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第22章

a first family of tasajara-第22章

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yet he neither knew nor suspected until long after that his foolish

wife had that night half betrayed his secret to the stranger!



The next day he presented a note of introduction from Mr。 Fletcher

to the business manager of the 〃Clarion;〃 and the following morning

was duly installed in office。  He did not see his benefactor again;

that single visit was left in the mystery and isolation of an

angelic episode。  It later appeared that other and larger interests

in the San Jose valley claimed his patron's residence and attendance;

only the capital and general purpose of the paperto develop into a

party organ in the interest of his possible senatorial aspirations

in due seasonwas furnished by him。  Grateful as John Milton felt

towards him; he was relieved; it seemed probable that Mr。 Fletcher

HAD selected him on his individual merits; and not as the son of a

millionaire。



He threw himself into his work with his old hopeful enthusiasm; and

perhaps an originality of method that was part of his singular

independence。  Without the student's training or restraint;for

his two years' schooling at Tasajara during his parents' prosperity

came too late to act as a discipline;he was unfettered by any

rules; and guided only by an unerring instinctive taste that became

near being genius。  He was a brilliant and original; if not always

a profound and accurate; reporter。  By degrees he became an

accustomed interest to the readers of the 〃Clarion;〃 then an

influence。  Actors themselves in many a fierce drama; living lives

of devotion; emotion; and picturesque incident; they had satisfied

themselves with only the briefest and most practical daily record

of their adventure; and even at first were dazed and startled to

find that many of them had been heroes and some poets。  The

stealthy boyish reader of romantic chronicle at Sidon had learned

by heart the chivalrous story of the emigration。  The second column

of the 〃Clarion〃 became famous even while the figure of its

youthful writer; unknown and unrecognized; was still nightly

climbing the sands of Russian Hill; and even looking down as before

on the lights of the growing city; without a thought that he had

added to that glittering constellation。



Cheerful and contented with the exercise of work; he would have

been happy but for the gradual haunting of another dread which

presently began to drag him at earlier hours up the steep path to

his little home; to halt him before the door with the quickened

breath of an anxiety he would scarcely confess to himself; and

sometimes hold him aimlessly a whole day beneath his roof。  For the

pretty but delicate Mrs。 Harcourt; like others of her class; had

added a weak and ineffective maternity to their other conjugal

trials; and one early dawn a baby was born that lingered with them

scarcely longer than the morning mist and exhaled with the rising

sun。  The young wife regained her strength slowly;so slowly that

the youthful husband brought his work at times to the house to keep

her company。  And a singular change had come over her。  She no

longer talked of the past; nor of his family。  As if the little

life that had passed with that morning mist had represented some

ascending expiatory sacrifice; it seemed to have brought them into

closer communion。



Yet her weak condition made him conceal another trouble that had

come upon him。  It was in the third month of his employment on the

〃Clarion〃 that one afternoon; while correcting some proofs on his

chief's desk; he came upon the following editorial paragraph:



〃The played…out cant of 'pioneer genius' and 'pioneer discovery'

appears to have reached its climax in the attempt of some of our

contemporaries to apply it to Dan Harcourt's new Tasajara Job

before the legislature。  It is perfectly well known in Harcourt's

own district that; far from being a pioneer and settler HIMSELF he

simply succeeded after a fashion to the genuine work of one Elijah

Curtis; an actual pioneer and discoverer; years before; while

Harcourt; we believe; was keeping a frontier doggery in Sidon; and

dispensing 'tanglefoot' and salt junk to the hayfooted Pike

Countians of his precinct。  This would make him as much of the

'pioneer discoverer' as the rattlesnake who first takes up board

and lodgings and then possession in a prairie dog's burrow。  And if

the traveler's tale is true that the rattlesnake sometimes makes a

meal of his landlord; the story told at Sidon may be equally

credible that the original pioneer mysteriously disappeared about

the time that Dan Harcourt came into the property。  From which it

would seem that Harcourt is not in a position for his friends to

invite very deep scrutiny into his 'pioneer' achievements。〃



Stupefaction; a vague terror; and rising anger; rapidly succeeded

each other in the young man's mind as he stood mechanically holding

the paper in his hand。  It was the writing of his chief editor;

whose easy brutality he had sometimes even boyishly admired。

Without stopping to consider their relative positions he sought him

indignantly and laid the proof before him。  The editor laughed。

〃But what's that to YOU?  YOU'RE not on terms with the old man。〃



〃But he is my father!〃 said John Milton hotly。



〃Look here;〃 said the editor good…naturedly; 〃I'd like to oblige

you; but it isn't BUSINESS; you know;and this IS; you

understand;PROPRIETOR'S BUSINESS too!  Of course I see it might

stand in the way of your making up to the old man afterwards and

coming in for a million。  Well! you can tell him it's ME。  Say I

WOULD put it in。  Say I'm nastyand I AM!〃



〃Then it must go in?〃 said John Milton with a white face。



〃You bet。〃



〃Then I must go out!〃  And writing out his resignation; he laid it

before his chief and left。



But he could not bear to tell this to his wife when he climbed the

hill that night; and he invented some excuse for bringing his work

home。  The invalid never noticed any change in his usual buoyancy;

and indeed I fear; when he was fairly installed with his writing

materials at the foot of her bed; he had quite forgotten the

episode。  He was recalled to it by a faint sigh。



〃What is it; dear?〃 he said looking up。



〃I like to see you writing; Milty。  You always look so happy。〃



〃Always so happy; dear?〃



〃Yes。  You are happy; are you not?〃



〃Always。〃  He got up and kissed her。  Nevertheless; when he sat

down to his work again; his face was turned a little more to the

window。



Another serious incidentto be also kept from the invalidshortly

followed。  The article in the 〃Clarion〃 had borne its fruit。  The

third day after his resignation a rival paper sharply retorted。

〃The cowardly insinuations against the record of a justly honored

capitalist;〃 said the 〃Pioneer;〃 〃although quite in keeping with

the brazen 'Clarion;' might attract the attentions of the slandered

party; if it were not known to his friends as well as himself that

it may be traced almost directly to a cast…off member of his own

family; who; it seems; is reduced to haunting the back doors of

certain blatant journals to dispose of his cheap wares。  The

slanderer is secure from public exposure in the superior decency of

his relations; who refrain from airing their family linen upon

editorial lines。〃



This was the journal to which John Milton had hopefully turned for

work。  When he read it there seemed but one thing for him to do

and he did it。  Gentle and optimistic as was his nature; he had

been brought up in a community where sincere directness of personal

offense was followed by equally sincere directness of personal

redress; andhe challenged the editor。  The bearer of his cartel

was one Jack Hamlin; I grieve to say a gambler by profession; but

between whom and John Milton had sprung up an odd friendship of

which the best that can be said is that it was to each equally and

unselfishly unprofitable。  The challenge was accepted; t

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