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PAGE 10

Through The Santa Clara Wheat
by [?]

“That needn’t make him so uncivil,” said Rose, poutingly, “for if it comes to that you’re the LANDLORD,” she added triumphantly.

“No,” said the major, good-humoredly. “I am simply the man driving the lighter and more easily-managed team for pleasure, and he’s the man driving the heavier and more difficult machine for work. It’s for me to get out of his way; and looked at in the light of my being THE LANDLORD it is still worse, for as we’re working ‘on shares’ I’m interrupting HIS work, and reducing HIS profits merely because I choose to sacrifice my own.”

I need not say that those atrociously leveling sentiments were received by the young ladies with that feminine scorn which is only qualified by misconception. Rose, who, under the influence of her hostess, had a vague impression that they sounded something like the French Revolution, and that Adele must feel like the Princess Elizabeth, rushed to her relief like a good girl. “But, major, now, YOU’RE a gentleman, and if YOU had been driving that roller, you know you would have turned out for us.”

“I don’t know about that,” said the major, mischievously; “but if I had, I should have known that the other fellow who accepted it wasn’t a gentleman.”

But Rose, having sufficiently shown her partisanship in the discussion, after the feminine fashion, did not care particularly for the logical result. After a moment’s silence she resumed: “And the wheat ranch below–is that carried on in the same way?”

“Yes. But their landlord is a bank, who advances not only the land, but the money to work it, and doesn’t ride around in a buggy with a couple of charmingly distracting young ladies.”

“And do they all share alike?” continued Rose, ignoring the pleasantry, “big and little–that young inventor with the rest?”

She stopped. She felt the ingenue’s usually complacent eyes suddenly fixed upon her with an unhallowed precocity, and as quickly withdrawn. Without knowing why, she felt embarrassed, and changed the subject.

The next day they drove to the Convent of Santa Clara and the Mission College of San Jose. Their welcome at both places seemed to Rose to be a mingling of caste greeting and spiritual zeal, and the austere seclusion and reserve of those cloisters repeated that suggestion of an Old World civilization that had already fascinated the young Western girl. They made other excursions in the vicinity, but did not extend it to a visit to their few neighbors. With their reserved and exclusive ideas this fact did not strike Rose as peculiar, but on a later shopping expedition to the town of San Jose, a certain reticence and aggressive sensitiveness on the part of the shopkeepers and tradespeople towards the Randolphs produced an unpleasant impression on her mind. She could not help noticing, too, that after the first stare of astonishment which greeted her appearance with her hostess, she herself was included in the antagonism. With her youthful prepossession for her friends, this distinction she regarded as flattering and aristocratic, and I fear she accented it still more by discussing with Mrs. Randolph the merits of the shopkeepers’ wares in schoolgirl French before them. She was unfortunate enough, however, to do this in the shop of a polyglot German.

“Oxcoos me, mees,” he said gravely,–“but dot lady speeks Engeleesh so goot mit yourselluf, and ven you dells to her dot silk is hallf gotton in English, she onderstand you mooch better, and it don’t make nodings to me.” The laugh which would have followed from her own countrywomen did not, however, break upon the trained faces of the “de Fontanges l’Hommadieus,” yet while Rose would have joined in it, albeit a little ruefully, she felt for the first time mortified at their civil insincerity.

At the end of two weeks, Major Randolph received a letter from Mr. Mallory. When he had read it, he turned to his wife: “He thanks you,” he said, “for your kindness to his daughter, and explains that his sudden departure was owing to the necessity of his taking advantage of a great opportunity for speculation that had offered.” As Mrs. Randolph turned away with a slight shrug of the shoulders, the major continued: “But you haven’t heard all! That opportunity was the securing of a half interest in a cinnabar lode in Sonora, which has already gone up a hundred thousand dollars in his hands! By Jove! a man can afford to drop a little social ceremony on those terms–eh, Josephine?” he concluded with a triumphant chuckle.