Susy, A Story of the Plains by Bret Harte (best ereader for manga .txt) đ
- Author: Bret Harte
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âButââbegan Clarence.
âHush!â said Susy, with a stamp of her little foot.
Clarence, who had only wished to point out that the whole lower end of the garden wall was in ruins and the grille really was no prevention, âhushed.â
âAnd listen! Donât pay me much attention to-day, but talk to HER,â indicating the still discreet and distant Mary, âbefore father and mother. Not a word to her of this confidence, Clarence. To-morrow ride out alone on your beautiful horse, and come back by way of the woods, beyond our turning, at four oâclock. Thereâs a trail to the right of the big madrono tree. Take that. Be careful and keep a good lookout, for she mustnât see you.â
âWho mustnât see me?â said the puzzled Clarence.
âWhy, Mary, of course, you silly boy!â returned the girl impatiently. âSheâll be looking for ME. Go now, Clarence! Stop! Look at that lovely big maidenâs-blush up there,â pointing to a pink-suffused specimen of rose grandiflora hanging on the wall. âGet it, Clarence,âthat one,âIâll show you where,âthere!â They had already plunged into the leafy bramble, and, standing on tiptoe, with her hand on his shoulder and head upturned, Susyâs cheek had innocently approached Clarenceâs own. At this moment Clarence, possibly through some confusion of color, fragrance, or softness of contact, seemed to have availed himself of the opportunity, in a way which caused Susy to instantly rejoin Mary Rogers with affected dignity, leaving him to follow a few moments later with the captured flower.
Without trying to understand the reason of to-morrowâs rendezvous, and perhaps not altogether convinced of the reality of Susyâs troubles, he, however, did not find that difficulty in carrying out her other commands which he had expected. Mrs. Peyton was still gracious, and, with feminine tact, induced him to talk of himself, until she was presently in possession of his whole history, barring the episode of his meeting with Susy, since he had parted with them. He felt a strange satisfaction in familiarly pouring out his confidences to this superior woman, whom he had always held in awe. There was a new delight in her womanly interest in his trials and adventures, and a subtle pleasure even in her half-motherly criticism and admonition of some passages. I am afraid he forgot Susy, who listened with the complacency of an exhibitor; Mary, whose black eyes dilated alternately with sympathy for the performer and deprecation of Mrs. Peytonâs critical glances; and Peyton, who, however, seemed lost in thought, and preoccupied. Clarence was happy. The softly shaded lights in the broad, spacious, comfortably furnished drawing-room shone on the group before him. It was a picture of refined domesticity which the homeless Clarence had never known except as a vague, half-painful, boyish remembrance; it was a realization of welcome that far exceeded his wildest boyish vision of the preceding night. With that recollection came another,âa more uneasy one. He remembered how that vision had been interrupted by the strange voices in the road, and their vague but ominous import to his host. A feeling of self-reproach came over him. The threats had impressed him as only mere braggadocio,âhe knew the characteristic exaggeration of the race,âbut perhaps he ought to privately tell Peyton of the incident at once.
The opportunity came later, when the ladies had retired, and Peyton, wrapped in a poncho in a rocking-chair, on the now chilly veranda, looked up from his reverie and a cigar. Clarence casually introduced the incident, as if only for the sake of describing the supernatural effect of the hidden voices, but he was concerned to see that Peyton was considerably disturbed by their more material import. After questioning him as to the appearance of the two men, his host said: âI donât mind telling you, Clarence, that as far as that fellowâs intentions go he is quite sincere, although his threats are only borrowed thunder. He is a man whom I have just dismissed for carelessness and insolence,âtwo things that run in double harness in this country,âbut I should be more afraid to find him at my back on a dark night, alone on the plains; than to confront him in daylight, in the witness box, against me. He was only repeating a silly rumor that the title to this rancho and the nine square leagues beyond would be attacked by some speculators.â
âBut I thought your title was confirmed two years ago,â said Clarence.
âThe GRANT was confirmed,â returned Peyton, âwhich means that the conveyance of the Mexican government of these lands to the ancestor of Victor Robles was held to be legally proven by the United States Land Commission, and a patent issued to all those who held under it. I and my neighbors hold under it by purchase from Victor Robles, subject to the confirmation of the Land Commission. But that confirmation was only of Victorâs GREAT-GRANDFATHERâS TITLE, and it is now alleged that as Victorâs father died without making a will, Victor has claimed and disposed of property which he ought to have divided with his SISTERS. At least, some speculating rascals in San Francisco have set up what they call âthe Sistersâ title,â and are selling it to actual settlers on the unoccupied lands beyond. As, by the law, it would hold possession against the mere ordinary squatters, whose only right is based, as you know, on the presumption that there is NO TITLE CLAIMED, it gives the possessor immunity to enjoy the use of the property until the case is decided, and even should the original title hold good against his, the successful litigant would probably be willing to pay for improvements and possession to save the expensive and tedious process of ejectment.â
âBut this does not affect YOU, who have already possession?â said Clarence quickly.
âNo, not as far as THIS HOUSE and the lands I actually OCCUPY AND CULTIVATE are concerned; and they know that I am safe to fight to the last, and carry the case to the Supreme Court in that case, until the swindle is exposed, or they drop it; but I may have to pay them something to keep the squatters off my UNOCCUPIED land.â
âBut you surely wouldnât recognize those rascals in any way?â said the astonished Clarence.
âAs against other rascals? Why not?â returned Peyton grimly. âI only pay for the possession which their sham title gives me to my own land. If by accident that title obtains, I am still on the safe side.â After a pause he said, more gravely, âWhat you overheard, Clarence, shows me that the plan is more forward than I had imagined, and that I may have to fight traitors here.â
âI hope, sir,â said Clarence, with a quick glow in his earnest face, âthat youâll let me help you. You thought I did once, you remember,âwith the Indians.â
There was so much of the old Clarence in his boyish appeal and eager, questioning face that Peyton, who had been talking to him as a younger but equal man of affairs, was startled into a smile, âYou did, Clarence, though the Indians butchered your friends, after all. I donât know, though, but that your experiences with those Spaniardsâyou must have known a lot of them when you were with Don Juan Robinson and at the collegeâmight be of service in getting at evidence, or smashing their witnesses if it comes to a fight. But just now, MONEY is everything. They must be bought OFF THE LAND if I have to mortgage it for the purpose. That strikes you as a rather heroic remedy, Clarence, eh?â he continued, in his old, half-bantering attitude towards Clarenceâs inexperienced youth, âdonât it?â
But Clarence was not thinking of that. Another more audacious but equally youthful and enthusiastic idea had taken possession of his mind, and he lay awake half that night revolving it. It was true that it was somewhat impractically mixed with his visions of Mrs. Peyton and Susy, and even included his previous scheme of relief for the improvident and incorrigible Hooker. But it gave a wonderful sincerity and happiness to his slumbers that night, which the wiser and elder Peyton might have envied, and I wot not was in the long run as correct and sagacious as Peytonâs sleepless cogitations. And in the early morning Mr. Clarence Brant, the young capitalist, sat down to his traveling-desk and wrote two clear-headed, logical, and practical business letters,âone to his banker, and the other to his former guardian, Don Juan Robinson, as his first step in a resolve that was, nevertheless, perhaps as wildly quixotic and enthusiastic as any dream his boyish and unselfish heart had ever indulged.
At breakfast, in the charmed freedom of the domestic circle, Clarence forgot Susyâs capricious commands of yesterday, and began to address himself to her in his old earnest fashion, until he was warned by a significant knitting of the young ladyâs brows and monosyllabic responses. But in his youthful loyalty to Mrs. Peyton, he was more pained to notice Susyâs occasional unconscious indifference to her adopted motherâs affectionate expression, and a more conscious disregard of her wishes. So uneasy did he become, in his sensitive concern for Mrs. Peytonâs half-concealed mortification, that he gladly accepted Peytonâs offer to go with him to visit the farm and corral. As the afternoon approached, with another twinge of self-reproach, he was obliged to invent some excuse to decline certain hospitable plans of Mrs. Peytonâs for his entertainment, and at half past three stole somewhat guiltily, with his horse, from the stables. But he had to pass before the outer wall of the garden and grille, through which he had seen Mary the day before. Raising his eyes mechanically, he was startled to see Mrs. Peyton standing behind the grating, with her abstracted gaze fixed upon the wind-tossed, level grain beyond her. She smiled as she saw him, but there were traces of tears in her proud, handsome eyes.
âYou are going to ride?â she said pleasantly.
âY-e-es,â stammered the shamefaced Clarence.
She glanced at him wistfully.
âYou are right. The girls have gone away by themselves. Mr. Peyton has ridden over to Santa Inez on this dreadful land business, and I suppose youâd have found him a dull riding companion. It is rather stupid here. I quite envy you, Mr. Brant, your horse and your freedom.â
âBut, Mrs. Peyton,â broke in Clarence, impulsively, âyou have a horseâI saw it, a lovely ladyâs horseâeating its head off in the stable. Wonât you let me run back and order it; and wonât you, please, come out with me for a good, long gallop?â
He meant what he said. He had spoken quickly, impulsively, but with the perfect understanding in his own mind that his proposition meant the complete abandonment of his rendezvous with Susy. Mrs. Peyton was astounded and slightly stirred with his earnestness, albeit unaware of all it implied.
âItâs a great temptation, Mr. Brant,â she said, with a playful smile, which dazzled Clarence with its first faint suggestion of a refined womanâs coquetry; âbut Iâm afraid that Mr. Peyton would think me going mad in my old age. No. Go on and enjoy your gallop, and if you should see those giddy girls anywhere, send them home early for chocolate, before the cold wind gets up.â
She turned, waved her slim white hand playfully in acknowledgment of Clarenceâs bared head, and moved away.
For the first few moments the young man tried to find relief in furious riding, and in bullying his spirited horse. Then he pulled quickly up. What was he doing? What was he going to do? What foolish, vapid deceit was this that he was going to practice upon that noble, queenly, confiding, generous woman? (He had already forgotten that she had always distrusted him.) What a fool he was not to tell her half-jokingly that
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