Native Gold

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by Glynnis Campbell




  Native Gold

  by Glynnis Campbell

  Published by Glynnis Campbell at Smashwords

  Copyright 2014 Glynnis Campbell

  Native Gold by Glynnis Campbell

  Published by Glynnis Campbell

  COPYRIGHT © Glynnis Campbell 2014

  ISBN 9781938114113

  1st Edition, October 2014

  Produced with Typesetter

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used or reproduced or transmitted in any manner whatsoever, electronically, in print, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of both Glynnis Campbell and Glynnis Campbell, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  PUBLISHER'S NOTE: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Smashwords License Statement

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each reader. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  Dedication

  For the good people of Paradise

  from the

  Gold Nugget Queen of 1975

  Prologue

  AUTUMN 1850

  NEW YORK

  "Ladies and gentlemen, if you please!" Ambrose Hardwicke clapped his hands, earning the attention of the American nobility packed into his glittering ballroom.

  Mattie creased the rose satin of her too-tight gown with her nail-bitten fingers. This was her moment.

  It wasn’t the first time her uncle had paraded her before the cream of New York society. Ambrose never forgot his duties to his five charges—the four daughters who were his by blood, and seventeen-year-old Mathilda, who’d been thrust upon him as an orphan two years ago. Chief among those duties was seeing that his girls married well.

  To marry well, Ambrose said, one had to possess Quality. Something Mattie apparently lacked. Something Ambrose worked hard to instill in her.

  His four daughters, blessed with their mother’s beauty and poise, would grace the arm of any man he chose for them.

  Mathilda, however, didn’t have their porcelain skin, pale gold tresses, or angelic features.

  Some of her flaws were a matter of birth. Some of them she owed to her affection for the sun and her aversion to bonnets. Her complexion bordered on tawny. Her brown hair was streaked with lighter strands of a most contrary color, which were in startling contrast to her bright green eyes. And to everyone’s horror, she had a sprinkling of tiny freckles across her nose that no amount of powder could hide.

  But worse than her appearance, according to Uncle Ambrose, was her temperament. She didn’t have her cousins’ gentle manner. She tended to speak before she was spoken to. And often, what came out of her mouth wasn’t suited to polite society.

  So Ambrose had decided that wayward Mattie must be marketed by merit of what he regarded as her only gift—her talent for painting.

  "If I may have your attention!" he bellowed.

  Mattie chewed at her lower lip. Aunt Emily smiled tightly, sending her a chiding glare. Proper ladies didn’t fidget. None of her cousins, currently lined up in graceful ascending height beside their mother, ever moved a muscle that wasn’t absolutely essential. Even now, the sisters seemed to float above the hubbub of the evening unperturbed, like thistledown atop a swirling eddy.

  Not Mattie. She was wound as tight as a clock spring.

  It didn’t matter that Uncle Ambrose hosted these galas at least twice a season and that they always included a viewing of Mathilda’s latest work.

  Tonight was different. Tonight she’d show the audience a masterpiece. Tonight she’d bare her soul.

  This painting was the best she’d ever done. The image had emerged upon the canvas in a rush of passion, like a fevered outpouring from her heart. It seemed like she’d painted it with her own blood and tears.

  A thrill of improper excitement coursed through her as she thought about what sat upon the easel beneath the velvet drape. This was no muted, delicate watercolor of the countryside. This painting would take their breath away. It would open their eyes, the way her eyes had been opened by the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood—Millais, Rossetti, and Hunt—whose work she’d seen in London last year.

  Just thinking of how those young artists had brazenly challenged the Royal Academy made her heart race.

  They followed no rules but those of nature. Gone were the stifling standards of Sir Joshua Reynolds. Dead were the outdated concepts of the Renaissance.

  Art was no longer slave to man, but expression to truth—a truth Mattie was about to reveal to the guests, who were silent now except for soft murmurs and the rustle of silk skirts.

  "My niece informs me," Ambrose announced, smoothing one waxed tip of his gray mustache, "that she has abandoned landscapes this time in favor of a portrait."

  A few polite ahs and approving nods were sent her way.

  "She has chosen to paint, from recollection, her dearly departed parents—my brother, Lawrence, and his wife, Mary."

  There were a few sympathetic whispers as he grasped the corner of the drape. Mattie held her breath. Then, in a dramatic sweep of velvet, he revealed the painting.

  The crowd gasped, awestruck.

  Mattie knew intimately every brush stroke, every shadow, each strand of hair and droplet of water, but the painting amazed even her. Had she truly done it herself? Or had the spirit of the Pre-Raphaelites possessed her soul, guiding her hand?

  Her mother and father, lost at sea, she’d depicted in vibrant oils as a Siren and a sailor.

  On the left, the nude female figure half-reclined upon stark black rock, her scaly fish tail barely visible beneath the swirling emerald depths of the sea, her pale bosom slashed by strands of her dark, wet hair. Her lips were parted as if in melancholy song, and her face appeared to glow with ethereal light.

  Below her, the sailor, his shirt torn from his shoulders, his bronze hair drenched, his face tormented by wondrous obsession and fatigue, sank in the waters at her feet, one hand reaching up towards her in supplication.

  Just looking at the painting, Mattie could feel their tragedy. Yet the scene spoke of hope as well. From the skies above the doomed pair, the somber clouds broke to reveal a single shimmering bolt of sunlight, a guiding beacon to heaven and happiness beyond.

  So enrapt was she, reliving the emotion of the painting—sorrow, frustration, promise—that at first Mattie failed to hear the whispers. When they finally registered, she couldn’t have been more astonished.

  "Good God!"

  "What kind of daughter—“

  "—not even a stitch of clothing!"

  "Lawrence would turn in his grave if—“

  "How could she—“

  "Indecent, I tell you!"

  The spell of the painting broken, Mattie turned a bewildered face to the crowd. Some of them stood with open mouths, as if she’d just unveiled a three-headed calf. Uncle Ambrose’s face turned ruddy, and he shook with outrage. And in the corner of the room, her perfectly composed cousin Diana fell over in a dead faint.

  A full hour had passed since the debacle in the ballroom. Yet Mattie still waited, picking at the arm of the worn leather chair facing her uncle’s deserted desk in the library. Clearly he intended to let her stew until all the guests departed before he cam
e, as he’d promised, "to deal with her." She wondered if he made his petitioners fidget in this chair before they begged him for a morsel of his considerable funds.

  She chewed at her lip. She didn’t understand why everyone had reacted so badly to her work. Surely Diana’s swooning had less to do with what she’d seen on the canvas than with the tightness of her stays—which was a perfect example of what the Pre-Raphaelites fought against. Restraint was a thing of the past. Constriction of one’s artistic expression made no more sense than the wasp-waisted devices of torture women endured in the name of fashion.

  Yes, she thought, scooting the chair back with a harsh scrape. That was it. She’d explain it all to her uncle when he came to speak to her. If he ever came.

  She rubbed a damp palm over the arm of the chair, then pushed herself up again and began pacing. Had the Brothers faced such scorn when they first presented their paintings to the public? She supposed she’d have to inure herself to criticism if she wanted to ascend to their prominence in the art world. For above all—as her parents had told her from the time she was old enough to hold a paintbrush—she must never fight her nature. She must be true to herself.

  It was no easy task when one was shuffled from one household to another, as she’d been since her father’s...accident. Only Uncle Ambrose had even made the attempt to tame Lawrence’s "wild child." The other relatives seemed to consider Mattie a curse to be passed from kin to kin, a wicked girl as foolhardy as her father. They whispered that it was her father’s flagrant disregard for convention that had killed him, that Mattie was surely destined for the same fate.

  But Mattie knew the truth. She wasn’t wicked, only...different. So her parents had said.

  If her fingers found much more delight wrapped around an artist’s pencil than stuck in a sewing thimble or lilting across piano keys or any of the half-dozen or so activities appropriate to a lady’s station, it wasn’t because she was wayward. She was only using her God-given talent.

  Just because she’d rather spend her afternoons sketching the sailors at the docks than sipping tea in some old biddy’s parlor didn’t mean she was depraved.

  Just because her portraits of family members were painstakingly accurate, down to each wrinkle and scar, rather than obsequiously flattering, didn’t mean she was vulgar.

  And whose business was it if her sketchbook, her private sketchbook, contained a bare male torso here and there?

  Besides, it wasn’t nonconformity that had killed her father. Yes, he’d lived a dangerous, exciting life, traveling and writing papers about exotic places—the jungles of India, the sands of Egypt, the wilds of Africa.

  But his love of adventure hadn’t killed him. He’d died of a broken heart. When his wife succumbed to fever on their excursion to the West Indies, he’d cast himself from the ship into the waters of the Caribbean, deciding there was nothing left to live for.

  No one spoke of his brief letter of sad farewell. Instead, Lawrence Hardwicke was tactfully proclaimed “lost at sea.”

  In the five years since then, Mattie, too, had floated like a ship adrift, finding temporary harbor with various kin whose expectations she could never quite fulfill.

  But she was almost eighteen now. Soon she’d no longer worry about their expectations. She’d embark upon her own life, just as her parents had done, put her ship in order and let the winds take her where they willed.

  The mantel clock chimed. Mattie shivered. Another quarter hour had passed, and the fire, reduced to red-limned coals, needed tending. But she didn’t dare touch it. Everything in the library belonged exclusively to her uncle. He’d made that abundantly clear when she’d arrived two years ago and helped herself to a precious volume of Renaissance art. He’d rapped her knuckles with a ruler and lectured her about personal property in booming tones that were probably heard in Yonkers.

  But she’d never forgotten the lesson. No one touched what belonged to Ambrose Hardwicke.

  Mattie sighed, her anxiety dulled to restless boredom. She leaned forward toward the mahogany desk and straightened the blotter. Then, on a devilish impulse, she set it askew again. She flounced back into the chair and began drumming her fingers atop the glossy, lemon-oiled surface of the desk—forward and backward, forward and backward. The day’s newspaper was scattered across the blotter, and she inclined her head to peer at the headlines.

  Casting caution aside, she shuffled the paper together and reversed it so she could read it. There was nothing of much interest to her, mostly politics, financial enterprises, and the usual stories of murder and mayhem. Then, on the fourth page, a small advertisement caught her eye. She rested her finger on the column and traced the words.

  "Man of a Decent Age and Not Unhandsome desires God-fearing, Respectable Woman to head West for purposes of Matrimony. Will pay for Transport by Steamer and provide Sustenance in the form of a Modest Home, Full Provender, and whatever niceties a Woman of Dignity may require and my profession as a Physician and Gold Miner may afford, in exchange for Maintenance of that Household, including Purchasing of Supplies, Preparing of Meals, Laundering of Clothing, and other customary wifely duties. All interested parties send Correspondence to Paradise Bar, California. Yours faithfully, Doctor James Harrison."

  Mattie smiled. How strange those Californians were, advertising for a wife. "A God-fearing, Respectable Woman" indeed. What Respectable Woman would head west to marry a man she’d never met? Her cousins were Respectable Women, and they’d sooner walk into the path of a runaway carriage than allow themselves to be dragged aboard a steamer bound for California.

  Mattie’s musings were interrupted by the click of the library door behind her. She swiftly pushed the newspaper back across the desk and, for once, wisely waited for Ambrose to speak first.

  "I’ve had to call the physician for Diana." He didn’t boom this time, but somehow his low growl seemed far more deadly than the verbal cannonballs he usually fired.

  Wary of his volatile temper, she kept her back straight and her eyes focused on the desk before her, and then gently cleared her throat. "Is she all right?"

  "No, she is not all right." Mattie could almost hear the grinding of his teeth. "She’s had a shock."

  She swallowed guiltily. "Actually, I believe it may have been the tightness of her stays rather than—"

  "What!"

  She grimaced. There it was. The cannon.

  His boot heels clacked heavily on the floor as he marched up behind her, and she prepared to listen to a thunderous tirade. But it never came. Instead, he hissed at her like one of the coals smoldering in the fireplace.

  "Is this what comes of my generosity? How I’m rewarded for taking in my brother’s child? First with that lascivious painting, and now with vulgar speech?"

  He seized the arm of her chair and wrenched it around towards him, startling a squeak from her. She shrank as his beefy hands clasped both arms of the chair, trapping her between them.

  "Tell me, girl, and I won’t hear any lies." His jaw was clenched, and his mustache quivered. "Who did you connive into it, eh? Who sat as a model for your filthy painting? Which servant am I going to have to dismiss?"

  Surprise widened her eyes. A model? Dear Lord, did he honestly believe that any of his servants had the time to sit for...

  "Who was it?" He rattled the chair, and she glimpsed murder in his purpling face. Good heavens, he was serious.

  She gasped. "No one!" She didn’t dare tell him the truth—that she’d styled the figure after herself, painting in her room before a looking glass, bare to the waist. "I did it...from my imagination."

  He narrowed his eyes, obviously unconvinced. Then he stepped briskly from her, muttering, "I should never have let Lawrence’s brat sully my household."

  Mattie’s throat tightened. She’d grown accustomed to her uncle’s bluster. Most of it was as harmless as a spring storm blowing through. But she’d never heard him say such a hurtful thing. The pain of it made her eyes water.

  He growled and
leaned something against the desk—her painting. It was draped again. She supposed he considered it too vile to expose.

  "Blazes, girl," he grumbled. "Can’t you do anything right? Now you’ve let the fire die." He crossed to the hearth and jabbed briskly at the coals with a heavy iron poker, adding two more logs.

  Mattie’s head swam as she bit back tears. Nothing she did ever pleased him. She supposed she should be used to scorn by now, but it always hurt.

  "I’ve tried to civilize you," he muttered, his back to her as he prodded the flames. "God knows I’ve tried to bring you up to Hardwicke standards. I’ve given you every opportunity to make something of yourself. I’ve fed you and clothed you like one of my own. I’ve introduced you to the best of society. Damn it all!"

  She flinched. No matter how angry Ambrose Hardicke was, she’d never heard him swear, never.

  "I’ve let you consort with my own innocent daughters, even when it was against my better judgment."

  A hard lump clogged her throat like a half-swallowed lemon drop. How could he say such things to her?

  "And this!" he said, gesturing toward the painting with the poker. "This is how I’m repaid. With this...this revolting monstrosity of a painting that’s an affront to the memory of my dear brother and a public humiliation to the Hardwicke name."

  Mattie sat, too stunned to answer, too paralyzed with pain to defend herself. Was that what he thought of her masterpiece? That it was a monstrosity? Was that what everyone thought?

  The flames snapped and flared behind him, and for a moment Ambrose looked like the Devil himself silhouetted against the inferno. Then he set the poker into its stand and thoughtfully stroked the end of his mustache.

  "Henceforward, Mathilda, while you live beneath my roof, you will no longer indulge in such licentious avocations. I’ve had the servants remove the paints and canvases from your room, along with your sketchbooks."

  His words sucked the very breath from her lungs. Not her art. It was all she had. He couldn’t take that away from her.

 

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