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head。

〃There's more yet; gentlemen。  I tell you that that girl; Mornie
Nixon; has; to my knowledge; been treated like a lady; has been
cared for as she never was cared for in her father's house; and;
while that father has been proclaiming her shame in every bar…room
at the Ferry; has had the sympathy and care; night and day; of two
of the most accomplished ladies of the Ferry;Mrs。 Sol Saunders;
gentlemen; and Miss Euphemia。〃

There was a shout of approbation from the crowd。  Nixon would have
slipped away; but the doctor stopped him。

〃Not yet!  I've one thing more to say。  I've to tell you; gentlemen;
on my professional word of honor; that; besides being an old
hypocrite; this same old Mat Nixon is the ungrateful; unnatural
GRANDFATHER of the first boy born in the district。〃

A wild huzza greeted the doctor's climax。  By a common consent the
crowd turned toward the Twins; who; grasping each other's hands;
stood apart。  The doctor nodded his head。  The next moment the
Twins were surrounded; and lifted in the arms of the laughing
throng; and borne in triumph to the bar…room of the Mansion House。

〃Gentlemen;〃 said the bar…keeper; 〃call for what you like: the
Mansion House treats to…day in honor of its being the first time
that Rand Pinkney has been admitted to the bar。〃

        。        。        。        。        。        。

It was agreed; that; as her condition was still precarious; the
news should be broken to her gradually and indirectly。  The
indefatigable Sol had a professional idea; which was not
displeasing to the Twins。  It being a lovely summer afternoon; the
couch of Mornie was lifted out on the ledge; and she lay there
basking in the sunlight; drinking in the pure air; and looking
bravely ahead in the daylight as she had in the darkness; for her
couch commanded a view of the mountain flank。  And; lying there;
she dreamed a pleasant dream; and in her dream saw Rand returning
up the mountain…trail。  She was half conscious that he had good
news for her; and; when he at last reached her bedside; he began
gently and kindly to tell his news。  But she heard him not; or
rather in her dream was most occupied with his ways and manners;
which seemed unlike him; yet inexpressibly sweet and tender。  The
tears were fast coming in her eyes; when he suddenly dropped on his
knees beside her; threw away Rand's disguising hat and coat; and
clasped her in his arms。  And by that she KNEW it was Ruth。

But what they said; what hurried words of mutual explanation and
forgiveness passed between them; what bitter yet tender recollections
of hidden fears and doubts; now forever chased away in the rain of
tears and joyous sunshine of that mountain…top; were then whispered;
whatever of this little chronicle that to the reader seems strange
and inconsistent (as all human record must ever be strange and
imperfect; except to the actors) was then made clear;was never
divulged by them; and must remain with them forever。  The rest of
the party had withdrawn; and they were alone。  But when Mornie
turned; and placed the baby in its father's arms; they were so
isolated in their happiness; that the lower world beneath them might
have swung and drifted away; and left that mountain…top the
beginning and creation of a better planet。

        。        。        。        。        。        。

〃You know all about it now;〃 said Sol the next day; explaining the
previous episodes of this history to Ruth: 〃you've got the whole
plot before you。  It dragged a little in the second act; for the
actors weren't up in their parts。  But for an amateur performance;
on the whole; it wasn't bad。〃

〃I don't know; I'm sure;〃 said Rand impulsively; 〃how we'd have got
on without Euphemia。  It's too bad she couldn't be here to…day。〃

〃She wanted to come;〃 said Sol; 〃but the gentleman she's engaged to
came up from Marysville last night。〃

〃Gentlemanengaged!〃 repeated Rand; white and red by turns。

〃Well; yes。  I say; 'gentleman;' although he's in the variety
profession。  She always said;〃 said Sol; quietly looking at Rand;
〃that she'd never marry OUT of it。〃




AN HEIRESS OF RED DOG。


The first intimation given of the eccentricity of the testator was;
I think; in the spring of 1854。  He was at that time in possession
of a considerable property; heavily mortgaged to one friend; and a
wife of some attraction; on whose affections another friend held an
encumbering lien。  One day it was found that he had secretly dug;
or caused to be dug; a deep trap before the front…door of his
dwelling; into which a few friends; in the course of the evening;
casually and familiarly dropped。  This circumstance; slight in
itself; seemed to point to the existence of a certain humor in the
man; which might eventually get into literature; although his
wife's lovera man of quick discernment; whose leg was broken by
the falltook other views。  It was some weeks later; that; while
dining with certain other friends of his wife; he excused himself
from the table to quietly re…appear at the front…window with a
three…quarter inch hydraulic pipe; and a stream of water projected
at the assembled company。  An attempt was made to take public
cognizance of this; but a majority of the citizens of Red Dog; who
were not at dinner; decided that a man had a right to choose his
own methods of diverting his company。  Nevertheless; there were
some hints of his insanity; his wife recalled other acts clearly
attributable to dementia; the crippled lover argued from his own
experience that the integrity of her limbs could only be secured by
leaving her husband's house; and the mortgagee; fearing a further
damage to his property; foreclosed。  But here the cause of all this
anxiety took matters into his own hands; and disappeared。

When we next heard from him; he had; in some mysterious way; been
relieved alike of his wife and property; and was living alone at
Rockville fifty miles away; and editing a newspaper。  But that
originality he had displayed when dealing with the problems of his
own private life; when applied to politics in the columns of 〃The
Rockville Vanguard〃 was singularly unsuccessful。  An amusing
exaggeration; purporting to be an exact account of the manner in
which the opposing candidate had murdered his Chinese laundryman;
was; I regret to say; answered only by assault and battery。  A
gratuitous and purely imaginative description of a great religious
revival in Calaveras; in which the sheriff of the countya
notoriously profane scepticwas alleged to have been the chief
exhorter; resulted only in the withdrawal of the county advertising
from the paper。  In the midst of this practical confusion he
suddenly died。  It was then discovered; as a crowning proof of his
absurdity; that he had left a will; bequeathing his entire effects
to a freckle…faced maid…servant at the Rockville Hotel。  But that
absurdity became serious when it was also discovered that among
these effects were a thousand shares in the Rising Sun Mining
Company; which a day or two after his demise; and while people were
still laughing at his grotesque benefaction; suddenly sprang into
opulence and celebrity。  Three millions of dollars was roughly
estimated as the value of the estate thus wantonly sacrificed。  For
it is only fair to state; as a just tribute to the enterprise and
energy of that young and thriving settlement; that there was not
probably a single citizen who did not feel himself better able to
control the deceased humorist's property。  Some had expressed a
doubt of their ability to support a family; others had felt perhaps
too keenly the deep responsibility resting upon them when chosen
from the panel as jurors; and had evaded their public duties; a few
had declined office and a low salary: but no one shrank from the
possibility of having been called upon to assume the functions of
Peggy Moffat; the heiress。

The will was contested;first by the widow; who it now appeared
had never been legally divorced from the deceased; next by four of
his cousins; who awoke; only too late; to a consciousness of his
moral and pecuniary worth。  But the humble legateea singularly
plain; unpretending; uneducated Western girlexhibited a dogged
pertinacity in claiming her rights。  She rejected all compromises。
A rough sense of justice in the community; while doubting her
ability to take care of the whole fortune; suggested that she ought
to be content with three hundred thousand dollars。  〃She's bound to
throw even THAT away on some derned skunk of a man; natoorally; but
three millions is too much to give a chap for makin' her onhappy。
It's offerin' a temptation to cussedness。〃  The only opposing voice
to this counsel came from the sardonic lips of Mr。 Jack Hamlin。
〃Suppose;〃 suggested that gentleman; turning abruptly on the
speaker;〃suppose; when you won twenty thousand dollars of me last
Friday nightsuppose that; instead of handing you over the money
as I didsuppose I'd got up on my hind…legs; and said; 'Look yer;
Bill Wethersbee; you're a dd fool。  If I give ye that twenty
thousand; you'll throw it away in the first skin…game in 'Frisco;
and hand it over to the first short…card sharp you'll meet。
There'

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