
be all things to you. What I had felt vaguely
before and stifled—the nothingness of life,
the inevitableness of satiety—I repudiated
utterly, now that they were personified in you; I
would not recognize the fact of their existence. I
could make you happy. How could imagination shape
such scenes, such perfection of union, of companionship,
if reality were not? Imagination is the child
of inherited and living impressions. I might
exaggerate; but, even stripped of its halo, the substance
must be sweeter and more fulfilling than anything
else on this earth at least. And I knew that
you loved me. Oh, I had felt that!
And the variousness of your nature and desires, although
they might madden me at times, would give an extraordinary
zest to life. I was The Doomswoman no longer.
I was a supplementary being who could meet you in
every mood and complete it; who would so understand
that I could be man and woman and friend to you.
A delusion? But so long as I shall never know,
let me believe. An extraordinary tumultuous desire
that rose in me like a wave and shook me often at
first, had, in those last sad weeks, less part in
my musings. It seemed to me that that was the
expression, the poignant essence, of love; but there
was so much else! I do not understand that, however,
and never shall. But I wanted to tell you all.
I could not rest until you knew me as I am and as
you had made me. And I will tell you this too,”
she cried, breaking suddenly, “I wanted you
so! Oh, I needed you so! It was not I, only,
who could give. And it is so terrible for a woman
to stand alone!”
He made no reply for a moment.
But he forgot every other interest and scheme and
idea stored in his impatient brain. He was thrilled
to his soul, and filled with the exultant sense that
he was about to take to his heart the woman compounded
for him out of his own elements.
“Speak to me,” she said.
“My love, I have so much to
say to you that it will take all the years we shall
spend together to say it in.”
“No, no! Do not speak of
that. There I am firm. Although the misery
of the past months were to be multiplied ten hundred
times in the future, I would not marry you.”
Estenega, knowing that their hour
of destiny was come, and that upon him alone depended
its issues, was not the man to hesitate between such
happiness as this woman alone could give him, and the
gray existence which she in her blindness would have
meted to both: his bold will had already taken
the future in its relentless grasp. But, knowing
the mental habit of women, he thought it best to let
Chonita free her mind, that there might be the less
in it to protest for hearing while his heart and passion
spoke to hers.
“It seems absurd to argue the
matter,” he said, “but tell me the reasons
again, if you choose, and we will dispose of them once
for all. Do not think for a moment, my darling,
that I do not respect your reasons; but I respect
them only because they are yours; in themselves they
are not worthy of consideration.”
“Ay, but they are. It has
been an unwritten law for four generations that an
Estenega and an Iturbi y Moncada should not marry;
the enmity began, as you should know, when a member
of each family was an officer in a detachment of troops
sent to protect the Missions in their building.
And my father—he told me lately—loved
your father’s sister for many years,—that
was the reason he married so late in life,—and
would not ask her because of her blood and of cruel
wrongs her father had done his. Shall his daughter
be weak where he was strong? You cast aside traditions
as if they were the seeds of an apple; but remember
that they are blood of my blood. And the vow I
made,—do you forget that? And the
words of it? The Church stands between us.
I will tell you all: the priest has forbidden
me to marry you; he forbade it every time I confessed;
not only because of my vow, but because you had aroused
in me a love so terrible that I almost took the life
of another woman. Could I bring you back to the
Church it might be different; but you rule others;
no one could remould you. You see it is hopeless.
It is no use to argue.”
“I have no intention of arguing.
Words are too good to waste on such an absurd proposition
that because our fathers hated, we, who are independent
and intelligent beings, should not marry when every
drop of heart’s blood demands its rights.
As for your vow,—what is a vow? Hysterical
egotism, nothing more. Were it the promise of
man to man, the subject would be worth discussing.
But we will settle the matter in our own way.”
He took her suddenly in his arms and kissed her.
She put her arms about him and clung to him, trembling,
her lips pressed to his. In that supreme moment
he felt not happiness, but a bitter desire to bear
her out of the world into some higher sphere where
the conditions of happiness might possibly exist.
“On the highest pinnacle we reach,” he
thought, “we are granted the tormenting and chastening
glimpse of what might be, had God, when he compounded
his victims, been in a generous mood and completed
them.”
And she? she was a woman.
“You will resist no longer,” he said,
in a few moments.
“Ay, more surely than ever,
now.” Her voice was faint, but crossed by
a note of terror. “In that moment I forgot
my religion and my duty. And what is so sweet,—it
cannot be right.”
“Do you so despise your womanhood, the most
perfect thing about you?”
“Oh, let us return! I wanted
to kiss you once. I meant to do that. But
I should not—Let us go! Oh, I love
you so! I love you so!”
He drew her closer and kissed her
until her head fell forward and her body grew heavy.
“I shall think and act now, for both,”
he said, unsteadily, although there was no lack of
decision in his voice. “You are mine.
I claim you, and I shall run no further risk of losing
you. Oh, you will forgive me—my love—”
Neither saw a man walking rapidly
up the trail. Suddenly the man gave a bound and
ran toward them. It was Reinaldo.
“Ah, I have found thee,”
he cried. “Listen, Don Diego Estenega, lord
of the North, American, and would-be dictator of the
Californias. Two hours ago I despatched a vaquero
with a circular letter to the priests of the Department
of the Californias, warning them each and all to write
at once to the Archbishop of Mexico, and protest that
the success of your ambitions would mean the downfall
of the Catholic Church in California, and telling
them your schemes. Thou art mighty, O Don Diego
Estenega, but thou art powerless against the enmity
of the Church. They are mightier than thou, and
thou wilt never rule in California. Unhand my
sister! Thou shalt not have her either. Thou
shalt have nothing. Wilt thou unhand her?”
he cried, enraged at Estenega’s cold reception
of his damnatory news. “Thou shouldst not
have her if I tore thy heart from thy body.”
Estenega looked contemptuously across
Chonita’s shoulder, although his heart was lead
within him. “The last resource of the mean
and down-trodden is revenge,” he said.
“Go. To-morrow I shall horsewhip you in
the court-yard of Fort Ross.”
Reinaldo, hot with excitement and
thirst for further vengeance, uttered a shriek of
rage and sprang upon him. Estenega saw the gleam
of a knife and flung Chonita aside, catching the driving
arm, the fury of his heart in his muscles. Reinaldo
had the soft muscles of the cabellero, and panted
and writhed in the iron grasp of the man who forgot
that he grappled with the brother of a woman passionately
loved, remembered only that he rejoiced to fight to
the death the man who had ruined his life. Reinaldo
tried to thrust the knife into his back; Estenega
suddenly threw his weight on the arm that held it,
nearly wrenching it from its socket, snatched the knife,
and drove it to the heart of his enemy.
Then the hot blood in his body turned
cold. He stood like a stone regarding Chonita,
whose eyes, fixed upon him, were expanded with horror.
Between them lay the dead body of her brother.
He turned with a groan and sat down
on a fallen log, supporting his chin with his hand.
His profile looked grim and worn and old. He
stared unseeingly at the ground. Chonita stood,
still looking at him. The last act of her brother’s
life had been to lay the foundation of her lover’s
ruin; his death had completed it: all the South
would rise did the slayer of an Iturbi y Moncada seek
to rule it. She felt vaguely sorry for Reinaldo;
but death was peace; this was hell in living veins.
The memory of the world beyond the forest grew indistinct.
She recalled her first dream and turned in loathing
from the bloodless selfishness of which it was the
allegory. Superstition and tradition slipped
into some inner pocket of her memory, there to rattle
their dry bones together and fall to dust. She
saw only the figure, relaxed for the first time, the
profile of a man with his head on the block.
She stepped across the body of her brother, and, kneeling
beside Estenega, drew his head to her breast.
THE END