Without disclosing the full extent
of Jim’s defection and desertion, Clarence was
able to truthfully assure the Hopkins family of his
personal safety, and to promise that he would continue
his quest, and send them further news of the absentee.
He believed it would be found that Jim had been called
away on some important business, but that not daring
to leave his new shanty exposed and temptingly unprotected,
he had made a virtue of necessity by selling it to
his neighbors, intending to build a better house on
its site after his return. Having comforted Phoebe,
and impulsively conceived further plans for restoring
Jim to her, happily without any recurrence
of his previous doubts as to his own efficacy as a
special Providence, he returned to the rancho.
If he thought again of Jim’s defection and Gilroy’s
warning, it was only to strengthen himself to a clearer
perception of his unselfish duty and singleness of
purpose. He would give up brooding, apply himself
more practically to the management of the property,
carry out his plans for the foundation of a Landlords’
Protective League for the southern counties, become
a candidate for the Legislature, and, in brief, try
to fill Peyton’s place in the county as he had
at the rancho. He would endeavor to become better
acquainted with the half-breed laborers on the estate
and avoid the friction between them and the Americans;
he was conscious that he had not made that use of
his early familiarity with their ways and language
which he might have done. If, occasionally, the
figure of the young Spaniard whom he had met on the
lonely road obtruded itself on him, it was always
with the instinctive premonition that he would meet
him again, and the mystery of the sudden repulsion
be in some way explained. Thus Clarence!
But the momentary impulse that had driven him to Fair
Plains, the eagerness to set his mind at rest regarding
Susy and her relatives, he had utterly forgotten.
Howbeit some of the energy and enthusiasm
that he breathed into these various essays made their
impression. He succeeded in forming the Landlords’
League; under a commission suggested by him the straggling
boundaries of Robles and the adjacent claims were resurveyed,
defined, and mutually protected; even the lawless
Gilroy, from extending an amused toleration to the
young administrator, grew to recognize and accept
him; the péons and vacqueros began to have faith
in a man who acknowledged them sufficiently to rebuild
the ruined Mission Chapel on the estate, and save
them the long pilgrimage to Santa Inez on Sundays
and saints’ days; the San Francisco priest imported
from Clarence’s old college at San Jose, and
an habitual guest at Clarence’s hospitable board,
was grateful enough to fill his flock with loyalty
to the young padrón.
He had returned from a long drive
one afternoon, and had just thrown himself into an
easy-chair with the comfortable consciousness of a
rest fairly earned. The dull embers of a fire
occasionally glowed in the oven-like hearth, although
the open casement of a window let in the soft breath
of the southwest trades. The angélus had
just rung from the restored chapel, and, mellowed
by distance, seemed to Clarence to lend that repose
to the wind-swept landscape that it had always lacked.
Suddenly his quick ear detected the
sound of wheels in the ruts of the carriage way.
Usually his visitors to the casa came on horseback,
and carts and wagons used only the lower road.
As the sound approached nearer, an odd fancy filled
his heart with unaccountable pleasure. Could
it be Mrs. Peyton making an unexpected visit to the
rancho? He held his breath. The vehicle
was now rolling on into the patio. The clatter
of hoofs and a halt were followed by the accents of
women’s voices. One seemed familiar.
He rose quickly, as light footsteps ran along the
corridor, and then the door opened impetuously to the
laughing face of Susy!
He came towards her hastily, yet with
only the simple impulse of astonishment. He had
no thought of kissing her, but as he approached, she
threw her charming head archly to one side, with a
mischievous knitting of her brows and a significant
gesture towards the passage, that indicated the proximity
of a stranger and the possibility of interruption.
“Hush! Mrs. McClosky’s here,”
she whispered.
“Mrs. McClosky?” repeated Clarence vaguely.
“Yes, of course,” impatiently.
“My Aunt Jane. Silly! We just cut away
down here to surprise you. Aunty’s never
seen the place, and here was a good chance.”
“And your mother Mrs. Peyton?
Has she does she?” stammered
Clarence.
“Has she does she?”
mimicked Susy, with increasing impatience. “Why,
of course she doesn’t know anything about
it. She thinks I’m visiting Mary Rogers
at Oakland. And I am afterwards,”
she laughed. “I just wrote to Aunt Jane
to meet me at Alameda, and we took the stage to Santa
Inez and drove on here in a buggy. Wasn’t
it real fun? Tell me, Clarence! You don’t
say anything! Tell me wasn’t
it real fun?”
This was all so like her old, childlike,
charming, irresponsible self, that Clarence, troubled
and bewildered as he was, took her hands and drew
her like a child towards him.
“Of course,” she went
on, yet stopping to smell a rosebud in his buttonhole,
“I have a perfect right to come to my own home,
goodness knows! and if I bring my own aunt, a married
woman, with me, although,” loftily,
“there may be a young unmarried gentleman alone
there, still I fail to see any impropriety
in it!”
He was still holding her; but in that
instant her manner had completely changed again; the
old Susy seemed to have slipped away and evaded him,
and he was retaining only a conscious actress in his
arms.
“Release me, Mr. Brant, please,”
she said, with a languid affected glance behind her;
“we are not alone.”
Then, as the rustling of a skirt sounded
nearer in the passage, she seemed to change back to
her old self once more, and with a lightning flash
of significance whispered,
“She knows everything!”
To add to Clarence’s confusion,
the woman who entered cast a quick glance of playful
meaning on the separating youthful pair. She was
an ineffective blonde with a certain beauty that seemed
to be gradually succumbing to the ravages of paint
and powder rather than years; her dress appeared to
have suffered from an equally unwise excess of ornamentation
and trimming, and she gave the general impression of
having been intended for exhibition in almost any other
light than the one in which she happened to be.
There were two or three mud-stains on the laces of
her sleeve and underskirt that were obtrusively incongruous.
Her voice, which had, however, a ring of honest intention
in it, was somewhat over-strained, and evidently had
not yet adjusted itself to the low-ceilinged, conventual-like
building.
“There, children, don’t
mind me! I know I’m not on in this scene,
but I got nervous waiting there, in what you call
the ‘salon,’ with only those Greaser servants
staring round me in a circle, like a regular chorus.
My! but it’s anteek here regular anteek Spanish.”
Then, with a glance at Clarence, “So this is
Clarence Brant, your Clarence? Interduce
me, Susy.”
In his confusion of indignation, pain,
and even a certain conception of the grim ludicrousness
of the situation, Clarence grasped despairingly at
the single sentence of Susy’s. “In
my own home.” Surely, at least, it was
her own home, and as he was only the
business agent of her adopted mother, he had no right
to dictate to her under what circumstances she should
return to it, or whom she should introduce there.
In her independence and caprice Susy might easily
have gone elsewhere with this astounding relative,
and would Mrs. Peyton like it better? Clinging
to this idea, his instinct of hospitality asserted
itself. He welcomed Mrs. McClosky with nervous
effusion:
“I am only Mrs. Peyton’s
major domo here, but any guest of her daughter’s
is welcome.”
“Yes,” said Mrs. McClosky,
with ostentatious archness, “I reckon Susy and
I understand your position here, and you’ve got
a good berth of it. But we won’t trouble
you much on Mrs. Peyton’s account, will we, Susy?
And now she and me will just take a look around the
shanty, it is real old Spanish anteek,
ain’t it? and sorter take stock of
it, and you young folks will have to tear yourselves
apart for a while, and play propriety before me.
You’ve got to be on your good behavior while
I’m here, I can tell you! I’m a heavy
old ‘doo-anna.’ Ain’t I, Susy?
School-ma’ms and mother superiors ain’t
in the game with me for discipline.”
She threw her arms around the young
girl’s waist and drew her towards her affectionately,
an action that slightly precipitated some powder upon
the black dress of her niece. Susy glanced mischievously
at Clarence, but withdrew her eyes presently to let
them rest with unmistakable appreciation and admiration
on her relative. A pang shot through Clarence’s
breast. He had never seen her look in that way
at Mrs. Peyton. Yet here was this stranger, provincial,
overdressed, and extravagant, whose vulgarity was
only made tolerable through her good humor, who had
awakened that interest which the refined Mrs. Peyton
had never yet been able to touch. As Mrs. McClosky
swept out of the room with Susy he turned away with
a sinking heart.
Yet it was necessary that the Spanish
house servants should not suspect this treason to
their mistress, and Clarence stopped their childish
curiosity about the stranger with a careless and easy
acceptance of Susy’s sudden visit in the light
of an ordinary occurrence, and with a familiarity
towards Mrs. McClosky which became the more distasteful
to him in proportion as he saw that it was evidently
agreeable to her. But, easily responsive, she
became speedily confidential. Without a single
question from himself, or a contributing remark from
Susy, in half an hour she had told him her whole history.
How, as Jane Silsbee, an elder sister of Susy’s
mother, she had early eloped from the paternal home
in Kansas with McClosky, a strolling actor. How
she had married him and gone on the stage under his
stage name, effectively preventing any recognition
by her family. How, coming to California, where
her husband had become manager of the theatre at Sacramento,
she was indignant to find that her only surviving
relation, a sister-in-law, living in the same place,
had for a money consideration given up all claim to
the orphaned Susy, and how she had resolved to find
out “if the poor child was happy.”
How she succeeded in finding out that she was not happy.
How she wrote to her, and even met her secretly at
San Francisco and Oakland, and how she had undertaken
this journey partly for “a lark,” and
partly to see Clarence and the property. There
was no doubt of the speaker’s sincerity; with
this outrageous candor there was an equal obliviousness
of any indelicacy in her conduct towards Mrs. Peyton
that seemed hopeless. Yet he must talk plainly
to her; he must say to her what he could not say to
Susy; upon her Mrs. Peyton’s happiness he
believed he was thinking of Susy’s also depended.
He must take the first opportunity of speaking to
her alone.
That opportunity came sooner than
he had expected. After dinner, Mrs. McClosky
turned to Susy, and playfully telling her that she
had “to talk business” with Mr. Brant,
bade her go to the salon and await her. When
the young girl left the room, she looked at Clarence,
and, with that assumption of curtness with which coarse
but kindly natures believe they overcome the difficulty
of delicate subjects, said abruptly:
“Well, young man, now what’s
all this between you and Susy? I’m looking
after her interests same as if she was my
own girl. If you’ve got anything to say,
now’s your time. And don’t you shilly-shally
too long over it, either, for you might as well know
that a girl like that can have her pick and choice,
and be beholden to no one; and when she don’t
care to choose, there’s me and my husband ready
to do for her all the same. We mightn’t
be able to do the anteek Spanish Squire, but we’ve
got our own line of business, and it’s a comfortable
one.”
To have this said to him under the
roof of Mrs. Peyton, from whom, in his sensitiveness,
he had thus far jealously guarded his own secret, was
even more than Clarence’s gentleness could stand,
and fixed his wavering resolution.
“I don’t think we quite
understand each other, Mrs. McClosky,” he said
coldly, but with glittering eyes. “I have
certainly something to say to you; if it is not on
a subject as pleasant as the one you propose, it is,
nevertheless, one that I think you and I are more competent
to discuss together.”
Then, with quiet but unrelenting directness,
he pointed out to her that Susy was a legally adopted
daughter of Mrs. Peyton, and, as a minor, utterly
under her control; that Mrs. Peyton had no knowledge
of any opposing relatives; and that Susy had not only
concealed the fact from her, but that he was satisfied
that Mrs. Peyton did not even know of Susy’s
discontent and alienation; that she had tenderly and
carefully brought up the helpless orphan as her own
child, and even if she had not gained her affection
was at least entitled to her obedience and respect;
that while Susy’s girlish caprice and inexperience
excused her conduct, Mrs. Peyton and her friends
would have a right to expect more consideration from
a person of Mrs. McClosky’s maturer judgment.
That for these reasons, and as the friend of Mrs.
Peyton, whom he could alone recognize as Susy’s
guardian and the arbiter of her affections, he must
decline to discuss the young girl with any reference
to himself or his own intentions.
An unmistakable flush asserted itself
under the lady’s powder.
“Suit yourself, young man, suit
yourself,” she said, with equally direct resentment
and antagonism; “only mebbee you’ll let
me tell you that Jim McClosky ain’t no fool,
and mebbee knows what lawyers think of an arrangement
with a sister-in-law that leaves a real sister out!
Mebbee that’s a ‘Sister’s title’
you ain’t thought of, Mr. Brant! And mebbee
you’ll find out that your chance o’ gettin’
Mrs. Peyton’s consent ain’t as safe to
gamble on as you reckon it is. And mebbee, what’s
more to the purpose, if you did get it, it might
not be just the trump card to fetch Susy with!
And to wind up, Mr. Brant, when you do have to
come down to the bed-rock and me and Jim McClosky,
you may find out that him and me have discovered a
better match for Susy than the son of old Ham Brant,
who is trying to play the Spanish grandee off his father’s
money on a couple of women. And we mayn’t
have to go far to do it or to get the
real thing, Mr. Brant!”
Too heartsick and disgusted to even
notice the slur upon himself or the import of her
last words, Clarence only rose and bowed as she jumped
up from the table. But as she reached the door
he said, half appealingly:
“Whatever are your other intentions,
Mrs. McClosky, as we are both Susy’s guests,
I beg you will say nothing of this to her while we
are here, and particularly that you will not allow
her to think for a moment that I have discussed my
relations to her with anybody.”
She flung herself out of the door
without a reply; but on entering the dark low-ceilinged
drawing-room she was surprised to find that Susy was
not there. She was consequently obliged to return
to the veranda, where Clarence had withdrawn, and
to somewhat ostentatiously demand of the servants
that Susy should be sent to her room at once.
But the young girl was not in her own room, and was
apparently nowhere to be found. Clarence, who
had now fully determined as a last resource to make
a direct appeal to Susy herself, listened to this
fruitless search with some concern. She could
not have gone out in the rain, which was again falling.
She might be hiding somewhere to avoid a recurrence
of the scene she had perhaps partly overheard.
He turned into the corridor that led to Mrs. Peyton’s
boudoir. As he knew that it was locked, he was
surprised to see by the dim light of the hanging lamp
that a duplicate key to the one in his desk was in
the lock. It must be Susy’s, and the young
girl had probably taken refuge there. He knocked
gently. There was a rustle in the room and the
sound of a chair being moved, but no reply. Impelled
by a sudden instinct he opened the door, and was met
by a cool current of air from some open window.
At the same moment the figure of Susy approached him
from the semi-darkness of the interior.
“I did not know you were here,”
said Clarence, much relieved, he knew not why, “but
I am glad, for I wanted to speak with you alone for
a few moments.”
She did not reply, but he drew a match
from his pocket and lit the two candles which he knew
stood on the table. The wick of one was still
warm, as if it had been recently extinguished.
As the light slowly radiated, he could see that she
was regarding him with an air of affected unconcern,
but a somewhat heightened color. It was like her,
and not inconsistent with his idea that she had come
there to avoid an after scene with Mrs. McClosky or
himself, or perhaps both. The room was not disarranged
in any way. The window that was opened was the
casement of the deep embrasured one in the rear wall,
and the light curtain before it still swayed occasionally
in the night wind.
“I’m afraid I had a row
with your aunt, Susy,” he began lightly, in his
old familiar way; “but I had to tell her I didn’t
think her conduct to Mrs. Peyton was exactly the square
thing towards one who had been as devoted to you as
she has been.”
“Oh, for goodness’ sake,
don’t go over all that again,” said Susy
impatiently. “I’ve had enough of it.”
Clarence flashed, but recovered himself.
“Then you overheard what I said, and know what
I think,” he said calmly.
“I knew it before,”
said the young girl, with a slight supercilious toss
of the head, and yet a certain abstraction of manner
as she went to the window and closed it. “Anybody
could see it! I know you always wanted me to
stay here with Mrs. Peyton, and be coddled and monitored
and catechised and shut up away from any one, until
you had been coddled and monitored and catechised
by somebody else sufficiently to suit her ideas of
your being a fit husband for me. I told aunty
it was no use our coming here to to”
“To do what?” asked Clarence.
“To put some spirit into you,”
said the young girl, turning upon him sharply; “to
keep you from being tied to that woman’s apron-strings.
To keep her from making a slave of you as she would
of me. But it is of no use. Mary Rogers
was right when she said you had no wish to please
anybody but Mrs. Peyton, and no eyes for anybody but
her. And if it hadn’t been too ridiculous,
considering her age and yours, she’d say you
were dead in love with her.”
For an instant Clarence felt the blood
rush to his face and then sink away, leaving him pale
and cold. The room, which had seemed to whirl
around him, and then fade away, returned with appalling
distinctness, the distinctness of memory, and
a vision of the first day that he had seen Mrs. Peyton
sitting there, as he seemed to see her now. For
the first time there flashed upon him the conviction
that the young girl had spoken the truth, and had
brusquely brushed the veil from his foolish eyes.
He was in love with Mrs. Peyton! That was
what his doubts and hesitation regarding Susy meant.
That alone was the source, secret, and limit of his
vague ambition.
But with the conviction came a singular
calm. In the last few moments he seemed to have
grown older, to have loosed the bonds of old companionship
with Susy, and the later impression she had given him
of her mature knowledge, and moved on far beyond her
years and experience. And it was with an authority
that was half paternal, and in a voice he himself
scarcely recognized, that he said:
“If I did not know you were
prejudiced by a foolish and indiscreet woman, I should
believe that you were trying to insult me as you have
your adopted mother, and would save you the pain of
doing both in her house by leaving it now and
forever. But because I believe you are controlled
against your best instinct by that woman, I shall remain
here with you to frustrate her as best I can, or until
I am able to lay everything before Mrs. Peyton except
the foolish speech you have just made.”
The young girl laughed. “Why
not that one too, while you’re about it?
See what she’ll say.”
“I shall tell her,” continued
Clarence calmly, “only what you yourself
have made it necessary for me to tell her to save you
from folly and disgrace, and only enough to spare
her the mortification of hearing it first from her
own servants.”
“Hearing what from her
own servants? What do you mean? How dare
you?” demanded the young girl sharply.
She was quite real in her anxiety
now, although her attitude of virtuous indignation
struck him as being like all her emotional expression,
namely, acting.
“I mean that the servants know
of your correspondence with Mrs. McClosky, and that
she claims to be your aunt,” returned Clarence.
“They know that you confided to Pepita.
They believe that either Mrs. McClosky or you have
seen”
He had stopped suddenly. He was
about to say that the servants (particularly Incarnacion)
knew that Pedro had boasted of having met Susy, when,
for the first time, the tremendous significance of
what he had hitherto considered as merely an idle
falsehood flashed upon him.
“Seen whom?” repeated
Susy in a higher voice, impatiently stamping her foot.
Clarence looked at her, and in her
excited, questioning face saw a confirmation of his
still half-formed suspicions. In his own abrupt
pause and knitted eyebrows she must have read his thoughts
also. Their eyes met. Her violet pupils
dilated, trembled, and then quickly shifted as she
suddenly stiffened into an attitude of scornful indifference,
almost grotesque in its unreality. His eyes slowly
turned to the window, the door, the candles on the
table and the chair before it, and then came back
to her face again. Then he drew a deep breath.
“I give no heed to the idle
gossip of servants, Susy,” he said slowly.
“I have no belief that you have ever contemplated
anything worse than an act of girlish folly, or the
gratification of a passing caprice. Neither do
I want to appeal to you or frighten you, but I must
tell you now, that I know certain facts that might
make such a simple act of folly monstrous, inconceivable
in you, and almost accessory to a crime!
I can tell you no more. But so satisfied am I
of such a possibility, that I shall not scruple to
take any means the strongest to
prevent even the remotest chance of it. Your
aunt has been looking for you; you had better go to
her now. I will close the room and lock the door.
Meantime, I should advise you not to sit so near an
open window with a candle at night in this locality.
Even if it might not be dangerous for you, it might
be fatal to the foolish creatures it might attract.”
He took the key from the door as he
held it open for her to pass out. She uttered
a shrill little laugh, like a nervous, mischievous
child, and, slipping out of her previous artificial
attitude as if it had been a mantle, ran out of the
room.