Blindfolded
CONTENTS
A city of hills with a fringe of houses crowning the lower heights; half-mountains rising bare in the background and becoming real mountains as they stretched away in the distance to right and left; a confused mass of buildings coming to the water's edge on the flat; a forest of masts, ships swinging in the stream, and the streaked, yellow, gray-green water of the bay taking a cold light from the setting sun as it struggled through the wisps of fog that fluttered above the serrated sky-line of the city—these were my first impressions of San Francisco.
The wind blew fresh and chill from the west with the damp and salt of the Pacific heavy upon it, as I breasted it from the forward deck of the ferry steamer, El Capitan . As I drank in the air and was silent with admiration of the beautiful panorama that was spread before me, my companion touched me on the arm.
“Come into the cabin,” he said. “You'll be one of those fellows who can't come to San Francisco without catching his death of cold, and then lays it on to the climate instead of his own lack of common sense. Come, I can't spare you, now I've got you here at last. I wouldn't lose you for a million dollars.”
“I'll come for half the money,” I returned, as he took me by the arm and led me into the close cabin.
My companion, I should explain, was Henry Wilton, the son of my father's cousin, who had the advantages of a few years of residence in California, and sported all the airs of a pioneer. We had been close friends through boyhood and youth, and it was on his offer of employment that I had come to the city by the Golden Gate.
“What a resemblance!” I heard a woman exclaim, as we entered the cabin. “They must be twins.”
“There, Henry,” I whispered, with a laugh; “you see we are discovered.” Though our relationship was not close we had been cast in the mold of some common ancestor. We were so nearly alike in form and feature as to perplex all but our intimate acquaintances, and we had made the resemblance the occasion of many tricks in our boyhood days.
Earle Ashley Walcott
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BLINDFOLDED
BLINDFOLDED
CHAPTER I. A DANGEROUS ERRAND
CHAPTER II. A CRY FOR HELP
CHAPTER III. A QUESTION IN THE NIGHT
CHAPTER IV. A CHANGE OF NAME
CHAPTER V. DODDRIDGE KNAPP
CHAPTER VI. A NIGHT AT BORTON'S
CHAPTER VII. MOTHER BORTON
CHAPTER VIII. IN WHICH I MEET A FEW SURPRISES
CHAPTER IX. A DAY IN THE MARKET
CHAPTER X. A TANGLE OF SCHEMES
CHAPTER XI. THE DEN OF THE WOLF
CHAPTER XII. LUELLA KNAPP
CHAPTER XIII. A DAY OF GRACE
CHAPTER XIV. MOTHER BORTON'S ADVICE
CHAPTER XV. I AM IN THE TOILS
CHAPTER XVI. AN ECHO OF WARNING
CHAPTER XVII. IN A FOREIGN LAND
CHAPTER XVIII. THE BATTLE IN THE MAZE
CHAPTER XIX. A DEAL IN STOCKS
CHAPTER XX. MAKING PROGRESS
CHAPTER XXI. AT THE BIDDING OF THE UNKNOWN
CHAPTER XXII. TRAILED
CHAPTER XXIII. A PIECE OF STRATEGY
CHAPTER XXIV. ON THE ROAD
CHAPTER XXV. A FLUTTER IN THE MARKET
CHAPTER XXVI. A VISION OF THE NIGHT
CHAPTER XXVII. A LINK IN THE CHAIN
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE CHASE IN THE STORM
CHAPTER XXIX. THE HEART OF THE MYSTERY
CHAPTER XXX. THE END OF THE JOURNEY
CHAPTER XXXI. THE REWARD