He had never seen a steamboat in his life. Born and reared in one
of the Western Territories, far from a navigable river, he had only
known the "dugout" or canoe as a means of conveyance across the
scant streams whose fordable waters made even those scarcely a
necessity. The long, narrow, hooded wagon, drawn by swaying oxen,
known familiarly as a "prairie schooner," in which he journeyed
across the plains to California in '53, did not help his conception
by that nautical figure. And when at last he dropped upon the land
of promise through one of the Southern mountain passes he halted
all unconsciously upon the low banks of a great yellow river amidst
a tangled brake of strange, reed-like grasses that were unknown to
him. The river, broadening as it debouched through many channels
into a lordly bay, seemed to him the ULTIMA THULE of his
journeyings. Unyoking his oxen on the edge of the luxuriant
meadows which blended with scarcely any line of demarcation into
the great stream itself, he found the prospect "good" according to
his lights and prairial experiences, and, converting his halted
wagon into a temporary cabin, he resolved to rest here and
"settle."
There was little difficulty in so doing. The cultivated clearings
he had passed were few and far between; the land would be his by
discovery and occupation; his habits of loneliness and self-
reliance made him independent of neighbors. He took his first meal
in his new solitude under a spreading willow, but so near his
natural boundary that the waters gurgled and oozed in the reeds but
a few feet from him. The sun sank, deepening the gold of the river
until it might have been the stream of Pactolus itself. But Martin
Morse had no imagination; he was not even a gold-seeker; he had
simply obeyed the roving instincts of the frontiersman in coming
hither. The land was virgin and unoccupied; it was his; he was
alone. These questions settled, he smoked his pipe with less
concern over his three thousand miles' transference of habitation
than the man of cities who had moved into a next street. When the
sun sank, he rolled himself in his blankets in the wagon bed and
went quietly to sleep.
But he was presently awakened by something which at first he could
not determine to be a noise or an intangible sensation. It was a
deep throbbing through the silence of the night--a pulsation that
seemed even to be communicated to the rude bed whereon he lay. As
it came nearer it separated itself into a labored, monotonous
panting, continuous, but distinct from an equally monotonous but
fainter beating of the waters, as if the whole track of the river
were being coursed and trodden by a multitude of swiftly trampling
feet. A strange feeling took possession of him--half of fear, half
of curious expectation. It was coming nearer. He rose, leaped
hurriedly from the wagon, and ran to the bank. The night was dark;
at first he saw nothing before him but the steel-black sky pierced
with far-spaced, irregularly scattered stars. Then there seemed to
be approaching him, from the left, another and more symmetrical
constellation--a few red and blue stars high above the river, with
three compact lines of larger planetary lights flashing towards him
and apparently on his own level. It was almost upon him; he
involuntarily drew back as the strange phenomenon swept abreast of
where he stood, and resolved itself into a dark yet airy bulk,
whose vagueness, topped by enormous towers, was yet illuminated by
those open squares of light that he had taken for stars, but which
he saw now were brilliantly lit windows.
Their vivid rays shot through the reeds and sent broad bands across
the meadow, the stationary wagon, and the slumbering oxen. But all
this was nothing to the inner life they disclosed through lifted
curtains and open blinds, which was the crowning revelation of this
strange and wonderful spectacle. Elegantly dressed men and women
moved through brilliantly lit and elaborately gilt saloons; in one
a banquet seemed to be spread, served by white-jacketed servants;
in another were men playing cards around marble-topped tables; in
another the light flashed back again from the mirrors and
glistening glasses and decanters of a gorgeous refreshment saloon;
in smaller openings there was the shy disclosure of dainty white
curtains and velvet lounges of more intimate apartments.
Martin Morse stood enthralled and mystified. It was as if some
invisible Asmodeus had revealed to this simple frontiersman a world
of which he had never dreamed. It was THE world--a world of which
he knew nothing in his simple, rustic habits and profound Western
isolation--sweeping by him with the rush of an unknown planet. In
another moment it was gone; a shower of sparks shot up from one of
the towers and fell all around him, and then vanished, even as he
remembered the set piece of "Fourth of July" fireworks had vanished
in his own rural town when he was a boy. The darkness fell with it
too. But such was his utter absorption and breathless
preoccupation that only a cold chill recalled him to himself, and
he found he was standing mid-leg deep in the surge cast over the
low banks by this passage of the first steamboat he had ever seen!
He waited for it the next night, when it appeared a little later
from the opposite direction on its return trip. He watched it the
next night and the next. Hereafter he never missed it, coming or
going--whatever the hard and weary preoccupations of his new and
lonely life. He felt he could not have slept without seeing it go
by. Oddly enough, his interest and desire did not go further.
Even had he the time and money to spend in a passage on the boat,
and thus actively realize the great world of which he had only
these rare glimpses, a certain proud, rustic shyness kept him from
it. It was not HIS world; he could not affront the snubs that his
ignorance and inexperience would have provoked, and he was dimly
conscious, as so many of us are in our ignorance, that in mingling
with it he would simply lose the easy privileges of alien
criticism. For there was much that he did not understand, and some
things that grated upon his lonely independence.
One night, a lighter one than those previous, he lingered a little
longer in the moonlight to watch the phosphorescent wake of the
retreating boat. Suddenly it struck him that there was a certain
irregular splashing in the water, quite different from the regular,
diagonally crossing surges that the boat swept upon the bank.
Looking at it more intently, he saw a black object turning in the
water like a porpoise, and then the unmistakable uplifting of a
black arm in an unskillful swimmer's overhand stroke. It was a
struggling man. But it was quickly evident that the current was
too strong and the turbulence of the shallow water too great for
his efforts. Without a moment's hesitation, clad as he was in only
his shirt and trousers, Morse strode into the reeds, and the next
moment, with a call of warning, was swimming toward the now wildly
struggling figure. But, from some unknown reason, as Morse
approached him nearer the man uttered some incoherent protest and
desperately turned away, throwing off Morse's extended arm.
Attributing this only to the vague convulsions of a drowning man,
Morse, a skilled swimmer, managed to clutch his shoulder, and
propelled him at arm's length, still struggling, apparently with as
much reluctance as incapacity, toward the bank. As their feet
touched the reeds and slimy bottom the man's resistance ceased, and
he lapsed quite listlessly in Morse's arms. Half lifting, half
dragging his burden, he succeeded at last in gaining the strip of
meadow, and deposited the unconscious man beneath the willow tree.
Then he ran to his wagon for whisky.
But, to his surprise, on his return the man was already sitting up
and wringing the water from his clothes. He then saw for the first
time, by the clear moonlight, that the stranger was elegantly
dressed and of striking appearance, and was clearly a part of that
bright and fascinating world which Morse had been contemplating in
his solitude. He eagerly took the proffered tin cup and drank the
whisky. Then he rose to his feet, staggered a few steps forward,
and glanced curiously around him at the still motionless wagon, the
few felled trees and evidence of "clearing," and even at the rude
cabin of logs and canvas just beginning to rise from the ground a
few paces distant, and said, impatiently:
The stranger turned upon him a look of suspicion not unmingled with
resentment. "Oh! " he said, with ironical gravity, "and I suppose
that this water you picked me out of was the Sacramento River.
Thank you!"
Morse, with slow Western patience, explained that he had only
settled there three weeks ago, and the place had no name.
"Thar ain't any. Thar's a blacksmith's shop and grocery at the
crossroads, twenty miles further on, but it's got no name as I've
heard on."
The stranger's look of suspicion passed. "Well he said, in an
imperative fashion, which, however, seemed as much the result of
habit as the occasion, "I want a horse, and mighty quick, too."
"Well," said the stranger, resuming his impatient manner, "you must
beg or steal a horse from your neighbors."
"Thar ain't any neighbor nearer than fifteen miles."
"Then send fifteen miles! Stop." He opened his still clinging
shirt and drew out a belt pouch, which he threw to Morse. "There!
there's two hundred and fifty dollars in that. Now, I want a
horse. Sabe?"
The stranger again examined him curiously. Then he suddenly
stretched out his hand and grasped his companion's.
"All right; if you can't send, I reckon I can manage to walk over
there tomorrow."
"I was goin' on to say," said Morse, simply, "that if you'll lie by
tonight, I'll start over sunup, after puttin' out the cattle, and
fetch you back a horse afore noon."
"That's enough." He, however, remained looking curiously at Morse.
"Did you never hear," he said, with a singular smile, "that it was
about the meanest kind of luck that could happen to you to save a
drowning man?"
"No," said Morse, simply. "I reckon it orter be the meanest if you
DIDN'T."
"That depends upon the man you save," said the stranger, with the
same ambiguous smile, "and whether the SAVING him is only putting
things off. Look here," he added, with an abrupt return to his
imperative style, "can't you give me some dry clothes?"
Morse brought him a pair of overalls and a "hickory shirt," well
worn, but smelling strongly of a recent wash with coarse soap. The
stranger put them on while his companion busied himself in
collecting a pile of sticks and dry leaves.
"Not any fire tonight if I know it," he said, brusquely. Before
Morse could resent his quickly changing moods he continued, in
another tone, dropping to an easy reclining position beneath the
tree, "Now, tell me all about yourself, and what you are doing
here."
Thus commanded, Morse patiently repeated his story from the time he
had left his backwoods cabin to his selection of the river bank for
a "location." He pointed out the rich quality of this alluvial
bottom and its adaptability for the raising of stock, which he
hoped soon to acquire. The stranger smiled grimly, raised himself
to a sitting position, and, taking a penknife from his damp
clothes, began to clean his nails in the bright moonlight--an
occupation which made the simple Morse wander vaguely in his
narration.
"And you don't know that this hole will give you chills and fever
till you'll shake yourself out of your boots?"
Morse had lived before in aguish districts, and had no fear.
"And you never heard that some night the whole river will rise up
and walk over you and your cabin and your stock?"
"No. For I reckon to move my shanty farther back."
The man shut up his penknife with a click and rose.
"If you've got to get up at sunrise, we'd better be turning in. I
suppose you can give me a pair of blankets?"
Morse pointed to the wagon. "Thar's a shakedown in the wagon bed;
you kin lie there." Nevertheless he hesitated, and, with the
inconsequence and abruptness of a shy man, continued the previous
conversation.
"I shouldn't like to move far away, for them steamboats is pow'ful
kempany o' nights. I never seed one afore I kem here," and then,
with the inconsistency of a reserved man, and without a word of
further preliminary, he launched into a confidential disclosure of
his late experiences. The stranger listened with a singular
interest and a quietly searching eye.
"Then you were watching the boat very closely just now when you saw
me. What else did you see? Anything before that--before you saw
me in the water?"
"No--the boat had got well off before I saw you at all."
"Ah," said the stranger. "Well, I'm going to turn in." He walked
to the wagon, mounted it, and by the time that Morse had reached it
with his wet clothes he was already wrapped in the blankets. A
moment later he seemed to be in a profound slumber.
It was only then, when his guest was lying helplessly at his mercy,
that he began to realize his strange experiences. The domination
of this man had been so complete that Morse, although by nature
independent and self-reliant, had not permitted himself to question
his right or to resent his rudeness. He had accepted his guest's
careless or premeditated silence regarding the particulars of his
accident as a matter of course, and had never dreamed of
questioning him. That it was a natural accident of that great
world so apart from his own experiences he did not doubt, and
thought no more about it. The advent of the man himself was
greater to him than the causes which brought him there. He was as
yet quite unconscious of the complete fascination this mysterious
stranger held over him, but he found himself shyly pleased with
even the slight interest he had displayed in his affairs, and his
hand felt yet warm and tingling from his sudden soft but expressive
grasp, as if it had been a woman's. There is a simple intuition of
friendship in some lonely, self-abstracted natures that is nearly
akin to love at first sight. Even the audacities and insolence of
this stranger affected Morse as he might have been touched and
captivated by the coquetries or imperiousness of some bucolic
virgin. And this reserved and shy frontiersman found himself that
night sleepless, and hovering with an abashed timidity and
consciousness around the wagon that sheltered his guest, as if he
had been a very Corydon watching the moonlit couch of some
slumbering Amaryllis.
He was off by daylight--after having placed a rude breakfast by the
side of the still sleeping guest--and before midday he had returned
with a horse. When he handed the stranger his pouch, less the
amount he had paid for the horse, the man said curtly:
"Your change. I paid only fifty dollars for the horse."
The stranger regarded him with his peculiar smile. Then, replacing
the pouch in his belt, he shook Morse's hand again and mounted the
horse.
"So your name's Martin Morse! Well--goodby, Morsey!"
Morse hesitated. A blush rose to his dark check. "You didn't tell
me your name," he said. "In case--"
"In case I'm WANTED? Well, you can call me Captain Jack." He
smiled, and, nodding his head, put spurs to his mustang and
cantered away.
Morse did not do much work that day, falling into abstracted moods
and living over his experiences of the previous night, until he
fancied he could almost see his strange guest again. The narrow
strip of meadow was haunted by him. There was the tree under which
he had first placed him, and that was where he had seen him sitting
up in his dripping but well-fitting clothes. In the rough garments
he had worn and returned lingered a new scent of some delicate
soap, overpowering the strong alkali flavor of his own. He was
early by the river side, having a vague hope, he knew not why, that
he should again see him and recognize him among the passengers. He
was wading out among the reeds, in the faint light of the rising
moon, recalling the exact spot where he had first seen the
stranger, when he was suddenly startled by the rolling over in the
water of some black object that had caught against the bank, but
had been dislodged by his movements. To his horror it bore a faint
resemblance to his first vision of the preceding night. But a
second glance at the helplessly floating hair and bloated outline
showed him that it was a DEAD man, and of a type and build far
different from his former companion. There was a bruise upon his
matted forehead and an enormous wound in his throat already washed
bloodless, white, and waxen. An inexplicable fear came upon him,
not at the sight of the corpse, for he had been in Indian massacres
and had rescued bodies mutilated beyond recognition; but from some
moral dread that, strangely enough, quickened and deepened with the
far-off pant of the advancing steamboat. Scarcely knowing why, he
dragged the body hurriedly ashore, concealing it in the reeds, as
if he were disposing of the evidence of his own crime. Then, to
his preposterous terror, he noticed that the panting of the
steamboat and the beat of its paddles were "slowing" as the vague
bulk came in sight, until a huge wave from the suddenly arrested
wheels sent a surge like an enormous heartbeat pulsating through
the sedge that half submerged him. The flashing of three or four
lanterns on deck and the motionless line of lights abreast of him
dazzled his eyes, but he knew that the low fringe of willows hid
his house and wagon completely from view. A vague murmur of voices
from the deck was suddenly overridden by a sharp order, and to his
relief the slowly revolving wheels again sent a pulsation through
the water, and the great fabric moved solemnly away. A sense of
relief came over him, he knew not why, and he was conscious that
for the first time he had not cared to look at the boat.
When the moon arose he again examined the body, and took from its
clothing a few articles of identification and some papers of
formality and precision, which he vaguely conjectured to be some
law papers from their resemblance to the phrasing of sheriffs' and
electors' notices which he had seen in the papers. He then buried
the corpse in a shallow trench, which he dug by the light of the
moon. He had no question of responsibility; his pioneer training
had not included coroners' inquests in its experience; in giving
the body a speedy and secure burial from predatory animals he did
what one frontiersman would do for another--what he hoped might be
done for him. If his previous unaccountable feelings returned
occasionally, it was not from that; but rather from some uneasiness
in regard to his late guest's possible feelings, and a regret that
he had not been here at the finding of the body. That it would in
some way have explained his own accident he did not doubt.
The boat did not "slow up" the next night, but passed as usual; yet
three or four days elapsed before he could look forward to its
coming with his old extravagant and half-exalted curiosity--which
was his nearest approach to imagination. He was then able to
examine it more closely, for the appearance of the stranger whom he
now began to call "his friend" in his verbal communings with
himself--but whom he did not seem destined to again discover; until
one day, to his astonishment, a couple of fine horses were brought
to his clearing by a stock-drover. They had been "ordered" to be
left there. in vain Morse expostulated and questioned.
"Your name's Martin Morse, ain't it?" said the drover, with
business brusqueness; "and I reckon there ain't no other man o'
that name around here?"
"But who sent them?" insisted Morse. "What was his name, and where
does he live?"
"I didn't know ez I was called upon to give the pedigree o'
buyers," said the drover dryly; "but the horses is 'Morgan,' you
can bet your life." He grinned as he rode away.
That Captain Jack sent them, and that it was a natural prelude to
his again visiting him, Morse did not doubt, and for a few days he
lived in that dream. But Captain Jack did not come. The animals
were of great service to him in "rounding up" the stock he now
easily took in for pasturage, and saved him the necessity of having
a partner or a hired man. The idea that this superior gentleman in
fine clothes might ever appear to him in the former capacity had
even flitted through his brain, but he had rejected it with a sigh.
But the thought that, with luck and industry, he himself might, in
course of time, approximate to Captain Jack's evident station, DID
occur to him, and was an incentive to energy. Yet it was quite
distinct from the ordinary working man's ambition of wealth and
state. It was only that it might make him more worthy of his
friend. The great world was still as it had appeared to him in the
passing boat--a thing to wonder at--to be above--and to criticize.
For all that, he prospered in his occupation. But one day he woke
with listless limbs and feet that scarcely carried him through his
daily labors. At night his listlessness changed to active pain and
a feverishness that seemed to impel him toward the fateful river,
as if his one aim in life was to drink up its waters and bathe in
its yellow stream. But whenever he seemed to attempt it, strange
dreams assailed him of dead bodies arising with swollen and
distorted lips to touch his own as he strove to drink, or of his
mysterious guest battling with him in its current, and driving him
ashore. Again, when he essayed to bathe his parched and crackling
limbs in its flood, he would be confronted with the dazzling lights
of the motionless steamboat and the glare of stony eyes--until he
fled in aimless terror. How long this lasted he knew not, until
one morning he awoke in his new cabin with a strange man sitting by
his bed and a Negress in the doorway.
"You've had a sharp attack of 'tule fever,'" said the stranger,
dropping Morse's listless wrist and answering his questioning eyes,
"but you're all right now, and will pull through."
"Really, I don't remember. But don't distress yourself. He has
settled for everything right royally. You have only to get strong
now. My duty is ended, and I can safely leave you with the nurse.
Only when you are strong again, I say--and HE says--keep back
farther from the river."
And that was all he knew. For even the nurse who attended him
through the first days of his brief convalescence would tell him
nothing more. He quickly got rid of her and resumed his work, for
a new and strange phase of his simple, childish affection for his
benefactor, partly superinduced by his illness, was affecting him.
He was beginning to feel the pain of an unequal friendship; he was
dimly conscious that his mysterious guest was only coldly returning
his hospitality and benefits, while holding aloof from any
association with him--and indicating the immeasurable distance that
separated their future intercourse. He had withheld any kind
message or sympathetic greeting; he had kept back even his NAME.
The shy, proud, ignorant heart of the frontiersman swelled beneath
the fancied slight, which left him helpless alike of reproach or
resentment. He could not return the horses, although in a fit of
childish indignation he had resolved not to use them; he could not
reimburse him for the doctor's bill, although he had sent away the
nurse.
He took a foolish satisfaction in not moving back from the river,
with a faint hope that his ignoring of Captain Jack's advice might
mysteriously be conveyed to him. He even thought of selling out
his location and abandoning it, that he might escape the cold
surveillance of his heartless friend. All this was undoubtedly
childish--but there is an irrepressible simplicity of youth in all
deep feeling, and the worldly inexperience of the frontiersman left
him as innocent as a child. In this phase of his unrequited
affection he even went so far as to seek some news of Captain Jack
at Sacramento, and, following out his foolish quest, even to take
the steamboat from thence to Stockton.
What happened to him then was perhaps the common experience of such
natures. Once upon the boat the illusion of the great world it
contained for him utterly vanished. He found it noisy, formal,
insincere, and--had he ever understood or used the word in his
limited vocabulary--VULGAR. Rather, perhaps, it seemed to him that
the prevailing sentiment and action of those who frequented it--and
for whom it was built--were of a lower grade than his own. And,
strangely enough, this gave him none of his former sense of
critical superiority, but only of his own utter and complete
isolation. He wandered in his rough frontiersman's clothes from
deck to cabin, from airy galleries to long saloons, alone,
unchallenged, unrecognized, as if he were again haunting it only in
spirit, as he had so often done in his dreams.
His presence on the fringe of some voluble crowd caused no
interruption; to him their speech was almost foreign in its
allusions to things he did not understand, or, worse, seemed
inconsistent with their eagerness and excitement. How different
from all this were his old recollections of slowly oncoming teams,
uplifted above the level horizon of the plains in his former
wanderings; the few sauntering figures that met him as man to man,
and exchanged the chronicle of the road; the record of Indian
tracks; the finding of a spring; the discovery of pasturage, with
the lazy, restful hospitality of the night! And how fierce here
this continual struggle for dominance and existence, even in this
lull of passage. For above all and through all he was conscious of
the feverish haste of speed and exertion.
The boat trembled, vibrated, and shook with every stroke of the
ponderous piston. The laughter of the crowd, the exchange of
gossip and news, the banquet at the long table, the newspapers and
books in the reading-room, even the luxurious couches in the
staterooms, were all dominated, thrilled, and pulsating with the
perpetual throb of the demon of hurry and unrest. And when at last
a horrible fascination dragged him into the engine room, and he saw
the cruel relentless machinery at work, he seemed to recognize and
understand some intelligent but pitiless Moloch, who was dragging
this feverish world at its heels.
Later he was seated in a corner of the hurricane deck, whence he
could view the monotonous banks of the river; yet, perhaps by
certain signs unobservable to others, he knew he was approaching
his own locality. He knew that his cabin and clearing would be
undiscernible behind the fringe of willows on the bank, but he
already distinguished the points where a few cottonwoods struggled
into a promontory of lighter foliage beyond them. Here voices fell
upon his ear, and he was suddenly aware that two men had lazily
crossed over from the other side of the boat, and were standing
before him looking upon the bank.
"It was about here, I reckon," said one, listlessly, as if
continuing a previous lagging conversation, "that it must have
happened. For it was after we were making for the bend we've just
passed that the deputy, goin' to the stateroom below us, found the
door locked and the window open. But both men--Jack Despard and
Seth Hall, the sheriff--weren't to be found. Not a trace of 'em.
The boat was searched, but all for nothing. The idea is that the
sheriff, arter getting his prisoner comf'ble in the stateroom, took
off Jack's handcuffs and locked the door; that Jack, who was mighty
desp'rate, bolted through the window into the river, and the
sheriff, who was no slouch, arter him. Others allow--for the
chairs and things was all tossed about in the stateroom--that the
two men clinched THAR, and Jack choked Hall and chucked him out,
and then slipped cl'ar into the water himself, for the stateroom
window was just ahead of the paddle box, and the cap'n allows that
no man or men could fall afore the paddles and live. Anyhow, that
was all they ever knew of it."
"And there wasn't no trace of them found?" said the second man,
after a long pause.
"No. Cap'n says them paddles would hev' just snatched 'em and
slung 'em round and round and buried 'em way down in the ooze of
the river bed, with all the silt of the current atop of 'em, and
they mightn't come up for ages; or else the wheels might have
waltzed 'em way up to Sacramento until there wasn't enough left of
'em to float, and dropped 'em when the boat stopped."
"It was a mighty fool risk for a man like Despard to take," resumed
the second speaker as he turned away with a slight yawn.
"Bet your life! but he was desp'rate, and the sheriff had got him
sure! And they DO say that he was superstitious, like all them
gamblers, and allowed that a man who was fixed to die by a rope or
a pistol wasn't to be washed out of life by water."
The two figures drifted lazily away, but Morse sat rigid and
motionless. Yet, strange to say, only one idea came to him clearly
out of this awful revelation--the thought that his friend was still
true to him--and that his strange absence and mysterious silence
were fully accounted for and explained. And with it came the more
thrilling fancy that this man was alive now to HIM alone.
HE was the sole custodian of his secret. The morality of the
question, while it profoundly disturbed him, was rather in
reference to its effect upon the chances of Captain Jack and the
power it gave his enemies than his own conscience. He would rather
that his friend should have proven the proscribed outlaw who
retained an unselfish interest in him than the superior gentleman
who was coldly wiping out his gratitude. He thought he understood
now the reason of his visitor's strange and varying moods--even his
bitter superstitious warning in regard to the probable curse
entailed upon one who should save a drowning man. Of this he
recked little; enough that he fancied that Captain Jack's concern
in his illness was heightened by that fear, and this assurance of
his protecting friendship thrilled him with pleasure.
There was no reason now why he should not at once go back to his
farm, where, at least, Captain Jack would always find him; and he
did so, returning on the same boat. He was now fully recovered
from his illness, and calmer in mind; he redoubled his labors to
put himself in a position to help the mysterious fugitive when the
time should come. The remote farm should always be a haven of
refuge for him, and in this hope he forbore to take any outside
help, remaining solitary and alone, that Captain Jack's retreat
should be inviolate. And so the long, dry season passed, the hay
was gathered, the pasturing herds sent home, and the first rains,
dimpling like shot the broadening surface of the river, were all
that broke his unending solitude. In this enforced attitude of
waiting and expectancy he was exalted and strengthened by a new
idea. He was not a religious man, but, dimly remembering the
exhortations of some camp meeting of his boyhood, he conceived the
idea that he might have been selected to work out the regeneration
of Captain Jack. What might not come of this meeting and communing
together in this lonely spot? That anything was due to the memory
of the murdered sheriff, whose bones were rotting in the trench
that he daily but unconcernedly passed, did not occur to him.
Perhaps his mind was not large enough for the double consideration.
Friendship and love--and, for the matter of that, religion--are
eminently one-ideaed.
But one night he awakened with a start. His hand, which was
hanging out of his bunk, was dabbling idly in water. He had barely
time to spring to his middle in what seemed to be a slowly filling
tank before the door fell out as from that inward pressure, and his
whole shanty collapsed like a pack of cards. But it fell outwards,
the roof sliding from over his head like a withdrawn canopy; and he
was swept from his feet against it, and thence out into what might
have been another world! For the rain had ceased, and the full
moon revealed only one vast, illimitable expanse of water! It was
not an overflow, but the whole rushing river magnified and repeated
a thousand times, which, even as he gasped for breath and clung to
the roof, was bearing him away he knew not whither. But it was
bearing him away upon its center, for as he cast one swift glance
toward his meadows he saw they were covered by the same sweeping
torrent, dotted with his sailing hayricks and reaching to the
wooded foothills. It was the great flood of '54. In its awe-
inspiring completeness it might have seemed to him the primeval
Deluge.
As his frail raft swept under a cottonwood he caught at one of the
overhanging limbs, and, working his way desperately along the
bough, at last reached a secure position in the fork of the tree.
Here he was for the moment safe. But the devastation viewed from
this height was only the more appalling. Every sign of his
clearing, all evidence of his past year's industry, had
disappeared. He was now conscious for the first time of the lowing
of the few cattle he had kept as, huddled together on a slight
eminence, they one by one slipped over struggling into the flood.
The shining bodies of his dead horses rolled by him as he gazed.
The lower-lying limbs of the sycamore near him were bending with
the burden of the lighter articles from his overturned wagon and
cabin which they had caught and retained, and a rake was securely
lodged in a bough. The habitual solitude of his locality was now
strangely invaded by drifting sheds, agricultural implements, and
fence rails from unknown and remote neighbors, and he could faintly
hear the far-off calling of some unhappy farmer adrift upon a spar
of his wrecked and shattered house. When day broke he was cold and
hungry.
Hours passed in hopeless monotony, with no slackening or diminution
of the waters. Even the drifts became less, and a vacant sea at
last spread before him on which nothing moved. An awful silence
impressed him. In the afternoon rain again began to fall on this
gray, nebulous expanse, until the whole world seemed made of
aqueous vapor. He had but one idea now--the coming of the evening
boat, and he would reserve his strength to swim to it. He did not
know until later that it could no longer follow the old channel of
the river, and passed far beyond his sight and hearing. With his
disappointment and exposure that night came a return of his old
fever. His limbs were alternately racked with pain or benumbed and
lifeless. He could scarcely retain his position--at times he
scarcely cared to--and speculated upon ending his sufferings by a
quick plunge downward. In other moments of lucid misery he was
conscious of having wandered in his mind; of having seen the dead
face of the murdered sheriff, washed out of his shallow grave by
the flood, staring at him from the water; to this was added the
hallucination of noises. He heard voices, his own name called by a
voice he knew--Captain Jack's!
Suddenly he started, but in that fatal movement lost his balance
and plunged downward. But before the water closed above his head
he had had a cruel glimpse of help near him; of a flashing light--
of the black hull of a tug not many yards away--of moving figures--
the sensation of a sudden plunge following his own, the grip of a
strong hand upon his collar, and--unconsciousness!
When he came to he was being lifted in a boat from the tug and
rowed through the deserted streets of a large city, until he was
taken in through the second-story window of a half-submerged hotel
and cared for. But all his questions yielded only the information
that the tug--a privately procured one, not belonging to the Public
Relief Association--had been dispatched for him with special
directions, by a man who acted as one of the crew, and who was the
one who had plunged in for him at the last moment. The man had
left the boat at Stockton. There was nothing more? Yes!--he had
left a letter. Morse seized it feverishly. It contained only a
few lines:
We are quits now. You are all right. I have saved YOU from
drowning, and shifted the curse to my own shoulders. Good-by.
The astounded man attempted to rise--to utter an exclamation--but
fell back, unconscious.
Weeks passed before he was able to leave his bed--and then only as
an impoverished and physically shattered man. He had no means to
restock the farm left bare by the subsiding water. A kindly train-
packer offered him a situation as muleteer in a pack train going to
the mountains--for he knew tracks and passes and could ride. The
mountains gave him back a little of the vigor he had lost in the
river valley, but none of its dreams and ambitions. One day, while
tracking a lost mule, he stopped to slake his thirst in a
waterhole--all that the summer had left of a lonely mountain
torrent. Enlarging the hole to give drink to his beast also, he
was obliged to dislodge and throw out with the red soil some bits
of honeycomb rock, which were so queer-looking and so heavy as to
attract his attention. Two of the largest he took back to camp
with him. They were gold! From the locality he took out a
fortune. Nobody wondered. To the Californian's superstition it
was perfectly natural. It was "nigger luck"--the luck of the
stupid, the ignorant, the inexperienced, the nonseeker--the irony
of the gods!
But the simple, bucolic nature that had sustained itself against
temptation with patient industry and lonely self-concentration
succumbed to rapidly acquired wealth. So it chanced that one day,
with a crowd of excitement-loving spendthrifts and companions, he
found himself on the outskirts of a lawless mountain town. An
eager, frantic crowd had already assembled there--a desperado was
to be lynched! Pushing his way through the crowd for a nearer view
of the exciting spectacle, the changed and reckless Morse was
stopped by armed men only at the foot of a cart, which upheld a
quiet, determined man, who, with a rope around his neck, was
scornfully surveying the mob, that held the other end of the rope
drawn across the limb of a tree above him. The eyes of the doomed
man caught those of Morse--his expression changed--a kindly smile
lit his face--he bowed his proud head for the first time, with an
easy gesture of farewell.
And then, with a cry, Morse threw himself upon the nearest armed
guard, and a fierce struggle began. He had overpowered one
adversary and seized another in his hopeless fight toward the cart
when the half-astonished crowd felt that something must be done.
It was done with a sharp report, the upward curl of smoke and the
falling back of the guard as Morse staggered forward FREE--with a
bullet in his heart. Yet even then he did not fall until he
reached the cart, when he lapsed forward, dead, with his arms
outstretched and his head at the doomed man's feet.
There was something so supreme and all-powerful in this hopeless
act of devotion that the heart of the multitude thrilled and then
recoiled aghast at its work, and a single word or a gesture from
the doomed man himself would have set him free. But they say--and
it is credibly recorded--that as Captain Jack Despard looked down
upon the hopeless sacrifice at his feet his eyes blazed, and he
flung upon the crowd a curse so awful and sweeping that, hardened
as they were, their blood ran cold, and then leaped furiously to
their cheeks.
"And now," he said, coolly tightening the rope around his neck with
a jerk of his head--"Go on, and be damned to you! I'm ready."
They did not hesitate this time. And Martin Morse and Captain Jack
Despard were buried in the same grave.