Flip: A California Romance. Bret Harte

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style="font-size:15px;">      “No,” said Lance, cheerfully.

      “Nor ye ain’t that chap ez beat his wife unto death at Santa Clara?”

      Lance honestly scorned the imputation. Such conjugal ill treatment as he had indulged in had not been physical, and had been with other men’s wives.

      There was a moment’s further hesitation on the part of the girl. Then she said shortly:

      “Well, then, I reckon you kin come along with me.”

      “Where?” asked Lance.

      “To the ranch,” she replied simply.

      “Then you won’t bring me anything to eat here?”

      “What for? You kin get it down there.” Lance hesitated. “I tell you it’s all right,” she continued. “I’ll make it all right with Dad.”

      “But suppose I reckon I’d rather stay here,” persisted Lance, with a perfect consciousness, however, of affectation in his caution.

      “Stay away then,” said the girl coolly; “only as Dad perempted this yer woods”—

      “PRE-empted,” suggested Lance.

      “Per-empted or pre-emp-ted, as you like,” continued the girl scornfully,—“ez he’s got a holt on this yer woods, ye might ez well see him down thar ez here. For here he’s like to come any minit. You can bet your life on that.”

      She must have read Lance’s amusement in his eyes, for she again dropped her own with a frown of brusque embarrassment. “Come along, then; I’m your man,” said Lance, gayly, extending his hand.

      She would not accept it, eying it, however, furtively, like a horse about to shy. “Hand me your pistol first,” she said.

      He handed it to her with an assumption of gayety. She received it on her part with unfeigned seriousness, and threw it over her shoulder like a gun. This combined action of the child and heroine, it is quite unnecessary to say, afforded Lance undiluted joy.

      “You go first,” she said.

      Lance stepped promptly out, with a broad grin. “Looks kinder as if I was a prisoner, don’t it?” he suggested.

      “Go on, and don’t fool,” she replied.

      The two fared onward through the wood. For one moment he entertained the facetious idea of appearing to rush frantically away, “just to see what the girl would do,” but abandoned it. “It’s an even thing if she wouldn’t spot me the first pop,” he reflected admiringly.

      When they had reached the open hillside, Lance stopped inquiringly. “This way,” she said, pointing toward the summit, and in quite an opposite direction to the valley where he had heard the voices, one of which he now recognized as hers. They skirted the thicket for a few moments, and then turned sharply into a trail which began to dip toward a ravine leading to the valley.

      “Why do you have to go all the way round?” he asked.

      “WE don’t,” the girl replied with emphasis; “there’s a shorter cut.”

      “Where?”

      “That’s telling,” she answered shortly.

      “What’s your name?” asked Lance, after a steep scramble and a drop into the ravine.

      “Flip.”

      “What?”

      “Flip.”

      “I mean your first name,—your front name.”

      “Flip.”

      “Flip! Oh, short for Felipa!”

      “It ain’t Flipper,—it’s Flip.” And she relapsed into silence.

      “You don’t ask me mine?” suggested Lance.

      She did not vouchsafe a reply.

      “Then you don’t want to know?”

      “Maybe Dad will. You can lie to HIM.”

      This direct answer apparently sustained the agreeable homicide for some moments. He moved onward, silently exuding admiration.

      “Only,” added Flip, with a sudden caution, “you’d better agree with me.”

      The trail here turned again abruptly and re-entered the canyon. Lance looked up, and noticed they were almost directly beneath the bay thicket and the plateau that towered far above them. The trail here showed signs of clearing, and the way was marked by felled trees and stumps of pines.

      “What does your father do here?” he finally asked. Flip remained silent, swinging the revolver. Lance repeated his question.

      “Burns charcoal and makes diamonds,” said Flip, looking at him from the corners of her eyes.

      “Makes diamonds?” echoed Lance.

      Flip nodded her head.

      “Many of ‘em?” he continued carelessly.

      “Lots. But they’re not big,” she returned, with a sidelong glance.

      “Oh, they’re not big?” said Lance gravely.

      They had by this time reached a small staked inclosure, whence the sudden fluttering and cackle of poultry welcomed the return of the evident mistress of this sylvan retreat. It was scarcely imposing. Further on, a cooking stove under a tree, a saddle and bridle, a few household implements scattered about, indicated the “ranch.” Like most pioneer clearings, it was simply a disorganized raid upon nature that had left behind a desolate battlefield strewn with waste and decay. The fallen trees, the crushed thicket, the splintered limbs, the rudely torn-up soil, were made hideous by their grotesque juxtaposition with the wrecked fragments of civilization, in empty cans, broken bottles, battered hats, soleless boots, frayed stockings, cast-off rags, and the crowning absurdity of the twisted-wire skeleton of a hooped skirt hanging from a branch. The wildest defile, the densest thicket, the most virgin solitude, was less dreary and forlorn than this first footprint of man. The only redeeming feature of this prolonged bivouac was the cabin itself. Built of the half-cylindrical strips of pine bark, and thatched with the same material, it had a certain picturesque rusticity. But this was an accident of economy rather than taste, for which Flip apologized by saying that the bark of the pine was “no good” for charcoal.

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