It was two months later that Mr. Tony Shear, of Marysville, but
lately confidential clerk to the Hon. Paul Hathaway, entered his
employer's chambers in Sacramento, and handed the latter a letter.
"I only got back from San Francisco this morning; but Mr. Slate
said I was to give you that, and if it satisfied you, and was what
you wanted, you would send it back to him."
Paul took the envelope and opened it. It contained a printer's
proof-slip, which he hurriedly glanced over. It read as follows:--
"Those of our readers who are familiar with the early history of
San Francisco will be interested to know that an eccentric and
irregular trusteeship, vested for the last eight years in the Mayor
of San Francisco and two of our oldest citizens, was terminated
yesterday by the majority of a beautiful and accomplished young
lady, a pupil of the convent of Santa Clara. Very few, except the
original trustees, were cognizant of the fact that the
administration of the trustees has been a recognized function of
the successive Mayors of San Francisco during this period; and the
mystery surrounding it has been only lately divulged. It offers a
touching and romantic instance of a survival of the old patriarchal
duties of the former Alcaldes and the simplicity of pioneer days.
It seems that, in the unsettled conditions of the Mexican land-
titles that followed the American occupation, the consumptive widow
of a scion of one of the oldest Californian families intrusted her
property and the custody of her infant daughter virtually to the
city of San Francisco, as represented by the trustees specified,
until the girl should become of age. Within a year, the invalid
mother died. With what loyalty, sagacity, and prudence these
gentlemen fulfilled their trust may be gathered from the fact that
the property left in their charge has not only been secured and
protected, but increased a hundredfold in value; and that the young
lady, who yesterday attained her majority, is not only one of the
richest landed heiresses on the Pacific Slope, but one of the most
accomplished and thoroughly educated of her sex. It is now no
secret that this favored child of Chrysopolis is the Dona Maria
Concepcion de Arguello de la Yerba Buena, so called from her
ancestral property on the island, now owned by the Federal
government. But it is an affecting and poetic tribute to the
parent of her adoption that she has preferred to pass under the
old, quaintly typical name of the city, and has been known to her
friends simply as 'Miss Yerba Buena.' It is a no less pleasant and
suggestive circumstance that our 'youngest senator,' the Honorable
Paul Hathaway, formerly private secretary to Mayor Hammersley, is
one of the original unofficial trustees; while the chivalry of the
older days is perpetuated in the person of Colonel Harry Pendleton,
the remaining trustee."
As soon as he had finished, Paul took a pencil and crossed out the
last sentence; but instead of laying the proof aside, or returning
it to the waiting secretary, he remained with it in his hand, his
silent, set face turned towards the window. Whether the merely
human secretary was tired of waiting, or the devoted partisan saw
something on his young chief's face that disturbed him, he turned
to Paul with that exaggerated respect which his functions as
secretary had grafted upon his affection for his old associate, and
said:--
"I hope nothing's wrong, sir. Not another of those scurrilous
attacks on you for putting that bill through to relieve Colonel
Pendleton? Yet it was a risky thing for you, sir."
Paul started, recovered himself as if from some remote abstraction,
and, with a smile, said: "No,--nothing. Quite the reverse. Write
to Mr. Slate, thank him, and say that it will do very well--with
the exception of the lines I have marked out. Then bring me the
letter, and I will add this inclosure. Did you call on Colonel
Pendleton?"
"Yes, sir. He was at Santa Clara, and had not yet returned,--at
least, that's what that dandy nigger of his told me. The airs and
graces that that creature puts on since the colonel's affairs have
been straightened out is a little too much for a white man to
stand. Why, sir! d--d if he didn't want to patronize you, and
allowed to me that 'de Kernel' had a 'fah ideah' of you, 'and
thought you a promisin' young man.' The fact is, sir, the party is
making a big mistake trying to give votes to that kind of cattle--
it would only be giving two votes to the other side, for, slave or
free, they're the chattels of their old masters. And as to the
masters' gratitude for what you've done affecting a single vote of
their party--you're mistaken."
"Colonel Pendleton belongs to no party," said Paul, curtly; "but if
his old constituents ever try to get into power again, they've lost
their only independent martyr."
He presently became abstracted again, and Shear produced from his
overcoat pocket a series of official-looking documents.
The secretary stared. "The reports of the San Francisco Chief of
Police that you asked me to get." His employer was certainly very
forgetful to-day.
"Oh, yes; thank you. You can lay them on my desk. I'll look them
over in Committee. You can go now, and if any one calls to see me
say I'm busy."
The secretary disappeared in the adjoining room, and Paul leaned
back in his chair, thinking. He had, at last, effected the work he
had resolved upon when he left Rosario two months ago; the article
he had just read, and which would appear as an editorial in the San
Francisco paper the day after tomorrow, was the culmination of
quietly persistent labor, inquiry, and deduction, and would be
accepted, hereafter, as authentic history, which, if not thoroughly
established, at least could not be gainsaid. Immediately on
arriving at San Francisco, he had hastened to Pendleton's bedside,
and laid the facts and his plan before him. To his mingled
astonishment and chagrin, the colonel had objected vehemently to
this "saddling of anybody's offspring on a gentleman who couldn't
defend himself," and even Paul's explanation that the putative
father was a myth scarcely appeased him. But Paul's timely
demonstration, by relating the scene he had witnessed of Judge
Baker's infelicitous memory, that the secret was likely to be
revealed at any moment, and that if the girl continued to cling to
her theory, as he feared she would, even to the parting with her
fortune, they would be forced to accept it, or be placed in the
hideous position of publishing her disgrace, at last convinced him.
On the other hand, there was less danger of her positive imposition
being discovered than of the vague and impositive truth. The real
danger lay in the present uncertainty and mystery, which courted
surmise and invited discovery. Paul, himself, was willing to take
all the responsibility, and at last extracted from the colonel a
promise of passive assent. The only revelation he feared was from
the interference of the mother, but Pendleton was strong in the
belief that she had not only utterly abandoned the girl to the care
of her guardians, but that she would never rescind her resolution
to disclaim her relationship; that she had gone into self-exile for
that purpose; and that if she had changed her mind, he would be the
first to know of it. On this day they had parted. Meantime, Paul
had not forgotten another resolution he had formed on his first
visit to the colonel, and had actually succeeded in getting
legislative relief for the Golden Gate Bank, and restoring to the
colonel some of his private property that had been in the hands of
a receiver.
This had been the background of Paul's meditation, which only threw
into stronger relief the face and figure that moved before him as
persistently as it had once before in the twilight of his room at
Rosario. There were times when her moonlit face, with its faint,
strange smile, stood out before him as it had stood out of the
shadows of the half-darkened drawing-room that night; as he had
seen it--he believed for the last time--framed for an instant in
the parted curtains of the doorway, when she bade him "Goodnight."
For he had never visited her since, and, on the attainment of her
majority, had delegated his passing functions to Pendleton, whom he
had induced to accompany the Mayor to Santa Clara for the final and
formal ceremony. For the present she need not know how much she
had been indebted to him for the accomplishment of her wishes.
With a sigh he at last recalled himself to his duty, and, drawing
the pile of reports which Shear had handed him, he began to examine
them. These, again, bore reference to his silent, unobtrusive
inquiries. In his function as Chairman of Committee he had taken
advantage of a kind of advanced moral legislation then in vogue,
and particularly in reference to a certain social reform, to
examine statistics, authorities, and witnesses, and in this
indirect but exhaustive manner had satisfied himself that the woman
"Kate Howard," alias "Beverly," alias "Durfree," had long passed
beyond the ken of local police supervision, and that in the record
there was no trace or indication of her child. He was going over
those infelix records of early transgressions with the eye of
trained experience, making notes from time to time for his official
use, and yet always watchful of his secret quest, when suddenly he
stopped with a quickened pulse. In the record of an affray at a
gambling-house, one of the parties had sought refuge in the rooms
of "Kate Howard," who was represented before the magistrate by her
protector, Juan de Arguello. The date given was contemporary with
the beginning of the Trust, but that proved nothing. But the name--
had it any significance, or was it a grim coincidence, that spoke
even more terribly and hopelessly of the woman's promiscuous
frailty? He again attacked the entire report, but there was no
other record of her name. Even that would have passed any eye less
eager and watchful than his own.
He laid the reports aside, and took up the proof-slip again. Was
there any man living but himself and Pendleton who would connect
these two statements? That her relations with this Arguello were
brief and not generally known was evident from Pendleton's
ignorance of the fact. But he must see him again, and at once.
Perhaps he might have acquired some information from Yerba; the
young girl might have given to his age that confidence she had
withheld from the younger man; indeed, he remembered with a flush
it was partly in that hope he had induced the colonel to go to
Santa Clara. He put the proof-slip in his pocket and stepped to
the door of the next room.
"You need not write that letter to Slate, Tony. I will see him
myself. I am going to San Francisco to-night."
"And do you want anything copied from the reports, sir?"
Paul quickly swept them from the table into his drawer, and locked
it. "Not now, thank you. I'll finish my notes later."
The next morning Paul was in San Francisco, and had again crossed
the portals of the Golden Gate Hotel. He had been already told
that the doom of that palatial edifice was sealed by the laying of
the cornerstone of a new erection in the next square that should
utterly eclipse it; he even fancied that it had already lost its
freshness, and its meretricious glitter had been tarnished. But
when he had ordered his breakfast he made his way to the public
parlor, happily deserted at that early hour. It was here that he
had first seen her. She was standing there, by that mirror, when
their eyes first met in a sudden instinctive sympathy. She herself
had remembered and confessed it. He recalled the pleased yet
conscious, girlish superiority with which she had received the
adulation of her friends; his memory of her was broad enough now
even to identify Milly, as it repeopled the vacant and silent room.
An hour later he was making his way to Colonel Pendleton's
lodgings, and half expecting to find the St. Charles Hotel itself
transformed by the eager spirit of improvement. But it was still
there in all its barbaric and provincial incongruity. Public
opinion had evidently recognized that nothing save the absolute
razing of its warped and flimsy walls could effect a change, and
waited for it to collapse suddenly like the house of cards it
resembled. Paul wondered for a moment if it were not ominous of
its lodgers' hopeless inability to accept changed conditions, and
it was with a feeling of doubt that he even now ascended the
creaking staircase. But it was instantly dissipated on the
threshold of the colonel's sitting-room by the appearance of George
and his reception of his master's guest.
The grizzled negro was arrayed in a surprisingly new suit of blue
cloth with a portentous white waistcoat and an enormous crumpled
white cravat, that gave him the appearance of suffering from a
glandular swelling. His manner had, it seemed to Paul, advanced in
exaggeration with his clothes. Dusting a chair and offering it to
the visitor, he remained gracefully posed with his hand on the back
of another.
"Yo' finds us heah yet, Marse Hathaway," he began, elegantly toying
with an enormous silver watch-chain, "fo' de Kernel he don' bin
find contagious apartments dat at all approximate, and he don'
build, for his mind's not dat settled dat he ain't goin' to
trabbel. De place is low down, sah, and de fo'ks is low down, and
dah's a heap o' white trash dat has congested under de roof ob de
hotel since we came. But we uses it temper'ly, sah, fo' de
present, and in a dissolutory fashion."
It struck Paul that the contiguity of a certain barber's shop and
its dangerous reminiscences had something to do with George's lofty
depreciation of his surroundings, and he could not help saying:--
"Then you don't find it necessary to have it convenient to the
barber's shop any more? I am glad of that, George."
The shot told. The unfortunate George, after an endeavor to
collect himself by altering his pose two or three times in rapid
succession, finally collapsed, and, with an air of mingled pain and
dignity, but without losing his ceremonious politeness or unique
vocabulary, said:--
"Yo' got me dah, sah! Yo' got me dah! De infirmities o' human
natcheh, sah, is de common p'operty ob man, and a gemplum like
yo'self, sah, a legislato' and a pow'ful speakah, is de lass one to
hol' it agin de individal pusson. I confess, sah, de circumstances
was propiskuous, de fees fahly good, and de risks inferior. De
gemplum who kept de shop was an artess hisself, and had been niggah
to Kernel Henderson of Tennessee, and do gemplum I relieved was a
Mr. Johnson. But de Kernel, he wouldn't see it in dat light, sah,
and if yo' don' mind, sah"--
"I haven't the slightest idea of telling the colonel or anybody,
George," said Paul, smiling; "and I am glad to find on your own
account that you are able to put aside any work beyond your duty
here."
"Thank yo', sah. If yo' 'll let me introduce yo' to de
refreshment, yo' 'll find it all right now. De Glencoe is dah. De
Kernel will be here soon, but he would be pow'ful mo'tified, sah,
if yo' didn't hab something afo' he come." He opened a well-filled
sideboard as he spoke. It was the first evidence Paul had seen of
the colonel's restored fortunes. He would willingly have contented
himself with this mere outward manifestation, but in his desire to
soothe the ruffled dignity of the old man he consented to partake
of a small glass of spirits. George at once became radiant and
communicative. "De Kernel bin gone to Santa Clara to see de young
lady dat's finished her edercation dah--de Kernel's only ward, sah.
She's one o' dose million-heiresses and highly connected, sah, wid
de old Mexican Gobbermen, I understand. And I reckon dey's bin big
goin's on doun dar, foh de Mayer kem hisself fo' de Kernel. Looks
like des might bin a proceshon, sah. Yo' don' know of a young lady
bin hab a title, sah? I won't be shuah, his Honah de Mayer or de
Kernel didn't say someting about a 'Donna'"
"Very likely," said Paul, turning away with a faint smile. So it
was already in the air! Setting aside the old negro's
characteristic exaggeration, there had already been some
conversation between the colonel and the Mayor, which George had
vaguely overheard. He might be too late, the alternative might be
no longer in his hands. But his discomposure was heightened a
moment later by the actual apparition of the returning Pendleton.
He was dressed in a tightly buttoned blue frock-coat, which fairly
accented his tall, thin military figure, although the top lappel
was thrown far enough back to show a fine ruffled cambric shirt and
checked gingham necktie, and was itself adorned with a white
rosebud in the button-hole. Fawn-colored trousers strapped over
narrow patent-leather boots, and a tall white hat, whose broad
mourning-band was a perpetual memory of his mother, who had died in
his boyhood, completed his festal transformation. Yet his erect
carriage, high aquiline nose, and long gray drooping moustache lent
a distinguishing grace to this survival of a bygone fashion, and
over-rode any irreverent comment. Even his slight limp seemed to
give a peculiar character to his massive gold-headed stick, and
made it a part of his formal elegance.
Handing George his stick and a military cape he carried easily over
his left arm, he greeted Paul warmly, yet with a return of his old
dominant manner.
"Glad to see you, Hathaway, and glad to see the boy has served you
better than the last time. If I had known you were coming, I would
have tried to get back in time to have breakfast with you. But
your friends at 'Rosario'--I think they call it; in my time it was
owned by Colonel Briones, and he called it 'The Devil's Little
Canyon'--detained me with some d--d civilities. Let's see--his
name is Woods, isn't it? Used to sell rum to runaway sailors on
Long Wharf, and take stores in exchange? Or was it Baker?--Judge
Baker? I forget which. Well, sir, they wished to be remembered."
It struck Paul, perhaps unreasonably, that the colonel's
indifference and digression were both a little assumed, and he
asked abruptly,--
"To the Dona Maria Concepcion de Arguello de la Yerba Buena--to
speak precisely," said the colonel, slowly. "George, you can take
that hat to that blank hatter--what's his blanked name? I read it
only yesterday in a list of the prominent citizens here--and tell
him, with my compliments, that I want a gentleman's mourning band
around my hat, and not a child's shoelace. It may be his idea of
the value of his own parents--if he ever had any--but I don't care
for him to appraise mine. Go!"
As the door closed upon George, Paul turned to the colonel--
"Then am I to understand that you have agreed to her story?"
The colonel rose, picked up the decanter, poured out a glass of
whiskey, and holding it in his hand, said:--
"My dear Hathaway, let us understand each other. As a gentleman, I
have made a point through life never to question the age, name, or
family of any lady of my acquaintance. Miss Yerba Buena came of
age yesterday, and, as she is no longer my ward, she is certainly
entitled to the consideration I have just mentioned. If she,
therefore, chooses to tack to her name the whole Spanish directory,
I don't see why I shouldn't accept it."
Characteristic as this speech appeared to be of the colonel's
ordinary manner, it struck Paul as being only an imitation of his
usual frank independence, and made him uneasily conscious of some
vague desertion on Pendleton's part. He fixed his bright eyes on
his host, who was ostentatiously sipping his liquor, and said:--
"Am I to understand that you have heard nothing more from Miss
Yerba, either for or against her story? That you still do not know
whether she has deceived herself, has been deceived by others, or
is deceiving us?"
"After what I have just told you, Mr. Hathaway," said the colonel,
with an increased exaggeration of manner which Paul thought must be
apparent even to himself, "I should have but one way of dealing
with questions of that kind from anybody but yourself."
This culminating extravagance--taken in connection with Pendleton's
passing doubts--actually forced a laugh from Paul in spite of his
bitterness.
Colonel Pendleton's face flushed quickly. Like most positive one-
idea'd men, he was restricted from any possible humorous
combination, and only felt a mysterious sense of being detected in
some weakness. He put down his glass.
"Mr. Hathaway," he began, with a slight vibration in his usual
dominant accents, "you have lately put me under a sense of personal
obligation for a favor which I felt I could accept without
derogation from a younger man, because it seemed to be one not only
of youthful generosity but of justice, and was not unworthy the
exalted ambition of a young man like yourself or the simple deserts
of an old man such as I am. I accepted it, sir, the more readily,
because it was entirely unsolicited by me, and seemed to be the
spontaneous offering of your own heart. If I have presumed upon it
to express myself freely on other matters in a way that only
excites your ridicule, I can but offer you an apology, sir. If I
have accepted a favor I can neither renounce nor return, I must
take the consequences to myself, and even beg you, sir, to put up
with them."
Remorseful as Paul felt, there was a singular resemblance between
the previous reproachful pose of George and this present attitude
of his master, as if the mere propinquity of personal sacrifice had
made them alike, that struck him with a mingled pathos and
ludicrousness. But he said warmly, "It is I who must apologize, my
dear colonel. I am not laughing at your conclusions, but at this
singular coincidence with a discovery I have made."
"I find in the report of the Chief of the Police for the year 1850
that Kate Howard was under the protection of a man named Arguello."
The colonel's exaggeration instantly left him. He stared blankly
at Paul. "And you call this a laughing matter, sir?" he said
sternly, but in his more natural manner.
"Perhaps not, but I don't think, if you will allow me to say so, my
dear colonel, that you have been treating the whole affair very
seriously. I left you two months ago utterly opposed to views
which you are now treating as of no importance. And yet you wish
me to believe that nothing has happened, and that you have no
further information than you had then. That this is so, and that
you are really no nearer the facts, I am willing to believe from
your ignorance of what I have just told you, and your concern at
it. But that you have not been influenced in your judgment of what
you do know, I cannot believe?" He drew nearer Pendleton, and laid
his hand upon his arm. "I beg you to be frank with me, for the
sake of the person whose interests I see you have at heart. In
what way will the discovery I have just made affect them? You are
not so far prejudiced as to be blind to the fact that it may be
dangerous because it seems corroborative."
Pendleton coughed, rose, took his stick, and limped up and down the
room, finally dropping into an armchair by the window, with his
cane between his knees, and the drooping gray silken threads of his
long moustache curled nervously between his fingers.
"Mr. Hathaway, I will be frank with you. I know nothing of this
blank affair--blank it all!--but what I've told you. Your
discovery may be a coincidence, nothing more. But I have been
influenced, sir,--influenced by one of the most perfect goddess-
like--yes, sir; one of the most simple girlish creatures that God
ever sent upon earth. A woman that I should be proud to claim as
my daughter, a woman that would always be the superior of any man
who dare aspire to be her husband! A young lady as peerless in her
beauty as she is in her accomplishments, and whose equal don't walk
this planet! I know, sir, you don't follow me; I know, Mr.
Hathaway, your Puritan prejudices; your Church proclivities, your
worldly sense of propriety; and, above all, sir, the blanked
hypocritical Pharisaic doctrines of your party--I mean no offense
to you, sir, personally--blind you to that girl's perfections.
She, poor child, herself has seen it and felt it, but never, in her
blameless innocence and purity, suspecting the cause, 'There is,'
she said to me last night, confidentially, 'something strangely
antagonistic and repellent in our natures, some undefined and
nameless barrier between our ever understanding each other.' You
comprehend, Mr. Hathaway, she does full justice to your intentions
and your unquestioned abilities. 'I am not blind,' she said, 'to
Mr. Hathaway's gifts, and it is very possible the fault lies with
me.' Her very words, sir."
"Then you believe she is perfectly ignorant of her real mother?"
asked Paul, with a steady voice, but a whitening face.
"As an unborn child," said the colonel, emphatically. "The snow on
the Sierras is not more spotlessly pure of any trace or
contamination of the mud of the mining ditches, than she of her
mother and her past. The knowledge of it, the mere breath of
suspicion of it, in her presence would be a profanation, sir! Look
at her eye--open as the sky and as clear; look at her face and
figure--as clean, sir, as a Blue-Grass thoroughbred! Look at the
way she carries herself, whether in those white frillings of her
simple school-gown, or that black evening dress that makes her look
like a princess! And, blank me, if she isn't one! There's no poor
stock there--no white trash--no mixed blood, sir. Blank it all,
sir, if it comes to that--the Arguellos--if there's a hound of them
living--might go down on their knees to have their name borne by
such a creature! By the Eternal, sir, if one of them dared to
cross her path with a word that wasn't abject--yes, sir, abject,
I'd wipe his dust off the earth and send it back to his ancestors
before he knew where he was, or my name isn't Harry Pendleton!"
Hopeless and inconsistent as all this was, it was a wonderful sight
to see the colonel, his dark stern face illuminated with a zealot's
enthusiasm, his eyes on fire, the ends of his gray moustache
curling around his set jaw, his head thrown back, his legs astride,
and his gold-headed stick held in the hollow of his elbow, like a
lance at rest! Paul saw it, and knew that this Quixotic
transformation was part of her triumph, and yet had a miserable
consciousness that the charms of this Dulcinea del Toboso had
scarcely been exaggerated. He turned his eyes away, and said
quietly,--
"Then you don't think this coincidence will ever awaken any
suspicion in regard to her real mother?"
"Not in the least, sir--not in the least," said the colonel, yet,
perhaps, with more doggedness than conviction of accent. "Nobody
but yourself would ever notice that police report, and the
connection of that woman's name with his was not notorious, or I
should have known it."
"And you believe," continued Paul hopelessly, "that Miss Yerba's
selection of the name was purely accidental?"
"Purely--a school-girl's fancy. Fancy, did I say? No, sir; by
Jove, an inspiration!"
"And," continued Paul, almost mechanically, "you do not think it
may be some insidious suggestion of an enemy who knew of this
transient relation that no one suspected?"
To his final amazement Pendleton's brow cleared! "An enemy? Gad!
you may be right. I'll look into it; and, if that is the case,
which I scarcely dare hope for, Mr. Hathaway, you can safely leave
him to me."
He looked so supremely confident in his fatuous heroism that Paul
could say no more. He rose and, with a faint smile upon his pale
face, held out his hand. "I think that is all I have to say. When
you see Miss Yerba again,--as you will, no doubt,--you may tell her
that I am conscious of no misunderstanding on my part, except,
perhaps, as to the best way I could serve her, and that, but for
what she has told you, I should certainly have carried away no
remembrance of any misunderstanding of hers."
"Certainly," said the colonel, with cheerful philosophy, "I will
carry your message with pleasure. You understand how it is, Mr.
Hathaway. There is no accounting for these instincts--we can only
accept them as they are. But I believe that your intentions, sir,
were strictly according to what you conceived to be your duty. You
won't take something before you go? Well, then--good-by."
Two weeks later Paul found among his morning letters an envelope
addressed in Colonel Pendleton's boyish scrawling hand. He opened
it with an eagerness that no studied self-control nor rigid
preoccupation of his duties had yet been able to subdue, and
glanced hurriedly at its contents:--
Dear Sir,--As I am on the point of sailing to Europe to-morrow to
escort Miss Arguello and Miss Woods on an extended visit to England
and the Continent, I am desirous of informing you that I have thus
far been unable to find any foundation for the suggestions thrown
out by you in our last interview. Miss Arguello's Spanish
acquaintances have been very select, and limited to a few school
friends and Don Caesar and Dona Anna Briones, tried friends, who
are also fellow-passengers with us to Europe. Miss Arguello
suggests that some political difference between you and Don Caesar,
which occurred during your visit to Rosario three months ago, may
have, perhaps, given rise to your supposition. She joins me in
best wishes for your public career, which even in the distraction
of foreign travel and the obligations of her position she will
follow from time to time with the greatest interest.