A WARD OF THE GOLDEN GATE
by
Bret Harte
JTABLE 5 9 1
PROLOGUE.
In San Francisco the "rainy season" had been making itself a reality to the wondering Eastern immigrant. There were short days of drifting clouds and flying sunshine, and long succeeding nights of incessant downpour, when the rain rattled on the thin shingles or drummed on the resounding zinc of pioneer roofs. The shifting sand-dunes on the outskirts were beaten motionless and sodden by the onslaught of consecutive storms; the southeast trades brought the saline breath of the outlying Pacific even to the busy haunts of Commercial and Kearney streets; the low-lying Mission road was a quagmire; along the City Front, despite of piles and pier and wharf, the Pacific tides still asserted themselves in mud and ooze as far as Sansome Street; the wooden sidewalks of Clay and Montgomery streets were mere floating bridges or buoyant pontoons superposed on elastic bogs; Battery Street was the Silurian beach of that early period on which tin cans, packing-boxes, freight, household furniture, and even the runaway crews of deserted ships had been cast away. There were dangerous and unknown depths in Montgomery Street and on the Plaza, and the wheels of a passing carriage hopelessly mired had to be lifted by the volunteer hands of a half dozen high-booted wayfarers, whose wearers were sufficiently content to believe that a woman, a child, or an invalid was behind its closed windows, without troubling themselves or the occupant by looking through the glass.
It was a carriage that, thus released, eventually drew up before the superior public edifice known as the City Hall. From it a woman, closely veiled, alighted, and quickly entered the building. A few passers-by turned to look at her, partly from the rarity of the female figure at that period, and partly from the greater rarity of its being well formed and even ladylike.
As she kept her way along the corridor and ascended an iron staircase, she was passed by others more preoccupied in business at the various public offices. One of these visitors, however, stopped as if struck by some fancied resemblance in her appearance, turned, and followed her. But when she halted before a door marked "Mayor's Office," he paused also, and, with a look of half humorous bewilderment and a slight glance around him as if seeking for some one to whom to impart his arch fancy, he turned away. The woman then entered a large anteroom with a certain quick feminine gesture of relief, and, finding it empty of other callers, summoned the porter, and asked him some question in a voice so suppressed by the official severity of the apartment as to be hardly audible. The attendant replied by entering another room marked "Mayor's Secretary," and reappeared with a stripling of seventeen or eighteen, whose singularly bright eyes were all that was youthful in his composed features. After a slight scrutiny of the woman--half boyish, half official--he desired her to be seated, with a certain exaggerated gravity as if he was over-acting a grown-up part, and, taking a card from her, reentered his office. Here, however, he did NOT stand on his head or call out a confederate youth from a closet, as the woman might have expected. To the left was a green baize door, outlined with brass-studded rivets like a cheerful coffin-lid, and bearing the mortuary inscription, "Private." This he pushed open, and entered the Mayor's private office.
The municipal dignitary of San Francisco, although an erect, soldier-like man of strong middle age, was seated with his official chair tilted back against the wall and kept in position by his feet on the rungs of another, which in turn acted as a support for a second man, who was seated a few feet from him in an easy-chair. Both were lazily smoking.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Ward of the Golden Gate by Bret Harte
- 2: She wanted to see Colonel Pendleton too
- 3: Have you and Bob Ridley had a quarrel
- 4: Colonel Pendleton and myself will set the thing going
- 5: She could be called Miss Buena when she grows up
- 6: And put the chair back against the wall
- 7: It's a matter of four years since we met at Marysville
- 8: Of the firm of Hoskins and Bloomer
- 9: Turned curiously towards Hathaway
- 10: I understand the colonel has been unfortunate
- 11: Admitting Hathaway with great courtesy
- 12: Yo' 'll have to skuse Marse Harry seein' yo in bed
- 13: Hathaway an old one played out
- 14: Hathaway will excuse your waiting
- 15: Continued Pendleton sardonically
- 16: Yet with a sudden and pathetic dropping of his dominant note
- 17: And Pendleton placed the packet in his visitor's hands
- 18: And ain't no more gumption dan chilleren
- 19: When Marse Harry hez to go to a barber's shop
- 20: That if the Widow Molloy can't pay because she sold out
- 21: Paul Hathaway the Honorable Paul Hathaway
- 22: Yerba glanced at the three gentlemen
- 23: Yerba broke the silence by suddenly turning to Milly
- 24: He placed himself beside Yerba and Milly
- 25: Again Paul was puzzled and irritated
- 26: If I don't like the name of Yerba Buena
- 27: One of my friends at the convent was Josita Castro
- 28: At the time you entered the convent as Yerba Buena
- 29: Some mysterious feminine signal with Yerba
- 30: The elder brother of poor Yerba
- 31: See a great deal of Yerba that evening
- 32: What Pendleton had said to him
- 33: Milly and Yerba had not yet appeared
- 34: Judge Baker calling across the table to Yerba
- 35: Paul had not looked at Yerba during this conversation
- 36: Thanks to the fact that Yerba was not present
- 37: Milly and Yerba had retired to the former's boudoir
- 38: And Milly will return in a few moments
- 39: With a mischievous side glance at Paul
- 40: As represented by the trustees specified
- 41: Colonel Pendleton belongs to no party
- 42: Had delegated his passing functions to Pendleton
- 43: The next morning Paul was in San Francisco
- 44: And do gemplum I relieved was a Mr
- 45: Of the property to Miss Arguello
- 46: Miss Yerba Buena came of age yesterday
- 47: I know nothing of this blank affair blank it all
- 48: The mere breath of suspicion of it
- 49: Ostensible porter of the Strudle Bad Hof
- 50: There was the usual contingent of abonnirte officers
- 51: There certainly was Colonel Pendleton
- 52: Sah as fah as de IDIOTISMS ob de language goes
- 53: Hathaway is one of my friends and have supper accordingly
- 54: She declined to pass in review before his mother
- 55: Paul looked fixedly at the colonel
- 56: And disclosed a handsomely furnished salon
- 57: His extravagance is something TOO awful
- 58: She held out her hand with a frank girlish smile
- 59: I'd rather see you flare out like that than pay compliments
- 60: They dismounted at the beginning of a gentle acclivity
- 61: But one eccentric and willful gosling Mr
- 62: And above all with the recollection of his scene with Yerba
- 63: But still the name Arguello surely that is not American
- 64: At times the strains of a dreamy German waltz
- 65: Miss ARGUELLO that are thieves
- 66: Suppose you prove that I am not an Arguello
- 67: Do you know this mother of Miss Yerba
- 68: But I wish to speak with Briones elsewhere
- 69: Or was this Colonel Pendleton the duelist
- 70: Paul turned quickly to the inspector
- 71: The Pastor was not an unkindly man
- 72: Yet regarding him with stern rigidity
- 73: Pendleton remained staring at her silently
- 74: I saw no necessity for reopening the past
- 75: And the Briones from the day of their departure
- 76: Seen through an opening of scarlet maples
- 77: Yerba carried it always with me
- 78: Woods again became retrospective and Californian
- 79: Paul drove with Yerba rapidly to the hospital
- 80: Paul and Yerba glanced quickly at each other
