Books: Down the Mother Lode
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Vivia Hemphill >> Down the Mother Lode
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The boy turned from the peddler's pack as Rosa entered the room. "What
is that horrible noise?"
"A fight. Come, you had better go." She led him down a dark stair to
another section of the cellar. "Jose," she called. An evil looking
Mexican pushed open a rough door. "You shall take this man out through
the second tunnel."
"Si, senora."
"And, Jose, he shall reach the outer opening alive, and with all his
belongings. He has no money. Do you hear?" Jose grunted. "Go, now,
under, cover of the noise."
"But the gift for Elena!"
Rosa laughed mockingly. "What a child it is! My gift to Elena tonight,
is you - her lover. Ask her to thank me with a prayer from her pure
heart for my sins."
Jose led the young man through a long, damp, evil-odored passage
underground, and out through a trapdoor at the extreme end of the
garden. A shrub grew on top of the door, surrounded by a bed of fragrant
wild pansies. Jose kicked the staring youth away from the entrance and
vanished into the earth looking, in the lantern-light like a malevolent
fiend returning to the realm of everlasting fire.
* * * * *
The balls which were given at the Franklin House on the old Pioneer road
were the most pretentious of the year. Feminine loveliness in silks and
cameos gathered from every section. General Sutter and his officers
sometimes were there, and the Spanish grandees brought to them the
lovely, star-eyed beauties of their households.
On this night a brilliant assemblage stood about in the ballroom floor
ready for a quadrille. Elena Ashley and her betrothed were near the wide
entrance doors.
"There is "Sheriff Paul of Calaveras County," she told him. "He does not
dance. I wonder what brings him here?"
The doors opened and Rosa Phillips entered, magnificently jewelled and
dressed in a rich silk of pearl grey. Elena stared, clutching at her
partner's arm.
"Oh, look!" she shrieked , "she is wearing my wedding dress. My wedding
dress which was stitched at the shop of Rosenthal the peddler, in
Sacramento, and which he was to bring me two weeks ago. I know it is
mine! There is the pearl passe-mentre on it that was my mother's. There
is none other like it in California!"
"So?" answered Rosa cooly, glancing down at the voluminous silken folds
of her robe. Then she stood waving her big fan, her large, dark eyes
roving across the throng.
"Mine Host" came quickly forward. "It is not permitted, senora, that you
- "
Rosa smiled cynically. "I, the silken hawk, came not to flutter your
nest of doves, senor. I came but for a little hour to meet a man who -
Ah, he is coming now. Sheriff Paul, I have that to tell you which - "
The sheriff offered his arm ceremoniously and they passed out of the
ballroom. Tender hearted Elena was conscience stricken. She dropped her
lover's arm and darted after them through the big doors.
"Oh, I am sorry, I did not mean - please, Sheriff Paul, she may have
the dress, poor thing! But for her, I should have had no man to marry on
my wedding day next week."
Sheriff Paul turned quickly. Elena, frightened, clapped two little hands
over her mouth. Rosa shrugged indifferently, and tipping back her small,
black head, listened to the music in the ballroom.
"Madam," to Rosa, "you sent for me, making strange promises which, for
the safety of this community, I hope that you are now pleased to keep."
Without lowering her chin she looked at him through sinister, narrowed
eyelids, and a smile of triumphant malice touched her face.
"Senor, I make no promises which I fail to keep," she answered, "and
there is also a promise which I made Senor Tom Bell - "
* * * * *
"There is some one knocking at the cellar door," said Tom Bell to
Phillips. "See who is there, and be careful that you let no one in
without the bullet and the password."
"Tom, I'm afraid," whined Driscoll "that Spanish devil's promised to
get you hung more than once lately, and last night I know she sent that
Mexican Jose of hers out somewhere with a string and bullet. I saw them
- "
"What! Why didn't you tell me before? Listen! Phillips is in trouble! Go
help him! Call the boys! Hurry!" As Jim Driscoll, with a halt in his
walk, left him, Tom Bell stole quietly to one of the tunnels and ran to
the trap-door which opened into an outhouse.
He found the corral full of saddle-horses and the Mountaineer House
completely surrounded by Sheriff Paul's, posse.
"Come on, boys," said a voice.
"Did he get in?"
"Ye-ah - put his hand in with the bullet on a string, got his foot in
the door, gave the password and heaved the door wide open. Come on, now,
and there's orders not to take the woman, remember."
Bell stole a rawboned roan from the corral and was far from the
frightful battle at Mountaineer House before he dared burst forth into
the vituperation which he heaped upon the name of Rosa Phillips.
* * * * *
Rosa sat strumming her guitar idly, and musing upon the events of the
past few months. Jack Phillips was serving a term in prison. Driscoll
had also been sent to the penitentiary. One day a rumor reached her that
he was threatening to turn state's evidence, and to divulge the truth in
regard to Rosenthal.
Three days later an iron bar was accidentally(?) dropped on his head;
through some mysterious agent he was given poison, and died. At the
memory of it Rosa smiled her enigmatic and implacable smile. Tom Bell
was at large somewhere far to the north and she - she was rich now and
she would go back to Monterey, perhaps. She drew her guitar closer and
sang:
"The far distant sound of a harp's soft strings - an echo on the air,
The hidden page may be full of sweet things, of things that once were fair.
There's a turned down page in each life, and mine - a story might unfold,
But the end was sad of the dream divine. It better rests untold."
It was time for Harlan to arrive. Charlie Harlan, the man whom she hoped
to cajole into buying Mountaineer House. She strolled out into the
garden as Harlan rode up and tied his horse under one of the trees.
A happy pair passed. A delicate girl mounted upon a little mule and a
sturdy youth walking in the dust, his hand upon the beast's shoulder.
With their serene and joy-illumined faces they somehow suggested the
holy family, symbolical of all that was divine in a sordid world.
The girl smiled and waved to Rosa, but the young man doffed his hat
coldly and hastened by.
"The sweet little Elena," said Rosa to herself, "and her lover-husband.
I wear the silken wedding gown which no lover sees, but she travels the
way in calico with the man she loves. May the Blessed Virgin grant that
she shall have no turned down pages in her life," and forcing her proud
and bitter mouth into a provocative smile, she went forward to welcome
Harlan.
The Hanging of Charlie Price
III
"He goes to the well,
And he stands on the brink,
And stops for a spell
Jest to listen and think:
Let's see - well, that forty-foot grave wasn't his, sir,
that day, anyhow."
- Bret Harte.
Everywhere in the foothills of the Sierras there are still evidences of
gold mining. High cliffs face the rivers, all that is left of hills torn
down at the point of the powerful hydraulic nozzles, with great heaps of
cobbles at their base which Mother Nature, even in seventy years has
been unable to change or cover.
At the mouth of nearly every ravine there are countless little mounds
which marked the end, or dump of the sluice-box in the placer mining.
When the mound got the proper height the sluice was simply lengthened,
like putting another joint onto a caterpillar - and there you were! The
sluice-boxes have long since been moved away or rotted to mould but the
little mounds remain, to be mansions for hustling colonies of small
black ants.
The country, in various localities, is pitted with prospect holes, and
the hills are pierced with drift tunnels and abandoned mines. Some of
the prospect holes are mere grassy cups, others are very deep and partly
filled with water.
Some of the most engrossing days of my childhood were spent in exploring
these places with my two boy companions. We would fell an oak sapling
across the mouth of the hole, tie a rope, usually my pony's lariat, to
the tree and slide down it to explore the depths below. If we came to a
side drift we would swing into it, light our candle-lanterns and go
looking for gold. We were always sure that we should yet find a
forgotten cache of gold - perhaps guarded by a lonely skeleton - but we
never did!
About all we ever got out of it was snake-frights (naturally, sans
alcoholic origin), until we were sure, the snakes were not rattlers;
baby bats, which invariably tried to bite us; swallows' eggs, wet feet,
and a good spanking if the family happened to find out what we had been
up to.
I suppose that it really was a very dangerous pastime, for although
sometimes the drift tunnel led us to a sunlit opening on the hillside,
more often we reached a blind end and were forced to return to the main
shaft and to "shin" up the rope, with from ten to forty feet of inky
water waiting to catch us if we fell.
Or we went up the river to "swing the rocker" for old Ali Quong. He
always pretended to drive us away, bellowing fiercely as soon as he
caught sight of us, "Whassa malla you? Alle time you come see Ali Quong!
Ketchem too-oo much tlouble for po-or old Chinaman" - the whole time
with his wrinkled, brown face wreathed in smiles.
There we stayed the long summer afternoon, swinging the rocker while
Quong shoveled in the pebbly dirt, watching him take the black sand,
which held the gold, off the canvas with his little spade-like scoop,
and panning it for him in the heavy iron pan, fascinated to see what we
should find. Usually only a few small nuggets in a group of colors
(flake gold), but once we found a good sized nugget which Quong
gallantly gave me for a "Chinese New Year" gift. At dusk he sent us
home, each with a bar of brown barley sugar - smelling to the blue of
opium - which he fished out of one of his numerous jumpers with his
long-fingered, sensitive hands.
They are dead, long ago - Ah Quong, old Sing, Shotgun-Chinaman - and
gone to the blessed region of the Five Immortals, I know, but every true
Californian will understand the regard the pioneer families had for
these faithful Chinese servitors who took as much loving pride in the
aristocratic and unblemished names of their "familees" as the white
persons who bore them. Four generations of my family, old Sing lived to
serve - but I must get on with my forty-niner's tale of the hanging of
Charlie Price!
"Eh, mon, but the spring is here again," said Jim "Hutch" (Hutchinson)
to Old Man Greeley.
"Is it so, now?" returned the little man, gazing off through the sunny,
velvet air to a world which had been painted clean, new green. His
shrewd, blue eyes returned to the ponderous Scotchman.
"And how came you to realize that it was spring?" he asked maliciously.
"How came you to lick Sandy McArthur-r-r?" Hutchinson came back at him.
"Tell me that."
"Well, but whisper, man," said old Jimmie plaintively, "what else could
a man be after doin'? Me boots were on, an' I could not run away an'
climb a tree, so I used them on McArthur."
"Ye're a wild fightin' Irishman with no regard for the Sabbath,"
returned Jim Hutch, sternly. Now Greeley had a fear of what the dour old
Scotchman might tell upon him. It would not pay to lose his Celtic
temper.
"It was to church I was goin'." he growled. "'Twas why I was wearin' me
red-topped high boots."
"Where was church that day, whatever? At the Widow Schmitt's?"
Jimmie squirmed. "You mentioned the beautiful spring, I mind," he
countered deftly. Suddenly Jim Hutch grinned.
"I'll tell ye why. I was gaein' down frae Rattlesnake this afternoon an'
Charlie Price an' his Leezie were out in his bit garden a-plowin'. Mon,
ye could hear him for miles!"
It was even so. Old Charlie Price had decided that it was high time to
put in his vegetable garden. He went out to the lean-to in his corral to
inform Lizzie, the mare, of his intention. Lizzie was always the
unwilling partner of these agricultural peregrinations, and, now she saw
him approaching with the harness, she ran away with much snorting and
scattering of sod.
"Hey, you, Liz," roared Charlie, "you goot-for-not'ing buckskin lummix,
you com mit!" He flourished the halter rope at her. Lizzie flattened her
ears, opened her mouth like a yawning snake, and ran at him. Old Charlie
let out a whoop that brought the sheriff from Rattlesnake at full speed,
and could be heard (so they say) all the way across the river to Wild
Goose Flat, six miles away.
Even Lizzie, accustomed as she was to Charlie's mannerisms, was frankly
startled and meekly allowed herself to be caught. She did not like to
plow. She was a saddler and a pair of tugs and a collar bored her. With
a cinch one could puff out in true wild-horse fashion while the latigo
strap was being pulled, and afterward be fairly comfortable, but a
slipping collar was neither off nor on. She shook herself impatiently
and the collar slid down her neck to her ears.
"Hey!" bellowed Charlie, "you don't vear it so! You - " The mare stamped
at a fly, bringing her hoof down on the old Dutchman's foot. His
blood-curdling whoops and yells brought the sheriff in on a brilliant
finale to a record-breaking run.
"What's the matter? Are you being murdered?"
"Who, I'm?" asked Charlie, absent-mindedly. He was nursing the injured
member, wondering whether to kick at Lizzie with it, knowing full well
that he stood a good chance of her kicking back again' but when she
snapped viciously at the puffing sheriff he decided against it.
"You com' to see me?" he asked, in a bland, so-glad-you've-called tone.
"To see you! Why, I've come to save your life!"
"So? Dot's goot, but Lizzie undt me, ve ain't got so much time today.
It's vegetables I sell in Rattlesnake undt ve go to plow, now."
"Well, you old fool, after this you can call in vain if anything happens
to you. I'll never bother with you."
"Oh, vell, ven I got a little excitement I got to yell about it, ain't
it?"
"Maybe you have - and after this you can, for all of me," and the
wrathful sheriff departed. He was new in the community or he would have
known that the plowing of Charlie Price and Lizzie was a regular event
of each season, for which an audience gathered to lay bets for and
against the probability of his dying of apoplexy before it was finished.
The plowing progressed in this manner:
Charlie put the point of the plow in the soft earth and roared at the
motor-power. Lizzie started off at a nimble lope. The plow cut a pretty
curve and flew out of the ground. Charlie reefed the reins at once,
completely turning off the power. Then he put the reins about his neck,
grasped the handles of the plow with both hands, and zoomed commands
again at the champing power. "Power" jumped ahead. The reins nearly
snapped old Charlie's head off, but effectually brought the mare to a
standstill.
"Vait, you dunder-undt-blitzen apful peelings! You - you think dot
plowing is not high-toned enough, yet - hey? Vell, I show you!"
He picked up a huge clod of soft dirt held it aloft in both hands and
banged it down on Lizzie's back - whereupon she promptly ran away! She
galloped furiously to the end of the field with the plow banging in
scoops and leaps, and old Charlie, dangling on the end of the reins,
flying along in seven-league jumps behind her. As soon as he caught his
breath sufficiently for renewed directions, the cavalcade returned to
the grandstand and operations were repeated.
Charlie had been a sailor before he came to California, and he plowed
(?) each furrow with a collection of forceful admonitions, delivered in
a voice of thunder, from a different language. It was all the same to
Lizzie! She loathed plowing just as thoroughly in wildcat Spanish, as
she did in Dutch or Cingalese, and she did not hesitate to prove it.
Jim Hutch and Jimmie Greeley drifted down to Rattlesnake at sundown and
joined the laughter-weakened group perched upon Charlie's snake fence.
"The man grows more daft every year. 'Tis strange, what charms the Widow
Schmitt." Old Jimmie merely growled in his beard. "Charlie, mon," he
called, "the mare is warm and weary, and so's yoursel'. Come on to town
for a bit."
Charlie stayed overlong at the miners' haunts in Rattlesnake and it was
very late when he started back to his cabin, carrying in one limp, hot
hand a jug which he guarded zealously from harm during his unsteady
progress.
The men still sat over the card tables when the first daylight crept
over the mountains. Jimmie Greeley was raking in a jackpot, grinning
fiendishly at the dour Jim Hutch when they heard heavy, running feet
outside. The door crashed open and a frightened, half-grown lad shouted:
"Where's the sheriff? Charlie Price has been hung!"
"What!"
"On a tree near the Widow Schmitt's. I saw him. I know well the sailor
coat that he wears - and his best red-topped boots. Where's the
sheriff?"
"Over at Ah Quong's, the Chinee store on the edge of town." The boy ran
off. Old Jim Hutch rose impressively to his feet.
"Friends, the man ye hae laughed at all day - is dead. The man ye hae
always laughed at - and yet, WHO was it that lent ye gold when ye had
none? Yea, the gold ye thought it not worth ye'r while to return. Who
was ever ready to warm you at his bit fire in winter or to cool ye're
whuskey-hot throat with water from his cool spring in summer?
"Who was it that brought his mare into his own kitchen when it snowed,
and fed her the rice and beans he went without? Who was it that the
Widow Schmitt waits for year after year, with half the ould fools in
Placer dancin' after her?"
That was too much for old man Greeley.
"Because he was indifferent-like. When ye want a woman, run away
f-r-r-om her and she'll run after."
"Why did ye na do it, then, Jeems?"
"Faith an' I did, but bein' ahl dressed up as I was in me coat, she
couldn't see me suspenders to tell was I comin' or goin'!" Jim Hutch
turned from him witheringly.
"Who was it staked ye for a new prospectin' trip, an' let his own mine
go unworked? Who nursed ye when ye were lyin' seeck unto death, an' no
one would come nigh on account of the smallpox scare? Old Charlie
Price."
A boy whirled about to face the window, but not before one
uncontrollable sob had sounded through the quiet room.
"Who was it," went on the old Scotchman gently, "found the wee bairn
that was lost, last summer; that followed the Indians for thirty miles
on his Leezie-mare and got the babe from out the wickiup of White
Beaver? Charlie Price.
"Who came bringing it haeme laughing, on the saddle pommel while he sang
to it songs from ower seven seas, which we did blush to hear, in a voice
to be heard twa miles about? And 'twas only the bairn's mother who
thought to thank him.
"Yea, and furthermore, when the incensed people would hae wipet out the
while tribe of White Beaver, who dashed at the mob wi' the roars of a
bull-bison forcin' them to hear that the squaw was crazed from the death
of her own bit bairn, and but tryin' to comfort her sore heart? Who, I'm
askin' ye?" and from each man's lips came the murmur like a response to
a litany:
"Charlie Price."
From the open door a cool dawn breeze blew in from the Sierras, pure
forerunner to the new day. It whirled the heavy smoke plumes into forms
of vanished ghosts, like the tortured figments of each man's conscience
who had done, and "left undone" that which it was forever too late to
amend.
The sheriff walked in.
"This boy says that old Charlie is gone." He stood with his broad hat
off, running his fingers nervously through his hair. "Gentlemen - I - I
must confess - I heard the poor man calling, but - "
"Mon, in an ancient book named 'Mr. Aesop, His Fables,' there was a tale
of the lad who cried 'wolf.' Many there are here who have read it. Come,
let us gae after poor Charlie."
In the first daylight they reached the tree with its gruesome burden.
"But - but," sputtered the keen-eyed little Irishman, "'Tis not Charlie
at all! 'Tis but an effigy dressed in Charlie's clothes and hung at the
Widow Schmitt's gate."
"As a warnin' to him frae some mutton-head lover of hers."
They ran as one man across the road to Charlie's cabin. It was empty.
"He was callin' 'Help'," said the round-eyed boy.
"Yes, we heard him," added the sheriff.
They had come up the road. They started back down the trail.
* * * * *
Charlie had got nearly home when he began to worry about a deep prospect
hole near the trail known as "Rosenhammer's Shaft." He must be careful
to avoid it. Suddenly his foot slipped on a pebble. He clutched
unavailingly at a manzanita and rolled into a circle of inky blackness.
Rosenhammer's Shaft! Now he was lost, indeed.
But, no. As he slid he came against a sturdy live-oak bush which he
clutched, managing to stop his descent into the next world for the time
being. He even, swung one leg over a wiry limb, and there he clung,
puttering sailors' argot, considering his sins, and roaring for help in
his best fortissimo tone.
The shaft was said to be a hundred feet deep. It was filled part way
with oily water, and inhabited by snakes and monsters of the
subterranean deeps. People had fallen in and drowned, and had been known
never to rise again. The ghost of a Chinaman who had been murdered and
flung down, was said to float up from its depths at night to range the
earth, seeking the perpetrator of the fiendish deed.
Charlie wished that he had led a more blameless life that he had not so
thoroughly beaten the Indian who had sold him a salted mine; that he had
not made Lizzie plow; that, above all, he had married the Widow Schmitt
when she had so plainly shown her liking for him.
Well, it did not matter much. He would fall in forty feet of water and
they would never find him. He wished that he had drunk that which the
jug contained. It was growing daylight. What was the day, then, to him?
He would never live to see it. His arms were numb. He must soon let go
and fall to his doom.
He heard voices but was too spent to call out. As a crowd of men came
running over the hill, his arms were slipping - slipping. It was almost
broad day.
He made one last, herculean effort to hold fast, turning his head over
his shoulder to glance into the deathtrap below and - just as his
repentant rescuers reached him, he gave a disgusted snort and fell -
three feet to the bottom of the hole!
In the darkness he had safely passed the Rosenhammer shaft and had
fallen into the six-feet-deep prospect hole of his own claim.
Two days later, Charlie married the Widow Schmitt
"Rattlesnake Dick"
IV
"Again swings the lash on the high mountain trail,
And the pipe of the packer is scenting the gale;
For the trails are all open, the roads are all free,
And the highwayman's whistle is heard on the lea."
- Bret Harte.
We were riding one day under the Digger pines, down an abandoned old
road toward Mountaineer House. As usual, my spirited half-Arab, as white
as she was fleet, had put me far in the lead. She loved a race as well
as I did, but she ran it to suit herself. If I tried to interpose any
theories of my own, she calmly took the bit in her teeth and after that
I devoted most of my energies to hanging on!
Mammy Kate, own daughter of Nancy Gooch of Coloma, would scold when I
came home with torn skirt and a bump on my forehead: "Now, den, look at
dat chile! Been hoss-racin' agin su'ah as Moses was in Egypt! I shall
suttenly enjine yo' fathah to done gin' yo' plow-hoss to ride so yo's
gwi' git beat wiff yo' racin', and quit. Spects yo' had 'nothah tumble,
didn't you'? You' wait till Katie gits de camph-fire an' put on dat
haid."
So did Katie's scoldings invariably end in renewed pampering of her
"chile," and so did I continue to race every horse in the community and
usually to win.
With one small ear laid back to listen for the other horses, little
white Flossie flew along the grassy track, darting around the chapparal
bushes which had grown up and jumping the fallen tree trunks. Suddenly
we came out of the woods and she shied violently at a man who was
digging a fence-post hole, directly in the road. I always rode Indian
fashion without stirrups of any kind, so of course I was catapulted
neatly over her head.
"Hello. Otto," I said, remaining seated in the road and catching at
Floss' bridle rein, "what have you found?"
Otto was sifting the loose dirt in the hole through eager fingers.
"Hello! I've found some money here in the ground. I wonder - oh, yes,
I've heard my mother tell about it! This was the old pioneer road and it
was at this very spot that Rattlesnake Dick and some of his gang held up
the Wells-Fargo stage coach and got such a lot of money. They say
there's still $40,000 buried on Trinity Mountain, half of what was
waiting when Rattlesnake Dick got killed."
Rattlesnake Dick, pirate of the placers, prince of highwaymen! Magical
name - irridescent bubble from the pipe of romance. Proud, imperious,
bitter Dick! What a splendid old name he had been born to, and what
blows Fate had dealt him which led to his tragic end!
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