Part 15 (2/2)

”I am going to the Episcopal Church. I had hoped to meet my father there.”

”You expect--to meet your dad--thar?” gasps Kruger, as if the girl's information took away his breath.

”Yes, certainly! My father has been an Episcopalian all his life. I naturally expect to meet him at the Episcopal Church.”

”Oh--your--father--has--been--an Episcopal--all his life,” echoes Lot, apparently a little dazed. Then he goes on genially: ”Wa-all, as you are certain of not seeing your dad among the Episcopals, perhaps you'd better go up this morning to our great Tabernacle, where President Young will make an address that'll learn you somethin'.” He apparently now has no wish to conceal that he is a Latter-Day Saint.

”Thank you,” replies the girl, with a little mocking smile. ”I am an Episcopalian as well as my father,” and she rejoins the wondering Ollie, who has by this time crossed the street; as she moves away with her escort, she thinks she hears a low chuckle from the genial Kruger.

Horror and rage would enter her, however, did she catch the remark of one of his companions: ”Well, bishop, what do you think Mrs. Kruger Number Six would say to that, if she saw it? A new favorite in the household, eh?”

”Oh, no tellin',” rejoins Lot, his eyes following Miss Travenion's light form, as do likewise those of his companions, for the girl, robed as she is in the creation of some New York milliner, makes a picture of maiden loveliness seldom seen in the streets of Salt Lake City in 1871; Mormon women, as a rule, not being over fair to look upon, and the few Gentile ladies in that town being mostly married to gentlemen whose business has brought them to Utah.

”I am simply astonished, Erma,” remarks Mr. Livingston, as they get out of ear-shot, ”that knowing, as you know now, that this man is a Mormon, a polygamist, you even notice him, much less address him on the public streets.”

”I merely asked him where my father was,” replies the girl rather haughtily. ”I would ask any man that--to get one minute nearer my dear papa.”

Then she walks silently by his side; Oliver sporadically attempting to keep up the conversation, until they arrive at the pretty little Episcopal church on First South Street, where they get such an edifying sermon from Bishop Tuttle, who is a.s.sisted by the Rev. Mr. Kirby in the service, that Mr. Livingston is quite delighted.

”Who would have thought it! They even have altar-boys out here. I shall leave my card on the Bishop at once,” he remarks, as the congregation is dismissed.

”Why not see him immediately?” suggests Miss Travenion; which they do, and she has an opportunity of asking the Right Reverend Mr. Tuttle if her father, Mr. Ralph Travenion, is not one of his communicants, and is much surprised and disappointed to learn that the Bishop has never heard of the gentleman she names.

Returning from church, after dinner Ferdie, who is anxious, as he expresses it, to see Mormonism in its glory, induces them to go to afternoon services in the Tabernacle. Under its vast dome, many thousands of the elect of Utah listen to a discourse from one high up in the Mormon priesthood, who tells them that women who bear not children are accursed, and goes so into the details of the ”Breeding of the Righteous,” that Mrs. Livingston whispers to Louise and Erma to close their ears, and goes out of the place to the pealing of its great organ and the singing of its vast choir, feeling a loathing horror of these Saints of Latter Days.

As for Ferdie, he remarks, ”Isn't this a Tower of Babel crowd?” for it is Conference time, and Northern Utah has sent its Swedes and Scandinavians, and Southern Utah its Huns and Bohemians, and there are Welsh from Spanish Fork, and Cornish men from Springville, and all are jabbering in their native tongues, English being less heard than the others; and the men have, generally, red faces, scaly from weather exposure, and the women have often a hopeless look in their eyes, and the children are mostly tow-headed in this Mormon Conference crowd of 1871.

After a time the Livingstons get to their carriage and drive up to Camp Douglas, to the dress parade which takes place every Sunday, having been invited there by Captain Ellison, of the Thirteenth Infantry, who has been introduced to Louise the evening before, and has been very much caught by her piquant graces. Then, the parade being dismissed, this gentleman brings up several of his brother officers to the Livingstons'

carriage, and introduces Lamar, a dandy, das.h.i.+ng lieutenant fresh from West Point, and Johnson, of the Fifth Cavalry, and several other of his brother officers, and these, looking for the first time upon the New York beauties as they sit in their carriage, offer them a hundred pleasant excursions and courtesies; all insisting that the whole party must come to Mr. Bussey's ball, as it will be a great affair in Salt Lake society, both Mormon and Gentile; for the banker aims for popularity, and has invited every one in the city who has a bank account or has any chance of having one.

Then they drive away, and looking at the stars and stripes which float from the flag-staff of this camp bristling with cannon and Gatling guns--for Douglas, in those days, was held rather in the manner of a beleaguered fortress than in the easy method of a local garrison--the girl cannot help contrasting the columns of blue infantry she has just seen, and the vast and motley a.s.semblage of men in the Tabernacle, who, at the word of their president, would turn upon and a.s.sault this camp and make war upon these United States of America. For the danger of Mormonism has been and will be, not in the feeling of animosity that its ma.s.ses hold to this government, for they have but little, but in their blind, unthinking allegiance to a power they hold superior to it--that of their priesthood and the officers of their Church.

Then they come down the hill into the city again for supper at the Townsend House, which takes place in the evening, dinner in that primitive country being the midday meal. Finis.h.i.+ng this, they are called upon by Mrs. Bussey, who insists upon their not omitting her ball.

During her visit she introduces to the Livingstons a number of Gentile ladies in the hotel and a few of the gentlemen engaged in speculation in the neighboring mines, who are quartered at the house, and they pa.s.s a quiet evening in the parlor, in conversation with their new-made acquaintances, whom Miss Travenion charms with a song or two.

These are mostly plaintive melodies, for thoughts of her father will run in the girl's brain and somehow make her sad. Being full of the subject now, she questions the mining operators that she meets if they know Ralph Travenion, and receives the usual answer that they have never heard of him; and her anxiety for tidings of him increases and would now be desperate, did not a few words she catches from one mining operator to another set her thinking of the man who has gone to Tintic.

”I am afraid Harry Lawrence has a hard row to hoe,” remarks Jackson of the Bully Boy to Thomas of the Neptune. ”He has got Tranyon and the Mormons against him. They will stop his sale to the English company if they do not get a goodly portion of his Mineral Hill.”

”He has got one chance, however,” says the other.

”Indeed! What is that?”

”Why, don't you know,” replies Thomas of the Neptune, ”that the prophet up there,” he nods his head in the direction of Brigham Young's private residence, ”and some of the other leaders of the Church are beginning to be afraid of Tranyon?”

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