A First Family of Tasajara. Bret Harte

A First Family of Tasajara - Bret Harte


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itself into something absurdly practical and business-like.

      Not so Mr. Harkutt. He quickly rose from his chair, and, leaning over the table, with his eyes fixed on the card as if it really signified the railroad, repeated quickly: “Railroad, eh! What’s that? A railroad to Tasajara Creek? Ye don’t mean it!—That is—it ain’t a SURE thing?”

      “Perfectly sure. The money is ready in San Francisco now, and by this time next year—”

      “A railroad to Tasajara Creek!” continued Harkutt hurriedly. “What part of it? Where?”

      “At the embarcadero naturally,” responded Grant. “There isn’t but the one place for the terminus. There’s an old shanty there now belongs to somebody.”

      “Why, pop!” said Phemie with sudden recollection, “ain’t it ‘Lige Curtis’s house? The land he offered”—

      “Hush!” said her father.

      “You know, the one written in that bit of paper,” continued the innocent Phemie.

      “Hush! will you? God A’mighty! are you goin’ to mind me? Are you goin’ to keep up your jabber when I’m speakin’ to the gentlemen? Is that your manners? What next, I wonder!”

      The sudden and unexpected passion of the speaker, the incomprehensible change in his voice, and the utterly disproportionate exaggeration of his attitude towards his daughters, enforced an instantaneous silence. The rain began to drip audibly at the window, the rush of the river sounded distinctly from without, even the shaking of the front part of the dwelling by the distant gale became perceptible. An angry flash sprang for an instant to the young assistant’s eye, but it met the cautious glance of his friend, and together both discreetly sought the table. The two girls alone remained white and collected. “Will you go on with my fortune, Mr. Grant?” said Phemie quietly.

      A certain respect, perhaps not before observable, was suggested in the surveyor’s tone as he smilingly replied, “Certainly, I was only waiting for you to show your confidence in me,” and took up the cards.

      Mr. Harkutt coughed. “It looks as if that blamed wind had blown suthin’ loose in the store,” he said affectedly. “I reckon I’ll go and see.” He hesitated a moment and then disappeared in the passage. Yet even here he stood irresolute, looking at the closed door behind him, and passing his hand over his still flushed face. Presently he slowly and abstractedly ascended the flight of steps, entered the smaller passage that led to the back door of the shop and opened it.

      He was at first a little startled at the halo of light from the still glowing stove, which the greater obscurity of the long room had heightened rather than diminished. Then he passed behind the counter, but here the box of biscuits which occupied the centre and cast a shadow over it compelled him to grope vaguely for what he sought. Then he stopped suddenly, the paper he had just found dropping from his fingers, and said sharply,—

      “Who’s there?”

      “Me, pop.”

      “John Milton?”

      “Yes, sir.”

      “What the devil are you doin’ there, sir?”

      “Readin’.”

      It was true. The boy was half reclining in a most distorted posture on two chairs, his figure in deep shadow, but his book was raised above his head so as to catch the red glow of the stove on the printed page. Even then his father’s angry interruption scarcely diverted his preoccupation; he raised himself in his chair mechanically, with his eyes still fixed on his book. Seeing which his father quickly regained the paper, but continued his objurgation.

      “How dare you? Clear off to bed, will you! Do you hear me? Pretty goin’s on,” he added as if to justify his indignation. “Sneakin’ in here and—and lyin’ ‘round at this time o’ night! Why, if I hadn’t come in here to”—

      “What?” asked the boy mechanically, catching vaguely at the unfinished sentence and staring automatically at the paper in his father’s hand.

      “Nothin’, sir! Go to bed, I tell you! Will you? What are you standin’ gawpin’ at?” continued Harkutt furiously.

      The boy regained his feet slowly and passed his father, but not without noticing with the same listless yet ineffaceable perception of childhood that he was hurriedly concealing the paper in his pocket. With the same youthful inconsequence, wondering at this more than at the interruption, which was no novel event, he went slowly out of the room.

      Harkutt listened to the retreating tread of his bare feet in the passage and then carefully locked the door. Taking the paper from his pocket, and borrowing the idea he had just objurgated in his son, he turned it towards the dull glow of the stove and attempted to read it. But perhaps lacking the patience as well as the keener sight of youth, he was forced to relight the candle which he had left on the counter, and reperused the paper. Yes! there was certainly no mistake! Here was the actual description of the property which the surveyor had just indicated as the future terminus of the new railroad, and here it was conveyed to him—Daniel Harkutt! What was that? Somebody knocking? What did this continual interruption mean? An odd superstitious fear now mingled with his irritation.

      The sound appeared to come from the front shutters. It suddenly occurred to him that the light might be visible through the crevices. He hurriedly extinguished it, and went to the door.

      “Who’s there?”

      “Me,—Peters. Want to speak to you.”

      Mr. Harkutt with evident reluctance drew the bolts. The wind, still boisterous and besieging, did the rest, and precipitately propelled Peters through the carefully guarded opening. But his surprise at finding himself in the darkness seemed to forestall any explanation of his visit.

      “Well,” he said with an odd mingling of reproach and suspicion. “I declare I saw a light here just this minit! That’s queer.”

      “Yes, I put it out just now. I was goin’ away,” replied Harkutt, with ill-disguised impatience.

      “What! been here ever since?”

      “No,” said Harkutt curtly.

      “Well, I want to speak to ye about ‘Lige. Seein’ the candle shinin’ through the chinks I thought he might be still with ye. If he ain’t, it looks bad. Light up, can’t ye! I want to show you something.”

      There was a peremptoriness in his tone that struck Harkutt disagreeably, but observing that he was carrying something in his hand, he somewhat nervously re-lit the candle and faced him. Peters had a hat in his hand. It was ‘Lige’s!

      “‘Bout an hour after we fellers left here,” said Peters, “I heard the rattlin’ of hoofs on the road, and then it seemed to stop just by my house. I went out with a lantern, and, darn my skin! if there warn’t ‘Lige’s hoss, the saddle empty, and ‘Lige nowhere! I looked round and called him—but nothing were to be seen. Thinkin’ he might have slipped off—tho’ ez a general rule drunken men don’t, and he is a good rider—I followed down the road, lookin’ for him. I kept on follerin’ it down to your run, half a mile below.”

      “But,” began Harkutt, with a quick nervous laugh, “you don’t reckon that because of that he”—

      “Hold on!” said Peters, grimly producing a revolver from his side-pocket with the stock and barrel clogged and streaked with mud. “I found THAT too,—and look! one barrel discharged! And,” he added hurriedly, as approaching a climax, “look ye,—what I nat’rally took for wet from the rain—inside that hat—was—blood!”

      “Nonsense!” said Harkutt, putting the hat aside with a new fastidiousness. “You don’t think”—

      “I think,” said Peters, lowering his voice, “I think, by God! HE’S BIN AND DONE IT!”

      “No!”

      “Sure! Oh, it’s all very well for Billings and the rest of that conceited crowd to sneer and sling their ideas of ‘Lige gen’rally as they did jess now here,—but I’d like ‘em


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