The Gilded Age Part 3
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"Never fear, sir, I have imbibed the Green Fairy herself."
The old cowboy peers at him more closely with that painful-looking eye. "What in d.a.m.n h.e.l.l is the Green Fairy?"
"Absinthe, sir." Daniel sighs. What he would give now for a gold-green bottle of Pernod Fils, a sugar cube, a perforated spoon, a lovely bell-shaped gla.s.s. What he would give to be back with Roch.e.l.le and the gang at La Nouvelle-Athenes sipping rainbow cups, flirting with poetry, l.u.s.t, and death. "La fee verte, the Green Fairy. The sacred herb. Holy water, sir. A finer, eviler brew has never been concocted. One hundred twenty proof, reeking of wormwood. Tremblement de terre. Earthquake, sir, that's what we call absinthe."
"Haw. Well, you'll find some o' that out in Californ', young gent." The old cowboy is unimpressed.
"Just a hair of the dog." Daniel offers another ciggie, cajoling the coot. "That's fine Virginia weed machine-rolled to perfection. Come now, what've you got?"
"Hunnert twenny proof is a cinch, young gent." The old cowboy cackles. From beneath the topcoat, he produces a sc.u.mmy bottle, a neat piece of gla.s.s with flat sides that fit against the chest and do not extrude indiscreetly. The fifth is down to four fingers, but that should last till they reach the Port of Oakland. "This here's puma p.i.s.s."
"Puma p.i.s.s?"
"Home-brewed rotgut, tobacco juice, an' a dose o' white lightinin'. What some call rat poison."
"Dear sir, you cannot mean strychnine."
"Yessir, I do, an' a hunnert twenny proof is a cinch, but ye can't prove it by me." The old cowboy consults with his invisible companion, cackling and nodding.
Puma p.i.s.s! Daniel will have to remember that! "Let's have a taste, then. Just a drop, sir." With sunlight gleaming off his teeth, he offers a third ciggie. d.a.m.n b.l.o.o.d.y coot! But Daniel can purchase more machine-rolled cigarettes in San Francisco. The American Tobacco Company is spread out all over the West. He can get anything he wants in San Francisco. Or so they say.
But right now, right now, what he needs is a drink.
"Ah, h.e.l.l." The old cowboy hands over the bottle.
"It's a cinch." Daniel winks, knocks back a swallow.
Vile cannot approach the taste of stagnant well water infused with putrefaction, but the sting of newly distilled grain alcohol mangles the inside of his mouth and his tongue. The taste swiftly becomes irrelevant. He knows the stuff is liquid, but the sensation in his throat is of scorching fire. Or fangs. Fangs of a ravening beast.
In less than an instant, his heart begins to pound like lunatic desperate to escape his chains. Pure vertigo seizes him, whirls him around. A black satin curtain drops over his eyes. Oh, no! Has he suddenly gone blind? Sometimes homebrew steals your sight along with your sanity. But no, the black satin curtain is abruptly whisked away.
And he stares out at the golden-brown hills of California, curving like the bodies of women. Golden-brown women lolling about like wh.o.r.es with their golden-brown b.r.e.a.s.t.s and hips and swooping waists. The ill-starred Sioux, perhaps, or the Apache. Or the fabled Celestials, the Chinese. Golden-brown women harried and driven by the brute forces of rape and slavery and murder till they have fled, disguised themselves, mysteriously reincarnated into the landscape itself. He sees their awful transmogrification, their anger parched and mute save for the testimony of the hills, the golden-brown hills in which a man could get lost and die. He hears them screaming now-by G.o.d!-feels them reaching for him. They mean to tear him limb from limb with their curved fingers of thorn. They mean to drive him mad with their anguish.
That high rending sound? It's only the train whistle.
Daniel shuts his eyes, and the black satin curtain falls again. But the blackness is so dizzying, his lids pop open at once. Now the landscape changes as he speeds toward his destination. The hills grow greener, studded with shrubs and st.u.r.dy trees. Abundant palms that are the rage in fas.h.i.+onable houses back East grow wild by the track bed. Flowering bushes shamelessly offer up pink and purple thunderheads, and huge, twisted succulents are so vibrant and filled with a peculiar presence that they seem like living creatures in some cunning disguise, waiting in ambush for the unwary. Waiting to pounce like pumas do.
Daniel feels the hand of destiny spinning him round like a Zoetrope. Does he only go through the motions of his life like a pathetic painted little figure? The tracks clack below him. The lunatic again, he's rattling his cage. A great fate awaits him-he feels this in his heart-unlike anything he's confronted before. Not in Saint Louis, not in London or Paris. Perhaps he will live, perhaps he will die in San Francisco. What does it matter, what does anything matter? We're all just painted figures spun round by the hand of G.o.d.
Now grief wells up inside him, squeezing the frantic beat of his heart. Well, Mama died. People die. He saw three grandparents meet their Maker before he was ten. It was not as though family had never pa.s.sed on before. Mama died in the late spring, in the fecund heart of incipient summer. A time he always thought of as a sick time--disease in the air, poison in the water, rotting food.
He should not have been surprised. His mother had been dying for a long time. But why did she wait for him? Why did she have to wait? He did not want to see her face, pale and beautiful as always. Her eyes-what she called her deep sea eyes-beseeching him. Her question, always her question, even on her deathbed, "Danny, haven't I been good to you? Haven't I always been good?" And his answer, always the same answer, "Yes, Mama. Of course, Mama. Of course you've always been good."
He takes one more swallow of puma p.i.s.s, swallowing his grief and rage. "Ish a s.h.i.+nch," he says, handing the bottle back with as steady a hand as he can muster. A gentleman must observe the niceties of sharing a drink.
"Haw." The old cowboy grins, showing broken brown teeth through his neglected whiskers. His invisible companion apparently adds a trenchant comment. Daniel himself can just about see the companion. Yes, there he is--a hand from the good old days, long dead and still lively in the old cowboy's eyes.
"Thank you, s.h.i.+r. Mush oblished." Daniel stands, the vertigo fading, his pulse slowing. A fine feeling of arousal courses through his veins. When his stomach settles down, his feelings turn to another part of his anatomy he has too often abused. By G.o.d, his heart.
There are ladies on the train. He vaguely recalls two fine ladies who boarded the Overland at dawn in Sacramento. How could he have ignored them for so long? What a cad! He should go pay his respects, find out if they're bound for San Francisco, too, and, if so, what in heaven's name is their address? The pilgrim seeks the comfort of fellow travelers, that is the natural way of the world, is it not? He staggers to the dining car, newly filled with the spirit of amorous adventure, tapping out a ciggie. Where are the ladies? Who are they?
Ah, there. They sit at a table set for tea. The small girl with a narrow mousy face, protruding eyes, and an overbite interests him not at all. She's dressed in charcoal-gray leg-o'-mutton sleeves and a plain gored dress. She chatters and chirps in broad, ugly vowels. She is much too American for his taste and much too plain. No, her companion, an elegant lady-now she interests him. A high-cheeked face, rose-kissed skin, a lovely mouth with a full lower lip, huge soft eyes. Oh yes, she interests him. A startling streak of white accentuates her brown pompadour, but that doesn't dissuade him. A lady getting on in her years? In her late twenties, perhaps? Yet still with the spark of her youthful pa.s.sion, he can see it in her eyes. More pa.s.sionate than her younger companion, either because she's experienced more of the world or less than she's longed for.
She is well-dressed, too, a quality in ladies for which Daniel has the highest admiration. The young companion wears proper travelling togs. But her. The elegant lady wears a full skirt the color of a good French burgundy. An ivory silk blouse with abundant lace spills over the chinchilla collar of a cashmere coat belted tightly around her waist. A gay hat, piled high with ribbons and flowers, perches upon the pompadour. A voluminous veil is drawn over her face and pinned at her throat with a glittering Art Nouveau brooch. And gloves. The elegant lady wears immaculate gloves that accentuate her long, fine fingers, the white cotton unsullied by any mundane contact with the world. Her fingers twitch in her lap as if longing to touch a man.
Indeed, sir, that is the only conclusion Daniel can draw.
"Good morning, ladies," Daniel says, carelessly tossing himself on the chair beside her. She's tall, he can see that. Tall with a long slim body beneath the coat, the skirts, the bodice, the corset. Roch.e.l.le was tall, too, and her long legs literally went up to her throat when she danced the cancan at La Nouvelle-Athenes. Of course, Roch.e.l.le was a wh.o.r.e. But this one, this one. He is smitten. What a marvelous land, this Californ'!
"Good morning, sir," they murmur and recommence their conversation.
"But, Evie, darling," says the elegant lady, "the Young Women's Christian a.s.sociation puts up dozens of these Chinese girls every month. Every month! And still dozens more are defiled in Chinatown. Defiled, imprisoned. They are literally sold into slavery! In the United States of America!" Her melodious voice quavers. "Can you imagine our dear Jesus Christ tolerating this abomination?"
"Well, they are heathens," says the mousy girl.
"All the more reason, Evie! In San Francisco! Young girls! Oh, our Christ would surely die all over again to see such a thing!"
Uh oh, Daniel thinks, a Holy Roller.
"And here we are, celebrating the one hundred nineteenth anniversary of our great nation founded on freedom," the elegant lady says. "The shame!"
Indeed it is the nation's anniversary, why, it's the Fourth of July. He's lost track of the days during his trek west. The elegant lady glances at Daniel. Such eyes! With the depth of intelligence, the sheen of pa.s.sion. Clearly, pa.s.sion! Pa.s.sion in a lady is a far different thing than the depraved opportunism of a wh.o.r.e. His heart a.s.sumes a more frantic pace.
"That is why our dear Christ has sent for you, Dolly," the mousy girl says. She darts a disapproving look at Daniel and sniffs loudly.
"In point of fact, Miss Culbertson sent for me," the elegant lady corrects her with refres.h.i.+ng logic. "When the directress of our mission at Nine Twenty Sacramento Street invites one, one goes. One goes gladly, to serve our Lord."
"But I am so worried for you, Dolly. San Francisco is such a dreadful dirty city. So low cla.s.s. And we've got so many parties planned for the season."
"I shall stay at the mission only a little while, I promise. But perhaps we should not speak of such things in front of this gentleman."
"You may speak of anything you like, dear ladies," Daniel says. "The sound of your sweet voices is all I crave."
"Dolly, he's stinking," the mousy girl whispers. "Perhaps we should find another table."
"Yes, it's true, I'm stinking," Daniel says. "I confess all before Our Savior, you need not whisper." Now there's a fine line for a couple of Holy Rollers. He congratulates himself and reaches for the mousy girl's paw. She s.n.a.t.c.hes her hand away. He pantomimes having seized her hand anyway and kisses the air in his palm. "I confess I'm drunk on your presence, dear ladies, drunk with wonder at this marvelous land. I have been away too long. And now I have returned, your true native son." He slides off the chair and kneels before the elegant lady, taking her hand between his two, boldly clasping the whole package on her knees, and breathing deeply of her fragrance. She's a hummer, all right.
The mousy girl gasps at his impropriety, but the elegant lady smiles indulgently and neither reclaims her hand nor casts him off her knees. Smitten by him, too? Better and better!
"And who might you be, sir?"
"I might be the Devil but in fact I am Daniel J. Watkins of Saint Louis, London, and Paris. And you?"
The mousy girl gasps, perhaps appreciating him after all. London and Paris? She widens her eyes and blushes, adding a modic.u.m of charm to her sallow face. "Why, I'm Miss Evie Brownstone, Mr. Watkins, and this here is Miss Donaldina Cameron. We all call her Dolly."
Dolly! Yes, a Dolly! Very much a Dolly! Daniel eagerly leans forward, and her knees part a little.
"Or Donald," the elegant Miss Cameron says, frowning at her friend's familiarity.
"Donald?" Daniel shuffles back on his knees, lurches to his feet, regains the chair. Oh, no. She cannot be one of those peculiar women who cannot decide if they are female or male. He bows a little stiffly. "Miss Cameron."
"Dolly is one of the MacKenzie Camerons," Miss Brownstone rattles on, uncertain how she has offended her friend. "Of Scotland, New Zealand, San Francisco, Oakland, and the San Gabriel Valley!" she says with another doubtful look at Miss Cameron.
Daniel rouses himself. "Ah, then you know San Francisco, Miss Cameron? You know Oakland? Still the mud hut frontier, these towns, are they not?"
Oakland glimmers behind the windows of the Overland train. After the golden-brown hills and rustic flatlands, he has not expected this--a s.h.i.+mmering lake, a stylish city. Three-story Queen Anne mansions line the littoral sh.o.r.e, with astounding gardens and sprawling lawns, carriage houses and small private parks set with cla.s.sical sculptures wrought in marble. Daniel spies fine carriages driven by liveried coachmen trotting down well-worn lanes bordered by more of the astonis.h.i.+ng succulents and palms, broad swooping oaks with reddish-green leaves unlike any foliage he's seen back East.
Miss Cameron coolly regards his surprise. "We call Oakland the Continental Side of the Bay, Mr. Watkins. Evie attended Snell's Seminary here."
"Snells?" Daniel thinks of escargot in garlic b.u.t.ter.
"The finis.h.i.+ng school, of course."
"Of course." The sliver of a headache pokes behind Daniel's eyes.
She gazes out the window, s.h.i.+fting into a pensive mood. "The good people live in Oakland, Mr. Watkins. People who love books and art and sculpture. Aesthetes, Mr. Watkins. Birders, scholars, astronomers, entomologists. Dr. Merritt lives here, and the Peraltas, and Joseph Knowland the publisher, and Judge Sam McKee. Mr. F. M. Smith, who discovered all that borax in Nevada. His ballroom accommodates hundreds and his gardens are legendary."
"I've heard of his gardens."
"And the houses in Oakland have telephones, Mr. Watkins. Do you know of the telephone?"
He laughs indignantly. "Why, of course. In London and Paris-"
"Oaklanders own more telephones than people in San Francisco," Miss Cameron continues, growing animated. "They've got more electricity in their homes than anyone."
"Mother's got a system of electrical buzzers to summon the servants," Miss Brownstone says breathlessly. "Like Mrs. Winchester, the rifle heiress."
"And electrical lights," Miss Cameron says. "Oaklanders employ Mr. Edison's genius to good advantage, Mr. Watkins."
"I never said you didn't."
"Mother's got hot water for my bath," Miss Brownstone yelps, getting into the spirit. "Pumped right into my rooms on the third floor!"
"You say you've seen London and Paris, Mr. Watkins," Miss Cameron says imperiously. "Well, the McPhail mansion was designed by California architects, and do you know what those clever fellows did? They installed a chute in the wall that opens up in the boudoir of the lady of the house upstairs and goes all the way down to the washerwomen's tubs in the bas.e.m.e.nt. No one has ever seen anything like it." Miss Cameron's flowers and ribbons quake with civic pride. "Have you ever seen such a thing in London or Paris, Mr. Watkins?" Before he can respond properly or crack a joke, she snaps, "No, I thought not, sir! We are scarcely mud huts in California. We are quite modern and striding forth into the future. And don't you forget it!"
The two ladies storm out of the dining car, leaving Daniel dazed.
The Overland pulls into the station at the Port of Oakland. Daniel collects his bags and his trunk, and disembarks. At midday, a languor has settled over the port. Sunlight filters through a high haze, a breeze whips in from the bay. Clang of s.h.i.+ps' bells, slap of waves, squeak of tightly drawn rope around wood. Ah, London, how he recalls those sounds, his night walks along the piers.
By G.o.d, his head aches. He lights a ciggie, inhales deeply. His stomach rolls over. Another shot of puma p.i.s.s would put him right. But the old cowboy has vanished as surely as his invisible companion.
"Porter," Daniel calls, extracting coins from his coat pocket. "Where's the ferry bound for San Francisco?"
"You'll be wantin' the Chrysapolis, sir, and a lovely steamer she is, too," says the porter, a stringy old man in a cap and a rumpled uniform. He flashes an abundance of gold teeth. A failed prospector? If the porter had been a youngster during the Gold Rush-and many Forty-niners were just kids-he could very well have scratched around in those golden-brown hills, panned the streams. Taking only a taste of fortune with him--a mouthful of gold teeth.
"Take me there." Daniel scowls, his headache deepening. He can see it--the stringy porter's years of searching, the frustration, his ultimate failure. Perhaps the porter wasn't so stringy then. Perhaps he'd been a robust young man like Daniel. That is what failure does--wrings you out, plucks at your bones, sucks you dry. A failed man is a loathsome thing. And Father? Why, the eminent Jonathan D. Watkins, he is a failure, too.
"Sir, she don't depart till half past three," the porter says apologetically, unsure how he may have offended the young gentleman.
"Half past three! What in heaven's name am I to do till then?"
"If you please, sir, the sights along the promenade is quite nice." The porter points to where Miss Cameron and Miss Brownstone stroll arm-in-arm beside the rocks strewn along the steep grade of the beach.
"I think not." Holy Rollers, indeed.
"Perhaps a gentleman like yourself would like to seek some refreshment?" The porter points in the opposite direction where sailors slouch about the docks and the murmur of distant merriment can be heard.
Refreshment. Exactly. Daniel hands more coins to the porter. "You shall watch my bags while I seek refreshment. And you shall come and fetch me when the Chrysapolis is ready to depart. Understand me?"
"Oh, yes, sir. Very good, sir. That way, sir."
Daniel stalks along the waterfront, loosening his tie and collar. Get a hold of yourself, sir. Why should he be so disquieted by a porter? There is no such thing as equality, his friends in London say. You Americans are deluded if you believe in such nonsense. There are those who are superior, those who are inferior, and that is that. Yet the porter-if he truly is a failed prospector in more than Daniel's imagination-is no different than Father. No different at all. In the whole scheme of things, they are truly equal.
Father fancied himself so clever. A friends.h.i.+p with a rich British lady during one of Mama's many illnesses had enlightened him. Father realized that America's rebellion could be turned to his advantage. This was the New World, replete with land and resources, cheap labor and huge ambitions. Funds were all the aspiring grubbers lacked. And funds, capital, gold could be secured from the old merchant families, royalty, continental capitalists hungry for higher returns, all eager to exploit the peasants and criminals and reprobates who were beating out a new life for themselves in this New World.
Consider the beauty of it. You loan the wretches money against their homes, their land, their businesses. Let them think they've won their freedom, then reinstate their servitude not by force, king, or country, but by debt.
This was part and parcel of Father's insidious propaganda. If the strident communists and the clamoring workingmen infesting Europe are worrying you, then bring your gold to America where bold entrepreneurs are making a killing. Have you any notion, he would whisper in the ear of a French widow or a German dowager, how property values in San Francisco shot to the moon during the Gold Rush? Why, a little commercial front on Portsmouth Square with a bar slinging shots of rotgut and a rouge-et-noir game in the back was bought for six thousand dollars and sold but a few years later for one million. One million dollars, madame. El Dorado House, the first restaurant in the city serving hard-boiled eggs for five dollars apiece, leased its premises for twenty-five thousand dollars a month.
This, when men and women rolling cigars or s.h.i.+ning shoes or st.i.tching gentlemen's collars earned fifty cents a day.
Oh, Father had them coming and going on both sides of the transaction. The dreaming settlers, the idealistic famers, the ambitious shopkeepers sc.r.a.ping out their survival in the cow towns, dead ends, tenderloins, and Chinatowns throughout the West. And the scheming capitalists, the jaded merchant dynasties, the indolent European royalty hungering for more profits, for greater cash flow.
The eminent Jonathan D. Watkins became a mortgage broker and from 1888 to 1892 extended twelve million dollars, mostly in European capital, in loans on real estate throughout the West. He put Daniel on H.M.S. May Queen on New Year's Day, bound for London and Paris. This was a time when Father favorably regarded his son's good looks, quick charm, and easy manners. Hobn.o.b, those were Father's orders. Ingratiate yourself to those grieving French widows, diamond-studded German dowagers, plump Dutch bluebloods.
Hobn.o.b Daniel did. So what if he wound up in Paris, drinking absinthe with wh.o.r.es and poets at La Nouvelle-Athenes? He scratched up plenty of capital for Father's schemes. Removed from Father's stern ambit, he found he cared little for business, for money-grubbing. He kept his bohemian life to himself and dreamed of pictures on a strip of painted paper whirling in a Zoetrope.
Then the panic struck America in '93. Banks failed, and capital dried up in a financial drought the like of which no one had see in a decade. Businesses collapsed. Angry gangs of unemployed men roamed towns and cities with sticks and knives and guns. Needless to say, property values plummeted, especially in the West where the economy was still so fragile.
By 1895, the eminent Jonathan D. Watkins found himself holding twelve million dollars of his own outstanding debt, debtors who could not or would not make payments, and property securing all that debt worth next to nothing.
What could he do? Father declared bankruptcy and recalled his son from Europe. How well Daniel remembered the telegram. What excitement to receive a telegram, quite the rage. Brand-new telegraph wires looped all over the streets of Paris.
DANIEL STOP WE'RE DONE STOP COME HOME AT ONCE STOP FATHER.
MOTHER NEEDS YOU STOP.
Daniel hadn't understood the full import of the message till he reluctantly returned home, dragging a bag filled with scandalously decadent paintings and four bottles of Pernod Fils. We're done? What in h.e.l.l did that mean? That Father had decided upon a new strategy? A more lucrative way to become a millionaire besides lending the money of strangers to other strangers?
No. Jonathan D. Watkins had become a failure, just as surely as the old cowboy or the porter with his gold teeth. Bankruptcy was, to Daniel, as evil as moral turpitude and as far-reaching as an extramarital indiscretion. Sins of the father? Oh, yes. Daniel was doomed.
He kneads his brow. Refreshment. Indeed, sir, refreshment is just the thing he needs.
He quickens his pace along the waterfront. Sailors stare at him, poke each other in the ribs, guffaw, or mutter half-heard obscenities. Daniel tips his bowler, keeping his spine ramrod straight. He's got the accoutrements any gentlemen should possess when sojourning through the West--a Remington double-barreled derringer stuck in his waistband and a jumbo Congress knife with a two-inch blade. He's strolled among dives and joints before. He can walk into any accursed place he cares to.
The sound of merriment loudens.
The Gilded Age Part 3
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The Gilded Age Part 3 summary
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