By this time we had passed through the town of Broomfield. There was an open stretch as we followed the mesa, with a spectacular view of Boulder and its environs, before the road dipped down into Boulder Valley—that great bowl at the base of the Flatirons.
Caleb Hawes broke the long silence during which I’d watched the mountains hungrily, and moved for the first time into a more personal area. “What is your work, Mr. Lange? What brings you to Colorado?”
“At the moment Laurie brings me,” Hillary told him cheerfully. “She didn’t want to face an unknown situation alone, so I came along. To fend off Indians, or whatever. As for my work—I’m an actor.”
“A very good one,” I put in, sounding too eager to convince.
The lawyer decided to ignore Hillary for the moment, and went on to address me. “Mrs. Morgan did not consult me about your coming. If she had, I’d have advised against it.” He looked away, out the window at the mountains that were coming a little closer all the time as we drove. “For the moment I’m staying at the house myself, since your grandmother’s state of mind and health have grown precarious.”
“Can you tell me what’s wrong?” I asked. “I mean why she sent for me now?”
“She’ll tell you herself. Though she may not see you until tomorrow. She was in bed when I left this morning, and it seemed likely she would stay there.”
“Is she ill then?”
“I suppose you could call it that. Ill of old age. Do you remember her at all from your visits as a child?”
“Only a little,” I said cautiously.
“I was surprised that you were willing to return, Miss Morgan. I remember the state you were in when your mother took you away.”
“You—remember?”
“Yes, of course. After all, I was there in the house when—that is, at the time you left. My father was head of our Denver law firm, but he was ill and I had come up to Jasper to take care of some business for Mrs. Armand.”
He was going too fast for me. I felt suddenly cold in spite of the bright day and the western sun still flowing over the tops of the mountain range we followed.
“Mrs. Armand?” I repeated.
“Yes—surely you remember that your grandmother was Mrs. Noah Armand at that time. It was only after Noah—went away—that she took back the name of her first husband—Morgan. It’s a respected name out here.”
Armand. That was the last name I hadn’t been able to remember. And Noah was the name that sometimes came into my mind carrying some frightening connotation that I always turned away from.
I spoke hurriedly, hating the tension in my voice, “I’d better tell you—I don’t remember anything about the time when I last visited my grandmother. I was ill when my mother brought me East and I was in a hospital for a while. Afterward there was a gap in my memory. So it’s all gone.”
I was aware of the half-turn of Jon Maddocks’ head before he attended again to his driving, but he didn’t speak. At my side Caleb Hawes’ straight mouth tightened.
“Perhaps it’s wiser not to remember. Your grandmother will be just as glad. She doesn’t want to recall that time either.”
It was hard not to shiver. How long could I remain outwardly calm in the company of those who remembered every detail of what I had so completely forgotten? I tried to remind myself that this was the reason for my coming—to know, to find out. Only I mustn’t go too fast. I must take this a step at a time, so that I could learn how to deal with it in a way that wouldn’t overpower me and send me over the precipice I feared.
In the front seat Hillary had turned to watch me, his look intent, and I knew that he half expected me to crack, to fall apart in terror, sooner or later. But that I was determined not to do, and I managed a smile.
“We’re missing the mountains,” I said. “Let’s not talk. Let’s just watch.”
We were driving through Boulder now, and I could see the thousand-foot-high Flatirons, with their jagged peaks slicing the sky. Then the road took us up Boulder Canyon to Nederland, and on west.
I recognized nothing of what I saw. I could look at the spectacular scenery with the eyes of a stranger seeing it for the first time. With a sense of awe, yet without recognition. I only knew I loved the mountains—any mountains. Before long I found myself breathing more quickly as the air thinned to a mixture I wasn’t accustomed to, and Caleb Hawes noticed my puffing.
“It may give you a sort of euphoria at first. You’ll think you’re full of all kinds of energy—so watch it. You’ll tire quickly until you get used to the altitude. Just breathe faster for a while.”
At my knees Red yawned widely, and Hillary looked around and grinned, following suit.
“Tell me about Jasper,” I said to Caleb. “I’ve seen pictures of Central City, Is it like that?”
“It’s hardly a Central City, or a Leadville, or Durango. Not room enough to spread. Your great-grandfather, Malcolm Tremayne, found a rich vein of purple quartz over on Old Desolate that assayed high in silver. It pinched out after a while, but there were other strikes. Enough to make him one of the silver kings. So Jasper was born.”
“I’d like to have seen it in the old days.” Jon Maddocks’ voice carried a deep timbre. When he spoke, I noticed that we all listened—though he had said so little that his words always seemed to come as a surprise. He continued, with his eyes on the road ahead. “I’ve heard my grandfather talk about it. The way those little camps like Domino sprang up all over the place. The way thousands poured in, crazy for gold and silver. He used to say it wasn’t just the notion of wealth that kept them going. It was treasure fever—the strike that could be made just over the next hill, or in the next riverbed.”
His words brought pictures to my mind that Caleb Hawes’ dry facts had not done. I wanted to hear more.
“Was your grandfather a miner?”
“My great-grandfather was a Cornishman. He was one of the tinners who came to America when the bad times hit the tin mines in Cornwall. He worked in Domino along with Malcolm Tremayne and Tyler Morgan, and he’s buried in the Jasper cemetery. He died of lung cancer from the rock dust, I gather. Your grandmother remembers him. It’s strange to think of that whole silver boom over so suddenly.”
“Why? Why was it over?”
“It’s a complicated political story. But to put it simply, the bottom dropped out of silver when Congress removed the price support back in 1893. A lot of the camps disappeared into dust almost overnight when that happened.”
“Not everyone left,” Caleb Hawes said. “The Tremaynes and the Morgans stayed on. They were rich enough by that time to do as they pleased, and they’d made sound investments. So that’s where they raised their families, right in Jasper, and sent them off to school in Boulder and Denver.”
“Until my father went to school in the East,” I said quietly. “And met my mother there.”
There was a momentary silence before Caleb Hawes spoke coolly. “Something your grandmother has always regretted.”
I turned to him with a sudden appeal I hadn’t meant to make. “I have a feeling I’m not welcome here. I won’t stay long. Perhaps only for a few days. Lone enough to find out why my grandmother wanted me to come. I don’t belong here, and there’s nothing I can do for her—so I’ll leave as soon as I can.”
“Once you belonged here,” Jon Maddocks said.
The deep tones of his voice seemed to probe something dangerous in my memory, as if sleeping terrors stirred and grew ready to waken.
Hillary came to my rescue. “Laurie’s a New York girl now. I can’t see her putting down roots in these mountains.”
“She can’t help her roots,” Jon said, his eyes always on the winding mountain road, so that I saw only the back of his head, the battered rim of his hat. I couldn’t place him, pigeonhole him, and I was beginning to suspect that no pigeonhole would ever accept that lanky, sinewy body. Had I known him when I was little? It was possible, since he was only a few years older than I. Yet I had no sense
of recognition. Surely I would have known him at once if he had been the young boy who sometimes came into my dream.
“What I can’t understand,” Hillary went on, “is why Mrs. Morgan would want to stay in so remote and broken-down a place at her age.”
“It’s her home.” Caleb sounded curt. “She doesn’t mean to be put out of it, no matter what anyone else advises. She is a determined woman. At least she used to be.”
“Used to be?” I repeated.
“She’s changed,” he said, and was silent.
Hillary put another question of his own. “Why does she disapprove of the Timberline?”
Apparently it was the wrong question, and the attorney closed his lips tightly on four words. “You’d better ask her.”
I didn’t mind the silence that followed. The mountains were awesomely beautiful, and I longed to be out where I could climb them, get to the very top, where I could command the earth below me. I gave myself over to watching whatever offered—tall spruce and hemlock, aspens with their quivering leaves like “silver dollars”—I remembered that phrase. Occasional outcroppings of red rock raised eerie pinnacles beside the road, and a mountain stream tumbled down the canyon toward the plains. Now that we were long away from Boulder there were fewer signs of habitation, but it was clear that cars had come this way, because of the pitiful animal bodies left on the pavement.
“Hold tight,” Caleb said. “This is where we turn off on the road to Jasper.”
It was a rough gravel road—very rough—and I could see the need for a jeep. Wind came whining around craggy peaks that were etched now in gold from the lowering afternoon sun, so that mauve shadows fell across our way. Already it was cooler, and I was glad of my suede jacket and warm pants. Red whined uncertainly, and I knew that strange scents from the deep woods were reaching him. He responded to my hand and snuggled closer for reassurance. He was not a very brave dog, and all this was unknown territory.
Once, looking down between aspens on the hillside below, I saw the main road we had left winding off in hairpin turns below us, with a car following its looped ribbon like a tiny bug. The sense of height was exciting, and the sense as well of moving out of touch with a world I knew—the world of cities and living towns. This was still wilderness. Forest and cold mountain streams, the steep-pitched sides of slope and canyon, hadn’t yet been reached into destructively by man. I began to experience a bit of that euphoria Caleb Hawes had mentioned, and I knew that once I had loved all of this.
For the first time in some miles Jon Maddocks spoke. “Look ahead!”
I stared through the windshield at snow peaks lifting gloriously against a cornflower sky where the sun still shone.
“The Continental Divide,” Caleb informed us, sounding like a textbook. “Running all the way from Canada’s northwest territories to Mexico. The backbone of North America.”
Yet the Rockies were beginning to seem more like a jumble of mountains to me, spreading beyond and beyond forever, and not at all like a thin backbone. They were indeed rocky, and not like the gentler mountains of the East.
Now it was my turn to cry, “Look!” as I pointed toward broken ties and rusted rails running below the road we followed. “Did trains come up here?”
“Of course,” Caleb said. “That’s the old narrow gauge that took out the ore from Jasper when it was mined. Wherever there was enough silver or gold, the railroads came. That track hasn’t been used since early in the century. We’re nearly there now.”
For a little while the lonely mountains had calmed me, but now I braced myself, waiting for my first glimpse of the town I could vaguely remember.
There had been a sign on the highway we had left announcing that the Pass was open. A reminder of what could happen when the snows came. Now we seemed to be traveling through a narrow cut between high peaks, and here the shadows were thick, almost as though night had begun, though it was still late afternoon.
“Jasper can be cut off completely in the winter months,” Caleb said. “The road gets cleared out eventually, but there are sometimes snowslides that take days for the road crews to cut through. Electricity is the first thing to go of course, and the telephone. Though we have shortwave radio now for emergencies.”
“Mrs. Morgan doesn’t stay up here through all that snow does she?” Hillary asked.
“Sure she does,” Jon said. “I’ve been here with her for the last few winters. That’s when you find out what you’re made of.”
Caleb’s laugh was dry. “Not for me! I’ll take Denver in the winter anytime. But the Morgans have always stayed here in the mountains, along with a few other hardy souls who dislike civilization. They have oil for heat and propane gas for cooking. And some extra generators. The old oil lamps come out, and the candles. Of course food supplies are stocked well ahead of the first snow, and there’s even one last store in town that operates. Jasper was never completely abandoned, so it hasn’t deteriorated as badly as most old campsites in the mountains. Now it’s having its first real face-lift.”
There was something in his tone, part denigration, part admiration, that caught my attention. “In what way?”
“Ingram’s taking charge. He’s done over the Timberline, and as I told you, he owns most of the town by now. He wants to turn Jasper into a ski resort, get the access road paved, open up ski slopes. And during the summer bring tourists in for a taste of the old West.”
“He doesn’t own Persis Morgan,” Jon Maddocks said.
Caleb went on, ignoring him. “Your grandmother holds the land outside Jasper that Ingram needs for his project. So you’ve arrived in the middle of a war, so to speak.”
I exchanged a look with Hillary and saw that his eyes were bright with anticipation. If I had been brought here to fortify my grandmother’s opposition, Hillary would be ready for a fight. But would I? What could I possibly do?
“How do you stand on this?” Hillary asked Caleb.
“I work for Mrs. Morgan. Her interests are of course the interests of my firm. But Mark Ingram is pretty powerful, and it might be better for her to sell and get out. More sensible. She’s grown too old for this sort of fight. And Ingram could be a ruthless opponent.”
Before I had time to wonder about his words, I saw that the road had opened and we were descending from the Pass. The mountain dropped off precipitously to a stream far below. Along the narrow expanse of ledge between mountain and canyon stretched the town of Jasper, Colorado, and something stirred in me. Recognition? I wasn’t sure.
I knew only that suddenly I wanted to turn and run, wanted only to escape what was coming up so surely ahead of us as the road dropped to the level of the town. But I sat hunched in my seat, knowing that I could not run, knowing that I wouldn’t even if I could, and that a knot of stubborn determination was gathering in me that would have to substitute for courage.
So this was Jasper, and possibly my fate? All right then—I would meet it as well as I could, and that was all I need ever ask of myself.
IV
The way we followed was clearly the main street, with another running parallel below and two or three other streets on the hill above. Still higher were the ruined structures of old mines and the bare mounds of tailing dumps left behind to scar the land forever.
To my surprise, the main street was far from empty. Many of the false fronts had been repaired and refurbished with new paint. Men on ladders and scaffolding were working on buildings that were still shabby and dilapidated. The pounding of hammers, the ring of metal on wood sounded everywhere. If I’d hoped we would enter a lonely, empty street that would evoke the past so that a feeling of familiarity would stir in me, I was to be disappointed.
Freshly painted signs announced a blacksmith’s shop, a barber’s, where a pole was being newly striped, and even a livery stable. The latter was operating, since horses stood in the stalls and repairs were being made on a buckboard. On ahead a small white church raised a new steeple above its lower neighbors.
Cars
and trucks had been parked on the side streets, above and below, obviously belonging to the influx of workmen from the outside world. Some of these houses seemed to be occupied, probably being used as living quarters for this army of help.
Somehow all this effort to spruce up everything took away the appeal for me. The Jasper I remembered was gray and weathered and growing shabby—like an old friend who had lived for a very long time. This new Jasper meant nothing to me, and I felt recognition only for those buildings that still showed the signs of age, whose windows were broken and siding splintered.
Farther on along the street an impressive building with thin posts holding up its extended roof indicated by a new sign that it was the Opera House. Next door was a post office and general store, and then an empty jail. The town was noisy with hammering and pounding and the voices of workmen.
Across from the Opera House the Timberline Hotel stood out because it was the largest building in sight, and had been painted a dazzling white.
“We’d better stop and unload Mr. Lange here,” Caleb said to Jon Maddocks.
I must have made some involuntary sound of protest because Hillary reached back to touch my knee. “I’ll be fine, Laurie, and so will you. I’ll see you early tomorrow. It’s better not to spring me on your grandmother until you’ve had a chance to get acquainted with her.”
“I’ll come in with you for a moment,” I said as Jon got out to help Hillary with his bags. “I’d like to see the hotel.”
Caleb came with us. A board sidewalk in good repair fronted the building, which was set slightly above the street, with three steps to mount. There was even a narrow porch, painted white like the rest, and for the moment empty of chairs. Wide double doors stood open, and when Caleb motioned to us I stepped into an older world.
Outside there was still considerable dilapidation and neglect, for all the effort that was being made, but here the good-sized lobby was perfect in its restoration. Furnishings of Victorian sofas and pedestal tables had been installed, and the carpet wore large cabbage roses in its pattern. If the red velvet draperies at every long window were modern synthetics, one would never know. The gold cords that tied them back were untarnished, and again undoubtedly synthetic. On the wall had been hung prints of Remington paintings and photographs of famous Colorado mining towns—Telluride and Cripple Creek in their past glory. Mark Ingram, whatever else he was, had renovated well.
Domino Page 4