Part 11 (1/2)

”Hem! Must have cost a heap o' money.”

”It did! Came from the best milliner in San Francisco.”

”Of course,” said Piney, with half a.s.sumed envy. ”When your popper runs the bank and just wallows in gold!”

”Never mind, dear,” replied Cissy cheerfully. ”So'll YOUR popper some day. I'm goin' to get mine to let YOUR popper into something--Ditch stocks and such. Yes! True, O King! Popper'll do anything for me,” she added a little loftily.

Loyal as Piney was to her friend, she was by no means convinced of this. She knew the difference between the two men, and had a vivid recollection of hearing her own father express his opinion of Cissy's respected parent as a ”Gold Shark” and ”Quartz Miner Crusher.” It did not, however, affect her friends.h.i.+p for Cissy. She only said, ”Let's come!” caught Cissy around the waist, pranced with her out into the veranda, and gasped, out of breath, ”Where are we goin' first?”

”Down Main Street,” said Cissy promptly.

”And let's stop at Markham's store. They've got some new things in from Sacramento,” added Piney.

”Country styles,” returned Cissy, with a supercilious air. ”No! Besides, Markham's head clerk is gettin' too presumptuous. Just guess! He asked me, while I was buyin' something, if I enjoyed the dance last Monday!”

”But you danced with him,” said the simple Piney, in astonishment.

”But not in his store among his customers,” said Cissy sapiently. ”No!

we're going down Main Street past Secamps'. Those Secamp girls are sure to be at their windows, looking out. This hat will just turn 'em green--greener than ever.”

”You're just horrid, Ciss!” said Piney, with admiration.

”And then,” continued Cissy, ”we'll just sail down past the new block to the parson's and make a call.”

”Oh, I see,” said Piney archly. ”It'll be just about the time when the new engineer of the mill works has a clean s.h.i.+rt on, and is smoking his cigyar before the office.”

Cissy tossed her hat disdainfully. ”Much anybody cares whether he's there or not! I haven't forgotten how he showed us over the mill the other day in a pair of overalls, just like a workman.”

”But they say he's awfully smart and well educated, and needn't work, and I'm sure it's very nice of him to dress just like the other men when he's with 'em,” urged Piney.

”Bah! That was just to show that he didn't care what we thought of him, he's that conceited! And it wasn't respectful, considering one of the directors was there, all dressed up. Don't tell me! You can see it in his eye, looking you over without blinking and then turning away as if he'd got enough of you. He makes me tired.”

Piney did not reply. The engineer had seemed to her to be a singularly attractive young man, yet she was equally impressed with Cissy's superior condition, which could find flaws in such perfection. Following her friend down the steps of the veranda, they pa.s.sed into the staring graveled walk of the new garden, only recently recovered from the wild wood, its accurate diamond and heart shaped beds of vivid green set in white quartz borders giving it the appearance of elaborately iced confectionery. A few steps further brought them to the road and the wooden ”sidewalk” to Main Street, which carried civic improvements to the hillside, and Mr. Trixit's very door. Turning down this thoroughfare, they stopped laughing, and otherwise a.s.sumed a conscious half artificial air; for it was the hour when Canada City lounged listlessly before its shops, its saloons, its offices and mills, or even held lazy meetings in the dust of the roadway, and the pa.s.sage down the princ.i.p.al street of its two prettiest girls was an event to be viewed as if it were a civic procession. Hats flew off as they pa.s.sed; place was freely given; impeding barrels and sacks were removed from the wooden pavement, and preoccupied indwellers hastily summoned to the front door to do homage to Cissy Trixit and Piney as they went by. Not but that Canada City, in the fierce and unregenerate days of its youth, had seen fairer and higher colored faces, more gayly bedizened, on its thoroughfares, but never anything so fresh and innocent. Men stood there all unconsciously, reverencing their absent mothers, sisters, and daughters, in their spontaneous homage to the pair, and seemed to feel the wholesome breath of their Eastern homes wafted from the freshly ironed skirts of these foolish virgins as they rustled by. I am afraid that neither Cissy nor Piney appreciated this feeling; few women did at that time; indeed, these young ladies a.s.sumed a slight air of hauteur.

”Really, they do stare so,” said Cissy, with eyes dilating with pleasurable emotion; ”we'll have to take the back street next time!”

Piney, proud in the glory reflected from Cissy, and in her own, answered, ”We will--sure!”

There was only one interruption to this triumphal progress, and that was so slight as to be noticed by only one of the two girls. As they pa.s.sed the new works at the mill, the new engineer, as Piney had foreseen, was leaning against the doorpost, smoking a pipe. He took his hat from his head and his pipe from his month as they approached, and greeted them with an easy ”Good-afternoon,” yet with a glance that was quietly observant and tolerantly critical.

”There!” said Cissy, when they had pa.s.sed, ”didn't I tell you? Did you ever see such conceit in your born days? I hope you did not look at him.”

Piney, conscious of having done so, and of having blushed under his scrutiny, nevertheless stoutly a.s.serted that she had merely looked at him ”to see who it was.” But Cissy was placated by pa.s.sing the Secamps'

cottage, from whose window the three strapping daughters of John Secamp, lately an emigrant from Missouri, were, as Cissy had surmised, lightening the household duties by gazing at the--to them--unwonted wonders of the street. Whether their complexions, still bearing traces of the alkali dust and inefficient nourishment of the plains, took a more yellow tone from the spectacle of Cissy's hat, I cannot say. Cissy thought they did; perhaps Piney was nearer the truth when she suggested that they were only ”looking” to enable them to make a home-made copy of the hat next week.

Their progress forward and through the outskirts of the town was of the same triumphal character. Teamsters withheld their oaths and their uplifted whips as the two girls pa.s.sed by; weary miners, toiling in ditches, looked up with a pleasure that was half reminiscent of their past; younger skylarkers stopped in their horse-play with half smiling, half apologetic faces; more ambitious riders on the highway urged their horses to greater speed under the girls' inspiring eyes, and ”Vaquero Billy,” charging them, full tilt, brought up his mustang on its haunches and rigid forelegs, with a sweeping bow of his sombrero, within a foot of their artfully simulated terror! In this way they at last reached the clearing in the forest, the church with its ostentatious spire, and the Reverend Mr. Windibrook's dwelling, otherwise humorously known as ”The Pastorage,” where Cissy intended to call.

The Reverend Mr. Windibrook had been selected by his ecclesiastical superiors to minister to the spiritual wants of Canada City as being what was called a ”hearty” man. Certainly, if considerable lung capacity, absence of reserve, and power of handshaking and back slapping were necessary to the redemption of Canada City, Mr. Windibrook's ministration would have been successful. But, singularly enough, the rude miner was apt to resent this familiarity, and it is recorded that Isaac Wood, otherwise known as ”Grizzly Woods,” once responded to a cheerful back slap from the reverend gentleman by an ostentatiously friendly hug which nearly dislocated the parson's ribs. Perhaps Mr.

Windibrook was more popular on account of his admiring enthusiasm of the prosperous money-getting members of his flock and a singular sympathy with their methods, and Mr. Trixit's daring speculations were an especially delightful theme to him.