PEOPLE who have been so
unfortunate as to have travelled in western Kansas will remember the Solomon
valley for its unique and peculiar desolation. The river is a turbid, muddy
little stream, that crawls along between naked bluffs, choked and split by sand
bars, and with nothing whatever of that fabled haste to reach the sea. Though
there can be little doubt that the Solomon is heartily disgusted with the
country through which it flows, it makes no haste to quit it. Indeed, it is one
of the most futile little streams under the sun, and never gets anywhere. Its
sluggish current splits among the sand bars and buries itself in the mud until
it literally dries up from weariness and ennui, without ever reaching anything.
The hot winds and the river have been contending for the empire of the valley
for years, and the river has had decidedly the worst of it. Never having been a
notably ambitious stream, in time it grew tired of giving its strength to
moisten barren fields and corn that never matured. Beyond the river with its
belt of amber woodland rose the bluffs, ragged, broken, covered with shaggy red
grass and bare of trees, save for the few stunted oaks that grew upon their
steep sides. They were pathetic little trees, that sent their roots down
through thirty feet of hard clay bluff to the river level. They were as old as
the first settler could remember, and yet no one could assert that they had
ever grown an inch. They seldom, if ever, bore acorns; it took all the
nourishment that soil could give just to exist. There was a sort of mysterious
kinship between those trees and the men who lived, or tried to live, there.
They were alike in more ways than one.
Across the river
stretched the level land like the top of an oven. It was a country flat and
featureless, without tones or shadows, without accent or emphasis of any kind
to break its vast monotony. It was a scene done entirely in high lights,
without relief, without a single commanding eminence to rest the eye upon. The
flat plains rolled to the unbroken horizon vacant and void, forever reaching in
empty yearning toward something they never attained. The tilled fields were
even more discouraging to look upon than the unbroken land. Although it was
late in the autumn, the corn was not three feet high. The leaves were seared
and yellow, and as for tassels, there were none. Nature always dispenses with
superfluous appendages; and what use had Solomon valley corn for tassels? Ears
were only a tradition there, fabulous fruits like the golden apples of the
Hesperides; and many a brawny Hercules had died in his own sweat trying to
obtain them. Sometimes, in the dusk of night, when the winds were not quite so
hot as usual and only the stars could hear, the dry little corn leaves
whispered to each other that once, long ago, real yellow ears grew in the
Solomon valley.
Near the river was a
solitary frame building, low and wide, with a high sham front, like most stores
in Kansas villages. Over the door was painted in faded letters, "Josiah
Bywaters, Dry Goods, Groceries and Notions." In front of the store ran a
straight strip of ground, grass grown and weedy, which looked as if it might
once have been a road. Here and there, on either side of this deserted way of
traffic, were half demolished buildings and excavations where the weeds grew
high, which might once have been the sites of houses. For this was once El
Dorado, the Queen City of the Plains, the Metropolis of Western Kansas, the
coming Commercial Centre of the West.
Whatever may have been
there once, now there were only those empty, windowless buildings, that one
little store, and the lonely old man whose name was painted over the door.
Inside the store, on a chair tilted back against the counter, with his pipe in
his mouth and a big gray cat on his knee, sat the proprietor. His appearance
was not that of the average citizen of western Kansas, and a very little of his
conversation told you that he had come from civilization somewhere. He was tall
and straight, with an almost military bearing, and an iron jaw. He was thin,
but perhaps that was due to his diet. His cat was thin, too, and that was
surely owing to its diet, which consisted solely of crackers and water, except
when now and then it could catch a gopher; and Solomon valley gophers are so
thin that they never tempt the ambition of any discerning cat. If Colonel
Bywaters's manner of living had anything to do with his attenuation, it was the
solitude rather than any other hardship that was responsible. He was a sort of
"Last Man." The tide of emigration had gone out and had left him high
and dry, stranded on a Kansas bluff. He was living where the rattlesnakes and
sunflowers found it difficult to exist.
The Colonel was a man
of determination; he had sunk his money in this wilderness and he had
determined to wait until he had got it out. His capital had represented the
industry of a lifetime. He had made it all down in Virginia, where fortunes are
not made in a day. He had often told himself that he had been a fool to quit a
country of honest men for a desert like this. But he had come West, worse than
that, he had come to western Kansas, even to the Solomon valley, and he must
abide the consequences. Even after the whole delusion was dispelled, and the
fraud exposed, when the other buildings had been torn down or moved away, when
the Eastern brokers had foreclosed their mortgages and held the land empty for
miles around, Colonel Bywaters had stubbornly refused to realize that the game
was up. Every one had told him that the best thing he could do was to get out
of the country; but he refused to listen to advice. Perhaps he had an
unreasoning conviction that money could not absolutely vanish, and that, if he
stayed there long enough, his must some time come back to him. Perhaps, even
had he wished to go, he actually lacked the means wherewith to get away. At any
rate, there he remained, becoming almost a part of that vast solitude, trying
to live the life of an upright Christian gentleman in this desert, with a heart
heavy and homesick for his kind, always living over again in memory the details
of that old, peaceful life in the valley of Virginia. He rose at six, as he had
always done, ate his meagre breakfast and swept out his store, arranged his
faded calicoes and fly-specked fruit cans in the window, and then sat down to
wait. Generally he waited until bedtime. In three years he had not sold fifty
dollars' worth. Men were almost unknown beings in that region, and men with
money were utterly so. When the town broke up, a few of the inhabitants had
tried to farm a little,--tried until they had no grain to sow and no horses to
plough and no money to get away with. They were dead, most of them. The only
human faces the Colonel ever saw were the starved, bronzed countenances of the
poor fellows who sometimes passed in wagons, plodding along with their wives
and children and cook stoves and feather beds, trying to get back to
"God's country." They never bought anything; they only stopped to
water their horses and swear a little, and then drove slowly eastward Once a
little girl had cried so bitterly for the red stick candy in the window that
her father had taken the last nickel out of his worn, flat pocketbook. But the
Colonel was too kind a man to take his money, so he gave the child the money
and the candy, too; and he also gave her a little pair of red mittens that the
moths had got into, which last she accepted gratefully, though it was August.
The first day of the
week brought the exceptions in the monotonous routine of the Colonel's life. He
never rose till nine o'clock on Sunday. Then, in honor of the day, he shaved
his chin and brushed out his mustache, and dressed himself in his black suit
that had been made for him down in Winchester four years ago. This suit of
clothes was an object of great care with the Colonel, and every Sunday night he
brushed it out and folded it away in camphor gum. Generally he fished on
Sunday. Not that there are any fish in the Solomon; indeed, the mud turtles,
having exhausted all the nutriment in the mud, have pretty much died out. But
the Colonel was fond of fishing, and fish he would. So in season, every Sunday
morning, he would catch a bottle of flies for bait and take his pole and, after
locking his store against impossible intruders, he would go gravely down the
street. He really went through the weed patch, but to himself and his cat he
always spoke of it as the street.
On this particular
afternoon, as the Colonel sat watching the autumn sunlight play upon the floor,
he was feeling more bitterly discouraged than usual. It was exactly four years
ago that day that Major Penelton had brought into his store on Water Street a
tall, broad shouldered young man, with the frankest blue eyes and a
good-natured smile, whom he introduced as Mr. Apollo Gump of Kansas. After a
little general conversation, the young man had asked him if he wished to invest
in Western lands. No, the Colonel did not want to put out any money in the
West. He had no faith in any of the new states. Very well; Apollo did not wish
to persuade him. But some way he saw a good deal of the young man, who was a
clever, open-handed sort of a chap, who drank good whiskey and told a good
story so that it lost nothing in the telling. So many were the hints he threw
out of the fortunes made every day in Western real estate, that in spite of
himself the Colonel began to think about it. Soon letters began pouring in upon
him, letters from doctors, merchants, bankers, all with a large map on the
envelope, representing a town with all the railroads of the West running into
it. Above this spidery object was printed the name, El Dorado. These
communications all assured him of the beauty of the location, the marvellous
fertility of the surrounding country, the commercial and educational advantages
of the town. Apollo seemed to take a wonderful liking to him; he often had him
to dine with him at the little hotel, and took him down to Washington to hear
Patti, assuring him all the time that the theatres of Kansas City were much
better than anything in the East, and that one heard much better music there.
The end of the matter was that when Apollo went back to Kansas the Colonel sold
out his business and went with him. They were accompanied by half a dozen men
from Baltimore, Washington and the smaller towns about, whom Apollo had induced
to invest in the fertile tracts of land about El Dorado and in stock in the
Gump banking house.
The Colonel was not a
little surprised to find that El Dorado, the metropolis of western Kansas, was
a mere cluster of frame houses beside a muddy stream, that there was not a
railroad within twenty-five miles, and that the much boasted waterworks
consisted of a number of lead pipes running from the big windmill tank on the
hill; but Apollo assured him that high buildings were dangerous in that windy
country, that the railroads were anxious and eager to come as soon as the town
voted bonds, and that the waterworks--pipes, pumps, filters and all, a complete
"Holly" system--were ordered and would be put in in the spring. The
Colonel did not quite understand how an academy of arts and science could be
conducted in the three-room sod shack on the hill; but Aristotle Gump showed
him the plan of a stately building with an imposing bell-tower that hung over
the desk in his office, assuring him that it would go up in May, and that the
workmen from Topeka were already engaged for the job. He was surprised, too, to
find so few people in a town of two thousand inhabitants; but he was told that
most of the business men had gone East to settle up their affairs, and would be
back in the spring with their new goods. Indeed, in Ezekiel Gump's office, the
Colonel saw hundreds of letters, long glowing letters, from these absent
citizens, telling of their great business schemes and their unshaken faith in
the golden future of El Dorado. There were few houses, indeed, but there were
acres and acres of foundations; there were few businesses in operation, but
there were hundreds of promises; and Apollo laughingly said that Western towns
were built on promises.
But what most puzzled
the Colonel was the vast number and importance of the Gumps. The Gumps seemed
to be at the head of everything. The eldest brother was Isaiah Gump, the
minister, a red faced, clean shaven man, with a bald pate and dark, wrinkled
little hands. Then there were De Witt Gump, the physician and druggist;
Chesterfield Gump, the general dry goods merchant; Aristotle Gump, architect
and builder, and professor of mathematics in the Gump Academy; Hezekiah Gump,
the hardware merchant and president of the El Dorado Board of Trade; Ezekiel
Gump, real estate agent, superintendent of waterworks, professor of natural
sciences, etc. These were the Gumps. But stay,-- were there not also Almira
Gump, who taught history and Italian in the academy, and Venus Gump, who
conducted a dressmaking and millinery establishment? The Colonel learned from
Apollo that the Gump brothers had bought the land and founded the town, that it
was, in short, a monument of Gump enterprise, it having been their long
cherished ambition to become municipal promoters.
The Sunday after the
Colonel's arrival, Isaiah preached a sermon on the rebuilding of Jerusalem, and
told how the Jews built each man before his own door, with a trowel in one hand
and a sword in the other. This was preliminary to urging the citizens of El
Dorado to build sidewalks before their respective residences. He gave a long
and eloquent discourse upon the builders of great cities from Menes, Nimrod and
Romulus down, and among these celebrated personages, the Gumps were by no means
forgotten.
After the sermon, the
Colonel went to dine with Apollo at the little hotel. As they sat over their
claret and cigars, Apollo said, "Colonel, if you can work any kind of a
deal with Zeke, I would advise you to buy up your land before the railroad
comes, for land is sure to go up then. It's a good plan out here to buy before
a road comes and sell as soon as possible afterwards."
"About how much
would you advise me to invest in land, Mr. Gump?" inquired the Colonel.
"Well, if I were
you, I would about halve my pile. Half I would put into real estate and half
into bank stock. Then you've got both realty and personal security and you are
pretty safe."
"I think I will
get back into business. I may as well open a little shop and give your brother
Chesterfield a little competition. I find I have been in the harness so long
that I scarcely know what to do with myself out of it. I am too old to learn to
be a gentleman of leisure."
"That's a good
idea; but whatever you do, do it before the road comes. That's where the
mistake is made in Western towns; men buy at high tide of the boom instead of
having foresight enough to buy before. A boom makes the man it finds; but woe
to the man it leaves in its track." A year later the Colonel found that
Apollo had spoken a great truth.
"I think I rather
like that land your brother showed me yesterday. Right next to the 'eighty' Mr.
Thompson just bought. I would a little rather get tilled land, though."
"Now, Colonel, you
are buying this land to sell; and wild land will sell just as well as any. You
don't want to bother with crops; that's for the fellows that come in later. Let
them do the digging. As soon as you have made up your mind, I want to spring a
little scheme on you. I want to run you for city mayor next spring; and as soon
as you have invested, we can begin to talk it up."
That suggestion pleased
the Colonel and it rather soothed his conscience. He had his own scruples about
land speculation; it seemed to him a good deal like gambling. But if he could
really make an effort to further the interests of the town, he felt he would
have a better right to make his fortune there.
After dinner they went
out to look at Apollo's blooded horses, and then to Apollo's rooms over the
bank to smoke. Apollo's rooms were very interesting apartments. They were
decorated with boxing gloves, ball bats, fishing rods, an old pair of foils and
pictures of innumerable theatrical people, mostly vaudeville celebrities and
ladies of the ballet. As the Colonel showed some interest in these, Apollo
began rattling off their names and various accomplishments, professional and
otherwise, with a familiarity that astonished the old gentleman. One, he
declared, could do the best double dislocation act on the horizontal bars to be
seen in Europe or America, and his talents had been highly applauded by the
Prince of Wales. Another was the best burnt cork artist of his time; and
another a languishing blond lady, whose generous outlines were accentuated by
the nature of her attire, he declared was "the neatest thing in tights
that ever struck Kansas City." From Apollo that was a sweeping statement;
for Kansas City was the unit of measure which he applied to the universe. At
one end of his sleeping room there was a large, full length painting of a
handsome, smiling woman, in short skirts and spangles. She stood on the toe of
her left foot, her right foot raised, her arms lifted, her body thrown back in
a pose of easy abandon. She was just beginning to dance, and there was
something of lassitude in the movement of the picture. Behind her hung a dark
red curtain, creating a daring effect of color through the sheer whiteness of
her skirts, and the footlights threw a strong glare up into her triumphant
face. It was broadly and boldly painted, something after the manner of Degas,
but handled less cruelly than his subjects. The name at the bottom of the
picture was that of a young American painter, then better known in Paris than
in his own country. There were several photographs of the same person ranged
about on Apollo's dressing case, and, as he thought her extremely beautiful,
and as Apollo had not mentioned her, the Colonel politely inquired who she was.
"She was called
Therese Barittini," replied Apollo, not looking at the picture.
"I never heard of
her," remarked the Colonel, wondering at Apollo's strange manner.
"Probably not; she
is dead," said Apollo shortly; and as the Colonel saw that he did not wish
to discuss the subject, he let it drop. But he could never refrain from looking
at that picture when he was in Apollo's room; and he had conjectures of his
own. Incidentally he learned that Apollo had grown up about the theatres of
Kansas City, ushering as a boy, and later working up to the box office. Had he
known more of the theatres of that river metropolis, the Colonel would have
realized that they are bad places for a boy. As it was, he attributed Apollo's
exaggerated manner and many of his bad habits to his early environment.
It chanced that the
next day was the day for voting on railroad bonds, and of course bonds were
voted. There was great rejoicing among the builders of the city. The Gump band
was out, and Apollo fired a fine display of fireworks which he had ordered from
Kansas City in anticipation of the happy event. Those fireworks must have cost
Apollo a nice little sum, for there were a great many of them. Why, there were
actually some of the blackened rocket sticks lying around the streets next
spring when every one knew that the railroad companies had never heard of such
a place as El Dorado.
None of the Gumps had
their families with them; they were to come out in the spring. They spoke often
and affectionately of their families,--all but Apollo, who never mentioned
having any. The Colonel had supposed that he had never been married, until one
day when he and Apollo were dining with Isaiah. Isaiah, after droning away in
his prosy fashion about his wife and little ones and commenting upon the beauty
of family ties, began moralizing upon Apollo's unfortunate marriage. Apollo,
who had been growing whiter and whiter, rose, set down his glass and, reaching
across the table, struck the Reverend Isaiah in the mouth. This was the first
that the Colonel saw of the bitter altercations which sometimes arose among the
Gump brothers.
By the close of the
winter the Colonel had put out his money and opened his store. Everything went
on at a lively enough pace in El Dorado. Men took large risks because their
neighbors did, as blind to the chances against them as the frequenters of the
bucket shops on Wall Street. Hope was in the atmosphere, and each man was immersed
in his own particular dream of fortune. One thinking man might have saved the
community; but many communities have gone to ruin through the lack of that rare
man. Afterwards, when the news of the great Gump swindle spread abroad over the
land, and its unique details commanded a column's space in one of the New York
papers, financiers laughed and said that a child could have grasped the
situation. The inhabitants of El Dorado were chiefly men who had made a little
capital working for corporations in large cities, and were incompetent to
manage an independent business. They had been mere machines in a great system,
consulted by no one, subject to complete control. Here they were
"prominent citizens," men of affairs, and their vanity and self-confidence
expanded unduly. The rest were farming people who came to make homes and paid
little attention to what went on in the town. And the farmer is always
swindled, no matter by whom offences come. The crash may start in Wall Street,
but it ends in the hillside farms and on the prairie. No matter where the
lightning strikes, it blackens the soil at last.
As the winter wore
away, Apollo Gump drank harder than ever, drank alone in his rooms now,
indulging in the solitary form of the vice, which is its worse form. No one saw
much of him after business hours. He was gloomy and abstracted and seemed to
dread even the necessary intercourse with men which his position in the bank
entailed. The Gump brothers commissioned the Colonel to remonstrate with him
upon the error of his ways, which he did without much effect. Still, there were
many likable things about Apollo. He was different from the rest; his face was
finer and franker, in spite of its heavy marks of dissipation, and his heart
was kinder. His dogs were better treated than many men's children. His brothers
were very clever fellows, some of them, all of them free handed enough, except
old Isaiah, who was the greatest bore and the sorriest rascal of them all. But
the Colonel liked Apollo best. The great end of his life was to serve Mammon,
but on the side he served other and better gods. Dante's lowest hell was a
frozen one; and wherever Apollo's tortured soul writhes, it is not there; that
is reserved for colder and perhaps cleaner men than he.
At last spring came, that
fabled spring, when all the business men were to return to El Dorado, when the
Gump Academy was to be built, when the waterworks were to be put in, when the
Gumps were to welcome their wives and children. Chesterfield, Hezekiah and
Aristotle had gone East to see to bringing out their families, and the Colonel
was impatiently awaiting their return, as the real estate business seemed to be
at a standstill and he could get no satisfaction from Apollo about the
condition of affairs. One night there came a telegram from New York, brought
post haste across the country from the nearest station, announcing that the
father of the Gumps was dying, and summoning the other brothers to his bedside.
There was great excitement in El Dorado at these tidings, and the sympathy of
its inhabitants was so genuine that they scarcely stopped to think what the
departure of the Gumps might mean.
De Witt and Ezekiel
left the next day accompanied by Miss Venus and Miss Almira. Apollo and Isaiah
remained to look after the bank. The Colonel began to feel anxious, realizing
that the Gumps had things pretty much in their own hands and that if the death
of their father should make any material difference in their projects and they
should decide to leave Kansas for good, the town and his interests would be
wofully undone. Still, he said very little, not thinking it a time to bring up
business considerations; for even Apollo looked worried and harassed and was
entirely sober for days together.
The Gumps left on
Monday. On the following Sunday Isaiah delivered a particularly powerful
discourse on the mutability of riches. He compared temporal wealth to stock in
the great bank of God, which paid such rich dividends of grace daily, hourly.
He earnestly exhorted his hearers to choose the good part and lay up for
themselves treasures in heaven, where moths cannot corrupt nor thieves break
through and steal. Apollo was not at church that morning. The next morning the
man who took care of Apollo's blooded horses found that two of them were missing.
When he went to report this to Apollo he got no response to his knock, and, not
succeeding in finding Isaiah, he went to consult the Colonel. Together they
went back to Apollo's room and broke in the door. They found the room in
wretched disorder, with clothing strewn about over the furniture; but nothing
was missing save Apollo's grip and revolver, the picture of the theatrical
looking person that had hung in his sleeping room, and Apollo himself. Then the
truth dawned upon the Colonel. The Gumps had gone, taking with them the Gump
banking funds, land funds, city improvement funds, academy funds, and all
funds, both public and private.
As soon as the news of
the hegira of the Gumps got abroad, carriages and horses came from all the
towns in the country, bringing to the citizens of El Dorado their attentive
creditors. All the townsmen had paid fabulous prices for their land, borrowed
money on it, put the money into the Gump bank, and done their business
principally on credit obtained on the Gump indorsement. Now that their money
was gone, they discovered that the land was worth nothing, was a desert which
the fertile imagination of the Gumps had made to blossom as the rose. The loan
companies also discovered the worthlessness of the land, and used every possible
means to induce the tenants to remain on it; but the entire country was
panic-stricken and would near no argument. Their one desire was to get away
from this desolate spot, where they had been duped. The infuriated creditors
tore down the houses and carried even the foundation stones away. Scarcely a
house in the town had been paid for; the money had been paid to Aristotle Gump,
contractor and builder, who had done his business in the East almost entirely
on credit. The loan agents and various other creditors literally put the town
into wagons and carried it off. Meanwhile, the popular indignation was turned
against the Colonel as having been immediately associated with the Gumps and
implicated in their dishonesty. In vain did he protest his innocence. When men
are hurt they must have something to turn upon, like children who kick the door
that pinches their fingers. So the poor old Colonel, who was utterly ruined and
one of the heaviest losers, was accused of having untold wealth hidden away
somewhere in the bluffs; and all the tempest of wrath and hatred which the
Gumps had raised broke over his head. He was glad, indeed, when the town was
utterly deserted, and he could live without the continual fear of those
reproachful and suspicious glances. Often as he sat watching those barren
bluffs, he wondered whether some day the whole grand delusion would not pass
away, and this great West, with its cities built on borrowed capital, its
business done on credit, its temporary homes, its drifting, restless population,
become panic-stricken and disappear, vanish utterly and completely, as a bubble
that bursts, as a dream that is done. He hated Western Kansas; and yet in a way
he pitied this poor brown country, which seemed as lonely as himself and as
unhappy. No one cared for it, for its soil or its rivers. Every one wanted to
speculate in it. It seemed as if God himself had only made it for purposes of
speculation and was tired of the deal and doing his best to get it off his
hands and deed it over to the Other Party.
On this particular
morning, the fourth anniversary of the fatal advent of Apollo Gump into his
store at Winchester, as the Colonel sat smoking in his chair, a covered wagon
came toiling slowly up from the south. The horses were thin and fagged, and it
was all that they could do to drag the creaking wagon. The harness was old and
patched with rope. Over the hames and along the back strap hung pieces of
sunflower brush to serve as fly nets. The wagon stopped at the well and two
little boys clambered out and came trotting up the path toward the store. As
they came the Colonel heard them chattering together in a broad Southern
dialect; and the sound of his own tongue was sweet to his ears.
"What is it,
boys?" he asked, coming to the door.
"Say, boss, kin we
git some watah at yo' well?"
"Of course you
can, boys. Git all you want."
"Thank yo', sir
;" and the lads trotted back to the wagon.
The Colonel took up his
stick and followed them. He had not seen such good natured, tow-headed little
chaps for a long while; and he was fond of children. A little girl, dressed in
that particularly ugly shade of red in which farming people seem to delight,
clambered out of the wagon and went up to the well with a tin cup, picking her
way carefully with her bare feet to avoid the sand burrs. A fretful voice
called from the wagon.
"Law me, boys,
haint you most got that watah yit?"
A wan woman's face
appeared at the front of the wagon, and she sat down and coughed heavily,
holding her hand over her chest as if it hurt her. The little girl filled the
tin cup and ran toward the wagon.
"Howdy do,
sir?" said the woman, turning to the Colonel as soon as she had finished
drinking.
"Right smart, ma
am, thank 'ee."
"Mercy, air yo'
from the South? Virginy? Laws! I am from Mizzoura myself an' I wisht I was back
there. I 'low we'd be well enough off if we could git back to Pap."
She looked wistfully
off toward the southwest and put her hand to her side again. There was
something in the look of her big, hollow eyes that touched the Colonel. He told
her she had better stay there a few days and rest the horses,--she did not look
well enough to go on.
"No, thank yo',
sir, we must git on. I'll be better in the mornin', maybe. I was feelin' right
smart yisterday. It's my lungs, the slow consumption. I think I'll last till I
git back to Pap. There has been a good deal of the consumption in our family,
an' they most all last." She talked nervously on, breathing heavily
between her words. "Haint there a town Eldorader somewheres about
here?"
The Colonel flushed
painfully. "Yes, this is El Dorado."
"Law me, purty
lookin' town!" said the woman, laughing dismally. "Superb's better'n
this." She pronounced Superb as though it had but one syllable. "They
got a blacksmith shop an' a hardware store there, anyways. I am from nigh
Superb, yo' see. We moved there ten years ago, when the country was lookin'
mighty green and purty. It's all done burnt up long ago. It's that dry we
couldn't raise any garden stuff there these three years. Everything's gone now,
exceptin' these horses Pap give me when I was married. No, my man haint with
me; he died jist afore we come away. A bull gored him through an' through, an'
he crawled outsiden the bob-wire fence and died. It was mighty hard. He didn't
want to die there; he craved to die in Mizzoura. We shot the bull and brought
t'other cattle with us; but they all died on the way."
She closed her eyes and
leaned back against the side of the wagon. Suddenly she roused herself and
said:
"Law me, boys,
this must be the sto' that man told us on. Yo' see our meat and stuff give out
most a week ago, an' we been a livin' on pancakes ever since. We was all
gittin' sick, fur we turned agin' 'em, when we met a feller on horseback down
the valley, a mighty nice lookin' feller, an' he give us five dollars an' told
us we'd find a store someers up here an' could git some groceries."
"It must have been
one of them loan company fellows," said the Colonel meditatively.
"They still come sneakin' about once in a while, though I don't know what
they're after. They haven't left us much but the dirt, an' I reckon that
wouldn't do 'em much good if they could carry it off."
"That I can't tell
yo'. I never seen him befo',--but he was a mighty kind sort of a feller. He
give us the money, and he give me some brandy."
The Colonel helped her
out of the wagon, and they went up to the store, while the boys watered the
horses. Their purchases were soon made; but the Colonel refused to take their
money.
"No, ma'am, I
can't do that. You'll need your money before you get to Missouri. It's all in
the family, between blood kin like. We're both from the South; and I reckon it
would have been enough better for us if we'd never left it."
"Thank yo' mighty
kindly, sir. Yo' sholey can't be doin' much business heah; better git in an' go
with us. Good day to yo', an' thank you kindly, sir."
The Colonel stood
wistfully watching the wagon until it rolled slowly out of sight, and then went
back to his store, and with a sigh sat down,--sat down to wait until water came
from the rock and verdure from the desert, a sort of Sphinx of the Solomon who
sat waiting for the end of time. This was a day when his mind dwelt even more
than usual upon his misfortunes, and homesickness was heavy upon him, and he
yearned for his own people and the faces of his kindred; for the long Virginia
twilights in which he and Major Denney used to sit under the great trees in the
courthouse yard, living the siege of Richmond over again; for the old comrades
who took a drink with him at the Taylor House bar; for the little children who
rolled their hoops before his door every morning, and went nutting with him in
the fall; for the Great North Mountains, where the frosts would soon be
kindling the maples and hickories into flame; for the soft purple of the Blue
Ridge lying off to the eastward; and for that sound which every Virginian hears
forever and forever in his dreams, that rhythmic song of deathless devotion,
deep and solemn as the cadence of epic verse, which the Potomac and Shenandoah
sing to the Virginia shore as they meet at Harper's Ferry. To every exile from
the Valley of Virginia that sound is as the voice of his mother, bidding him
keep his honor clean, and forever calling him to come home. The Colonel had
stopped his horse there on the moonlight night in '62 when he rode away to the
wars, and listened long to that sound; and looking up at the towering grandeur
of Maryland heights above him, he had lifted his hand and sworn the oath that
every young Virginian swore and that every young Virginian kept. For if the
blood shed for those noble rivers could have been poured into their flood, they
would have run crimson to the sea; and it is of that that they sing alway as
they meet, chanting the story over and over in the moonlight and the sunlight,
through time and change unable to forget all that wasted glory of youth, all
that heroic love. Before now, when the old man had heard them calling to him in
the lonely winter nights, he had bowed his head in his hands and wept in an
almost physical passion of homesickness.
Toward evening the
clouds banked up in the western sky, and with the night a violent storm set in,
one of those drenching rains that always come too late in that country, after a
barren summer has waned into a fruitless autumn. For some reason he felt
indisposed to go to bed. He sat watching the lightning from the window and
listening to the swollen Solomon, that tore between its muddy banks with a
sullen roar, as though it resented this intrusion upon its accustomed calm and
indolence. Once he thought he saw a light flash from one of the bluffs across
the river, but on going to the door all was dark. At last he regretfully put
out his lamp and went to bed.
That night, a few hours
before, when the storm was at its worst, a horseman had come galloping along
the bank of the Solomon. He drew rein at the foot of a steep, naked bluff and
sat in his saddle looking about him. It was a sorry night for a man to be out.
The blackness of the sky seemed to bear down upon him, save when now and then
it was ripped from end to end by a jagged thrust of lightning, which rent it
like the veil of the temple. At each flash he could see the muddy water of the
swollen river whirling along wraiths of white foam over the little shivering
willows. Save for that one lonely light across the river, there was no sign of
man. He dismounted from his horse and, tying it to a sapling, he took a spade,
strapped to the saddle, and began to climb the bluff. The water from the
uplands was running down the hill wearing channels in the soft stone and made
the grass so slippery that he could scarcely stand. When he reached the top he
took a dark lantern from his pocket and lit it, sheltering it under the cape of
his mackintosh; then he set it behind a clump of bunch grass. Starting from a
lone oak, he carefully paced a distance and began to dig. His clothing was wet
through, and even his mackintosh was wet enough to impede his arms. He
impatiently threw off everything but his shirt and trousers and fell to work
again. His shirt was wet and his necktie hung like a rag under his collar. His
black hair hung wet over his white forehead, his brows were drawn together and
his teeth were set. His eyes were fixed on the ground, and he worked with the
desperation of a man who works to forget. He drove the spade in to the top at
every thrust and threw the soggy earth far down the hillside, blistering his
white hands with the rigor of his toil. The rain beat ceaselessly in his face
and dripped from his hair and mustache; but he never paused save when now and
then he heard some strange sound from the river. Then he started, shut off the
light from his dark lantern and waited until all was quiet.
When he had been
digging for some time, he knelt down and thrust his arm into the hole to feel
its depth. Close beside him he heard a shrill, whirring, metallic sound which a
man who hears it once remembers to his dying day. He felt a sharp pain in the
big vein of his right arm and sprang to his feet with an oath; and then the
rattlesnake, having been the avenger of many, slid quietly off through the wet
grass.
Next morning the sun
rose radiantly over the valley of the Solomon. The sky was blue and warm as the
skies of the South, the hard, straight line of the horizon was softened by a
little smokelike haze, and the yellow leaves of the cottonwoods, still wet from
the drenching rain, gleamed in the sunshine, and through the scant foliage the
white bark glittered like polished silver. All the land was washed fresh and
clean from the dust of the desert summer. It was a day of opal lights, a day
set in a heaven of gold and turquoise and bathed in sapphirine airs; one of
those rare and perfect days that happen only in desert countries, where Nature seems
sometimes to repent of her own pitilessness and by the glory of her skies seems
trying to compensate for the desolation of the lands that stretch beneath them.
But when the Colonel came out to view the ravages of the storm the exultant
beauty of the morning moved him little. He knew how false it was and how
fleeting. He knew how soon Nature forgets. Across the river he heard a horse
whinnying in the bushes. Surprised and curious, he went over to see what it
might mean. The horse stood, saddled and bridled, among the sumac bushes, and
at the back of the saddle carried a long waterproof roll. He seemed uneasy and
stood pawing the wet ground and chewing at the withered leaves. Looking about
the Colonel could see no rider and he went up the bluff to look for him. And
there he found him. About five paces from the oak tree was a newly dug hole,
with the spade still sticking upright in the earth. The grass around it was cut
and crushed as though it had been beaten by a strong man in his rage. Beside
the hole was the body of a man. His shirt was torn open to the waist and was
wet and spattered with mud; his left hand was wound in the long grass beside
him; his right, swollen and black, was thrown over his head; the eyes were wide
open, and the teeth were set hard upon the lower lip. The face was the
handsome, dissolute face of Apollo Gump.
The Colonel lifted him
up and laid him under the little tree. A glance at his arm told how he died.
There was a brandy flask beside him, and the wound had been enlarged with his
knife, but the snake had struck a vein and the poison had been too swift.
Taking up the spade, the Colonel set to work to finish what the dead man had
begun. At a depth of about four feet he found a wooden box, cased in tin. He
whistled softly to himself as he loosened the earth about it. So the Gumps had
not been so clever, after all; they had brought down more game than they could
bag, and at the last moment they had been compelled to bury part of their
spoil. For what else on earth or in heaven would Apollo Gump have risked his
rascally neck in the Solomon valley?
But no, there was no
money, only the picture of the handsome, theatrical looking woman he had seen
in Apollo's room, a few spangled stage dresses, a lot of woman's clothing,
dainty garments that looked like a trousseau and some tiny gowns made for a
little, little baby, that had never been worn. That was all. The Colonel drew a
long breath of astonishment, and stood looking at the picture. There, at the
back of the saddle, was the waterproof roll which was to have carried it away.
This then was Apollo Gump's weakness, and this was the supreme irony that life
had held in store for him, that when he had done evil without penalty and all
his sins had left him scathless, his one poor virtue should bring him to his
death! As the Colonel glanced at that poor distorted body, lying there in the
sunlight amid the glistening grasses, he felt for a moment a throb of that old
affection he had once known for him. Already the spiders had woven a rainbow web
over that set, white face, a gossamer film of protection against man's
vengeance; and it seemed as though Nature had already begun her magnificent and
complete work of pardon, as though the ground cried out for him, to take him
into her forgiving breast and make him again a part of the clean and fruitful
earth.
When he searched the
dead man's body he found a leather belt and pouch strapped about his waist next
his skin. In this were ten thousand dollars in bank notes and a ticket to San
Francisco. The Colonel quietly counted the money and put it into his own
pocket.
"There, sir, I've
waited a long time to square my account with you. You owe me six thousand
still, but they say a dead man's debts are cancelled and I'll take your horse
and call it square. If there is a recording angel that keeps the run of these
things, you can tell him you are square with me and take that much off your
poor soul; you'll have enough to answer for without that, God knows."
That afternoon the
Colonel dragged up the bluff a long rough box made from weather boards torn
from his store. He brought over his best suit of clothes from its odorous
camphor chest and with much difficulty succeeded in forcing it on to the
stiffened limbs of the dead man.
"Apollo, I liked
you mighty well. It cut me to the heart when you turned rascal,--and you were a
damned rascal. But I'll give you a decent burial, because you loved somebody
once. I always knew you were too good a fellow for your trade and that you'd
trip up in it somewhere. This would never have happened to those precious
brothers of yours. I guess I won't say any prayers over you. The Lord knows you
better than I do; there have been worse men who have lived and died Christians.
If I thought any words of mine could help you out, I'd say 'em free. But the
Lord has been forgiving sin from the beginning of the world, till it must have
kept him pretty busy before now. He knows his business by this time. But I hope
it will go a bit easy with you, Apollo, that I do."
He sunk the box in the hole
and made a pillow of the light spangled dresses and laid the dead man in upon
them. Over him he laid the picture of the handsome, smiling woman, who was
smiling still. And so he buried them.
Next day, having got
his money out of the place, the Colonel set fire to his old store and urged his
horse eastward, never once casting back a look at the last smoking ruin of El
Dorado.
In the spring the
sunflowers grew tall and fair over every street and house site; and they grew
just as fair over the mound beside the oak tree on the bluff. For if Nature
forgets, she also forgives. She at least holds no grudge, up in her high place,
where she watches the poles of the heavens. The tree itself has stopped growing
altogether. It has concluded that it is not worth the effort. The river creeps
lazily through the mud; it knows that the sea would be only a great, dirty,
salty pond if it should reach it. Year by year it buries itself deeper in the
black mud, and burrows among the rotting roots of the dead willows, wondering
why a river should ever have been put there at all.