<h2 class='c007'>III</h2></div>
<div class='c005'>
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<p class='drop-capi0_5'>
Twenty-three years before
the opening of this
desultory tale its heroine
was born on the island of
Santa Catalina, a fragment
of Southern California.
Her father had begun life as a professor of
classics in a worthy Eastern college, but, his
health breaking down, he betook himself and
his small patrimony to the State which
electrifies the nerves in its northern half and
blunts them in its southern. Jonathan Shore
wrote to his cousin, Lyman T. Moulton:</p>
<p class='c008'>“I haven’t a nerve left with a point on it; have
recovered some measure of health and lost what little
ambition I ever possessed. I am going to open
an inn for sportsmen on the island of Santa Catalina,
so that I shall be reasonably sure of the society
of gentlemen and make enough money to replenish
my library now and then—my books are on the
way. Here I remain for the rest of my natural life.”</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>But he crossed over to Los Angeles occasionally.
At a soirée he met the daughter—and
only child—of one of the largest landholders
in Southern California, and danced
with no one else that night. She married
the scholarly innkeeper with the blessing
of her father, who was anxious to pass his
declining years in peace with a young wife.
The bride, for coincident if not similar reasons,
was glad to move to Catalina. She
was the belle of her time, this Madelina
Joyce, and her dark beauty came down to
her from Indian ancestors. Her New England
great-grandfather had come to California
long before the discovery of gold,
bought, for a fraction, two hundred thousand
acres from the Mexican government, and
married, despite the protests of his Spanish
friends, an Indian girl of great beauty, both
of face and character.</p>
<p class='c000'>The Pueblo bride had lived but two years
to receive the snubs of the haughty ladies
of Santa Barbara, her ardent young husband
had shot himself over her grave, and the
boy was brought up by the padres of the
mission. Fortunately, he came to man’s
<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>estate shortly before the United States occupation,
and managed to save a portion of
his patrimony from the most rapacious set
of scoundrels that ever followed in the wake
of a victorious army. This in turn descended
to his son, who, in spite of Southern indolence
and a hospitality as famous as his
cellar, his liberal appreciation of all the good
things of life, and a half-dozen lawsuits, still
retained fifty thousand of the ancestral
acres, and had given his word to his daughter
that they should go to her unencumbered.
This promise he kept, and when Catalina
was ten years old he died, at good-will with
all the world. His widow moved to San
Francisco with her freedom and her liberal
portion, and Mrs. Shore announced that she
must give the ranch her personal attention.
The ten years had been happy, for the husband
and wife loved each other and were
equally devoted to their beautiful, unsmiling
baby. But there were deep wells of laughter
in Mrs. Shore, and much energy. She wept
for her father, but welcomed the change in
her life, not only because she had reached
the age when love of change is most insistent,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>but because she had begun to dread the
hour of confession that life on an island,
even with the man of one’s choice, was insufficient.</p>
<p class='c000'>Mr. Shore himself was not averse to
change so long as it did not take him out of
California, although he refused to sell the
little property on the island where he had
spent so many happy years.</p>
<p class='c000'>From the hour Mrs. Shore settled down
in the splendid old adobe ranch-house she
watched no more days lag through her
fingers. Attended by Catalina she rode
over some portion of the estate every day,
and if a horse had strayed or a cow had
calved she knew it before her indolent
vaqueros. She personally attended, each
year, to the sheep-shearing and the cattle-branding,
the crops and the stock sales.
Once a year she gave a great barbecue, to
which all within a radius of a hundred miles
were invited, and once a week she indulged
herself in the gossip, the shops, and the
dances of Santa Barbara.</p>
<p class='c000'>In the vast solitude of the ranch Catalina
grew up, carefully educated by her father,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>petted and indulged by her mother, hiding
from the society that sought Mrs. Shore,
but friendly with the large army of Mexican
and Indian retainers. When she was persuaded
by her mother to attend a party in
Santa Barbara she rooted herself in a corner
and glowered in her misery, snubbing every
adventurous youth that approached her.
She adored books, her out-door life, her
parents, and asked for nothing further
afield.</p>
<p class='c000'>When she was eighteen her father died.
She rode to the extreme confines of the
ranch and mourned him, returning to her
life at home with the stolidity of her Indian
ancestors. Mrs. Shore grieved also, but by
this time she was too busy a woman to consort
with the past. Moreover, she was now
at liberty to take Catalina to San Francisco
and give her the proper tutors in languages
and music. Incidentally, she made many
new friends and enjoyed with all her vivid
nature the life of a city which she had visited
but twice before. She returned in the following
winter and extended her fame as a
hostess. Catalina found San Francisco society
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>but little more interesting than that of
the South, and enjoyed the reputation of
being as rude as she was beautiful. Here,
however, her Indian ancestress had her belated
revenge. Her brief and tragic story
cast a radiant halo about the indifferent
Catalina, whose strain of aboriginal blood
was extolled as the first cause in a piquant
and original beauty; all her quaint eccentricities—which
were merely the expression
of a proud and reticent nature anxious to be
let alone—were traced to the same artless
source, and when one day in the park she
sprang from her horse and shook the editor
of a personal weekly until his teeth rattled
in his head, her unique reputation was
secure.</p>
<p class='c000'>The greater part of the year was spent on
the ranch. Mrs. Shore loved the world, but
she was a woman of business above all things,
and determined that the ranch should be a
splendid inheritance for her child. Her
time was closer than she knew. In all the
vigor of her middle years, with the dark
radiance of her beauty little dimmed, and
an almost pagan love of mere existence,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>she was done to death by a bucking mustang,
unseated for the first time since she
had mounted a horse, and kicked beyond
recognition.</p>
<p class='c000'>Catalina resolutely put the horror of those
days behind her, and for several months
was as energetic a woman of business as
her mother had been. She was mistress of
a great tract of land, of herself, her time, her
future. When her stoical grief for her
mother subsided she found life interesting
and stimulating. She rode about the ranch
in the morning, or conferred with her
lawyer, who drove out once a week; the
afternoons she spent in the great court of
the old house, with its stone fountain built
by the ancestors who had learned their
craft from the mission fathers, its palms and
banana-trees, its old hollyhocks and roses.
Here she read or dreamed vaguely of the
future. What she wanted of life beyond
this dreaming Southern land, where only
an earthquake broke the monotony, was
as vague of outline as her mountains under
their blue mists, but its secrets were a constant
and delightful well of perplexity.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>For two years she was contented, and at
times, when galloping down to the sea in the
early dawn, the old moon, bony and yellow,
sinking to its grave in the darkest canyon of
the mountain, and the red sun leaping from
the sea, she was supremely happy.</p>
<p class='c000'>Then, in a night, discontent settled upon
her. She wanted change, variety; she wanted
to see the world—Europe above all
things; and when her Eastern relatives,
with whom she corresponded, in obedience
to a last request of her father, again pressed
her to visit them, and mentioned that they
were contemplating a trip abroad, she
started on three hours’ notice, leaving the
ranch in charge of a trusted overseer and the
executors of her mother’s will.</p>
<p class='c000'>She found her relatives living in a suburb
of New York, their social position very
different from that her mother had given
her in California. Nothing saved them
from the narrow routine of the suburban
middle class but the intellectual proclivities
of Mr. Moulton, who was reader for a publishing
house and the literary adviser of the
pseudo-intellectual. Through the constant
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>association of his name with moral and non-sensational
fiction, his well-balanced attitude
of piety tinctured by humor, the pleasant
style with which he indited irreproachable
and elevated platitudes, his stern and
invariable denunciation of the unorthodox
in religion, in ideas, and in style, and his
genially didactic habit of telling his readers
what they wished to hear, he had achieved
the rank of a great critic. As he really was
an estimable man and virtuous husband, of
agreeable manners, sufficiently hospitable,
and extremely careful in choosing his friends,
his position in the literary world was quite
enviable. The great and the safe took tea
on his lawn, and if the great and unsafe
laughed at both the tea and the critic that
was the final seal of their unregeneracy.</p>
<p class='c000'>When Catalina arrived, after lingering for
a fortnight in Boston with a friend she had
made on the train, she liked him at once,
unjustly despised Mrs. Moulton, who was
the best of wives and copied her husband’s
manuscripts, hated Jane, and recognized in
Lydia a human being in whom one could
find a reasonable amount of companionship,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>in spite of the magnetism of the mirror—or
even the polished surface of a panel—for
her complacent eyes. Lydia was innocently
vain, and, being the beauty of the family,
believed herself to be very beautiful indeed.
She always made a smart appearance, and
was frankly desirous of admiration. Like
many family beauties, she had a strong will
and was reasonably clever. When the first
opportunity to go to Europe arrived she
had reached what she called a critical point
in her life. She confided to Catalina that she
was becoming morbidly tired of mere existence
and hated the sight of every literary
man she knew, particularly the young ones.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Of course, they are more or less the respectable
hangers-on that give us the benefit
of their society,” she said, gloomily. “Those
that scurry about writing little stories for
the magazines and weekly papers—it seems
to me a real man might find something better
to do. We know all the big ones, but they
are too busy to come out here often, and
father sees them at the Century and Authors’
clubs, anyhow. We hardly know a
man who isn’t a publisher, an editor, or a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>writer of something or other—perhaps an
occasional artist. For my part, I’d give
my immortal soul to be one of those lucky
girls that go to Mrs. Astor’s parties; that’s
my idea of life. If a millionaire would only
fall in love with me—or any old romance,
for that matter!”</p>
<p class='c000'>“Have you never been in love?” asked
Catalina, afraid of the sound of her own
voice but deeply interested.</p>
<p class='c000'>“Not the least little bit, more is the pity.
I wouldn’t mind even being heart-broken
for a while.”</p>
<p class='c000'>It was this frankness that endeared her
to Catalina. “Jane is third rate, and tries
to conceal the fact from herself and others
by an affectation of such of the literary
galaxy as make the least appeal to the popular
taste, and cousin Lyman is no critic,”
she informed herself three days after her
arrival. “Cousin Miranda is just one of
those American women who are invalids
for no reason but because they want to be,
and I suppose even Lydia would get on my
nerves in time. Thank Heaven, when they
do I can leave at a moment’s notice.”</p>
<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>After four months of the friction of travel,
Catalina had half hoped her relatives would
reject her startling proposal and abandon
her to a future full of dangers and freedom.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>
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