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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30037 ***
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+THE PRINCESS OF FORGE
+
+THE ISLE OF STRIFE
+
+THE INCORRIGIBLE DUKANE
+
+THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE
+
+THE INVISIBLE ENEMY
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE C. SHEDD
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+"THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE," ETC.
+
+NEW YORK
+
+THE MACAULAY COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, 1919, By THE MACAULAY COMPANY
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE FRANK A. MUNSEY CO.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY 11
+ II A COMEDY--AND SOMETHING ELSE 23
+ III THE ENEMY'S SPAWN 34
+ IV A SECRET CONFERENCE 42
+ V A SHOT IN THE DARK 53
+ VI JANET HOSMER 64
+ VII IN THE COIL 75
+ VIII THE GATHERING STORM 83
+ IX AN UNEXPECTED ALLY 91
+ X BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION 99
+ XI JANET AND MARY 107
+ XII THE PLOT 116
+ XIII THE CURRENT OF EVENTS 121
+ XIV OLD SAUREZ' DEPOSITION 135
+ XV THE MASK DROPPED 145
+ XVI WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT 158
+ XVII EARTH'S RETRIBUTION 167
+ XVIII IN THE NIGHT WATCHES 177
+ XIX A QUEER PAPER 189
+ XX ANXIETIES 197
+ XXI THE WEAK LINK 209
+ XXII AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE 219
+ XXIII WITH FANGS BARED 226
+ XXIV THE ALARM 238
+ XXV NO QUARTER 248
+ XXVI THE THUNDERBOLT 256
+ XXVII WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT 261
+ XXVIII VORSE 270
+ XXIX THE FOURTH MAN 279
+ XXX THE VICTOR 286
+ XXXI A FINAL CHALLENGE 294
+ XXXII THE RECLUSE 304
+ XXXIII UNDER THE MOON 314
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY
+
+
+Eastward out of the Torquilla Range the Burntwood River emerged from a
+gorge, flowing swift and turbulent during the spring months, shallow
+and murmurous the rest of the year, to pass through a basin formed by
+low mountains and break forth at last from a canyon and wind away over
+the mesa. In the canyon was being erected the huge reservoir dam which
+was in the future to store water for irrigating the broad acres
+spreading from its base.
+
+The construction camp rested on one of the hillsides above the dam.
+And here one summer afternoon a man stepped forth from the long low
+tar-papered shack that served as headquarters, directing his gaze down
+the road across the mesa at a departing automobile. He was Steele
+Weir, the new chief, a tall, strong, tanned man of thirty-five, with
+lean smooth-shaven face, a straight heavy nose, mouth that by habit
+was set in grim lines, and heavy brows under which ruled cold, level,
+insistent, gray eyes. He had come suddenly, unexpectedly, returning
+with Magney, the engineer in charge, when the latter had been summoned
+east for a conference with the company's directors. He had replaced
+Magney, who was now whirling away to the nearest railway point,
+Bowenville, thirty-five miles distant.
+
+He thoughtfully watched the car, a black spot in a haze of dust,
+speeding towards the New Mexican town of San Mateo, on the Burntwood
+River two miles below camp, its cluster of brown adobe houses showing
+indistinctly through the cottonwoods that embowered the place. For
+Magney he felt a certain amount of sympathy, for the engineer was
+leaving with a recognition of defeat; he was a likeable man, as Steele
+Weir had discovered during their brief acquaintance, a good
+theoretical engineer, but lacking in the prime quality of a successful
+chief--fighting spirit and an indomitable will.
+
+Under Magney the work of construction had been inaugurated the
+previous summer, but progress had not been as rapid as desired; there
+had been delays, labor difficulties, local opposition during the
+months since; and Weir had been chosen to succeed Magney. In his
+profession Weir had a reputation, built on relentless toil and sound
+ideas and daring achievements--a reputation enhanced by a character of
+mystery, for the man was unmarried, reserved, without intimates or
+even friends, locking his lips about his life, and welcoming and
+executing with grim indifference to risk engineering commissions of
+extreme hazard, on which account he had acquired the soubriquet of
+"Cold Steel" Weir.
+
+Who first bestowed upon Weir that name is not known. But it was not
+misapplied. Cold steel he had proved himself to be a score of times in
+critical moments when other men would have broken: in pushing bridges
+over mountain chasms, in mine disasters, in strikes, in almost
+hopeless fights against bandits in Mexico. And it was this ability to
+handle difficulties that had brought about the decision of the
+directors of the company to put him in charge, as the man best
+qualified, at San Mateo, where the situation was unsatisfactory,
+costly, baffling.
+
+Since his arrival a week before he had been consulting with Magney,
+studying maps and blue-prints, examining the work and analyzing
+general conditions. What had been accomplished had been well done; he
+had no criticism to offer on that score. It was the delay; the work
+was considerably behind schedule, which of course meant excessive
+cost; and this had undermined the spirit of the enterprise. In a dozen
+places, in a dozen ways, Magney, his predecessor, had been hampered,
+checked, defeated--and the main contributing cause was poor workmen,
+inefficient work. On that sore Weir's skillful finger fell at once.
+
+Standing there before the low office building he watched Magney
+depart. He, Steele Weir, had now taken over full charge of the camp
+and assumed full responsibility for the project's failure or success.
+His eye passed beyond the distant automobile to the town of San
+Mateo--a new town for him, but a town like many he had seen in the
+southwest and in Mexico. And aside from its connection with the
+construction work, it held a fascinating interest, a profound interest
+for the man, the interest that any spot would which has at a distance
+cast a black and sinister shadow over one's life. San Mateo--the name
+lay like a smoldering coal in his breast!
+
+At length he turned and strode down the hillside to the dam site in
+the canyon. The time had come to shut his hand about the work and let
+his hold be felt. He located the superintendent directing the pouring
+of concrete in the frames of the dam core, Atkinson, a man of fifty
+with a stubby gray mustache, a wind-bitten face and a tall angular
+frame. When Weir joined him he was observing with speculative eyes the
+indolent movements of a group of Mexican laborers.
+
+"Those _hombres_ don't appear to be breaking any speed records, I
+see," Weir remarked, quietly.
+
+"Humph," Atkinson grunted.
+
+"What do they think this is? A rest cure?"
+
+The superintendent's silence suddenly gave way.
+
+"I ought to land on 'em with an ax-handle and put the fear of God in
+their lazy souls," he exclaimed, bitterly.
+
+"Well, do it."
+
+"What!"
+
+"Do it."
+
+"Say, am I hearing right?" Atkinson swung fully about to stare at the
+new chief. Then he went on, "They'd quit to a man if made to do a
+man's work; I supposed that Magney had told you that. A dozen times
+I've been ready to throw up my job from self-respect; I'm ashamed to
+boss work where men can loaf and I must keep my tongue between my
+teeth. I was considering just now the matter of leaving."
+
+"No need, Atkinson. From this time these men will work or get their
+dismissal."
+
+The other pushed his hat atilt and rubbed his head in surprise.
+
+"What about that 'company policy' of hiring nothing but local labor to
+keep the community friendly which Magney was always kicking about?" he
+asked. "That was what made him sorer than anything else, and beat him.
+He said the directors had tied his hands by promising that no workmen
+should be imported. If they promised that, they sure bunkoed
+themselves. Friendly, huh."
+
+"The people haven't been friendly, eh?" Weir said.
+
+"Does it look like it when these Mexicans won't work enough to earn
+their salt? They openly boast that we dare neither make them work
+nor fire them. They say Sorenson and his bunch will pull every man off
+the works if we lift a finger; and they all know about that fool
+promise of the directors. Friendly? Just about as friendly as a
+bunch of wildcats. This whole section, white men and Mexicans, are
+putting a knife into this project whenever they can. Do you think they
+want all that mesa fenced up and farmed? This is a range country;
+they propose to keep it range; they don't want any more people
+coming here--farmers, store-keepers, and white people generally."
+
+"That's always the case in a range country before it's opened up,"
+Weir said. "But they have to swallow the pill."
+
+"Let me tell you something; they don't intend to swallow it here. They
+figure on keeping this county just as it is, for only themselves and
+their cattle and woolies, and everybody else keep out. The few big
+sheep and cattle men, white and Mex, have their minds made up to that,
+and they're the only ones who count; all the rest are poor Mexicans
+with nothing but fleas, children, goats and votes to keep Sorenson and
+his gang in control. They've set out to bust this company, or tire it
+out till it throws up the sponge. They've spiked Magney, and they'll
+try to spike you next, and every manager who comes. That's plain talk
+I'm giving you, Mr. Weir, but it's fact; and if it doesn't sound nice
+to your ears, you can have my resignation any minute."
+
+"I've been hoping to hear it. From now on drive this crowd of
+coffee-colored loafers. Put the lash on their backs."
+
+A gleam of unholy joy shone in Atkinson's eyes as he heard Weir's
+words.
+
+"All right; that goes," he said. "But I'm warning you that they'll
+quit. You'll see 'em stringing out of camp for home to-night, and
+those who hang out till to-morrow will leave then for sure. By
+to-morrow night the dam will be as quiet as a church week-days.
+They'll not show up again, either, until you send word for them to
+come back--and then they'll know you've surrendered. Magney tried it
+once, just once. And that's why you found me chewing tobacco so
+lamb-like and saying nothing."
+
+"Turn your gat loose," Weir said. And turning on his heel, he went
+back to headquarters.
+
+Before Atkinson fired a volley at the unsuspecting workmen he crossed
+the canyon to where a cub engineer was peering through a transit. The
+superintendent had overheard a scrap of gossip among the staff one
+evening before Weir's arrival when they were discussing the advent of
+the new chief.
+
+"What was that name you fellows were saying Weir was called by?" he
+asked.
+
+The boy straightened up.
+
+"'Cold Steel'--'Cold Steel' Weir. Anyway that's what Fergueson says,"
+was the answer. "I never heard it before myself. His first name's
+Steele, you know, and he looks cold enough to be ice when he's asking
+questions about things, boring into a fellow with his eyes. But he's
+up against a hard game here."
+
+"Maybe. But a man doesn't get a name like that for just parting his
+hair nice," Atkinson remarked. "He told me to stretch 'em"--a horny
+thumb jerked towards the workmen--"and you'll see some real work
+hereabouts for the rest of the afternoon."
+
+"And to-morrow will be Sunday three days ahead of time."
+
+"Sure."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"You know as much about that as I do. Make your own guess." With which
+the speaker started off.
+
+The morrow was "Sunday" with a vengeance. The majority of the laborers
+demanded their pay checks the minute work ceased at the end of the
+afternoon; Atkinson tightened orders, and by noon next day the last of
+the Mexicans had quit. The fires in the stationary engines were
+banked; the concrete mixers did not revolve; the conveyers were still;
+the dam site wore an air of abandonment. In headquarters the engineers
+worked over tracings or notes; and in the commissary store the
+half-dozen white foremen gathered to smoke and yarn. That was the
+extent of the activity.
+
+Two days passed. After dinner Weir held a terse long-distance
+telephone conversation, the only incident of the second day; and it
+was overheard by no one. On the fourth day this was repeated. At dawn
+of the fifth he despatched all of the foremen, enginemen and engineers
+with wagons to Bowenville; and about the middle of the afternoon,
+accompanied by his assistant, Meyers, and Atkinson, he sped in the
+manager's car down the river for San Mateo, two miles below the camp.
+
+Of the town Steele Weir had had but a glimpse as he flashed through on
+his way to the dam the morning of his arrival twelve days earlier. It
+had but a single main street, from which littered side streets and
+alleys ran off between mud walls of houses. The county court house sat
+among cottonwood trees in an open space. A few pretentious dwellings,
+homes of white men and the well-to-do Mexicans, arose among long low
+adobe structures that were as brown and characterless as the sun-dried
+bricks of which they were built. That was San Mateo.
+
+Before doors and everywhere along the street workmen from the dam were
+idling. As Meyers brought the automobile to a stop before the court
+house, news of Weir's visit spread miraculously and Mexicans began to
+saunter forward to hear the engineer's words of surrender, couched in
+the form of a suave invitation to return to work. While the crowd
+gathered the three Americans sat quietly in the car. Then Steele Weir
+stood up.
+
+"Who can speak for these men?" he demanded.
+
+A lean Mexican with a long shiny black mustache and a thin neck
+protruding from a soiled linen collar elbowed a way to the front.
+
+"I'm authorized to speak for them," he announced, disclosing his white
+teeth in an engaging smile.
+
+"Are you one of the workmen?"
+
+"No. I'm a lawyer and represent them in this controversy. By your
+favor therefore let us proceed. You've come to persuade them to resume
+work, and that is well. But there are conditions to be agreed upon
+before they return, which with your permission I shall state--first,
+no harsh driving of the workmen by foremen; second, full wages for the
+days they have been idle; third, no Sunday work."
+
+The engineer regarded the speaker without change of countenance.
+
+"Have you finished?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. There are minor matters, but they can be adjusted later. These
+are the important points."
+
+"Very well, this is my reply: I, not the workmen, make the terms for
+work on this job--I, not these men, name the conditions on which they
+may return. And they are as follows: no pay for the idle days; if the
+workmen return they agree to work as ordered by superintendent and
+foremen; and last, they must start for the dam within an hour or not
+at all."
+
+Incredulity, amazement rested on the Mexican spokesman's face as he
+listened to this curt rejoinder.
+
+"Preposterous, impossible, absurd!" he exclaimed. Then revolving on
+his heels so as to face the crowd he swiftly repeated in Spanish what
+Weir had said.
+
+An angry stir followed, murmurs, sullen looks, a number of oaths and
+jeers. The lawyer turned again to the engineer, spreading his hands in
+a wide gesture and lifting his brows with exaggerated significance.
+
+"You see, Mr. Weir, your position is hopeless," he remarked.
+
+"Ask them if they definitely refuse."
+
+The lawyer put the question to the crowd. A chorus of shouts
+vehemently gave affirmation--a refusal immediate, disdainful,
+unanimous.
+
+"We'll now discuss the men's terms," the lawyer remarked politely and
+with an air of satisfaction.
+
+"There's nothing more to discuss. The matter is settled. They have
+refused; they need not seek work at the dam again. Start the car,
+Meyers."
+
+The roar of the machine drowned the indignant lawyer's protest, the
+crowd hastened to give an opening and the conference was at an end.
+
+"Drive to Vorse's saloon; I want a look at Vorse," said Weir. "I see
+the place a short way ahead."
+
+When they entered the long low adobe building an anemic-appearing
+Mexican standing at the far end of the bar languidly started forward
+to serve them, but a bald-headed, hawk-nosed man seated at a desk
+behind the cigar-case laid aside his newspaper, arose and checked the
+other by a sidewise jerk of his head.
+
+He received their orders for beer and lifted three dripping bottles
+from a tub of water at his feet. His eyes passed casually over Steele
+Weir's face, glanced away, then came back for a swift unblinking
+scrutiny. The eyes his own met were as hard, stony and inscrutable as
+his own. Finally Vorse, the saloon-keeper, turned his gaze towards the
+window and extracting a quill tooth-pick from a vest pocket began
+thoughtfully to pick his teeth.
+
+"You're the new manager at the dam?" he asked presently, still
+considering the street through the window.
+
+"I am."
+
+"And your name is Weir?"
+
+"You've got it right."
+
+The questions ended there. The three men from camp slowly consumed
+their beer and exchanged indifferent remarks. At the end of five
+minutes the Mexican lawyer, clutching the arm of an elderly,
+gray-mustached man, entered the saloon.
+
+They lined up at the bar nearby the others. The older of the pair
+regarded the trio shrewdly, laid a calf-bound book that he carried
+under his arm upon the counter and ordered "a little bourbon." When he
+had swallowed this, he addressed the men from the engineering camp.
+
+"Which of you is Mr. Weir?"
+
+"I am he," Steele replied.
+
+"Mr. Martinez here has solicited me, Mr. Weir, to use my offices in
+explaining to you the workmen's point of view in the controversy that
+exists relative to the work. I'm Senator Gordon, a member of the state
+legislature, and I have no interest in the matter beyond seeing an
+amicable and just arrangement effected."
+
+Steele Weir fixed his eyes on the speaker with an intentness, a cold
+penetration, that seemed to bore to the very recesses of his mind. In
+that look there was something questioning and something menacing.
+
+"There's no controversy and hence no need of your services. The men
+stopped work, refused to return, and now the case is closed."
+
+"My dear sir, let us talk it over," said the Senator, bringing forth a
+pair of spectacles and setting the bow upon his nose.
+
+The engineer's visage failed to relax at this pacific proposal.
+
+"I gave them their chance and they declined; they'll have no other,"
+he stated. "Those men have browbeaten the company long enough. They
+refused, and as I anticipated that refusal I made preparations
+accordingly; a hundred and fifty white workmen arrived at Bowenville
+from Denver this morning and a hundred and fifty more will come
+to-morrow. They will do the work."
+
+The Senator's lips quivered and the upper one lifted in a movement
+like a snarl, showing tobacco-stained teeth.
+
+"The matter isn't closed, understand that," he snapped out. "We have
+the directors' promise no outside labor shall be brought in here for
+this job, and the promise shall be kept."
+
+"The new men go to work in the morning," Weir said.
+
+"You'll repent of this action, young man, you'll repent of it." The
+Senator seized the whisky bottle and angrily poured himself a second
+drink. "You'll repent of it as sure as your name is--is--whatever it
+is."
+
+The engineer took a step nearer the older man. His face now was as
+hard as granite.
+
+"Weir is my name," he said. "Did you ever hear it before?"
+
+"Weir--Weir?" came in a questioning mutter.
+
+"Yes, Weir."
+
+The speaker's eyes held the Senator's in savage leash, and a slight
+tremble presently began to shake the old man. Atkinson and Meyers and
+even the volatile Mexican lawyer, Martinez, remained unstirring, for
+in the situation they suddenly sensed something beyond their ken, some
+current of deep unknown forces, some play of fierce, obscure and
+fateful passion.
+
+A shadow of gray stole over Gordon's lineaments.
+
+"You are--are the son of----" came gasping forth.
+
+"I am. His son."
+
+"And--and----"
+
+"And I know what happened thirty years ago in this selfsame room!"
+
+The whisky that the Senator had poured into his glass suddenly slopped
+over his fingers; his figure all at once appeared more aged, hollow,
+bent. Without further word, with his hand still shaking, he set the
+glass on the bar, mechanically picked up the law book and walked
+feebly towards the door.
+
+Steele Weir turned his gaze on the saloon-keeper, Vorse. The man's
+right hand was under the bar and he seemed to be awaiting the
+engineer's next move, taut, tight-lipped, malignant.
+
+"That was for you too, Vorse," was flung at him. "One Weir went out of
+here, but another has returned."
+
+And he led his companions away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+A COMEDY--AND SOMETHING ELSE
+
+
+Towards noon one day a week later Steele Weir, headed for Bowenville
+in his car, had gained Chico Creek, half way between camp and San
+Mateo, when he perceived that another machine blocked the ford. About
+the wheels of the stalled car the shallow water rippled briskly, four
+or five inches deep; entirely deep enough, by all appearances, to keep
+marooned in the runabout the girl sitting disconsolately at the
+wheel.
+
+She was a very attractive-looking girl, Steele noted casually as he
+brought his own car to a halt and sprang out to join her, wading the
+water with his laced boots. As he approached he perceived that she had
+a slender well-rounded figure, fine-spun brown hair under her hat
+brim, clear brown eyes and the pink of peach blossoms in her soft
+smooth cheeks.
+
+But her look of relief vanished when she distinguished his face and
+her shoulders squared themselves.
+
+"Has your engine stopped?" he inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'll look into the hood."
+
+"I prefer that you would not."
+
+For an instant surprise marked his countenance.
+
+"You mean that you desire to remain here?" he asked.
+
+"I don't wish to remain here, but I choose that in preference to your
+aid."
+
+The man, who had bent forward to lift one cover of the engine,
+straightened up at that. He considered her intently and in silence
+for a time, marking her heightened color, the haughty poise of her
+head, the firm set of her lips.
+
+"To my knowledge, I never saw you before in my life," he remarked at
+last. "What, may I ask, is your particular reason for declining my
+services?"
+
+She was dumb for a little, while she tucked back a stray tendril of
+hair. The act was performed with the left hand; and Weir's eyes, which
+seldom missed anything, observed a diamond flash on the third finger.
+
+"Well, I'd choose not to explain," said she, afterwards, "but if you
+insist----"
+
+"I don't insist, I merely request ... your highness."
+
+A flash of anger shot from her eyes at this irony.
+
+"Don't think I'm afraid to tell you!" she cried. "It's because you're
+the manager of the construction camp; and if you've never seen me
+before, I've at least had you pointed out to me. I wish no assistance
+from the man who turns off his poor workmen without excuse or warning,
+and brings want and trouble upon the community. It was like striking
+them in the face. And then you break your promise not to bring in
+other workmen!"
+
+As she had said, she did not lack courage. Her words gushed forth in a
+torrent, as if an expression of pent up and outraged justice,
+disclosing a fervent sympathy and a fine zeal--and, likewise, a fine
+ignorance of the facts.
+
+"Well, why don't you say something?" she added, when he gave no
+indication of replying.
+
+Steele could have smiled at this feminine view of the matter that
+violent assertions required affirmations or denials.
+
+"What am I supposed to say?" he asked.
+
+Apparently that exhausted her patience.
+
+"You'll please molest me no longer," she stated, icily.
+
+"Very well."
+
+He raised the hood and inspected the engine. During his attempts to
+start it, she sat nonchalantly humming an air and gazing at the
+mountains as if her mind were a thousand miles away--which it was
+not.
+
+"Something wrong; it will have to be hauled in," said he finally.
+
+No reply. Steele returned to his own car and descending into the creek
+bed worked his way around her. When he was on the far bank, he
+rejoined her again, carrying a coil of rope. One end of this he
+fastened securely to the rear axle of her runabout.
+
+"What are you going to do, sir?" she demanded, whirling about on her
+seat and glaring angrily.
+
+"Drag you out."
+
+"You'll do nothing of the kind!"
+
+"Oh, yes," was his calm response.
+
+"Against my wishes, sir?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"This is abominable!"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+"I'll put on the brakes." And put them on she did, with a savage
+jerk.
+
+But nevertheless Weir's powerful machine drew her car slowly up out of
+the creek upon the road, where he forced it about until it pointed
+towards San Mateo. Then he retied the rope on the front axle.
+
+"Now for town," said he.
+
+"Why did you haul me out of there, I demand to know?"
+
+"Why? Because you were a public obstruction blocking traffic. If you
+had remained there long enough you would have become a public
+nuisance; and it's the duty of every citizen to abate nuisances. No
+one would call you a nuisance, of course,--not to your face, at any
+rate. But travelers might have felt some annoyance if compelled to
+drive around you; they might even have had you arrested when they
+learned you were acting out of willful stubbornness."
+
+In a sort of incredulous wonder, of charmed horror, the girl heard
+herself thus unfeelingly described.
+
+"You--you barbarian!" she cried.
+
+"Ready? We're off for town now."
+
+"I'll run my car in the ditch and wreck it if you so much as pull it
+another inch!"
+
+"I don't like to be frustrated in my generous acts; they are so few,
+according to common report. Well, we'll leave the car, but it must be
+drawn off the road."
+
+When this was accomplished, Weir replaced the rope in his machine.
+Then he returned to her.
+
+"What now? Do you intend to sit here in the hot sunshine, to say
+nothing of missing your dinner?"
+
+"That doesn't concern you."
+
+Weir shook his head gravely.
+
+"You must be saved from your own folly," said he.
+
+Before she had realized what was happening, he had opened the door of
+the runabout, swung her out upon the ground and was marching her
+towards his own machine. Stupefaction at this quick, atrocious deed
+left her an automaton; and before she had fully regained her control
+they were speeding towards San Mateo, she at his side.
+
+"This is outrageous!" she gasped.
+
+Steele Weir did not speak until they entered town.
+
+"Where is your home?" he asked.
+
+"Turn to the right at the end of the street."
+
+It was before a house of modern structure, banked with a bewildering
+number of flowers and shaded by trees, that he halted the car. He
+alighted, bared his head, assisted her to descend, bowed and then
+without a word drove away, leaving her to stare after him with a
+baffling mixture of feelings and the single indignant statement, "And
+he didn't even wait long enough for me to thank him!" Nor did her
+perplexity lessen when her car was left before the door during the
+afternoon by one of the camp mechanics to whom Weir had telephoned
+from San Mateo and who had put it in running order.
+
+Weir himself proceeded to Bowenville, where matters regarding
+shipments and the unloading of machinery engaged him the rest of the
+day. Into his mind, however, there floated at moments the image of the
+girl's face, banish it as he would. He had learned her name by asking
+who was the owner of the house where she had alighted, information
+necessary to direct the mechanic as to the delivery of the stalled
+car. Hosmer it was; and the residence was that of Dr. Hosmer.
+Presumably she was his daughter. And what a vivid, charming,
+never-surrender enemy! Lucky the chap who had won this high-spirited
+girl.
+
+The memory of her eyes and her personality was still with him when
+he ate his supper that evening in a restaurant in Bowenville. His own
+past in relation to the other sex had been starred by no love
+affair, not even by episodes of a sentimental nature; the character of
+his work had for long periods kept him away from women's society,
+but further than this there was the shadow upon his life, the shadow
+of mystery that obliged him to follow a solitary course. He
+considered himself unfree to seek friendships or favors among women.
+By every demand of honor he was bound to solicit no girl's trust or
+affection until that mystery was cleared and his father's innocence
+established. It was for this reason that he seemed even to himself to
+grow more hard, more harsh, more silent and aloof, until at last he
+had come to believe that no fair face had the power to arouse his
+interest or to quicken his pulse.
+
+But now, this girl he had met at the ford!
+
+Long-stifled emotions struggled in his breast. Sleeping desires awoke.
+His spirit swelled like a caged thing within the shell of years of
+indurated habit. A strange restlessness pervaded him. He had a fierce
+passion somehow to rip in pieces the gray drab pattern of his
+commonplace life.
+
+Perhaps it was this revolt against the fetters of fate that caused him
+to welcome the chance for action that presently was offered. The
+restaurant was of an ordinary type, with a lunch counter at one side,
+a row of tables down the middle and half a dozen booths along the wall
+offering some degree of privacy. In one of these Steele Weir was
+smoking a cigar and finishing his coffee before making his ride back
+to camp. From the booth adjoining he had for some time been hearing
+scraps of conversation; now all at once the voices rose in protest and
+in answering explanation, in perplexed appeal and earnest assurance.
+
+Weir's own reflections ceased. His head turned and remained fixed to
+listen, while the cigar grew cold between his fingers. For ten minutes
+or so his attitude of concentrated harkening to the two voices, a
+girl's and a man's, remained unchanged. Little by little he was
+piecing out the thread of the confidential dialogue--and of the little
+drama being enacted in the booth.
+
+His brows became lowering as he gathered its significance, his lips
+drew together in a tight thin line. He did not move when he heard the
+man push back his chair to leave the place, nor alter his position
+until there came the sound of the door closing at the front of the
+restaurant. Then he reached for his hat, stood up and went lightly
+around into the other booth, where he pulled the green calico curtain
+across the opening.
+
+A girl of about seventeen, of plump clean prettiness, still sat at the
+table, which was littered with dishes. The cheap finery of her hat and
+dress showed a pathetic attempt to increase her natural comeliness. At
+this minute her face showed amazement and a hint of apprehension.
+
+"What are you coming in here for?" she demanded.
+
+"I want to talk to you for a little while," Weir replied, seating
+himself. "You will please listen. I've overheard enough of your talk
+to catch its drift; you came here to be married, but now this man
+wants to induce you to go to Los Angeles first."
+
+"That isn't any of your business," the girl flashed back, going white
+and red by turns.
+
+"I'm making it mine, however. You live up on Terry Creek, by what I
+heard; that's not far from my camp. I'm manager at the dam and my
+name's Weir."
+
+At this statement the girl shrank back, beginning to bite the hem of
+her handkerchief nervously and gazing at him with terrified eyes.
+
+"I'm here to help you, not harm you. You've run away from home to-day
+to marry this fellow. Did he promise to marry you if you came to
+Bowenville?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And now he wants you to go with him to Los Angeles first, promising
+to marry you there?"
+
+The girl hesitated, with a wavering look.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He gives you excuses, of course. But they don't satisfy your mind,
+do they? They don't satisfy mine, at any rate. It's the old trick.
+Suppose when you reached the coast he didn't marry you after all and
+put you off with more promises and after a week or two abandoned
+you?"
+
+"Oh, he wouldn't do that!" she cried, with a gulp.
+
+"That's just what he is planning. He didn't meet you here until after
+dark, I judge. You'll both go to the train separately--I overheard
+that part. Afterwards he could return from the coast and deny that he
+had ever had anything to do with you, and it would simply be your word
+against his. And which would people hereabouts believe, tell me that,
+which would they believe, yours or his, after you had gone wrong?"
+
+The girl sat frozen. Then suddenly she began to cry, softly and with
+jerks of her shoulders. Weir reached out and patted her arm.
+
+"What's your name?" he asked.
+
+"Mary--Mary Johnson."
+
+"Mary, I'm interfering in your affairs only because I know what men
+will do. You must take no chances. If this fellow is really anxious to
+marry you, he'll do it here in Bowenville."
+
+After a few sobs she wiped her eyes.
+
+"He said he didn't dare get the license in San Mateo, or his folks
+would have stopped our marriage."
+
+"Then you should stay here to-night, go to the next county seat and be
+married to-morrow. His parents are bound to learn about it once you're
+married. A few days more or less make no difference. And though I
+should return to my work, I'll just stay over a day and take you in my
+car to-morrow to see that you're married straight and proper. Why go
+clear to Los Angeles?"
+
+"He said it would be our honeymoon--and--and I had never been away
+from here."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+She hesitated in uncertainty whether or not she should answer.
+
+"Ed Sorenson," came at last from her lips.
+
+Steele Weir slowly thrust his head forward, fixing her with burning
+eyes.
+
+"Son of the big cattleman?" he demanded.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"And you love him?"
+
+"Yes, oh, yes!"
+
+Weir sat back in his seat, lighted a cigarette and stared past her
+head at the opposite partition. The evil strain of the father had been
+continued in the son and was working here to seduce this simple,
+ignorant girl, incited by her physical freshness and the expectation
+that she should be easy prey.
+
+"Well, I doubt if he loves you," he said, presently.
+
+"He does, he does!"
+
+"If he really does above everything else in the world, he'll be
+willing to marry you openly, no matter what his father may say or do.
+That's the test, Mary. If he's in earnest, he'll agree at once to go
+with us to the next county seat to-morrow and be married there by a
+minister. Isn't that true? Answer me that squarely; isn't it true?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then by that we'll decide. If he agrees, well and good; if he
+refuses, that will show him up--show he never had any intention of
+marrying you. I'm a stranger to you, but I'm your friend. And you're
+not going to Los Angeles unmarried!"
+
+The last words were uttered in a level menacing tone that caused Mary
+Johnson to shiver. To her, reared in the humble adobe house on her
+father's little ranch on Terry Creek, a man who could manage the great
+irrigation project seemed a figure out of her ken, a vast form working
+against the sky. His statements were not to be disputed, whatever she
+might think.
+
+"Yes, sir," she said, just above a whisper.
+
+"All right. Now we'll wait for him. He was coming back for you, wasn't
+he?"
+
+"Yes. I was to stay at the hotel till train time."
+
+"Is this your grip?"
+
+Weir jerked a thumb towards a worn canvas "telescope" fastened with a
+single shawl strap, resting in the corner of the booth.
+
+"It's mine. Yes, sir."
+
+"How old is Ed Sorenson," he asked, after a pause.
+
+"About thirty, maybe."
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Seventeen next month."
+
+"But sixteen yet this month."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+He said nothing more. As the minutes passed, her timorous gaze
+continued steadfastly on the stern countenance before her. She dully
+expected something terrible to happen when Ed Sorenson appeared, for
+she knew Ed would be angry; but she had been powerless to prevent the
+intrusion of this terrible stranger.
+
+Fear, in truth, a fear that left her heart cold, was her feeling as
+she contemplated Weir. Yet under that, was there not something else? A
+sense of safety, of comforting assurance of protection?
+
+"You--you won't hurt Ed if he won't go with us?" she asked, in a low
+voice. "If he gets mad and won't marry me here, I mean?"
+
+The man's eyes came round to hers.
+
+"I'll just break him in two, nothing more, Mary," was the calm
+answer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE ENEMY'S SPAWN
+
+
+The curtain to the booth was flung back.
+
+"I've the train tickets; come along to the hotel----" exclaimed the
+man who quickly entered. But the words died in his mouth at sight of
+Weir sitting in the place he had vacated.
+
+He was over average height, of strong fleshy build, with a small
+blonde mustache on his upper lip. Under his eyes little pouches had
+already begun to form; his mouth was full and sensual; but he still
+retained an air of liveliness, of carelessness and agility, that might
+at first sight seem the spontaneity of youth. He wore a brown suit, a
+gray flannel shirt and Stetson hat--the common apparel of the
+country.
+
+"Who the devil are you? And what are you butting in here for?" he
+exclaimed, with a vicious spark showing in his pale blue eyes. At the
+same time he clapped a hand on Weir's shoulder, closing it in a hard
+grasp.
+
+Instantly Weir struck the hand off with his fist.
+
+"Keep your dirty flippers to yourself," he said, rising.
+
+The blood faded from the other's countenance, leaving it white with
+rage.
+
+"Get out of this booth, or I'll throw you out."
+
+It was Weir's turn to act. Like a flash he caught Sorenson's elbow,
+jerked him forward, spun him about and dropped him upon the chair.
+
+"Sit there, you cradle-robber, until I'm through with you," he
+commanded. "And if you don't want everybody in this restaurant to know
+about your business with this girl, you'll lower your voice when you
+talk."
+
+Sorenson shot an uneasy glance towards the curtain and his wrath
+became not less furious but better controlled. Clearly public
+attention was the last thing he desired in this affair. He leaned
+back, staring at Steele Weir insolently, and produced a cigarette, at
+which he began to puff.
+
+"Mary, get ready. We'll be going in a minute," said he.
+
+"No, you'll not, Sorenson. I've taken a hand in your game. This girl
+says you're going to marry her, is that right?" The other rolled his
+eyes upward and began to whistle a jig tune softly. "Well, this is the
+plan she and I've made. She'll remain at the hotel to-night--as will
+you and I--and to-morrow we'll drive to another county seat in my car
+and you'll secure a licence there. Then you'll go to a minister's,
+where I'll act as a witness, and the ceremony will be performed.
+Afterwards the pair of you can proceed to Los Angeles, or elsewhere as
+you please, on your wedding journey."
+
+"You're quite a little planner, aren't you?" the other jeered.
+
+"That's the arrangement if you agree."
+
+"I don't agree."
+
+Mary Johnson, in whose eyes a light of hope had dawned during Weir's
+low-toned statement, began nervously to bite her lip.
+
+"Won't you do it, Ed?" she asked, timidly.
+
+"We'll do as I planned, or nothing," he stated. Then with sudden spite
+he continued, "You're responsible for this mixup. What did you let
+this fellow in here for while I was gone? Didn't you have sense
+enough to keep your mouth shut?"
+
+Steele halted him by a gesture.
+
+"Don't begin abusing her; you're not married to her yet. I overheard
+your talk and guessed the low-lived, scoundrelly trick you proposed to
+play on her."
+
+"You damned eavesdropper----"
+
+"Sure, eavesdropper is right," Weir interrupted, coolly. "So I just
+stepped in here from my booth next door to discuss the situation with
+her; you can't mislead an innocent girl like her with the intention of
+shaking her when you get her into a city, not if I know about it and
+am around. If you sincerely intend to marry her, and will do so
+to-morrow in my presence, then I'll withdraw. Afterwards I mean, of
+course."
+
+Sorenson arose.
+
+"Come, Mary. Stand aside, you!"
+
+"She doesn't go with you," the engineer stated.
+
+For a moment the men's eyes locked, those of one full of blue fire and
+hatred, those of the other quiet as pieces of flint.
+
+"And she shall keep with me while I telephone to your father that you
+brought her here under promise of marriage, a girl of sixteen, without
+her own parents' consent, and now refuse to marry her," Steele added.
+
+A sneer twisted the other man's mouth.
+
+"My father happens to be in the east, where he's been for a month," he
+mocked. "If he were here, he wouldn't believe you; he'd know you were
+a liar. He knows I'm engaged to marry----" Bite off the words as he
+tried, they had escaped.
+
+"Ah, that's the way of it!" Weir remarked with a silky smoothness.
+"You expect to marry some other girl--and have no intention whatever
+of marrying Mary here."
+
+"To hell with you and your opinions!"
+
+"First, you coax her to Bowenville by a promise, then you persuade her
+by more promises to go to Los Angeles," the engineer proceeded
+steadily, "and there you would betray and abandon her to a life on the
+streets, like the yellow cur you are."
+
+Sorenson snapped his fingers and moved round to the girl's side.
+
+"Pay no attention to him," he addressed her. "He's only a crazy
+fool."
+
+But she drew back against the wall, staring at him with a strained,
+searching regard.
+
+"Will you marry me to-morrow as he asks?" she questioned anxiously.
+
+"No. I explained the reason why once. Come on; let's get away from
+him. Then I'll make everything clear and satisfactory to you."
+
+For a moment she stood wavering, picking at her handkerchief, her face
+pale and unhappy, questioning his countenance. Finally she turned to
+look at Steele Weir, standing silently by.
+
+"You never said you were engaged to another girl; you told me I was
+the only one you loved," she muttered in a choked voice. "But I see
+now you won't marry me. You wish me to go with you--but not to marry.
+I'm going away--away anywhere. By myself! Where I'll never see any
+one!" Burying her face in her hands, she shook with sobs.
+
+"This is what comes from your putting an oar in," said Sorenson,
+lifting his fist in a burst of fury to strike Weir.
+
+The latter at once smote him across the mouth with open palm at the
+vile epithet that followed. Sorenson staggered, then lunged forward,
+tugging at something in his hip-pocket, while the table and dishes
+went over in a crash.
+
+Before he could draw the weapon Steele's fingers shot forth and seized
+his wrist; his other hand closed about Sorenson's throat in an iron
+grasp. Slowly under that powerful grip the younger man's struggles
+ceased, his eyes dilated, his knees yielded and gave way. The revolver
+was wrenched from his numbed hold. His eyeballs seemed afire; his
+breast heaved in violent spasms for the denied breath; and his heart
+appeared about to burst.
+
+"You miserable skunk!" Weir said, barely moving his mouth. "I ought to
+choke the life out of you." Then he released his hold. "I'll keep this
+gun--and use it if you ever try to pull another on me! Now, make
+tracks. Remember, too, to pay your bill as you go out."
+
+When Sorenson had straightened his coat, giving Weir a malignant look
+during the process, he departed. His air of disdainful insolence had
+quite evaporated, but that he considered the action between them only
+begun was plain, though he spoke not a word. Weir, however, heard him
+give a quieting explanation to the waiter hovering outside, who had
+been drawn by the crash of dishes.
+
+"Thought a fight was going on," the aproned dispenser of food said to
+Steele when he and the girl emerged.
+
+"Just an accident. Nothing broken, I imagine," was the response.
+
+"You couldn't break those dishes with a hammer; they're made for rough
+work."
+
+"If there's any damage, this may cover it." And Steele tossed the
+fellow a dollar.
+
+Outside the restaurant he slipped his hand inside Mary Johnson's arm
+and led her along the street. With him he had brought the old strapped
+grip.
+
+"Where you taking me?" she asked, in a worried quaver.
+
+"Home, Mary."
+
+"Oh, I'm afraid to go home."
+
+"Are you afraid of your own father and mother? They're the ones to
+trust first of all."
+
+"But when father--mother is dead--sees the telescope, he'll want to
+know where I've been. He doesn't know I have it. I told him I might
+stay with a girl at San Mateo over night, and then sneaked it out."
+
+"The best thing is to tell him all about this occurrence."
+
+"Oh, I can't."
+
+"Then I shall. Leave that part to me."
+
+And though her heart was filled with fresh alarms and fears at the
+prospect, there seemed nothing else to do. She longed to flee, to hide
+in some dark hole, to cover her shame from her father and the world,
+but in the hands of this determined man she felt herself powerless.
+What he willed, she dumbly did.
+
+Terry Creek flowed out of the mountains four miles north of San Mateo,
+an insignificant stream entering the Burntwood halfway down to
+Bowenville. The Johnson ranch house was a mile up the canyon, where
+the rocky walls expanded into a grassy park of no great area. They
+reached the girl's home about half-past nine that night.
+
+For two hours Weir remained talking with the father, describing the
+affair at Bowenville, fending off his first bitter anger at the girl
+and gradually persuading him to see that Mary had been deceived, lured
+away on hollow promises and was guiltless of all except failing to
+take him into her confidence. At last peace was made. Mary wept for a
+time, and was patted on the head by her rough, bearded father, who
+exclaimed, "There, there, don't cry. You're safe back again; we'll
+just forget it."
+
+Outside of the house, however, where he had accompanied Weir to his
+car, he said with an oath:
+
+"But I'll not forget Ed Sorenson, if I go to hell for it. My little
+girl!"
+
+"She's half a child yet, that's the worse of his offense," Steele
+replied, savagely.
+
+"Mary said you choked him."
+
+"Some. Not enough."
+
+"I'll not forget him--or you, Mr. Weir."
+
+Steele mounted into his machine. He thoughtfully studied the rancher's
+bearded, weather-tanned face, illuminated by the moonlight.
+
+"At present I'd say nothing about this matter to any one. Later on you
+may be able to use it in squaring accounts," the engineer advised.
+
+"I hope so," was the answer, with a bitter note. "But talking would
+only hurt Mary, not Ed Sorenson. Whatever the Sorensons do is all
+right, you know, because they're rich. The daughter of a poor man like
+me would get all the black end of the gossip; and I can't lift a
+finger, that's what grinds me, unless I go out and shoot him, then
+hang for it. For the bank's got a mortgage on my little bunch of
+stock, and on my ranch here, and Sorenson, of course, is the bank.
+Gordon and Vorse and a few others are in it too, but he's the bull of
+the herd. If I opened my mouth about his son, I'd be kicked off of
+Terry Creek, lock, stock and barrel. That's the way Sorenson keeps all
+of us poor devils, white and Mexican, eating out of his hand. I've
+just been poor since I came here a boy; the gang in San Mateo won't
+let anybody but themselves have a chance. And I reckon old man
+Sorenson wouldn't care much if his boy had ruined my girl. Cuss him a
+little, maybe; that would be all. But I won't forget the whelp. Some
+day my chance will come to play even." "Sure; if one just keeps quiet
+and waits," Steele agreed. "Well, I must hit the trail. If you want
+work any time, come over to the dam; we can always use a man with a
+team." Johnson nodded. "After haying is done, maybe. And remember, I'm
+much obliged to you for looking after my little girl. I won't forget
+that, either." He reached up diffidently and shook hands with the
+engineer. Weir's grip was sympathetic and sincere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A SECRET CONFERENCE
+
+
+On a certain afternoon Felipe Martinez, the lean and restless attorney
+who had acted as the Mexican workmen's mouthpiece, observed through
+the broad plate-glass window of the San Mateo Cattle Company's office
+an incident that greatly interested him. For the moment he forgot the
+resentment kindled by Sorenson's abrupt refusal and brutal words when
+he asked for the nomination for county attorney. The election was in
+the autumn; the nomination was equivalent to election; and Felipe
+considered that he had too long been kept apart from that particular
+spoil.
+
+Martinez had once had a slight difference with the banker, and now
+outrageously Sorenson had recalled it. He had stated that Martinez
+should hold no political office; he gave offices only to men who did
+exactly as he advised; his exact words were that the Mexican was
+"tricky and no good." And picking up his hat Sorenson who had that day
+returned home from the east went out of the bank, leaving Martinez to
+stare out of the window and meditatively twist a point of his silky
+black mustache.
+
+It was before the window that there occurred the meeting between
+Sorenson and the manager of the dam. Martinez perceived the two men
+glance at each other and pass, but after a step or two both men
+halted. As if worked by a single wire, they slowly swung about for a
+second look. The Mexican's nimble brain calculated that they could not
+have previously met and in consequence their behavior bespoke
+something out of the ordinary.
+
+The pair stood exactly where they had turned, three or four paces
+apart, he noted. The Mexican's mind palpitated with a slight thrill of
+excitement. The manner of each of the men was that of a fighting
+animal looking over another animal of the same sort: neither uttering
+a word, nor stirring a finger, nor yielding a particle in his fixed
+unwinking gaze. Martinez could almost feel the exchanged challenge,
+the cold antagonism, the hostile curiosity, the matching of wills, the
+instant hate, between the men.
+
+Though they had not met before, to be sure, nevertheless they were
+enemies. Was it because of the discharge of the workmen? Then
+Martinez' mind flashed back to the scene in Vorse's saloon when Gordon
+had showed such sudden emotion at the engineer's name and his
+enigmatical reference to some event in the past. That was it!
+Something which had occurred thirty years ago, probably something
+crooked. Men committed deeds in those early days that they would now
+like to forget. He, Martinez, would look into the matter.
+
+Sorenson passed out of sight, and Weir likewise proceeded on his way.
+Thereupon the lawyer sauntered over to the court house, where
+presently he became engrossed in a pile of tomes in the register's
+office. As examining records is a part of a lawyer's regular work, it
+never excites curiosity or arouses suspicion.
+
+That same evening Martinez perceived Vorse enter Sorenson's office.
+Vorse, he recalled, had been included in the engineer's threatening
+remarks to Gordon. Shortly thereafter Gordon himself ambled along the
+street and passed through the door. Last of all, Burkhardt, a short,
+fleshy, bearded man, went into the building. The vultures of San
+Mateo, as he secretly called them, had flocked together for
+conference. Presently Martinez strolled by the office, outwardly
+displaying no interest in the structure but furtively seeking to catch
+a glimpse of the interior through a crack of the drawn shade. But in
+this he was unsuccessful.
+
+Of one thing he was certain, however. His prolonged examination of the
+county records had revealed an old bill of sale of a ranch and several
+herds of cattle from one Joseph Weir to Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon and
+Burkhardt. He had placed his finger on the link connecting the
+engineer with these men, the entire four, as this old bill of sale
+thus recorded showed the intimate though unexpressed partnership of
+the men, which was common knowledge over the country; and intuition
+told him also that this private assembly of the quartette quickly on
+Sorenson's return home had its inspiration in the new manager of the
+dam.
+
+Martinez determined to continue his investigations. Events might yet
+prove that it would have been much better for the cattleman to have
+given him the political nomination. Truly, it was possible. In any
+case, it would do no harm to have "something on" Sorenson and the
+others, these rulers of San Mateo. And there was the opposite side of
+the affair--Weir's side; so it looked as if there might be profit
+either way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The four men sitting in the railed-off space in the San Mateo Cattle
+Company's office constituted the cattle company. Moreover, they
+comprised the financial, political and general power of this remote
+section of New Mexico. In face, manner, garb, they were dissimilar.
+Vorse, clothed in gray, was hawk-nosed and impassive; and though now,
+like his companions, wealthy beyond simple needs he nevertheless
+continued the operation of his saloon that had been a landmark in San
+Mateo for forty years. Burkhardt was rough-featured, rough-tongued,
+choleric, and coatless: typically the burly, uncurried, uncouth
+stock man, whose commonest words were oaths or curses and whose way
+with obstinate cattle or men was the way of the club or the fist.
+Gordon was the wily, cautious, unscrupulous politician; he had
+represented San Mateo in the legislature for years, both during
+the Territorial period and since New Mexico had become a state, and
+was not unknown in other parts of the southwest; but he was "Judge"
+only by courtesy, the title most frequently given him, never having
+been admitted to the bar or having practiced, and engaged himself
+ostensibly in the insurance and real estate business. Like the
+others, his share of the large cattle, sheep and land holdings of
+the group made him independent. Sorenson, the last of the four and
+in reality the leader because of a greater breadth of vision and a
+natural capacity for business, was dressed in a tailored suit of
+greenish plaid--a man with bushy eyebrows, a long fleshy nose,
+predatory eyes, a heavy cat-fish mouth and a great, barrel-like body
+that reared two or three inches over six feet when he stood on his
+feet. But one thing they had in common, in addition to the gray hair
+of age, and that was a joint liability for the past. For years they
+had believed that liability extinguished through the operation of
+time. They had considered as closed and sealed the account of early
+secret, lawless acts by which they had acquired wealth and a grip on
+the community. They were now law-observing members of society; they
+controlled even if they sometimes failed to possess the goodwill
+of the county--and they were not men to measure position by
+friendships; their councils determined how much or how little other
+men should own and in local politics their fingers moved the puppets
+that served their will.
+
+With the entrance here of the powerful group of financiers who were
+constructing the irrigation project they recognized the threat to
+their old-time supremacy. Cattle and sheep interests would succumb to
+farming; a swarm of new, independent settlers would arrive like
+locusts; and their leadership would eventually be challenged if not
+ended. New towns would spring up. New money would flow in to dispute
+their financial mastery. New leaders would arise to assail their
+political dominion. And against the prospect of all this they had
+initiated a secret warfare, endeavoring by stealth to ruin the
+irrigation company at the beginning and nip the danger in the bud.
+
+Now it had been revealed all at once that they had not only a
+general and impersonal enemy in the form of the company, but a
+specific one in the form of a man, its manager. Out of nowhere he
+had emerged, out of thirty years' silence, a sinister figure who
+tapped with significant finger the book of their secret past while
+his eyes steadfastly demanded a reckoning. Did he know all, or
+nothing? Knowing, did he deliberately leave them in doubt in order
+to shatter their confidence?
+
+At least one of the four had been badly shaken on learning Weir's
+identity, and all now were uneasy. It was as if Fate after a long
+silence was about to open the sealed record.
+
+"Perhaps you were just imagining things, Judge," Sorenson was saying.
+
+Senator Gordon moistened his lips and tugged nervously at his gray
+mustache.
+
+"No, no," he exclaimed. "Just ask Vorse. The man said his name was
+Weir and that he was the son of Joe Weir. Then--then----"
+
+"Well?" Sorenson demanded, frowning at the other's visible trepidation.
+
+"Weir added, 'And I know what happened thirty years ago in this
+selfsame room.' Those were his very words. Isn't that true, Vorse?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"They could mean only one thing," said Gordon.
+
+"When the Judge went out he said to me," Vorse stated, "'That was for
+you too.' I had my hand on my gun under the counter as he said it,
+ready if he made a move. He knew what I had there, but it didn't faze
+him. He's a better man than Joe Weir ever was, I want to remark, and
+different; he has nerve and a bad eye. He knows something, lay your
+bets on that."
+
+"How much? How much? If we only knew how much!" Judge Gordon
+vouchsafed, testily.
+
+"How would he know anything? Joe Weir didn't know, so how can this
+fellow know? Don't get scared at a shadow." It was the bearded,
+rough-tongued Burkhardt who spoke, concluding his words with a
+blasphemous oath.
+
+"There's the Mexican who saw what happened--and that boy who looked in
+at the back door," Gordon asserted. "We just caught sight of him and
+couldn't make out his face against the light. Then he had skipped when
+we ran there. We never did learn who he was."
+
+"Do you think he remembers?" Sorenson said, scornfully. "He may be
+dead. He may be on the other side of the world. Just some kid who
+happened to drift by at the minute and look in, and there's not one
+chance in a million he's anywhere around these parts yet. He would
+have blabbed long ago to some one if he had been; don't figure him in,
+he's lost."
+
+"Saurez isn't, though."
+
+At this Vorse put in a word.
+
+"He saw more than one killing in those days when he was roustabout for
+me. It was only one more to him. Probably he has forgotten it.
+Anyway," Vorse ended with deadly emphasis, "he knows what would happen
+to him even now if he remembered it and talked. Leave him out of the
+calculation too."
+
+"Then that just makes the four of us," said Burkhardt. "Nobody else.
+So this fellow Weir doesn't know a thing."
+
+"But we can't be absolutely sure," Judge Gordon replied.
+
+"Well, he'd need proof, wouldn't he?"
+
+"Certainly, to bring legal action. But how do we know he hasn't even
+that? Look all around the question as a lawyer does; let us assume the
+millionth chance, for instance. Suppose that he somewhere met and
+became acquainted with that boy. Suppose that he learned the latter
+had been here at the time and saw the shooting; and heard his story.
+Suppose that Weir knows this instant where he is and can produce him
+as a witness in court."
+
+"I reckon in this county his testimony wouldn't count for much,"
+Burkhardt, who had been sheriff, stated, with a harsh laugh.
+
+Sorenson, however, was impressed by the Judge's reasoning, for he
+drummed with fingers on the desk and sat in brooding silence. So
+likewise sat Vorse, who had heard Weir's utterance and beheld his
+face.
+
+"He knows something," he repeated, in a convinced tone. "Or he's a
+damned good bluffer."
+
+"I passed him here at the door this afternoon," the banker remarked.
+"I turned to look at him, guessing who he was, and he had stopped and
+was looking at me. Cool about it too. We'll have to watch him."
+
+"Perhaps if we just tip him off to keep his mouth shut tight, that
+will be enough," Burkhardt suggested. "If he knows the four of us are
+ready----"
+
+Vorse sniffed.
+
+"You think he can be bluffed?" he said. "You haven't seen him yet; go
+take a look. We'll not throw any scare into him. If he were that kind,
+he wouldn't have told us who he is. He wanted us to know he's after
+us, that's my opinion. He wants to shake our nerve--and he shook the
+Judge's all right that day at my bar."
+
+"He did," Gordon admitted. "The thing was so infernally unexpected.
+Almost like Joe Weir himself appearing. I didn't sleep a wink that
+night, what with my heart being bad and what with seeing him."
+
+"Suppose he _has_ proofs?" Vorse asked after a pause, while his
+narrowed eyes moved from one to another of his companions.
+
+A considerable silence followed. The question jerked into full light
+the issue that had all the while been lurking in the recesses of their
+minds--an issue full of ghastly possibilities. Judge Gordon's fingers
+trembled as he wiped with handkerchief the cold sweat on his brow.
+
+"We're all in it," Vorse added.
+
+Burkhardt brought his fist down on the desk with a sudden crash.
+
+"If he has proofs, then it's him or us," he exclaimed, while the
+blood suffused his face. "Him or us--and that means him! I'll never go
+behind bars!"
+
+"Sure not. None of us," Vorse said.
+
+"It will mean----" Judge Gordon began in an agitated voice, but did
+not finish.
+
+Sorenson gave a nod of his head. His bear-trap mouth was compressed in
+a determined evil line.
+
+"Exactly. He'll never use his proofs. We're in too far to halt now if
+matters come to the point of his trying to use them. He has a grip on
+us in one way; he knows we can't declare his father, Joe Weir, did the
+killing; that would make us--what do you call it, Judge?"
+
+"Accomplices after the fact. Besides, it would then come out that we
+had taken over and shared among us his stuff, fifty thousand apiece.
+It's a deplorable situation we're in, gentlemen, deplorable. If we
+were but able to start the story Joe Weir believed and fled because
+of, it would cut the ground out from under this man's feet at once."
+
+"It's him we'll cut, not the ground under him," Burkhardt growled,
+thrusting his hairy chin forward towards the lawyer. "And cut his
+damned throat."
+
+"I hate to think of our being forced to--to homicide. Even justifiable
+homicide."
+
+"Homicide nothing! It's just killing a rattlesnake waiting in the
+brush to strike. That's the way we used to do in the old days, and if
+he's going to bring them back that's what we'll do again."
+
+Sorenson smiled grimly.
+
+"We'll wait till we're sure he has the proofs, then----"
+
+"Then we'll act quick and sure," Vorse shot out.
+
+"And quietly," the cattleman added. "We'll take no more chances this
+time. It will be arranged carefully beforehand; all four of us will be
+in it, of course,--equal responsibility; and there'll be no
+witnesses."
+
+Judge Gordon's face wore a pallid, sickish look.
+
+"I hope to God there's some other way out of it," he muttered.
+
+"So do all of us," Burkhardt snarled. "But if there isn't, it means
+guns. For you, too, along with the rest of us."
+
+Sorenson leaned forward and gazed from under his heavy brows,
+compelling Gordon to meet his fixed look.
+
+"You were keen enough at the time for your share of Joe Weir's stuff,"
+he said. "So you'll play the hand out to the end now, the bad cards as
+well as the good. You're no better than the rest of us, and it was you
+who hatched the scheme for cleaning him up and who put over the
+story."
+
+"I know, I know. But--but this would be too much like cold-blooded
+murder."
+
+"Murder!" Sorenson grated. "Did you look straight into this fellow
+Weir's eyes? Didn't you see something there that resembled murder?
+He'd like only the chance to kill us one by one with his own hands: I
+saw that much. Just as Burkhardt said, it's him or us. After you told
+me about him, I had only to take one look. If he has the goods on
+us--well, he'll have to die. Make up your mind to that. We're back to
+the time of thirty years ago and fighting for our lives. We were not
+only all in on the Weir job, but the Dent killing--all of us. Remember
+that. If the facts become known, we'll be run into some other county
+and court and hanged. And every enemy we've made in these years past
+will put up his head and clamor for our blood. Let that sink into your
+mind."
+
+The effect of this low fierce utterance was to hammer the truth home.
+The Judge was ashen. Vorse's face appeared like an evil mask.
+Burkhardt glowered savagely.
+
+At that instant there sounded the faint report of a shot in the
+street. Then as the group sat unmoving, rigid, keyed to the highest
+pitch of expectancy, there followed quickly two more shots.
+Afterwards, silence.
+
+"A gun-play!" issued from Vorse's lips, softly.
+
+They all sprang up to hasten to the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A SHOT IN THE DARK
+
+
+Steele Weir driving his car down the street in the dusk had caught
+sight of Felipe Martinez standing near the cattle company's office. He
+stopped close by, beckoned. Martinez would do as well as another.
+
+"You're a notary, I suppose?" he questioned.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Weir. Most of us lawyers here are," he replied politely,
+when he had advanced.
+
+"I've some papers I want acknowledged to-night. Must get them into the
+mail going down to Bowenville in the morning."
+
+"Only too pleased to facilitate your business, Mr. Weir. My office is
+down a few doors."
+
+"Jump in."
+
+"It's but a few steps."
+
+"Then I'll get out here." And the engineer stopped the engine and
+descended to the ground.
+
+Along the street open doorways and windows were already beginning to
+make yellow panels of lamplight in the thin gloom. The air was still
+warm, balmy, scented by the lingering aroma of the greasewood smoke of
+supper fires in Mexican ovens. Stars were jeweling the sky. Few
+persons moved in the twilight.
+
+One of these was a man who, standing at the door of a native saloon
+across the street and a little farther up, had come diagonally over
+towards the bank on seeing the engineer halt his car. He walked with a
+slouching haste seldom exhibited by a Mexican and gained the spot as
+Weir stepped out. There he slackened his pace while he scanned the
+American with an intense, slow gaze that the engineer, chancing to
+raise his eyes, squarely met.
+
+The Mexicans always looked at him and fell silent when he passed since
+he had shown who was master at the dam. In the eyes of some was merely
+stupid curiosity, in some a shrinking, and in many a half-veiled
+hostility. That did not trouble Weir. In Mexico he had dealt with
+recalcitrant workmen of more lawless nature than these. He usually
+ignored them altogether now as they no longer were in his employ. But
+this man seized his attention.
+
+It was not yet too dark to mark his face as he lounged past, slowly
+turning his head about as he progressed until his chin was on his
+shoulder, staring back. His look the while remained riveted on Weir--a
+steady, contemplative, evil regard. In Chihuahua the engineer had once
+seen a notorious local "killer" who had that same gaze.
+
+Martinez had also glanced at the fellow.
+
+"Who is that man? One of the discharged workmen?" Weir asked him, when
+moving forward they in turn had passed the Mexican.
+
+"No, I imagine not. At any rate, he doesn't belong in San Mateo or
+anywhere hereabouts. I know everybody for fifty miles, for I've been
+active in social and political affairs. He's unknown to me. A
+stranger." Then a little farther along: "Here is my office, Mr. Weir.
+I'll have a light in an instant. Ah, now. Be so good as to have a
+chair and we'll expedite your business."
+
+As Martinez filled out the acknowledgment blanks on the papers, his
+eyes furtively skipped over the vital portions of the documents. The
+latter were connected with company business. He had hoped they would
+be personal so that he might learn something more of this manager's
+affairs, possibly more of his secret antagonism for Sorenson and his
+friends. Any intrigue appealed to the thin, slippery lawyer's soul,
+but most of all some one's else intrigue into which he might
+profitably put a finger. However, from these papers he was to learn
+nothing.
+
+He had considered all possibilities of the affair, all possible
+solutions of what long ago might have occurred between Joseph Weir,
+undoubtedly the father of the man sitting across the table from him,
+and the four men now conferring in Sorenson's office. This was no
+petty squabble, he divined. There was something going on under the
+surface that was big--big! And very dangerous too, for the spirit of
+that moment in Vorse's bar was not to be mistaken; it had been tense,
+electric. Utmost caution on Martinez's part would therefore be
+necessary.
+
+As between the two parties, his sympathies at present inclined towards
+Weir. The refusal on the latter's part to reëmploy the Mexican workmen
+on their own terms was purely a matter of policy, and the lawyer's
+first gusty anger had long been forgotten. But not so Sorenson's
+sneering words of that afternoon. They struck to the heart of his
+vanity, breeding an animosity that would last. Had not the banker
+stated that the lawyer should hold no political office whatever? After
+all his services? Had he not definitely shown that Martinez might
+never expect anything there? Well, the lawyer wasn't one tamely to
+yield his rights; he did not propose always to remain a scrimping,
+pettifogging attorney, existing on crumbs.
+
+When with a flourish he had appended his name to the acknowledgments
+and affixed his seal, he sat back thoughtfully studying the engineer,
+who was carefully examining the paragraphs for errors. He knew his
+business, did Martinez; the man would find no mistakes. Then the
+lawyer's eyes suddenly glistened. He arose and closed the door as Weir
+thrust the documents into a stout linen envelope, addressed and
+stamped.
+
+"I'll be pleased to see your letter goes in the mail in the morning,"
+he said, returning to his place. "The stage leaves at eight-thirty."
+
+"Post-office is closed now, I suppose. Very well. It will be an
+accommodation," the engineer responded.
+
+Martinez leaned forward.
+
+"If you can spare the time, I should like to have a little talk with
+you," said he. "Pardon me if I appear presumptuous, but as you're
+aware, Mr. Weir, I overheard your words to Judge Gordon in Vorse's
+saloon. I inferred--check me at any instant if you consider this none
+of my business!--that there exists some unpleasant feeling between you
+two gentlemen and possibly others. Judge Gordon has always handled the
+company's business in his private capacity of counselor. As you know,
+he's a silent partner in many enterprises with Sorenson, Vorse and a
+man named Burkhardt. They run this town and county. You should also
+know that they're secretly opposed to your irrigation project,
+whatever they profess. They've misled the people into believing it
+will work an injury to this district, whereas it will of course be
+beneficial. Unfortunately too they lead the people by the noses--but
+not me! I refuse to be subservient."
+
+He paused to note the effect of his words.
+
+"Now, Mr. Weir, these are facts you can confirm if you're not already
+informed of them, which I imagine you are. Because I'm independent in
+my opinions and actions, I stand in disfavor with these gentlemen,
+which may or may not be an objection in your view to what I have in
+mind. And this is it. I should be pleased to execute any legal work
+that you care to give me; it might be of advantage to your company at
+times to have an attorney other than Judge Gordon, who is aligned
+against you and will serve his own interests first. He's in a position
+to cause you embarrassment."
+
+"Our eastern attorneys draw all documents."
+
+"Of course. But I was thinking of delays more than anything else.
+There are a thousand ways a lawyer can push or halt matters at will,
+and your project will never be free of legal red tape until
+completed--if then! I'm not unselfish in this, I admit; the business
+would be valuable to me. But aside from that, I'll give you this
+advice anyway:--secure another lawyer in any case, one without
+antagonistic personal interests, if you can find another in San Mateo
+besides me. See, I'm frank! That may sound egotistical, but really I'm
+the only free man of the lawyers here. And I've paid for my liberty!"
+He made a sweeping gesture to indicate his shabby office. "If I had
+taken orders, I could have been county attorney and probably a judge.
+But I respect myself too much to take orders from Sorenson and his
+bunch. I choose this sort of thing in preference."
+
+Steele Weir maintained a non-committal silence. Again the thin
+dark-skinned lawyer swiftly weighed the man before him, considered the
+dangers in which he might become involved if he went a step farther,
+recoiled, then grew bolder. Sorenson had marked him for poverty and
+nonentity; under the favoring shelter of the irrigation company's
+power he might arise from both. For at moments the acute Mexican
+sensed the inevitable victory of the new forces at work; this, one of
+the last strong-holds of old time cattle and sheep interests, would
+break down and yield to the plow and fence.
+
+"Now, there's something more, though I hesitate to mention it," he
+went on, doubtfully. "While Sorenson and his crowd run things, it's
+not because the people--and that means us Mexicans chiefly--love them.
+We're indolent by nature; we idle rather than work; borrow when we can
+rather than earn--I speak of our race, but we're learning that work
+proves best in the long run. These men have squeezed my people, and
+robbed them, and kept them down. Nothing more would I wish than to see
+these leaders deposed. It's no secret they've built their wealth by
+questionable methods, but who can prove it?
+
+"Do you know what I suspect? You have something on Sorenson's crowd.
+That's why they're uneasy; that's why the four are sitting over in the
+cattle company's office this minute with their heads together, meeting
+the minute Sorenson arrives home. I saw them go in. Leaving aside the
+question of your own affairs, I'd like to have matters changed here in
+this county so that every man has a fair chance. Anything that will
+bring that about enlists my interest. When I heard your statement to
+Gordon and saw his face, I knew there was something in the past that
+alarmed him. I recalled a name I had once run across when abstracting
+a title----"
+
+It was not this ingenious twisting of the truth that caused the lawyer
+to become filled with sudden dismay and stop, but the savage hardening
+of the engineer's face.
+
+"Go on," Weir commanded.
+
+"Well, the name was Joseph Weir. I looked it up again to be sure, and
+found the property had been deeded to Sorenson and the others, who
+still have it. I wondered----"
+
+"What did you wonder?" came with a devouring look.
+
+"If--if Joseph Weir received consideration according to law."
+Martinez' courage flowed back again. "I'll make no attempt to justify
+my curiosity, sir, except to say that more than one man in the
+southwest was done out of property in early days; and the practice has
+not ceased, for that matter. But in these days the means is usually
+legal and Mexicans the victims. Sharp mortgage dealings and so forth.
+Now, if I've said too much, I'll instantly forget all about it. On the
+other hand----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I might be of assistance. If you wish to look into that old
+transaction, that is. If there was anything crooked about the deal,
+and I set it down that there was with Sorenson mixed in, and with
+Vorse and Burkhardt the witnesses named in the deed and Judge Gordon
+taking the acknowledgment of Joseph Weir's signature, as the record
+shows, then there should be some weak spot that could be attacked.
+There may be men yet alive conversant with the circumstances; they
+may know whether duress or fraud was exercised, supposing the sale
+was not honest. Some of the old Mexicans may remember Weir, and could
+give a clue; they have good memories for things of those days. Of
+course, if the transaction was all right, then I'm all wrong in my
+suppositions."
+
+Weir arose.
+
+"I can give you some of the company business, perhaps considerable of
+it," he said.
+
+Martinez sprang up, an expression of gratitude upon his face. He had
+not realized all that he had hoped for, but he was nevertheless
+delighted.
+
+"I'm really sincere when I give you a thousand thanks, Mr. Weir," said
+he, spreading his arms wide. "I'll not make promises as to the
+efficiency of my services; let results speak for themselves."
+
+"I always do," was the comment. "But I'll tell you what I demand in
+any one associated with me--absolute trustworthiness first of all,
+then loyalty and ability."
+
+"Which leaves nothing," Martinez smiled.
+
+He preceded the engineer and swung the door open, stepping aside. To
+the visitor's question regarding fees for the acknowledgments taken,
+he waved a declining hand.
+
+"Nothing, nothing. Delighted to render you the service."
+
+"Very well."
+
+"I'll attend to the letter," the lawyer again assured him.
+
+"Come out to the dam in a day or two."
+
+"To-morrow, if you wish."
+
+"To-morrow afternoon will do."
+
+Steele Weir's frame filled the lighted doorway as he stepped forth
+from the office. He paused to accustom his eyes to the darkness, for
+during his colloquy with the attorney full night had descended. On the
+same side of the street with himself and perhaps twelve or fifteen
+paces off he saw a girl's figure appear and disappear before a window
+as she moved along.
+
+Then suddenly a tongue of red flame darted at him across the street,
+where lay a space of unlighted gloom. His hat was whipped off his
+head. The sharp report of a shot cracked between the adobe walls. With
+an unbelievably rapid movement Steele Weir drew the revolver in his
+pocket, and which he had carried ever since his encounter with young
+Sorenson in the restaurant, fired twice where he had seen the flame
+and leaped aside into the darkness beside the doorway. There he
+waited, half crouching, for a further attack.
+
+But none came. Men began to run towards the place. Shouts and calls
+echoed along the street. In two minutes a crowd was surging before
+Martinez' door wildly asking questions.
+
+Weir pocketed his pistol and walked back into the office, where he
+found his bullet-pierced hat lying on the floor and the attorney
+standing frozen with astonishment. A stream of people followed at his
+heels.
+
+"Who did this shooting? Do you know, Felipe?" a tall raw-boned white
+man who led them asked hastily.
+
+"This gentleman, Mr. Weir, was fired on, sheriff," Martinez burst out
+volubly.
+
+"And I fired in return," the engineer stated. "The fellow was across
+the street in the dark. You might look over there."
+
+Turning and pushing his way through the packed door, the sheriff
+disappeared. The crowd melted away again. Presently as Weir glanced
+about he saw a new figure at the doorway, staring at him. He went
+towards the girl there outlined in the lamplight.
+
+"Was that you I saw moving along just before the exchange of
+compliments, Miss Hosmer?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. I was coming towards you on my way home."
+
+"It probably gave you a fright."
+
+"It did, indeed. I heard the shot and saw your hat knocked off. I just
+went cold in my tracks. At first I believed you killed."
+
+"I'm very much alive, as you see."
+
+"But it was dreadful! Who would fire at you from the dark? Some one
+tried to murder you!"
+
+"It looks like it. Still here I am, ready to move your car out of the
+water next time it's stalled."
+
+She entered the room slowly.
+
+"Who in San Mateo would do such a terrible thing, Mr. Martinez?" she
+addressed the lawyer. The pallor was still on her face and her eyes
+were large with horror.
+
+"Ah, Miss Janet, if we but knew! We'd lay hands on him and send him to
+the penitentiary."
+
+Real emotion struggled in the lawyer's words. With the return of his
+senses he had just begun to realize by what a narrow margin the
+assassin's bullet had missed destroying his future client and
+prospects.
+
+A growing murmur across the street attracted their attention. Then as
+they continued to chat of the event, the sheriff reappeared, directing
+half a dozen men who laid a burden in the light of Martinez' doorway.
+
+"You got him," he said to Weir, with ominous significance. "One bullet
+through the head, one through his stomach. He's good and dead."
+
+Weir walked forward and inspected that outstretched figure. It was the
+man whose gaze had been so malevolently fastened upon him as he joined
+Martinez before Sorenson's office.
+
+"Who is he?" he asked.
+
+"A strange Mexican. Some of these men say he showed up this morning
+and hung around the saloons, not talking much. Haven't you ever seen
+him, before?" The question expressed a perplexed curiosity.
+
+"Once. When Martinez and I were coming here to transact some business.
+He was taking a good look at me then when he passed us. That wasn't
+over half an hour ago. Never saw him before that."
+
+"He shot at you first?"
+
+"I had just stepped out of this room. Could I see him hiding over
+there? Or know he was there?" Then he added, "I was taken by surprise,
+but I marked the flash of his gun."
+
+The sheriff, Madden by name, looked at Weir appreciatively.
+
+"You can use a gun yourself," said he, briefly.
+
+Martinez now repeated the fact of the dead man having fired the first
+shot, which Janet Hosmer confirmed.
+
+"Well, is there anything more?" Weir questioned.
+
+"Not to-night, I reckon," Madden replied. "We'll have an inquest in
+the morning; show up then. Where will I find your father, Miss
+Hosmer?"
+
+"At home." Then to the engineer she explained, "Father acts in the
+absence of the coroner, who's away just now."
+
+"I'm very sorry this happened on your account," said he.
+
+"And I'm very glad you were not hurt."
+
+Outside the corpse was being borne away, followed by the curious, avid
+crowd of Mexicans.
+
+"You're still shaken by the thing," said Steele Weir. "It's enough to
+upset any girl. Let me walk home with you, or you may be starting at
+shadows all the way."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+JANET HOSMER
+
+
+A silvery brightness shone in the east as they came out of Martinez'
+office, that increased as they went forward until all at once the moon
+arose into view, lighting the street, disclosing the flanking lines of
+squat buildings, revealing the tall cottonwoods about the court house
+and elsewhere thrust up in the town.
+
+Janet Hosmer breathed a sigh of relief. The darkness had seemed potent
+for further evil, but now it was as if the latter retreated with the
+shadows. She felt a desire to go on alone, to separate herself from
+this companion with whom chance had brought her in contact at a
+dramatic moment, to get away from the whole terrible affair.
+Involuntarily her spirit shrank at the nearness of the man, for though
+he had struck back in self-defense he nevertheless had killed another
+and the act somehow appeared to set him apart from ordinary men,
+isolate him, give him the character of an Ishmael.
+
+Yet her feelings were confused. Against this inclination was an avid
+curiosity, or rather a wonderment, as to what must now be occurring in
+his soul. Her eyes sought his face as he walked beside her. Neither
+had spoken; and his countenance wore the same stern contained aspect,
+calm, forceful, as the first time she had ever observed it. But what
+was below the surface? What were the thoughts now revolving in his
+mind and the emotions flowing in his breast? She could read nothing
+on that composed mask of a face. Was it possible for a man to slay
+another human being, even justifiably, without suffering a hurricane
+of the spirit?
+
+But perhaps he had killed men before. The fact of his carrying a
+weapon and his swift deadly fire pointed ominously to previous
+experience.
+
+"Did you ever shoot any one before?" popped from between her lips.
+Then she stopped, clapping her hand over her mouth in consternation
+and staring at him palely.
+
+Weir had halted too. He regarded her in silence for a little, a slight
+smile resting on his face. They stood before the cattle company's
+office and his look went past her once to embrace the small darkened
+building.
+
+"I'm not a murderer by trade, if that's what you mean," said he, at
+last. "But I've killed a man or two before, yes." Then at the white
+anguish of her lips and cheeks, his tone softened a degree as he went
+on. "Unfortunately since becoming of age I've had to fight. If not
+men, then the earth. If not the earth, then men. Sometimes both
+together. You saw what happened to-night; that fellow was unknown to
+me. He was not a workman who had been discharged and felt he had a
+grievance----"
+
+"Oh, no!" she interjected. "The Mexicans here wouldn't attempt to
+murder you, however angry they might feel."
+
+"I'm not so sure of that," he answered.
+
+"But I am; I know them, I've lived among them!"
+
+"Well, let that go. The man tried to kill me, at any rate. However, he
+was merely a tool, hired for the business by some one else. Ordinarily
+I don't discuss my affairs with any one, but since you've raised the
+matter I'll just say that I've enemies in San Mateo who are anxious
+to dispose of me."
+
+"Such enemies here!"
+
+"Yes. Who would be delighted to see me lie where that dead man lies
+and who are apparently determined to effect it." He touched her sleeve
+warningly. "But you will speak of this to no one."
+
+"No, oh, no! Not a word!"
+
+Steele gazed at her steadily. He already repented disclosing even so
+little of his private concerns, an impulse altogether at variance with
+his close-mouthed habit, but he had, for some vague reason, felt it
+necessary to explain his course, to justify himself to this
+clear-eyed, fine-spirited girl. He could not let her rest under a
+misapprehension that he was a brute who reveled in blood-spilling. And
+as he regarded her a conviction that she was absolutely to be trusted
+settled firmly into his mind.
+
+She would be staunch; oxen and ropes could not drag information from
+her once she had determined not to speak. Yes, she would be loyal to
+her given word--and to her friends. Weir's eyes glanced at the diamond
+on her finger. It would be a girl like her with whom he would have
+chosen to mate if fate had not directed his feet on a road which
+seemingly left him no choice but incessant and solitary struggle.
+
+"I hate it all; I have nothing but crusts and nettles!" he exclaimed,
+with sudden fierce passion. And with a quick movement of his hand he
+beckoned her on.
+
+Submissively she accompanied him, her bosom rising and falling with a
+quickened rhythm. Too much had happened, one thing piling on another,
+for her to sort her thoughts or to attempt to understand things yet;
+and in her tossing state of mind she went at his gesture as one
+follows a guide, or as a simple matter of course.
+
+In her mental turmoil that last passionate utterance of the man played
+like a lambent flame. Tense, violent, spontaneous, it had come from
+the heart. What harsh lot he had lived and sufferings borne she could
+not even guess; but no man spoke with such unconscious bitterness who
+had not undergone pain and travail of spirit. His head was now turned
+a little towards her as they walked: she perceived him staring at the
+moonlit street, his lips compressed, his brows knit.
+
+Then he glanced about at her, his face clearing. "Pay no attention to
+what I said," he remarked. "I shouldn't have let loose that way.
+Hello, what's on now?"
+
+Before them, and in front of the court house, was a packed crowd,
+people who had run forth at the sound of shots, augmented by those who
+had since arrived upon the scene. It was motionless.
+
+"Stand back, stand back; don't trample the body!" came Sheriff
+Madden's voice in an angry order.
+
+The crowd surged a little apart in the center.
+
+"How do you know this dead man fired the first shot?" asked some one,
+vehemently.
+
+The voices went lower so that Steele Weir and Janet Hosmer, who had
+paused at the edge of the throng, were able only to catch the tones.
+
+"Who was that who questioned the sheriff?" Weir whispered.
+
+"Mr. Burkhardt, I think. Sounded like him."
+
+So intent were the Mexicans upon the occurrence in their midst that
+those close by remained with backs towards the pair, failing to
+notice their presence. All craned eagerly to miss nothing of the
+controversy.
+
+"How do you know this engineer didn't start it?" came Burkhardt's
+voice again.
+
+"Don't be a fool; there were witnesses."
+
+"I'd like to talk to those witnesses. I doubt if they really saw
+anything. It looks to me as if there's another side to this
+shooting."
+
+"Well, of course you know--you, sitting there in Sorenson's office, as
+you say," was the ironical retort.
+
+At this juncture another voice interposed.
+
+"Madden, we want no mistake here. This Weir doesn't bear a very good
+reputation for peacefulness, from what I've learned. If this Mexican
+has simply been shot down----"
+
+"Who is that?" Steele demanded of the girl. "I can't see him."
+
+"That"--Janet Hosmer's speech faltered--"that is Mr. Sorenson. Oh,
+they misunderstand! Let me push in there and tell them how it
+happened."
+
+The engineer's hand closed about her arm.
+
+"You'll do nothing of the kind," he commanded, low.
+
+"But----"
+
+"No. Remain quiet and listen."
+
+Her eyes flew up to his at this extraordinary course, so injurious to
+his own interests. She was anxious to press to the front and declare
+his innocence in the affair of everything but defending his life from
+an assassin. She could not understand why he also was not eager to
+spring forward, why he restrained her. Then she saw the implacable
+hatred on his face.
+
+A thrill quivered through her body. The feeling she had at that
+instant was one of being on the point of seeing behind the curtain of
+a mystery, of making a discovery so sinister that she would gasp. Her
+very finger almost rested upon it. Why were Mr. Sorenson and Mr.
+Burkhardt talking as they were? Trying by innuendo to make it seem her
+companion might have been guilty of a crime? Could it be---- Her blood
+slowly congealed to ice at the horror of where her reasoning led.
+
+_Could it be they were the enemies he meant!_
+
+Such a thing was too dreadful, too absurd. They, the respected leaders
+of the community, could never put a pistol in the dead wretch's hand
+to slay this man beside her. Mr. Sorenson! The father of Ed, whom----
+She stared blankly at her left hand.
+
+Yet the banker's heavy, smooth words continued to assail her ears
+steadily. She grasped their import once more.
+
+"--for the story is too thin. No man could hit another across the
+street in the dark as this engineer claims, not only once but twice
+put a bullet where it would kill. Probably the dead man had something
+on this Weir, and the latter knew it. It's not impossible he found the
+fellow in his path, drew and murdered him at once, quickly put a hole
+in his own hat and then carried the body across the way, running back
+to Martinez' office. The thing could have been done in a minute.
+Martinez' himself wouldn't have seen how it was worked. I'm not saying
+that was exactly how it was done, or that this Weir did actually
+murder him, but--investigate, Madden, investigate."
+
+Steele Weir felt an angry tug at his sleeve. He looked around and
+beheld Janet Hosmer's eyes distended with incredulity.
+
+"Come away, come away," she whispered. "I should never have believed
+it if I hadn't heard with my own ears!"
+
+Keeping close to the line of buildings, they skirted the crowd, still
+unnoticed, and left it behind. She walked with quick nervous steps;
+her hand yet unconsciously grasped his coat sleeve. All the way to her
+home, which they found dark since a messenger had called the doctor to
+the court house and the Mexican girl servant also was gone, she said
+nothing.
+
+"Come up on the veranda; I want to talk," she announced when he opened
+the gate.
+
+"Wouldn't it be best if you took your mind off the whole thing, by a
+book or something else? I'll go."
+
+"As if I could take my mind off! There are matters in this I must
+know. You may wonder when I say it, Mr. Weir, but this happening
+concerns me more than you dream." Her dark glowing gaze brooded on him
+with a sort of intense determination. Then she went on, "It--it
+involves my whole future as well as your own, though in a different
+way. So come inside, if you please."
+
+Weir in silence accompanied her upon the dark, broad, vine-clad porch.
+In the half-gloom he found chairs for them.
+
+"I'm going to the point at once," she declared. "Why did Mr. Sorenson
+talk in such a fashion?" And he could feel her bending forward as if
+hanging on his answer.
+
+"That's the one thing I can't discuss," said he.
+
+"I must know, I must know."
+
+"And unhappily I must refuse."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Weir, if you could but understand what this involves for me,
+you wouldn't hesitate! I was shocked at the shooting, but I saw its
+necessity on your part; you're not one to run from a foe, a cowardly
+foe least of all. But what I heard there in the street horrified me. I
+couldn't believe it; I can scarcely credit my ears yet. Mr. Sorenson
+and Mr. Burkhardt were not near when you were attacked; they are not
+acquainted with the circumstances or facts as you, Mr. Martinez and I
+know them; they apparently didn't appear until the crowd started away
+with the dead man. Yet at once----"
+
+"Ay, at once," Steele Weir let slip.
+
+"At once, immediately, when they had barely heard the story, they
+began to tear it to pieces and suggest another, making you out a
+villain. You're only an acquaintance, sir, scarcely more than a
+stranger, but as I listened it outraged all my sense of justice. Mr.
+Sorenson, of all men! My brain was in a whirl. But it's steady now."
+
+The engineer failed to open his lips at her pause.
+
+"I'm no fool, Mr. Weir; I think of other things besides dressing my
+hair and using a powder puff. I can sometimes put two and two
+together--when I see the 'twos' clearly. Now, tell me why Mr. Sorenson
+talked as he did, for I must have my eyes clear."
+
+"Ask me anything but that, Miss Hosmer."
+
+He sat distressed and uneasy at her prolonged muteness. Suddenly she
+questioned quietly:
+
+"Are those two men the enemies you spoke of?"
+
+"It will save me embarrassment if I go," he remarked, starting to
+rise. "I don't want you to hate me, you know, and still I can't say
+anything."
+
+Her grasp pulled him imperatively back.
+
+"You shall not go yet."
+
+"Then I can only continue to decline making answers. I frankly say
+that I regret having uttered a word of explanation."
+
+"I don't regret it. And I intend to keep questioning you, however rude
+you may think me. I must know," she cried impetuously, "and I shall
+know! Mr. Sorenson is one of the men you referred to, or he would
+never seek to direct suspicion at you. I saw the look on your face,
+sir, as he spoke. But why should you two be enemies! You come here a
+stranger to San Mateo, or have you been here before sometime? Did you
+know him before?"
+
+Again he could feel her eyes straining at him.
+
+"It seems mad to think of him and Mr. Burkhardt, and perhaps others,
+hiring some one to shoot you down from a dark doorway. It is utterly
+mad--crazy. But why should they want to convict you, in the crowd's
+opinion at least, of murdering the man. It would not be just trouble
+about the dam--oh, no. But I can't see through it at all. Why won't
+you tell me? You can trust me--and I want to help you as well as help
+myself. You certainly don't hold against me my silly nonsense and
+unkind words of the day you brought me home from the ford."
+
+"I didn't think them silly; they delighted me," he responded. "I
+hadn't had anything happen to me so refreshing in years."
+
+"We must be friends. Something tells me they're going to make you
+trouble over this shooting, and you'll need friends."
+
+"Something tells me you're right in both respects," he laughed.
+
+"And friends must stick together."
+
+"That's what they should do."
+
+In the dusk of the vine-clad, flower-scented place where they sat he
+experienced the subtle power of this intimacy. Not a soul stirred in
+the empty moonlit street before the house. No sounds disturbed the
+warm peace of the night. In this secluded spot only there ran the
+murmur of their voices.
+
+"I could never stand by and see any man unjustly accused and defamed
+if I knew he was innocent, without lifting up my word in defense," she
+proceeded. "But let me ask if on your side you're treating me
+fairly?"
+
+Weir could have groaned.
+
+"You have a noble spirit, Miss Hosmer. You're more courageous and kind
+than any girl I've ever known. Would you have me reveal what my best
+judgment tells me should remain untold?"
+
+"But what of me? Would you keep it to yourself if my future happiness
+might turn on it?"
+
+The appeal in her words shook Steele's heart.
+
+"How does this business affect your happiness? How?" he asked, in
+perplexity.
+
+Now it was her turn to hesitate. Why should she pause, indeed, before
+telling to this man what every one else knew. Yet hesitate she did,
+from a feeling she could but partly analyze. Of her fiancé she had
+already had disturbing secret doubts that had increased of late:
+doubts of his habits, his character and the genuineness of his love;
+so that it was with a little eddy of dissatisfaction and shame that
+she admitted the relationship. More she questioned her own love as an
+actual thing. In a startling way, too, this silent, forceful man, so
+deadly in earnest and so earnestly deadly, so terrible in some
+aspects, seemed at the instant to dwarf the other in stature and power
+as if the latter were a plump manikin.
+
+Perhaps at the last minute she had a shiver of dread at what might
+issue from the engineer's lips in the way of facts if he took her at
+her word and told her what she had demanded to know. Did she want to
+know? Suppose she let the affair rest where it was and went forward
+to the future in the comfortable assurance of ignorance.
+
+In that case, it might be wooing later revelations that then could not
+be escaped, revelations like consuming lightnings. She would settle it
+now once for all.
+
+"It does concern my future and my happiness vitally," she declared,
+earnestly. "For this reason----"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"I'm engaged to marry Ed Sorenson, son of Mr. Sorenson."
+
+Weir leaped to his feet.
+
+"Good God! That fellow!" he exclaimed, astounded.
+
+Without another word he sprang down the steps and strode away. Janet
+Hosmer, grasping the arms of her chair and staring after him, saw him
+once bring down his clenched fist on nothing. Then he passed rapidly
+along the street and out of sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+IN THE COIL
+
+
+The Spirit of Irony couldn't have devised a more intolerable
+situation. So thought Steele Weir as he strode away from the
+dwelling, still laboring under the emotions provoked by the girl's
+disclosure, wincing at his own biting thoughts and writhing at his
+own helplessness. It needed only this revelation to cap the whole
+diabolical evening.
+
+He could not have remained with her now if his life had depended on
+it. She, engaged to that scoundrel Ed Sorenson! How could she have
+been so blind to the lustful beast's nature? She must love him, of
+course. He must have been careful to exhibit to her only such
+qualities as would gain her affection and respect, or rather hollow
+shams of qualities he never had possessed. Propinquity, lack of rivals
+in this little town, no doubt were largely responsible for her feeling
+for the man. But it was like standing by and seeing her fair young
+body, her fresh pure life, her high soul, flung to a devouring swine.
+
+And by the rules of the game he couldn't open his lips to utter a word
+of warning! That was the worst of it, that was the worst of it. No,
+not by the rules of the game; not, for that matter, by the rules of
+life; for the latter run that only can the person concerned see with
+his or her own eyes what a loved one's character is, and must make and
+abide by her own judgments.
+
+Steele Weir all at once stopped in his tracks. He stared straight
+before him for a time seeing Janet Hosmer's face as it appeared when
+she anxiously gazed at him from Martinez' door, coming out of the
+night like a pallid moon-flower. At that instant she had feared he had
+been wounded; her heart was fluttering with anguish. The tension of
+his body relaxed and his hands slowly unclosed and involuntarily his
+eyes went up to the moon sailing serenely in the sky above the
+treetops and the flat-roofed adobe houses. What vaster blessing could
+life bestow than to have such a look come seeking one beloved!
+
+He went on thoughtfully.
+
+"She shall not marry him," he said to himself, with a quick resolve.
+
+What were the rules of any game when an innocent girl's happiness was
+at stake? Did he care for conventions, or even the contempt she
+herself might feel for him for apparently belittling her lover? He
+could stand that, so that her eyes were opened and the fellow's yellow
+heart made plain. At the proper time he should act, view his part as
+she might. A snap of his fingers for being misunderstood! He would go
+his own way afterwards.
+
+The thing had its curious features, too. No mistake, the shock of
+hearing Sorenson senior talking to the sheriff and the crowd, working
+up sentiment, had stirred her indignation and wonder and uneasiness
+and alarm. She was no fool, as she had said. She had a clear,
+practical mind, give it something to work on. Her intuition had
+immediately grasped the fact that there might be cellars under the
+Sorenson household of which she knew nothing and which should be
+promptly entered with a strong light. Whether the momentary desire
+would last, that was the question. To-morrow, or the first time she
+found herself in Ed Sorenson's reassuring presence, she might consider
+that her brain had been upset by events of this night, jiggled awry in
+a sort of moonlight madness, and her apprehensions as to happiness
+unfounded shadows.
+
+Well, Weir would strike later.
+
+He turned into the main street. Evidently the body of the dead Mexican
+had been carried into the jail behind the court house, or somewhere.
+The throng had dispersed, though its elements were every place
+talking, in pairs or in little knots of people. As he came along,
+these fell silent at his passing. They stared at him, motionless,
+expressionless, with the characteristic Mexican stolidity that is the
+heritage of Indian blood. By his automobile he found Martinez posted,
+stroking his long black mustache and regarding Sorenson's office,
+which was still lighted though the curtain remained drawn over the
+broad plate-glass window.
+
+"Just wanted to give you a whispered word," he said, in Steele Weir's
+ear, darting a glance towards some of the Mexicans who, drawn by
+insatiable curiosity, were lounging nearer.
+
+"Speak," said the engineer.
+
+"I came out of the office after you did and heard the talk." He made a
+covert movement of forefinger towards the nearby building. "The four
+of them are in there again. I saw you listening to Sorenson here in
+the street; and would you care to have me express my opinion as to
+what the signs indicate, Mr. Weir?"
+
+"Go ahead."
+
+"In the light of what I suggested during our talk in my office, the
+silly twaddle of Burkhardt and Sorenson is understandable. I look
+right through their scheme. They always frame up something against
+anybody they want to dispose of; they do it in business matters
+regularly, and very skillfully. They immediately perceived a chance,
+sir, in this unfortunate encounter of yours and laid hands on it;
+their talk was the first delicate maneuver to 'frame' you."
+
+"Sure," was the unperturbed answer.
+
+Martinez laid a finger on Weir's lapel.
+
+"Frankly, feeling hasn't been good towards you because of the work
+controversy at the dam," he went on, with another swift glance about.
+"They will use that. On the other hand, you have Miss Janet and me as
+witnesses in support of your story. Unfortunately Miss Janet is, as
+you may not be aware, engaged to----"
+
+Martinez paused dramatically.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"To Ed Sorenson," the lawyer half-hissed. "Nothing could be worse."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Why? Look at the position she'll be in. Consider the pressure they
+can put on her through that fact--and they'll not hesitate to do so,
+in one way or another. Innocent as a dove, she is, Mr. Weir." He
+thrust his head forward, showing his lips drawn apart and shining
+teeth tight set. "And she's never heard a rumor of his hushed-up
+affairs with poor, ignorant, Mexican girls who knew no better."
+
+"We'll simply have to trust to her courage to tell the truth on the
+proper occasion."
+
+"Ah, but they'll trick her some way."
+
+"And you?"
+
+Martinez straightened, smiled, twirled his mustache.
+
+"I? They aren't quite foxy enough for that, Mr. Weir," he boasted,
+with glistening eyes.
+
+The engineer was almost ready to believe that, but cunning was not the
+only weapon in his enemies' arsenal. How would this lean lawyer stand
+up under intimidation, bribes, threats?
+
+"I trust so, Martinez," said he. "Do you think they will try to get me
+sometime by an out-and-out gun-play?"
+
+"No, no, no."
+
+"Do you think they could if they tried?" Weir inquired, grimly.
+
+The attorney paused with finger and thumb on the point of his
+mustache, lifted his eyebrows and smiled broadly.
+
+"They'll consider twice before they attempt it, after your expert
+exhibition this evening," said he. "It was amazing, your speed, your
+accuracy."
+
+Steele tapped the man on the breast, who experienced a distinct tremor
+at that significant touch and at the veiled menace in the dam
+manager's eyes.
+
+"There's always one bullet in my gun for the man who betrays me,
+Martinez."
+
+The lawyer licked his lips. On general principles he disliked
+statements that committed one to the future. But it was necessary to
+say something.
+
+"To be sure. I should feel the same in your circumstances," he
+responded. Then as Weir turned to his car, he continued: "The inquest
+to-morrow morning should be over early. I'll visit you in the
+afternoon as planned."
+
+"Don't forget that letter," Weir called out.
+
+Martinez marveled. Kill a man, and still remember a letter! That
+magnified his respect immensely. Cool, that fellow! Then a slight
+shiver as if a chill from those black peaks west of the town had
+struck through his flesh rippled along his spine; for he had been
+over at the jail with the crowd and had viewed that dead body lying
+there on the stone floor. Not only cool, but dangerous and deadly,
+this engineer. He, Martinez, must be discreet; it would not do to risk
+gaining Weir's enmity. That cold-faced man could not be "monkeyed
+with."
+
+Martinez gnawed his mustache and eyed the dully illuminated office
+window. He wondered if those four men inside had not at last found
+their match, perhaps their master. Any one with half a brain could see
+there was going to be a desperate struggle between the four and the
+one, and he was not exactly sure yet that he wanted to venture farther
+into the affair. But the very danger fascinated him with its subtle
+and obscure features, exactly suited to his manipulation.
+
+A man who had been standing apart sauntered nearer.
+
+"Señor," he addressed the lawyer in Spanish.
+
+Martinez whirled about.
+
+"Ah, it's only you, Naharo."
+
+"He is a bad fighter, eh?" And the man, almost white because of
+intermixed blood, moved a hand in the direction Weir's car had gone.
+
+"Perhaps not bad. Quick with a gun, however," was the careful reply.
+
+"With his fists also. I saw, or if I did not see, I very nearly did
+so--it is the same--saw him use them in Bowenville. And on that dog of
+an Ed Sorenson who would have seduced my little Dolorosa, as he did
+Cristobal's daughter, if I had not perceived what he was at."
+
+The lawyer's ears were instantly pricked up. He caught the man by the
+shirt-sleeve.
+
+"Come with me," he said.
+
+Once they were in his office he carefully closed and locked the door,
+drawing the window shades. Literally he rubbed his hands one over the
+other as he bade Naharo take a chair. Then the pair of them rolled and
+lighted cigarettes.
+
+"Perhaps I should say no more, Señor Martinez."
+
+"It will go no farther. And if the engineer and Ed Sorenson had a
+fight, then it must have been for that reason the latter's father
+spoke as he did to-night. You heard him."
+
+"Yes. And I did not understand why. It was not because of what
+happened at Bowenville, unquestionably not, for it had to do with
+another girl----"
+
+"Ha, a girl! And the engineer mixed in it?"
+
+"Listen. As I say, he would not have told his father, because he keeps
+such things quiet; it is four years since he last had to pay money to
+settle a matter. Some think he now behaves, but it is not true. But he
+is more careful. So his father did not know about this."
+
+"Tell it all, Naharo."
+
+The other inhaled a puff of smoke and half-closed his eyes. Though
+nearly white, he retained the Mexican's high cheek bones, and languor,
+and unforgiving nature.
+
+"I was in Bowenville, freighting up flour to the store of Smith's. I
+had loaded by evening, to make an early start next day. I had gone
+into the restaurant for supper, taking a seat far down at the end of
+the counter near the kitchen. I was tired and thinking only of my
+food. As I ate, there was a crash in one of the stalls and I looked
+about. There was a fight, of course. But it ended at once. Then I
+observed Ed Sorenson come out presently, jerking his collar and tie
+straight. He was mad. He had been whipped, too. For he yet looked as
+if he wanted to kill the other man in there, but he went away. Soon
+the other man came out and with him was a young white girl, whom I
+did not know. The man was this engineer and he carried an old piece of
+baggage, not such as he would carry but as the girl might, for she
+looked like a ranch girl who was poor. The girl was scared. The man
+was calm as a priest. That scoundrel Ed Sorenson had been beaten. Aha,
+so; it was clear. The engineer had put a spoke in the fellow's wheel.
+Then I walked to the door and saw the two get into a car and start on
+the trail this way. After that, I resumed my supper. You perceive, the
+man had taken the girl away from the wolf."
+
+Martinez' restless eyes wandered about the room as he digested this
+account.
+
+"Did you see the dead man?" he inquired, casually.
+
+"Yes, señor."
+
+Their looks met, held for an instant, dropped. Each read the thought
+of the other: the motive for the attack on the engineer was clear. But
+some convictions are better not expressed.
+
+"I should have liked to see Señor Weir do the shooting," Naharo
+stated. "Dios, such shooting! Two shots, two hits. And in the dark!"
+
+Martinez' grinned.
+
+"It will not please--whoever hired the dead man. He was hired for the
+job, of course."
+
+"Unquestionably, señor," was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE GATHERING STORM
+
+
+At the inquest next morning no outward sign indicated what Weir's
+enemies might be at. Indeed, none of them was present. The engineer
+made a statement; the two witnesses, Janet Hosmer and Felipe Martinez,
+were briefly interrogated, and the finding was returned that the
+unknown Mexican had met death from two bullet wounds while attempting
+to kill Steele Weir.
+
+One spectator there was who took a strong interest in proceedings, Ed
+Sorenson. When, however, Janet Hosmer was notified by her father, who
+was in charge, that she could withdraw, the young fellow hastened to
+lead her away, with an audible remark that it was a shame she had had
+to be "dragged into this disreputable gun-man's bloody show." Meaning
+Steele Weir, naturally.
+
+That feeling was being intensified against him was only too apparent
+in the hostile manner of the crowd and in the silence with which it
+received the finding. There was his former unpopularity, to begin
+with; there was now added a race resentment, for the slain man,
+stranger though he was, was Mexican; and finally, he knew not what
+distilled poison of lies concerning his innocence in the night fray.
+Nothing more was needed to reveal the swelling hate which secret fear
+of Weir but increased than a volley of curses and abuse hurled at his
+head from a native saloon doorway as he passed in his car on his way
+home.
+
+During the following week the engineer was too occupied with dam work
+to have time for other matters. He pushed the concrete construction
+and inspired his men with something of his own indomitable spirit, who
+had learned of the cowardly attack in San Mateo and rallied to his
+standard with a zeal and ardor for which the fact of employment alone
+did not account. He had become a leader as well as their "boss." From
+Meyers down to the humblest workman the camp had for him a new
+admiration, a new respect and a new loyalty, which he could not help
+but feel; he had proved that he could deliver the "goods"; and if the
+Mexicans wanted war, the Americans here would be glad to oblige them.
+Nor did they wait to let San Mateo know the fact.
+
+"We're wid 'Cold Steel' Weir, our boss, four hundred of us, till ye
+can skate on hell," a huge Irishman, one of half a dozen standing at
+Vorse's bar on Saturday night, remarked when the saloon-man uttered a
+sneer at the manager. "Say that agin and we'll tear your rotten booze
+joint to pieces and make ye eat it! And if another stinkin' greaser
+tries to wing him from the dark, we'll come down here and wipe your
+dirty little town off the map! That goes both ways from the jack!" He
+snapped his fingers under the other's nose by way of added insult.
+
+A petty series of hostile acts against the company developed.
+Teamsters were stoned by boys, which left them raging and murderous to
+discover the men who set them on. Half a carload of cement in sacks
+was ripped open and emptied on the earth at Bowenville. After Meyers,
+Weir's assistant, found his automobile tires slashed to bits on coming
+out of the post-office in San Mateo, it became necessary always to go
+in pairs, one man to remain on watch. Weir himself just avoided a
+serious accident one evening at dusk while a mile from the dam when he
+instinctively ducked in his car as something grazed the top of his
+wind-shield. A wire had been stretched across the road from a
+telephone pole to a tree, at just the height to strike him at the
+throat.
+
+He halted and removed the deadly contrivance. Men on watch of his
+movements could have prepared it against his return; and, indeed, he
+thought he detected a pair of flitting shadows behind a row of willow
+bushes lining a Mexican irrigation ditch, but in the dusk he could not
+be sure. On running thither, he found no one.
+
+The camp was not of a temper, however, to allow the attacks to be all
+on one side. Atkinson, the superintendent, came to Weir one morning
+towards the end of the week and informed him workmen were drifting
+down to San Mateo nightly in hope of trouble.
+
+"They'll get a knife put into them," Steele Weir replied, with a frown
+that did not entirely hide his satisfaction at this evidence of
+support.
+
+"Maybe; and again maybe not," the superintendent stated, grinning. "A
+bunch jumped some of our boys last night and I guess when the dust
+settled there were a couple of Mexicans beaten nearly to death."
+
+"Call the men all together this noon," Weir ordered.
+
+At that hour he gave them a talk for what he called their long-eared
+cussedness, and laid down a little law and wound up with a number of
+reasonable explanations for the same. Every man who went out hunting
+trouble was a camp liability, and would be fired. He did not propose
+to give the town authorities a chance to jail workmen and impair the
+dam work, just the thing they were waiting to do. The men should keep
+away from San Mateo, or at least avoid disputes and rows. If they
+spent no money there whatever it would sting the town where it would
+hurt the most, in its pocket-book; and he himself was transferring the
+company bank account to Bowenville, by way of example. If any man felt
+the need of change from camp, he could have two days off at the end of
+the month to spend at Bowenville. But keep away from the Mexicans!
+
+"And if they come up here huntin' us when we show up no more?" yelled
+the same big Irishman who had paid his respects to Vorse.
+
+"In that case, tear their heads off," was the reply. "But put on your
+gloves first or you'll dirty your fingers." Which bit of rough humor
+caught the crowd's fancy and won a roar of laughter.
+
+Later as the crowd dispersed to eat Atkinson said to Meyers, "The boss
+knows how to handle men all right, all right; he put sugar on the
+pill. The gang went off grinning. They know they've got to be
+good--but only up to a limit."
+
+Meantime Felipe Martinez had not been idle. He rode up to engineering
+headquarters on his pony one evening and carried Weir out into the
+open where their words would not be overheard. He reported that he was
+quietly working for information of Weir's father among the older
+Mexicans who would be likely to remember him, but proceeding
+cautiously so that no one would suspect his purpose. He represented
+himself to them as undertaking to write a history of San Mateo County;
+he must depend upon them for data of early days; it would be a fine
+book bound in leather, in which their names and possibly their
+pictures would appear;--which never failed to flatter the parties with
+whom he talked. And the lawyer laughed with amusement as he related
+the success of his method.
+
+"I have already seen some thirty or forty people, a few of whom
+recalled your father, but no more. But this afternoon," he continued,
+"I discovered a woman who worked at the Weir ranch house." Martinez
+perceived the engineer's attention quicken. "She said the Weirs had a
+little boy of four years of age, perhaps five. You, Mr. Weir, of
+course. They suddenly paid and discharged her one day, packed a trunk
+and drove hurriedly off; and the next morning Sorenson took possession
+of the ranch and she went home. They drove off in a great haste--there
+was no railroad anywhere near here then--and that was the last she
+ever saw or heard of them."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"One thing more there was: she said there was a story that went around
+for awhile afterwards that Weir and another had lost their ranches and
+cattle gambling. For that reason Weir left the country; and for that
+reason, too, the other man, Dent, by name, committed suicide in
+Vorse's saloon where they had gambled. She said Saurez, an old man
+living with his son up a little creek, would know about that, for he
+used to clean out Vorse's bar-room in those days."
+
+Steele Weir grasped Martinez's shoulder in a quick grip.
+
+"He did! Get everything he knows out of him," he commanded.
+
+"Leave it to me, Mr. Weir. I understand how to wheedle facts out of
+these old fellows."
+
+But it was doubtful if the engineer heard his words. He had dropped
+his hand, stood opening and shutting his fingers, while on his face
+grew the hard implacable look that always whetted the attorney's
+curiosity.
+
+Weir walked up on the hillside when Martinez had ridden away and there
+sat down on a rock. It was a rift, though but a faint rift, that this
+news made in the blank dark wall he had to confront; and he wished to
+think. Proof as well as knowledge of what had happened in his father's
+case was what he must have. Acting on intuition he had been able to
+put fear into the hearts of the four men responsible for making his
+father's life a hell, but proof of their guilt was necessary to make
+them suffer in a similar fashion, to reveal their crime to the world,
+to destroy them. Now at last, here was a possibility. If this former
+roustabout of the saloon knew anything!
+
+Well, he must be patient--the mill of the gods grinds slowly. But when
+finally he had gained all the strands and woven the net! Unconsciously
+his hands arose before his face like talons closing on prey and shut
+on air, until their veins swelled. That was how he would serve them,
+those men. Though they might fall on their knees and implore mercy,
+not one beat of pity should move his heart.
+
+It was almost dark when he arose. Behind him the great peaks soared
+against the last greenish twilight. In the shacks the camp lamps were
+showing at windows. At one side and in the canyon the concrete core of
+the dam appeared white in the gloom, like a bank of snow. The murmur
+of voices, an occasional distant laugh, came from men's quarters.
+
+Presently he slanted down the hillside past the camp, until he struck
+into a road leading towards town, where he began to walk forward,
+hatless and without coat, through the soft dusk. He was disinclined
+for work as yet, the work always piled on his desk; he desired yet
+for a little to rest his spirit in the evening calm.
+
+His thoughts had softened and turned to Janet Hosmer. He had not seen
+her since the morning at the court house. He had not spoken with her
+since that interview upon her veranda, which had terminated with his
+shocked utterance. That he had thus given away to his feeling he had a
+hundred times repented; and that he had so bruskly departed he was
+profoundly chagrined. But what could he have done? No explanation was
+possible. The situation in which he had been allowed of but one thing,
+escape.
+
+With the rising tide of emotion reflected by memory of that moment his
+steps had quickened. All at once he discovered before him the rippling
+sheen of water. He was at Chico Creek, a mile from camp, where he
+first had met Janet Hosmer. Engaged with his tangled problem, he had
+been unaware of the distance covered.
+
+Pausing but an instant he waded through, smiling to himself at thought
+of that afternoon's spirited encounter with the girl. She had not
+dreamed then, nor he, that events would fling them together in a more
+dramatic second meeting at Martinez' door.
+
+Suddenly he perceived a white-clad figure before him, standing
+motionless, leaning forward to peer his way as he walked forth from
+the ford.
+
+"It's you, Mr. Weir?" came in soft inquiry.
+
+"Yes. How in the world do you happen to be here, Janet Hosmer?"
+
+She laughed.
+
+"I thought I recognized you marching through the stream, so I wasn't
+alarmed."
+
+"No one would think of harming you, I'm sure."
+
+"But anyway I should have vanished if you had been a stranger."
+
+"Not being one, you remained. I had no idea of such luck as this when
+I set out for a walk."
+
+Both pleasure and satisfaction sounded in his voice.
+
+"I was just taking a little stroll myself," said she.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+AN UNEXPECTED ALLY
+
+
+"Let me take the chance first thing to apologize for my behavior the
+night we talked on your porch," Steele Weir exclaimed. "Your statement
+of being engaged surprised me into words and conduct that has had me
+in an unhappy state of mind ever since. Mr. Sorenson's talk to the
+crowd stirred my anger. Had I known your exact relationship to him and
+his son, I should have made no mistakes."
+
+"I had urged you to speak, had I not?"
+
+"Grant that. But I don't stand excused."
+
+"There was no questioning the sincerity of your last expression that
+night, in any case," she said. "But I've not been indignant because of
+what you exclaimed or because you hate the Sorensons. 'Hate' isn't too
+strong a word, is it? I'm none the less interested however to know
+what it's all about. You see I don't take any stock in the reasons
+commonly given: that you're a 'bad man,' an agent of a rich
+corporation trying to put our people out of business, a public menace
+and all the rest."
+
+"Is that what they say?" Weir asked, with a laugh.
+
+"Part of it. Nor does it fool father, for he said only yesterday that
+there's something more at bottom of the feeling against you than
+merely a fight of moneyed interests. He knows from what I told him
+that that dead man tried to murder you; yet he hears constant talk of
+your 'crime,' of evidence being gathered against you by the county
+attorney, Mr. Lucerio, and of the penalty you shall pay. All absurd,
+to be sure."
+
+"Mr. Martinez tells me the same," Steele responded. "But he says also
+that all the people do not believe the stories."
+
+"That's true." And she appeared to reflect upon the circumstance.
+
+To Weir nothing could be stranger than this talk on the dark road with
+the girl who, too, should be naturally opposed to him. In fact, here
+at this very spot and at their first meeting she had announced herself
+as a critic and an enemy. He could smile over that now; she herself
+probably did smile at the recollection. Yet she was calmly discussing
+his situation without animus or even unfriendliness.
+
+How could that be possible if she actually loved the man whom she
+expected to marry, Ed Sorenson? Why did she not at once spring to arms
+in defense of the Sorenson side? Unless--unless she suspected the
+baseness of her lover and his father, and fear had replaced love.
+
+All at once she spoke.
+
+"They will put you in jail if they can, and bring you to trial,
+and--and----"
+
+"And hang me, that's what you hesitate to say," Steele finished for
+her. "Whom do you mean by 'they'?"
+
+"The people."
+
+"Are the people here in this county really 'they'? Do the people, that
+is, the mass of poor ignorant Mexicans, have anything to do with
+public affairs? Both you and I know they do not."
+
+"Why deny it!" she sighed. "It's generally known that four men, with
+a few more at their skirts, run things. They nominate the men who are
+to fill office--there's only one political party in the county worth
+mentioning--and give them orders and expect them to obey. For that
+reason father would never accept an office. He could be coroner; he
+could be county treasurer; he could go to the legislature; or anything
+else--if he would but wear their political livery. But he prefers to
+be a free man. I used to think nothing of it, see no wrong in such a
+state of affairs, for everything went along well enough and about the
+same as ever as far as I could see."
+
+"Possibly you didn't see everything that was occurring below the
+surface even then."
+
+"Exactly what father told me yesterday. We talked about everything
+under the sun, I imagine. And I informed him that you walked home with
+me the night of the shooting; I had not spoken of it before."
+
+"That was proper; he should know it."
+
+"He doesn't share in the feeling against you, Mr. Weir, let me assure
+you of that. Ever since he heard my explanation of the shooting and
+then met you at the inquest, he's convinced that you're being done a
+great injustice."
+
+Steele experienced a warm glow of pleasure.
+
+"I liked your father at first sight," said he, simply. "But where does
+all this leave us?" He spoke in a light tone of amusement that he was
+far from feeling. "Our position is--odd."
+
+"It is," she assented so earnestly that he began to laugh.
+
+"You mustn't allow it to disturb you. I'm really presuming upon your
+kindness of heart and innocence in enjoying your company now.
+Acquaintance with me is a rather serious matter here in San Mateo and
+carries consequences. You don't think for an instant that I'd allow my
+personal pleasure--and pleasure it is to be with you, needless to
+say--to bring you into ill-favor among your friends and to make you
+the subject of gossip. I appreciate your good spirit towards me; and I
+admire you greatly. But it will be well if I admire you at a distance
+hereafter."
+
+"I don't see whose business it is except mine."
+
+To Steele Weir it was like pushing aside the only thing that
+brightened his hard, toilsome existence thus to abjure future
+companionship with her.
+
+"Good heavens, do you fancy that comes easy for me to say?" he
+exclaimed, drawing a deep breath. "I never before knew any one
+who--well, I'll stop there."
+
+"Who what?" she demanded.
+
+"I nearly overstepped the bounds."
+
+"Oh, that's it."
+
+What imp of perversity was in the girl? Weir stared at her for a
+moment through the gloom.
+
+And then she remarked that she must be returning home, and said she
+would be glad if he would accompany her part way as there was a
+Mexican's house half way to town where a particularly vicious dog
+always rushed out. The dog rushed out exactly as she had predicted,
+barking savagely, so that she slipped her arm into the engineer's and
+held fast until they were past.
+
+"He does that only after dark; I hadn't expected to walk so far and it
+was still light when I set out," said she.
+
+The touch of her fingers on his sleeve, the light swing of her form at
+his side, the subtle fragrance that emanated from her hair and face,
+this intimate nearness on the dark road, the heavy scent of flowers
+in the bordering fields,--all sent the blood thumping from his heart.
+If he--if he were in Ed Sorenson's place, what love he could pour
+out!
+
+Ed Sorenson, the double-faced wretch who while engaged to her had
+attempted to entice away for his own vile gratification the simple,
+trustful girl on Terry Creek, he was to marry this sweet and charming
+companion. What diabolical tragedies life could mix!
+
+"See, the moon is rising," she said.
+
+Over the edge of the mesa the yellow globe was bulging, rayless for
+the moment, round and full.
+
+"We're almost at the edge of town, and I'll stop here," he replied.
+"As I said, I'd not bring down upon your head a single unpleasant
+word."
+
+"My head's not so tender," she responded quickly. "But I think you're
+right--for the present." A tight little smile followed the words.
+"We'll see."
+
+"That's best."
+
+"But I propose to stand by you. I told you that night I couldn't
+remain indifferent when I saw an innocent man persecuted."
+
+"You give me a tremendous amount of happiness."
+
+"If I do, I'm glad. I don't believe you ever had much of it. Do you
+know what is said? That you never smile. But I can swear that isn't
+true, and I'm beginning to wonder if you really are--Heavens, what was
+I about to say!"
+
+"Go ahead. It's nothing terrible, I wager."
+
+"Well, I won't finish that, but I'll ask a question even more
+impertinent, if I may. Frankly, I'm dying of curiosity to know."
+
+Weir turned his head to listen to the approach of a horseman. He could
+see the man galloping towards them for town, having turned into the
+road from a lane a short distance off, his horse's hoofs striking an
+occasional spark from a stone. Then the engineer looked smilingly at
+Janet Hosmer.
+
+"I'll tell you anything--or almost anything." One subject alone was
+sealed.
+
+"It's that name."
+
+"Name?"
+
+"'Cold Steel.' How did you get it?"
+
+"It was just pinned on me a few years ago. I'm not particularly proud
+of it. I don't even know the rogue who gave me the label. And it means
+nothing."
+
+"Even your enemies are using it,--and I understand what it signifies."
+She bent her eyes upon him for a time. "That is, what it signifies to
+your friends."
+
+"And to my enemies?"
+
+"More gossip. They say it's because you're a gun-man and a knife-man.
+Oh, I wish I didn't have to have my ears filled with such vicious
+slander! But it means the same to enemies as to friends if they would
+but admit it. I'll wait until this rider passes, then I must go."
+
+No thought of friends or foes, both, or of any such person as Ed
+Sorenson in particular, was in Steele's mind as he made answer.
+
+"I'd stand here forever if you didn't go," he said, with a low
+eagerness that caused her breath to flutter in spite of herself.
+
+On her part, her mind was whispering, "He means it, I believe he
+really means it." Which caused her to lift and lower her eyes
+hurriedly, and feel a peculiar sense of trepidation and excitement.
+Odd to state, she, too, just then had no recollection of any such
+being as Ed Sorenson, which was the extreme of unloverliness.
+
+"Before I do go, I've something to tell you," she said hurriedly,
+dropping her voice. "It's this: the dead man's name was"--here her
+tone went down to a mere sibilance--"Pete Ortez."
+
+He leaned forward, once again the hard fierce man she had seen in
+Martinez' office the night of the shooting.
+
+"How did you learn that?"
+
+"It--well, it was let slip inadvertently in my presence."
+
+Weir would not press her further. Nor was there need, for the sudden
+embarrassment on her face and indeed the information itself could have
+but one source, the man who knew, Ed Sorenson.
+
+"You're the equal of a thousand ordinary friends," he declared. "I can
+make use of that item. Step aside, please; we're in the middle of the
+road." And he drew her from in front of the horseman advancing upon
+them.
+
+They said nothing, but waited for the man to pass. But he pulled his
+mount from a gallop to a trot, and from a trot to a foot pace, and at
+last when squarely even with them came to a full stop. From under his
+broad hat brim he silently considered the girl in white summer dress
+and the bare-headed engineer.
+
+Then he began to shake with laughter, which lasted but an instant. So
+insulting, so sinister was that noiseless laugh that Janet's hand had
+flown to Weir's arm, which she nervously clutched. As for Weir, his
+limbs stiffened--she felt the tightening of the arm she grasped--as a
+tiger's body grows taut preparatory to a spring.
+
+The short, fleshy, insolent rider sitting there in the moonlight was
+Burkhardt.
+
+"Ed Sorenson better keep an eye on his little turtledove," he
+remarked. And touching heel to his animal he swung ahead for town.
+
+For one dazed minute they stared after him.
+
+"Shoot him!" she suddenly said, through shut teeth.
+
+"I haven't my gun along, or I'd be glad to oblige you."
+
+"He deserves killing, the wretch!"
+
+"On more accounts than one," he replied, quietly.
+
+So quietly and so gravely, in truth, that her gust of rage subsided
+before the low-spoken menace of the words. No quick anger was his but
+a steady and deadly purpose. Again she felt the hard-held force, the
+mystery of the man, as if flowing suddenly upward from subterranean
+channels. What wrong had he suffered, what undeserved torture at the
+hands of this man and others thus to freeze his soul?
+
+But he immediately turned to her, asking, "Does that upset the
+broth?"
+
+A wan smile greeted his words.
+
+"I expect it will keep the cook busy, anyway," she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION
+
+
+Janet Hosmer made no effort to guess what her fiancé would say when
+next he called, or to prepare a defense of explanations and excuses.
+She was not that kind. What was necessary to be stated at the proper
+time would arise to her lips. Nevertheless she had a heaviness of
+heart, a natural distress as to the unpleasantness in prospect; and
+had only the slightest hope that Ed would ignore or refuse to hear
+Burkhardt's story. The man would tell her lover, of that she might
+rest assured, out of hatred for the engineer if for no other reason.
+
+She knew how passionately Ed was set against Steele Weir, for a score
+of times she had heard his incensed opinions, increasing lately to
+tirades. It had seemed strange at first that one could be so bitter
+over a simple difference like that of who should work at the dam. But
+ever since Weir had uttered his hoarse exclamation regarding her
+engagement, words so full of protest and amazed indignation, she was
+aware the cause went deeper.
+
+At that moved ejaculation of her companion that night something, too,
+had settled on her heart like a weight--an indefinable foreboding. The
+anxiety aroused about Ed's father and his integrity came to include Ed
+likewise. Loyalty of course required that she accept the man she had
+promised to marry, without reservations. As between him and others
+there should be but one choice. But did she really know him? Was he
+simply the open, jolly, generous, upright adoring fellow he appeared?
+Or were there less pleasant, more ignoble sides to his character? Was
+he, as well as his father, capable of a mean, unworthy, selfish
+persecution of another?
+
+The engineer had made no open accusation against him--or against any
+one, for that matter. She had done her best to get him to express
+himself, but he had refused. Enemies he might have, but he would not
+discuss the fact beyond admitting it was true. Only at moments when
+his restraint slipped could she measure his feelings. Quite different
+that from Ed Sorenson's voluble, heated denunciations of the other.
+Yet, heavens, how appalled this reserved man had been at hearing of
+her engagement! Far more than words, far more than any open charge,
+did his face and incredulity, both so patently sincere, bespeak the
+mistake she was making and justify gnawing doubts of her lover.
+
+As she approached her home Ed Sorenson came dashing out to spring into
+his runabout waiting before the gate. At sight of her he pulled up
+short.
+
+"Ah, here you are," he said.
+
+"Yes, here I am," was her reply.
+
+"You doubtless know what I've been told," he stated, significantly.
+
+"No, I don't. I can only suspect."
+
+"Is it true you've been meeting this man Weir on the quiet? Meeting
+him while engaged to me? You know what I think of him, and what every
+other respectable person thinks of him."
+
+"Was that Mr. Burkhardt's report? That I am meeting Mr. Weir on the
+quiet, to use your words?" she countered.
+
+Sorenson made an angry gesture at what he considered an evasion.
+
+"Janet, listen. He said he saw you at the edge of town, that you
+were both bare-headed, standing close together, arms locked. Good
+heavens, can't you imagine my feelings on hearing what he had to
+say! He stopped me on the street and drew me aside to put me on my
+guard, he said. Burkhardt wouldn't just make up a yarn like that
+against you, and he's a good friend of mine. He didn't say half
+what he suggested."
+
+The girl turned her face towards the house, shut her eyes for an
+instant. She could picture the rider's brutal leering face and
+unspoken insinuations; and her brain also placed in the scene her
+lover greedily if angrily drinking in the tale. Harkening to it
+instead of knocking the man down, that was the worst of it.
+Harkening--and believing.
+
+"I'll not deign to resent your remark of meeting Mr. Weir 'on the
+quiet'," said she, quietly. "I met him on the road accidentally."
+
+"Don't you think I'm entitled to know something about it?" he asked,
+with an edged tone.
+
+"What is it you desire to know?"
+
+Nearly an oath of wrath escaped his mouth, but he kept his control.
+
+"Janet, you know what kind of a man he is," he said. "You know what I
+feel against him, and father, and all our friends, and the town. And
+the whole town, too, will probably hear of this, with a lot of gossip
+added that isn't true."
+
+"But I met him accidentally."
+
+"You didn't have to chat with him like an old friend."
+
+Janet Hosmer gave him a slow, meditative look.
+
+"How do you know how I talked with him?"
+
+"You talked with him. That in itself was too much."
+
+"I don't view it in that light," she responded. "He was perfectly
+civil. Whatever public opinion may be regarding the shooting, I know
+he killed the man in self-defence. So that's nothing against him. You
+would have done the same in his place."
+
+Ed Sorenson leaned towards her.
+
+"You were mistaken, Janet. I've said before that I feared you were,
+but the prosecuting attorney has witnesses to the gun-play that he's
+dug up. Martinez saw nothing; how could he from inside the office? And
+remember that you're only a girl, Janet; in the darkness and with the
+excitement you were confused. I haven't a doubt this scoundrel Weir
+made you believe you saw what never occurred, when you appeared in
+Martinez' office. When you've thought it over, you'll realize that
+yourself. These new witnesses tell just the reverse of what you
+fancied happened. I'm going to see that you're away from San Mateo
+when the man's tried, as he will be."
+
+No reply coming from her, he continued:
+
+"He deceived you then and he'll endeavor to poison your mind right
+along. You're too trustful. Now, I was angry at first, but if there
+was anything in this meeting to-night that was out of the way, it was
+his doing, I know. If he got familiar with you, as Burkhardt
+hinted----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I'll kill the dog with my own hands!"
+
+"You may rest easy. His conduct was irreproachable, Mr. Burkhardt to
+the contrary."
+
+Sorenson regarded her in perplexity, divided between anger and doubts.
+Too, a new feeling unaccountably sprang into his breast--jealousy. In
+the end apprehension all at once filled his mind, darkening his face
+and bringing down his brows.
+
+Uneasy as at first he had been after the row in the restaurant, he had
+eventually dismissed the matter from his mind, for no rumor of it had
+reached San Mateo. Neither Weir nor Johnson, the girl's father, had
+blabbed of it, so his alarm passed; they didn't want to talk of it for
+the girl's sake, any more than he wished it known, was his grinning
+conclusion. The deuce would have been to pay if Janet had got wind of
+the business. But now his fears came winging back a hundred-fold as he
+stared at her.
+
+"What did he say to you?" he asked, in a tense voice.
+
+"Not that tone with me, if you please."
+
+Sorenson, however, was past observation of her mood or temper.
+
+"He told you a lot of lies about me, didn't he?" he went on, not
+hiding the sneer. "And you believed them."
+
+"He didn't say much, but what he did say was to the point. I don't
+recall that there were any lies."
+
+"There were, of course. It would be just his chance to give you his
+made-up story about me and that Johnson girl. That was what so
+interested you."
+
+"No, he didn't say anything about you and any girl except me. Then
+he only said he was sorry he couldn't have the pleasure of my
+friendship----"
+
+"Ay-ee," the other grated. His lips worked above his teeth.
+
+A shudder passed over Janet Hosmer's skin at the sound and the sight,
+for she had never seen him like this. A cold hand might have been
+closing about her heart: his glare was animal-like and bestial. His
+nature at the instant stood unclothed.
+
+"And he said he would be at pains to avoid even chance meetings with
+me, because it would make talk and cause me annoyance."
+
+"He'll not meet you another time if I have anything to say about it."
+
+"I see. But I wanted you to understand that he told me no lies, nor
+repeated any story--about you and a Johnson girl, I think you said."
+
+A visible breath of relief lifted his breast. He now would have
+been glad for some one to boot him along the street for ever
+mentioning the thing. He almost had put his foot in it. Apparently
+she was not interested in seeking further knowledge of the subject
+that he so ill-advisedly had brought up. Lucky for him she hadn't the
+inquisitiveness of some girls.
+
+The narrow escape restored a trace of his good humor, and he was
+shrewd enough to divert her mind before the incident made an
+impression. He reached out and patted her shoulder.
+
+"Don't think me a scold, darling," said he. "Burkhardt upset me with
+his news, that was all. He hates that gun-man so much that it's no
+wonder he was angry at seeing him hoodwink you. He probably imagined a
+lot. Just don't speak to Weir if he tries to stop you again. And
+pretty soon we'll have him where he won't interfere with anybody."
+
+"When will that be?"
+
+"The county attorney's still collecting evidence. Nothing will be done
+before the grand jury meets, which is in a couple of weeks. You must
+arrange to go off on a visit about that time."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So you won't have to go through the ordeal of appearing in court.
+There are ways of fixing such things." He laughed softly. "Especially
+here in San Mateo County. It's too rotten a business for you to have
+to step into, this murder. Come along down to the drug store and have
+some ice cream."
+
+"Not to-night. I'm feeling a little tired."
+
+"Then let us rest on your porch. I haven't seen you twice in the last
+week."
+
+"Some other evening, Ed. I promised father to help get up his account
+books."
+
+"You're not angry with me?" he asked. "If you're not, give me a kiss
+before I go."
+
+A sharp smile showed on her lips.
+
+"I'm not angry, but I'm going to penalize you to that extent. If you
+must have a cheek to press, go kiss----" She paused, while the
+conviction darted into his mind that she had remembered that Johnson
+girl blunder after all, then said: "Mr. Burkhardt's cheek."
+
+Again relief swept him.
+
+"Come, be kind, Janet," he began. But she was already through the gate
+and skipping up the walk, vanishing in the gloom of the veranda. The
+screen door clapped shut. "Peeved, all right. I'll have to be
+extra-nice to her for a day or so until she calms down," he murmured
+to himself. "Must send her a box of chocolates and some magazines
+to-morrow to show my contrite heart; that always gets 'em. Hang it,
+it's time to fix a day, too. We've been engaged long enough. She sure
+has a figure and face--a beaut! I guess she didn't smell the booze on
+my breath. Got to be careful about that till we're married." He jumped
+into his car.
+
+The screen door had clapped shut, but Janet had not entered. She had
+employed the artifice to convey the impression it had. She did not
+wish to go in to her work just yet, for calm as she had appeared
+during the interview her emotions were running full tide. Love Ed
+Sorenson? Marry him? She groped for and dropped into a wicker chair,
+her head sinking in shame and self-abasement. Never--never!
+
+And before her mind swam another face, a face with the hair ruffled
+about the brow, clear of eyes and strong-lined, as she had beheld it
+in the moonlight of the road.
+
+All at once she tugged at a finger, fiercely pulling off the
+engagement ring. She rubbed her cheek as well, with an angry hand, for
+the memory of kisses was burning her as by fire.
+
+Then she sat quite motionless for a long time.
+
+"I'll just ask father," she exclaimed. "There can't be more than a
+dozen Johnsons around here."
+
+Which would have given Ed Sorenson a fresh jolt in his breathing
+apparatus if he had overheard, and shriveled the cocky self-assurance
+with which he sipped a high-ball that moment at Vorse's bar.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+JANET AND MARY
+
+
+In a region as sparsely settled by white people as San Mateo and its
+adjoining counties there were not, as Janet put it, more than a dozen
+Johnson families. In fact, there were but two, she learned from her
+father: one at Bowenville, the small railroad town of three hundred
+people, a merchant with a wife and four little children; the other a
+rancher on Terry Creek, whose wife was dead and who had one child, a
+girl of sixteen or seventeen years of age.
+
+"I may be away at dinner time, so don't wait for me," she told her
+father next morning. "I'm going out in the country a few miles--and
+you know my car! If you'd just let me squeeze some of these patients
+who never pay, you could have a new car yourself."
+
+"Mine's all right," he smiled.
+
+"But mine isn't. Look at it. You gave it to me only because you
+scorned to ride in it any longer yourself. It would do for me, you
+said, but you prance around in a bright shiny one yourself. I blush at
+the row mine makes; sounds like a boiler factory; I drive only along
+side streets. If the patients would pay what they owe, I could ride
+like a lady instead of a slinking magpie."
+
+The doctor leaned back in his chair and laughed (they were at
+breakfast) and remarked that old friends were best.
+
+"Don't call my asthmatic tin beast a friend; we're bitter enemies,"
+said she.
+
+It carried her to Terry Creek about noon, however, safely enough,
+whither she went with a firm resolution that crushed a certain
+embarrassment and anxiety. Suppose these people resented her
+inquiries.
+
+She placed the bearded, tanned rancher at once, when she saw him
+working on a piece of harness before the door as she drove up. She had
+seen him in town at different times. She once had stopped here, too,
+several years previous when accompanying her father, who had been
+called to dress the rancher's injured hand. The girl could not have
+been over twelve or thirteen then, a shabby, awkward girl wearing a
+braid who came out to gaze shyly at her sitting in the car.
+
+Johnson arose from the ground and approached as she alighted, while
+the girl's head popped into sight at the door.
+
+"I'm Dr. Hosmer's daughter, Janet," she stated, putting out her hand
+and smiling. "I've come to see you on a matter. Shall we go into the
+house?"
+
+With curiosity sharing a vague hostility in his bearing he led her in,
+where his daughter was setting the table. Janet also told the girl who
+she was. At once dismay and startlement greeted the announcement. But
+she invited Janet to be seated, she herself withdrawing to a spot by
+the stove.
+
+No need for Janet to beat about the bush with her errand.
+
+"Mr. Johnson," she said, "I've come to you and your daughter for a
+little help if you can give it." That seemed the best way to break
+down their reserve, an appeal rather than simply blunt questions--and
+what was it if not an appeal? "What I have to say is just among the
+three of us and I know it will go no farther. You're acquainted with
+my father; he's respected by every one."
+
+"He is," Johnson stated, nodding.
+
+"The situation is this, to speak plainly: last night I heard something
+that has caused me to come to you for information; I'm engaged to Ed
+Sorenson, and in a moment of anger he denounced Mr. Weir, the engineer
+at the dam, for having told me a false story--lies--about him and your
+daughter."
+
+Janet perceived the quick, troubled look exchanged by man and girl.
+
+"Mr. Weir has never mentioned your daughter's name in my hearing; I
+think him incapable of discussing any one maliciously. He's very
+careful of what he says. I consider him a very honorable man. At any
+rate, he said nothing of what Ed Sorenson suggested, and if the latter
+himself hadn't spoken of the thing I should have had no inkling that
+there had been anything justifying an inquiry on my part. There may
+not be. But why should he imagine Mr. Weir had told me 'lies' linking
+him and your daughter?"
+
+"I know Weir--and I know Ed Sorenson, too," was the rancher's grim
+rejoinder.
+
+"This is a disagreeable subject, I know. But I'm not here out of mere
+curiosity, but a desire to learn if something has been concealed from
+me by Ed Sorenson that I should be informed of. His manner, his words,
+the whole incident has filled me with doubts. See, I'm trusting you
+absolutely." And she extended a hand in a gesture bespeaking
+sincerity.
+
+Johnson peered at her in silence from under shaggy brows.
+
+"I ask myself why Mr. Sorenson took it for granted that the engineer
+had been telling me false stories and if there was any ground for such
+fears," she went on. "He had nothing to be afraid of, no matter what
+might be said, if he had done nothing unworthy. I can't imagine Mr.
+Weir, for instance, being alarmed in that way."
+
+"They're telling plenty of lies about him, for that matter, but I
+guess it doesn't worry him any," Johnson said.
+
+"What I ask you touches a delicate subject, perhaps," Janet continued,
+reluctantly. "You may feel that I'm pushing in where I'm not
+concerned. But if Mr. Sorenson has done anything discreditable--if he
+has acted in a way to make me ashamed when I know, then it becomes a
+matter affecting my happiness too. I would never marry a man who had
+done something dishonorable, for if I did so knowingly I should be
+dishonored and dishonorable as well."
+
+Johnson suddenly thrust a brown forefinger at her.
+
+"Do you want to know what Sorenson did?" he demanded, wrathfully.
+
+Janet gripped her hands together. "Yes."
+
+"You'll not go spreading it all around the country? But I guess you
+won't as long as it would make you out a fool too. I'll not have
+Mary's name dragged about in a lot of gossip."
+
+"I assure you I shall remain silent, for her sake and my own."
+
+"All right, I'll tell you. You're too good a girl--any decent girl
+is--to marry Ed Sorenson. He met Mary at a dance last spring in town
+where she went with some friends of ours, and made love to her but
+wouldn't let her tell me or any one. We don't get to town so very
+often; she never knew he was engaged to marry you, there never
+happening to be any mention of it to her. Then he got her to go to
+Bowenville one day awhile ago, under promise to marry her there--Mary
+is only sixteen, a little girl yet. To me, anyway."
+
+Janet felt the working of his love in those simple words. Felt it but
+half-consciously, though, for her own soul was stifling at Ed
+Sorenson's revealed infamy.
+
+"When he got her there, he told her they would have to go away farther
+to be married--to Los Angeles." Again his finger came up, this time to
+be shaken at her like a hammer. "He never intended to marry her; he
+planned to get her there, ruin her, and cast her off. That's the sort
+of man you're going to marry!"
+
+"I remember he expected to be away for a couple of weeks--a business
+trip, he said. But afterwards he explained that it hadn't been
+necessary to go."
+
+"A business trip! Yes, the dirty kind of business he likes. And if it
+hadn't been that Weir heard him explaining to Mary that she must go on
+and interfered--there in the restaurant--Ed Sorenson might have
+succeeded. Mary trusted him, thought he was straight. But he's
+crooked, crooked as his old man. When Weir told him to his face what
+he thought of his tricks, he let it out he was engaged to you. Didn't
+mean to, of course. Weir said he would stay right with them and see
+that they got married next day before a minister, then Sorenson
+snapped out he was to marry you. That opened Mary's eyes, that and his
+refusing to go before a preacher as the engineer demanded. So Weir
+brought her home to me.
+
+"And that isn't all I know," he snarled. "Mexicans and cowboys and
+others have talked--women don't hear these things--how he's had to
+pay Mexicans hush-money for girls of theirs he's wronged. But what do
+people care? He's rich, he's old man Sorenson's boy; everything's kept
+quiet; and he goes around as big as life." With a muttered oath he
+turned away, his lips shut hard and his beard sticking out savagely.
+
+He came back to her again.
+
+"The young one gets it from the old one," he exclaimed. "Bad crooked
+blood in both of them. I know. I've been here ever since I was a boy
+and remember things Sorenson believes every one has forgotten, I know
+how he got his start, how he and the rest of his bunch cleaned out
+Dent of his ranch and cattle gambling and then killed him when he
+discovered they had used marked cards, how at the same time they
+robbed another man----"
+
+Janet struggled to her feet. She had covered her eyes and bowed her
+head before the torrent of his vehemence.
+
+"No more, I want to hear no more," she gasped. "Let me go home. I'm
+sick."
+
+"It all makes me sick, too," he answered. "Sick and sore, both. But
+it's the truth. I'm sorry if it's been a bad pill to swallow, but it's
+the God's truth, girl. I'm sorry it couldn't be any other way, but I
+wouldn't see you marry that scoundrel if I lost a hand stopping you.
+Mary felt sick at first, too; she's over it now. You'll not feel bad
+long. Better stay for dinner with us."
+
+"I couldn't swallow a bite. Thank you for your kindness in asking
+me--and for telling me what I wanted to know, too. Father never knew,
+or he would have warned me. People saw I was engaged to Ed Sorenson
+and would say nothing to father, of course. I shall always count you
+as one of my best friends, Mr. Johnson. And you too, Mary; you must
+come down and stay with me sometime, for I imagine you get lonely
+here. No, another day I'll remain to dinner--and I want to be alone
+now."
+
+They pressed her no further, seeing her wretchedness of spirit. But
+they walked with her to the car and shook hands with her when she was
+in and urged her to come again.
+
+When she had disappeared in the aspens among which the trail led, Mary
+said to her father:
+
+"You said they killed a man named Dent."
+
+"They did. I saw the killing."
+
+"And nothing was ever done about it?"
+
+"No. Nobody but me knew of the happening and I'd of had a bullet
+through my heart if I'd talked. I might yet even now, so see that you
+keep your mouth shut."
+
+"You told her."
+
+"I was mad, so mad I could say anything. But she isn't the kind to
+repeat the story; I'm not afraid on that score. She's clean strain all
+through."
+
+"Did you know the man whom Sorenson and the others killed?" Mary
+questioned, in some awe.
+
+"I knew of him, but I was only a lad then. I saw it all through the
+back door of Vorse's saloon where it happened, but I've never breathed
+about it to a soul. I didn't want to be murdered some dark night.
+Those four men would see that the job was done quick even now, I'm
+saying, if they were on to the fact. I know 'em, if nobody else
+does."
+
+Mary's skin crawled with prickles of fear.
+
+"They must be awful bad."
+
+"They were devils then, and I don't think they've changed to angels
+to-day, though they try to appear decent. I know 'em; I know what
+they'll do once they start. You can't make sheep out of wolves just by
+giving 'em a fleece."
+
+"You said they robbed another man at the same time they killed that
+Dent."
+
+"Yes; and it only goes to show the hellish crooks they are. It was
+another man in the saloon. He was drunk. They made him believe he had
+killed Dent. Then said they'd help him to get away if he gave them his
+property. He was a rich fellow who had come out from the east and gone
+to ranching, a tenderfoot. They took his stuff and he skipped the
+country with his wife. That was the last of him, and I reckon he
+believes to this day that he's a murderer. And that's how they got the
+start of their wealth, or a big part of it, Sorenson and Vorse and the
+other two. They've got the San Mateo Cattle Company, with fifty
+thousand head of steers, and ten or twenty bands of sheeps and
+ranches, and the bank, and all the rest, and they walk around like
+honest men. But they're thieves and murderers, Mary, thieves and
+murderers! I'd rather be the man I am, poor and with nothing but this
+little mortgaged piece of ground and my few cattle, than them, who
+robbed Dent and killed him and then robbed and drove out Weir."
+
+"Was that the other man's name?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That's funny. The same as the man who brought me home."
+
+"There are lots of Weirs, like the Johnsons."
+
+"Not so many, I guess. Maybe they're related. Did the man who skipped
+have any children?"
+
+"No. None I ever heard of, though I didn't know much about him. Just
+him and his wife, I think."
+
+Johnson had perceived no resemblance between the engineer and the
+vanished man of whom he spoke. As for that, however, he had no clear
+recollection of the elder Weir's face; he was but twelve years old at
+the time of the dramatic event, thirty years before.
+
+"Now, come along and eat," he said. "And remember! Not a word of this
+to a soul."
+
+Meanwhile Janet Hosmer was driving slowly down the canyon, oblivious
+that opportunity to unlock the whole mystery had been hers, never
+dreaming that she had just missed by the slenderest margin what Steele
+Weir would have given the world to know.
+
+For an instant Fate had placed the key in her hand. She knew it not;
+it was withdrawn again and the door remained closed and locked while
+the threads of Destiny continued to be spun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE PLOT
+
+
+In Vorse's saloon, where in the past so many evil ideas for the
+acquisition of money or power had sprouted, the scheme had its
+inception. It had been of slow growth, with innumerable suggestions
+considered, tested, discarded. The intended arrest and trial of Weir
+had been the first aim; but this had expanded until at last the plot
+had become of really magnificent proportions, cunning yet daring,
+devilish enough even to satisfy the hate and greed of its originators,
+consummate in design, absolutely safe and conclusive.
+
+It was Sorenson who conceived the notion of pulling the irrigation
+project down in ruins at the moment of Weir's own fall. Judge Gordon a
+few days later had pieced out the method, which was either to corrupt
+the workmen to wreck dam and camp or to place them in the equivocal
+position of having done so apparently though others did it in fact.
+Vorse and Burkhardt devised the details. Weir should be left free
+until the blow had fallen on the camp, whereupon he should be
+immediately clapped into jail on the murder charge, which, coming on
+top of the "riot," would paralyze all company action and work. From
+such a crushing double-blow no concern could quickly recover, if
+indeed the loss did not result in total cessation of construction.
+
+Thus shedding their coats of expedient lawfulness, they reverted
+under the menace of Steele Weir's presence to the men they were in an
+earlier age--an age when a few white land and cattle "barons"
+dominated the region, predatory, arrogant, masterful and despotic; the
+age just ceasing when the elder Weir and Dent arrived; the age of
+their youth forty years before, the age when railroads and telegraphs
+and law were remote, and chicanery and force were the common agents,
+and "guns" the final arbiters.
+
+To them Weir was like a reincarnated spirit of that age. He guessed if
+he did not know their past. He had appeared in order to challenge
+their supremacy, end their rule, avenge his father's dispossession at
+their hands. He instinctively and by nature was an enemy; he would
+have been their enemy in any other place and under any other
+circumstances. He was a head-hunter, and in turn was to be hunted
+down. He was the kind who neither made compromises nor asked quarter.
+He veiled his purposes in as great secrecy as did they, and when he
+struck it would be suddenly, fiercely, mercilessly--if he struck. They
+were determined he should not strike, being himself first surprised
+and crushed, for though in ignorance of what he could bring against
+them their fears were real. Everything, indeed, about the man
+antagonized them, alarmed them, stirred their hate and filmed their
+eyes with blood. He must be destroyed.
+
+"And with him the dam," Sorenson had said. "Both together." For there
+was no effort to conceal among themselves their savage intention.
+
+"He'll never come to trial," Vorse remarked, with a malignant gleam in
+his blue eyes and a shutting of his thin lips. "An attempted jail
+delivery by 'friends' will fix that. All they will have to do then is
+to buy him a pine box."
+
+"If the man had but stayed away!" Judge Gordon exclaimed. Cunning, not
+force, was his forte; and the measures in prospect at times had
+oppressed him with dreadful forebodings. He was growing old, feeble,
+and here when he was entitled to peace he still had to fight for his
+own.
+
+In accordance with the scheme Burkhardt vanished from San Mateo for a
+time, ostensibly on business but in fact on a journey across the
+Mexican line, where he conducted negotiations with a certain
+"revoluçionista" of no particular notoriety as yet, of avaricious
+character, unscrupulous nature, and with a small following of fellow
+bandits and a large animosity for Americans. His ambition was to
+emulate the brilliant Villa. But pickings had been poor of late, no
+more than that of stealing a few horses from across the border. To
+Burkhardt, who had heard of him and sought him out, he listened with
+interest and bargained with zest. Five thousand in gold for fifty men
+was like pearls from Paradise. And whatever this Yankee's own private
+purpose, it was a chance for the chieftain to strike secretly and
+safely at Americans, in addition.
+
+"They will come through in squads after they've slipped across the
+line," Burkhardt reported. "They're to pose as laborers."
+
+"When?" Sorenson asked.
+
+"Along next week. They're to drop off down along the railroad at
+different towns and I'll run them up into the mountains with some
+grub. Then we'll assemble them quietly a couple miles off from the
+dam, where they'll be handy on the chosen night. Afterwards we'll slip
+them back to the railroad, and they fade into Mexico. Weir's workmen
+will be drunk and rowing--and will have done the job, eh?" Burkhardt
+shook with suppressed, evil laughter.
+
+"If they're drunk, they may join in and help," Judge Gordon stated,
+acutely. "A mob full of whiskey will do anything. If they did take a
+hand, it would round out the case against them perfectly. Very likely
+next day they, too, would fade, as you put it, Burkhardt; they would
+want to get out of this part of country as quickly as possible when
+they realized what had happened. I see no flaw in our plan.
+Fortunately the three directors who are coming will be gone by the end
+of next week."
+
+"What's that? What directors?" Burkhardt asked.
+
+"They're to be here on an inspection trip, so they wrote, and will be
+pleased to hear our complaints in regard to the question of workmen."
+Gordon's tone was ironical. "I wrote them protesting Weir's discharge
+of our people, you remember, but that was some time ago."
+
+"What's the use of paying attention to the fools now?"
+
+"We must carry out the farce, Burkhardt, for the sake of appearances."
+
+"I'd like to blow them up along with their dam!" was the scowling
+rejoinder, "Well, let 'em inspect. Next time they come back there
+won't be any."
+
+"I believe we should arrest Weir before the thing's pulled off,"
+Gordon said, meditatively. "It would be surer."
+
+Sorenson set his heavy jaw.
+
+"No. I want him to see the wreck; I want him to know just what's
+happened before he's haled away; I want him feeling good and sick
+already when he gets the next jolt."
+
+"Sure. It's him or us, as I've said from the first; and I've always
+believed in making a clean sweep," Vorse remarked. "We have the right
+line this time. First, make his men drunk and sore; then smash the
+works; then arrest him quick; and last finish him off with a bullet
+during a pretended jail delivery."
+
+"There will be elements of danger in the last," Judge Gordon stated,
+cautiously.
+
+Vorse smiled and Burkhardt grinned.
+
+"Not so you'll notice it," said the latter. "The town won't know
+anything about it until afterwards. Just a few good men at night,
+masked and working fast, and the thing is done."
+
+"I'll not feel easy till it's over."
+
+"Keep up your nerve, Judge," Burkhardt grunted. "You used to be as
+lively as anybody when you were young."
+
+"I know, I know. But this Weir isn't going to stand idle. If he ever
+gets a chance with his gun----"
+
+"He won't get it," said Vorse.
+
+"And he'll not resist the sheriff when Madden arrests him legally,"
+Sorenson added. "Nothing could be better for us than if he did. He
+knows that."
+
+"Still I'll be glad when next week is past," the Judge replied, with a
+sigh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE CURRENT OF EVENTS
+
+
+Though outwardly the world's face was as calm as ever, though peace
+seemed to bask on San Mateo and the broad mesa and lofty mountain
+range, events were rapidly shaping themselves to bring a thunder crash
+of contending forces. Not Weir, not even the little evil cabal
+plotting so desperately against him, guessed the scope and power of
+the passions to be released.
+
+As a vital impulse towards the climax, though an unconscious one on
+her part so far as the general play of circumstance was concerned,
+Janet Hosmer informed Ed Sorenson of her determination to break their
+engagement. This was the same evening she returned from the Johnson
+ranch, when he called at her telephoned request. He went to her home
+under the impression that his box of candy and bundle of new magazines
+had restored him to favor. He was very jaunty, in fact, and bent on
+persuading her to name an early day for their nuptials.
+
+Imagine his wrath when she explained that she wished to say that she
+could not marry him, at the same time handing him his ring and the
+other trinkets he had bestowed upon her.
+
+"Is it because of our little spat last night about the engineer?" he
+demanded. "I apologized, Janet. I'm sorry still, and I love you above
+everything else."
+
+"I think not," said she.
+
+"But I do, Janet. Above everything."
+
+"No, not above yourself and your vices. You deceived me for a long
+time, but now I know the truth. You aroused my suspicions when you
+mentioned a Johnson girl; there's only one Johnson girl hereabouts, as
+I learned; and this noon I visited her and her father. They informed
+me fully about your conduct towards Mary at Bowenville and your
+promises to marry her--that, when you were engaged to me. There are
+other things I heard to-day. Of affairs with Mexican girls that are
+shameful."
+
+"Lies, lies!" was the passionate disclaimer. "Or if I have been
+flirting a little, and never since my engagement, it's no more than
+any fellow does."
+
+"You can neither excuse nor justify your words and actions towards
+Mary Johnson not a month ago."
+
+"They're liars, I tell you."
+
+"Will you confront them and say that?"
+
+Taken by surprise Sorenson hesitated, flushed, and then made a gesture
+of disdain.
+
+"I'll not, because I'll not condescend to answer such baseless
+charges," he stated. "I thought you had sense enough not to believe
+every little thing you hear. Certainly I expect you not to believe
+this, and I know you won't on consideration. Then we'll be married. I
+came here to-night to urge you to marry me soon."
+
+"I'll never marry you, and we're no longer engaged. You've acted
+faithlessly and dishonorably. You're not the decent man I thought you
+were."
+
+"Don't you still love me, Janet?"
+
+"No. I don't think I ever loved you; I was loving a man who didn't
+exist, an illusion I imagined to be Ed Sorenson, not your real self.
+If I loved at all, which I now doubt! And you never loved me, though
+you may think you did and still do. But it's not so; for no man who
+really loved a respectable girl could at the same time do what you
+did. Think of it! While pretending to love me, you were secretly
+trying to inveigle that poor ignorant girl away from home. You're not
+a man; you're a beast. The shame and disgust and humiliation I suffer
+at the thought of my position during that time, your effort to
+hoodwink both Mary Johnson and me, so fills me with anger I can't talk
+to you. Go, go! And please don't even speak to me hereafter, on the
+street or anywhere else."
+
+Instead of departing the man grasped her wrist and gave her a venomous
+look.
+
+"It was this sneak of an engineer, after all, who told you this lie
+and turned you against me," he snarled.
+
+"Let me go. Mr. Weir said nothing. It was you yourself who betrayed
+yourself, or I should not have known as I do, thank heavens. Stop
+holding my wrist!"
+
+For an instant Sorenson wavered between whether he should obey her
+command or strike her as his rage prompted. A very devil of passion
+beating in his breast urged him to show her her place, deal with her
+as he would like to do and as she deserved--throw her down and drag
+her by the hair until she crawled forward and clasped his knees in
+subjection. But the look in her eyes cooled this half-insane,
+whiskey-inspired desire.
+
+He took his hand off her wrist, picked up his hat.
+
+"You can't throw me down this way," he sneered. "You're going to marry
+me just the same, whether you think so or not. I have a voice in this
+engagement, and you can't break your word and promise to me because
+it happens to strike your fancy. Not for a single minute!"
+
+"If you were a gentleman and a decent man you wouldn't say that."
+
+"I'm not either, by your judgment, so I do say it. I say it again:
+you're going to marry me, willingly or unwillingly. Now if after
+thinking it over, you want to forget all this and go on as before, all
+right. If not, our engagement still holds just the same. You may
+release me, but I haven't released you. Remember that. And keep away
+from that engineer if you know what's best for you!"
+
+With a scowl he stalked out of the house, leaving a very angry, very
+tremulous and very heart-sick girl. The fellow was in truth not a man,
+she perceived, but a creature so conscienceless and loathsome that she
+seemed contaminated through and through by his touch, his words, and
+their previous relations. How grossly he had deceived her as to his
+real character! What a horrible future as his wife she had escaped!
+Nor was she yet free, for he promised to make an infinity of trouble.
+
+That day she could do nothing. Her father noting her face asked what
+was the trouble, and she told him the whole affair.
+
+"I've heard rumors of late about him and was worried," he said. "You
+did the only thing, of course. Pay no attention to his words; I'll see
+he doesn't annoy you."
+
+It was three or four days afterwards that she called Weir up at the
+dam in a desire to hear the voice of a man she knew to be straight and
+upright.
+
+"I've wondered if a girl is allowed to look at your dam," she said on
+impulse, when they had chatted for a moment. "Father, who was at your
+camp to attend an injured man, says you're making famous progress."
+
+"I'd be more than delighted to show you the work. But--I wonder----"
+
+"Don't let what people say disturb you," she replied quickly, divining
+his thought. "I've arranged all that." A somewhat obscure remark to
+Weir.
+
+"Then come any time--and often. I hope to be able to conduct you
+around, the first visit at least. Next week I may not be able to do so
+as a committee of directors arrive who'll take my time."
+
+"Oh, indeed," Janet answered, politely.
+
+"A manager has to be directed occasionally, or he may run wild," she
+heard, with his laugh.
+
+"I'll come before they do," she said.
+
+Quite as she had announced she did run up to the canyon and go with
+Weir over the hillsides and dam, asking questions and displaying a
+great interest in the men and the operation of the machinery. The
+concrete work was nearing an end. Already tracks were laid for the
+dump trams that were to carry dirt from steam-shovels to the dam to
+form its main body.
+
+She perceived the immense labor of the project and the coördinated
+effort required. The necessity in itself of dragging hither from
+Bowenville all of the supplies, the material, the huge machines, was
+overwhelming. The responsibility of combining scientific knowledge and
+raw industry to an exact result struck her as prodigious. The handling
+of hundreds of subordinate workmen and assistants of various grades
+and skill demanded exceptional ability, understanding, will and
+generalship. Yet these things the man at her side, Steele Weir,
+accomplished and supplied; and appeared quite calm and unmoved about
+it, as if it was all a matter of course.
+
+She glanced at the ground, flushing. The thought of Ed Sorenson,
+making only a pretense of doing anything useful and because his father
+was rich doing nothing in reality but waste himself in vicious
+practices, was in her mind. What must have the engineer believed of
+her all this while when he knew Sorenson's true nature and infamous
+record? Did he suppose her a light-headed feather, indifferent to
+everything except that her husband should be rich? Very likely. There
+were plenty of girls of that type. He naturally would suppose her
+one.
+
+And she could say nothing to put herself in a better light and to gain
+his respect--for that she now desired greatly. She saw him as he was,
+a big man, a strong man, a man whose respect was to be prized. Beside
+him she felt herself small and ordinary. That was all right, but she
+was determined he should not believe her insignificant, shallow,
+unworthy, mercenary.
+
+While she could not explain matters openly without shaming herself
+and still lowering herself in his estimation, he being only an
+acquaintance, yet there were ways of getting at the end. Janet could
+act adroitly, like most women, when it best served the purpose.
+
+"Do you know, I just learned from friends of yours on Terry Creek that
+you're a public benefactor as well as an engineer," she stated, when
+they paused on the hillside for a last look at the dam.
+
+"I?" he exclaimed.
+
+His eyes came around and found hers fixed on him.
+
+"I happened to stop at the Johnson ranch. They didn't say so, but I
+know they would be pleased to death if you would go to dinner there
+some day. They have some fine fat chickens, if you like chicken fried
+or baked, and they hesitate to ask you only because they're afraid
+you'll refuse."
+
+"Fried chicken is my weakness. Of course I'll go; at the first spare
+chance."
+
+But all the while Steele Weir's mind was eddying with wonderment. He
+had colored at mention of the Johnson ranch, as if he had been caught
+with a hand in a jam pot. And it meant only one thing: she knew of the
+Bowenville episode. Involuntarily his eyes flashed to her left hand
+with which she was brushing back the hair under her hat brim. There
+was no diamond solitaire on its third finger. Surely, something had
+happened.
+
+"Well, I must be returning home. I just thought I'd give you a tiny
+hint," said she. An odd smile rested on her lips as she spoke, for
+hints may carry multiple suggestions.
+
+"By Jove!" Weir said suddenly.
+
+Man of action though she knew him to be, she never anticipated he
+would or could act so directly. He reached out and seized her left
+hand and scanned it significantly. Then he raised his eyes.
+
+"What does this mean?" he asked, tapping the finger with one of his
+own. "Does this mean----"
+
+It was Janet's turn to become scarlet. She tried to smile again, but
+it was a wavering smile that appeared.
+
+"What does what mean?" she fenced.
+
+"That--well, that the ring is off permanently?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"And that there's now a chance for me?"
+
+Janet's eyes at that popped open very wide indeed. Meanwhile Weir
+still held to the palm resting in his own.
+
+"You?" she breathed, faintly.
+
+"Me, yes."
+
+Presently with a gentle movement she drew her hand free. She had been
+quite dumbfounded, but not so dumbfounded that she did not realize
+that this new situation had requirements of its own. He appeared
+absolutely sincere and resolute.
+
+"But I never dreamed of such a thing!" she stammered.
+
+"Nor I--because until now I hadn't the right. All I ask is that you
+give me your friendship--and a chance--and--well, we'll see."
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't be friends," said she. "We are
+already, aren't we?"
+
+"Yes--now. I never actually thought so before."
+
+"Things have changed," she stated. And her lips closed with a firm
+pressure as she spoke. "Or I shouldn't have been here inspecting the
+dam, should I?" Again the smile flashed upon her face. "You may
+consider this a preliminary inspection to that of your high and mighty
+directors, and I assure you my verdict--is that the word?--is
+favorable. Now I must be going to the car. Father likes his meals on
+time."
+
+"And when shall I see you again?"
+
+The note of eagerness in his voice set her heart moving a bit faster.
+If he carried on his engineering work as he did his friendship, no
+wonder he got things done.
+
+"Why, when you wish to call, Mr. Weir. Both father and I shall be
+pleased to have you come any time."
+
+"I'll certainly avail myself of the privilege," said he. "You must
+really go now?"
+
+With a feeling of exaltation at this new turn of affairs he watched
+her drive away from camp, a feeling that persisted during the
+succeeding days.
+
+The three directors arrived. That was Thursday evening; and Friday and
+Saturday were devoted to a discussion of construction plans,
+inspection of the works, analysis of costs and so on. Weir found the
+men what he expected: quick to comprehend facts, incisive of mind, and
+though of course not engineers yet able to measure results; while they
+on their part were appreciative of the exceptional progress made and
+of his thorough command of the project. They knew the first hour that
+the right manager was in charge at last.
+
+Saturday afternoon Sorenson and Judge Gordon called at headquarters,
+by appointment, to discuss the grievance held locally against the
+company. Weir was present at the meeting.
+
+"As to whether the Mexican workmen who were discharged were actually
+giving a full return in work for the wages, as you maintain,
+gentlemen," said Mr. Pollock, one of the directors and a corporation
+lawyer from New York, in reply to the visitors' statement, "that is a
+question not of opinion but of fact."
+
+"Fact, yes," Judge Gordon argued. "Fact supported by the evidence of
+the three hundred workmen against that of a single man, your manager,
+who had just come."
+
+"Are not your three hundred men prejudiced witnesses?" the New Yorker
+inquired, a slight smile upon his thin face.
+
+"No more than is Mr. Weir."
+
+"But Mr. Weir is the manager and consequently has the power of
+decision in such matters."
+
+"Not to the extent of revoking unfairly your promise, given orally, to
+be sure, but still given, to employ local labor." Sorenson was the
+speaker and his heavy face wore an expression of ill-disguised
+contempt.
+
+"Agreed. Local labor was to be hired," said Pollock. "But our company
+isn't a philanthropic institution; it's run on strictly business
+principles. Any agreement we made implied that local workmen should
+give exactly what other workmen would give in work."
+
+"They did so," Judge Gordon affirmed.
+
+"There was no trouble until this man came," Sorenson remarked. "I
+suppose he felt that he had to show his authority."
+
+"Ah, but there was if not trouble at any rate dissatisfaction on our
+part," Pollock stated, tapping a finger on the table. "Construction
+wasn't progressing as we knew it should, which was the very reason for
+getting a new manager, one who could speed it up. But as I said, it
+all comes down to a question of fact. You gentlemen offer your
+workmen's avowals of industry to support your claim; Mr. Weir, on the
+other hand, gives us some definite records to back up his side. Here
+they are for the last week the workmen from San Mateo and neighborhood
+worked--his first week here; and for the succeeding weeks under the
+men shipped in; in material used, in cubic yards of concrete
+construction, and in percentage of work finished. Examine them if you
+please. They show daily and weekly results to be just a trifle less
+than double for the corresponding time the imported workmen have been
+here. In other words, the new men have, while shortening the time of
+completion, given twice as much work for exactly the same wage paid
+your Mexicans. In other words, too, your local laborers cancelled our
+agreement by their own incompetence."
+
+"Your manager could easily have doctored those records," Sorenson
+stated, coldly.
+
+"You scarcely mean that, sir," Pollock instantly replied icily, his
+amiability vanishing.
+
+"Come, Judge, we may as well go, I think. We're appealing to a
+prejudiced court." And Sorenson arose.
+
+"Our decision to view the matter like Mr. Weir is because his position
+is sustained by these facts, not because we're prejudiced, as you
+insinuate. But I may add that it would not be strange if we were
+prejudiced, as we've become convinced that you gentlemen haven't been
+sincere in your attitude towards our company and if anything are
+strongly hostile. Any one may be deceived for a time, and we were, but
+not permanently. You would have done much better to have recognized
+that we have a perfect right to build this project on land that we
+bought and with water that we acquired. For it will be built in any
+case and in spite of such local opposition as may be made." Pollock
+flicked the ash from his cigar with a careful finger. "That is a mere
+piece of information or a declaration of war, whichever way you wish
+to take it."
+
+"I told you we were wasting our time coming here," the cattleman said
+to his companion.
+
+"Good day, gentlemen," said Judge Gordon, politely.
+
+And the pair went out to Sorenson's machine.
+
+Shortly after, the two other directors left to catch a train at
+Bowenville, Pollock planning to stay with Weir to formulate a report
+during the next day or two for presentation to the entire directorate
+at its next meeting. Sorenson caught a glimpse of the car whirling
+through town, with Weir at the wheel, who with Pollock accompanied the
+departing men that certain unsettled points might be discussed up to
+the last moment.
+
+As Weir and Pollock were returning, the latter eyed the engineer and
+laughed.
+
+"You've evidently brushed these fellows', Sorenson's and Gordon's, fur
+the wrong way to please them. But they'll probably leave us alone from
+now on."
+
+"They'll not leave me alone."
+
+"Eh? How's that?"
+
+"Well, I have, as it happens, a little trouble with them on my own
+hook. A private matter antedating the building of the dam. They're
+after me. I had to put a piece of lead into a fellow who tried to kill
+me from the dark one night. I speak of it in case you should be told
+and wonder; otherwise I should not have mentioned the thing. I'm not
+popular in San Mateo, in consequence."
+
+"Ah, I had heard nothing of that. It interests me. You were not
+touched."
+
+"My hat, that was all."
+
+"Very interesting, very interesting, indeed," was Pollock's only
+comment. But if his tone was casual, his eyes were busy in sidelong
+study of the engineer, making a new appraisal and drawing fresh
+conclusions.
+
+Meanwhile several knots were being tied in the web of circumstance.
+Sorenson took his telephone and conversed briefly with Vorse, passing
+the information that he had just seen the three directors leaving for
+the east. So they were out of the way. In reply the saloon-keeper
+stated that he would start the whisky end of the game that evening.
+By the morrow, Sunday, when the camp was at rest, the workmen would
+all be "celebrating." Burkhardt had reported the last load of
+"southern cattle" shipped in and driven on the range the previous
+evening--a seemingly innocent statement that Sorenson understood
+perfectly. Up in the hills, safely hidden in the timber, lay the fifty
+men brought from Mexico to make the assault on the dam the next night,
+men whose instruments of destruction would be fire and dynamite.
+Twenty-four hours more would bring the moment of action.
+
+Ignorant of all this Ed Sorenson had been forming a little individual
+scheme that would promote his own affairs, chief of which was to win
+Janet Hosmer. Drinking heavily ever since his rebuff, he had sunk into
+a condition of evil determination and recklessness that made him fit
+for any desperate act. After much meditation fed by whisky, he had
+evolved a plan that would bring him success. Thereupon he had loaded
+his car with a quantity of selected stuff and made a mysterious
+journey at night.
+
+"She'll learn I meant business," was his frequent soliloquy.
+
+And while these strands were being knit into the skein Martinez was
+producing another. Quietly, carefully, persuasively, he had been
+pursuing his own particular course of eliciting history for use in his
+"Chronicle," as he named it,--and for another use concerning which he
+was as still as death.
+
+That he was successful in obtaining what he had been after was made
+known to Weir about dusk that evening while he was talking with
+Pollock in his office. But that he had not been so lucky in covering
+his tracks was likewise apparent.
+
+The telephone rang. Steele took down the receiver.
+
+"See Janet Hosmer at once," Felipe Martinez' terrified voice came over
+the wire. "She'll have it, the paper--the one you want. They've
+learned I got it; they're after me now. Hammering on the door. If you
+don't hurry----"
+
+His words ceased abruptly in an anguished quaver. At the same time
+Weir heard carried to him the sound of a crash as of a door smashed.
+Excusing himself hurriedly, Steele Weir seized his holster from a nail
+and buckled on the belt. Then snatching his hat, he ran outside the
+building to his car.
+
+"Now, who is he gunning for?" Pollock asked himself aloud, "I rather
+wish he had invited me along."
+
+But neither he nor Weir himself, nor any soul in San Mateo, knew that
+at last the furious torrent of events had burst upon the community.
+Weir sensed something. But Sorenson brooding on the morrow thought the
+moment had not yet come. His son was occupied with his own treacherous
+scheme. Even Vorse and Burkhardt smashing their way into Martinez'
+office saw nothing beyond the immediate necessity. Yet the flood was
+bearing down on all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+OLD SAUREZ' DEPOSITION
+
+
+In order to understand why Vorse and Burkhardt were attacking
+Martinez' office it is necessary to trace the lawyer's movements and
+the incidents which precipitated that act. Martinez had, as stated,
+not been idle. Following the clue obtained from the woman who had
+worked in the elder Weir's household, he visited the old Mexican named
+as having been used as roustabout by Vorse in early days. This was old
+Saurez, whom he knew. The wrinkled old fellow seldom came to town now,
+spending most of the time sitting against the sunny side of his son's
+house on Pina Creek, twenty miles south, where he lived.
+
+Martinez in the ten days that had elapsed since informing Weir he had
+learned of Saurez' possible knowledge of the past had proceeded to
+make himself agreeable to the gray-headed old man. He had explained
+his "history." He exercised all the arts of graciousness and flattery.
+Beginning at the present he worked back through the past to the
+killing of Jim Dent and the flight of Joseph Weir, extracting tales of
+early fights, raids, accidents, big storms, violent deaths and
+killings, making elaborate notes, winning the narrator's confidence
+and gradually drawing forth the facts he really sought.
+
+Out of all the rambling talk and vague accounts of the Dent and Weir
+affair Martinez was able to piece together the fragments in a clear
+statement. This was that Saurez had seen Weir and Dent in Vorse's
+saloon. The pair had gambled for a time with Vorse, Burkhardt (at that
+time sheriff), Sorenson and Judge Gordon. After losing for a time Weir
+refused to continue in the poker game, although he was drunk. Dent
+played on notwithstanding Weir's urgence to desist; he had already
+lost all his money and began staking his cattle and finally his ranch.
+At this stage Weir had gone to sleep at another table, with his head
+on his arms. Vorse had locked the front door to keep out visitors
+during the big game. But the back door remained open for air.
+
+Saurez had busied himself cleaning the bar. All at once he saw the
+players spring up in their game, Dent talking angrily about cheating,
+marked cards and so on. Then the guns came out when he pointed at a
+card that was marked--for it had been marked with pinpricks as Saurez
+saw later on examining the deck, which Dent had perceived in spite of
+the whisky in him. And Sorenson and Vorse had both shot him where he
+stood. Yes, shootings were not uncommon. Every one but he, Saurez, had
+likely forgotten all about the matter. That was long ago.
+
+Afterwards Vorse had sent the Mexican away for something or other,
+with an injunction to keep his mouth closed. As said, speaking of it
+now made no difference, though he expected Martinez to keep his
+promise to publish none of the stories while he was still alive; that
+was agreed. When the Mexican had left the saloon Weir was yet
+sleeping, having only raised his head at the pistol shots to stare
+drunkenly and then relapse. What occurred afterwards Saurez did not
+know. Weir left the country. Dent was buried, the story being told
+that he had committed suicide. Every one believed it: had he not lost
+his ranch at poker? That was the end of the business. Other affairs
+happened and it was forgotten.
+
+On this Saturday Martinez had persuaded Saurez to accompany him to San
+Mateo. It would be necessary to sign the stories, he explained
+lightly, to give them proper weight and in order that when the book
+was published after Saurez' death they would be seen to be true
+accounts, with Saurez' picture that a photographer would make
+appearing in the middle. He, Saurez, would be famous, and his sons and
+grandsons would have copies of the book in their houses to show
+visitors and the priest. Ah, it would be well to have the priest
+witness Saurez' signature, then sceptical people would know indeed
+that the stories were Saurez' own accounts. So on and so on.
+
+The matter required infinite precautions, patience, skill on the
+lawyer's part. He had prepared two or three dozen depositions of
+events, as a husk for the real kernel. With Saurez in his office at
+last he telephoned the priest to call at once and unostentatiously
+caught on the street four other Mexicans of the better class, bringing
+them in. When the priest arrived he closed the door and explained his
+desire they should act as witnesses to Saurez' statements. He had
+already solicited the _padre's_ advice as to the history; the others
+all had heard of it; he gave them a number of the most harmless
+depositions to read; and set Saurez to work making his mark on the
+rest of the papers. During the reading and the accompanying lively
+discussion of the witnesses, he had them pause to witness Saurez' mark
+with their own names in the places provided. About the tenth
+deposition when their attention was confused and flagging he slipped
+the account concerning Weir and Dent, a many-paged attestation, upon
+the table, so folded that nothing but the signing space was visible.
+It was the critical instant for Martinez; his thin body was more
+nervous than ever, his eyes brighter and more restless. But at last
+the ordeal was over.
+
+Saurez' heavy black cross was at the bottom of the important
+deposition, the priest and the other four men had appended their
+names, and all that remained to do was for Martinez to fill out the
+acknowledgment and affix his seal. He whisked the document behind his
+back and called attention to a humorous episode in a paper one of the
+men still held, starting a laugh. Then he suggested they rest and
+opened a bottle of wine, over which the others congratulated Saurez
+and Martinez and predicted a wonderful fame for the "Chronicle."
+Finally the lawyer perceived, as he said, that Saurez was weary.
+Anyway, it was supper-time. The remaining papers could be signed
+another day.
+
+The witnesses departed, much pleased with the affair.
+
+"Walk up and down outside for a little time while I straighten the
+sheets, then we'll go eat and afterwards I'll drive you home to bed,"
+the attorney said. "The fresh air will give you an appetite. Behold,
+you're already becoming a famous man! I shall preserve these documents
+safely as they are tremendously important to our town, our state, our
+country!" And a grandiloquent gesture accompanied the words. "Come
+back in a little while, my friend, then we'll see how much food you
+can hide away."
+
+Saurez much gratified at these words and at everything went out
+slowly, for he was troubled by rheumatism. The instant his back
+disappeared Martinez sprang to the table, swiftly filled out the
+acknowledgment of the old man's signature to the Weir document,
+clapped the page under the seal and pressed home the stamp. Then
+pushing the folded statement into an envelope and that into his
+pocket, he leaned back with a sigh of exhaustion. The thing was
+accomplished at last, but the strain had been great. Weir's command to
+secure evidence had been obeyed. Only the promise to await Saurez'
+death, troubled Martinez, and with a convenient sophistry he decided
+that an agreement not to print the narrative in a book did not extend
+to using it in court. Weir would be delighted--it was a famous coup.
+
+How long Martinez sat reveling in this well-earned satisfaction he was
+unaware, until with a start he glanced at his watch. Three-quarters of
+an hour had passed. He went out to look for Saurez. But he was not in
+sight and though several persons had seen him they could not say where
+he had gone. Martinez went again into his office. When another
+half-hour had drifted by he decided the old man had encountered
+friends and either caught a ride home or gone with one to supper. So
+Martinez proceeded to his own meal.
+
+Yet he was pervaded by an unaccountable uneasiness. The sun had set in
+a bank of clouds and night was not far off. He made another search for
+the old Mexican, inquiring here and there, until he was informed by
+one that he had seen Saurez in Vorse's saloon talking with Vorse and
+sipping a glass of brandy. That was half an hour before. A chill of
+fear spread over the lawyer's skin.
+
+Determined, however, to learn the worst, he stole to the saloon and
+peered over the slatted door. The Mexican bar-keeper was wiping a
+glass; Vorse was not in sight; and--ha! there was Saurez himself
+drowsing by a table. Martinez slipped in and made his way to the
+rear.
+
+"Come; time to go home," he said softly, giving the old Mexican's
+shoulder a shake. This did not arouse the sleeper, so he added force
+to his hand, at which the other sagged forward limply.
+
+Martinez jumped back. Next he stood quite still, staring. Then he
+approached and lifting the drooping head, gazed at the wrinkled face
+and glazed eyes.
+
+"Miguel, come here!" he exclaimed, anxiously. "Saurez is dead."
+
+"Dead!" The bar-keeper ran to the spot, eyes large with alarm and
+excitement. "Dios, I thought him asleep! See, there is the glass in
+which I gave him brandy at Señor Vorse's order. The old one said he
+had come in to pay a little visit to his old employer and have a chat.
+They talked for some time."
+
+"Was Vorse asking him questions?"
+
+"Yes. I think Saurez was telling him how he happened to be in town. I
+paid little attention to them, however. After a while I glanced up and
+saw Vorse standing by him. They were not talking. Then Vorse came away
+and said the old man had fallen asleep, and he went out to supper."
+
+Martinez again lifted the head and darted glances over the dead man's
+breast. There were no wounds, but on the shriveled brown throat he saw
+what might have been a thumb-mark. He could not be sure, yet that was
+his guess.
+
+"He was an old man," Miguel remarked.
+
+"Yes. You should notify his son and also the undertaker, so the body
+can be taken care of. I'll telephone the latter too when I reach my
+office."
+
+This Martinez did, informing Saurez's family that the old man had
+died while apparently asleep at Vorse's, and expressed his sympathy
+and sorrow.
+
+One feature of the case he instantly perceived; he was released from
+any obligation to keep silent regarding the old man's declaration.
+Fortunate was he to have obtained it before Vorse had got wind of his
+purpose. At the thought of Vorse he arose and locked both front and
+back doors of the building, pulled down the window shades and turned
+out the light.
+
+It was almost dark by now. In the darkness he felt safer. Any one
+passing would suppose him away. Perhaps he should spend the night
+elsewhere--at the dam, for instance. Again the same shudder shook his
+frame that he had experienced on seeing the mark on Saurez' throat.
+Vorse had killed the old Mexican, of that he was convinced. With his
+tongue made garrulous by brandy and by the presence of his old
+employer the old man had doubtless related everything that occurred
+between him and Martinez; and the vulture-like, bald-headed
+saloon-keeper, recognizing that he had been unconsciously betrayed had
+immediately acted to close this witness' lips forever against a second
+utterance.
+
+Martinez himself was in danger. The perspiration dampened his face as
+he realized that as far as he was concerned the die was cast. He must
+fling in his fortunes with Weir to the utmost. He would first stand in
+defense on his right as a lawyer to secure evidence for a client, but
+if this failed--and what rights would Vorse halt for?--he must depend
+upon the paper. Once they had that, they would speedily put him out of
+the way as they had done Saurez. But if they had it not, they would at
+least hesitate to wreak their vengeance until they could get it into
+their possession. He must place it in Weir's hands at once, then if
+questioned refuse to inform them of its whereabouts. Perhaps they
+would try to seize it some time this night. He stood up, lighted the
+lamp, saw that all was well in the office and took his hat.
+
+A peremptory knock sounded on the door of the rear room.
+
+"Open up there, Martinez," a voice commanded.
+
+He stole thither, listened.
+
+"Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"Never mind. Open this door or I'll pull it down," came in hoarse
+tones he recognized as Burkhardt's. The man, or men, outside had
+chosen the rear to force an entrance if necessary, where there would
+be no spectators. "Jerk it open quick," Burkhardt continued savagely.
+"We want you." Then again, "We knew you were there, though you kept
+the place dark. Move lively before I use this ax."
+
+Never did Martinez' mind work more rapidly. Likewise his eyes darted
+everywhere in search of the object he needed. Then he glided to a
+decrepit arm-chair and turning it over stuffed the document in a rent
+in its padded seat, out of sight underneath. Next he filled his
+pockets with other papers signed by Saurez. Last, he hastily tore open
+the little telephone book and ran a forefinger down the H's.
+
+"Doctor Hosmer's, hurry," he exclaimed. "Number F28."
+
+Blows were already sounding on the rear door, but the lock was strong
+and resisted. Of all the persons he knew Janet Hosmer was the only one
+he could trust to keep her word. And he dare not wait until Weir could
+come.
+
+"Is this you, Janet? Martinez talking," he said, when he heard her
+answer. "Listen. I'm at my office; men are trying to break in to get
+a paper valuable for Mr. Weir's defense. They must not get it. He's to
+be arrested and tried for murder of the man he killed. You and I know
+he's innocent. This is a life and death matter. The paper is hidden in
+the old chair. The men are breaking down the door. I'll get them away
+long enough for you to come and obtain it. Give it to Weir--at once,
+to-night, immediately. Promise me you will, promise! My own life
+probably hangs on it. Return to your house and stay for half an hour
+and if he hasn't arrived by that time, go to the dam. Thank you, thank
+you--from my heart! Start now."
+
+The words had tumbled out in an agitated stream, occupying but a few
+seconds. The panels were splintering in the door now, as the ax
+smashed a way through. Martinez had no need to look up Weir's number;
+and it was in a strain of terror and excitement that he waited for the
+connection.
+
+"See Janet Hosmer at once," he shot at the engineer, followed by the
+rest of the warning already quoted which had so electrifying an effect
+upon Steele Weir.
+
+But the words had broken off abruptly. For as the door crashed off its
+hinges Martinez dropped the telephone receiver and darted for the
+front entrance, shooting back the bolt and flinging it open. He almost
+plunged into Vorse who was on guard there.
+
+"Stand still," the man ordered. And Martinez kept the spot as if
+congealed, for in the saloon-keeper's hand was a revolver with an
+exceedingly large muzzle.
+
+Burkhardt burst in, ax still in hand, eyes bloodshot with rage. Vorse
+turned and closed the front door. Then he glanced over the lawyer's
+table and ran a hand into his inside coat pocket bulging with
+documents. He glanced through one or two.
+
+"Here's what we're after," said he. "We'll take him to my place where
+we can quietly settle the matter." His eyes rested on the Mexican with
+ominous meaning.
+
+"Come along, you snake," Burkhardt growled, seizing their prisoner's
+arm. "Out the back way--and keep your mouth shut. Don't try to make a
+break of any kind, if you know what's best for you."
+
+Martinez' yellow skin was almost white.
+
+"But, gentlemen, what does this all mean?" he began, endeavoring to
+pull back.
+
+"You'll learn soon enough."
+
+"Step right along," Vorse added. "Take him away, Burkhardt, then I'll
+blow out this light."
+
+With no further word Martinez accompanied his captors into the gloom
+of the night. They moved in silence through the dark space behind the
+row of store buildings. The lawyer felt that at least the way was
+clear for Janet Hosmer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE MASK DROPPED
+
+
+When Janet Hosmer, startled by Felipe Martinez' agitated appeal,
+turned from the telephone, her single thought was to carry out on the
+instant his fervid injunction. Something aimed at the engineer and the
+lawyer was in movement, a plot for the former's arrest and the
+destruction of evidence necessary to his defense, according to
+Martinez' quick hurried words; and the Mexican now sought her aid, as
+she was the only one within reach whom he could trust. That he must
+call to her showed the desperate nature of the exigency--and he had
+said lives were at stake!
+
+Haste was the imperative need. As her father was absent, she summoned
+the Mexican girl from the kitchen, for instinct advised the wisdom of
+having a companion on this errand; and the two of them, bare-headed
+and walking fast, set out for the house. Dusk was just thickening to
+night. No stars were visible. A warm moistness in the air forewarned
+of rain from the blanket of clouds that had spread at sunset along the
+peaks. Indeed, a few fine globules of water touched their faces as
+they came into the main street and hurried along.
+
+Neither girl had observed the automobile, unlighted and moving slowly,
+that approached the Hosmer house as they emerged. Apparently the
+driver perceiving them against the lamplight of the doorway and noting
+their departure thought better of bringing the car to a halt, for he
+kept the machine in motion and as quietly as possible trailed the pair
+by glimpses of their figures flitting before an occasional illuminated
+window. When Janet and her companion turned into the main street where
+the stores were lighted his task became easier.
+
+The street was peaceful. Janet saw no evidence of the violence or
+danger indicated by the Mexican lawyer's declaration, but she was too
+sensible to imagine on that account that peril did not exist. The town
+was not aware of what had occurred, that was all,--not yet. The chief
+actors in the conspiracy were still moving stealthily against their
+intended victims; they had pounced on Martinez and once they had
+seized the evidence they sought they would arrest Weir. Afterwards the
+people, as she guessed the matter, would be aroused to create a strong
+sentiment against the helpless men. It was an atrocious business.
+
+But as yet things were in a lull--and it was during this pause, brief,
+critical, that Martinez expected her to act. That much she had grasped
+from his hurried words. She reached his office and halted to listen.
+No gleam came from the building, nor from the low structure on either
+side, and across the way all was dark--dark as it had been that night
+when the assassin's shot had been fired at Steele Weir. Repressing a
+shudder, she bade the Mexican girl follow her, groped for the door
+knob, found it and pushed the door open.
+
+Martinez had spoken of men forcing an entrance, so it must have been
+at the rear. Inside all was pitchy black.
+
+"Juanita, you have a match in your pocket, haven't you?" she demanded,
+anxiously.
+
+"Yes, Miss Janet."
+
+"Strike it, then."
+
+In the pent stillness of the dark office Janet could hear the Mexican
+girl fumbling in the pocket of her gingham dress. There came a
+scratching sound and a tiny flame.
+
+"Be careful of it," she warned. "Now give it to me. And close the
+door."
+
+Janet lighted the smoky lamp resting on the table, next took it up in
+her hand. A few papers had fallen upon the floor. The room was still
+strong with fresh cigarette smoke. Martinez could not have been gone
+more than five minutes.
+
+And in another five minutes' time too Martinez' captors might be back
+again!
+
+Holding the lamp aloft she peered about for an old chair, her heart
+beating rapidly, her lips compressed. But all the chairs, the three or
+four in the room, were old. Her eyes encountered the Mexican girl
+staring open-mouthed and scared.
+
+"Take the lamp and keep by me," Janet ordered. "Don't upset it. What
+are you shaking for, you ninny?"
+
+"I can't help it--and you're so white," the other whimpered.
+
+"Never you mind me; do as I say."
+
+Janet swiftly went from one chair to another, turning them about,
+upside down, all ways. No paper was hidden in or under any one of
+them, or indeed was there space capable of holding a document. At last
+she gave up, gazing about in dismay, dread, tears of vexation and
+anxiety almost rising to her lids. Only one conclusion was to be
+drawn: the men who had seized the lawyer had found the paper in spite
+of his precaution.
+
+She examined the chairs a second time feverishly, for time was
+flying.
+
+"I can't find it, Juanita, the paper he telephoned me to come and
+get," she exclaimed.
+
+"Maybe it's in there where he sleeps." And the Mexican girl pointed at
+the inner door standing barely ajar.
+
+"We'll see."
+
+Janet led the way within. There was Martinez' living- and sleeping-room.
+The furnishings comprised a bed, an old scratched bureau, a stand
+with wash-bowl, a red and black Navajo blanket on the floor, a trunk,
+a stool and a dilapidated stuffed chair--just such a chair as a paper
+could be hidden in. That into this room the lawyer's assailants had
+burst their way was apparent from the splintered door hanging from one
+hinge at the rear.
+
+Beckoning Juanita to bring the lamp, Janet ran to the arm-chair.
+
+"Ah, here it is!" she cried, when she had turned the piece of
+furniture over and inserted her hand in the rent. "It wasn't found,
+after all! Come away now."
+
+Relief and exultation replaced her depression of the moment before.
+She had succeeded; she had helped the lawyer outwit his enemies; she
+must now return home to await Steele Weir's arrival, or if he failed
+in that then go to the dam.
+
+In the outer room she bade the Mexican girl place the lamp on the
+table once more and blow it out. This was done. They groped forward to
+the door.
+
+"Follow me out quietly, Juanita," Janet said. "Only Mr. Martinez knows
+we've been here, and Mr. Weir, the engineer. See, I'm trusting you.
+This is a very important paper for Mr. Weir, and other men are trying
+to keep it out of his hands. So you must say nothing to any one about
+our being here."
+
+Juanita assented in a whisper. Janet thereupon opened the door and
+the pair stepped forth. A faint hissing sound directly before them
+startled both. But the American girl immediately recognized it for
+what it was, the faint murmur of an automobile engine.
+
+She quietly closed the office door, caught her companion's arm to lead
+her away.
+
+"Don't talk," she whispered in her ear.
+
+At the same instant the beam of an electric hand torch flashed in
+their eyes, blinding them. Then as quickly the light was extinguished
+and a heavy blanket was flung over Janet's head. Her cry was choked
+off, but not that of the Mexican girl who had been struck by the
+corner of the cloth and who heard her mistress struggling in the arms
+of the man who had seized her. The sound of the struggle moved towards
+the car and then Juanita, paralyzed by fright, was stunned by a sudden
+roar of the exhaust, a grind of gears, and a rush in the darkness. The
+automobile had gone, carrying off Janet Hosmer a muffled prisoner.
+Juanita regaining use of her legs fled for Doctor Hosmer's unmindful
+of the mist against her face.
+
+Janet's sensation had been that of strangulation and terror. In the
+thick folds of the blanket, held and lifted by strong arms, all she
+could offer in the way of resistance was futile kicks. She had been
+jammed into the automobile seat and firmly kept there by an embrace
+while the car was being started, which did not relax as the machine
+gathered speed. For some minutes this lasted, while she strained
+painfully for breath, and then she perceived the car was stopping.
+
+Her terror increased. What now would happen? These men after
+overpowering Felipe Martinez had abducted her in their determination
+to possess themselves of the paper. Finding it in her hand--for she
+still clutched it--what then? Would they kill her?
+
+The car was now completely at rest. The arm was withdrawn from about
+her; hands gripped her hands and forced them together; a handkerchief
+was tightly knotted about her wrists. Afterwards her ankles were bound
+by a strap. Then the blanket was lifted from her form and head and she
+gasped in again pure night air.
+
+"Here's a gag," said the man at her side. "Keep quiet and I'll not use
+it; if you open your mouth to make a sound, I shall. It's up to you."
+And with the hoarse threat she caught the heavy sickening odor of
+whiskey on the speaker's breath.
+
+"You, Ed Sorenson! You've dared to do this!" she exclaimed, fear
+vanishing in anger.
+
+"Yes, sweetheart," came with a mocking accent.
+
+"Untie me this minute and let me out!"
+
+"Oh, no. You've got the wrong line on this little game. We're going
+for a ride, just you and me, as lovers should."
+
+Janet began to think fast.
+
+"How did you know I was in Mr. Martinez' office?" she demanded.
+
+"Because I saw you go in, little one. I was just pulling up at your
+door to coax you out when I saw you and the Mexican wench appear. So I
+followed along. Saved me the bother of telling you your father had
+been hurt in an accident. He's chasing off somewhere thirty miles from
+town on a 'false alarm' call to attend a dying man. Sorry I had to use
+the blanket; sorry I have to keep your naughty little hands and feet
+tied up. But it's the only way. After we're married, you'll forget all
+about it in loving me."
+
+So this was the face of the matter. Not the paper she gripped, but
+she herself was his object. His abduction of her had nothing to do
+with Martinez' affair; he knew nothing of the larger plot; and for
+that reason she experienced a degree of relief.
+
+"I'll never marry you, be certain of that," said she, recurring to his
+statement. "If anything had been needed to settle that point, what you
+have done now would be enough. You shall pay for this atrocious
+treatment. Untie my hands."
+
+"Oh, no. We're starting on."
+
+"Your father as well as mine shall know of this."
+
+"I think not, dearie. We're going up into the hills where I've a nice
+little cabin fixed up. And we'll stay there awhile. And then when we
+come back, you'll not do any talking. On the contrary, you'll be
+anxious to marry me--you'll be begging me to marry you. Of course!
+People know we're engaged, and they'll know you've been away with me
+for two or three days. Do you think they'll listen to any story about
+my carrying you off against your will? They'll wink when they hear it.
+Yes, you'll be ready to marry me all right, all right, when we come
+back to San Mateo."
+
+Janet's blood ran cold at this heartless, black plan to ensnare her
+into marriage.
+
+"Ed, you would never do a thing like that," she pleaded. "You're just
+trying to scare me with a joke. Be a good fellow and untie my hands
+and take me home."
+
+"No joke about this; straight business. I told you you should marry
+me----"
+
+"You're drunk or mad!" she burst out, terrified.
+
+"Neither; perfectly calm. But I'm not the fellow to be tossed over at
+a whim. I'm holding you to your word, that's all. You'll change your
+mind back as it was by to-morrow; you'll be crazy to have me as a
+husband then. I won't have to tie your hands and feet to keep you at
+my side when we come riding home to go to the minister's. Now we've
+had our little talk and understand each other; and it's beginning to
+drizzle. Time to start for our little cabin. The less fuss you make,
+the pleasanter it will be for both of us."
+
+He set the gears and the car started forward once more. A sensation of
+being under the paws of a beast, odious and fetid, savage and
+pitiless, overwhelmed her. That this was no trick of a moment but a
+calculated scheme to abase and possess her she now realized with a
+sort of dull horror. And on top of all he was, despite his denial,
+partly drunk.
+
+Through the terror of her situation two thoughts now continued to
+course like fiery threads--one a hope, one a purpose. The former
+rested on Juanita, whom in his inflamed ferocity of intention, the man
+seemed to have forgotten--on Juanita and Steele Weir, "Cold Steel"
+Weir; and this failing, there remained the latter, a set idea to kill
+herself before this brute at her side worked his will. Somehow she
+could and would kill herself. Somehow she would find the means to free
+her hands and the instrument to pierce her heart.
+
+Sorenson had switched on his lights. He drove the car through the damp
+darkness at headlong speed along the trail that leaped from the gloom
+to meet them and vanished behind. At the end of a quarter of an hour
+he swung into a canyon; and Janet perceived they were ascending Terry
+Creek. He stopped the car anew.
+
+"I'll just take no chances with you," he exclaimed. "We have to pass
+your friends, the Johnsons, you know. Had to take my stuff up here in
+the middle of the night--up one night and back the next--and mighty
+still too, so that they wouldn't suspicion I was fixing a little
+bower for you."
+
+He bound a cloth over her mouth and again flung the blanket over her
+head. Janet struggled fiercely for a moment, but finally sank back
+choking and half in a faint. She was barely conscious of the car's
+climbing again. Though when passing the ranch house the man drove with
+every care for silence, she was not aware of the fact. Her breath,
+mind, soul, were stifled. She seemed transfixed in a hideous
+nightmare.
+
+At length her lips and head were released. But her hands and feet were
+numb. Still feeling as if she were in some dreadful dream she saw the
+beam of the headlights picking out the winding trail, flashing on
+trees by the wayside, shining on wet rocks, heard the chatter of the
+creek over stones and the labor of the engine.
+
+The road was less plain, a mere track now, and steeper. They were
+climbing, climbing up the mountain side, up into the heavier timber,
+up into one of the "parks" among the peaks. Johnson's ranch was miles
+behind and far below. Occasionally billows of fog swathed them in wet
+folds that sent a chill to Janet's bones.
+
+Sorenson held his watch down to the driver's light.
+
+"Ten o'clock; we're making good time. Must give the engine a
+drink--and take one myself."
+
+He descended to the creek with a bucket, bringing back water to fill
+the steaming radiator. Afterwards, standing in the light of the car's
+lamps, he tilted a flask to his lips and drank deep.
+
+"Not far now; three or four miles. But it's slow going. Have to make
+it on 'low'," said he, swinging himself up into his place.
+
+Janet held her face turned away. She was thinking of Juanita and
+Steele Weir. Had the girl gone home again? Or, terrified, had she run
+to her own home and said nothing? Had the engineer come and waited and
+learning nothing at last returned to the dam? Despair filled her
+breast. Even should the Mexican girl have apprised him of the
+kidnapping, how should he know where to follow? And in the solitude of
+the wet dark mountains all about her hope died.
+
+She began desperately to tug against the handkerchief binding her
+wrists.
+
+Suddenly the going became easier and she felt rather than saw that the
+trees had thinned. A flash of the car lamps at a curve in the trail
+showed a great glistening wall of rock towering overhead, then this
+was passed and the way appeared to lead into a grassy open space. A
+dark shape beside the road loomed into view--a cabin by a clump of
+pine trees. Sorenson brought the car to a stop a few yards from the
+house.
+
+"Here at last," he announced, springing down.
+
+He unstrapped her feet, bade her get out.
+
+"I make a last appeal to your decency and manhood--if you have
+either," she said, sitting motionless.
+
+"Rot," he answered. Half dragging her, half lifting her, he removed
+her from the machine. Slipping a hand within her arm he led her inside
+the log house.
+
+"Sit there," he ordered.
+
+Janet dropped upon the seat, a rude plank bench against the wall
+farthest from the door. Indeed, fatigue and the numbness of her limbs
+rendered her incapable of standing.
+
+"When I've touched off this fire and set out some grub, then I'll
+untie your hands," he continued. "A snug little cabin, eh? Just the
+place for us, what? See all the stuff I've brought up here to make you
+warm and happy and comfortable. Regular nest. Lot of work on my part,
+I want to say."
+
+He touched a match to the wood already laid in the fireplace, flung
+off his rain coat and stood to warm his hands at the blaze. Lighting a
+cigarette, he began placing from a box of supplies plates and food on
+the table in the middle of the room, but paused to reproduce his
+flask. With a sardonic grin he lifted the bottle, bowed to Janet and
+drank the liquor neat. When he had finished, he turned the bottle
+upside down to show it was empty, then tossed it into a corner. Again
+he fixed his drunken, mocking smile upon her.
+
+"Can't preach to me about booze here, can you, honey?" he said. "Ought
+to take a swallow yourself; warm you up. I have plenty. Guess I better
+untie your hands now." He advanced towards her, swaying slightly.
+"You're going to love me from this time on, ain't you, girlie?" He
+untied the handkerchief and dropped it at his feet. "No nonsense now
+about trying to get away; I'll rope you for good if you try to start
+anything. Hello, what's that?"
+
+"No; give it to me!" she cried, in alarm as he pulled the folded
+sheets of paper from her stiffened fingers.
+
+"Something I ought to see, maybe." Then he added harshly, "Sit down,
+if you don't care to have me teach you a thing or two. I'm master
+here."
+
+He stepped to the table and drawing a box beside him settled upon it,
+pulled the candle-stick nearer and began to read the document. Janet
+glanced swiftly about the room for a weapon. Escape past him she could
+not, for by a single spring he could bar the way; but could she lay
+hand on a stick of wood she might fight her way out. None was nearer
+than the fire, and again he could interpose.
+
+He read on and on, with a darkening brow and an evil glint showing in
+his eyes. Page by page he perused Saurez' deposition until he reached
+the end. Then he got to his feet, shaking the paper at her head.
+
+"You were in on this," he snarled. "This is what you were in Martinez'
+office to get. You're wise to this cursed scheme to help Weir make my
+father and Vorse and Burkhardt and Judge Gordon out a gang of
+swindlers. So they trimmed _his_ father of something--at least I fancy
+they did, and I hope to God they did, the coward! And you were in with
+them! You're not quite the little white angel you'd have people
+believe, are you? Not quite so innocent and simple as you've made me
+think, anyway. Well, I'll square all that. That slippery snake,
+Martinez, I'll twist his neck the minute I get back to town. I'll bet
+a thousand it was framed up to use this when Weir was arrested--but
+he'll never use it now!"
+
+He glared at the girl with a face distorted by rage.
+
+"We'll just burn it here and now," he continued. "Then we'll be sure
+it won't be used."
+
+Janet gripped her hands tightly, while her lips opened to utter a wild
+protest at this desecration. What the document contained she did not
+yet know, except that it was evidence that fixed upon the men named
+guilt for some past deed in which Weir had suffered and which would
+bring them to account. But something more than protest was needed, she
+saw in a flash, to deflect the man from his purpose and save the
+sheets from the flame.
+
+She shut her lips for an instant to choke the cry, then said with an
+assumption of unconcern:
+
+"Go ahead. I didn't want your father to see it, in any case."
+
+The paper had almost reached the candle, but the hand that held it
+paused. Sorenson stared at it, and from it to her. At last a malignant
+curl of his lips uncovered his teeth.
+
+"Oh, you didn't want him to see it," he sneered. "If that's so, I'll
+just save it. He'll be interested in reading what your friends have
+prepared to destroy his good name and reputation."
+
+He folded the document and slipped it into his inner coat pocket. Then
+he walked towards her. At the look on his face Janet sprang to her
+feet.
+
+"I've changed my mind about the marriage matter, just as you did," he
+said. "I agree with you now; there won't be any marriage. But I'll
+have your arms about my neck just the same."
+
+And he seized her wrist.
+
+"Let me go, let----" The words ceased on her lips.
+
+Her eyes were riveted on the cabin door; she scarcely felt the man's
+loathsome touch on her arm. How had the door come unlatched? And was
+it only the wind that slowly moved it open?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT
+
+
+On leaving the construction camp Steele Weir had whirled away down the
+river road for San Mateo with a feeling both of satisfaction and of
+enmity--satisfaction at Martinez' success in at last having secured
+the evidence ardently desired, as betokened by his words; enmity at
+whoever was laying violent hands on the lawyer. Unfortunately when yet
+half a mile from town his car suffered one of the common misadventures
+of automobiles:--ping-g-g! sang a tire in a shrill dying whine.
+
+Weir did not stop to change and inflate the tube, but pushed ahead on
+his mission though at slackened speed. He brought his car to rest
+before Doctor Hosmer's house. The windows were lighted, yet at his
+knock there was no response; so brushing conventionalities aside he
+entered and called Janet's name. Only echoes and a following silence
+greeted his call.
+
+Doubtful whether to remain awaiting the girl's return or go at once to
+Martinez' office in the hope of still finding her, he finally chose
+the latter course leaving his car where it stood and proceeding on
+foot, as a result of which he passed in the darkness Juanita hurrying
+home in a fright. A bad choice and valuable time lost, he afterwards
+discovered. At Martinez' office he stepped inside, called the lawyer
+by name, called Janet Hosmer, stood for a little while in the black
+room harkening and thinking, then went forth into the street.
+
+This time chance fell his way. He had but come out when he heard
+footsteps and two men in low-toned talk as they approached; and he
+withdrew further into the concealing darkness of the street. The new
+visitors, striking matches at the entrance, walked inside. The men
+were Vorse and Burkhardt.
+
+"If you had been here, we could have nailed him at once as soon as I
+had Saurez' story," the former said. "Martinez had half an hour and
+more to get the thing into somebody else's hands."
+
+"Well, I was looking after those men up in the hills," was the growled
+answer. "Had to feed 'em and have 'em ready for to-morrow night. If we
+don't find the document here, we'll screw its hiding-place out of that
+dirty greaser if we have to use a cord on his head Indian-fashion.
+Anyway it ought to be about this office. Martinez didn't know you had
+learned about it from Saurez. He'd never let go a paper like that
+until he had to."
+
+"I think you're right there," Vorse said. "He'd want to sell it for
+all it was worth. Better shut and lock the door while we're searching.
+Don't care to have any of his friends sticking in their heads while
+we're here."
+
+Burkhardt, who had lighted the lamp, now closed the door, cutting off
+so far as Steele Weir was concerned both a view of the men and their
+conversation. However he had learned if not enough, at least
+considerable. They had not yet gained possession of the paper. They
+knew nothing of Janet's part in the affair. They had so far not
+succeeded in unlocking Martinez' lips, but undoubtedly they would be
+able to wring from the lawyer when they went about it the real truth
+regarding the document. Very likely Martinez had anticipated that, had
+known his powers were such as not to be greatly able to resist
+physical torture and had planned to get the evidence into the
+engineer's hands before he should be subjected to pains of the flesh.
+That would be remembered to his credit, along with all the rest. Where
+Martinez was being held prisoner was the additional information Weir
+should have liked to glean before the door was shut.
+
+Postponing for the time the hunt along this line, he returned to the
+Hosmer dwelling. In answer to his knock and call on this visit the
+trembling Juanita appeared, immediately pouring forth a recital of the
+happenings at the office as affecting her mistress.
+
+"You've told no one else?" he demanded.
+
+"No, señor. She said I was to say nothing of her being there for the
+paper, and I was waiting for her father to come. But she informed me
+Mr. Martinez and you knew she was there, so I've told you."
+
+"And you saw nothing of this man who cast the blanket over her head
+and seized her?"
+
+"It was dark; we had just come out of the office. But--but the car
+sounded like Ed Sorenson's. I've heard it start from here many times
+with the same loud noise. They had quarreled, Señor Weir, and were no
+longer engaged."
+
+"I know. Which way did he drive off?"
+
+"East, down the lower end of the street."
+
+"Bring a lamp out to my car, so I can fix my tire."
+
+With the girl holding the light by his side the engineer worked with
+concentrated energy in stripping the wheel, in inserting a new tube,
+replacing the tire and pumping it up. The thin drizzle glistened on
+his face, but for all that it was none the less determined, stern.
+
+"You need not be afraid for yourself; no one but us knows you were
+there," he said to her, climbing into his machine. "Nor for Miss
+Janet, either. I'll bring her home safely. When Dr. Hosmer returns,
+tell him everything. Also ask him to await our coming. Be sure and say
+to him that I'll bring her home unharmed and that I advise silence in
+regard to the matter until I have talked with him. You will remain
+quiet, of course. This isn't a thing to be gossiped about."
+
+"No, señor."
+
+Away the automobile shot under the impulsion of the gas. Minutes,
+golden minutes, had been wasted in taking up the pursuit because of
+his going to Martinez' office and because of the flat tire. Sorenson
+now would be miles away with his prisoner.
+
+Sweeping out of town with the car's headlights illuminating the road,
+Steele Weir blessed the drizzling mist that dampened the dust so as to
+leave a tire's imprint. Almost at once he picked up the track, for not
+more than twenty or twenty-five minutes had elapsed since Sorenson's
+flight and not even a horseman had since been over the way.
+
+Though he knew it not, the interval of time had been reduced by the
+stop made by the first machine, a mile or so out of town, when the
+abductor removed the blanket from Janet Hosmer's head to announce his
+evil scheme. From the main road leading to Bowenville Weir saw the
+car's trail turn aside into a mesa track pointing obliquely for Terry
+Creek canyon; and he suspected that Sorenson was making a long drive
+northward, skirting the mountain range and working away from the
+railroad-tapped region.
+
+Once he thought he caught a flash of light far ahead of him, but knew
+this was an illusion. Through this rainy darkness no car's beam,
+however powerful, would show half a mile. The mist beat against his
+face in a steady stream as he rushed forward in the night, his eyes
+immovable on the wet twin tire-marks stamped on the road, his iron
+grip on the wheel, his ears filled with the steady hum of the engine.
+If Sorenson had driven fast, Steele Weir drove faster.
+
+At Terry Creek he plunged down the bank, across the water and up on
+the other side without a change of gears, rocking and lurching. Once
+on the smooth trail again the car seemed to stretch itself like a
+greyhound for the race northward. But on a sudden he brought the
+automobile to an abrupt halt. The surface of the road was undisturbed;
+nothing had passed here.
+
+Swinging back again on the way he had come, Weir recrossed the creek
+and slowly retraced his course. Then with an exclamation of
+satisfaction he picked up the track where it turned up the canyon
+trail. But why was the man going to the Johnson ranch? Mystified by
+this baffling procedure on Sorenson's part, he nevertheless headed up
+the stream with no lessening of his purpose to overtake the other.
+
+At the ranch house, whose kitchen window was lighted, he stopped and
+leaped out. Johnson and Mary both answered his thumping knock.
+
+"Is Janet Hosmer here?" he questioned, while his eyes darted about the
+kitchen. Then he made his own reply, "I see she's not. Ed Sorenson
+kidnapped her to-night and drove to this canyon. Did you hear a car?"
+
+Mary faced her father.
+
+"You remember I thought I heard one!" she cried. "But the sound was so
+low I wasn't sure, and when I went to the window I saw nothing. I
+didn't hear it again. Father said it was just my imagination."
+
+"Where does this road lead?"
+
+"Up into the timber and to a 'park.' Used to be an old wood road.
+Sheepmen sometimes use it to take their wagons up above; sometimes
+cattle outfits too while on round-ups."
+
+"Could an auto go ahead on it?"
+
+"Yes, I guess so. By hard driving."
+
+"Then he's up there."
+
+Weir ran back to his car, jumped in.
+
+"Let me go with you," Johnson shouted after him.
+
+"No, I can handle the fellow," the engineer answered. And again his
+machine started on. "How long ago was it that you heard him, Mary?"
+was his parting question.
+
+"'Bout fifteen minutes ago," she cried.
+
+Fifteen minutes! But the girl's reckoning might be vague, and
+"fifteen" minutes be half an hour. At any rate, with the road
+ascending among the peaks Sorenson's speed would be greatly
+diminished. The incline would be against him, the uneven twisting
+rain-washed trail would require careful driving, the rain would hamper
+his sight. Yet the fellow he pursued could not be more than three or
+four miles ahead at most.
+
+On and on Weir pressed. The mist thickened; black wet tree trunks
+loomed before him like ghosts and sank out of view again; the road
+wound along the stream among rocks and bushes and over hillocks with
+all the difficult sinuosity of a serpent's track; in his ears
+persisted the chuckling talk of the creek, flowing in darkness except
+when lighted by his car's lamps as the machine plunged through a ford,
+as became more and more frequent with the ascent and the narrowing of
+the canyon.
+
+Five miles, ten miles, fifteen miles he must have come since leaving
+the ranch house. His car now was high in the mountain range, running
+on low gear, the engine working hard in the thin air and against the
+steep grade. He was not making more than five miles an hour, he
+judged, at this moment. The radiator was boiling and steaming like a
+cauldron. But he might be sure that if his travel was slow, Sorenson's
+was no better; the road was the same for the pursued as for the
+pursuer.
+
+At the end of another half hour he came around a ledge of rock, where
+the creek flowed some fifty feet below and the granite wall allowed
+just room to pass in a hair-pin turn. There a light gleamed before him
+like a beacon, a dim gleam of a window. It was perhaps a hundred yards
+distant. It marked the end of the trail, the end of the search.
+
+Here was Janet Hosmer!
+
+And he had come in time. They could not have been here long, for
+Sorenson's start had not been sufficient for that; the scoundrel had
+not yet recovered his breath from his hard drive, so to speak. He
+probably would imagine himself safe and so be in no haste to
+consummate his vile plan of enjoying his helpless victim.
+
+Rage that until now had been lying cold and implacable in Steele
+Weir's breast began to flame in his veins and brain. He drove his car
+past the rock and off the trail upon an open grassy space, very
+carefully, very quietly. Next he stopped the engine and put out the
+lights, then he got out, felt his gun in its holster and gazed ahead
+for an instant.
+
+A form had passed and repassed before the window--Sorenson's figure,
+of course. Brute, coward, degenerate he was, and to be dealt with as
+such. Not only as such, indeed, but as a wretch who had dared to touch
+Janet Hosmer against her will, to drag her from her home to this
+lonely spot by violence for his own bestial purposes.
+
+The blood seemed like to burst Steele Weir's heart. This sweet,
+honest, kind-souled, noble girl! Janet Hosmer, so bright-eyed and
+pure! She, who had suffered this man's hate to save Martinez'
+document, who had dared peril to help him, Weir! All the hunger of
+heart of years, and all the stifled affection, now went out to her. He
+loved her; the veil was rent from his mind and he realized the fact
+indisputably--he loved Janet Hosmer. And the great creature of an Ed
+Sorenson had dared to seize her with brutal hands!
+
+Weir broke into a run. By instinct he kept the trail, though once or
+twice stumbling and once barely missing a collision with a tree. When
+he reached the cabin, he dropped to a walk and crept to the window,
+which was without glass or frame, open to the night. Peering in he
+perceived Sorenson at the table reading a document, and as he watched
+he had no need to be told this was the paper that so vitally concerned
+himself.
+
+At last Sorenson got to his feet, shaking his hand at Janet Hosmer who
+sat against the cabin wall and beginning to speak. Weir listened for a
+little. Then he stole along the log house to find the door.
+
+At last his finger touched the latch. He lifted it soundlessly, as
+silently pushed the door ajar until there was space for him to slip
+in. This he did. His mouth was shut hard, his eyes watchful, his right
+hand was closed about the butt of his revolver still resting in the
+holster.
+
+Over Sorenson's shoulder he saw Janet Hosmer's face, pale and drawn
+but with a sudden joy flaming there. If ever gratitude were written on
+human countenance, it was on hers. Gratitude--and more! Something that
+sent Steele Weir's blood rushing anew through his body, with hope,
+with a song, with he knew not what.
+
+Janet suddenly jerked herself free and stepped back, her head held
+high and proud.
+
+"You'll never touch me again, you coward. Look behind you," she
+exclaimed.
+
+Involuntarily Sorenson turned head on shoulder. The frown still
+darkened his liquor-flushed face and the sneer yet twisted his lips so
+that his mustache was drawn back from his teeth. Thus he remained as
+if changed to stone.
+
+What he saw was the man he most dreaded, with a shadow of a smile on
+his lips, his figure motionless, his hand ready, like an avenging
+Nemesis from out of the night. A perceptible shudder shook the fellow.
+Weir it was--"Cold Steel," whose counter-stroke against one man
+already had been swift and deadly, whom nothing checked or turned or
+terrified, who now for a second time was plucking away the fruit of
+Sorenson's efforts, who probably on this occasion would shoot him
+outright.
+
+For a moment Steele Weir regarded him in silence. But at last he
+spoke:
+
+"Stand away from that lady, you skunk!"
+
+Sorenson moved hastily aside.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+EARTH'S RETRIBUTION
+
+
+Steele Weir crossed the cabin to Janet's side.
+
+"You are unhurt?" he asked, his eyes scanning her face anxiously.
+
+"Yes. And, oh, how glad I am you came!" she cried, low. "I knew you
+would not fail me if you but learned of my plight; but it's wonderful
+you should be here so soon. I prayed every minute of my ride that
+Juanita would find and tell you."
+
+"I couldn't come half as fast as I wished." His smile assured and
+cheered her. Then as his glance fell on her wrists, still red and
+creased from being bound, he exclaimed, "What's this? Let me see." And
+he caught and lifted her hands to look.
+
+"He had you tied?" Weir's gaze moved away to Sorenson.
+
+"Yes. Hands and feet."
+
+"All the way? All the long ride?"
+
+"Yes--look out!"
+
+Janet's words, half a gasp, half a shriek, gave warning of Sorenson's
+movement, though none was needed. While apparently neglecting to watch
+the other, Weir had kept the man sharp in the corner of his eye. The
+motion with which his hand darted to his hip and up again was a single
+lightning-like sweep; and his weapon covered his enemy before the
+latter's hand so much as got his revolver in grasp.
+
+"Drop it; drop it on the floor!" the engineer ordered. The gun
+clattered on the rough-hewn logs. "Now put your hands up and turn your
+back this way." Sorenson obeyed, not without his eyes speaking the
+disappointed wrath and hatred his tongue dared not utter. "I should
+have allowed you to make a full draw and then killed you," Steele Weir
+went on. "That would have been the simplest way to settle your case.
+Only I don't like to kill bunglers, even when they deserve it."
+
+He re-sheathed his own gun and strode forward, picking up the one on
+the floor--a black, ugly-looking automatic. This he dropped into a
+coat pocket.
+
+"Now face about, you cur," he commanded. "I want a good look at a
+man--no, I'll not call you a man--at a low-lived imitation of a man
+who is such a sneaking, dirty beast that all he can do is to trap and
+tie up a helpless girl. I don't know yet just what I shall do with
+you, but I know what I ought to do--I ought to choke the miserable
+life out of you! You're not fit to live. You soil the earth and
+pollute the air. But you're of the same treacherous, underhanded,
+scoundrelly breed as your father, same yellow flesh and blood, same
+crooked mind and heart, same sort of poisonous snake, and since you
+get it all from him I suppose it can't be helped. Nor changed, except
+by killing and burying you. One thing is sure, when I'm done you won't
+be trying any more deals like this. Bah, you slimy reptile, you belong
+in a cess-pool!"
+
+Under Steele Weir's biting speech Sorenson's face went red and pale by
+turns. His lips twitched and worked, moving his mustache in little
+angry lifts, while he breathed with short spasmodic intakes.
+
+"First, you're after Mexican girls," Weir went on mercilessly. "Then
+Mary Johnson, whom I pulled out of your vile fingers. And now it's--"
+The engineer's fist arose suddenly above the other's head. "Why, I
+ought to drop you dead in your tracks for so much as looking at Janet
+Hosmer! Why don't you fight? Why don't you give me a chance, you
+cowardly girl-robber? Haven't you a spark of--well, you haven't, I
+see. I'll just tie you up and later figure out some way to make you
+suffer for this night's work." And with a gesture of disgust Weir
+turned away.
+
+It was the moment Sorenson had been waiting for. As the engineer's
+back came about, exposed in one instant of carelessness, the man
+struck Weir full force on the neck, sending him staggering. Then
+Sorenson leaped for the doorway.
+
+Janet screamed. Weir recovered himself and whirled around, whipping
+forth his revolver and firing two shots. But the bullets only buried
+themselves in the door slammed shut after the escaping prisoner.
+
+"I myself ought to be shot for this," Steele snapped out.
+
+He ran across the cabin, flung the door open, sprang out. The
+uselessness of seeking his enemy in the black wet gloom was only too
+evident, but he would not give up. Gun in hand, he stood listening for
+sound of fleeing footsteps.
+
+A light hand gripped his arm. Janet had followed him out, was at his
+side. Barely audible he heard her quick, excited breathing.
+
+"Must you shoot him?" she whispered.
+
+"Why spare him for more deviltry? But I'll not have the chance now."
+
+"I can't bear to think of even his blood being on our hands. Let him
+go," Janet said.
+
+"He's gone without our permission, I'd say."
+
+"Isn't it just as well? I'm not harmed, and he'll never dare show his
+face in San Mateo again," she said. "He'll have to stay away; he'll
+leave for good."
+
+"Not until I see him first. I want that paper."
+
+"Oh, the paper, I forgot it! And it's in his pocket," she cried, in
+despair.
+
+"Like the fool I was, I forgot it for the moment too," Steele said
+bitterly. "When I could have had it at once I must go off ranting
+about his meanness. It was thought of what he had done to you that
+made me overlook the paper; that set me boiling. Lost my head."
+
+Janet's answer was almost sufficient recompense for even such a
+serious deprivation as that of the document.
+
+"I'll never forget that you were angry in my behalf," she said,
+softly. "But perhaps you can gain possession of the paper yet."
+
+Before he could make a reply the sound of a motor engine startled
+them. Sorenson was in his car, not far off. Weir immediately plunged
+forward through the darkness in the direction of the noise, uttering a
+shout for the man to stop or be shot. But after the taste of liberty
+that he already had had Sorenson was prepared to take further chances;
+the engine's roar burst into full volume and the car leaped ahead,
+while its driver sent back a derisive curse to the cabin.
+
+Weir fired again, fired two or three times at the sound. Perhaps
+Sorenson was crouching safely out of range; at any rate, the bullets
+did not reach him, for the automobile plunged away. Steele slowly went
+back to the girl.
+
+"How can he see without lights?" she questioned.
+
+"He can't see, but he'd rather risk not seeing the road than drawing
+my fire. There's a bad place there at the rock; he'd better turn on
+his lamps if he wants to round that."
+
+Sensing the danger that threatened Sorenson, both remained unmoving,
+trying to penetrate the darkness, harkening to the automobile's
+retreating murmur. A curiosity, a sort of detached suspense, rooted
+them to the spot.
+
+"Ah, he's snapped them on!" Janet said, almost with relief.
+
+The powerful beam of the headlights had suddenly blazed forth. Either
+feeling that he was safe from Weir's gun or realizing that he was on
+the verge of a graver danger, Sorenson had chosen to make the light.
+He was going at headlong speed; even where they watched, Steele and
+Janet perceived that,--and only his fear of the peril behind which
+made him heedless of the difficulties in front could account for that
+reckless pace.
+
+The light leaped out into the night. Something else too seemed to
+spring forth within the circle of the glow, dark, sudden, imminent,
+rushing at the machine. A frantic jerk this way and that of the beam
+showed the driver's mad effort to avoid the towering wall of granite.
+Then a scream rang back to the man and girl before the cabin. Followed
+instantly a crash, an extinguishment of the light, darkness, silence,
+and finally a thin quivering flame at the base of the ledge, delicate
+and blue, like a dancing chimera.
+
+Janet's hand reached out and closed in Steele Weir's, and he covered
+it with his other hand.
+
+"Oh, how terrible!" she gasped. "Did you see? The rock seemed to smite
+him!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He must be dead."
+
+"You remain here and I'll go find out."
+
+He led her into the cabin and to a stool by the table, where resting
+her elbows on the board she pressed her hands over her eyes as if to
+blot out the sight she had just witnessed. After all she had suffered,
+the climax of this dreadful spectacle left her unnerved, weak,
+shuddering.
+
+"Don't stay long," she whispered. "Come back as quick as you can. This
+cabin, this whole spot in the mountains, is awful. I can almost feel
+him hovering over me."
+
+"You mustn't permit such thoughts." He gave her shoulder an
+encouraging pat. "It will take but a few minutes to see if he's still
+alive and then we'll start home. You've been the bravest girl going
+and will continue to be, I know. Everything is over; nothing can
+happen to you now."
+
+Weir went out. He perceived that the wrecked car was fully afire by
+this time, its flames illuminating the granite ledge and the ground
+about. Evidently the machine's fuel tank had been smashed under the
+impact and the gasoline had escaped, preventing an explosion but
+fiercely feeding the blaze. He ran towards the place.
+
+At first he did not find Sorenson, so that he supposed him buried
+beneath the wreckage, but presently he discovered his crumpled form
+lying jammed between the base of the ledge and a boulder. Weir lifted
+the limp figure from its resting place and bore it to open ground,
+where he made an examination of the still form. Clearly Sorenson had
+been pitched free of the car and crushed against the rock wall. His
+cap was missing; his coat was ripped up the back and a part of it gone
+as if caught and held by some obstruction in the car when he had been
+shot forth; blood and a great bruise marked one cheek; and the way his
+legs dragged when he was lifted up indicated some serious injury to
+those members. But the man still breathed.
+
+"Miracles haven't ceased," Weir muttered, when he had made sure of the
+fact. "But his chance is slim at best."
+
+It would be false to say that the engineer felt compassion at the
+other's sudden catastrophe; he experienced none. On the contrary he
+had a sense of justice fittingly executed, as if, escaping bullets and
+man's blows, Sorenson had been felled by a more certain power, by the
+inevitable consequences of his own deeds and sins, by a wall of evil
+he himself had raised as much as by a wall of stone.
+
+He searched the man's breast pocket, then hunted for the missing
+document among the stones and bushes. At last he gave up for the time
+further seeking, with a conviction that the vital paper was gone for
+good, destroyed in the fire of the burning car. But for his own
+over-confidence, his belief he had Sorenson a safe prisoner back there
+in the cabin, the sheets might be secure in his pocket. Well, it was
+too late now.
+
+He again lifted the unconscious man in his arms and returned to the
+log house. Inside he laid him on the rude bed which Sorenson himself
+had spread with sheets and blankets.
+
+"He's alive?" Janet asked, awed.
+
+"Alive, but badly hurt."
+
+"You'll leave him here?"
+
+"Yes, while I take you away. We could do nothing for him in any case;
+his injuries are grave and need a doctor's help. The best service we
+can perform in his behalf is to start your father or some other
+physician here as quickly as possible. He may live or he may die; that
+isn't in our hands. He's unconscious and not suffering, and probably
+will not feel pain for some hours if he does live, so we can go
+without feeling that we're robbing him of any of his chances of
+recovery. Your conscience may rest quite easy on that point. Come,
+we'll start at once. The quicker we reach your father, the quicker he
+will arrive here."
+
+When they were in his car he wrapped a robe about her against the
+sharp chill.
+
+"I am cold; my teeth are chattering," she said.
+
+"You've been under a great strain. Just lie back and rest and think of
+something else than what has happened, if you can," he urged.
+
+"I'll try to."
+
+The lamps blazed out at his touch of the switch and the car began to
+move. She closed her eyes. She did not wish to see the scene of the
+smash, with the leaping fire and the horrible pile of crushed metal.
+Indeed, she drew the robe before her face, where she kept it for some
+time.
+
+"Are we past the place?" she asked, finally.
+
+"A long way past."
+
+"Thank heaven! Nothing shall ever drag me up this road again!"
+
+"It will not take us long to reach Johnson's and be off this trail
+altogether, for it's down-hill going all the way."
+
+"You said nothing about the paper? Did you get it?"
+
+"No; it wasn't on him. I'll return for another look, but it fell in
+the fire, I think, and burned."
+
+"Do you know what was in it, Mr. Weir?"
+
+"No. But I can guess."
+
+"I know a little of its contents, from what he said before you
+entered. It was a statement, something about his father and others
+doing dishonest acts, I think. He didn't seem to be quite clear what
+it was about either, but he spoke of your father and declared he
+hoped the others had swindled him, which he inferred had happened. I
+didn't know your father ever had been in this country. That's the
+reason you hate those men, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Vorse and Mr.
+Burkhardt; because of some injury they worked your father."
+
+"That's the reason. And that too is why they're trying to get rid of
+me one way or another. But they didn't hire the Mexican to attempt to
+shoot me; Ed Sorenson employed him. Martinez, when you told me the
+man's name, telegraphed around the country from Bowenville till he got
+track of the fellow. He also secured evidence that a white man
+resembling Ed Sorenson had been seen talking with him at the place he
+came from. So we can draw our conclusions."
+
+"Then he hired the man to assassinate you!"
+
+"Looks like it. Because I took Mary Johnson away from him, and from
+fear. He was afraid you might learn of the matter, I suppose, and
+decided to get rid of me. He's a coward at heart, but none the less a
+criminal by instinct, so he hired another to do what he dared not
+attempt himself. A crook like his father, but with less nerve."
+
+Janet was silent while the car wound its way down the creek road,
+through the misty darkness and among the invisible peaks. The full
+danger that she had escaped was but now making itself clear to her
+mind.
+
+"If he would go so far as to try to murder you," she faltered, "I
+surely could have expected no pity from him."
+
+"Now listen to me," he said. "I'm going to give you a little scolding:
+you must forget all this business; it just makes you fearful and
+unhappy. The past is over, and he's out of your life for good. Look at
+it that way. Consider the thing as a bad dream, done with and no more
+important. That's 'the right view to take'"--he paused, then added
+softly--"Janet."
+
+"How strong-souled you are!" she whispered.
+
+Strong, in truth, he seemed. Ignoring danger he had come swift on
+Sorenson's track and rescued her, saved her, kept her clean from her
+assailant's infamous brutishness. The one was a knave and a beast; but
+he, Steele Weir, was a man, clear to see, quick to act, hard towards
+enemies, gentle to friends. Every particle a man--sure of himself, and
+fearless, and true-hearted, and firm of soul.
+
+She pressed her hands tight against her breast. He was a man one could
+love and honor. "Cold Steel" Weir they called him--and, she divined,
+his love if ever given would be as lasting as hoops of steel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+IN THE NIGHT WATCHES
+
+
+A light still burned in the Johnson ranch house, late as was the hour,
+when the car swung round a copse of aspens and brought it in view.
+Johnson himself came forth at sound of the automobile, with a sleepy
+Mary following.
+
+"I wouldn't go to bed, of course, knowing you were to come back," said
+he. But his true reason appeared in his added words, "I was just about
+ready to saddle a horse and head up there myself. Mighty glad to see
+you safe back, Miss Hosmer. Mary has had some coffee on the fire ever
+since Weir went along, knowing you'd be cold and worn out."
+
+"Just the thing!" Steele exclaimed. "We're both chilled. Come, Janet."
+And he stepped from the machine.
+
+Without demur the girl placed her hand in the one he offered and
+descended stiffly. Mary ran back into the house to attend to the
+coffee-pot and the visitors presently were seated at the kitchen table
+at places already laid, with cups of steaming strong coffee and plates
+of food before them.
+
+Janet contented herself with the hot, reviving drink, but Weir ate
+heartily as well. Coming and going, forty miles of driving a rough
+mountain road had given him a laborer's appetite.
+
+"It's late, one o'clock," Mary said to Janet. "Why don't you stay
+with us the rest of the night? I wish you would."
+
+Janet put up an arm and drew down the face of the girl at her side and
+kissed her.
+
+"You're a good friend, Mary, to be so thoughtful," she answered. "But
+father will be terribly anxious every minute I'm away. I must reach
+home as quickly as possible to ease his mind."
+
+Of Sorenson nothing had been spoken, though a repressed curiosity on
+the part of the ranchman and his daughter had been evident from the
+instant of Weir's and Janet's return.
+
+At this point Johnson jerked his head in the direction of the creek.
+
+"What did you do to him, Weir?" he growled.
+
+"Not as much as I intended at first. But he made up for it himself.
+Ran his car against that granite ledge before the cabin while trying
+to get away, and smashed himself up badly. I carried him into the hut
+and left him there; he was alive when we drove off, but he may be dead
+by now. Bad eggs like him are hard to kill, however. I'll start a
+doctor up there when I arrive in San Mateo; probably one from
+Bowenville."
+
+"Father won't attend him now, so long as there's another physician who
+can, I know," Janet stated.
+
+"I should say not!" Johnson asseverated. "If that young hound Sorenson
+had his deserts, we'd just leave him there and forget all about him."
+
+"That's where our civilized notions handicap us," Steele Weir said,
+with a slight smile. "But at that, if he were the only person
+concerned, I'd do no more than inform a doctor where he was and what
+had happened to him, and wash my hands of the affair. There are other
+things, though, to consider. Janet's position, primarily. Her case is
+similar to that of Mary's awhile ago, and we must prevent talk."
+
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"The worst of the doings of a scoundrel like him that involve innocent
+people is the talk. There are always some people low enough to ascribe
+evil to the girl as well as the man in such a circumstance as this. I
+propose to see that Janet doesn't suffer that. We avoided it in Mary's
+case and we'll do so in this, though the situation is more difficult.
+I've been thinking the matter over on the way down and have a plan
+that will work out, I believe, but it requires your help, Johnson."
+
+"I reckon you know you'll not have to ask me twice for anything," the
+rancher remarked.
+
+"And we may have to shuffle the facts a bit."
+
+"All right. I'll do all the lying necessary and never bat an eye."
+
+"It won't require much decorating, the story. But you will have to go
+up and get him, starting at once." Then he concluded, "I hate to have
+to ask you to make that drive late at night and in the darkness."
+
+"Never mind that. Glad to do it, if that's what you want."
+
+"Take your wagon and fill the box with hay and bring him down. By
+coming back slowly he won't be jarred, and he has to be brought out
+anyway. If he's dead, well, bring his body just the same. A doctor
+should be easily at your house by the time you arrive; and your story
+is that a sheepherder found him lying by his wrecked car, carried him
+into the cabin and then came down and told you of the accident, on
+which you went and brought him in, not knowing, of course, in the dark
+who he was or what he was doing up there or how the smash-up had
+occurred. You might suggest that he was camping there by himself to
+fish, and stop at that."
+
+Johnson nodded.
+
+"I'll say just enough and no more," he remarked.
+
+"If you start at once, you'll be there by daylight if not before. That
+will get you back here by nine or ten o'clock. I don't want him taken
+to San Mateo; that would stir up a swarm of inquiries and might even
+send some of the curious up to the spot. Let the trail get cold, so to
+speak. People aren't half as curious about a thing three or four days
+after it happens as at the moment."
+
+"I've noticed that myself."
+
+"And another thing, I don't wish his father to learn of the matter
+just yet. Under other circumstances he should be the first to know,
+but I want the news kept from him for a special reason. Besides, it
+would be better if he found out about it from others and through
+roundabout channels. His son up there I don't see doing any talking
+himself for some time if he does live. When he is able to talk, I
+believe he'll decide to keep his mouth shut or just accept the
+explanation given that he was fishing or something of that kind. When
+the doctor has looked him over, either he or you will carry him to
+Bowenville. If we could ship him at once to Gaston, where there's some
+sort of a hospital, I suppose, or even to Santa Fé, that would be the
+thing. He'd be out of the way; there'd be no talk; there would be no
+explanations to make except to the doctor."
+
+"Every doctor round these parts probably knows him," Johnson said,
+"and so would insist on taking him home."
+
+"There's a new one at Bowenville, father says," Janet put in. "A young
+man, just starting practice. He hasn't been there but a few weeks and
+may not know Ed."
+
+"He's the man for us!" Weir declared. "We'll send for him. Now we must
+be going."
+
+Steele arose from the table and stretched his shoulders.
+
+"And I'll hitch up my team immediately," the rancher said.
+
+"I'll go with you," Mary exclaimed.
+
+"Tut, tut, girl."
+
+"I can help you, and I want to do something to help Mr. Weir and Janet
+Hosmer, even if it's only a little bit. I'm strong, I don't care if it
+is late--anyway, I'd just have nightmares if I stayed here alone,--and
+I can help you with him. I'm going," she ended, obstinately.
+
+Johnson eyed her for a moment, then yielded.
+
+"Nothing to be afraid of now," he rejoined, "but if you would rather
+go along with your dad, all right."
+
+Five minutes later Steele and Janet were emerging from the canyon upon
+the mesa. The drizzling rain still continued and the unseen mist beat
+cool upon their cheeks as the car swung away from Terry Creek for
+town. Except for the stream of light projected before them, they were
+engulfed in Stygian darkness; and save for the slithering sound of the
+tires on the wet road, they moved in profound night silence.
+
+"That business is arranged," Steele said, after a time. "But we still
+have the results of the attack on Martinez to deal with. I don't know
+how long he'll hold out against the men who dragged him off, probably
+not long. I suppose Burkhardt and perhaps Vorse took him, and they'll
+stop at nothing to get the paper they're after. How they learned of
+it, I don't know, but find out about it they did; and they'll force
+the information they want from Martinez if they have to resort to hot
+irons. That's the kind of men they are. The lawyer will stick up to a
+certain point--then he'll tell. That brings you into their way."
+
+"You also," Janet answered.
+
+"I've been there for some time," was his grim response. "But in your
+case it's different. I'm worried, I tell you frankly."
+
+"Do you think they would dare try to intimidate me in my own home and
+with father to protect me?" she cried, incredulously.
+
+"Not there, perhaps. But if they could inveigle you away, yes. They
+wouldn't use hot irons in your case, of course, and I can't guess just
+what they would do, but they would do--something. Those men think I
+have the 'goods' on them; I repeat, they would stop at nothing to save
+themselves if worst came to worst; their fear will make them fiends.
+One couldn't suppose they would dare seize Martinez in all defiance of
+law--but they did. One can't believe they would dream of torturing him
+for information--but I haven't a doubt that's what they've done. So
+you see why I'm worried about you. If anything happened, if any harm
+came to you now, Janet--"
+
+His voice was unsteady as he spoke her name and ceased abruptly. She
+thrilled to this betrayal of his feeling.
+
+"I wish I could just stick at your side, then I know I should be
+safe," she said.
+
+And for answer she felt his hand grope and press her own for an
+instant.
+
+"You can count on me being somewhere around."
+
+"I know that," she said, confidently.
+
+San Mateo was asleep, buried in gloom when they entered it, and quiet
+except for the barking of a dog or two that their passage stirred to
+activity. But in Dr. Hosmer's cottage a light was burning and as the
+car came to a stop at its gate the door was flung open and the doctor
+himself appeared framed in the doorway. He ran hastily down the walk
+to meet them.
+
+"Janet!" he cried. And the girl flung her arms about him.
+
+"Juanita told you? Oh, it was dreadful! But Mr. Weir has brought me
+home safe."
+
+Dr. Hosmer too agitated to speak reached out and grasped the
+engineer's hand, pressing it fervently.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At about that moment three men sat in the rear of Vorse's saloon. The
+shades were drawn and the front part of the long room was dark. Only a
+dull light burned where they sat. They were talking in low tones, with
+long pauses, with worried but determined, savage faces--Vorse,
+Burkhardt, Sorenson.
+
+"Where the devil is she, that's what I want to know!" Burkhardt
+growled. "I've been over twice and looked through a window. Doc was
+there."
+
+"She's in bed and asleep, probably," Sorenson said.
+
+"I don't believe it. The old man would be in the sheets himself if
+that were the case. Didn't I call up twice by 'phone too? She was out,
+they said."
+
+"Couldn't do much with her father there, anyway. We've got to get the
+paper by soft talk," Vorse commented. "I still half believe Martinez
+was lying when he said it had been in that old chair. She couldn't
+have got to the office and away in the hour or two before he told
+without some one seeing her, and no one did so far as we can learn. We
+locked the door too the second time we went back and it hasn't been
+opened since; and we were there ten minutes after our first visit when
+we learned the papers weren't among those in his pocket. I think he's
+got it cached away somewhere still."
+
+"Then we'll give him another dose of our medicine."
+
+"If I know anything about men, he told the truth," Sorenson said.
+
+"Well, if the girl has it, we've got to get it from her if I have to
+wring her neck to do it." It was Burkhardt's inflamed utterance.
+
+A pause followed.
+
+"Sorenson, your boy is engaged to her," Vorse stated.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it's up to him to get it first thing in the morning. Maybe it
+goes against the grain to let him know about this business of the
+past, but it ain't going to knock him over; he's no fool, he's a wise
+bird, he understands that a good many things are done in business that
+aren't advertised. He knows we weren't missionaries in the old days.
+And she'll hand it over for him when she might not for any one else."
+
+"That's right, Sorenson," Burkhardt affirmed, his scowling face
+visibly clearing.
+
+"Ed went away somewhere this evening, that's the only drawback to your
+scheme. Said something about Bowenville and catching the night train
+to Santa Fé, and that he might be gone maybe a couple of days and
+maybe a week."
+
+"Hell!" Burkhardt exploded, in consternation.
+
+Vorse however remained cool.
+
+"Then you must start telegrams to head him off, start them the instant
+you get home. Telephone to Bowenville the message you want sent and
+have the operator dispatch it to all trains going both ways since
+early evening, in order to make sure. If you can reach him within two
+or three hours, wherever he is, he can hop off, catch a train back
+and be here by to-morrow evening. Make your message urgent. And
+meanwhile we'll do what we can to get hold of that paper. At any rate
+we can keep her from seeing Weir. If we have to watch her we'll do it;
+and if we have to stop her from going to the dam we'll do that someway
+too. You might invite her over to-morrow to spend the day at your
+house."
+
+"Do you think she'll be likely to come if she reads that document?"
+the banker inquired coldly.
+
+"Why not? Tell her right off the bat that the thing is a lie and a
+forgery and that you want to explain about how it was made. She might
+fall for that and carry the document to you. She's always had a good
+opinion of you, hasn't she?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then why should she change at a mere story."
+
+"You're right," Sorenson exclaimed with sudden energy. "The matter
+described happened so long ago that she won't probably attach as much
+importance to it as we've imagined she would. I'll ask her to bring it
+to me to see--and that will be all that's necessary, once it's in my
+fingers."
+
+"And what about him?" Burkhardt asked, striking the floor with his
+heel.
+
+"Just leave him there for the present. To-morrow we'll have another
+talk with him," the cattleman stated. "Better offer him a couple of
+thousand to go to another state; he'll grab at the chance, I fancy.
+Money heals most wounds. But, Vorse, keep your cellar locked and the
+bartender away from it. We can start Martinez away sometime
+to-morrow."
+
+"Don't know about that. To-morrow night will be our busy night," the
+ex-sheriff said.
+
+"We might let Gordon handle him," Vorse suggested.
+
+"I thought perhaps you intended to keep the Judge in ignorance of this
+Martinez matter. He seems to be getting sort of feeble."
+
+"He's not too feeble to take his share of the unpleasant jobs along
+with the rest of us," Vorse answered, unfeelingly. "I shall have him
+in here first thing in the morning and tell him what's happened and
+what we've done and what he has to do."
+
+"Sure," said Burkhardt.
+
+"Well, that's agreeable to me," Sorenson stated, looking at his watch
+and rising: "Time we were turning in, if there's nothing more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the dam camp Meyers, the assistant chief engineer, and Atkinson,
+the superintendent, were still awake, smoking and talking in the
+office.
+
+"I smelt enough booze on those fellows who came stringing in here to
+fill the reservoir," the latter was saying. "Some one's feeding it to
+them."
+
+"Nobody drunk, though."
+
+"No. But who's giving it to them and why? I asked one fellow and he
+said he'd been to a birthday party, and wouldn't tell where. They were
+all feeling pretty lush, even if they weren't soused. And to-morrow's
+Sunday!"
+
+"They'll all be idle, you mean?"
+
+"Sure. If there's more liquor, they'll be after it. All day to drink
+in means a big celebration. The whiskey is sent up from town, of
+course, and I reckon sent just at this time to get us all in bad while
+Mr. Pollock's here."
+
+"We'll look up the bootlegging nest to-morrow," Meyers said, with
+finality.
+
+"What can we do if we do locate it? They're not selling the stuff, I
+judge, but giving it away. That clears their skirts and forces us to
+deal with the men themselves if there's any dealing done. Probably
+they hope to start a big row among us that way."
+
+"We'll await Weir's advice."
+
+"Well, I've waited all I'm going to to-night. Seems to me for a
+steady, quiet, self-respecting, dignified, unhooked, unmarried,
+unmortgaged, unromantic man he's skylarking and gallivanting around
+pretty late."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the rocky creek road the ranchman and his daughter Mary were
+driving up among the trees on their way to the cabin, a lantern
+swinging from the end of the wagon tongue, the horses straining
+against the grade. On Johnson's beard the moisture formed beads which
+from time to time he brushed away. From the trees collected drops of
+water fell on their hands and knees. All about as they proceeded the
+bushes and rocks appeared in shadowy outline, to disappear in the
+night once more, yielding to others.
+
+"Isn't this cabin where we're going the one we drove to three years
+ago when you were hunting some cattle?" Mary asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I never thought then that Ed Sorenson would be lying up there all
+mashed to pieces," she said, with awed voice.
+
+"I guess he didn't either," was the dry response.
+
+"He ought to be ready to stop chasing girls after this," she
+declared.
+
+"He won't if he can walk; his kind never does quit."
+
+"Then his kind ought to be locked up somewhere like mad dogs. In a
+'sylum, maybe."
+
+"I guess you're right on that, Mary. They're dangerous."
+
+"Funny we didn't know he'd been up there, going past our house. He
+must have been there first before taking Janet."
+
+"Sneaked up in the night, probably. He'd have to have grub and so on
+if he expected to stay even a day or two. Crooks always look after
+their bellies, be sure."
+
+"I reckon Janet Hosmer will like Mr. Weir a whole lot now, don't
+you?"
+
+"She ought to, if she doesn't."
+
+A long silence followed while Mary apparently pursued the line of
+thought opened up by this speculation.
+
+"If she has the good sense I think she has," the rancher stated at
+length, for his mind at least had been following out the subject,
+"she'll not only like him a whole lot, but she'll lead him to the
+altar and put her brand on him."
+
+He spoke to unhearing ears. For just then Mary sagged against him, her
+head sank on his shoulder. He put an arm around her form and let her
+sleep, thus roughly expressing his tenderness and love. Weir had not
+only rescued Janet Hosmer from the clutches of the man now lying
+injured; he also had once saved Johnson's own child Mary from the
+scoundrel's grasp.
+
+Weir might ask anything of him, even to the laying down of his life in
+his defense.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A QUEER PAPER
+
+
+When Mary Johnson next opened her eyes it was at a little shake by her
+father. She had slept heavily despite the jolting of the wagon; and
+now looked about drowsy-eyed and at a loss to know where she was. Her
+clothes and face were damp, her hands cold. She wasn't sure yet but
+this was still a dream--the team and wagon, the cabin before which
+they stood, the trees and rocks scattered about the grassy park-like
+basin, and the soaring mountain peaks on every hand that were just
+touched by the first early sun-rays.
+
+The rain and mists were gone, leaving the dawn clear, gray, sharp,
+scented with the pungent odor of balsam and pine. From a distance came
+the subdued murmur of Terry Creek, which here high in the mountain
+range had its source in springs and brooks flowing from pools. All was
+peaceful.
+
+Mary's look came to rest on the cabin. Over it reared the great pines
+that grew in a clump behind. Its door was ajar, but the log house for
+any sign of occupancy might have been untenanted. Immediately the girl
+glanced back along the road they had come and beheld there in the dim
+shadow at the foot of the lofty granite ledge a shapeless black lump.
+She shivered.
+
+"You awake?" her father asked.
+
+"Yes." And she began to climb down over the wagon wheel.
+
+"Wait here. I'll go in first. He might be----" But though the rancher
+did not complete his sentence the words spoken carried their own grave
+implication.
+
+He came out again presently. Mary gazed at his face to read from it
+the news it might carry, and it was with a breath of relief she
+perceived that the injured man was still alive, for her father himself
+appeared easier of mind. Neither would by choice have a dead man for a
+passenger on the ride home, even Ed Sorenson.
+
+"He's breathing, but is still unconscious," Johnson declared. "Must
+have got a crack in the head along with the rest. Face is covered with
+dried blood. From the stuff inside the house he must have been fixing
+for quite a stay--blankets, grub, whiskey, candles, and so on. We'll
+eat a bite ourselves before starting back; get the pail out of the
+wagon and bring some water and I'll make a pot of coffee. There's a
+fireplace and wood inside."
+
+"I'll get the water, but I'll stay out while you're boiling it," the
+girl said. "I don't want to see him until I have to go in and help
+carry him out."
+
+She went off for the water, on her return setting the bucket by the
+door. Then curious to see the place of Ed Sorenson's accident, she
+wandered back along the trail to the ledge. There she beheld the
+crumpled, fire-blackened remains of his automobile in a heap near the
+stone wall. Apparently the car had first struck a small boulder, which
+had flung Sorenson out on one side and forward, then leaping this hit
+the ledge full force.
+
+At the instant he must have been off the road and headed wrong, she
+guessed. The rapid daybreak of the mountains had by now dispersed the
+last dimness and indeed the crags far above were bright with sunshine.
+She could plainly see the ruin that the machine was, fire having
+completed what the smash had left undamaged, and the part of the rock
+that was smoked by the flames, and was able to smell yet the reek of
+burnt oil, varnish and rubber.
+
+With the eyes of the curious she stared at the wreck, at the ledge, at
+the ground, absorbed with simple speculations and filled with a sense
+of awe. The machine must have made a big sound when it struck. It was
+a lot of money gone quickly, that car. Not enough of it left to make
+it worth hauling away. And so on and so on.
+
+Then all at once her wandering regard detected something white in a
+crevice between two stones. At first she thought it the gleam of a
+bird or a chipmunk. The thing was some yards off from the spot where
+she stood, but the flutter persisted. So she approached it to learn
+its nature.
+
+The thing was a paper. One corner of a sheet stuck up from the crack
+in which it lay and was waved gently by the rising dawn breeze. She
+drew it out and perceived it was fastened to other sheets that were
+folded, all damp from the rain though not soaked because the cranny
+had admitted little moisture. It was the last sheet which had come
+partly unfolded, apparently as it fell, so was left in sight or she
+would never have noticed the white flutter. This last sheet was blank,
+but the others, neatly folded though wrinkled, were covered with
+writing she saw on spreading them open. However, she could not read
+the pages; the matter was typewritten, but it was not English. Some
+foreign language, maybe.
+
+If Mary could not read the document, she could at least logically
+deduce how it had happened to be in its present resting-place. The
+paper was here because the wrecked automobile was here, so when Ed
+Sorenson was pitched out the folded sheets of paper must have been
+propelled from his pocket by the same force and at the same instant.
+It hit a rock after flying through the air and slid down into the
+crack.
+
+Perhaps it was only a business document; it looked like one. Again
+perhaps it told something about his crooked private affairs--about his
+schemes for ruining girls, possibly. Very likely, indeed. That seemed
+to be about all he engaged himself at. When she found some one who
+could read it, she would know for certain. She would just take it
+along with her and say nothing about her find until she could have
+somebody who understood the writing read it over for her.
+
+In places the typing had stained from dampness, but not seriously. She
+could dry out the pages over the kitchen stove at home. So folding the
+sheets again, she doubled the document, tied it in her handkerchief
+and placed it inside her waist, where it could not be lost. Perhaps
+there were other papers. But a further search disclosed none,
+whereupon as her father was shouting to her from the cabin to come she
+retraced her steps.
+
+When they had drunk their coffee and eaten some of Sorenson's food,
+making their meal before the door, they carried the unconscious man
+out to the wagon, bearing him in the blanket on which he lay. Other
+blankets they spread over him. Johnson also placed at the prostrate
+figure's feet the rest of the eatables in the cabin.
+
+"No need to leave this stuff to the pack-rats," said he. "We'll just
+consider it a little pay towards fetching him out."
+
+"He ought to be willing to pay you a whole lot more when he learns the
+trouble you've been to."
+
+"I wouldn't touch his money if he offered me a thousand dollars; I'd
+throw it back in his face. I'm not doing this for pay, or friendship,
+or charity; I'm doing it to help Janet Hosmer and because Weir asked
+me. If the Sorensons had all the money on earth, they couldn't give me
+a penny as between man and man. If they owed it to me, that would be
+another matter. They'd pay it if I had to stick a gun down their
+throats to make them come across."
+
+"We don't need any of their money, I guess," Mary said.
+
+"Nope. We're poor but we're straight. So we're better off than they
+are--richer, if we just look at it that way."
+
+Once during the long drive, as they neared the ranch house, a low moan
+came from the form on the straw in the wagonbed. Both Johnson and Mary
+looked around quickly, then regarded each other.
+
+"Beginning to suffer," said the parent. "It's a wonder there's a whole
+bone in his body. I hope the doctor is down below waiting for us."
+
+This proved to be the case when about ten o'clock Johnson drove his
+worn-out team into his dooryard. Weir's car was there and with it the
+engineer himself and a young medical practitioner. Climbing up into
+the wagon, the doctor made a hasty examination of the patient.
+
+"Hips broken. Slight concussion of the skull, but not dangerous," was
+his opinion. "I shall not be able to tell the full seriousness of his
+injuries until I have him stripped on a table or bed. Probably there
+are other broken bones,--ribs or something. We must get him down to
+Bowenville as quickly as possible, for his is a bad case. But I guess
+if he has pulled through so far he'll recover. If you'll drive your
+wagon down to the mouth of the canyon, we'll transfer him to my car,
+which is double seated, and then you can accompany me to town; Mr.
+Weir says you are willing to go along and help. I'll send you back
+from Bowenville."
+
+"Yes, I'll go along. Mary will ride down with us and bring back the
+team and wagon."
+
+"Strange what he was doing up there in the mountains with an
+automobile alone," the doctor remarked.
+
+"Oh, he might have wanted a day's fishing, or was taking a look at
+cattle or range, something like that," Johnson stated.
+
+"Mr. Weir said a sheepherder found him. Wasn't that it, sir?"
+
+The engineer turned to the rancher.
+
+"Wasn't that the way of it?"
+
+"Yes. Showed up here late and said he had found the man and carried
+him into the cabin. Said his wrecked car was still burning, so the
+accident couldn't have occurred very long previous. Said we ought to
+bring him down immediately as he was badly hurt. So I sent word to Dr.
+Hosmer, and my girl and I set off at once, the sheepherder going back
+with us. Said he just happened to be looking for a stray sheep or he
+would never have come on this man, as he was heading his band for a
+pass to get over on the west side of the range. S'pose we'll never see
+him again."
+
+"Do you know who this man is?"
+
+"His face seems sort of familiar," Johnson replied, scratching his
+chin. "But he looks like a city chap, by his clothes, what's left of
+them. No papers or anything on him to tell his name. Might have come
+over the pass himself from the other side; men go everywhere in these
+hill-climbing cars they make nowadays."
+
+"Somebody will be seeking information soon and then we'll know," the
+physician said. "He'll probably give his name and address himself when
+he comes round. But if I'm not mistaken he'll need another sort of
+car if he does any moving about when he's out of bed."
+
+"Why's that?"
+
+"Speaking off-hand, I'll say he'll never walk again. That's the way
+broken hips usually turn out; and if his spine is injured, as I
+suspect, he will probably be paralyzed from the waist down. Hard luck
+for a young man like him. He'll wish at times he was killed
+outright."
+
+Unobserved by the speaker Weir and Johnson exchanged a meaningful
+look. In the minds of both moved the same thought, that Providence had
+punished Ed Sorenson according to his sins and more adequately than
+could man. Dreadful years were before him. He would, in truth, wish a
+thousand times that he had died at the foot of the ledge.
+
+Half an hour later the visitors had departed, the rancher going with
+the physician and his charge to Bowenville, Weir returning to San
+Mateo. Mary had driven the wagon up from the mouth of the canyon,
+unharnessed the horses, watered and fed them, and now was seated in
+the kitchen staring absently out the open door. After so much
+excitement she felt distrait, depressed.
+
+Finally she produced and dried the papers over the stove, in which she
+had re-kindled a fire.
+
+"Funny how anybody should want to talk or write anything but English,"
+she remarked to herself, gazing at the pages.
+
+She attempted to extract some sense from the strange words. At the
+bottom of the last sheet she deciphered, Felipe Martinez' name under
+the notorial acknowledgment. All at once in scanning certain lines she
+came on names that were plain enough--Sorenson, Vorse, Burkhardt,
+Gordon. The last must mean Judge Gordon. Then presently she found two
+more names that excited her curiosity--James Dent's and Joseph
+Weir's.
+
+Springing to her feet she stared at the sheets in her hand. For some
+reason or other her blood was beating with an odd sensation of
+impending discovery.
+
+"Why--why----" she stammered. "Why, those are the men father told
+about being shot, and him looking on as a boy! This is a queer paper!
+I wish he were here."
+
+Possession of it gave her a feeling of uneasiness. Her father had
+warned her never to speak of the matter to any one--and here was
+something about it in writing, or so she guessed. He had said Sorenson
+and the other men would kill him at once if they learned he had been a
+witness. That meant they would kill her too if they found out that she
+not only knew about their crime but had this paper as well.
+
+She looked about. Finally she retied the document in a tea-towel,
+tight and secure, and buried it deep in the flour barrel. They would
+not think of looking in the flour. But she went to the door just the
+same and gazed anxiously down the canyon as if enemies might put their
+heads in sight that very minute.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ANXIETIES
+
+
+"My dear doctor, your talents are wasted in San Mateo. They should be
+employed in the larger field of diplomacy," said Steele Weir, when on
+his arrival from Terry Creek he was apprised of what had occurred
+during his absence.
+
+"From all indications I shall have full opportunity for their use
+hereafter, whatever they may be, in our own bailiwick," Doctor
+Hosmer replied, smiling. "There's more going on in our village,
+apparently, than in many a small kingdom. I merely had Janet use the
+truth with certain limitations, and there's no wiser course when
+part of the facts are known. Sorenson seemed quite satisfied with her
+explanation."
+
+The colloquy resulted from a meeting between Janet and the cattleman
+while Weir was guiding the young physician, summoned from Bowenville,
+to Johnson's ranch. Sorenson had appeared at the house about ten
+o'clock that morning desiring to see the girl. They had talked
+together on the veranda, where the visitor stated he had effected a
+settlement and obtained an acknowledgment from Martinez, who was
+trying to blackmail him and others; that a certain paper had been
+prepared by the lawyer for use in the disreputable business; that the
+man had said he had asked Janet to secure it from an old chair in his
+office; and he wished to learn if she had done so.
+
+Janet had admitted such to be the case.
+
+"It was odd Mr. Martinez should telephone me to go get it, wasn't it?"
+she had asked. "But I went, and there it was stuffed in the lining of
+the chair."
+
+"You have it then?" Sorenson stated, with a sigh of relief and his
+eyes kindling with eagerness.
+
+"No, I haven't it now."
+
+"What in heaven's name did you do with it?" he asked.
+
+"As I was coming out of Mr. Martinez' office, there at the door was
+Ed. He had seen me go in and so stopped his car before the door; after
+a time he took the paper to see what it was."
+
+"Then you didn't see its contents?"
+
+"No; I didn't even open it."
+
+"And he has it?"
+
+"He had it the last I saw of the paper. He read it. First, he was
+going to burn it up because it made him angry, then he changed his
+mind, saying he would take it to show to you, as he thought you would
+be interested. Is there anything else you wish to know, Mr.
+Sorenson?"
+
+"Where did he go from there?"
+
+"He drove away. From something he said, I judged that he planned to be
+away from home several days."
+
+Revolting as it was to Janet to put so fair a face on Ed Sorenson's
+conduct, nevertheless she had braced herself to go through with the
+part and presented to the cattleman a clear, natural countenance. The
+very simplicity of her story, its directness, its accord with the
+facts as he knew them, carried conviction. Innocently drawn into the
+affair, she had, in his view, been quickly guided out again by Ed's
+luck and wit.
+
+Ed had the deadly document. The four men concerned might breathe
+easily once more. Ed himself, in all probability, did not realize the
+true menace of old Saurez' deposition, or he would at once have
+brought it to him instead of continuing on his trip: the boy no doubt
+thought it sufficient to keep it until he returned or mailed it back
+from somewhere; he perhaps had taken it along for a more careful
+reading. Good boy, anyway. He had got possession of the thing, that
+was the main consideration.
+
+"He told me too that he was leaving last evening for a few days'
+jaunt," Sorenson said, rising to go. "You'll likely have a whole
+basketful of letters from him. Finest boy going, Ed, even if it's his
+own father who says it. But he's the lucky one, Janet." The girl
+lowered her eyelids, for at this flattery she felt she could no longer
+dissemble her feelings. "Sorry to have bothered you about the matter,"
+he concluded. "Fellows like this Martinez are always making us
+trouble. Run over and eat dinner with us soon."
+
+He went down the walk, large, dominant and still with a trace of
+his early cowman's walk. Both his step and his erectness bespoke
+the buoyant effect of the talk upon his spirits, which was not to
+be wondered at as he had splendid news to import to his confrères
+in crime. They would get rid of Martinez, destroy the paper when
+Ed delivered it, and their skeleton--this one (of a number) which
+had unexpectedly kicked the door open and started to dance in
+public--would be safely locked up forever. For Saurez, the only
+witness (as they believed) was now dead: he would make no more
+depositions. Certainly Sorenson had reason to walk briskly away
+from Doctor Hosmer's dwelling.
+
+Janet had somberly watched him till he was out of sight, then had gone
+inside.
+
+"I don't see how I ever imagined him an honorable man," she said to
+her father. "For all his pretended politeness he was ready if
+necessary to bully me. One thing he can't ever say is that I didn't
+tell him exact facts; what I omitted was the circumstances giving rise
+to the facts." And her father, who now knew from Weir the story of the
+happening of thirty years before, assured her that she need be
+troubled over no moral hairsplitting.
+
+The incident, as Steele Weir perceived, diverted both suspicion and
+danger from Janet, at least for a time. A big gain that. And he was
+impressed by the subtle sagacity of the maneuver.
+
+"That wasn't just a clever move, it was a flash of genius," he told
+father and daughter. Then after a few minutes more of talk he said:
+"Now I must be running up to the dam. To-day is Sunday and the works
+are quiet, so if I find everything all right I shall strike back
+immediately for Terry Creek and the cabin up above. I want to make a
+search for that paper by daylight."
+
+"After your hard night?" Janet exclaimed. "I snatched some sleep when
+we had done talking last night, but father says you and he had none.
+You can't make that terrible ride again without rest!"
+
+"Missing a night in bed is nothing new," he laughed. "Once or twice in
+my life I've not had my clothes off in a week, and only such cat-naps
+as I could steal meantime. But I'll not boast of that; your father
+probably has gone longer periods without sleep, or with only broken
+rest, than ever I did. Most doctors do. Be sure and let me know if
+anything new occurs."
+
+But if Weir's mind was put at ease so far as Janet was concerned, he
+had more than enough other cares to burden his thoughts. The loss of
+the deposition, chief of all; then the matter of effecting Martinez'
+release, wherever he was immured; and finally, as he learned from
+Meyers and Atkinson on reaching camp, the insidious promise of trouble
+in the "free whiskey party."
+
+"Perhaps whoever supplied the fire-water underestimated this
+copper-lined crew's capacity and didn't furnish enough," Meyers
+suggested. "Nobody was really drunk last night and here it is nearly
+noon, with the men all hanging about camp. If there was whiskey yet to
+be had, some of these thirsty, rollicking scrappers of ours would be
+right back at the spigot this morning."
+
+"Maybe so," Atkinson admitted. "Seems so--and yet I ain't easy in my
+mind. The men don't act right; they behave as if they're just waiting;
+they're restless and not a man could I get to open his mouth about
+where they found the stuff. If there wasn't to be any more, they would
+have told and tried to kid me. They appear to me as if just biding
+their time. Some men weren't gone, of course, those who don't drink.
+They stayed in the bunk-house and they know nothing."
+
+"We'll go on the supposition then that there will be more coming, and
+act accordingly," Weir stated, at once. "Watch them close, and put up
+a warning that men who are not at work in the morning, or who bring
+booze into camp, will be fired."
+
+"That's the trouble," the superintendent declared. "I don't think they
+brought a drop in except in their skins. And as we say, they weren't
+drunk. There's not a thing we can object to and they know it; somebody
+has put 'em wise how to act. Here they are, sober this morning,
+behaving themselves, and so on. We can't keep men from going for a
+walk if they want to; we can't string barb-wire around the camp and
+hold them in; we can't even say they can't touch a bottle if a
+stranger offers them one when they're on the outside."
+
+"But we can hold up the consequences if they go on a spree," Steele
+replied. "Most of them are satisfied with the work and pay and grub;
+they don't want to go."
+
+"No, but they like whiskey too, free whiskey in particular. They would
+say they're not getting drunk--no man ever really expects to when he
+starts drinking--and talk about their 'rights.' There are two or three
+fellows in camp now who are doing a lot of mouthing about labor's
+rights; I. W. W.'s, I'd say. Shouldn't be surprised if they were the
+ring-leaders."
+
+"If more whiskey comes, we must beat them to it."
+
+"That's my notion," Atkinson said, with a nod. "I didn't locate the
+booze fountain last night, but I did this morning. Took a horse at
+daylight and rode along the hills; about a mile south in some trees at
+the foot of the mountain, I came across a case of empty bottles and a
+keg half-full of water. That was all, but it showed where the
+'birthday party' was."
+
+"That's the place to watch, then. Better send a trusty man there to
+report to us immediately if he sees signs of a supply arriving for
+to-night. Half a dozen of us with axes will soon start a temperance
+wave in that locality."
+
+In accordance with this instruction the superintendent dispatched a
+reliable man to maintain guard at the spot; and Weir, feeling that all
+had been done that was possible under the circumstances, gave his
+attention to other matters.
+
+But he perceived that with this "liquor attack" in the air, for it was
+but another of his enemies' moves against him, of course, directed
+with the purpose of creating internal disorder, he must postpone his
+trip to the headwaters of Terry Creek. Knowing the crafty,
+persistent, conscienceless character of the four men inspiring the
+trick, he was under no delusion that the "free whiskey" would end with
+a single case of bottles. Among three hundred men that would amount to
+but two or three drinks apiece--a mere taste, only a teaser. And
+because it was only a teaser, the men would want more. If he could
+carry them over this idle Sunday sober, they would be at work on the
+morrow and the chief danger be passed.
+
+Unfortunately a manager cannot take his workmen into his confidence in
+such a case and explain the nature of such a cunning attack; the thing
+was too complex, and their untutored minds would fail to perceive if
+they did not actually reject the explanation, in jealousy for their
+"rights" concluding that they were being hoodwinked. By very
+perverseness they would refuse to deny themselves a free gift of
+whiskey.
+
+With Pollock, however, whose interest as a director was vital, he
+could talk in full expectation of being understood. And moreover,
+owing to the entangled condition into which the company's and his own
+personal affairs had come, strict honor required that he inform his
+visitor of the entire situation and offer, if in the director's view
+such action would best serve the company's ends, to resign.
+
+In his office immediately after dinner he gave the easterner a
+complete account of happenings in San Mateo since his arrival as
+manager, with a statement of his father's earlier residence here, of
+the fraud practiced by Sorenson and his companions on him and his
+tragically ruined life.
+
+"This, you see, has resulted not only in bringing the animosity of
+these men against me but in aggravating their hostility to the
+company," he concluded. "I've never been a quitter. It would go sorely
+against the grain with me to quit now while under fire. But my own
+feelings or fortunes should have no weight; the company's interests
+alone are to be considered. I shall turn over the management to Meyers
+and retire if you desire; I count my contract not binding upon your
+board under the circumstances."
+
+Pollock arose and began to pace the office, gently beating the air
+with his eye-glasses and thoughtfully regarding the floor.
+
+"I should not do your remarkable story proper justice if I did not
+give it the serious attention it deserves," he said, after a time.
+"Certain aspects of the case would appear to favor our accepting
+your resignation, but on analysis, Weir, they turn out to be aspects
+only, not real arguments. Assuming the facts are as you relate, which
+I personally don't doubt, these men, if they will stop at nothing
+to injure you, will be no more reluctant to injure us. In fact, if
+you withdrew they would feel that they had gained a distinct
+triumph, forced us to yield to their will, and would be inspired to
+further and greater opposition. Personal hatred for you on their
+part is no ground for their fixing their enmity on the company. But
+that enmity, apparently, already existed before you came. Therefore if
+they hate you likewise, you and our company have a common bond. And
+that assures us of one thing, or several things: your vigilance,
+care of company property, and loyalty. Last, and aside from that,
+you are, I am confident, possessed of the exact qualities essential to
+the successful solution of present difficulties. We prefer as manager
+an energetic, determined, fighting man, however much disliked by
+envious neighbors, to some fellow less firm and more inclined to
+conciliation. The latter never gained anything with out-and-out
+foes, from what I've seen. So you perceive, Weir, that when my
+associates and I get into a row we're not quitters either. We shall
+therefore just dismiss all talk of your resignation."
+
+"Very good; I wanted you to know the facts."
+
+Pollock paced to and fro for a time longer.
+
+"What really interests me is your own fight," he remarked at length.
+"If the paper you spoke of should be found, I would be pleased to have
+it translated for you. I should also like to consult with this man
+Martinez; he seems a clever fellow. You expect to settle with this
+quartet who defrauded your father, of course."
+
+"Certainly. But the money isn't the main thing. For no amount of money
+would ever pay for the wrong done my father. I want to make these men
+suffer, suffer as he suffered. Call it a simple desire for revenge if
+you will; that's what it really is. They robbed him of his future as
+well as of his ranch and cattle. They took away hope and implanted in
+his breast terror and remorse wholly undeserved. But for them he might
+have been a happy, prosperous, well-thought of man in this state. Yes,
+revenge is what I want, not money. Revenge that will be for them an
+equivalent of hell."
+
+"But they should pay the legal penalties of their crime as well," the
+lawyer spoke. "Recovery of the original amounts gained by fraud from
+both your father and this man Dent, and accumulated interest as well
+as damages, should be had. In all it should make a large amount."
+
+"I suppose so. Probably enough to clean the four men out. But though
+of course I should enjoy getting the property or money that was
+rightfully my father's and now mine, still I'd let that go if I could
+secure the satisfaction of making the four men pay in the coin I
+want."
+
+"Don't be a fool, Weir. Don't overlook any bets, as the saying is.
+Taking their property away from them will but add to their pain and to
+your pleasure. Now we must see if Dent's heirs can be found. I suggest
+that you employ some good attorney to start a hunt along that line,
+for an action by Dent's relatives will indirectly strengthen your own
+case. I'm doubtful about one thing, however----"
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"Your courts here, and the value of this old Mexican's deposition. The
+case could be brought in a Federal Court as you're a non-resident,
+which would solve the first point, but how much weight would this
+Mexican's testimony have against white men of standing and after a
+period of thirty years. If you could find another witness----"
+
+"There was one, a white boy, so Martinez hinted," Weir said.
+
+"Find him, find him. Search the whole country until you find him!"
+
+"That's a big undertaking, when I don't even know his name or whether
+he's alive."
+
+"Begin nevertheless."
+
+"Well, I had better find my lost paper or secure another statement
+from old Saurez first. At present I have absolutely nothing that a
+court would look at; I haven't as much as I had yesterday. And even
+Martinez has been spirited away."
+
+Pollock smiled.
+
+"I'm interested, greatly interested," he said. "I'm not actively
+engaged in legal affairs at home and I may stay on here awhile longer.
+Perhaps I can assist you; it promises excitement, at any rate. After
+dry corporation matters, it should be a refreshing change--and I
+haven't had a real vacation in years. Possibly this is the time to
+take one."
+
+"I appreciate your kindness in speaking so, Mr. Pollock."
+
+"But I'm quite selfish; I'm seeking entertainment. And your peppery
+affairs promise it. Do you give me permission to take a hand?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+"Then as a beginning I'll go to town. Saurez, you say, was the old
+Mexican's name? And give me the facts again as you know them about the
+affair of your father and the man Dent in the saloon."
+
+Pollock listened closely as Steele Weir repeated the story.
+
+"That's all I know, and it's meager at best," the engineer concluded.
+
+"Pity you didn't get to read the deposition, which would have
+increased your fund of information. More unfortunate it is that you
+haven't the paper itself. But we'll do the best we can without it for
+the present. Kindly have some one drive me in to San Mateo."
+
+"Atkinson, the superintendent, is going there for me. I thought he
+might pick up something of Martinez' whereabouts."
+
+"Where does Judge Gordon live?"
+
+"I can't tell you that. But you can easily learn when you reach
+town."
+
+"Well, the Judge used to handle company matters, you know." The smile
+on Pollock's lips was inscrutable. "I used to have frequent
+conferences with him when I was here at the inception of our project.
+He is very shrewd in certain ways, but he impressed me as being not
+exactly--what shall I say?--'cold steel', for instance." And still
+wearing the thin smile, he went out.
+
+If Weir had not had so many things to make his mind grave, from a
+missing paper and a missing lawyer to mysterious whiskey and fierce
+enemies, he would have leaned back and laughed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE WEAK LINK
+
+
+Though the sun was bright that day, unseen forces were gathering in
+the sky above town, mesa and mountains, not of weather but of fate, to
+loose their lightnings. Sunday peace seemed to reign, the languid
+summer Sunday peace of tranquil nature. Yet even through this there
+was a faint breath of impending events, a quiver or excitement in the
+air, an increasing expectation on the part of men, who sensed but did
+not realize what was to come.
+
+All day whispers and hints had passed among the people in San Mateo
+and out to isolated farms and up nearby creeks, kindling in the
+ignorant, brown-skinned Mexicans a lively interest and an exorbitant
+curiosity. Nothing was said definitely; nothing was promised outright.
+So in consequence speculation ran wild and rumors wilder. The hints
+had to do with the manager of the dam who had shot the strange
+Mexican: something was to be done with him, something was to happen to
+him. He had been arrested, or was to be arrested; he had confessed, or
+was about to confess the murder; he was going to kill other Mexicans,
+or had killed other Mexicans; he was about to raid San Mateo with his
+workmen and slay the town; he was to be hanged;--and so on eternally.
+Uncertain as was everything else, what was sure apparently was that
+something would happen at San Mateo that night.
+
+Families visiting about in wagons spread the news. Horsemen were at
+pains to ride to outlying Mexican ranch houses, for what messenger is
+so welcome as he who brings tales of great doings? He might be sure of
+an audience at once. So it was that the plan craftily put in operation
+by Weir's enemies, to gather and inflame the people, under cover of
+whose pressure and excitement when the engineer was arrested he might
+be slain by a pretended rescue or popular demonstration, whichever
+should serve best, produced the expected result. During the afternoon
+wagons and horsemen and men on foot began to appear in town, to join
+already aroused relatives or friends at their adobe houses or to loaf
+along the main street in groups.
+
+Outwardly there were few signs in the aspect of the Mexican folk of
+something extraordinary developing. But to the sheriff, Madden,
+aroused from an afternoon nap at his home by a telephoned message from
+the county attorney requesting him to come to the court house, the
+unwonted number in the town was in itself a significant fact.
+
+"I didn't know this was a fiesta, Alvarez. What's up with you people?"
+he asked of one he met on the street.
+
+"The fiesta is to be to-night, eh?" the man laughed. "Have you this
+engineer locked up yet?"
+
+"What engineer?"
+
+"The killer, the gun-man, that Weir. It is said he is already arrested
+and is to be hanged from the big cottonwood at dark beside the jail.
+It is also said he is still loose and bringing five hundred workmen to
+burn the town, rob the bank, kill the men and steal the girls."
+
+"If he is to do either, it's news to me," Madden said, and proceeded
+to the office of Lucerio, the county attorney.
+
+Madden was a blunt man, who for policy's sake might close his eyes to
+unimportant political influence as exercised by the Sorenson crowd.
+But he was no mere compliant tool. This was his first term in office.
+He had never yet crossed swords with the cattleman and the others
+associated with him, because the occasion had never arisen. When he
+had allowed himself to be nominated for sheriff, though Sorenson might
+imagine Madden to be at his orders, the latter had accepted the office
+with certain well-defined ideas of his duty.
+
+"What do you want of me?" he asked Lucerio, for whom he had little
+liking.
+
+"I desire to tell you, Madden, that at eight o'clock I'll have a
+warrant for you to serve on the engineer Weir. You'll go to the dam
+and arrest him and bring him in to the jail."
+
+"Well, apparently the whole country except me knew this was to happen.
+The town's filling up as if it were going to be a bull-fight."
+
+"I know nothing of that."
+
+"All right; give me the warrant."
+
+"At eight o'clock. I don't want it served before then."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I have my reasons."
+
+"Sorenson? And Vorse and Burkhardt? They've stirred up this charge
+against the man." Lucerio making an angry answer, he continued. "Well,
+everybody knows you jump when they pull the string. I'll have to serve
+the warrant, naturally. But I'm going to tell you what I think: you've
+faked the evidence you've got; we had the truth from Martinez and
+Janet Hosmer at the inquest; you're trying to railroad Weir to the
+gallows."
+
+"Mr. Sorenson shall know what you've said. As for me"--the Mexican
+swelled with outraged dignity--"the evidence was placed in my hands.
+It warrants the engineer's arrest and trial. You attend to your
+department and I'll attend to mine."
+
+"All to the good, Mr. County Attorney. I'll arrest him; he won't make
+me any trouble on that score. But you won't find it so easy to prove
+his guilt. And afterwards, just look out, for if he doesn't come
+gunning for you and fill your carcass full of lead, I miss my guess.
+You won't be able to hide behind Sorenson, either."
+
+He left the county attorney at that, the latter unable despite all his
+efforts to hide his uneasiness and alarm. Madden reaching the street
+looked at his watch; it was half past five, so he started home for
+supper.
+
+Some way before him he saw Martinez walking. The lawyer did not stop
+to converse with any of the loiterers along the street, but moved
+steadily along. He had come out of Vorse's saloon and was going
+towards his office. Just then the sound of an automobile caused Madden
+to turn his head in time to see Weir speed along but stop with a
+sudden application of brakes as he caught sight of the attorney.
+
+A hail brought Martinez to the car. A few minutes' rapid speech there
+followed. Then the lawyer mounted beside Weir, the machine went on,
+turning into a side street and vanishing. To Madden there was nothing
+unusual in the circumstance, and he only noted the surprise and
+silence along the street at the engineer's passage. The Mexicans would
+know the man wasn't yet arrested at any rate, he thought. But he
+should like to learn what was the purpose in bringing them all to
+town! He would keep an eye open for any lynching nonsense if it were
+attempted.
+
+Weir and Martinez were hastening to Judge Gordon's house, for shortly
+before the engineer had received an unexpected call from Pollock for
+him to join him there. Evidently the eastern lawyer had turned a card
+of some sort; and Weir had gone at once, wondering what the meeting
+might portend. The sight of Martinez, free and composed of hearing,
+walking along the street, further amazed him.
+
+He perceived, however, when the lawyer stepped out to the car from
+Vorse's place that he was pale, his mouth tight-drawn and his eyes
+glittering.
+
+"You got my message?" the latter asked, quickly.
+
+"The telephone message, yes. Janet Hosmer got the paper also."
+
+"They dragged me to Vorse's cellar," Martinez whispered fiercely.
+"They beat me with their fists, Vorse and Burkhardt. Then they tied me
+and squeezed my eyeballs till I could stand the pain no longer and
+told. I've been there ever since, bound and without food or water, the
+devils! Sorenson came with them last night, afterwards. And now he and
+Vorse came again--there they are back there in the bar yet--and gave
+me a draft on a Chicago bank for a thousand dollars and said to get
+out and stay out of New Mexico and never open my mouth about what had
+happened."
+
+"Get in with me," Weir ordered.
+
+At Judge Gordon's house the lawyer said:
+
+"You are going in here? He's one of them."
+
+"I know it. Come in, however. I may need you. You're not going to
+leave San Mateo, but there's no reason why you shouldn't cash the
+draft. That's only part of the damages you'll make them pay for what
+you underwent."
+
+"It isn't money I want from them," Martinez replied, between his
+teeth.
+
+Judge Gordon lived in a rambling adobe house two squares from the
+Hosmer dwelling. It was old but had been kept in good repair, and as
+he had never married he had lived comfortably enough with an old
+Mexican pair as servants. One of these, the woman, admitted the
+visitors at their knock and conducted them, as if expected, to the
+Judge's study, a long room lined with cases of books, mostly legal,
+and filled with old-fashioned furniture.
+
+That something had occurred to change the Judge's aspect during the
+hours in which Pollock had been closeted with him was at once
+apparent. He looked older, broken, haggard of face, terrified.
+
+"I met Mr. Martinez and brought him along," Weir said.
+
+"Was that necessary?" Judge Gordon asked, heavily.
+
+"He's my attorney, for one thing."
+
+"And I've been a prisoner in Vorse's cellar for twenty-four hours for
+another, and you're one of those responsible for my being there and
+for the torture to which I was subjected," Martinez exclaimed,
+glaring.
+
+"Mr. Martinez, I give you my word of honor that I knew nothing of your
+incarceration until this morning."
+
+"That for your word of honor!" the lawyer cried, snapping his fingers
+in the air. "And in any case, you're an accessory after the fact. You
+let me stay."
+
+Pollock stepped forward.
+
+"Is this Mr. Martinez? Glad to meet you, sir. Mr. Weir has spoken very
+favorably of you and of your handling of legal matters for the
+irrigation company, of which I am a director. Pollock is my name. Are
+you a notary? Ah, that is good. There will be some papers to
+acknowledge and witness and so on."
+
+He pointed at seats, seemingly having direction of matters, and the
+visitors sat down. Judge Gordon had sagged down in the padded leather
+chair in which he sat; his face was colorless, his eyes moving
+aimlessly to and fro, his white mustache and hair in disorder.
+
+"Let us begin on business at once," Pollock stated, on his feet as was
+usual when entering a discussion and removing his eye-glasses. "I
+called on Judge Gordon this afternoon after my talk with you, Weir,
+and disclosed the evidence which has been gathered relative to the
+fraud perpetrated on your father and the crime against the man Dent. I
+assumed, and rightly, that to a man of the Judge's legal mind the
+facts we hold would prove the futility of resistance, and I set out to
+convince him of the wisdom of sparing himself a long losing fight, in
+which he would be opposing not only the evidence which was sure to
+convict him, and not only you, Mr. Weir, but our company which
+proposed to see the fight through. I went so far, Weir, as to promise
+him immunity from your wrath and from public prosecution."
+
+Weir arose slowly.
+
+"No," said he, "no."
+
+"But, my dear fellow----"
+
+"No. He made my father's life a hell for thirty years. Why should I
+spare him?"
+
+"If granting him freedom from prosecution did actually spare him
+anything, I should say 'No' also, standing in your place. But with the
+facts made public as they will be, with Judge Gordon losing his
+legislative office and the esteem in which he had been held, with him
+relinquishing the bulk of his fortune as he agrees, with his finding
+it necessary to go elsewhere to live at his time of life, with the
+thought constantly in his mind of how low he has been brought, don't
+you think he will be suffering quite adequately? I should think so. He
+would probably die quicker in prison, but I believe he will suffer
+more outside. See, I don't hesitate to measure the alternatives, for
+the Judge and I have discussed and canvassed the whole situation,
+which was necessary, of course, in order to arrive at a clear
+understanding." And Pollock smiled genially.
+
+"Does he admit my charges?"
+
+"He hasn't denied them."
+
+"Will he admit them?"
+
+"I've outlined exactly what we must have--deeds to his property and an
+acknowledged statement of the Joseph Weir and James Dent affair,
+supplementing the Saurez affidavit, which by the way he at first
+thought we did not possess but which an account of what happened last
+night in the mountains and your recovery of the same"--Pollock's
+eyelid dropped for an instant towards Weir--"convinced him of. This
+statement is not to be produced as evidence against his associates
+except in the last extremity, and if not needed is always to be kept
+secret. We are to give him, when the papers are signed, a draft for
+ten thousand dollars. This will permit him to have something to live
+on. He states that he will want to go from San Mateo at once."
+
+During this speech Weir's eyes had glanced to and fro between the
+lawyer ticking off his words with his glasses and the figure in the
+leather chair. Old and shattered as Judge Gordon had suddenly become,
+wretched as Weir saw him to be, the engineer nevertheless felt no
+pity. The man had been in the conspiracy that had ruined his father;
+he suffered now not because of remorse but through fear of public
+opinion; and was a fox turned craven because he found himself
+enmeshed in a net. And to save his own skin he was selling out his
+friends.
+
+Weir's face went dark, but Pollock quickly stepped forward and drew
+him into a corner of the room.
+
+"Keep calm, man," was the lawyer's low advice. "Do you think if we had
+him tied up as tightly as I've made him believe that I should propose
+a compromise in his case. He's the weak link. Do you think I've had an
+easy time the last three hours bringing him to the point he's at? I
+had to invent evidence that couldn't possibly exist. I had to give him
+a merciless mental 'third degree.' I told him if he refused I was
+going to Sorenson with the same offer, who would jump at the chance.
+And, my dear man, we haven't, in reality, enough proof to convict a
+mouse since you lost that paper. So now, so far as he's concerned, you
+must bend a little, a very little--and you'll be able to hang the
+remaining three."
+
+This incisive reasoning was not to be denied.
+
+"I yield," said Weir.
+
+Beaming, Mr. Pollock walked back to the table.
+
+"Mr. Weir consents," he stated. "Mr. Martinez, if you will go to your
+office and bring the necessary forms and your seal we can make the
+transfers and statement and wind the matter up."
+
+An hour later Judge Gordon had signed the deeds, stock certificates
+from his safe and bills of sale spread before him, passing the
+ownership of lands, cattle and shares in companies to Pollock for
+equitable division between Weir and the Dent heirs if found. The old
+Mexican servants were called in and witnessed his shaky signatures to
+the papers.
+
+At the statement regarding the Dent shooting and Weir fraud, which
+Pollock had dictated to Martinez with Gordon's assistance, he
+staggered to his feet while the pen dropped from his hand.
+
+"I can't sign it, I can't sign it; they would kill me!" he groaned.
+
+The two aged servants stared at him wonderingly.
+
+"My dear Judge, they'll never know of it until it's too late for them
+to do anything--if they ever know," came the easterner's words, in
+smooth persuasiveness.
+
+Judge Gordon brushed a hand over his eyes.
+
+"Give me a moment," he muttered.
+
+He stood for a time motionless. Then he walked across the room and
+opened a door and entered an inner chamber.
+
+"He won't live a year after this," Pollock whispered to his
+companions.
+
+The speaker could have shortened the time immensely and have still
+been safe in his prophecy. For when at the end of five minutes he sent
+the woman to request the Judge to return, she stumbled out of the
+bed-chamber with affrighted eyes. She said the Judge was asleep on his
+bed and could not be aroused.
+
+Sleep of the profoundest, the men discovered on going in. And in his
+fingers was an empty vial. So far as Judge Gordon was concerned Weir
+had had his revenge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE
+
+
+Revenge Weir had. But even in death Judge Gordon, true to his evasive,
+contriving character, had tricked him; and the irony lay in the fact
+that in this last act the trick was unpremeditated, unconscious,
+unintentional. Instead of the signed confession, necessary above
+everything else, which seemed almost in his fingers, the man had left
+a little poison vial.
+
+Night had settled over the earth when the three men, after directing
+the Mexican servants to bring the undertaker, went out of the house,
+for considerable time had been occupied in the discussion and the
+preparation of papers preceding Judge Gordon's tragic end. With him
+Mr. Pollock carried the documents pertaining to the property
+restitution. These, considered in connection with the suicide, would
+constitute something like a confession, he grimly asserted.
+
+Avoiding the main street of San Mateo they drove out of the town for
+camp. The first part of the ride was pursued in silence, for each was
+busy with his own thoughts in consequence of the sudden shocking
+termination of the meeting. When about half way to camp, however,
+their attention was taken from the subject by a sight wholly
+unexpected, a scene of high colors and of a spirit that mocked at what
+had just happened.
+
+Some way off from the road, at one side, two bonfires burned brightly
+before an adobe house, the flames leaping upward in the darkness and
+lighting the long low-roofed dwelling and the innumerable figures of
+persons. At the distance the place was from the highway, perhaps two
+hundred yards, one could make out only the shadowy forms of men--of a
+considerable number of men, at that.
+
+"I never saw any one at that old tumble-down house before, Martinez,"
+Weir remarked, lessening the speed of the car. "Always supposed it
+empty."
+
+"No one does live there. The ground belongs to Vorse, who leases it
+for farming to Oterez. Perhaps Oterez is giving a party there. They
+are dancing."
+
+Weir brought the machine to a full stop, with suspicion rapidly
+growing in his mind. The place was owned by Vorse, for one thing, and
+the number about the house was too large for an ordinary Mexican
+family merry-making, for another. In view of what had occurred the
+previous night all "parties" in the neighborhood of the dam deserved
+inquiry, and this house was but a mile from camp.
+
+They could now hear the sound of music, the shrill quick scrap of a
+pair of fiddles and the notes of guitars. Against the fire-light too
+they could distinguish the whirl of skirts.
+
+"Just run over there, will you, Martinez, and have a look at that
+dance?" Weir said. "See how much whiskey is there, and who the people
+are."
+
+The Mexican jumped down, climbed through the barb-wire fence bordering
+the field and disappeared towards the house.
+
+"I told you about some one giving the men booze last night," the
+engineer addressed his remaining companion. "We found the place off
+south along the hills where that business happened, and stationed a
+man there to warn us if another attempt was made to use the spot. But
+I shouldn't be surprised if this is the location used for to-night;
+it has all the signs. We suspected that this evening would be the real
+blow-out and if the men are going there I shall send down the foremen
+and engineers to break it up. Vorse's owning this house and his being
+the source of the liquor is almost proof. I met Atkinson returning to
+the dam when you sent him back from town and he'll know something is
+up if the workmen have been melting away from camp. This is simply
+another damnably treacherous move of the gang against us to interfere
+with our work, starting a big drunk and perhaps a row. We'll stop it
+right at the beginning."
+
+"Are the officials of this county so completely under Sorenson and his
+crowd's thumbs that they won't move in a case like this?" Pollock
+questioned.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then we must act on our own initiative, as you say."
+
+"That's our only recourse. Giving whiskey isn't actually an illegal
+act--and they're giving it away, not trying to sell it here without a
+government licence."
+
+"The thing's illegal if it's part of a conspiracy to disrupt our work,
+and if we can secure proof that such is the fact it will but add one
+more item to the score to be settled with these San Mateo outlaws."
+
+"There are more men going there. See them?" Weir asked. "You hear them
+on the road ahead of us. They're ducking through the fence and
+crossing to the house. Our workmen. The thing's plain now; they had
+word there would be another 'party' to-night, but they didn't know
+just where until they received word this evening. I suppose the whole
+camp except a few men will be here."
+
+"Won't they turn ugly if you interfere?"
+
+"Can't help that. I'll send men down with axes and when the booze is
+poured on the ground it makes no difference then; the men will be kept
+sober. If they are stubborn, I'll run a new bunch in and fire these
+fellows. But I don't imagine they will quit work, however surly, for
+they know whiskey's no excuse. Men usually cool down after a night's
+sleep."
+
+From where they sat and since Weir had turned out his car lamps, they
+could see the steady string of men emerging from the darkness of the
+field and approaching the house, to quickly dissolve in the gathering
+already there. In their lively steps, as well as in the eager voices
+occasionally raised along the dark road, the men's desire to join in
+the debauch was apparent.
+
+With the swelling of the crowd the scraping of the fiddles became
+louder, the dancing more furious, shouts and yells more frequent,
+while a dense line of men passing and jamming in and out of the door
+pointed only too plainly that inside the house liquor flowed. This
+would be no matter of a few drinks per man, but a big drunk if not
+stopped.
+
+Martinez confirmed this opinion on his return.
+
+"There are two barrels inside and a couple of fellows are dipping it
+up in tin cups like water," said he. "They're not even troubling to
+draw the stuff; the barrels have been placed on end and the heads
+knocked out. It will be the biggest spree San Mateo ever saw, with
+plenty of fighting after awhile. Women, you know, always start fights
+during a spree."
+
+"Those surely are not women from town," Weir exclaimed.
+
+"Oh, no. I never saw them before. Brought in here from somewhere--Santa
+Fé perhaps, El Paso more likely. You know the kind who would mix with
+that crowd--tough girls. They're wearing low necks and short skirts,
+red stockings and all that. You know the kind. Out of joints and dives
+somewhere. There's only a dozen, but they keep circulating and dancing
+with different ones. I just put my head through a window to look inside,
+which is lighted by a big kerosene lamp hanging from the roof; and I
+tell you, gentlemen, it made me sick the way those two fellows were
+dipping up whiskey and the crowd drinking it down."
+
+"And more men coming all the time," Weir stated.
+
+"And more coming, yes. It will be very bad there by midnight. Vorse
+and Burkhardt and Sorenson are managing the thing, of course."
+Martinez lighted a cigarette and stepped into the car. "No mistake
+about that, for Vorse's bartender is one of the men at the barrels.
+And I imagine Judge Gordon knew this thing was coming off though he
+made no mention of it."
+
+"Since we were ignorant of the matter, he naturally wouldn't inform
+us," Pollock remarked, dryly.
+
+"Time to put a stop to the show before it grows bad," Weir stated
+resolutely. And he started the machine.
+
+"If it can be stopped," Martinez replied.
+
+That was the question, whether or not now it would be possible even to
+reach and destroy the barrels inside the house, what with the numbers
+who would oppose the move and what with the state of intoxication that
+must rapidly prevail at the place.
+
+For as they drove away they could already detect in the mad revel
+about the old adobe dwelling a faster beat in the sharp shrieking
+music, a wilder abandon in the movements of the figures about the
+flames, a more reckless, fiercer note in the cries and oaths.
+
+"This is deviltry wholesale," Pollock said. "On a grand scale, one
+might put it."
+
+So thought a horseman who approached and halted almost at the same
+spot where the car had rested. This was Madden who with a warrant for
+Weir's arrest in his pocket had arrived opposite the house a moment
+after the automobile's departure. He had secured the warrant at eight
+o'clock according to the county attorney's request, but he had taken
+his own time about setting off to serve it.
+
+For a quarter of a mile he had been interested in the evidences of
+unwonted hilarity at the usually untenanted structure. Now he sat in
+his saddle, silent and motionless, observing the distant scene. He
+easily guessed the men were from the construction camp and that liquor
+was running.
+
+"I can almost smell it here, Dick," he addressed his horse.
+
+But two circumstances puzzled him. One was that there had been no news
+in town of such a big affair impending for the night; the second, that
+there were women present--for no Mexican, however ignorant, would take
+or allow his women folks to attend such a howling show. Coming on top
+of the crowd in town, he wondered if this business might not be linked
+up with Weir's affairs. These were his workmen and this was Vorse's
+farm-house and very likely Vorse's liquor. After he had arrested the
+engineer he would look into the thing.
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when he had gone on, other passers-by paused
+for a minute on the road to stare at the amazing picture across the
+field. These were Dr. Hosmer and Janet, Johnson and his daughter Mary:
+the two men being in the doctor's car, the two girls in Janet's
+runabout.
+
+"What on earth is going on there!" Janet exclaimed, when the two
+machines had pulled up.
+
+The two fires, fed by fresh fuel, were leaping higher than ever,
+bringing out in strong relief the long squat building, the dark,
+restless, noisy throng, and the space of illuminated earth. Against
+the night the flames and building and mob of hundreds of men seemed a
+crimson vision from some inferno to an accompaniment of mad music.
+
+"The camp's gone on a tear; drive ahead," her father said. "This isn't
+a sight for you girls to look at."
+
+And with that the two cars sped forward towards the dam, where on this
+night so much was converging. For their occupants already had had an
+experience that had started them at once to seek the man around whose
+figure were swirling a hundred passions and dark currents of destiny.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+WITH FANGS BARED
+
+
+That Sunday afternoon Janet Hosmer had awakened about sunset from an
+after-dinner sleep, rested and refreshed, with her mind continuing to
+be occupied by thoughts of Steele Weir about whom had eddied her
+dreams. The man was no longer the mystery he had been, since now she
+knew all the circumstances of his life, and on that account was
+nearer, more human, and yet as compelling.
+
+That on his part his interest went beyond mere friendship she had
+recognized from his voice and eyes when they were together. Ah, in
+truth, how his tones deepened and his look betrayed his feelings! At
+the thought Janet's heart beat faster and her cheeks grew warm and an
+indefinable joy seemed to fill her breast. She would not deny it: his
+presence, his touch gave her a greater happiness than she had ever
+known. At a single stride, as it were, he had come into the middle of
+her life and dominated her mind and changed her whole outlook.
+
+How he too had changed and grown in the coming! From the avaricious,
+calculating, heartless manager of the construction work, as she seeing
+through colored San Mateo eyes had believed him to be, he now stood
+forth a figure of power, undaunted by difficulties, undismayed by
+enemies however numerous, fearless to a fault, stern perhaps--but who
+would not have been made stern in his place?--and determined, cool,
+resourceful, alert, and of an integrity as firm and upright as a
+marble shaft. Yet beneath this exterior his heart was quick and tender
+for those who needed sympathy or help, and his hand swift to aid.
+
+More than once a hot flush burned on Janet's face, as sitting there on
+the vine-hung veranda in the gathering dusk, recollection assailed her
+with memories of wasted kindnesses given the infamous Ed Sorenson, of
+trust bestowed and of love plighted. That passage in her life seemed
+to leave her contaminated forever. It burned in her soul like a
+disgrace or a dishonorable act. But Steele Weir--and she swam in
+glorious ether at the thought--did not appear to view it in that
+light.
+
+Juanita running in the twilight to the house interrupted her
+introspection.
+
+"I came to tell you," the Mexican girl exclaimed panting before
+Janet.
+
+"Tell me what?" For Juanita's reappearance in itself was unusual, as
+Sunday afternoon and evening were her own to spend at home.
+
+"People are saying Mr. Weir is to be arrested and hanged from a tree
+in the court house yard! Everybody has come to town to see. Three
+uncles and aunts and nine cousins of ours have already come to our
+house from where they live four miles down the river. All the town is
+talking about it. But though I said nothing, I knew how Mr. Weir had
+saved you and that he had done nothing to be hanged for. If anybody is
+to be killed it ought to be that Ed Sorenson."
+
+"Are you sure of this, Juanita?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Miss Janet. It is so."
+
+"Then this is part of the plot against him; let me think. They might
+arrest him but they would never dare try to hang him, unless they
+could pretend----"
+
+What they might pretend Janet never stated, as at that instant a motor
+car dashed up and stopped before the gate. Even in the gloom she made
+out that the figure garbed in a gray dust coat was Sorenson's.
+Springing out of the machine, he jerked the gate open and strode
+towards the house, while a premonition of a fresh and unpleasant turn
+of affairs quivered in Janet's mind.
+
+"I've come back again, you see," he said. "Step inside where you can
+hear what I have to say."
+
+The words were like an order; the man's manner, indeed, was
+overbearing and brutal. But the girl concealing her resentment,
+preceded him into the house and bade Juanita light a lamp.
+
+"And now you get out!" Sorenson commanded the servant in so savage a
+tone that she fled to the kitchen without waiting to consult Janet's
+eyes. "I see your father isn't here," he continued, addressing Janet.
+
+The latter made no reply. To be sure, Dr. Hosmer was not in the room
+but he was in the house, sleeping. Let the cattleman think him absent
+if he wished.
+
+"So much the better; if he's not about, he won't try to interfere,"
+the man went on. "Now, my girl, I've learned all about your tricks,
+and----"
+
+"Sir, you talk like that to me in my own house!" Janet broke in, with
+a flash of eyes. "You will walk out of that door this instant and
+never set foot here again."
+
+"Will I, you slippery young Jezebel? I'll do nothing of the kind until
+I'm ready, which will be when you've handed over that paper. Don't try
+to deny that you have it or Weir has it; I suppose he has now, and
+I'll be forced to go shoot him down as he deserves. But I came here
+first to make sure. It would be just like the rest of the schemes of
+you two to have you keep it, thinking I'd be fooled. I have half a
+notion to wring your white neck for lying to me to-day--lying, while
+all the time you knew my son was hanging between life and death."
+
+So savage was his voice, so threatening his visage and air that Janet
+retreated a step. His hands worked as if he actually felt her soft
+throat in his clutch; his huge body and big beefy head swayed towards
+her ominously; while his eyes carried a baleful light that revealed in
+full intensity the man's real brutal soul. Hitherto carefully coated
+in an appearance of respectability fitted to a station of wealth,
+influence and prominence, he now stood as he truly was, domineering,
+repellant, lawless. Janet could at that minute measure the close
+kinship of father and son.
+
+"Fortunately a man in Bowenville recognized Ed, or I should never have
+known he had been injured," Sorenson went on. "So your little scheme
+to keep me in ignorance went wrong. The doctor 'phoned me about five
+and I took my wife and we rushed there, and I have just this instant
+returned. Do you know what the doctor says? Ed will live, but be a
+life cripple, a useless wreck, a bundle of smashed bones, always
+sitting in a chair, always eating out his heart. And all because of
+you and that engineer! Ed was conscious; he told me the real story
+about which you lied,----"
+
+"I did not lie," Janet stated, firmly.
+
+Sorenson made an angry gesture as if to sweep aside this declaration.
+
+"He told me how you promised to slip away with him to spend a week in
+the mountains, and how you warned this Weir so that the two of you
+could trick my son and get him out of the way. You, who always
+pretended to be so innocent and virtuous! And then Weir caused the
+accident up there in the hills that has crippled my boy for life! Did
+it to get him out of the path to you, and you helped, like the
+traitress you are; and the two of you took the paper."
+
+Janet's form had stiffened at these insulting speeches.
+
+"Your son is the liar," said she. "Did he tell you how he flung a
+blanket over my head as Juanita and I were coming out of Martinez'
+office? How he tied my hands and feet and carried me off like a
+victim--and victim he intended me to be! Yes, Mr. Weir rescued me
+because Juanita met and told him what had happened and he followed.
+Your son was drunk. He tried to commit a crime because I had rejected
+him a week before, on learning that during our engagement he had
+endeavored to mislead another girl. A drunkard and a criminal both,
+that's your son. And he alone brought on his accident by his drunken,
+reckless driving. Now I've told you the truth; leave the house!"
+
+"You can't put that kind of a story over on me," he snarled. "I
+believe what Ed said. Even if he has had affairs with other girls,
+that makes no difference now. You tried to double-cross him; you've
+wrecked his body and life; and you shall pay for it."
+
+Neither of the pair in their intense excitement had heard a wagon
+drive to a stop before the house. Whether in fact they would have
+heard a peal of thunder might be a question. Sorenson, enraged by his
+son's injury and burning for revenge, was oblivious to all else but
+his passion, while Janet Hosmer, divided between contempt and fear,
+had but the single thought of ridding herself of the man.
+
+"You cannot injure me," she said, in reply to his savage utterance.
+
+"I'll drive you and your father out of this town and this state," he
+exclaimed. "They shall know here in San Mateo, and wherever you go if
+it's in my power to reach there, what sort of a pretending,
+double-faced, disreputable wanton----"
+
+"You coward!" Janet burst out.
+
+Then she turned to flee out of the room to arouse her father. But
+Sorenson was too quick for her; he sprang forward and seized one of
+her wrists.
+
+"No you don't, you perfumed wench!" he growled.
+
+A scream formed on Janet's lips. The heavy, rage-crimsoned face bent
+over her as if to kill her by its very nearness. Brute the man was,
+and as a brute he appeared determined she should feel his power. She
+pulled back, jerking to free herself, and shrieked.
+
+Intervention came from an unexpected quarter. Rushing into the room
+came the rancher Johnson, followed by his daughter.
+
+"Let go of her," the man ordered, harshly.
+
+Sorenson looked about over his shoulder.
+
+"Keep out of this, and get out," he answered.
+
+Johnson leaped forward and struck the other on the jaw. The cattleman
+releasing his hold on Janet staggered back, at the same time thrusting
+a hand under his coat.
+
+But the rancher's pistol was whipped forth first.
+
+"You'd try that game, would you?" Johnson said, with his ragged beard
+out-thrust and stiff. "Put up your hands; I want to see how they look
+sticking up over your head."
+
+Sorenson though now holding them in sight did not at once comply.
+
+"Johnson, you're butting into something that doesn't concern you," he
+said, endeavoring to speak calmly.
+
+"You've made one mistake in striking me; don't make another by keeping
+that gun pointed at my head. Remember I've a mortgage on your place
+that you'll wish renewed one of these days."
+
+The expression of scorn on the rancher's face was complete.
+
+"Trying that line, are you?" he sneered. "Think you can play the
+money-lender now and scare me? You didn't look much like a banker
+reaching for your gun; you just looked like a killer then, a plain
+bar-room killer--but I beat you to the draw. You've got fat and slow,
+haven't you, since early days when you use to put lead into poor
+devils whose stuff you wanted. And you didn't look like a banker to
+me, either, trying to bulldoze Janet when I came in; you looked like
+the big dirty coward you are. Aha, here's the doctor! Now just tell
+him how it comes you can order me out of his house, and why you were
+threatening Janet and making her scream."
+
+The physician turned a white, angry countenance to Sorenson.
+
+"I heard the scream. Is it true you were abusing my daughter?" he
+demanded, stepping in front of the man.
+
+"I came here because I learned my son Ed had been broken to bits
+through her trickery and damnable----"
+
+The words were cut off by the doctor's hand which smote the
+blasphemous lips uttering them.
+
+Even more than Johnson's blow did this slap upon the mouth enrage the
+cattleman. His face became congested, his shoulders heaved, but behind
+the doctor was the revolver still directed at his head.
+
+"You've come here uninvited and you've said too much," Doctor Hosmer
+stated in cold even tones. "You may be the town magnate, but you're
+only a ruffian and a crook after all. You can't bluff or bully us.
+More than that, you've insulted my daughter and me beyond any future
+reparation. As for your son, he got less than he deserved." He turned
+to the rancher. "You came just in time, it seems. Please see that he
+leaves the house."
+
+Johnson waved with his gun significantly towards the door.
+
+"Move right along lively," he added. "And I'll go along with you to
+see that you don't hamstring my horses, which I don't put past an
+underhanded cattle-thief like you."
+
+Sorenson seemed striving for words that would adequately blast those
+before him, but they appeared lacking. With a last malignant glare he
+walked out upon the veranda and down across the yard, with his guard
+following him.
+
+When Johnson returned after Sorenson's departure in his car, he was
+grinning sardonically.
+
+"I shouldn't want him running among my cattle; he'd bite 'em and give
+'em the rabies," he remarked.
+
+Janet caught and pressed his toil-roughened hand.
+
+"You'll never know how much I thank you for coming in just when you
+did," she cried.
+
+"Pshaw, your father would have showed up and stopped him."
+
+"I'm not so sure. Father has no weapon, and that man did have one. It
+was the sight of your pistol that made him cower. You couldn't have
+chosen a more lucky minute to arrive."
+
+"Well, it was a little bit timely, as it turned out. Considering too
+that we were coming to see you anyway, it was just as well to walk in
+when we could do some good. Mary has something for you to read, if you
+read Spanish."
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"That's good. Show 'em what you have, daughter."
+
+Mary drew a knotted handkerchief from her bosom and undid the knots.
+Appeared the doubled paper she had found. This she passed to Janet.
+
+"Why,--why, this is the document I had!" the latter exclaimed,
+joyfully. "Where did you find it?"
+
+"Up by the smashed automobile, when father and I were at the cabin."
+She exchanged a guarded look with her father. "There are names in it
+that made me think it might be valuable. So when father came back from
+Bowenville I showed it to him. But neither of us could read it. We
+thought we'd better bring it to you to read."
+
+"It is valuable, very valuable. I had it when I was seized by Ed
+Sorenson and he took it away from me. Evidently, then, it fell from
+his pocket at the time of the accident. Yes, indeed, it's important.
+It means everything to certain parties. I'll read it, but you
+understand what it tells is private at present."
+
+"We understand--and I think I know what it's going to say," Johnson
+remarked, grimly.
+
+Thereupon while the others listened Janet read a translation of the
+long document. To her and her father the facts were not new, for Weir
+had already related such as he knew of the happenings in Vorse's
+saloon on that eventful day thirty years previous. Nor for that matter
+were they strange to Johnson and his daughter, though of course
+neither Janet nor her father were aware of the rancher's more intimate
+knowledge of the subject.
+
+"A pretty good story as far as it goes, but like all lawyers' papers
+long-winded," Johnson stated, critically.
+
+"What do you mean, far as it goes?" Janet asked, curiously. "Did you
+know this old Mexican? Did you ever hear him tell about the thing?"
+
+"I knew he was there at the time, but he never told me anything."
+
+Here Dr. Hosmer spoke.
+
+"Saurez died yesterday. It must have been shortly after he made this
+deposition. He died in Vorse's saloon, which gives a color of
+suspicion to his death. In addition, Martinez, as you know, was
+dragged away somewhere."
+
+"Then Vorse learned old Saurez had blabbed, and killed him," Johnson
+said, in a convinced tone. "Vorse is a bad bird, I want to say. But so
+are all of them, Sorenson, Burkhardt and Judge Gordon as well."
+
+Janet brought the talk back to the subject.
+
+"You make me still wonder, Mr. Johnson," she said. "You seemed to
+think there's more to the account than is told in this paper."
+
+Again the rancher and his daughter glanced at each other, hesitatingly.
+
+"Tell them, father," Mary broke forth all at once. "They know this
+much, and you know you can trust them."
+
+The man, however, shook his head with a certain dogged purpose.
+
+"If this is just a paper in some trifling lawsuit or other, it will be
+better if I keep my own counsel," he stated. "I've riled Sorenson
+considerable as it is now, and I don't care particularly about having
+him gunning on my trail active-like. If it really mattered----"
+
+"It does matter; it matters everything," Janet cried, "if you really
+know something more!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because it concerns Mr. Weir. The Joseph Weir described and named in
+this affidavit was his father. He believes these men robbed his
+father; this paper proves it, but not absolutely, for Mexican evidence
+here in this country doesn't carry as much weight against white
+men--especially men as rich and strong as these named--as it would in
+other places perhaps. You know that. This paper was obtained for Mr.
+Weir."
+
+"Oho, so that's the way of it!" Johnson said, with a long drawn-out
+tone.
+
+He regarded the paper in silence for a time, busy with his thoughts,
+absently twisting his beard, until at length a look of satisfaction
+grew on his face.
+
+"Well, well, this is fine," he went on presently. "I never thought I
+should be able to pay the obligation I owe him, and I won't fully at
+that, but this will help. No, that paper doesn't tell all, for I
+reckon Saurez didn't see all." He glanced triumphantly at the doctor
+and the girl. "But I did."
+
+"You!" both exclaimed.
+
+But before he could explain, the memory of the cattleman's threat
+recurred to Janet to banish thoughts of aught else than Weir's danger
+from her mind.
+
+"Mr. Sorenson said he was going up to the dam to shoot Mr. Weir," she
+exclaimed. "We must give warning."
+
+"Did he say he was going himself?" Johnson asked.
+
+"To get the paper, yes." Then Janet continued anxiously. "But the
+paper isn't all. His son told him what occurred in the mountains and I
+believe the man wants to harm Mr. Weir as well as to obtain the paper.
+Perhaps he plans on gaining the document first, then killing him. In
+any case, we must put Mr. Weir on guard."
+
+"I'll just drive up there and tell the engineer," Johnson stated.
+"Shouldn't be surprised if I got a chance yet to use my gun. You girls
+can stay here."
+
+Janet gazed at him with a flushing face.
+
+"The man could go to the dam and kill Mr. Weir and get safely home
+while you're starting with your team," said she. "No, we must drive
+there in a car. Father, you take Mr. Johnson in yours, and I'll carry
+Mary in mine. We'll go along of course, for we'll not remain here in
+the cottage alone with such terrible things happening in San Mateo."
+
+And to this there was no dissent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE ALARM
+
+
+At the dam Weir found Meyers and Atkinson anxiously waiting his
+return. The sudden concerted melting away of workmen from camp had
+been warning to his subordinates that the danger of a general spree
+had taken definite form, which the report of a pair of young engineers
+confirmed when they followed a group of laborers to the old adobe
+house and beheld the beginning of the debauch.
+
+"Get out all the staff, Meyers, and you, Atkinson, all the foremen and
+sober men left, then go down the road and put that joint out of
+business, taking axes and whatever is necessary."
+
+"And if they fight?" Meyers asked.
+
+"Try first to placate them. If that fails, some of you draw them off
+in order to permit the others to enter the house and destroy the
+whiskey. It's a tough job, but you may succeed. If the crowd turns
+ugly as it may, being drunk, come back. No need to take the risk of
+broken heads or being beaten up. See, however, if you can't outwit the
+outfit. Possibly you could push that mud house over from the rear by
+means of a beam; that would do the business. I leave it to you to
+decide what's best to do, men, after you've examined the situation."
+
+"The camp will be unguarded except for you and the two men with you,"
+Weir's assistant suggested. "If the crowd drinking down at that place
+should take the notion to come here and tear things up, there would
+be nothing to hinder them. A few should stay, anyway, I imagine--half
+a dozen, who can use guns."
+
+"Well, pick out six to remain," the other agreed.
+
+For Meyers' suggestion had raised a disagreeable possibility. It was
+never safe to ignore precautions when a gang of two or three hundred
+rough, active laborers, however loyal when sober, were made
+irresponsible and crazy by liquor; and one stage of drunkenness in
+such men was usually manifested in a wild desire for violence. The
+scheme of Weir's enemies might comprise using this very act for
+wrecking the camp.
+
+Six men, to be sure, would offer little resistance to stemming the
+movement once it was started, but the sight of steel in the guards'
+hands might cause even a reckless mob to pause long enough for an
+appeal. If the men should be brought to listen, they could probably be
+diverted from their purpose, as impassioned crowds are easily swayed
+by men of force.
+
+In any case the camp and dam should be defended to the last. That went
+without saying.
+
+Meyers and Atkinson had little more than departed with their muster of
+engineers, foremen and sober workmen, some fifty in all, when the two
+cars driven by Dr. Hosmer and Janet arrived at headquarters. To the
+occupants of both machines the camp appeared singularly dark and
+silent, the office building and the commissary shack alone showing
+lights.
+
+The four visitors entered the main room in the former building, where
+they found Mr. Pollock and Martinez.
+
+"Mr. Weir stepped out for a moment to make a round of the camp and the
+horse corrals," the easterner replied in answer to an inquiry from the
+doctor. "Will you be seated?" And he politely placed chairs for Janet
+and Mary, while his look scrutinized the party with discreet
+interest.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Martinez, you've escaped!" Janet exclaimed, after a surprised
+stare at the lawyer.
+
+The Mexican smiled, bowed and drew one point of his black mustache
+through his fingers.
+
+"I have indeed, Miss Janet," said he. "Not without an unpleasant
+experience, however. I understand you secured the paper concerning
+which I telephoned you, and though I understand it has since been
+lost--through no fault of yours--I desire to express my thanks for
+your excellent assistance in the matter."
+
+"But it has been found again; we have it with us."
+
+Martinez gave a start, none the less sincere for being dramatic.
+
+"What! Saurez' deposition? Weir thought it burned. Why, this is the
+most wonderful luck in the world! It gives us the whip-hand again."
+
+Janet nodded.
+
+"Mary Johnson here found it in a crack in the rocks when she and her
+father went up to the cabin to bring Ed Sorenson down. Father has it.
+That's one reason we're here. But there's another; Mr. Sorenson has
+learned of his son's accident, has seen him, talked with him, been
+told lies and now is in a dreadful rage, threatening every one
+concerned. He was at our house and made a scene. He's coming here, or
+so he said, to kill Mr. Weir and obtain the document. So we hurried to
+the dam to give warning."
+
+At this juncture Mr. Pollock stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. Sorenson hasn't yet appeared, and I assure you he will be
+prevented from harming any one if he comes. You are Miss Janet Hosmer,
+I judge, of whom I've heard so much that is praiseworthy. Will you
+allow me to introduce myself? I'm Mr. Pollock, a company director,
+and to a degree in Mr. Weir's confidence."
+
+Janet expressed her pleasure at his acquaintance and in turn
+introduced her father and the Johnsons.
+
+"Mr. Weir spoke of you to us, but we weren't aware he had informed you
+of the paper." Then she added, "But he would wish to, naturally."
+
+Weir's voice, without, in conversation with some one caused them all
+to look towards the door. In the panel of light falling on the
+darkness before the house they perceived the engineer's tall figure by
+a horse, from which the rider was dismounting. Letting the reins drag
+and leaving the horse to stand, the latter walked with Weir into the
+room.
+
+"Why, this is a delightful surprise!" the engineer exclaimed on
+beholding the four who had come while he was out. "And unexpected."
+His eyes rapidly interrogated the different faces. "I suppose it's
+business, not pleasure, that brings you."
+
+"That's so," said Johnson, the rancher, nodding.
+
+"Well, Madden is here on business, too, it seems." He glanced at Mr.
+Pollock. "Mr. Madden is our sheriff and he has a warrant for my
+arrest." He turned back to the officer. "You come at a bad time for my
+affairs. You saw that big show at the old house half way down the
+road? That crowd is made up of my workmen, who are being entertained
+with free whiskey, and there's no telling but what they may come here
+to tear things up. The whiskey is furnished by Vorse, I suspect, and
+is being served at Vorse's place. Your warrant is inspired by Vorse
+and others, isn't it? The two circumstances coming at the same moment,
+the free drunk and my arrest, look fishy to me. What do you think? I'm
+in charge of a property here representing a good deal of money and I
+should hate to be absent if the men took the idea into their heads to
+turn the camp upside down, especially if the idea was inspired by
+Vorse and his friends."
+
+"I haven't served the warrant yet," Madden replied.
+
+"And you know that I'm not going to skip the country at the prospect
+of your serving it?"
+
+"No. There's no hurry; I'll just sit around for a while. And
+understand, Weir, this arrest is none of my doings, except officially.
+I take no stock in the yarn about your having attacked the greaser you
+killed. Martinez' and Miss Janet's testimony at the inquest satisfied
+me in that respect."
+
+Mr. Pollock now drew Weir aside for a whispered conference. When they
+rejoined the others the engineer made the lawyer acquainted with the
+sheriff.
+
+"Mr. Weir has agreed to my suggestion to take you into our confidence,
+Mr. Madden," he stated. "There may be other warrants for you to serve
+soon, and I'm sure you will respect what we reveal. All of us here
+except you know the facts I'm about to relate; indeed, have shared in
+them to an extent; and in addition to our word we'll present proof.
+You know Dr. Hosmer and his daughter certainly, you probably know Mr.
+Johnson and the young lady with him, and are aware whether their
+statements are to be relied on."
+
+"They are," Madden answered, without hesitation.
+
+"You're already convinced of the truth of Weir's innocence in the
+charge of murder now being preferred against him. Well, now, a friend
+at court is worth something; and we propose to make you that friend."
+
+"I'm not against him like most of the town, anyway," was the sheriff's
+answer.
+
+"Go ahead with your explanation," Pollock said to the engineer.
+
+Thereupon Weir briefly sketched out events for the officer as they had
+occurred and as showing the motives which had inspired his enemies in
+seeking to destroy him:--the original plot against his father, his
+determination to uncover the four conspirators, the episode at the
+restaurant in Bowenville, the discovery of Ed Sorenson as the hirer of
+the dead Mexican assassin, the obtaining of Saurez' deposition and
+Martinez' imprisonment in Vorse's saloon cellar, Janet's abduction and
+rescue and the loss of the paper.
+
+"But the paper isn't lost," Dr. Hosmer interrupted. "Mary Johnson
+found it and here it is." With which he drew the crumpled document
+from his breast pocket and laid it on the table.
+
+"You have it again!" Weir exclaimed. "You found it, Mary!" He stepped
+forward and took the girl's hand in his for a moment. "You're a friend
+indeed to bring this back to me."
+
+"I owed you more than that," she said, coloring.
+
+"But Mr. Sorenson has learned about his son and the paper and
+everything that happened, except Ed Sorenson told him lies instead of
+the truth," Janet put in. "He's terribly angry at all of us. He said
+he would kill you for crippling Ed."
+
+"Sorenson is welcome to try," Weir responded, with a quick blaze in
+his eyes.
+
+At this point Mr. Pollock interposed.
+
+"You didn't finish your story, Weir. Relate for Mr. Madden's benefit
+what occurred at Judge Gordon's house."
+
+This tragic conclusion to the afternoon's happenings the engineer
+told, though remarking that the company director should be the true
+narrator. At his announcement that Judge Gordon had taken his own life
+by poison his listeners remained dumbfounded.
+
+"He's dead, then?" Madden asked, at last.
+
+"Yes. And the transfer of property made to Mr. Pollock amounts to an
+acknowledgment of his guilt. Now, I should like to have Martinez read
+this deposition, for I've never heard its contents myself."
+
+This the Mexican did, translating the Spanish paragraphs into English
+with fluent ease, ending by reading the list of witnesses. Martinez
+gave the paper a slap of his hand.
+
+"And old Saurez was found dead in Vorse's saloon by me an hour after
+he had signed this," he said. "Draw your own conclusions."
+
+Madden shifted on his seat. He glanced at the document and at the
+others and then gazed out the door at the darkness.
+
+"Looks like a clear case; I always imagined if these men's past was
+dug into there would be a lot of crooked business turned up. But
+granting that everything is as shown, with Lucerio the county attorney
+under Sorenson's thumb and the community as it is there's a question
+if Saurez' statement even will be enough to convict them."
+
+At that Janet jumped up, her eyes gleaming.
+
+"That is not all the proof, not all by any means!" she cried.
+
+"What more is there?"
+
+"Mr. Johnson's evidence."
+
+"Johnson's!" came in surprised tones from all four of the men
+uninformed of the rancher's story.
+
+"Yes, he saw the man Dent killed and the plotters make your father,
+Mr. Weir, believe he had done the killing."
+
+Steele stared at Johnson dumbfounded.
+
+"Just that; I saw the whole dirty trick worked, looking through the
+back door of the saloon."
+
+"Then you were the boy!" Weir gasped. "The boy who looked in! After
+thirty years I supposed that boy gone, lost, vanished beyond
+finding."
+
+"I stayed right here," was the reply. "Of course I kept my mouth shut
+about what I had seen. I worked on ranches and rode range and at last
+got the little place on Terry Creek and married. Nothing strange in my
+remaining in the country where I grew up, especially as I only knew
+the cattle business."
+
+Weir swung about to Madden.
+
+"Here's a live witness," said he. "With the other proof his evidence
+should be final."
+
+"Whenever you say, I'll arrest the men. As for this warrant I have,
+I'll just continue to carry it in my pocket," the sheriff stated. "I
+must remark that I never heard of a more villainous plot, taking it
+all around, than you've brought to light."
+
+"And the charges must cover everything," Pollock said sternly. "From
+Dent's murder to the conspiracy against the irrigation company."
+
+"I'll stay here in case you need me to stop any trouble with your
+workmen," Madden remarked.
+
+But trouble though imminent was coming from another direction, as was
+suddenly shown when a man, dust-covered and hatless, rushed into the
+office.
+
+"They're on the way," he cried.
+
+"Who? The workmen?" Weir demanded.
+
+"No. I don't know anything about the workmen, but a bunch of Mexicans,
+fifty or more, are headed this way to blow up the dam. I saw and heard
+them."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"At the spring a mile south. I was watching down there, where Atkinson
+had sent me after supper, relieving the man who kept lookout during
+the afternoon. That was where the booze was dealt out last night, you
+remember. I was sitting there when I heard a crowd coming. At first I
+thought it was our men, but when they stopped to drink and smoke, I
+saw by their talk they were Mexicans. But there was one white man with
+them, a leader. He and a Mexican talked in English. They're to raid
+the camp, crawling up the canyon, to dynamite the dam first, then fire
+the buildings."
+
+"Then they're on the road here now?"
+
+"Yes." The speaker licked his lips. "I cut along the hillside until I
+got ahead of them, but it was slow going in the dark and stumbling
+through the sage. They must be close at hand by this time, though I
+came faster than they did. The white man said to the Mexican that they
+wanted to reach the dam just at moonrise, and that will be pretty
+quick now."
+
+"Go to the bunk-house and call the men waiting there, and get a gun
+yourself," Weir ordered. "The storekeeper will give you one." When the
+messenger had darted out, he looked at the others. "You must take
+these girls away from here, doctor, at once."
+
+"But I don't go," Johnson snapped forth, drawing his revolver and
+giving the cylinder a spin.
+
+"I never could hit anything, and haven't had a firearm in my hand for
+years, but I can try," Pollock stated. "This promises to be
+interesting, very interesting."
+
+"Very," said Weir.
+
+For a little he stood in thought, while the others gazed at him
+without speaking. His straight body seemed to gather strength and
+power before their eyes, his clean-cut features to become hard and
+masterful.
+
+"Up the canyon he said they were coming, didn't he?" he remarked at
+last, more to himself than to them. "Very well, so much the better.
+Johnson, you and Madden take charge of the men when they come and line
+them along the hillside this side of the dam. Put out all lights."
+With which he strode out of the building.
+
+They looked after him in uncertainty.
+
+"I'm not going; you may be hurt, and need me," Mary stated, with a
+stubborn note in her voice.
+
+"Then keep out of reach--and run for town if the ruffians get into
+camp," was her father's answer.
+
+"I stay too," Janet exclaimed, resolutely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+NO QUARTER
+
+
+The peril threatening the unfinished dam now alone engaged Steele
+Weir's mind. Personal considerations did not enter into his
+calculations, least of all thought of personal danger; for when he
+placed himself in an undertaking whatever rested under his hand, as in
+this case the irrigation company's property, became for him a trust to
+attend, to direct, to guard. Even more than if it had been his own
+property did he feel the obligation, for the interests concerned were
+not his. But the matter went deeper than a prospective money loss; it
+struck down to principles and rights--the principles of order and
+industry as against viciousness and havoc; the rights of law-abiding
+men who create as against the wantonness of lawless men who would
+destroy.
+
+Were it his own workmen who, inflamed by drink and incited by a spirit
+of recklessness, were coming to wreck the camp in a moment of mad
+intoxication, he would have made allowances for the cause. Before
+resorting to extreme measures in defending his charge, he first would
+have sought to bring them to their senses. Drunken men are men
+unbalanced, irrational.
+
+But here was another case: an attack by a secret, sober, malevolent
+band, who in cold blood approached to demolish the company works. Not
+liquor moved them on their mission, but money--money paid by his arch
+enemies. The men were simply hired tools, brazenly indifferent no
+doubt to crimes, desperate in character certainly, for a handful of
+coins ready to wipe out a million dollars' worth of property and
+effort. Such deserved no consideration or quarter.
+
+Weir proposed to give none. With enemies of this kind he had but one
+policy, strike first and strike with deadly force. One does not seek
+to dissuade a rattlesnake; one promptly stamps it under heel. One
+cannot compromise with ravenous wolves; one shoots them down. One does
+not wait to see how far a treacherous foe will go; one forestalls and
+crushes him before he begins. Moreover, if wise, one does it in such
+fashion that the enemy will not arise from the blow.
+
+With the information given him by the guard posted at the spring Weir
+immediately grasped the true nature of the plot. The "whiskey party"
+was but a means of withdrawing the workmen from the scene, of
+weakening the camp, while a picked company of ruffians wrecked the
+property. It was an assault intended to wipe out the works and end
+construction, coincident with his arrest. Both the company and he were
+to pay the penalty for resisting the powers that rule San Mateo. And
+if the tale were spread that the destruction had been wrought by his
+workmen while drunk, who would doubt it?
+
+Like shadows the band of Mexican desperadoes would come, dynamite the
+dam, fire the buildings, stampede the horses, and like shadows vanish
+again. In the unexpectedness of the raid, in the confusion, in the dim
+light, no one would with certainty be able to say who the assailants
+were. A scheme ferocious in its conception and diabolical in its
+cunning! But there was one flaw--the element of chance. Chance had
+given Weir warning.
+
+A strong man warned is a strong man armed.
+
+As the engineer stood in the office, swiftly measuring the imminent
+menace of which he had just been told, calculating the meager
+instruments of defense at hand, his mind sweeping up all the salient
+aspects, features, advantages and disadvantages of the situation, he
+seized on the one weak spot in the attacking party's plan. At that
+spot he would strike.
+
+So giving Johnson and Madden the order to take charge of the little
+handful of guards, he had plunged out into the night.
+
+The men from the bunk-house were already running toward the office,
+before the door of which the rancher gathered them together to make
+sure of their arms and ammunition. All told, when Martinez and Pollock
+presently came from the store with guns, the little party numbered
+eleven.
+
+"Is this all there are of us?" Dr. Hosmer asked.
+
+"We are worth all that crowd that's coming," Johnson exclaimed, taking
+a spare gun Martinez had brought him.
+
+"Did Weir send the rest of the engineers down to that house? I
+understood so."
+
+"That's where they are, I reckon."
+
+Dr. Hosmer considered for a minute.
+
+"I can be there in five minutes in my car. The road is on the north
+side of the stream, as is this camp: the gang that's heading here to
+blow things up is coming up from the south, so it will not block the
+way. Men could be here in twenty minutes from down yonder by
+running."
+
+"A good suggestion, doctor," Pollock said. "It may take you a bit
+longer to find and tell them what's occurring, but even so they may
+return in time. Fifty, or even twenty, might give us enough
+assistance to beat off the attack."
+
+"There comes the moon," said the man who had been at the spring. "They
+must be near now."
+
+Far in the east the moon was stealing above the horizon. Under its
+light the mesa took form out of the darkness--the level sagebrush
+plain criss-crossed by willow-lined ditches and checkered by small
+Mexican fields, the winding shimmering Burntwood River with its border
+of cottonwoods, the narrow road, the distant town of San Mateo, a
+vague blot of shadow picked out by tiny specks of light.
+
+The mountains too now reared in view, silent, silvered, majestic,
+towering about the camp on the lower base. One could see, as the moon
+swam higher, the low long buildings of the camp clustered on the
+hillside above the canyon, in the bottom of which was the dashing
+stream and the bone-white core of the dam.
+
+"Look down yonder on the other side!" Martinez exclaimed suddenly,
+pointing a long thin forefinger at the mouth of the canyon where a
+group of black dots were moving up the river.
+
+"That's them," said the man who had given the warning.
+
+"And they're armed," said another. "You can see the moon shine on
+their gun-barrels."
+
+On the opposite side of the stream, some two hundred yards below the
+dam and three or four hundred feet lower in elevation than the camp,
+advancing up the canyon in a string, the men looked like a line of
+insects.
+
+"I'm off for help," the doctor said, springing into his car. "Janet,
+you and Mary go higher up among the rocks and hide if these buildings
+are attacked." Away he went, buzzing down the hillside to the long
+stretch of road.
+
+Weir now came into sight, walking quickly towards the group. That he
+saw the Mexicans down in the canyon was evident from his swift
+appraising glances thither.
+
+"Johnson, move your men down halfway to the dam and have them scatter
+there behind bowlders. I shall go still lower down," he said. "You
+will hold your fire until I signal with my hat from the dam."
+
+"You're going to the dam?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We ought to go with you."
+
+"I don't need you. You'll be more effective hidden above. You'll have
+plenty of light as the moon is shining squarely in the gorge. And
+await my signal."
+
+"All right; you're the general."
+
+"But take no extreme risks, Weir. The company doesn't ask you to
+sacrifice yourself," Pollock stated.
+
+"The sacrifice will be down among those fellows," Steele replied, with
+set jaw. "Don't worry about me. Now, start, men."
+
+He stood for a little watching the rate of progress of the line of
+Mexicans ascending the stream, which was not rapid owing to the broken
+rocks lining the bank. Then he swung about to the two girls.
+
+"Every one here now is under my orders," he said. "You two will take
+your car and go at once. This is no place for you."
+
+"But----" Janet began.
+
+"I'm taking no chances that you shall fall into the hands of those
+scoundrels," he declared, sternly. "They may succeed in reaching this
+spot. You must not be here; you must go."
+
+Taking each by an arm he piloted them to the car.
+
+"Sorry, but it has to be," he added. "This is work for men, and men
+alone."
+
+Janet and Mary climbed up into the seat.
+
+"You--you will take care of yourself," Janet said, tremulously.
+
+"I expect to. Still, this isn't going to be a croquet party; anything
+may happen. Good-by."
+
+With that he swung about and breaking into a run made for a small
+building half-buried in the hillside and apart from the camp. There he
+stooped and picked up under each arm what looked like a cylinder of
+some size and went down towards the dam. For a time they could see
+him, but all at once he slipped behind an outcrop of rock and they saw
+him no more.
+
+Janet turned to eye her companion. Once more her face was pale.
+
+"Well?" she inquired of Mary.
+
+"I reckon we'd better do as he says. He'd be awful mad if we didn't.
+Did you see his eyes when he talked to us?"
+
+"But if he--he and others are wounded?"
+
+Uneasily Mary gazed at the older girl and then down at the canyon. On
+the hillside the men led by her father were no longer in sight,
+somewhere concealed among the stones that dotted the earth. But down
+by the stream and now scarcely fifty yards from the white stretch of
+concrete barring the river bed through a tunnel in which the water
+foamed and escaped, the Mexicans were clearly visible, their hats
+bobbing about, their guns flinging upward an occasional gleam.
+
+"It doesn't seem as if anything was going to happen," Mary went on in
+awed tones. "Things are so quiet and peaceful."
+
+Still Janet delayed starting the car, divided in feelings between a
+wish to respect Steele Weir's insistent command and a growing fear for
+his safety. She could see nothing of him. Into the shadow of a rock he
+had disappeared and thither she gazed with straining eyes, hoping to
+see again his straight strong figure.
+
+"Why, look down there at the dam," Mary said, whose eyes had been
+wandering from, point to point of the scene. "Isn't that him?"
+
+Janet's heart gave a quicker beat, then seemed to sink in her breast
+as staring downward she recognized the engineer. He had come out all
+at once from the shade cast by a wooden framework. He had with him the
+burdens he had lifted from the ground before the little detached stone
+house at the edge of the camp, and these, the cylinders, he placed on
+the surface of the concrete core at the spot where he stood. Then he
+knelt down, struck a match, lighted a cigar--as if any man in his
+senses would stop to smoke in such a situation!--and busied himself at
+some task over the cylinders.
+
+Only for an instant had he stood erect on the flat top of the dam.
+Apparently he had been unseen by the attackers, engaged in picking
+their footing: and now in his crouching position, retired from the
+upper edge of the dam's front as he was, it was very likely that he
+was wholly out of view of the band.
+
+At last Weir moved his cylinders forward towards this edge. Afterwards
+he straightened up and standing hands on hips, smoking his cigar, the
+tiny crimson glow of which rose and fell, he watched the party nearing
+the foot of the white gleaming wall, fifty feet below him.
+
+For Janet the sight was too much. His indifference to risk froze her;
+he appeared to be courting death; and she strove to open her lips to
+send down to him an imploring cry to draw back, but succeeded in
+uttering only a tremulous wail.
+
+"They'll shoot him," Mary was saying, "oh, they'll kill him!"
+
+A surge of terror swept Janet. Next thing she knew she was out of the
+car and running down the hillside among the stones and the stalks of
+sagebrush, frantic to reach him, to pull him out of view of the men
+beneath. Only a single one of them had to cast a glance upward and to
+raise his gun and fire, then he would die. He should not die! She
+should fling herself as a protection before him rather than that he
+should be slain!
+
+On a sudden a hand reached up from a rock and seized her arm, stopping
+her with a jerk. Then she was roughly pulled down beside it. The man
+was Madden, the sheriff.
+
+"What in hell are you doing?" he demanded harshly. "Have you gone
+crazy?"
+
+His grip was not relinquished.
+
+"But see him! Aren't you men going to help him? Are you going to let
+him be killed?"
+
+Madden forced her to her knees, so that she was sheltered by the
+outcrop of stone.
+
+"Any man who can smoke a cigar like that at such a time as this knows
+just what he's doing," was the answer. "Keep quiet and watch."
+
+"Oh, I don't want to see," she said. But she continued to look with
+fascinated eyes at the lone, calm figure on the dam.
+
+Presently Madden pushed his gun forward over the rock.
+
+"They've caught sight of him," he stated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE THUNDERBOLT
+
+
+The greater part of the number of bandits had stopped in a group a few
+yards from the base of the white dam core, though a few stragglers
+were some way behind. Among these Steele Weir made out the figure of
+one whom he recognized as a white man; he whom the guard from the
+spring had mentioned as directing the company; and when at a number of
+exclamations from Mexicans who perceived the engineer the man lifted
+his face, Weir saw he was Burkhardt.
+
+No more than this was needed to show whose the hand behind this
+treacherous conspiracy. Clear, too, it was that Burkhardt, determined
+that no mistake or abandonment of the operation should occur, had come
+to see it through in person. Weir could ask nothing better; he had one
+of the plotters caught in the act.
+
+Apparently orders had been to carry through the first part of the
+diabolical plan of destruction in silence, that of gaining control of
+the dam, for when two or three Mexicans flung up rifles to shoot at
+Weir a sharp word from another Mexican, seemingly their leader, had
+checked the volley and shouted to Burkhardt.
+
+The latter had stopped; he stared for a few seconds at the man on the
+white wall above and finally signaled with a wave of his arm.
+
+"Come down here," he ordered.
+
+But Weir made no move to obey. He continued to stand motionless,
+coolly regarding the party beneath. His eyes particularly considered
+two men who carried wooden boxes, square and stout, on their
+shoulders. At last he spoke.
+
+"What do you want here?"
+
+"Come down, then you'll learn," Burkhardt shouted up, making no effort
+to hide the enmity in his voice.
+
+Weir puffed at his cigar, removed it from his lips to glance at its
+glowing end, while the Mexicans stared up at him in silence, puzzled
+by this lone guard who carried no rifle, who did not flee away to
+spread an alarm and seek aid, and who so unexpectedly had appeared as
+if anticipating their visit.
+
+Murmurs broke out. Why were they not allowed to shoot him at once in
+the approved Mexican bandit fashion and proceed to their work? If
+he were not shot at once, he yet could escape for aid. The party
+had to ascend the hillside in order to mount to the top of the
+concrete work. Time would be required to place and fire their charges
+of dynamite--and they were eager to get at the loot in the buildings
+above.
+
+"Kill him," Burkhardt roared suddenly, jerking forth his revolver and
+blazing at the engineer.
+
+The bullet sang past Weir's head. He did not duck; indeed, kept his
+place calmly while the Mexicans were raising their guns, as if to show
+his supreme contempt for their power. But at the instant Burkhardt
+fired again and a dozen rifles blazed he sprang back and dropped flat,
+leaving the deadly missiles to speed harmlessly above the dam.
+
+Raising himself cautiously he seized the end of a fuse projecting from
+one of the canisters and held the crimson end of his cigar against it
+until a sputter of sparks showed that it had caught. From this fuse he
+turned to the one in the second can and repeated the operation.
+
+This was the essence of his plan of defense. With guns the defenders
+on the hillside would be outnumbered and probably killed in an attack.
+The information that the assailants were to steal up the canyon,
+however, was the key that would unlock a desperate situation, and his
+mind had grasped the mode and means of defeating the enemy.
+
+With the first shots quiet had returned. The night seemed for Weir as
+peaceful as ever, the earth bathed in moonlight, the camp at rest.
+Only before him there was the sputter of the two fuses, one at the
+right, one at the left, as the trains of fire burned towards the holes
+in the canisters. He watched these calculatingly. His cigar no longer
+of service had been cast aside.
+
+All at once he rose erect again. A few men were starting along the
+wall to climb the hillside, but the greater number were gathered about
+Burkhardt and the Mexican leader. Now Weir glanced at them and now at
+the fuses.
+
+"I warn you to leave this dam and camp, Burkhardt," he shouted, when a
+few seconds had passed. "Don't say I didn't give you warning."
+
+Every head jerked upward at this surprising reappearance and voice.
+They had supposed him fled, the men down there, and were having a last
+hasty conference, doubtless as to the wisdom of now first attacking
+the camp. A grim smile came on the engineer's face. Their astonishment
+was comic--or would have been at a moment less perilous and fraught
+with less grave consequences.
+
+An oath ripped from Burkhardt's lips. An angry curse it might have
+been at Madden that he had failed to arrest and hold the engineer
+according to plan. He gestured right and left, yelling something to
+the men around him. He himself began to run towards one end of the
+dam.
+
+Weir stooped, picked up one of the canisters, blew on the fuse now
+burned so near the hole. Some men perhaps at this instant would have
+quailed for their own safety and at the prospect of hurling death
+among others. For death this tin cylinder meant for those below. But
+there was no tremor in Steele Weir's arm or heart.
+
+He was the man of metal who had won the name "Cold Steel"--calm,
+implacable, of steel-like purpose. With such enemies he could hold no
+other communion than that which gave death. For such there was no
+mercy. By the same sort of law that they would execute let them
+suffer--the law of lawlessness and force. Destruction they would give,
+destruction let them gain.
+
+He straightened. He took a last look at the snapping, sparkling,
+smoldering fuse, then flung his burden full down upon the spot where
+the Mexicans were again pointing their guns at him. Swiftly picking up
+the second canister, while bullets whined by, he cast it down after
+the first. A glimpse of startled faces he had, of men attempting to
+scatter from before the huge missiles, then he flung himself full
+length upon the dam.
+
+Interminably time seemed to stretch itself out as lying there he
+listened, waited, sought to brace himself for the impending shock. A
+quick doubt assailed his mind. Had the charges failed.
+
+All at once the earth seemed rent by a roar that shook the very dam.
+Followed instantly a second volume of sound more terrific, more
+blasting in its quality, more dreadful in its power, deafening,
+stunning, as if the world had erupted.
+
+"Their dynamite!" Weir breathed to himself.
+
+His ear-drums appeared to be broken. His hat was gone. His body ached
+from the tremendous dispersion of air. But that he could still hear he
+discovered when through his shocked auditory nerves he distinguished,
+as if far off, faint booming echoes from the hills.
+
+He got to his knees, finally to his feet. Pressing his hands to his
+head he gazed slowly about. Stones and a rain of earth were still
+falling, as if from a meteoric bombardment. About him he perceived
+sections of woodwork shaken to pieces, collapsed.
+
+Stepping to the edge of the dam he peered downward. A vast hole showed
+in the earth before the wall though the wall itself was uninjured and
+only smeared with a layer of soil. Huge rocks lay where there had been
+none before, uprooted and flung aside by the explosion, dispersed by
+the gigantic blast. On the hillside half a dozen men were picking
+themselves up and struggling wildly to flee. Nearer, a few other forms
+lay in the moonlight mangled and still, or mangled, and writhing in
+pain. Of all the rest--nothing.
+
+Almost completely Burkhardt's predatory band had been blotted out.
+Weir's thunderbolt had struck down into its very heart, and it had
+vanished.
+
+As he turned and walked towards the end of the dam, he staggered a
+little. The sight had shaken even his iron nerve.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT
+
+
+In his runabout, with Sheriff Madden at his side, and followed by
+Atkinson and half a dozen men for guards in two other machines, Weir
+sped along the road to San Mateo. They carried with them Burkhardt,
+who had been found stunned and slightly injured, and two Mexican
+bandits who had been captured. Those of the party of attackers yet
+alive but seriously hurt were being treated at camp by Dr. Hosmer,
+while the young engineers, armed and eager, were scouring the mountain
+side for the few Mexicans who had got away.
+
+It seemed a miracle that Burkhardt had escaped death, but the
+explanation was found no doubt in the fact he had started from the
+spot where the canisters fell and so at the moment of explosion was
+outside the area of its full destruction. To Weir the matter went
+deeper than that. Providence appeared to have saved him for
+punishment, for the long term of imprisonment he deserved for his
+crimes.
+
+"I'd much rather have him alive than dead," Steele had remarked to
+Madden, when the man was brought up from the canyon a prisoner.
+
+The tremendous thunder-clap of sound from the camp had quickened the
+return of the superintendent and his men, already reached and warned
+by the doctor. More, it had startled even the drunken workmen so that
+when some one shouted that the dam had been blown up the debauch came
+to an immediate end, the house was deserted and the throng, incited by
+curiosity and wonder, went staggering and running for camp.
+
+The first of these had arrived and the rest were tailing behind for
+half a mile when Weir and his companions set out for town, the
+blinding headlights of the machines scattering on either side of the
+road the approaching workmen. It was not likely many would go back to
+the house when they were told at headquarters how narrowly destruction
+of the works had been averted and how their spree had been a move in
+the plot. Between shame at being-duped and drowsiness resulting from
+drink they would, after a look at the hole blown in the earth at the
+base of the dam, want to seek their bunk-houses.
+
+As they sped towards town Weir and Madden rapidly made their plans,
+for the sheriff having witnessed with his own eyes the enormity of the
+plotters' guilt was all for quick action.
+
+"These engineers of yours with us and the other men Meyers will bring
+down can be thrown as a guard around the jail," he stated. "I'll swear
+them all in as deputies. With Sorenson and Vorse locked up along with
+Burkhardt--and I'll throw Lucerio, the county attorney, in with them
+on the off chance he's an accomplice--there will be high feeling
+running in San Mateo. As quick as I can make arrangements, we'll take
+them to safe quarters elsewhere--to-night if possible, to-morrow at
+the latest, in fast machines. These men have friends, remember."
+
+"You've Burkhardt handcuffed; it might be well to gag him, too, for
+fear the crowd might make trouble if he yelled for help," Weir
+replied.
+
+"Yes, we'll do that, though I think we can rush him into the jail
+before anyone knows what's happening."
+
+On the outskirts of town therefore the cars stopped. When Burkhardt,
+who had recovered his senses and with them a knowledge of his plight,
+perceived the sheriff's intention his rage burst all bounds.
+
+"You fool, you muddle-headed blunderer!" he exclaimed, with a string
+of oaths. "Take these cuffs off! You'll lose your job for this trick.
+When I see Sorenson----"
+
+"When you see him, you'll see him; and that will be inside a cell,"
+was the cool rejoinder. "I didn't know you were a dynamiter and
+would-be murderer until to-night, but I watched you at work and saw
+you shoot twice at Weir."
+
+"You'll unlock these, I say, here and now!" And the raging voice went
+off in a further stream of biting curses. "Look at me; I'm Burkhardt.
+You're crazy to talk of throwing me in jail, with my influence
+and----"
+
+"Your influence be damned," was the imperturbable answer. "You'll have
+a long time in a penitentiary to see how much influence you have, if
+you don't swing first."
+
+Burkhardt struggled fiercely for a moment against the steel bands
+about his wrists and the men who held him.
+
+"No crook like this Weir shall ever send me behind bars, or any other
+man put me there. Wait till Sorenson and Vorse and Judge Gordon learn
+what you're trying! Wait till they find out you've double-crossed us
+for this engineer! Wait till Gordon turns me loose with a _habeas
+corpus_, you'll sweat blood for this night's work, Madden!"
+
+The sheriff shook out the red handkerchief with which he expected to
+bind the prisoner's mouth.
+
+"I'll wait for a long time if I wait for Gordon to issue the writ," he
+remarked. "Seeing that he's dead."
+
+"Dead! You're a liar, you sneaking cur; you can't bluff me. And when
+I'm loose, if I don't fill you full of lead it will be because----"
+
+But Burkhardt's explanation was never finished on that point, for
+Madden whipped the rolled handkerchief over his mouth and quickly
+knotted it behind, shutting off the flow of seething vituperative
+speech. If looks could slay, those he received from the prisoner's
+bloodshot maddened eyes would have dropped the sheriff in his tracks;
+as it was, they fell harmless against the law officer's person.
+
+"Things have changed sort of sudden, haven't they, Burkhardt?" Madden
+stated, sardonically. "Never can tell what's going to happen between
+supper and breakfast. Here I go out to serve a warrant on Weir, and
+instead I'm bringing you in for trying a low I.W.W. trick. Surprising
+cards a fellow sometimes gets on the draw." With which he went back to
+the other car.
+
+Counting on quickness for the safe delivery of his men in jail, Madden
+did not attempt to approach the court house by a side street. On the
+contrary he drove fast down the main way, with the other two cars
+following close, passing without pause through the crowd of Mexicans
+drawn forth in wonder at the booming report of the explosion that had
+sounded from the dam.
+
+One could see that excitement was at a high pitch. With the rumors
+that all day had been in circulation, with later vague tales of the
+great debauch proceeding at the old 'dobe house half way up the road
+to camp, with the thunder-clap that had burst from the base of the
+mountains coming on top of all, every man, woman and child had run to
+the main street, where those in the automobiles could see by wagging
+tongues and gesticulating hands that speculation was rife and
+curiosity afire.
+
+"The talk this evening when I set out for your camp was that I
+expected to bring you in and hang you," Madden said dryly, to the
+engineer. "Quite a crowd had come to town. Plain to see now that
+Burkhardt and his bunch had started the talk. I shouldn't be surprised
+if there had been trouble had I arrested and locked you up. There are
+a few bad Mexicans around these parts that would do anything for
+money, and it's evident from what's happened that Sorenson's gang was
+ready to go the limit. What I'm trying to figure out is where these
+fellows Burkhardt had with him up yonder came from."
+
+"I can tell you. From across the line. I've seen plenty just like them
+down there," Weir affirmed. "Look at their hats and clothes--but
+you'll be able to make them talk after a while. However, you won't
+find any of them speaking English. Offer one of them some money and a
+trip home and he'll give you the story quick enough, especially after
+you've thrown a scare into him. We can afford to let one go to get the
+facts."
+
+"You better keep out of sight after we have the men in the jail. Slip
+behind the jail to the rear of the yard, and when I've locked them up
+and told Atkinson what to do about keeping the people away from the
+building, I'll join you there."
+
+"I understand," Weir stated.
+
+"And we can slip off and grab Vorse if he's in his saloon and then
+Sorenson before any one knows what's happening."
+
+"That's right; don't want the game spoiled now. Here we are."
+
+The cars had arrived at the gate before the courthouse. Here, too,
+however, the crowd was densest, having gathered at the spot as if the
+roar of powder from the camp was an overture to Weir's arrest and
+appearance. It had proved a prelude to his appearance, at any rate.
+The crowd perceived him with Madden and it believed him a prisoner
+even if not handcuffed and marched with a pistol at his head.
+
+A profound silence at first greeted the party as it alighted. Madden,
+assisting Burkhardt to alight, pulled the man's broad-brimmed hat low
+over his eyes to conceal his face from the revealing moonlight. A
+short struggle again ensued, but Burkhardt finally yielded to the
+pressure exerted by his companion guards.
+
+A murmur of astonishment ran over the surrounding throng, each instant
+being augmented by the voices of others running to the place. Not only
+did it appear that the engineer was under arrest, but likewise
+others,--a handcuffed, gagged man and two sullen Mexicans, strangers
+to the community. Yet a number of the onlookers, possibly men with
+Vorse's or Sorenson's money in their pockets, shouted as the
+new-comers moved through the press:
+
+"Killer, murderer! Hang him, shoot him!" And more voices began to join
+in the cry.
+
+Clearly the intent was to stir up feeling in the crowd to a point
+where action against Weir would seem a spontaneous outbreak. Even
+women joined in the cry; curses followed; fists were shaken.
+
+"Open up the way," Madden ordered, as a surge of the crowd threatened
+to surround him and his party. In his hand, as if to emphasize his
+command, a six-shooter swung into view, sweeping to and fro and
+menacing the press of people.
+
+The frightened men directly before the party struggled to get out of
+line of the weapon, yielding suddenly a clear passage.
+
+"Quick! Around the courthouse and back to the jail," Madden exclaimed
+to those with him.
+
+Pushing forward from the moonlight into the shade cast by the
+cottonwoods, they dragged their prisoners past the first building
+towards the low stout stone structure at the rear, half-illuminated
+and half-concealed by the patches of light and shade falling from the
+trees.
+
+A minute later Madden whipped out his keys.
+
+"Two men remain here at the door and don't be afraid to show your
+rifles to that bunch," he said. "In with you, Burkhardt; there's a
+nice soft stone floor to sleep on. Keep those Mexican camp-burners
+covered, Atkinson, till I get the cells open. You, Weir, slip on back
+there in the shadow and wait for me."
+
+The engineer had taken but three steps into the gloom along the
+outside jail wall, glancing about to avoid any curious straggler of
+the crowd already hurrying around the court house towards the jail,
+when he heard a call. In the advance was a slim well-dressed Mexican,
+full in the moonlight and very important of bearing. The call was
+directed not at Weir but at Madden.
+
+"You got him all right, sheriff?" he said.
+
+"Yes. He came in with me," was the answer.
+
+"But who are these others?"
+
+"Step inside and I'll tell you, Lucerio."
+
+The county attorney joined the sheriff, peered inside the doorway and
+hesitated. It was dark within; no light showed except a patch of
+moonlight at the far side of the building that fell through a barred
+window.
+
+"Go right in," Madden exclaimed. And laying hand on the other's
+shoulder he forced him ahead. The door closed after the pair. Before
+the doorway there remained, however, the pair of young engineers,
+rifle in hand, whose threatening bearing and glistening gun-barrels
+were apparent even in the patchy light dropping through the boughs. At
+a distance of about ten feet off the crowd of people halted, staring
+eagerly at the jail building, showing their white teeth as they
+carried on low talk in Spanish and awaiting with impatience the return
+of Madden and Lucerio that they might flood them with questions.
+
+Weir remained to see no more, for the increasing crowd pushed out
+further and further on the flanks, a circumstance that would
+eventually result in his discovery. So slipping to the rear of the
+jail and keeping well in the shadows he gained the fence. This he
+leaped and, lighting a cigarette, examined his pistol, then proceeded
+to smoke calmly until Madden arrived.
+
+"Hurry; slip away," the latter said. "They wondered what the devil I
+dodged back here for and are coming, curious as cats."
+
+The two men glided away, keeping well in shadows until they gained the
+side street and thence passed to the main thoroughfare.
+
+"What if Sorenson and Vorse are somewhere in that crowd?" Madden
+asked. "They're likely to be, expecting your arrest."
+
+"Then we'll have to wait till they leave it. But I don't believe
+they're there. They won't want to show their hand even by being on the
+scene."
+
+"Probably they've found out Gordon is dead."
+
+"Probably. But on the other side, they suppose now that the dam has
+been destroyed and that I'm locked up," Weir said. "Still, I'll guess
+that if they've learned Pollock and Martinez and I were at Gordon's
+all the afternoon, and he committed suicide, they'll be worrying some
+just the same."
+
+Madden glanced at his companion.
+
+"I don't believe we'll bring Vorse in--alive," he said.
+
+"That's the way I want him, and Sorenson, too. I want to see them go
+up for life, but if not that then hanged. But a life term for both,
+along with Burkhardt, is my choice. I want them to suffer as my father
+suffered. Only worse. Dying's too easy for them. Let them have hell
+here for awhile before they get it on the other side. Let the iron
+bars and stone walls kill them. I hope they live for twenty years to
+gnaw out their hearts every day and every night behind steel doors.
+That wouldn't half pay what they owe. But if they finish in prison,
+knowing there's no hope, knowing I've put them there for what they did
+to my father and Jim Dent, knowing that all the money and cattle they
+stole had slipped through their fingers, that they've lost all they
+gained and more, that their curses and crimes are crushing their own
+heads, why, that will help. And Sorenson--Sorenson there every day
+knowing his son lies a helpless cripple, without the money that has
+been piled up for him! I couldn't invent a worse hell for him. And
+that's the hell he's going to have!"
+
+Though a man not easy to move, Madden at Weir's cold implacable
+expression of hatred shivered slightly. Sorenson and his accomplices
+would be lucky indeed if they died by the rope.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+VORSE
+
+
+Across the main street the two men walked, wearing their hats low and
+making no answer to shouted questions of those hurrying to the
+courthouse yard. Already the grounds about the court house and the
+street in front were jammed with eager, excited Mexicans, thrilled
+with an expectation of something to happen, though they knew not
+exactly what. The murderer, the killer, they have taken the killer,
+was the constant statement tossed from mouth to mouth.
+
+"But not the killer they think," Madden said, in a low aside to Weir
+as they moved ahead on their errand.
+
+The pair were now advancing toward the saloon, along the opposite side
+of the street where a slight shadow afforded them concealment. By the
+time they came opposite the building they had escaped altogether from
+the crowd, though looking thither over shoulder they could see the
+black press of people in the moonlight at the public building; and
+here the street was empty except for a few belated women and children
+running toward the assemblage.
+
+Madden's hand suddenly gripped the engineer's arm as they were about
+to step forth from the shadow to cross the street to the saloon.
+
+"There he is," the sheriff whispered.
+
+Vorse had pushed open the slatted door of his place and stepped
+outside. In the moonlight his figure and face were clearly visible:
+his thin whip-cord body and predatory face, and bald head as shiny and
+hard as a fish-scale. He wore no coat, while his vest hung unbuttoned
+and open as usual. About his waist was an ammunition belt carrying a
+holster, as if he were prepared for action.
+
+Thus he stood for a time, hands on hips, motionless, his cruel
+hatchet-like face directed towards the scene further along the street.
+Presently a man came running to him, Miguel, his bartender, who had
+been one of the two men serving out whiskey to the workmen at the old
+adobe house and who at the break-up of the spree had hastened back to
+town to report to his employer. Now, it seemed, he had fresher news to
+give.
+
+"Yes, it is the engineer, for a certainty," he exclaimed panting, as
+he stopped before Vorse. "The sheriff arrested him and he now lies in
+jail there. It is said he fought and tried to shoot Madden, but that
+the sheriff was too quick and shot the gun out of his hand. It is said
+also that the dam is blown into a million little stones, but men are
+riding there on horses to see for themselves. They will soon return.
+Anyway a fight there was up there undoubtedly, for Madden brought in
+not only the engineer but three other men, bound and handcuffed and
+struggling furiously, trying to strike and bite the crowd like mad
+dogs. From time to time the sheriff had to beat them on the heads with
+his pistol, especially the engineer, who is the worst. I did not see
+them, but those who did said their faces were streaming with blood."
+
+"All right. Go find José Molina and 'Silver' Leon."
+
+"Are they not up in the hills with their bands of sheep?"
+
+"No. They are here. Look around till you find them; then send them to
+me."
+
+"That means something lively to happen, eh?" Miguel said with a
+laugh.
+
+He did not wait, however, for an answer, but set off at once for the
+court house.
+
+"I hope Meyers shows up soon with more men," Madden said to Weir.
+"Those two sheepherders of Vorse's are a pair of snakes; he always
+hires that kind; and they probably have some fellows with them like
+themselves."
+
+"Meyers is on the way with twenty men or so by this time. They had to
+come in wagons, as we had the cars. Atkinson ought to be able to stand
+off the crowd with the half dozen boys he has until the others
+arrive."
+
+While they had conducted this brief exchange of opinions they had kept
+their gaze on the saloon-keeper, who continued to stand before his
+door. The cold and merciless character of the man was never more
+revealed than now as he waited for his hired assassins to come to
+receive orders. Possessing already a full knowledge of the plot, Weir
+and Madden were able to guess what culmination was now contemplated
+and measure the true depth of the conspirators' infamy. The sheriff
+especially boiled with inward wrath that they should expect to make
+him not only a dupe but a tool in their crime.
+
+"It's clear they never intended you should come to trial when
+arrested," he said to his companion.
+
+"Certainly not. That isn't the way they play the game. And I suppose
+Vorse there imagines the cards are all falling his way at this
+moment."
+
+"He's going in."
+
+"Good. Now then!"
+
+Weir struck off across the street, striding forward at a pace Madden
+found it difficult to keep. As they neared the door, Weir loosened the
+gun in his holster.
+
+In this action the sheriff imitated him and then changing his mind
+drew the weapon itself. Plain man that he was, he was an instinctive
+judge of character; he had encountered men of Vorse's type before,
+less shrewd but equally savage; their nature was to fight, not
+surrender; their way was to kill or be killed in the final issue. He
+anticipated no arrest.
+
+He felt no necessity, however, to express this view to the engineer,
+who had proved himself in the time he had been at San Mateo wholly
+competent to deal with any situation that arose. Moreover, while Vorse
+had had a reputation of being a quick shot in the past, he was
+confident Weir was his master.
+
+With a quiet movement the engineer pushed open the door and stepped
+into the saloon. Madden following him had allowed the slatted door to
+swing shut again and the sound of its hinges caused Vorse, who was
+just starting away from the bar, to turn about. In his hand was a tray
+holding a bottle of whiskey, a bottle of mineral water and glasses,
+which apparently he had just lifted up.
+
+For a space of ten seconds or so he remained unmoving, the tray in his
+hand and his eyes regarding the visitors fixedly. Behind him in the
+rear of the saloon a second man had sprung up from the table where he
+sat, but after that first startled action he, too, had not stirred.
+The man was Sorenson.
+
+With Madden at his side and with a grim smile on his lips Weir walked
+slowly towards Vorse. In his tread there was something of the quality
+of a tiger's, the light, deliberate, poised advance, the easy and
+dangerous movement of body, the effortless glide of a powerful animal
+ready to spring and strike. His hands swung idly at his sides, but
+that did not mean they would not be swift once they responded to the
+call of the brain that controlled them.
+
+"You gentlemen were just about to celebrate my downfall, I perceive,
+by pouring a libation," Weir said. "Don't let me interrupt. Only I
+must request you to conduct the proceedings there where you're
+standing, Vorse, instead of at the rear of the room: Madden and I wish
+a good view of the ceremony. If Mr. Sorenson will be so agreeable as
+to step forward, you may go ahead."
+
+Sorenson did not join Vorse, but instead he spoke.
+
+"Why haven't you locked up your prisoner, Madden?" he demanded
+harshly. "And you're letting him keep his gun. Don't you know enough
+to disarm a murderer and throw him into jail when you arrest him?"
+
+"I haven't arrested him yet," was the sheriff's answer.
+
+"Well, do it then. You have the warrant for the scoundrel. Perhaps you
+haven't heard he almost killed my boy Ed last night--and you're
+allowing him to walk around with you as if he were a bosom friend. Do
+your duty, or we'll get a sheriff who will."
+
+"That's why I'm here, to do my duty."
+
+"You didn't have to bring this man here to do it."
+
+"I decided to bring him, however."
+
+From Vorse had come not a word. Only his gleaming evil eyes continued
+to rest on the two men without wink or change. For him explanations
+were unnecessary; he had divined instantly that somewhere, somehow the
+plotters' plans had gone awry.
+
+"Did you know that Gordon is dead?" Weir asked, all at once.
+
+Vorse lowered the tray to the bar and ran the tip of his tongue over
+his lips.
+
+"No," said he, "we didn't know it."
+
+"He deeded his property over this evening and then swallowed poison,"
+the engineer stated. "He saw the game was up."
+
+"You can't make me believe your lies," came sneering from Sorenson.
+"And you shall pay, you and that girl, for every broken bone in my
+boy's body. I'll spend my last dollar for that if necessary. Madden,
+do your duty and lock him up."
+
+The sheriff said nothing, but lifted his gun a little. Vorse by a
+slight movement of his body had edged from the bar as if to gain
+freedom for action.
+
+"The game's up for you men too," Weir said. "You've murdered and
+robbed and swindled in this country long enough; I've got the proof
+and I'm going to remove you from this community. It's not I who will
+be arrested. You killed Jim Dent after cleaning him out at cards and
+then made my father believe he was guilty of the crime. All I fear is
+that the court will hang you instead of sending you up for life; that
+would be too good for you. I want your crooked souls to die a thousand
+deaths within stone walls before you die in body. The game's up, I
+say. I've Saurez' deposition and I've the man who was the boy looking
+in the back door there that day thirty years ago and saw you shoot
+Dent, and he'll go on the stand against you."
+
+A stillness so profound that one could hear the tiny insects hovering
+about the lamps succeeded this statement. If words had not been
+enough, Weir's cold, harsh face would have removed the men's last
+hope, for on it was not a single trace of relenting. A stone could
+have been no flintier.
+
+"Well?" Vorse inquired softly.
+
+His arched bony nose appeared thinner and more hawk-like. His lips
+were compressed in a white scornful smile, while his eyelids now
+drooped until but slits of light showed from the orbs.
+
+"And you may be interested to know Burkhardt and some of the Mexicans
+he hired are now locked up in jail; the rest, or nearly all, are
+dead," Weir continued, with slow distinctness. "Your little scheme to
+blow up the dam and burn the camp failed. We caught Burkhardt at the
+spot leading the gang. Your plot to make the workmen drunk and leave
+the dam unprotected worked well enough so far as that part was
+concerned, but a keg of powder dropped on your bunch of imported
+bandits ended that part of the show. And we have Burkhardt! You
+gentlemen are going to join him in the jail, where we shall give you
+all the care and attention you deserve."
+
+Vorse turned his head about towards Sorenson.
+
+"Do you hear?" he asked.
+
+"Madden, you've too much sense to believe all this trumped-up libel!"
+Sorenson exclaimed furiously. "About us, respected leaders of this
+town! Arrest the blackguard!"
+
+Even facing assured proof of his complicity and guilt, the cattleman
+still believed in the power of his wealth and influence, in his
+ability to browbeat opponents, to command the man he had elected to
+office, to dominate and ruthlessly crush by sheer will power all
+resistance, as he had done for years.
+
+"I take no orders from you," the sheriff replied.
+
+"Well, I suppose I can empty the till and lock the safe before going?"
+Vorse questioned.
+
+"No. Keep in front of the bar where you are," the sheriff commanded.
+
+"And have everything stolen."
+
+"Your bar-keeper will be back presently. He will look after things for
+you."
+
+"You say Burkhardt is locked up?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That will hurt his pride," Vorse laughed. "He always swore that no
+one should put him behind bars. He wouldn't have minded so much
+finishing in a gun-fight, but to serve a term in prison would surely
+go against the grain with Burk. Though I think with Sorenson----"
+
+Weir's eyes had never left the speaker. Through the other's
+inconsequential talk and apparently careless acceptance of the fact of
+arrest the engineer had noted the tense gathering of the man's body.
+
+"Put your hands up," he interrupted at this point.
+
+Vorse had uttered no following word after speaking Sorenson's name;
+his voice terminated abruptly. At the same instant his right hand flew
+to his holster and whipped out his gun. It was the advantageous time
+for which he had waited, for Madden's look which had been moving back
+and forth from Vorse to Sorenson so as to cover both had passed to the
+latter. And Weir's weapon was undrawn.
+
+But if Vorse drew fast, the engineer's motion was like a flash of
+light. His weapon leaped on a level with the other's breast. The
+report sounded a second before that of Vorse's and three before
+Madden's, who also had fired.
+
+Then, if ever, Steele Weir had displayed his amazing speed in beating
+an enemy to his gun, for Vorse had indeed been quick, keyed by a
+knowledge that for him this meant imprisonment or freedom, a slow
+death or liberty.
+
+For a minute he stood half crouching as he had been at the instant of
+shooting, his eyes glaring balefully at his enemy and the thin cruel
+smile on his lips, while the two men in front stood warily waiting
+with weapons extended. Then Vorse clutched at his breast, muttered
+thickly and toppled over full length on the floor.
+
+The sharp pungent smell of powder smoke mingled with the reek of
+liquor.
+
+"He's dead," Madden said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you hit?"
+
+"No. His bullet went past my hip; he never got his gun up."
+
+Madden glanced about towards the rear of the room. A command for
+Sorenson to stop broke from his lips. Next he fired. And Weir swinging
+his look that way saw Sorenson's form, untouched by the bullet,
+vanishing through the rear door into the night. Using the minute that
+the two men's surveillance had been lifted he had escaped.
+
+"Hard luck when we had him," Weir growled.
+
+"He can't get away."
+
+"I'm not so sure. And he's armed."
+
+"He'll strike for home to get his car."
+
+"Or to the office for money," Weir exclaimed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE FOURTH MAN
+
+
+A last look Steele Weir had at the dead man on the floor before he
+turned to go in search of Sorenson. Not so astute or crafty as Judge
+Gordon, nor so intelligent as Sorenson, nor so belligerent as
+Burkhardt, he had been as rapacious and infinitely more cool-minded
+than any of the three. If anything, he was the one of them all to
+proceed to a crime, whether fraud or murder, in sheer cold blood and
+by natural craving. No uneasy conscience would have ever disturbed his
+rest: no remorse or pity ever stirred in his breast. He was the human
+counterpart of a bird of prey.
+
+Well, he was dead now. Three of the quartette who had been joined by
+avarice and lawless actions were taken care of--Burkhardt a prisoner,
+Gordon dead by self-administered poison, Vorse by bullets. Almost did
+Steele Weir feel himself an embodiment of Fate, clipping the strands
+of these men's power and lives as with shears. Sorenson alone remained
+to be dealt with and his freedom should be short.
+
+Beckoning Madden, he went swiftly through the door where the cattleman
+had leaped into the shadows. Where the gloom ceased and the space
+behind the row of store buildings was clear in the moonlight, nothing
+was to be seen. Naturally the man had kept within black shade in his
+flight.
+
+When they reached the rear of the cattle company's office building,
+they peered in through its barred back windows, but all was dark
+inside the structure so far as they could determine. To all appearance
+Sorenson had not stopped here: it was quiet, gloomy, untenanted.
+
+"We'll have to try his home now," the sheriff stated. "If we don't
+find him there, we'll set the telephones going to warn all the ranches
+and towns around to be on the lookout and either to stop or report him
+if he shows up. He hasn't start enough to get away now."
+
+They hastened on along the line of buildings until they reached a side
+street. But when they had proceeded a short way, Weir stopped.
+
+"I'm not satisfied about the office," said he. "Suppose you go on to
+his house and I'll return for a look inside from the front. If you
+fail to find him join me at Martinez' office, where no one is likely
+to be around and we can then lay further plans."
+
+"That suits," Madden responded, and set off alone.
+
+Weir's alert brain had been turning over the possibilities of
+Sorenson's course. Rather by pursuing what would be the man's line of
+reasoning than by depending on chance, he had come to the quick
+decision to turn back once again to the office. Sorenson would so act
+as would best serve his immediate escape and that of the future.
+
+Would he expect the sheriff and the engineer to look for him to flee
+by the speediest means, an automobile, and to the natural avenue of
+escape, the railroad? Yes. Therefore on that expectation he would
+adopt another way to throw off pursuit. And perilous as a delay would
+be in getting away from San Mateo, yet he must risk the few minutes
+necessary to get money. For to fly with pockets empty meant eventual,
+certain capture. Money a fugitive from justice must possess above
+everything in order to possess wings; and no one would know that
+better than Sorenson.
+
+Though Madden and he had seen no light in the office building, the
+cattleman nevertheless might have been within. If he had been in the
+vault, he could safely have lighted a candle without their perceiving
+its beams; and though the safe was modern it probably had no time
+lock. Sorenson could unlock it with a few twirls of the combination,
+stuff his pockets with currency and negotiable paper to the amount of
+thousands and then slip away.
+
+Fortunately the moonlight was to Weir's advantage. He quickened his
+steps, passed round the corner into the main street and moved towards
+the building. For him the crowd at the court house at that moment had
+no interest; one person, and one person alone, commanded his
+thoughts.
+
+How correct had been his logic--logic not unmixed with intuition,
+perhaps--appeared when he was yet some fifty yards away from the door
+he sought. A tall bulky figure suddenly stepped forth from the
+building and instantly ran across the street and lost itself in the
+shifting, jostling crowd that was half-disclosed, half-concealed by
+the broken shadows of the moonlit trees.
+
+Steele Weir proceeded to a spot near the office and halted. His first
+impulse to rush after Sorenson had been promptly suppressed, as cooler
+judgment ruled. To seek his quarry in that throng would be labor
+wasted, while to reveal his identity would be to court a disastrous
+interference with the business at hand. From where he stood he should
+much better be able to see Sorenson when he did emerge, unless he
+chose to remain in the crowd or steal away at the rear of the court
+house yard, a chance Weir must take.
+
+Five minutes passed. The restless, talkative Mexicans continued to
+swarm and buzz with excitement, ceaselessly moving about, forming and
+reforming in groups, agitatedly repeating newer and wilder rumors
+concerning events. Despite Weir's intent watch for Sorenson, the
+engineer could not but observe the mob's manifestations, observe them
+with sardonic humor. For their ebullition of the present would be
+nothing to what it would be if they learned he stood across the
+street, uncaged, unfettered, free and armed, a "gun-man" loose instead
+of a "gun-man" in jail.
+
+All at once Weir noted out of the tail of his eye a slight stir among
+a number of horses standing with reins a-trail before a store a little
+way down the street. The horses were partly in the light, partly in
+the shadow, so that all he could see was that one or two of them had
+jerked aside quickly, then resumed their listless postures.
+
+He was about to withdraw his eyes when he saw a man swing upon the
+back of one of them and start off at an easy canter. Weir sprang
+towards the spot at a run. That big figure could only be Sorenson's,
+for no Mexican he had ever seen in San Mateo could match it. And the
+plan of escape showed the other's craft in an emergency; gradually
+working his way through the crowd he had at last gained the protective
+shadow of the building on that side of the street and slipped along in
+it until he reached the horses.
+
+Doubtless the man had conceived the plan at the instant he had stepped
+from his office, sweeping the street by one gauging look. With the
+whole town assembled at the court house, his departure was little
+likely to be noted by the Mexicans, while Madden and Weir would never
+suspect him of riding off on a horse, or suspect too late. Indeed, he
+rode at first as if in no great haste, but as he turned his mount
+into a narrow by-way, more a lane than a street that disappeared
+between two mud walls, Weir saw him strike his heels into the pony's
+flanks.
+
+But for the startled movement of the nearby horses when Sorenson
+took stirrup, Weir would not have looked that way. He might
+possibly have seen the horseman start off, but that is not certain.
+He unquestionably would have supposed him an ordinary rider if he
+had not noticed the man until he reached the mouth of the lane.
+
+Meantime the engineer had made his best speed to the line of waiting
+horses. Slowing to a walk so as not to scare them, though as he
+discovered on examination most of them looked too bony and spiritless
+for that, he approached and carefully inspected the bunch. He took his
+time in the selection: the more haste in choosing a mount might prove
+less speed in the end. He tightened the saddle-girths and ran a finger
+along the head straps of the bridle of the horse picked to judge their
+fit, receiving a snap from the pony's teeth, which gave him
+satisfaction. Not only was this animal a wiry, tough-looking little
+beast, but he had life.
+
+Up into the saddle Weir went, followed Sorenson's line to the lane,
+down which he swung. Coming out into the next street, he pursued it to
+an intersecting street, and there galloped for the edge of town
+without trying to guess the way taken by his enemy. Once he reached
+the open fields he would quickly get sight of the man racing away
+somewhere on the mesa.
+
+Evidently the quarry he pursued had not taken so direct a course as
+Weir, for when the latter at length came forth where he could have a
+wide view he perceived the horseman a quarter of a mile off and
+further east, galloping south. The engineer at once raced thither to
+gain the same road and turning into it made for Sorenson.
+
+Thus the two men sped away from San Mateo. The wire fences and the
+adobe houses of Mexicans owning little farms adjoining soon ceased.
+The wide mesa lay on either side. Though a quarter of a mile had
+separated the men when Weir first observed the other, the distance
+between had been increased while the engineer was gaining the road,
+until now the interval was almost twice as great.
+
+Weir guessed the fleeing man's plan. Instead of seeking the railroad
+for the present, he would disappear in the mountains, where with the
+assistance of some loyal employee, cowman or sheepherder, he would lie
+hid until the first fury of the hunt had subsided. Possibly his bold
+brain even conceived the idea of again returning to San Mateo some
+dark night soon and further looting the office, vigilance being
+relaxed.
+
+In any case, he would expect to remain safe from pursuit in a mountain
+fastness until either on horseback or by automobile he could work his
+way out of the country. With what he had unquestionably carried off he
+would not be a poor man. In some spot far away he could assume a new
+name, start in business and later be joined by his wife and crippled
+son.
+
+Alas, for those plans, arising like mushrooms on the ruins of his
+life! Behind him followed the same inexorable antagonist who so
+swiftly had brought everything crashing about his head. Possibly
+Sorenson once out of the town had failed to look back; possibly
+looking back he had been unable to distinguish against the blur of
+houses and trees the horseman galloping in the moonlight along the
+same road.
+
+But all at once when they were two miles away from San Mateo he
+discovered Weir, who had been gradually cutting down the space between
+until now again he was within a quarter of a mile of his quarry.
+Sorenson had been riding rapidly but not hard; he now beat his horse
+to a furious gallop,--a good pony, too, from its speed, showing that
+the banker as well as Weir had picked his mount with care.
+
+Weir did not urge his horse to a similar pace, only maintaining a fast
+steady gallop that kept the other in sight though the space between
+again widened. Apparently Sorenson realized the folly of attempting to
+outrun, his pursuer at once, for he soon dropped back into a regular,
+mile-eating gallop. Gradually in turn Weir crept up to his old
+position.
+
+To each the only sound was that of drumming hoof-beats. In front rode
+the fleeing man--dethroned leader and criminal and murderer. Behind
+relentlessly came his Nemesis, the son of the man whom he had deceived
+and damned to mental suffering. All about them as they flew along was
+the silent, moonlit, sage-covered mesa. At their right towered the
+misty, unchanging peaks, as if watching unmoved this strange race of
+two human beings. A strange race, in truth,--a race where vengeance
+rode.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE VICTOR
+
+
+Ten miles the two men had gone when Sorenson's horse began to fail.
+The rider's weight was proving too much for the sturdy little animal
+and though he strove to maintain his speed the strain told on lungs
+and legs. Weir had reduced the distance first to three hundred yards,
+then to two hundred, and at last but a hundred separated him from the
+man and horse ahead.
+
+The hard chase indeed was beginning to tell on his own mount. Flecks
+of foam flew from its lips; its neck was wet with sweat; the whistle
+of its breath was audible to the engineer at every stride. For as both
+men had realized that now the end could not be far off, they had
+pushed their horses to faster and faster galloping.
+
+On a sudden Sorenson swung his animal into a dim trail leading from
+the main road skirting the mountain range to the base of the mountains
+themselves. The first slopes were but a mile away, covered with a
+scattering growth of pinyon pines. Just in front, too, for which the
+trail seemed pointing, was a dark ravine filled with brush that rose
+to the denser timber above. This was the fugitive's goal. Once he
+could fling himself from the saddle and plunge into the undergrowth he
+would be safe from his pursuer.
+
+The two ponies struggled on with exhausted leaps. Weir had reduced the
+interval to seventy-five yards by the time half the distance was
+covered and to fifty as they drew near the mouth of the ravine. He
+measured his gain and the remaining two hundred yards or so with
+savage eyes, then drew his revolver. He desired to take Sorenson
+unharmed. But rather than that the man should escape he would kill
+him.
+
+Sorenson's horse stumbled, but a jerk of the reins saved him and kept
+him moving on. The engineer struck his own pony fiercely on the flank,
+which produced a tremendous effort in the striving beast that brought
+it within thirty paces or so of Sorenson. That, however, was the best
+it could do, labor as it would. Its knees were trembling at every
+stride, its head swinging heavily.
+
+Sorenson's horse suddenly went to its knees. But the man leaping clear
+took the ground on his feet and instantly set off at a run for the
+line of brush in the draw some seventy or eighty paces away. A last
+spurt Weir's pony made, bringing his rider to within thirty yards of
+the cattleman, who glancing over his shoulder halted, swung about,
+fired a shot and again started to run.
+
+The pony under Weir came to an abrupt stop, shaking. He was done,
+whether from exhaustion or the bullet the engineer did not wait to
+see. Flinging himself out the saddle he raced after his man, taking
+the rough trail leading up the slope in swift strides. On foot
+Sorenson was no match for him. But the latter had the start; he was
+now almost within reach of the thick screen of bushes; and he bent
+every energy to make the ambuscade.
+
+Still running, Weir flung up his gun and fired. Close the shot must
+have gone to Sorenson, so close as to inject into the man's mind
+recollection of his pursuer's accuracy and a fear of a bullet in his
+back, for when within twenty feet of the bushes he dropped behind a
+small bowlder, whence he fired twice at Weir but without striking his
+mark.
+
+Neither man after the furious ride and the concluding run on foot was
+fit for sure marksmanship. This Weir realized, so stopped where he was
+some forty feet off from Sorenson's stone in order to regain his
+breath and calm his nerves. Of the cattleman he could see nothing; the
+man crouched low out of sight, perhaps reloading his weapon, perhaps
+steeling himself for a dash across that small moonlit space that
+separated him from safety, or perhaps preparing for a quick upward
+spring and a fresh volley directed at his foe.
+
+It may be questioned if in his heart Sorenson was not almost disposed
+to fight the matter out. He was no coward; his original hatred for the
+engineer had by recent events been swelled to a diabolical desire to
+kill; and now even if he, Sorenson, succeeded in slipping away, his
+whereabouts would be known unless he destroyed the man. Safety
+demanded that he not only escape but escape without this witness.
+
+Weir had not sought cover. He stood upright, his revolver ready,
+trusting to have an advantage in his speed when it came to an exchange
+of shots. Then he began an advance, a slow noiseless circling advance
+that at the same time of taking him closer to his enemy brought him
+round on his flank.
+
+Sorenson's hand and pistol appeared and half his face while three
+shots rattled from his gun, two at the spot where Weir had been and
+one at him in his new position, which the hiding man had immediately
+located. The last shot ticked the engineer's sleeve. In return Weir
+fired twice, the first bullet striking the rock and ricocheting off
+with a loud whine, while the second struck the pistol from Sorenson's
+hand.
+
+Instantly Weir sprang forward.
+
+"Show yourself," he ordered. And the kneeling fugitive, disarmed,
+gripping his bleeding hand, sullenly arose to his feet. "You've led me
+a chase, but I have you at last," the engineer continued. "Now you're
+going back to San Mateo and jail. Walk towards the horses."
+
+Sorenson cast one bitter glance at the thicket in the ravine; by only
+the little matter of a few yards he had failed to gain liberty. For
+Weir his visage when he looked around again was never more hard,
+hostile, full of undying hatred. Though balked, he was not submissive,
+and was the kind who kept his animosity to the end. Then he started
+off towards the horses, his own which had staggered to its feet again
+and Weir's, both standing with hanging heads and heaving, quivering
+sides.
+
+All at once the cattleman halted and faced about.
+
+"Most men have a price, and I suppose you have yours," he said, with
+forced calmness. "I'm ready to pay it."
+
+"You're going to pay it," was the answer.
+
+"How much will you ask to let me go?"
+
+"If you offered me ten million, which you haven't got, I wouldn't
+accept it," Weir said, harshly. "There isn't enough money in the world
+to buy your liberty. You're going back to San Mateo, and from there to
+the penitentiary or to the gallows, one or the other."
+
+"It will be neither," Sorenson stated.
+
+"You're mistaken, but I shall not argue the matter with you. Keep
+walking towards the horses."
+
+Sorenson's lips became compressed. He glanced down at his bleeding
+hand, shook the blood from his fingers.
+
+"I stay here," said he.
+
+Weir went a step nearer and thrust his face forward, jaw set, eyes
+smoldering.
+
+"Go on, I say," he exclaimed.
+
+But the other did not retreat before him or indeed move at all. A
+sneer lifted his gray mustache.
+
+"You have a gun; you're a killer; here I am unarmed and in your
+power," he said. "You intend to take me in; I propose to stay here. If
+I go to San Mateo, it will be as a dead man. I'll see whether you have
+the nerve to shoot me down where I now stand. If you have, go to it.
+You can then take my body to town, but I'll not have paid the price
+you name and I'll have the satisfaction of knowing I beat you at the
+last--in that, at least. Your bragging will be empty. Start your
+shooting any time you please." The tone spoke complete contempt.
+
+Weir said nothing. The defiance, the supreme audacity of this
+assertion, coming so unexpectedly, surprised him and left him at a
+loss. He would not kill an unresisting man, even Sorenson, his worst
+enemy. Sorenson in his place probably would not have hesitated to do
+so, for he had no fine scruples in such matters; but for Steele Weir
+the thing was no more possible than striking a woman or a child.
+
+It was not a question of nerve, as the other had stated. It was a test
+of brutality and consciencelessness. To shoot a man while escaping is
+one thing; to kill him while a prisoner, however contemptuous and
+brazen, was another. But there are means other than bullets for
+handling obstinate prisoners.
+
+Weir shifted his weapon so as to grasp the barrel and have the butt
+free.
+
+"I'll leave your execution to the proper officials, if an execution
+is what you want," he said. "Now will you go?" he demanded,
+threateningly.
+
+His foe gazed at the clubbed pistol and turned as if to yield. Next
+instant he whirled, lunging at Weir and flinging his arms about his
+captor. An exultant exclamation slipped from his lips; his hot breath
+fell on the engineer's cheek; his eyes glared into those of the man
+his arms encircled. He had tricked Weir by his pretense of obstinacy,
+led him to weaken his guard and had him in his grasp.
+
+Weir braced himself to resist the man's effort to force him down.
+Strong arms the other had, now doubly strengthened by hate and a
+belief in victory. All the power of Sorenson's great body was exerted
+to lift him off his feet, crush him in a terrific bear-hug, put him on
+his back and render him helpless; and Weir in his turn was tensing his
+muscles and arching his frame with every ounce of his lean, iron-like
+frame.
+
+Thus they swayed and struggled in the moonlight, without witnesses. A
+sinister silent fight, marked only by their fierce breathing and
+fiercer heart-beats. The pistol had dropped from Steele Weir's hand;
+instead of attempting to break the other's hold he had yielded to it
+and pushing his own arms forward had clasped his hands behind
+Sorenson's back in the wrestler's true defense to such an attack.
+
+Once Sorenson almost had him on his knees, but by a quick powerful
+upthrust of his legs he regained his upright position. However, it had
+been a close shave for Weir, for he well knew that his opponent would
+use any tactics, fair or foul, to kill him if he once lay on his
+back.
+
+"You hound from hell!" Sorenson snarled. "You crippled my boy, and you
+shall die for that. You've ruined me in San Mateo, and you shall die
+for that. You jailed Burkhardt and poisoned Gordon and shot Vorse, and
+you shall die for that. I'm going to choke the life out of you, and
+grind your dead head into the dust, and then spit on you. That's how
+I treat snakes. Say your prayers, if you know any, for you'll never
+get another chance. Your friends won't recognize your remains when I'm
+done with you."
+
+Venomous and impassioned, all the hate in the man's heart flowed forth
+in a fuming stream. For hate and murderous desire was all that was
+left him in the wreck of life caused by the engineer. If he could no
+longer rule, he could at least destroy.
+
+Weir had made no response to the fierce imprecations. He was working
+his hands upward, straining his arms so as to reach Sorenson's head.
+
+"When the coyotes are gnawing your skull," Sorenson went on, raging,
+"when the worms are feeding on you----"
+
+The words died in a gurgle of pain. Weir's hands had closed about his
+temples, a finger sunk in each eye, forcing his head back. Sorenson
+shook himself frantically to break the torturing hold. His head went
+farther and farther back as if it seemed his neck would snap; his
+mouth opened to gasp, "Oh, God!" and all at once his hug slipped
+apart.
+
+Instantly Weir tripped him, falling on top. Reaching out like a flash
+he seized his pistol lying on the ground and brought it down on the
+head of his enemy, who momentarily blinded and suffering could not
+resist. Sorenson went limp. From the savage beast of a minute before
+he had been changed to a huge, motionless, sprawling figure, with face
+upturned to the moon.
+
+And on that face the victor of the life and death struggle could still
+behold, through the contorted lines stamped by pain, the man's brutal
+passion and fixed malevolence.
+
+Weir arose.
+
+"You felt the hound of hell's teeth," he muttered.
+
+With thongs from one of the saddles he bound Sorenson's hands, pulling
+the knots tight and hard. The prostrate man moaned, opened his eyes.
+Weir jerked him dazed and staggering to his feet.
+
+"Up into the saddle with you if you don't want another rap on the
+head," Steele ordered, bruskly. "And go straight this time. From now
+on I'll take you at your word and put a hole through your black heart
+if you try any more tricks."
+
+When his prisoner was mounted, he fastened his ankles together by
+another thong under the belly of the pony. Weir was taking no chances.
+Up into his own saddle then he swung himself.
+
+No exultant curses now came from his captive's lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+A FINAL CHALLENGE
+
+
+The hour was drawing near midnight when Weir and his prisoner entered
+the town. Most of the women and children of the crowd of Mexicans had
+gone to their homes, but men yet remained before the court house and
+in the street, discussing and arguing the exciting events of the
+night.
+
+In some mysterious manner knowledge that Burkhardt and not Weir was
+the prisoner in the jail, together with news of Judge Gordon's suicide
+and Vorse's death, had spread from mouth to mouth. Amazement and
+incredulity had been followed by an aroused feeling of anger, for to
+the Mexicans it appeared that the crushing blow dealt the leaders of
+the town was the arbitrary act of the man they believed a lawless
+gun-man. Were not Weir's foremen and engineers guarding the jail? Men
+who were strangers, not even citizens of the county?
+
+But though an undercurrent of feeling ran among the talking groups,
+gradually increasing as the time passed, yet was there no active
+desire on the part of all or a concerted movement to drive away the
+seeming invaders of the law. For any such attempt a strong leader was
+necessary. There was none: Madden frowned upon them, only saying as he
+moved about that he was executing the law; Sorenson, the dominating
+figure of the town, and Burkhardt's, Vorse's and Gordon's friend, was
+strangely absent.
+
+The determined guard about the jail was in itself a deterrent to mob
+action. Meyers had brought twenty or more men from camp, armed and
+alert, who with those already about the building constituted a force
+to make any crowd of Mexicans, however angry, think twice before
+seeking to rescue prisoners. But the wish and the spirit were not
+lacking. Employees of the plotters, men who had received favors from
+Sorenson or Vorse or Burkhardt, Mexicans of a naturally vicious and
+unruly temper, were all for rushing the jail. The great number of the
+people, however, peaceful and indolent, preferred to content
+themselves with satisfying their curiosity by talk instead of seeking
+a taste of blood. And so as a result of this divided opinion the
+hostility for Weir had not expressed itself in an effort to assail the
+keepers of the jail.
+
+When he was discovered to have returned to town, this angry feeling
+assumed a menacing form. He approached the court house by the side
+street, Sorenson riding at his side, for it was his plan to lodge his
+prisoner in the Jail with as much secrecy as possible. Nevertheless in
+this he was disappointed; men saw him arrive, assist his prisoner to
+alight and climb the board fence about the yard; and drawn by the
+expectation of new events the nearer groups hastened forward.
+
+Weir impelled his man towards the jail.
+
+"Stand back," he commanded the Mexicans.
+
+The latter at first stared in astonishment at beholding the pair, one
+of whom was San Mateo's foremost citizen, now sullenly advancing with
+wrists bound. Exclamations burst from their lips.
+
+At that a flash of hope filled Sorenson's breast.
+
+"To my rescue, friends!" he cried, beginning to struggle.
+
+Weir jerked him ahead fiercely and cast fiercer looks at the
+Mexicans.
+
+"This man is under arrest. And remember I can still shoot straight,"
+he warned.
+
+Towards him came Madden running, who in Weir's disappearance earlier
+in the night he had guessed a pursuit of the cattleman and had
+therefore returned to the jail. He placed himself at Sorenson's
+right.
+
+"Whoever tries to take Sorenson from the hands of the law does so at
+his own peril," he exclaimed.
+
+A few mocking shouts resulted. These were gradually increased until
+the Mexicans, now being joined by scores of others from the street,
+became a howling, cursing, hysterical mob, crying Sorenson and
+Burkhardt's innocence, calling down imprecations on the heads of the
+sheriff and the engineer, stirred by certain lawless spirits to wilder
+and wilder passion.
+
+Weir and Madden had not been standing still, for the crowd was not yet
+numerous enough at first or bold enough to attack. Moreover the two
+men held their pistols well in view. Forcing Sorenson ahead, driving
+apart those who blocked their way, they pushed across the yard until
+but a few paces from the jail.
+
+One Mexican, a ranch hand from one of Vorse's ranches, wearing a great
+high-peaked felt hat and chaps, insolently thrust himself before the
+trio, spitting at Weir's face and in Spanish begging companions to
+help him release Sorenson. His right hand was resting on his holster
+as if but awaiting an excuse to use his gun.
+
+"Get to one side," was Weir's harsh order.
+
+The man's answer was a string of foul curses. Like a panther the
+engineer leaped forward and struck the fellow on the side of his head
+with revolver barrel, dropping him where he stood.
+
+As the crowd remained suddenly mute, unmoving, their howls checked by
+this swift reprisal, Weir spoke to Madden:
+
+"Quick! To the door!"
+
+Each with an arm in Sorenson's, they made a run for the jail, passed
+through the line of armed guards and for the moment were safe. The
+sheriff lost no time in dragging the prisoner inside and when
+presently he stepped forth again, locking the door after him, he
+showed a relieved face.
+
+"I put irons on him, hands and feet," he informed Weir. "He's out of
+the way at any rate if we're in for a row."
+
+That was exactly what appeared in prospect. Only the rifles in the
+grip of the two dozen men about the jail kept the now thoroughly
+aroused mob from rushing forward. From yelling it had changed to low
+fierce murmurs that bespoke a more desperate mood.
+
+"We ought to move the men somewhere else," Steele Weir stated. "Pretty
+soon they'll go for arms and then we'll have real trouble."
+
+"I arranged while you were gone to transfer them to the county seat in
+the next county," Madden said. "Telephoned the sheriff; he's expecting
+them. To-morrow we can take them to Santa Fé, out of this part of the
+country till time for their trial. I placed the automobile your man
+brought Burkhardt in from the dam and another machine back in the
+alley; they are there now in the shadow."
+
+"Good. The quicker you take them, the better. They ought to be gagged
+when brought out. Get them here to the door; the men who are to drive
+should have the cars ready, engines going----"
+
+"That's fixed. Your superintendent will drive one car and one of the
+engineers the other; they can slip back there at once. Six more of the
+guards are to go with us."
+
+"All right. You know whom you want. Station them here at the door to
+rush the prisoners back the instant you're ready. Have them go round
+to the rear on the dark side of the jail; they should gain a good
+start before they're discovered."
+
+Madden called from the line Atkinson and the men whom he had chosen to
+accompany him on the night ride. A brief parley followed. Then he and
+two of the engineers went inside the jail, while the superintendent
+and one young fellow stole away in the shadows towards the spot where
+stood the cars.
+
+Meanwhile the throng had grown until it filled all the space about the
+rear of the court house and formed a mass of human bodies on which the
+checkered moonlight played reaching to within half a dozen paces of
+the jail. A shot rang out and a bullet struck the jail. It was like a
+match lighted near powder, that if allowed to burn would set off an
+explosion. One shot would lead to others from reckless spirits, to a
+volley and in the end to an onslaught.
+
+Perhaps that was the reasoning and the purpose of the man who had
+fired. In any case, it must not be repeated.
+
+Weir strode forward towards the crowd.
+
+"If that man, or any of you, want to shoot this out with me, let him
+show himself," he said, threateningly and swinging the muzzle of his
+weapon along the line of faces.
+
+A quick retreat on the part of those nearest marked the respect with
+which it was considered. Frantically they strove to push further back
+into the mob, clawing and elbowing.
+
+"If you try any more shots," he continued, speaking in Spanish as
+before, "those rifles will open fire." He paused to allow this
+information to have full effect. "Finally, if you attempt wrecking
+this jail, the three hundred workmen from the dam will march down to
+San Mateo and teach you proper observance of the law. If you're really
+looking for trouble, those three hundred men will give this town
+trouble that will be remembered for twenty years."
+
+Standing there in the moonlight between the two parties, between the
+thin line of sentinels about the jail and the dense mob in front,
+Steele Weir's action seemed the height of rashness. A rush of the
+Mexicans and he would be overwhelmed, a cowardly shot from somewhere
+in the rear and he might be killed. It was like inviting disaster.
+
+If, however, he recognized his danger, he gave no sign of it. By the
+power of his gun and sheer boldness he faced them, calm, fearless,
+masterful. His unexpected advance had surprised the Mexicans, left
+them confused and uncertain. Wild and sinister tales concerning his
+prowess magnified him in their eyes notwithstanding their animosity.
+Now they seemed to feel his iron will beating against their faces.
+
+During the pause that ensued Weir heard the jail door open. Madden was
+preparing to take his prisoners out.
+
+"I'm not seeking trouble, but I'm not avoiding it," the engineer
+proceeded, for this was the critical minute, and he sought to have all
+eyes focused upon him instead of upon the activity at his back. "The
+sheriff represents the law here in San Mateo, and I give you plain
+warning that every man who attempts violence to-night will be called
+upon to pay the account. By to-morrow the Governor may have soldiers
+stationed in your houses and in your streets, for the prisoners are
+now the prisoners of the state, arrested for stealing cattle----"
+
+That was a happy inspiration. Had Weir stated the whole category of
+Sorenson's and Burkhardt's crimes, including murder and dynamiting,
+he could not have struck so shrewdly as in naming the sin of
+cattle-stealing. For this was a cattle country and even the most
+ignorant Mexican grasped the significance of this charge.
+
+A visible stir answered the statement.
+
+"For stealing cattle from other men"--he did not trouble to mention
+the fact the crime had occurred thirty years previous--"and for that
+and other things Sheriff Madden has arrested them. Because they are
+rich, their guilt is all the worse. Perhaps they have taken cattle
+belonging to you, who knows? That may come out in their trial; if they
+have taken them, you shall have them back."
+
+From the rear of the grounds came the low sounds of automobile engines
+being started. Weir dared not look about to learn if Madden and his
+party were safely on their way thither. As for the Mexicans, the
+speaker's words had created a sensation. For men were there who owned
+small herds now feeding on the range, and from anger their minds
+yielded to sudden anxiety; each saw himself a possible sufferer from
+cattle depredations; and in the minds of these, at least, thought of
+loss supplanted thought of Sorenson and Burkhardt.
+
+"I helped Sheriff Madden arrest these men because they stole cattle,
+possibly some of your steers among them. Is that why you would like to
+lynch me, as I've heard you wanted to do?" he demanded, savagely.
+"Because I save your animals? Or is it because I shot that renegade
+Mexican whom Ed Sorenson hired to try and kill me? Ed Sorenson, yes.
+Sheriff Madden has the knowledge of it. Not only would Sorenson the
+father like to see me die because I know about his cattle-stealing,
+but Ed Sorenson, the son, hired that strange Mexican to shoot me from
+the dark because I stopped him from trying to steal a girl. Has Ed
+Sorenson left your daughters alone? I would save your daughters from
+his evil hands, as I would your cattle from his father's."
+
+A man all at once pushed forth from the crowd, wrathfully elbowing his
+way among neighbors. He was Naharo, the Mexican who had chatted once
+with Martinez in the latter's office.
+
+"It is true," he shouted, facing his countrymen. "I, Naharo, vow it
+the truth. For I saw this engineer take a young girl away from Ed
+Sorenson in the restaurant at Bowenville that the scoundrel intended
+to seduce. It is so, the truth; the engineer saved her. And are there
+not men among you"--his voice gained a savage, rasping note--"whose
+girls have been betrayed by the cattle-stealing Sorenson's son?"
+
+"Where is he--where is he now?" some one shouted, angrily. It might
+have been a father who stood in Naharo's case.
+
+"He lies crippled," Weir stated. "Last night he tried to steal yet
+another girl from San Mateo, and fleeing when overtaken was pitched
+from his car and crushed against a rock. He will steal no more
+daughters of San Mateo."
+
+Sensation on sensation. The crowd fairly hummed with new excitement
+resulting from these disclosures. Ed Sorenson's ways were known to
+most and the revelations seemed true to his character; and from
+believing the statements of the son to accepting those concerning the
+father was but a step. Cattle--girls! It began to look as if this
+engineer was in the right.
+
+With half of his attention Weir was harkening for the sound of
+starting automobiles. He had heard the scuffle of feet when the party
+slipped away from the jail door into the shadows. He had almost
+measured their passage to the alley. Ah, and now! There was a quick
+grind of gears, the pop of exhausts, then a dying of the sounds as the
+cars left the grounds.
+
+"You wished to kill me when you came here, but I had not then and have
+not now any intention of dying," he stated. "For I have work to
+do--and work for you if you want it. Instead of stealing your cattle
+and daughters as the Sorensons did, I'll give you jobs. We are about
+to begin digging canals and ditches on the mesa; I want men and
+teams--you and yours at good pay for a good day's work. Our quarrel of
+the past need not be remembered. I have never been your enemy, only
+the enemy of the four men who deceived and oppressed you. And now they
+are gone, two dead and two off to be tried for their crimes."
+
+Weir stood for a moment silent, while they as silently stared at him.
+
+"Ha, bueno, we shall work!" Naharo exclaimed.
+
+"We shall work and build your ditches, señor," cried a score of
+voices.
+
+Then the cry swelled to a noisy chorus. The crowd began to stir and
+disintegrate and break into groups, gesticulating, talking, discussing
+all the astonishing items of news given by the engineer, from the
+particulars of the Sorensons' depravity to announcement of renewed
+hire.
+
+"Señor, we hold you in greatest respect," said a man to Weir, smiling
+in friendly fashion.
+
+"And also your pistol," said a companion, laughing.
+
+"No one will need to wear pistols here in San Mateo from now on," was
+the answer. And he politely bade them good-night.
+
+His belief was sincere. San Mateo had gained an end of violence, and
+henceforth his weapon would gather dust. He had triumphed. Not only
+had he subdued his enemies, but he had won the good will of the
+people.
+
+One thing more alone remained to be won to bring him utter happiness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+THE RECLUSE
+
+
+As Weir drove his car homeward through the moonlight, he knew that at
+last the dark shadow upon his life had passed forever. Memories
+poignant and sad, memories bitter and stern, returned again and again
+to his mind; but these henceforth with time would soften and change.
+Of these his last visit to his father was most vivid, that day in
+spring that had proved their last together....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had been there with his father for a week, and now must go. He was
+chopping wood that morning, with his father looking on. Steele had
+cast a measuring glance at the pile of wood cut, then wiped the fine
+dew of perspiration from his brow, buried the ax blade in the
+chopping-log and seated himself upon a sawn block. A smile shaped
+itself upon his lips. Though he never chopped wood now except on these
+rare visits to his recluse father's cabin here on the forested
+mountain side, his tall lean figure was as tough and wiry as ever, his
+arm as tireless, his eye as true to cut the exact line. There was yet
+no softening of his fibers or fat on his ribs, and there would be
+neither if he had anything to say about it.
+
+From the little Idaho town in the valley below, which he viewed
+through the clearing before the cabin, his gaze came around to his
+father seated on the doorstep. Taciturn and brooding the latter had
+always been, but the pity and sorrow struck at the son's heart as he
+perceived what a mere shell of a man now sat there, gray-haired, bent,
+fleshless, consumed body and soul by the destroying acid of some dark
+secret. Even when a lad Steele Weir had sensed the mystery clouding
+his father's life. Like an evil spell it had condemned them to
+solitude here in the mountains, until Steele's youth at last rebelled
+and he had departed, hungry for schooling, for human society and for a
+wider field of action.
+
+What that secret might be he had for years not allowed himself to
+speculate. Unbidden at times the memory of certain revealing looks or
+acts of his father's floated into his mind:--a dread if not terror
+that on occasion dilated the elder man's eyes, and a steadfast driving
+of himself at work as if to obliterate painful and despairing
+thoughts, and an uneasy, furtive vigilance when forced to visit town.
+Once when a stranger, a short heavy-set bearded man, had unexpectedly
+appeared at the door, his father had leaped for the revolver hanging
+in its holster on the wall.
+
+On catching a second view of the chance visitor he had exclaimed, "Not
+Burkhardt after all!" With which he burst into a wild laugh, the
+shrill mirthless laugh of a man suddenly freed of a terrible fear.
+However, as he returned the gun-belt to its place, his hand shook so
+that he pawed all around the nail on which it was accustomed to hang.
+
+Steele Weir would never forget that moment of panic, his father's
+spring to the wall and following laugh--the only laugh he had
+heard from those lips; and though but twelve years old at the time
+he could not misread the episode. On another occasion he found his
+father kneeling at the grave under the giant pine beyond the
+cabin--the grave of the gentle mother of whom Steele had but dim
+recollections--and his father's hands were clasped, his head bowed.
+With an infinite yearning he had longed to creep forward and
+comfort him by his presence, by a clasp of the hand, but the
+recollection of his father's habitual chill reserve daunted him and
+he stole away.
+
+On his own life the mystery had left its gloomy impress. A solitary
+and joyless boyhood, overhung by he knew not what danger, haunted by a
+parent's lurking fear and anguish, had made him a silent, cold, ever
+watchful man, never entirely free from the expectation that his
+father's sealed past at some instant would open and confront him with
+the terrible facts. For that reason he felt that the success he had
+gained as an engineer, a success won by relentless toil and solid
+ability, rested on a quicksand. For that cause he had welcomed
+engineering projects full of danger and by his indifference to that
+danger gained his name "Cold Steel."
+
+Now on this day with his father he once again put the question he
+always asked on his visits, and with no more hope of a consenting
+reply than before.
+
+"I must be going to-morrow. Won't you come along with me this time,
+father? I want you to live with me, so that I can look after you and
+be with you. We can fix up a good cabin at the engineering camp.
+You're not so strong as you were; you could fall sick here and die and
+never a person know it. I doubt if you spend, making yourself
+comfortable, one dollar in ten of the money I send you. You would be
+interested in the building of this big irrigation project I'm to
+direct."
+
+His father appeared to shudder.
+
+"No, no," he muttered. "I've lived here and I'll die here."
+
+"That's what I'm afraid of," Steele responded. "Afraid you may become
+sick and die for lack of care."
+
+"No. I'll remain, my son."
+
+That was conclusive. It was the answer of not only thirty years of
+living at the spot, but of his secret dread. Steele saw once more the
+stark fear in his eyes, the fear of contact with men, of venturing out
+into the world, of precipitating fate.
+
+For a time his father plucked his white unkempt beard with unsteady
+hand.
+
+"Where's the place you're going this time?" he presently inquired,
+without real interest.
+
+"New Mexico."
+
+On the elder's face appeared suddenly a gray shadow as if the blood
+were ebbing from his heart.
+
+"Where in New Mexico?" he whispered.
+
+"The town of San Mateo."
+
+His father struggled to his feet. With one hand he clutched the
+doorframe for support. The skin of his cheeks had gone a sickly
+white.
+
+"San Mateo--San Mateo!" he gasped. "Not there, not there, Steele! Keep
+away, keep away, keep away! My God, not San Mateo--you!"
+
+He swayed as if about to fall full length, gesturing blindly before
+his face as if to sweep away the thought, while his son ran towards
+him.
+
+"Father, you're sick," Steele exclaimed, putting an arm about the
+other. And, in truth, the elder man seemed fainting, ready to
+collapse. "Come, let me help you in so you can lie down. I must bring
+a doctor."
+
+Steele almost carried him to the bed. On it his father sank, remaining
+with closed eyes and scarcely breathing.
+
+"No doctor; bring no doctor," he said painfully, at last. "I feel--I
+feel as if dying."
+
+"I must bring a doctor. And I have a flask of whiskey; let me pour you
+a little to revive your heart."
+
+The change the words wrought from passivity to action was startling.
+The elder Weir arose suddenly on elbow, glaring fiercely.
+
+"Whiskey, never! It brought me to this, it damned my life. If it had
+not been for whiskey----" Without finishing the words he fell back on
+the bed.
+
+The loathing, the hatred, the utter horror of his exclamation,
+banished from his son's mind further thought of using this stimulant.
+
+"But the doctor?" he inquired, gently.
+
+"No use, Steele. I've been the same as a dead man for days. Just
+ashes. I want to die; I want to lie by your mother there under the big
+pine. And maybe I'll have peace--peace."
+
+Steele took in his own the wasted hand hanging from the bed. He held
+it tight, with a feeling of infinite tragedy.
+
+"You'll be yourself again soon," he said comfortingly, though without
+faith in the assurance.
+
+His father's lips moved in a whisper.
+
+"No; my time is here at last," said he. "But don't go to San Mateo,
+Steele,--don't go, don't go. Oh, my God, spare me that!"
+
+"Would you have me break my word? I never have to any man, father. I
+accepted this offer and signed a contract. I'm morally bound; these
+men are depending on me. Were you ever at San Mateo? Was it something
+that happened there that makes you fearful to have me go? San Mateo is
+a thousand miles from here."
+
+The face before him became like the face of a corpse. For an instant
+Steele's heart went cold in the belief that his father had died under
+the effect of his declaration. But at last the eyelids raised, the
+eyes gazed at him. And all at once the features of the harsh visage
+seemed softened, changed, lightened by a dim illumination.
+
+"I see you now as you are, a man, stronger than I ever was," he
+murmured. "I lived in fear, but my fear was not for myself. Had I been
+alone, nothing would have mattered after your mother died. But my fear
+was for you--and of you. I was afraid your life would be blasted; I
+was in terror lest you should hate and despise me when you learned the
+truth. So I sought to conceal it."
+
+"You had no need to fear that."
+
+"I see it now. Tell me everything or nothing as you wish about your
+going to San Mateo to work; it will frighten me no longer."
+
+Steele briefly spoke of his new work there, of the magnitude of the
+project and the desire he had had that his father might be with him.
+
+"I'm proud of you," his father said. "God knows I have not been the
+parent I would or should have been."
+
+"It's enough for me if your heart's easy now."
+
+"I feel as if I were gaining peace at last and--and I must speak. In
+San Mateo--ah, Steele, you will hear of me there,--you may have to
+fight the damning influence of my name and past, but I know now you'll
+come through it. And all I pray for is that you can retain a little
+love for me despite everything."
+
+"Whatever it is I shall hear of my father, I should rather hear it
+from his lips than from strangers'."
+
+The hand in his closed spasmodically. For a long time nothing was
+said, and the only sound in the room was the ticking of the tin clock
+on the shelf busily measuring off the seconds of the old man's failing
+span. To Steele it was as if his father was slowly summoning the few
+remaining shreds of his fortitude to reveal the cancer of his past.
+
+"I'm a branded murderer," he said at last, gasping.
+
+"But you never killed a man out of mere wanton desire to slay," Steele
+responded firmly. "I too have killed men in fights in Mexico. That
+fact doesn't weight my mind."
+
+"In the line of your duty, in the line of your duty. But I was drunk.
+He was a friend. When I became sober, I saw him with a bullet hole in
+his head."
+
+"Do you remember nothing of shooting him?"
+
+"Nothing, nothing."
+
+"How do you know you killed him?" his son demanded with inexorable
+logic. "What is the proof?"
+
+A low groan escaped his father.
+
+"Men said I had killed him. But my own mind was blank."
+
+"Who were the men? Were they present at the time?"
+
+"They were four--Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon, Burkhardt."
+
+"Were you arrested and tried?"
+
+"No. They helped me to escape. Because of your mother, they said, and
+because they said they were my friends. But I never felt they were
+really friends. For they were always against new-comers and wanted to
+keep things in their own hands. You were only three or four years old
+at that time, Steele, so you wouldn't remember anything about matters
+there."
+
+"What were you doing at San Mateo, father?"
+
+Now that the hideous past at last stood uncovered the son was able to
+turn upon it his incisive mind; he would drag out and scrutinize every
+bone of the skeleton which had terrorized his father and shadowed his
+own life Facts faced are never so dreadful as fears unmaterialized.
+And more, he sought with all the love of a son for circumstances that
+would mitigate, excuse, or even justify his father's act.
+
+"I was ranching," was the low answer. "I had come to San Mateo two
+years before from the east, bringing you and your mother and
+considerable money. I bought a ranch and stocked it with cattle; I was
+doing well, in spite of the fact I was new to the country and the
+business. Also I was making friends, and I had been nominated for the
+legislature of the Territory to run against Gordon. But I had taken to
+drinking with the men I met, other cattlemen, because I fancied no
+harm in it. And then while in a drunken stupor I killed Jim Dent."
+
+"Had you quarreled with him?"
+
+"Never, never--till that moment I killed Jim. They said I quarreled
+with him then. But I remember nothing. Jim was my best friend; I would
+have trusted him with my life. Even now I can't make it seem real I
+shot him, though it must be true by those four witnesses."
+
+"What of your ranch? Your political nomination?"
+
+"I withdrew from the latter; that was one of the terms made by Gordon
+on which they were to help me escape instead of turning me over for
+prosecution. And my ranch and cattle, I had to deed them over to the
+four men too."
+
+"Then their friendship wasn't disinterested," Steele said quickly,
+with suspicion dawning on his face.
+
+"They weren't really friends, I knew that."
+
+"How were they to arrange your escape?"
+
+The senior Weir seemed to shudder at the question.
+
+"By bribing the sheriff and county attorney. I was then to leave the
+country at once, never showing my face again, or I should be arrested.
+I was still half dazed by whiskey and terror; I took your mother and
+you and fled this far, when my money gave out. So here I've remained
+ever since, for here I could hide and here was her grave."
+
+"What's the last thing you remember of the circumstance previous to
+learning Dent was dead?" he asked.
+
+"Ah, though I had been drinking I can remember clearly up to the time
+I stopped playing poker with Jim and the four men, for we were losing
+and I felt they were working a crooked deal on us somehow. I asked Jim
+to quit also, for though I hadn't lost much he was losing fast and
+playing recklessly. But he wouldn't drop out of the game, and when
+Vorse and Sorenson cursed me and said for me to mind my own business I
+went back to a table near the rear door and laid my head on my arms
+and went to sleep. When I was awake again, Vorse and Gordon were
+holding me up by their table and Jim was dead on the floor. I had come
+forward, they said, begun a big row with Dent and finally shot him."
+
+"Then the only witnesses were these four men who were gambling with
+him, who cursed you when you attempted to persuade him to drop his
+cards," Steele proceeded, "one of whom was your political adversary,
+men who were old-timers and opposed to new-comers, who pretended to be
+your friends but took your ranch and cattle. It begins to look to me
+as if they not only killed your friend Dent but double-crossed you in
+the bargain. Did you look in your gun afterwards?"
+
+"No. I was sick with the horror of the accusation, I tell you, Steele.
+I had no way to deny it; it seemed indeed as if I must have killed
+him. And from that day until this I've never had the courage of soul
+to reload my pistol, or even clean it. It hangs there on the wall with
+the very shells, two empty, the rest unfired, that it carried that day
+in San Mateo."
+
+Weir sprang up and crossed to the nail where hung the weapon. The
+latter he drew from the holster and broke open, so that the cartridges
+were ejected into his hand. For an instant he stared at them, but at
+length walked to the bed before which he extended his palm.
+
+"Look--look for yourself!" he exclaimed hoarsely. "You never killed
+Jim Dent; drunk or sober, you never killed any one. You're not a
+murderer. You're the innocent victim of those four infamous
+scoundrels; they deceived you, they ruined your life; and their
+damnable fraud not only killed my mother in her youth, as I guess, by
+grief and despair, but has brought you now to your death too."
+
+His father had raised himself on an arm to gaze incredulously at the
+six unfired cartridges lying in Weir's palm. Then all at once his
+bearded lips trembled and a great light of joy flashed upon his face.
+
+"Innocent--innocent!" he whispered. "Steele, my son,--Helen, my wife!
+No stain on my soul!"
+
+As he sank back Steele's arms caught him. He did not speak again, but
+his eyes rested radiantly on his boy's before they glazed in death.
+Fear had passed from them, forever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+UNDER THE MOON
+
+
+Lights still were burning at headquarters when Steele Weir slowly
+drove his runabout up the hillside slope to the dam camp. The men who
+had acted as guards about the jail, except those who went with Madden,
+were somewhere on the road behind him, returning home in the wagons. A
+reaction of mind and body had set in for Weir; after the previous
+night's loss of sleep and prolonged exertions, after the swift
+succession of dramatic events, after the tremendous call that had been
+made upon his brain power, nervous force and will, he experienced a
+strange unrest of spirit. His triumph seemed yet incomplete, somehow
+unsatisfying.
+
+It was as he approached the camp that he saw a slender girlish figure
+sitting on a rock in the moonlight. He swung his car off the road
+beside the spot where Janet Hosmer sat.
+
+"What, you are still awake?" he asked, with a smile.
+
+"Could I sleep while not knowing what was happening or what danger you
+might be in?" she returned. "Mr. Pollock said we must not think of
+returning home until quiet was restored in San Mateo. One of the
+engineer's houses was given to us by Mr. Meyers before he left, where
+Mary and I could sleep. But I could not close my eyes. So much had
+happened, so much was yet going on! So I came out here to be alone and
+to think and watch."
+
+"And your father?"
+
+"He's attending the wounded Mexicans in the store."
+
+Steel alighted and tossing his hat upon the car seat gazed out over
+the mesa, misty in the moonlight.
+
+"There will be no more trouble," said he. "Sorenson and Burkhardt are
+Madden's prisoners, and on their way to a place of safe-keeping in
+another county. Vorse is dead. The people in town have a fairly good
+understanding of matters now, I think."
+
+"How in the world did such a change of opinion occur?" Janet
+exclaimed.
+
+"I had a little talk with the crowd and made explanations. The feeling
+for me was almost friendly when I left; what enmity remains will soon
+die out, I'm sure."
+
+Though unaware from Steele Weir's laconic statement of what had
+actually occurred, the girl divined that his words concealed vastly
+more than their surface purport. With the general hostility against
+the engineer that had existed, for him to swing the community to his
+side meant a dramatic moment and a remarkable moral conquest.
+
+"Your friends have always known you would win," she said, smiling up
+at him.
+
+He seated himself on the rock beside her.
+
+"It's but a short time ago, Janet, that I had no friends, or so
+few they could be counted on the fingers of one hand. Business
+acquaintances, yes. Professional companions, yes. Men who perhaps
+respected my ability as an engineer, yes. But real friends, scarcely
+one. And now I think I have gained some, which is the greatest
+satisfaction I have from all that has happened. After years the
+pendulum has swung to my side. Do you know the hour my luck changed?"
+
+Janet shook her head wonderingly.
+
+"No, I can't even guess," said she.
+
+"Well, it was that afternoon, and that moment, I found you sitting in
+your stalled car in the creek down there. That was the beginning. From
+that time things began to run in my favor and they haven't ceased to
+do so for a moment since, I now see looking back over events. You
+brought good luck to me that day in your car."
+
+"What an extraordinary idea! Then at bottom you're superstitious,"
+Janet replied. "I shall have to give you a new name; I must no longer
+call you 'Cold Steel.'"
+
+"I really never liked that name," Weir said quickly. "Perhaps I was
+cold steel once, but I have changed along with everything else. And
+you're responsible for that too."
+
+Janet leaned forward and looked into his eyes.
+
+"You were never truly harsh to any one except those who deserved it,"
+she said. "I know! You would never have been so quick to help Mary
+Johnson or me, or others who needed help, if your heart was not always
+generous and sympathetic. Only against evil were you as steel, and in
+moments requiring supreme courage and sacrifice. And that's how you
+gained the name before you ever came here."
+
+"Anyway I've changed," said he. "I'm out from under the cloud which I
+felt always hung above me. As I say, you brought me good luck that
+day--and I see clearly that I shall continue to be superstitious."
+
+"Why, all occasion for that is past now."
+
+"No," said Steele Weir. "No, less than ever. For I'm certain you hold
+my good fortune in your hand yet, and will continue to hold it. And
+that means----"
+
+He paused, regarding her so intensely that the blood beat up into her
+face. There was no mistaking that look and it thrilled her to the
+soul.
+
+"Yes?" she managed to say.
+
+"It means my happiness, now and for all time to come," he went on.
+"See, I shall have accomplished what I set out to do and what in
+justice had to be done, bringing these men to punishment--to
+punishment in one form or another. I shall have given my employer, the
+company, service worthy of the hire. I shall have rid you and San
+Mateo of an unscrupulous parasite in the person of Ed Sorenson, though
+my persecution of him now shall stop and I shall leave him enough out
+of the property recovered from his father to live in comfort somewhere
+with his mother.
+
+"Mr. Pollock states I shall have no trouble in getting legal title and
+possession of most of the wealth of these four men,--I and any
+relatives of the dead Jim Dent who can be found. For thirty years'
+accumulated interest charges owing me will swallow up all the men's
+properties. That, however, is only a material victory. I shall have
+relieved Johnson of fear of financial constraint; and saved his
+daughter from a serious mistake. I shall have started Martinez on the
+road to success--and I should not be surprised if he prospered, became
+the leading attorney in this county, was elected judge and so on.
+
+"In a way, too, I shall have helped to remove the oppressive weight of
+these men, Sorenson, Burkhardt, Judge Gordon and Vorse, with their
+sinister influence, from this community and region. They have always
+held the natives in more or less open subjection, financial,
+political, and moral. There should be a freer air in San Mateo
+henceforth. The people will have a chance to grow. They no longer will
+feel the threat of brutal masters always over them; and with the
+completion of the irrigation project and the infusion of new settlers
+they will become better citizens.
+
+"I see all this," he concluded. "It pleases me; it gives me cause for
+satisfaction. But it doesn't give me the happiness I want, or the
+love. That is alone in your hands to bestow."
+
+Janet felt herself trembling; she could not speak.
+
+"I think I felt the stirring of love from the moment I saw you there
+at the ford," he exclaimed. "Last night when I knew that wretch had
+carried you off to the mountains, I could have torn him limb from
+limb. That was my love speaking, Janet. If I should have to go through
+life without you--oh, the thought is too bitter to dwell on!--then I
+should think life not worth living. But I have imagined that you might
+have for me a little----"
+
+Janet swiftly clasped his hand with her own.
+
+"I love you," she cried softly. "I was sitting here when you came
+because I loved you. If I am necessary to your happiness, you also are
+necessary to mine. I honor you for what you have done and love you for
+what you are, a strong true heart."
+
+"Ah, Janet, you give me the greatest joy in the world," he whispered.
+"Love--that is more than all."
+
+His arms drew her to his breast. Her lips went to his in consecration
+of that love. Their hearts beat the rapture of that love.
+
+Over the silent peaceful mountains the moon spread its effulgent
+light. Over the mesa that was no more to know the fierce sound of
+strife. Over the town, at last free of its avaricious masters, free of
+the savage spirit of an outlaw time. Over the Burntwood River flowing
+in a shimmering band to the horizon. Over the camp where centered so
+many men's plans and labors. And over the lovers, chief of all, that
+light fell as in a silvery halo.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30037 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30037 ***</div>
+
+<h1>IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS</h1>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;margin-bottom:10px;'>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<p class='cg'>The Princess of Forge<br />
+The Isle of Strife<br />
+The Incorrigible Dukane<br />
+The Lady of Mystery House<br />
+The Invisible Enemy<br />
+In the Shadow of the Hills</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:2.0em;margin-bottom:40px;'>IN THE<br />SHADOW OF THE HILLS</p>
+<p class='tp' >BY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:10px;'>GEORGE C. SHEDD</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:smaller;margin-bottom:160px;'>AUTHOR OF<br />&ldquo;THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE,&rdquo; ETC.</p>
+<p class='tp' >NEW YORK</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;'>THE MACAULAY COMPANY</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-variant:small-caps;'>Copyright, 1919,<br />By THE MACAULAY COMPANY</p>
+<hr class='p10' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:smaller;'>COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE FRANK A. MUNSEY CO.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'><span style='font-size:0.8em'>CHAPTER</span></td>
+ <td />
+ <td valign='top' align='right'><span style='font-size:0.8em'>PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>I</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In a Hostile Country</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I_IN_A_HOSTILE_COUNTRY'>11</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>II</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Comedy&ndash;&ndash;And Something Else</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II_A_COMEDYAND_SOMETHING_ELSE'>23</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>III</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Enemy&rsquo;s Spawn</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III_THE_ENEMYS_SPAWN'>34</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Secret Conference</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV_A_SECRET_CONFERENCE'>42</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>V</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Shot in the Dark</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V_A_SHOT_IN_THE_DARK'>53</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Janet Hosmer</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI_JANET_HOSMER'>64</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In the Coil</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII_IN_THE_COIL'>75</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Gathering Storm</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII_THE_GATHERING_STORM'>83</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>An Unexpected Ally</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX_AN_UNEXPECTED_ALLY'>91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>X</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>By Right of Possession</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_BY_RIGHT_OF_POSSESSION'>99</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Janet and Mary</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI_JANET_AND_MARY'>107</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Plot</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII_THE_PLOT'>116</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Current of Events</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CURRENT_OF_EVENTS'>121</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Old Saurez&rsquo; Deposition</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV_OLD_SAUREZ_DEPOSITION'>135</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Mask Dropped</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XV_THE_MASK_DROPPED'>145</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Weir Takes up the Hunt</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVI_WEIR_TAKES_UP_THE_HUNT'>158</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Earth&rsquo;s Retribution</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVII_EARTHS_RETRIBUTION'>167</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In the Night Watches</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII_IN_THE_NIGHT_WATCHES'>177</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Queer Paper</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIX_A_QUEER_PAPER'>189</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Anxieties</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XX_ANXIETIES'>197</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Weak Link</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXI_THE_WEAK_LINK'>209</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>An Old Adobe House</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXII_AN_OLD_ADOBE_HOUSE'>219</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>With Fangs Bared</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIII_WITH_FANGS_BARED'>226</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXIV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Alarm</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIV_THE_ALARM'>238</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>No Quarter</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXV_NO_QUARTER'>248</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXVI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Thunderbolt</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_THUNDERBOLT'>256</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXVII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Weir Strikes While the Iron Is Hot</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVII_WEIR_STRIKES_WHILE_THE_IRON_IS_HOT'>261</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXVIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Vorse</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVIII_VORSE'>270</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXIX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Fourth Man</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIX_THE_FOURTH_MAN'>279</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Victor</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXX_THE_VICTOR'>286</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXXI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Final Challenge</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXXI_A_FINAL_CHALLENGE'>294</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXXII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Recluse</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXXII_THE_RECLUSE'>304</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXXIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Under the Moon</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXXIII_UNDER_THE_MOON'>314</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.6em;'>IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span></div>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.4em;'>IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS</p>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I_IN_A_HOSTILE_COUNTRY' id='CHAPTER_I_IN_A_HOSTILE_COUNTRY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<h3>IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Eastward out of the Torquilla Range the Burntwood
+River emerged from a gorge, flowing swift and turbulent
+during the spring months, shallow and murmurous
+the rest of the year, to pass through a basin formed
+by low mountains and break forth at last from a canyon
+and wind away over the mesa. In the canyon was
+being erected the huge reservoir dam which was in the
+future to store water for irrigating the broad acres
+spreading from its base.</p>
+<p>The construction camp rested on one of the hillsides
+above the dam. And here one summer afternoon a man
+stepped forth from the long low tar-papered shack that
+served as headquarters, directing his gaze down the road
+across the mesa at a departing automobile. He was
+Steele Weir, the new chief, a tall, strong, tanned man of
+thirty-five, with lean smooth-shaven face, a straight
+heavy nose, mouth that by habit was set in grim lines,
+and heavy brows under which ruled cold, level, insistent,
+gray eyes. He had come suddenly, unexpectedly, returning
+with Magney, the engineer in charge, when the
+latter had been summoned east for a conference with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+the company&rsquo;s directors. He had replaced Magney,
+who was now whirling away to the nearest railway
+point, Bowenville, thirty-five miles distant.</p>
+<p>He thoughtfully watched the car, a black spot in a
+haze of dust, speeding towards the New Mexican town
+of San Mateo, on the Burntwood River two miles below
+camp, its cluster of brown adobe houses showing indistinctly
+through the cottonwoods that embowered the
+place. For Magney he felt a certain amount of sympathy,
+for the engineer was leaving with a recognition
+of defeat; he was a likeable man, as Steele Weir had
+discovered during their brief acquaintance, a good theoretical
+engineer, but lacking in the prime quality of a
+successful chief&ndash;&ndash;fighting spirit and an indomitable will.</p>
+<p>Under Magney the work of construction had been inaugurated
+the previous summer, but progress had not
+been as rapid as desired; there had been delays, labor
+difficulties, local opposition during the months since;
+and Weir had been chosen to succeed Magney. In his
+profession Weir had a reputation, built on relentless toil
+and sound ideas and daring achievements&ndash;&ndash;a reputation
+enhanced by a character of mystery, for the man was
+unmarried, reserved, without intimates or even friends,
+locking his lips about his life, and welcoming and executing
+with grim indifference to risk engineering commissions
+of extreme hazard, on which account he had acquired
+the soubriquet of &ldquo;Cold Steel&rdquo; Weir.</p>
+<p>Who first bestowed upon Weir that name is not
+known. But it was not misapplied. Cold steel he had
+proved himself to be a score of times in critical moments
+when other men would have broken: in pushing bridges
+over mountain chasms, in mine disasters, in strikes, in
+almost hopeless fights against bandits in Mexico. And
+it was this ability to handle difficulties that had brought
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span>
+about the decision of the directors of the company to
+put him in charge, as the man best qualified, at San
+Mateo, where the situation was unsatisfactory, costly,
+baffling.</p>
+<p>Since his arrival a week before he had been consulting
+with Magney, studying maps and blue-prints, examining
+the work and analyzing general conditions. What
+had been accomplished had been well done; he had no
+criticism to offer on that score. It was the delay; the
+work was considerably behind schedule, which of course
+meant excessive cost; and this had undermined the spirit
+of the enterprise. In a dozen places, in a dozen ways,
+Magney, his predecessor, had been hampered, checked,
+defeated&ndash;&ndash;and the main contributing cause was poor
+workmen, inefficient work. On that sore Weir&rsquo;s skillful
+finger fell at once.</p>
+<p>Standing there before the low office building he
+watched Magney depart. He, Steele Weir, had now
+taken over full charge of the camp and assumed full responsibility
+for the project&rsquo;s failure or success. His eye
+passed beyond the distant automobile to the town of
+San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;a new town for him, but a town like many
+he had seen in the southwest and in Mexico. And aside
+from its connection with the construction work, it held
+a fascinating interest, a profound interest for the man,
+the interest that any spot would which has at a distance
+cast a black and sinister shadow over one&rsquo;s life. San
+Mateo&ndash;&ndash;the name lay like a smoldering coal in his
+breast!</p>
+<p>At length he turned and strode down the hillside to
+the dam site in the canyon. The time had come to shut
+his hand about the work and let his hold be felt. He located
+the superintendent directing the pouring of concrete
+in the frames of the dam core, Atkinson, a man
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+of fifty with a stubby gray mustache, a wind-bitten face
+and a tall angular frame. When Weir joined him he
+was observing with speculative eyes the indolent movements
+of a group of Mexican laborers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those <i>hombres</i> don&rsquo;t appear to be breaking any
+speed records, I see,&rdquo; Weir remarked, quietly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Humph,&rdquo; Atkinson grunted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do they think this is? A rest cure?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The superintendent&rsquo;s silence suddenly gave way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ought to land on &rsquo;em with an ax-handle and put
+the fear of God in their lazy souls,&rdquo; he exclaimed, bitterly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, am I hearing right?&rdquo; Atkinson swung fully
+about to stare at the new chief. Then he went on,
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;d quit to a man if made to do a man&rsquo;s work; I
+supposed that Magney had told you that. A dozen
+times I&rsquo;ve been ready to throw up my job from self-respect;
+I&rsquo;m ashamed to boss work where men can loaf
+and I must keep my tongue between my teeth. I was
+considering just now the matter of leaving.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No need, Atkinson. From this time these men will
+work or get their dismissal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other pushed his hat atilt and rubbed his head
+in surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What about that &lsquo;company policy&rsquo; of hiring nothing
+but local labor to keep the community friendly which
+Magney was always kicking about?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;That
+was what made him sorer than anything else, and beat
+him. He said the directors had tied his hands by promising
+that no workmen should be imported. If they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+promised that, they sure bunkoed themselves. Friendly,
+huh.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The people haven&rsquo;t been friendly, eh?&rdquo; Weir said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does it look like it when these Mexicans won&rsquo;t work
+enough to earn their salt? They openly boast that we
+dare neither make them work nor fire them. They say
+Sorenson and his bunch will pull every man off the works
+if we lift a finger; and they all know about that fool
+promise of the directors. Friendly? Just about as
+friendly as a bunch of wildcats. This whole section,
+white men and Mexicans, are putting a knife into this
+project whenever they can. Do you think they want
+all that mesa fenced up and farmed? This is a range
+country; they propose to keep it range; they don&rsquo;t want
+any more people coming here&ndash;&ndash;farmers, store-keepers,
+and white people generally.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s always the case in a range country before it&rsquo;s
+opened up,&rdquo; Weir said. &ldquo;But they have to swallow the
+pill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me tell you something; they don&rsquo;t intend to
+swallow it here. They figure on keeping this county
+just as it is, for only themselves and their cattle and
+woolies, and everybody else keep out. The few big
+sheep and cattle men, white and Mex, have their minds
+made up to that, and they&rsquo;re the only ones who count;
+all the rest are poor Mexicans with nothing but fleas,
+children, goats and votes to keep Sorenson and his gang
+in control. They&rsquo;ve set out to bust this company, or
+tire it out till it throws up the sponge. They&rsquo;ve spiked
+Magney, and they&rsquo;ll try to spike you next, and every
+manager who comes. That&rsquo;s plain talk I&rsquo;m giving you,
+Mr. Weir, but it&rsquo;s fact; and if it doesn&rsquo;t sound nice to
+your ears, you can have my resignation any minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been hoping to hear it. From now on drive this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+crowd of coffee-colored loafers. Put the lash on their
+backs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A gleam of unholy joy shone in Atkinson&rsquo;s eyes as
+he heard Weir&rsquo;s words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right; that goes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m warning
+you that they&rsquo;ll quit. You&rsquo;ll see &rsquo;em stringing out of
+camp for home to-night, and those who hang out till
+to-morrow will leave then for sure. By to-morrow night
+the dam will be as quiet as a church week-days. They&rsquo;ll
+not show up again, either, until you send word for them
+to come back&ndash;&ndash;and then they&rsquo;ll know you&rsquo;ve surrendered.
+Magney tried it once, just once. And that&rsquo;s
+why you found me chewing tobacco so lamb-like and
+saying nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turn your gat loose,&rdquo; Weir said. And turning on
+his heel, he went back to headquarters.</p>
+<p>Before Atkinson fired a volley at the unsuspecting
+workmen he crossed the canyon to where a cub engineer
+was peering through a transit. The superintendent
+had overheard a scrap of gossip among the staff one
+evening before Weir&rsquo;s arrival when they were discussing
+the advent of the new chief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was that name you fellows were saying Weir
+was called by?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>The boy straightened up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Cold Steel&rsquo;&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;Cold Steel&rsquo; Weir. Anyway that&rsquo;s
+what Fergueson says,&rdquo; was the answer. &ldquo;I never heard
+it before myself. His first name&rsquo;s Steele, you know, and
+he looks cold enough to be ice when he&rsquo;s asking questions
+about things, boring into a fellow with his eyes.
+But he&rsquo;s up against a hard game here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe. But a man doesn&rsquo;t get a name like that
+for just parting his hair nice,&rdquo; Atkinson remarked.
+&ldquo;He told me to stretch &rsquo;em&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;a horny thumb jerked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span>
+towards the workmen&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;and you&rsquo;ll see some real work
+hereabouts for the rest of the afternoon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to-morrow will be Sunday three days ahead of
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know as much about that as I do. Make your
+own guess.&rdquo; With which the speaker started off.</p>
+<p>The morrow was &ldquo;Sunday&rdquo; with a vengeance. The
+majority of the laborers demanded their pay checks the
+minute work ceased at the end of the afternoon; Atkinson
+tightened orders, and by noon next day the last of
+the Mexicans had quit. The fires in the stationary engines
+were banked; the concrete mixers did not revolve;
+the conveyers were still; the dam site wore an air of
+abandonment. In headquarters the engineers worked
+over tracings or notes; and in the commissary store the
+half-dozen white foremen gathered to smoke and yarn.
+That was the extent of the activity.</p>
+<p>Two days passed. After dinner Weir held a terse
+long-distance telephone conversation, the only incident
+of the second day; and it was overheard by no one. On
+the fourth day this was repeated. At dawn of the fifth
+he despatched all of the foremen, enginemen and engineers
+with wagons to Bowenville; and about the middle
+of the afternoon, accompanied by his assistant, Meyers,
+and Atkinson, he sped in the manager&rsquo;s car down the
+river for San Mateo, two miles below the camp.</p>
+<p>Of the town Steele Weir had had but a glimpse as he
+flashed through on his way to the dam the morning of
+his arrival twelve days earlier. It had but a single
+main street, from which littered side streets and alleys
+ran off between mud walls of houses. The county court
+house sat among cottonwood trees in an open space. A
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+few pretentious dwellings, homes of white men and the
+well-to-do Mexicans, arose among long low adobe structures
+that were as brown and characterless as the sun-dried
+bricks of which they were built. That was San
+Mateo.</p>
+<p>Before doors and everywhere along the street workmen
+from the dam were idling. As Meyers brought the
+automobile to a stop before the court house, news of
+Weir&rsquo;s visit spread miraculously and Mexicans began to
+saunter forward to hear the engineer&rsquo;s words of surrender,
+couched in the form of a suave invitation to return
+to work. While the crowd gathered the three
+Americans sat quietly in the car. Then Steele Weir
+stood up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who can speak for these men?&rdquo; he demanded.</p>
+<p>A lean Mexican with a long shiny black mustache
+and a thin neck protruding from a soiled linen collar
+elbowed a way to the front.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m authorized to speak for them,&rdquo; he announced,
+disclosing his white teeth in an engaging smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you one of the workmen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I&rsquo;m a lawyer and represent them in this controversy.
+By your favor therefore let us proceed.
+You&rsquo;ve come to persuade them to resume work, and that
+is well. But there are conditions to be agreed upon
+before they return, which with your permission I shall
+state&ndash;&ndash;first, no harsh driving of the workmen by foremen;
+second, full wages for the days they have been
+idle; third, no Sunday work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer regarded the speaker without change of
+countenance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you finished?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. There are minor matters, but they can be
+adjusted later. These are the important points.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, this is my reply: I, not the workmen,
+make the terms for work on this job&ndash;&ndash;I, not these men,
+name the conditions on which they may return. And
+they are as follows: no pay for the idle days; if the
+workmen return they agree to work as ordered by superintendent
+and foremen; and last, they must start
+for the dam within an hour or not at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Incredulity, amazement rested on the Mexican spokesman&rsquo;s
+face as he listened to this curt rejoinder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Preposterous, impossible, absurd!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+Then revolving on his heels so as to face the crowd he
+swiftly repeated in Spanish what Weir had said.</p>
+<p>An angry stir followed, murmurs, sullen looks, a number
+of oaths and jeers. The lawyer turned again to the
+engineer, spreading his hands in a wide gesture and lifting
+his brows with exaggerated significance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see, Mr. Weir, your position is hopeless,&rdquo; he
+remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ask them if they definitely refuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lawyer put the question to the crowd. A chorus
+of shouts vehemently gave affirmation&ndash;&ndash;a refusal immediate,
+disdainful, unanimous.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll now discuss the men&rsquo;s terms,&rdquo; the lawyer remarked
+politely and with an air of satisfaction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing more to discuss. The matter is
+settled. They have refused; they need not seek work
+at the dam again. Start the car, Meyers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The roar of the machine drowned the indignant lawyer&rsquo;s
+protest, the crowd hastened to give an opening
+and the conference was at an end.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drive to Vorse&rsquo;s saloon; I want a look at Vorse,&rdquo;
+said Weir. &ldquo;I see the place a short way ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When they entered the long low adobe building an
+anemic-appearing Mexican standing at the far end of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
+the bar languidly started forward to serve them, but a
+bald-headed, hawk-nosed man seated at a desk behind
+the cigar-case laid aside his newspaper, arose and
+checked the other by a sidewise jerk of his head.</p>
+<p>He received their orders for beer and lifted three dripping
+bottles from a tub of water at his feet. His eyes
+passed casually over Steele Weir&rsquo;s face, glanced away,
+then came back for a swift unblinking scrutiny. The
+eyes his own met were as hard, stony and inscrutable
+as his own. Finally Vorse, the saloon-keeper, turned
+his gaze towards the window and extracting a quill
+tooth-pick from a vest pocket began thoughtfully to
+pick his teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the new manager at the dam?&rdquo; he asked
+presently, still considering the street through the window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And your name is Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got it right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The questions ended there. The three men from camp
+slowly consumed their beer and exchanged indifferent
+remarks. At the end of five minutes the Mexican lawyer,
+clutching the arm of an elderly, gray-mustached man,
+entered the saloon.</p>
+<p>They lined up at the bar nearby the others. The older
+of the pair regarded the trio shrewdly, laid a calf-bound
+book that he carried under his arm upon the counter
+and ordered &ldquo;a little bourbon.&rdquo; When he had swallowed
+this, he addressed the men from the engineering
+camp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which of you is Mr. Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am he,&rdquo; Steele replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Martinez here has solicited me, Mr. Weir, to use
+my offices in explaining to you the workmen&rsquo;s point of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+view in the controversy that exists relative to the work.
+I&rsquo;m Senator Gordon, a member of the state legislature,
+and I have no interest in the matter beyond seeing an
+amicable and just arrangement effected.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir fixed his eyes on the speaker with an intentness,
+a cold penetration, that seemed to bore to the
+very recesses of his mind. In that look there was something
+questioning and something menacing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no controversy and hence no need of your
+services. The men stopped work, refused to return, and
+now the case is closed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear sir, let us talk it over,&rdquo; said the Senator,
+bringing forth a pair of spectacles and setting the bow
+upon his nose.</p>
+<p>The engineer&rsquo;s visage failed to relax at this pacific
+proposal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I gave them their chance and they declined; they&rsquo;ll
+have no other,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;Those men have browbeaten
+the company long enough. They refused, and as I anticipated
+that refusal I made preparations accordingly;
+a hundred and fifty white workmen arrived at Bowenville
+from Denver this morning and a hundred and fifty more
+will come to-morrow. They will do the work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Senator&rsquo;s lips quivered and the upper one lifted
+in a movement like a snarl, showing tobacco-stained
+teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The matter isn&rsquo;t closed, understand that,&rdquo; he
+snapped out. &ldquo;We have the directors&rsquo; promise no outside
+labor shall be brought in here for this job, and the
+promise shall be kept.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The new men go to work in the morning,&rdquo; Weir said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll repent of this action, young man, you&rsquo;ll repent
+of it.&rdquo; The Senator seized the whisky bottle and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span>
+angrily poured himself a second drink. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll repent
+of it as sure as your name is&ndash;&ndash;is&ndash;&ndash;whatever it is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer took a step nearer the older man. His
+face now was as hard as granite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weir is my name,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Did you ever hear it
+before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weir&ndash;&ndash;Weir?&rdquo; came in a questioning mutter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The speaker&rsquo;s eyes held the Senator&rsquo;s in savage leash,
+and a slight tremble presently began to shake the old
+man. Atkinson and Meyers and even the volatile Mexican
+lawyer, Martinez, remained unstirring, for in the
+situation they suddenly sensed something beyond their
+ken, some current of deep unknown forces, some play of
+fierce, obscure and fateful passion.</p>
+<p>A shadow of gray stole over Gordon&rsquo;s lineaments.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are&ndash;&ndash;are the son of&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; came gasping forth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am. His son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I know what happened thirty years ago in this
+selfsame room!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The whisky that the Senator had poured into his
+glass suddenly slopped over his fingers; his figure all
+at once appeared more aged, hollow, bent. Without
+further word, with his hand still shaking, he set the
+glass on the bar, mechanically picked up the law book
+and walked feebly towards the door.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir turned his gaze on the saloon-keeper,
+Vorse. The man&rsquo;s right hand was under the bar and
+he seemed to be awaiting the engineer&rsquo;s next move, taut,
+tight-lipped, malignant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was for you too, Vorse,&rdquo; was flung at him.
+&ldquo;One Weir went out of here, but another has returned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he led his companions away.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II_A_COMEDYAND_SOMETHING_ELSE' id='CHAPTER_II_A_COMEDYAND_SOMETHING_ELSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<h3>A COMEDY&ndash;&ndash;AND SOMETHING ELSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Towards noon one day a week later Steele Weir,
+headed for Bowenville in his car, had gained Chico
+Creek, half way between camp and San Mateo, when he
+perceived that another machine blocked the ford. About
+the wheels of the stalled car the shallow water rippled
+briskly, four or five inches deep; entirely deep enough,
+by all appearances, to keep marooned in the runabout
+the girl sitting disconsolately at the wheel.</p>
+<p>She was a very attractive-looking girl, Steele noted
+casually as he brought his own car to a halt and sprang
+out to join her, wading the water with his laced boots.
+As he approached he perceived that she had a slender
+well-rounded figure, fine-spun brown hair under her
+hat brim, clear brown eyes and the pink of peach blossoms
+in her soft smooth cheeks.</p>
+<p>But her look of relief vanished when she distinguished
+his face and her shoulders squared themselves.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has your engine stopped?&rdquo; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll look into the hood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I prefer that you would not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For an instant surprise marked his countenance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean that you desire to remain here?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish to remain here, but I choose that in
+preference to your aid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man, who had bent forward to lift one cover of
+the engine, straightened up at that. He considered her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+intently and in silence for a time, marking her heightened
+color, the haughty poise of her head, the firm set
+of her lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To my knowledge, I never saw you before in my life,&rdquo;
+he remarked at last. &ldquo;What, may I ask, is your particular
+reason for declining my services?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was dumb for a little, while she tucked back a
+stray tendril of hair. The act was performed with the
+left hand; and Weir&rsquo;s eyes, which seldom missed anything,
+observed a diamond flash on the third finger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;d choose not to explain,&rdquo; said she, afterwards,
+&ldquo;but if you insist&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t insist, I merely request ... your highness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A flash of anger shot from her eyes at this irony.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m afraid to tell you!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+because you&rsquo;re the manager of the construction camp;
+and if you&rsquo;ve never seen me before, I&rsquo;ve at least had you
+pointed out to me. I wish no assistance from the man
+who turns off his poor workmen without excuse or warning,
+and brings want and trouble upon the community.
+It was like striking them in the face. And then you
+break your promise not to bring in other workmen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As she had said, she did not lack courage. Her words
+gushed forth in a torrent, as if an expression of pent
+up and outraged justice, disclosing a fervent sympathy
+and a fine zeal&ndash;&ndash;and, likewise, a fine ignorance of the
+facts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, why don&rsquo;t you say something?&rdquo; she added,
+when he gave no indication of replying.</p>
+<p>Steele could have smiled at this feminine view of the
+matter that violent assertions required affirmations or
+denials.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What am I supposed to say?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>Apparently that exhausted her patience.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll please molest me no longer,&rdquo; she stated, icily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He raised the hood and inspected the engine. During
+his attempts to start it, she sat nonchalantly humming
+an air and gazing at the mountains as if her mind were a
+thousand miles away&ndash;&ndash;which it was not.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something wrong; it will have to be hauled in,&rdquo; said
+he finally.</p>
+<p>No reply. Steele returned to his own car and descending
+into the creek bed worked his way around her.
+When he was on the far bank, he rejoined her again,
+carrying a coil of rope. One end of this he fastened
+securely to the rear axle of her runabout.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you going to do, sir?&rdquo; she demanded,
+whirling about on her seat and glaring angrily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drag you out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do nothing of the kind!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; was his calm response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Against my wishes, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is abominable!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put on the brakes.&rdquo; And put them on she did,
+with a savage jerk.</p>
+<p>But nevertheless Weir&rsquo;s powerful machine drew her
+car slowly up out of the creek upon the road, where he
+forced it about until it pointed towards San Mateo.
+Then he retied the rope on the front axle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now for town,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you haul me out of there, I demand to
+know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why? Because you were a public obstruction
+blocking traffic. If you had remained there long enough
+you would have become a public nuisance; and it&rsquo;s the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+duty of every citizen to abate nuisances. No one would
+call you a nuisance, of course,&ndash;&ndash;not to your face, at
+any rate. But travelers might have felt some annoyance
+if compelled to drive around you; they might even
+have had you arrested when they learned you were
+acting out of willful stubbornness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a sort of incredulous wonder, of charmed horror,
+the girl heard herself thus unfeelingly described.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&ndash;&ndash;you barbarian!&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ready? We&rsquo;re off for town now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll run my car in the ditch and wreck it if you so
+much as pull it another inch!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like to be frustrated in my generous acts;
+they are so few, according to common report. Well,
+we&rsquo;ll leave the car, but it must be drawn off the road.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When this was accomplished, Weir replaced the rope
+in his machine. Then he returned to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What now? Do you intend to sit here in the hot
+sunshine, to say nothing of missing your dinner?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That doesn&rsquo;t concern you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir shook his head gravely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must be saved from your own folly,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>Before she had realized what was happening, he had
+opened the door of the runabout, swung her out upon
+the ground and was marching her towards his own machine.
+Stupefaction at this quick, atrocious deed left
+her an automaton; and before she had fully regained
+her control they were speeding towards San Mateo, she
+at his side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is outrageous!&rdquo; she gasped.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir did not speak until they entered town.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is your home?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turn to the right at the end of the street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was before a house of modern structure, banked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
+with a bewildering number of flowers and shaded by
+trees, that he halted the car. He alighted, bared his
+head, assisted her to descend, bowed and then without
+a word drove away, leaving her to stare after him with
+a baffling mixture of feelings and the single indignant
+statement, &ldquo;And he didn&rsquo;t even wait long enough for me
+to thank him!&rdquo; Nor did her perplexity lessen when her
+car was left before the door during the afternoon by one
+of the camp mechanics to whom Weir had telephoned
+from San Mateo and who had put it in running order.</p>
+<p>Weir himself proceeded to Bowenville, where matters
+regarding shipments and the unloading of machinery
+engaged him the rest of the day. Into his mind, however,
+there floated at moments the image of the girl&rsquo;s face,
+banish it as he would. He had learned her name by
+asking who was the owner of the house where she had
+alighted, information necessary to direct the mechanic
+as to the delivery of the stalled car. Hosmer it was;
+and the residence was that of Dr. Hosmer. Presumably
+she was his daughter. And what a vivid, charming,
+never-surrender enemy! Lucky the chap who had won
+this high-spirited girl.</p>
+<p>The memory of her eyes and her personality was still
+with him when he ate his supper that evening in a restaurant
+in Bowenville. His own past in relation to the
+other sex had been starred by no love affair, not even
+by episodes of a sentimental nature; the character of
+his work had for long periods kept him away from
+women&rsquo;s society, but further than this there was the
+shadow upon his life, the shadow of mystery that obliged
+him to follow a solitary course. He considered himself
+unfree to seek friendships or favors among women. By
+every demand of honor he was bound to solicit no girl&rsquo;s
+trust or affection until that mystery was cleared and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+his father&rsquo;s innocence established. It was for this reason
+that he seemed even to himself to grow more hard, more
+harsh, more silent and aloof, until at last he had come
+to believe that no fair face had the power to arouse
+his interest or to quicken his pulse.</p>
+<p>But now, this girl he had met at the ford!</p>
+<p>Long-stifled emotions struggled in his breast. Sleeping
+desires awoke. His spirit swelled like a caged thing
+within the shell of years of indurated habit. A strange
+restlessness pervaded him. He had a fierce passion
+somehow to rip in pieces the gray drab pattern of his
+commonplace life.</p>
+<p>Perhaps it was this revolt against the fetters of fate
+that caused him to welcome the chance for action that
+presently was offered. The restaurant was of an ordinary
+type, with a lunch counter at one side, a row of
+tables down the middle and half a dozen booths along
+the wall offering some degree of privacy. In one of
+these Steele Weir was smoking a cigar and finishing his
+coffee before making his ride back to camp. From the
+booth adjoining he had for some time been hearing
+scraps of conversation; now all at once the voices rose
+in protest and in answering explanation, in perplexed
+appeal and earnest assurance.</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s own reflections ceased. His head turned and
+remained fixed to listen, while the cigar grew cold between
+his fingers. For ten minutes or so his attitude of
+concentrated harkening to the two voices, a girl&rsquo;s and
+a man&rsquo;s, remained unchanged. Little by little he was
+piecing out the thread of the confidential dialogue&ndash;&ndash;and
+of the little drama being enacted in the booth.</p>
+<p>His brows became lowering as he gathered its significance,
+his lips drew together in a tight thin line. He
+did not move when he heard the man push back his chair
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span>
+to leave the place, nor alter his position until there
+came the sound of the door closing at the front of the
+restaurant. Then he reached for his hat, stood up and
+went lightly around into the other booth, where he
+pulled the green calico curtain across the opening.</p>
+<p>A girl of about seventeen, of plump clean prettiness,
+still sat at the table, which was littered with dishes.
+The cheap finery of her hat and dress showed a pathetic
+attempt to increase her natural comeliness. At this
+minute her face showed amazement and a hint of apprehension.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you coming in here for?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want to talk to you for a little while,&rdquo; Weir replied,
+seating himself. &ldquo;You will please listen. I&rsquo;ve
+overheard enough of your talk to catch its drift; you
+came here to be married, but now this man wants to
+induce you to go to Los Angeles first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That isn&rsquo;t any of your business,&rdquo; the girl flashed
+back, going white and red by turns.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m making it mine, however. You live up on
+Terry Creek, by what I heard; that&rsquo;s not far from my
+camp. I&rsquo;m manager at the dam and my name&rsquo;s Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this statement the girl shrank back, beginning to
+bite the hem of her handkerchief nervously and gazing
+at him with terrified eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m here to help you, not harm you. You&rsquo;ve run
+away from home to-day to marry this fellow. Did he
+promise to marry you if you came to Bowenville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now he wants you to go with him to Los
+Angeles first, promising to marry you there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl hesitated, with a wavering look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He gives you excuses, of course. But they don&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+satisfy your mind, do they? They don&rsquo;t satisfy mine,
+at any rate. It&rsquo;s the old trick. Suppose when you
+reached the coast he didn&rsquo;t marry you after all and put
+you off with more promises and after a week or two
+abandoned you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he wouldn&rsquo;t do that!&rdquo; she cried, with a gulp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just what he is planning. He didn&rsquo;t meet
+you here until after dark, I judge. You&rsquo;ll both go to
+the train separately&ndash;&ndash;I overheard that part. Afterwards
+he could return from the coast and deny that
+he had ever had anything to do with you, and it would
+simply be your word against his. And which would
+people hereabouts believe, tell me that, which would
+they believe, yours or his, after you had gone wrong?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl sat frozen. Then suddenly she began to cry,
+softly and with jerks of her shoulders. Weir reached
+out and patted her arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your name?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary&ndash;&ndash;Mary Johnson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary, I&rsquo;m interfering in your affairs only because
+I know what men will do. You must take no chances.
+If this fellow is really anxious to marry you, he&rsquo;ll do
+it here in Bowenville.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a few sobs she wiped her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said he didn&rsquo;t dare get the license in San Mateo,
+or his folks would have stopped our marriage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you should stay here to-night, go to the next
+county seat and be married to-morrow. His parents are
+bound to learn about it once you&rsquo;re married. A few days
+more or less make no difference. And though I should
+return to my work, I&rsquo;ll just stay over a day and take
+you in my car to-morrow to see that you&rsquo;re married
+straight and proper. Why go clear to Los Angeles?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He said it would be our honeymoon&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;and I
+had never been away from here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s his name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She hesitated in uncertainty whether or not she
+should answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed Sorenson,&rdquo; came at last from her lips.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir slowly thrust his head forward, fixing
+her with burning eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Son of the big cattleman?&rdquo; he demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you love him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, oh, yes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir sat back in his seat, lighted a cigarette and
+stared past her head at the opposite partition. The
+evil strain of the father had been continued in the son
+and was working here to seduce this simple, ignorant
+girl, incited by her physical freshness and the expectation
+that she should be easy prey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I doubt if he loves you,&rdquo; he said, presently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He does, he does!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he really does above everything else in the world,
+he&rsquo;ll be willing to marry you openly, no matter what
+his father may say or do. That&rsquo;s the test, Mary. If
+he&rsquo;s in earnest, he&rsquo;ll agree at once to go with us to the
+next county seat to-morrow and be married there by a
+minister. Isn&rsquo;t that true? Answer me that squarely;
+isn&rsquo;t it true?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then by that we&rsquo;ll decide. If he agrees, well and
+good; if he refuses, that will show him up&ndash;&ndash;show he
+never had any intention of marrying you. I&rsquo;m a
+stranger to you, but I&rsquo;m your friend. And you&rsquo;re not
+going to Los Angeles unmarried!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span></div>
+<p>The last words were uttered in a level menacing tone
+that caused Mary Johnson to shiver. To her, reared
+in the humble adobe house on her father&rsquo;s little ranch
+on Terry Creek, a man who could manage the great
+irrigation project seemed a figure out of her ken, a vast
+form working against the sky. His statements were not
+to be disputed, whatever she might think.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; she said, just above a whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. Now we&rsquo;ll wait for him. He was coming
+back for you, wasn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I was to stay at the hotel till train time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this your grip?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir jerked a thumb towards a worn canvas &ldquo;telescope&rdquo;
+fastened with a single shawl strap, resting in
+the corner of the booth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s mine. Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How old is Ed Sorenson,&rdquo; he asked, after a pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About thirty, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How old are you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seventeen next month.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But sixteen yet this month.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He said nothing more. As the minutes passed, her
+timorous gaze continued steadfastly on the stern countenance
+before her. She dully expected something terrible
+to happen when Ed Sorenson appeared, for she
+knew Ed would be angry; but she had been powerless to
+prevent the intrusion of this terrible stranger.</p>
+<p>Fear, in truth, a fear that left her heart cold, was
+her feeling as she contemplated Weir. Yet under that,
+was there not something else? A sense of safety, of
+comforting assurance of protection?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&ndash;&ndash;you won&rsquo;t hurt Ed if he won&rsquo;t go with us?&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span>
+she asked, in a low voice. &ldquo;If he gets mad and won&rsquo;t
+marry me here, I mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s eyes came round to hers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just break him in two, nothing more, Mary,&rdquo; was
+the calm answer.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III_THE_ENEMYS_SPAWN' id='CHAPTER_III_THE_ENEMYS_SPAWN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<h3>THE ENEMY&rsquo;S SPAWN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The curtain to the booth was flung back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve the train tickets; come along to the hotel&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;
+exclaimed the man who quickly entered. But the words
+died in his mouth at sight of Weir sitting in the place
+he had vacated.</p>
+<p>He was over average height, of strong fleshy build,
+with a small blonde mustache on his upper lip. Under
+his eyes little pouches had already begun to form; his
+mouth was full and sensual; but he still retained an air
+of liveliness, of carelessness and agility, that might at
+first sight seem the spontaneity of youth. He wore a
+brown suit, a gray flannel shirt and Stetson hat&ndash;&ndash;the
+common apparel of the country.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who the devil are you? And what are you butting
+in here for?&rdquo; he exclaimed, with a vicious spark showing
+in his pale blue eyes. At the same time he clapped
+a hand on Weir&rsquo;s shoulder, closing it in a hard grasp.</p>
+<p>Instantly Weir struck the hand off with his fist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep your dirty flippers to yourself,&rdquo; he said, rising.</p>
+<p>The blood faded from the other&rsquo;s countenance, leaving
+it white with rage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get out of this booth, or I&rsquo;ll throw you out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Weir&rsquo;s turn to act. Like a flash he caught
+Sorenson&rsquo;s elbow, jerked him forward, spun him about
+and dropped him upon the chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit there, you cradle-robber, until I&rsquo;m through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+with you,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;And if you don&rsquo;t want
+everybody in this restaurant to know about your business
+with this girl, you&rsquo;ll lower your voice when you
+talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson shot an uneasy glance towards the curtain
+and his wrath became not less furious but better controlled.
+Clearly public attention was the last thing
+he desired in this affair. He leaned back, staring at
+Steele Weir insolently, and produced a cigarette, at
+which he began to puff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary, get ready. We&rsquo;ll be going in a minute,&rdquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, you&rsquo;ll not, Sorenson. I&rsquo;ve taken a hand in your
+game. This girl says you&rsquo;re going to marry her, is that
+right?&rdquo; The other rolled his eyes upward and began
+to whistle a jig tune softly. &ldquo;Well, this is the plan she
+and I&rsquo;ve made. She&rsquo;ll remain at the hotel to-night&ndash;&ndash;as
+will you and I&ndash;&ndash;and to-morrow we&rsquo;ll drive to another
+county seat in my car and you&rsquo;ll secure a licence there.
+Then you&rsquo;ll go to a minister&rsquo;s, where I&rsquo;ll act as a witness,
+and the ceremony will be performed. Afterwards
+the pair of you can proceed to Los Angeles, or elsewhere
+as you please, on your wedding journey.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re quite a little planner, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; the other
+jeered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the arrangement if you agree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t agree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary Johnson, in whose eyes a light of hope had
+dawned during Weir&rsquo;s low-toned statement, began nervously
+to bite her lip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you do it, Ed?&rdquo; she asked, timidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll do as I planned, or nothing,&rdquo; he stated. Then
+with sudden spite he continued, &ldquo;You&rsquo;re responsible for
+this mixup. What did you let this fellow in here for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span>
+while I was gone? Didn&rsquo;t you have sense enough to
+keep your mouth shut?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele halted him by a gesture.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t begin abusing her; you&rsquo;re not married to her
+yet. I overheard your talk and guessed the low-lived,
+scoundrelly trick you proposed to play on her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You damned eavesdropper&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, eavesdropper is right,&rdquo; Weir interrupted,
+coolly. &ldquo;So I just stepped in here from my booth next
+door to discuss the situation with her; you can&rsquo;t mislead
+an innocent girl like her with the intention of shaking
+her when you get her into a city, not if I know about
+it and am around. If you sincerely intend to marry
+her, and will do so to-morrow in my presence, then I&rsquo;ll
+withdraw. Afterwards I mean, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson arose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Mary. Stand aside, you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t go with you,&rdquo; the engineer stated.</p>
+<p>For a moment the men&rsquo;s eyes locked, those of one
+full of blue fire and hatred, those of the other quiet
+as pieces of flint.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And she shall keep with me while I telephone to your
+father that you brought her here under promise of
+marriage, a girl of sixteen, without her own parents&rsquo;
+consent, and now refuse to marry her,&rdquo; Steele added.</p>
+<p>A sneer twisted the other man&rsquo;s mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father happens to be in the east, where he&rsquo;s been
+for a month,&rdquo; he mocked. &ldquo;If he were here, he wouldn&rsquo;t
+believe you; he&rsquo;d know you were a liar. He knows I&rsquo;m
+engaged to marry&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Bite off the words as he tried,
+they had escaped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s the way of it!&rdquo; Weir remarked with a
+silky smoothness. &ldquo;You expect to marry some other
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+girl&ndash;&ndash;and have no intention whatever of marrying Mary
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To hell with you and your opinions!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;First, you coax her to Bowenville by a promise, then
+you persuade her by more promises to go to Los Angeles,&rdquo;
+the engineer proceeded steadily, &ldquo;and there you
+would betray and abandon her to a life on the streets,
+like the yellow cur you are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson snapped his fingers and moved round to the
+girl&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pay no attention to him,&rdquo; he addressed her. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+only a crazy fool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But she drew back against the wall, staring at him
+with a strained, searching regard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you marry me to-morrow as he asks?&rdquo; she
+questioned anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I explained the reason why once. Come on;
+let&rsquo;s get away from him. Then I&rsquo;ll make everything
+clear and satisfactory to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment she stood wavering, picking at her
+handkerchief, her face pale and unhappy, questioning
+his countenance. Finally she turned to look at Steele
+Weir, standing silently by.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You never said you were engaged to another girl;
+you told me I was the only one you loved,&rdquo; she muttered
+in a choked voice. &ldquo;But I see now you won&rsquo;t marry me.
+You wish me to go with you&ndash;&ndash;but not to marry. I&rsquo;m
+going away&ndash;&ndash;away anywhere. By myself! Where I&rsquo;ll
+never see any one!&rdquo; Burying her face in her hands, she
+shook with sobs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is what comes from your putting an oar in,&rdquo;
+said Sorenson, lifting his fist in a burst of fury to strike
+Weir.</p>
+<p>The latter at once smote him across the mouth with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+open palm at the vile epithet that followed. Sorenson
+staggered, then lunged forward, tugging at something
+in his hip-pocket, while the table and dishes went over
+in a crash.</p>
+<p>Before he could draw the weapon Steele&rsquo;s fingers shot
+forth and seized his wrist; his other hand closed about
+Sorenson&rsquo;s throat in an iron grasp. Slowly under that
+powerful grip the younger man&rsquo;s struggles ceased, his
+eyes dilated, his knees yielded and gave way. The revolver
+was wrenched from his numbed hold. His eyeballs
+seemed afire; his breast heaved in violent spasms
+for the denied breath; and his heart appeared about to
+burst.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You miserable skunk!&rdquo; Weir said, barely moving
+his mouth. &ldquo;I ought to choke the life out of you.&rdquo;
+Then he released his hold. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll keep this gun&ndash;&ndash;and
+use it if you ever try to pull another on me! Now,
+make tracks. Remember, too, to pay your bill as you
+go out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Sorenson had straightened his coat, giving
+Weir a malignant look during the process, he departed.
+His air of disdainful insolence had quite evaporated, but
+that he considered the action between them only begun
+was plain, though he spoke not a word. Weir, however,
+heard him give a quieting explanation to the waiter hovering
+outside, who had been drawn by the crash of
+dishes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thought a fight was going on,&rdquo; the aproned dispenser
+of food said to Steele when he and the girl
+emerged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just an accident. Nothing broken, I imagine,&rdquo; was
+the response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t break those dishes with a hammer;
+they&rsquo;re made for rough work.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;If there&rsquo;s any damage, this may cover it.&rdquo; And
+Steele tossed the fellow a dollar.</p>
+<p>Outside the restaurant he slipped his hand inside
+Mary Johnson&rsquo;s arm and led her along the street. With
+him he had brought the old strapped grip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where you taking me?&rdquo; she asked, in a worried
+quaver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Home, Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m afraid to go home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you afraid of your own father and mother?
+They&rsquo;re the ones to trust first of all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But when father&ndash;&ndash;mother is dead&ndash;&ndash;sees the telescope,
+he&rsquo;ll want to know where I&rsquo;ve been. He doesn&rsquo;t
+know I have it. I told him I might stay with a girl at
+San Mateo over night, and then sneaked it out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The best thing is to tell him all about this occurrence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I shall. Leave that part to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And though her heart was filled with fresh alarms
+and fears at the prospect, there seemed nothing else to
+do. She longed to flee, to hide in some dark hole, to
+cover her shame from her father and the world, but in
+the hands of this determined man she felt herself powerless.
+What he willed, she dumbly did.</p>
+<p>Terry Creek flowed out of the mountains four miles
+north of San Mateo, an insignificant stream entering the
+Burntwood halfway down to Bowenville. The Johnson
+ranch house was a mile up the canyon, where the rocky
+walls expanded into a grassy park of no great area.
+They reached the girl&rsquo;s home about half-past nine that
+night.</p>
+<p>For two hours Weir remained talking with the father,
+describing the affair at Bowenville, fending off his first
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+bitter anger at the girl and gradually persuading him
+to see that Mary had been deceived, lured away on hollow
+promises and was guiltless of all except failing to
+take him into her confidence. At last peace was made.
+Mary wept for a time, and was patted on the head by
+her rough, bearded father, who exclaimed, &ldquo;There,
+there, don&rsquo;t cry. You&rsquo;re safe back again; we&rsquo;ll just
+forget it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Outside of the house, however, where he had accompanied
+Weir to his car, he said with an oath:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll not forget Ed Sorenson, if I go to hell for
+it. My little girl!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s half a child yet, that&rsquo;s the worse of his offense,&rdquo;
+Steele replied, savagely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary said you choked him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some. Not enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not forget him&ndash;&ndash;or you, Mr. Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele mounted into his machine. He thoughtfully
+studied the rancher&rsquo;s bearded, weather-tanned face, illuminated
+by the moonlight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At present I&rsquo;d say nothing about this matter to
+any one. Later on you may be able to use it in squaring
+accounts,&rdquo; the engineer advised.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope so,&rdquo; was the answer, with a bitter note. &ldquo;But
+talking would only hurt Mary, not Ed Sorenson. Whatever
+the Sorensons do is all right, you know, because
+they&rsquo;re rich. The daughter of a poor man like me
+would get all the black end of the gossip; and I can&rsquo;t
+lift a finger, that&rsquo;s what grinds me, unless I go out and
+shoot him, then hang for it. For the bank&rsquo;s got a
+mortgage on my little bunch of stock, and on my ranch
+here, and Sorenson, of course, is the bank. Gordon and
+Vorse and a few others are in it too, but he&rsquo;s the bull
+of the herd. If I opened my mouth about his son, I&rsquo;d
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+be kicked off of Terry Creek, lock, stock and barrel.
+That&rsquo;s the way Sorenson keeps all of us poor devils,
+white and Mexican, eating out of his hand. I&rsquo;ve just
+been poor since I came here a boy; the gang in San
+Mateo won&rsquo;t let anybody but themselves have a chance.
+And I reckon old man Sorenson wouldn&rsquo;t care much if
+his boy had ruined my girl. Cuss him a little, maybe;
+that would be all. But I won&rsquo;t forget the whelp. Some
+day my chance will come to play even.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Sure; if one just keeps quiet and waits,&rdquo; Steele
+agreed. &ldquo;Well, I must hit the trail. If you want work
+any time, come over to the dam; we can always use a
+man with a team.&rdquo;
+Johnson nodded.
+&ldquo;After haying is done, maybe. And remember, I&rsquo;m
+much obliged to you for looking after my little girl. I
+won&rsquo;t forget that, either.&rdquo;
+He reached up diffidently and shook hands with the
+engineer. Weir&rsquo;s grip was sympathetic and sincere.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV_A_SECRET_CONFERENCE' id='CHAPTER_IV_A_SECRET_CONFERENCE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<h3>A SECRET CONFERENCE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>On a certain afternoon Felipe Martinez, the lean and
+restless attorney who had acted as the Mexican workmen&rsquo;s
+mouthpiece, observed through the broad plate-glass
+window of the San Mateo Cattle Company&rsquo;s office
+an incident that greatly interested him. For the moment
+he forgot the resentment kindled by Sorenson&rsquo;s
+abrupt refusal and brutal words when he asked for the
+nomination for county attorney. The election was in
+the autumn; the nomination was equivalent to election;
+and Felipe considered that he had too long been kept
+apart from that particular spoil.</p>
+<p>Martinez had once had a slight difference with the
+banker, and now outrageously Sorenson had recalled it.
+He had stated that Martinez should hold no political
+office; he gave offices only to men who did exactly as he
+advised; his exact words were that the Mexican was
+&ldquo;tricky and no good.&rdquo; And picking up his hat Sorenson
+who had that day returned home from the east went
+out of the bank, leaving Martinez to stare out of the
+window and meditatively twist a point of his silky black
+mustache.</p>
+<p>It was before the window that there occurred the meeting
+between Sorenson and the manager of the dam.
+Martinez perceived the two men glance at each other
+and pass, but after a step or two both men halted. As
+if worked by a single wire, they slowly swung about for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+a second look. The Mexican&rsquo;s nimble brain calculated
+that they could not have previously met and in consequence
+their behavior bespoke something out of the
+ordinary.</p>
+<p>The pair stood exactly where they had turned, three
+or four paces apart, he noted. The Mexican&rsquo;s mind
+palpitated with a slight thrill of excitement. The
+manner of each of the men was that of a fighting animal
+looking over another animal of the same sort:
+neither uttering a word, nor stirring a finger, nor yielding
+a particle in his fixed unwinking gaze. Martinez
+could almost feel the exchanged challenge, the cold antagonism,
+the hostile curiosity, the matching of wills,
+the instant hate, between the men.</p>
+<p>Though they had not met before, to be sure, nevertheless
+they were enemies. Was it because of the discharge
+of the workmen? Then Martinez&rsquo; mind flashed back to
+the scene in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon when Gordon had showed such
+sudden emotion at the engineer&rsquo;s name and his enigmatical
+reference to some event in the past. That was it!
+Something which had occurred thirty years ago, probably
+something crooked. Men committed deeds in those
+early days that they would now like to forget. He,
+Martinez, would look into the matter.</p>
+<p>Sorenson passed out of sight, and Weir likewise proceeded
+on his way. Thereupon the lawyer sauntered
+over to the court house, where presently he became engrossed
+in a pile of tomes in the register&rsquo;s office. As examining
+records is a part of a lawyer&rsquo;s regular work,
+it never excites curiosity or arouses suspicion.</p>
+<p>That same evening Martinez perceived Vorse enter
+Sorenson&rsquo;s office. Vorse, he recalled, had been included
+in the engineer&rsquo;s threatening remarks to Gordon. Shortly
+thereafter Gordon himself ambled along the street
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span>
+and passed through the door. Last of all, Burkhardt, a
+short, fleshy, bearded man, went into the building. The
+vultures of San Mateo, as he secretly called them, had
+flocked together for conference. Presently Martinez
+strolled by the office, outwardly displaying no interest
+in the structure but furtively seeking to catch a glimpse
+of the interior through a crack of the drawn shade.
+But in this he was unsuccessful.</p>
+<p>Of one thing he was certain, however. His prolonged
+examination of the county records had revealed an old
+bill of sale of a ranch and several herds of cattle from
+one Joseph Weir to Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon and
+Burkhardt. He had placed his finger on the link connecting
+the engineer with these men, the entire four, as
+this old bill of sale thus recorded showed the intimate
+though unexpressed partnership of the men, which was
+common knowledge over the country; and intuition told
+him also that this private assembly of the quartette
+quickly on Sorenson&rsquo;s return home had its inspiration in
+the new manager of the dam.</p>
+<p>Martinez determined to continue his investigations.
+Events might yet prove that it would have been much
+better for the cattleman to have given him the political
+nomination. Truly, it was possible. In any case, it
+would do no harm to have &ldquo;something on&rdquo; Sorenson and
+the others, these rulers of San Mateo. And there was
+the opposite side of the affair&ndash;&ndash;Weir&rsquo;s side; so it looked
+as if there might be profit either way.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>The four men sitting in the railed-off space in the
+San Mateo Cattle Company&rsquo;s office constituted the
+cattle company. Moreover, they comprised the financial,
+political and general power of this remote section
+of New Mexico. In face, manner, garb, they were dissimilar.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span>
+Vorse, clothed in gray, was hawk-nosed and impassive;
+and though now, like his companions, wealthy
+beyond simple needs he nevertheless continued the operation
+of his saloon that had been a landmark in San
+Mateo for forty years. Burkhardt was rough-featured,
+rough-tongued, choleric, and coatless: typically the
+burly, uncurried, uncouth stock man, whose commonest
+words were oaths or curses and whose way with obstinate
+cattle or men was the way of the club or the fist. Gordon
+was the wily, cautious, unscrupulous politician; he
+had represented San Mateo in the legislature for years,
+both during the Territorial period and since New Mexico
+had become a state, and was not unknown in other
+parts of the southwest; but he was &ldquo;Judge&rdquo; only by
+courtesy, the title most frequently given him, never having
+been admitted to the bar or having practiced, and
+engaged himself ostensibly in the insurance and real
+estate business. Like the others, his share of the large
+cattle, sheep and land holdings of the group made him
+independent. Sorenson, the last of the four and in
+reality the leader because of a greater breadth of vision
+and a natural capacity for business, was dressed in a
+tailored suit of greenish plaid&ndash;&ndash;a man with bushy eyebrows,
+a long fleshy nose, predatory eyes, a heavy cat-fish
+mouth and a great, barrel-like body that reared two or
+three inches over six feet when he stood on his feet. But
+one thing they had in common, in addition to the gray
+hair of age, and that was a joint liability for the past.
+For years they had believed that liability extinguished
+through the operation of time. They had considered
+as closed and sealed the account of early secret, lawless
+acts by which they had acquired wealth and a grip on
+the community. They were now law-observing members
+of society; they controlled even if they sometimes failed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span>
+to possess the goodwill of the county&ndash;&ndash;and they were
+not men to measure position by friendships; their councils
+determined how much or how little other men should
+own and in local politics their fingers moved the puppets
+that served their will.</p>
+<p>With the entrance here of the powerful group of financiers
+who were constructing the irrigation project they
+recognized the threat to their old-time supremacy.
+Cattle and sheep interests would succumb to farming;
+a swarm of new, independent settlers would arrive like
+locusts; and their leadership would eventually be challenged
+if not ended. New towns would spring up. New
+money would flow in to dispute their financial mastery.
+New leaders would arise to assail their political dominion.
+And against the prospect of all this they had initiated
+a secret warfare, endeavoring by stealth to ruin
+the irrigation company at the beginning and nip the
+danger in the bud.</p>
+<p>Now it had been revealed all at once that they had
+not only a general and impersonal enemy in the form
+of the company, but a specific one in the form of a man,
+its manager. Out of nowhere he had emerged, out of
+thirty years&rsquo; silence, a sinister figure who tapped with
+significant finger the book of their secret past while his
+eyes steadfastly demanded a reckoning. Did he know
+all, or nothing? Knowing, did he deliberately leave them
+in doubt in order to shatter their confidence?</p>
+<p>At least one of the four had been badly shaken on
+learning Weir&rsquo;s identity, and all now were uneasy. It
+was as if Fate after a long silence was about to open
+the sealed record.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you were just imagining things, Judge,&rdquo;
+Sorenson was saying.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span></div>
+<p>Senator Gordon moistened his lips and tugged nervously
+at his gray mustache.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Just ask Vorse. The man
+said his name was Weir and that he was the son of Joe
+Weir. Then&ndash;&ndash;then&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Sorenson demanded, frowning at the other&rsquo;s
+visible trepidation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weir added, &lsquo;And I know what happened thirty
+years ago in this selfsame room.&rsquo; Those were his very
+words. Isn&rsquo;t that true, Vorse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They could mean only one thing,&rdquo; said Gordon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the Judge went out he said to me,&rdquo; Vorse
+stated, &ldquo;&lsquo;That was for you too.&rsquo; I had my hand on my
+gun under the counter as he said it, ready if he made
+a move. He knew what I had there, but it didn&rsquo;t faze
+him. He&rsquo;s a better man than Joe Weir ever was, I want
+to remark, and different; he has nerve and a bad eye.
+He knows something, lay your bets on that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much? How much? If we only knew how
+much!&rdquo; Judge Gordon vouchsafed, testily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How would he know anything? Joe Weir didn&rsquo;t
+know, so how can this fellow know? Don&rsquo;t get scared
+at a shadow.&rdquo; It was the bearded, rough-tongued Burkhardt
+who spoke, concluding his words with a blasphemous
+oath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the Mexican who saw what happened&ndash;&ndash;and
+that boy who looked in at the back door,&rdquo; Gordon asserted.
+&ldquo;We just caught sight of him and couldn&rsquo;t make
+out his face against the light. Then he had skipped
+when we ran there. We never did learn who he was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think he remembers?&rdquo; Sorenson said, scornfully.
+&ldquo;He may be dead. He may be on the other side
+of the world. Just some kid who happened to drift by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+at the minute and look in, and there&rsquo;s not one chance
+in a million he&rsquo;s anywhere around these parts yet. He
+would have blabbed long ago to some one if he had been;
+don&rsquo;t figure him in, he&rsquo;s lost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saurez isn&rsquo;t, though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this Vorse put in a word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He saw more than one killing in those days when
+he was roustabout for me. It was only one more to
+him. Probably he has forgotten it. Anyway,&rdquo; Vorse
+ended with deadly emphasis, &ldquo;he knows what would
+happen to him even now if he remembered it and talked.
+Leave him out of the calculation too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then that just makes the four of us,&rdquo; said Burkhardt.
+&ldquo;Nobody else. So this fellow Weir doesn&rsquo;t know
+a thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we can&rsquo;t be absolutely sure,&rdquo; Judge Gordon replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;d need proof, wouldn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, to bring legal action. But how do we
+know he hasn&rsquo;t even that? Look all around the question
+as a lawyer does; let us assume the millionth chance,
+for instance. Suppose that he somewhere met and became
+acquainted with that boy. Suppose that he learned
+the latter had been here at the time and saw the shooting;
+and heard his story. Suppose that Weir knows
+this instant where he is and can produce him as a witness
+in court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon in this county his testimony wouldn&rsquo;t count
+for much,&rdquo; Burkhardt, who had been sheriff, stated, with
+a harsh laugh.</p>
+<p>Sorenson, however, was impressed by the Judge&rsquo;s
+reasoning, for he drummed with fingers on the desk
+and sat in brooding silence. So likewise sat Vorse, who
+had heard Weir&rsquo;s utterance and beheld his face.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He knows something,&rdquo; he repeated, in a convinced
+tone. &ldquo;Or he&rsquo;s a damned good bluffer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I passed him here at the door this afternoon,&rdquo; the
+banker remarked. &ldquo;I turned to look at him, guessing
+who he was, and he had stopped and was looking at me.
+Cool about it too. We&rsquo;ll have to watch him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps if we just tip him off to keep his mouth shut
+tight, that will be enough,&rdquo; Burkhardt suggested. &ldquo;If
+he knows the four of us are ready&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Vorse sniffed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think he can be bluffed?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t
+seen him yet; go take a look. We&rsquo;ll not throw any scare
+into him. If he were that kind, he wouldn&rsquo;t have told us
+who he is. He wanted us to know he&rsquo;s after us, that&rsquo;s
+my opinion. He wants to shake our nerve&ndash;&ndash;and he
+shook the Judge&rsquo;s all right that day at my bar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did,&rdquo; Gordon admitted. &ldquo;The thing was so infernally
+unexpected. Almost like Joe Weir himself
+appearing. I didn&rsquo;t sleep a wink that night, what with
+my heart being bad and what with seeing him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose he <i>has</i> proofs?&rdquo; Vorse asked after a pause,
+while his narrowed eyes moved from one to another of
+his companions.</p>
+<p>A considerable silence followed. The question jerked
+into full light the issue that had all the while been lurking
+in the recesses of their minds&ndash;&ndash;an issue full of
+ghastly possibilities. Judge Gordon&rsquo;s fingers trembled
+as he wiped with handkerchief the cold sweat on his
+brow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re all in it,&rdquo; Vorse added.</p>
+<p>Burkhardt brought his fist down on the desk with a
+sudden crash.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he has proofs, then it&rsquo;s him or us,&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+while the blood suffused his face. &ldquo;Him or us&ndash;&ndash;and that
+means him! I&rsquo;ll never go behind bars!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure not. None of us,&rdquo; Vorse said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will mean&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Judge Gordon began in an agitated
+voice, but did not finish.</p>
+<p>Sorenson gave a nod of his head. His bear-trap
+mouth was compressed in a determined evil line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly. He&rsquo;ll never use his proofs. We&rsquo;re in too
+far to halt now if matters come to the point of his trying
+to use them. He has a grip on us in one way; he
+knows we can&rsquo;t declare his father, Joe Weir, did the
+killing; that would make us&ndash;&ndash;what do you call it,
+Judge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Accomplices after the fact. Besides, it would then
+come out that we had taken over and shared among us
+his stuff, fifty thousand apiece. It&rsquo;s a deplorable situation
+we&rsquo;re in, gentlemen, deplorable. If we were but
+able to start the story Joe Weir believed and fled because
+of, it would cut the ground out from under this man&rsquo;s
+feet at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s him we&rsquo;ll cut, not the ground under him,&rdquo; Burkhardt
+growled, thrusting his hairy chin forward towards
+the lawyer. &ldquo;And cut his damned throat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate to think of our being forced to&ndash;&ndash;to homicide.
+Even justifiable homicide.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Homicide nothing! It&rsquo;s just killing a rattlesnake
+waiting in the brush to strike. That&rsquo;s the way we used
+to do in the old days, and if he&rsquo;s going to bring them
+back that&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;ll do again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson smiled grimly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll wait till we&rsquo;re sure he has the proofs,
+then&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll act quick and sure,&rdquo; Vorse shot out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And quietly,&rdquo; the cattleman added. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+more chances this time. It will be arranged carefully
+beforehand; all four of us will be in it, of course,&ndash;&ndash;equal
+responsibility; and there&rsquo;ll be no witnesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judge Gordon&rsquo;s face wore a pallid, sickish look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope to God there&rsquo;s some other way out of it,&rdquo; he
+muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So do all of us,&rdquo; Burkhardt snarled. &ldquo;But if there
+isn&rsquo;t, it means guns. For you, too, along with the rest
+of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson leaned forward and gazed from under his
+heavy brows, compelling Gordon to meet his fixed look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were keen enough at the time for your share
+of Joe Weir&rsquo;s stuff,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So you&rsquo;ll play the hand
+out to the end now, the bad cards as well as the good.
+You&rsquo;re no better than the rest of us, and it was you
+who hatched the scheme for cleaning him up and who
+put over the story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, I know. But&ndash;&ndash;but this would be too much
+like cold-blooded murder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Murder!&rdquo; Sorenson grated. &ldquo;Did you look straight
+into this fellow Weir&rsquo;s eyes? Didn&rsquo;t you see something
+there that resembled murder? He&rsquo;d like only the chance
+to kill us one by one with his own hands: I saw that
+much. Just as Burkhardt said, it&rsquo;s him or us. After
+you told me about him, I had only to take one look. If
+he has the goods on us&ndash;&ndash;well, he&rsquo;ll have to die. Make
+up your mind to that. We&rsquo;re back to the time of thirty
+years ago and fighting for our lives. We were not only
+all in on the Weir job, but the Dent killing&ndash;&ndash;all of us.
+Remember that. If the facts become known, we&rsquo;ll be
+run into some other county and court and hanged. And
+every enemy we&rsquo;ve made in these years past will put up
+his head and clamor for our blood. Let that sink into
+your mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span></div>
+<p>The effect of this low fierce utterance was to hammer
+the truth home. The Judge was ashen. Vorse&rsquo;s face
+appeared like an evil mask. Burkhardt glowered savagely.</p>
+<p>At that instant there sounded the faint report of a
+shot in the street. Then as the group sat unmoving,
+rigid, keyed to the highest pitch of expectancy, there
+followed quickly two more shots. Afterwards, silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gun-play!&rdquo; issued from Vorse&rsquo;s lips, softly.</p>
+<p>They all sprang up to hasten to the door.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V_A_SHOT_IN_THE_DARK' id='CHAPTER_V_A_SHOT_IN_THE_DARK'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<h3>A SHOT IN THE DARK</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Steele Weir driving his car down the street in the
+dusk had caught sight of Felipe Martinez standing near
+the cattle company&rsquo;s office. He stopped close by, beckoned.
+Martinez would do as well as another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a notary, I suppose?&rdquo; he questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mr. Weir. Most of us lawyers here are,&rdquo; he
+replied politely, when he had advanced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve some papers I want acknowledged to-night.
+Must get them into the mail going down to Bowenville
+in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only too pleased to facilitate your business, Mr.
+Weir. My office is down a few doors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jump in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s but a few steps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll get out here.&rdquo; And the engineer stopped
+the engine and descended to the ground.</p>
+<p>Along the street open doorways and windows were
+already beginning to make yellow panels of lamplight in
+the thin gloom. The air was still warm, balmy, scented
+by the lingering aroma of the greasewood smoke of
+supper fires in Mexican ovens. Stars were jeweling the
+sky. Few persons moved in the twilight.</p>
+<p>One of these was a man who, standing at the door of
+a native saloon across the street and a little farther up,
+had come diagonally over towards the bank on seeing the
+engineer halt his car. He walked with a slouching haste
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+seldom exhibited by a Mexican and gained the spot as
+Weir stepped out. There he slackened his pace while he
+scanned the American with an intense, slow gaze that
+the engineer, chancing to raise his eyes, squarely met.</p>
+<p>The Mexicans always looked at him and fell silent
+when he passed since he had shown who was master at
+the dam. In the eyes of some was merely stupid curiosity,
+in some a shrinking, and in many a half-veiled hostility.
+That did not trouble Weir. In Mexico he had
+dealt with recalcitrant workmen of more lawless nature
+than these. He usually ignored them altogether now
+as they no longer were in his employ. But this man
+seized his attention.</p>
+<p>It was not yet too dark to mark his face as he lounged
+past, slowly turning his head about as he progressed
+until his chin was on his shoulder, staring back. His
+look the while remained riveted on Weir&ndash;&ndash;a steady, contemplative,
+evil regard. In Chihuahua the engineer had
+once seen a notorious local &ldquo;killer&rdquo; who had that same
+gaze.</p>
+<p>Martinez had also glanced at the fellow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is that man? One of the discharged workmen?&rdquo;
+Weir asked him, when moving forward they in
+turn had passed the Mexican.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I imagine not. At any rate, he doesn&rsquo;t belong in
+San Mateo or anywhere hereabouts. I know everybody
+for fifty miles, for I&rsquo;ve been active in social and political
+affairs. He&rsquo;s unknown to me. A stranger.&rdquo; Then a
+little farther along: &ldquo;Here is my office, Mr. Weir. I&rsquo;ll
+have a light in an instant. Ah, now. Be so good as
+to have a chair and we&rsquo;ll expedite your business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As Martinez filled out the acknowledgment blanks
+on the papers, his eyes furtively skipped over the vital
+portions of the documents. The latter were connected
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
+with company business. He had hoped they would be
+personal so that he might learn something more of
+this manager&rsquo;s affairs, possibly more of his secret antagonism
+for Sorenson and his friends. Any intrigue
+appealed to the thin, slippery lawyer&rsquo;s soul, but most of
+all some one&rsquo;s else intrigue into which he might profitably
+put a finger. However, from these papers he was to
+learn nothing.</p>
+<p>He had considered all possibilities of the affair, all
+possible solutions of what long ago might have occurred
+between Joseph Weir, undoubtedly the father of the
+man sitting across the table from him, and the four
+men now conferring in Sorenson&rsquo;s office. This was no
+petty squabble, he divined. There was something going
+on under the surface that was big&ndash;&ndash;big! And very
+dangerous too, for the spirit of that moment in Vorse&rsquo;s
+bar was not to be mistaken; it had been tense, electric.
+Utmost caution on Martinez&rsquo;s part would therefore be
+necessary.</p>
+<p>As between the two parties, his sympathies at present
+inclined towards Weir. The refusal on the latter&rsquo;s part
+to re&euml;mploy the Mexican workmen on their own terms
+was purely a matter of policy, and the lawyer&rsquo;s first
+gusty anger had long been forgotten. But not so Sorenson&rsquo;s
+sneering words of that afternoon. They struck
+to the heart of his vanity, breeding an animosity that
+would last. Had not the banker stated that the lawyer
+should hold no political office whatever? After all his
+services? Had he not definitely shown that Martinez
+might never expect anything there? Well, the lawyer
+wasn&rsquo;t one tamely to yield his rights; he did not propose
+always to remain a scrimping, pettifogging attorney,
+existing on crumbs.</p>
+<p>When with a flourish he had appended his name to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+the acknowledgments and affixed his seal, he sat back
+thoughtfully studying the engineer, who was carefully
+examining the paragraphs for errors. He knew his business,
+did Martinez; the man would find no mistakes.
+Then the lawyer&rsquo;s eyes suddenly glistened. He arose
+and closed the door as Weir thrust the documents into
+a stout linen envelope, addressed and stamped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be pleased to see your letter goes in the mail in
+the morning,&rdquo; he said, returning to his place. &ldquo;The stage
+leaves at eight-thirty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Post-office is closed now, I suppose. Very well. It
+will be an accommodation,&rdquo; the engineer responded.</p>
+<p>Martinez leaned forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you can spare the time, I should like to have a
+little talk with you,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Pardon me if I appear
+presumptuous, but as you&rsquo;re aware, Mr. Weir, I overheard
+your words to Judge Gordon in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon. I
+inferred&ndash;&ndash;check me at any instant if you consider this
+none of my business!&ndash;&ndash;that there exists some unpleasant
+feeling between you two gentlemen and possibly others.
+Judge Gordon has always handled the company&rsquo;s business
+in his private capacity of counselor. As you know,
+he&rsquo;s a silent partner in many enterprises with Sorenson,
+Vorse and a man named Burkhardt. They run this town
+and county. You should also know that they&rsquo;re secretly
+opposed to your irrigation project, whatever they profess.
+They&rsquo;ve misled the people into believing it will
+work an injury to this district, whereas it will of course
+be beneficial. Unfortunately too they lead the people
+by the noses&ndash;&ndash;but not me! I refuse to be subservient.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He paused to note the effect of his words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Mr. Weir, these are facts you can confirm if
+you&rsquo;re not already informed of them, which I imagine
+you are. Because I&rsquo;m independent in my opinions and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+actions, I stand in disfavor with these gentlemen, which
+may or may not be an objection in your view to what
+I have in mind. And this is it. I should be pleased to
+execute any legal work that you care to give me; it
+might be of advantage to your company at times to have
+an attorney other than Judge Gordon, who is aligned
+against you and will serve his own interests first. He&rsquo;s
+in a position to cause you embarrassment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our eastern attorneys draw all documents.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course. But I was thinking of delays more than
+anything else. There are a thousand ways a lawyer
+can push or halt matters at will, and your project will
+never be free of legal red tape until completed&ndash;&ndash;if then!
+I&rsquo;m not unselfish in this, I admit; the business would
+be valuable to me. But aside from that, I&rsquo;ll give you
+this advice anyway:&ndash;&ndash;secure another lawyer in any case,
+one without antagonistic personal interests, if you can
+find another in San Mateo besides me. See, I&rsquo;m frank!
+That may sound egotistical, but really I&rsquo;m the only
+free man of the lawyers here. And I&rsquo;ve paid for my
+liberty!&rdquo; He made a sweeping gesture to indicate his
+shabby office. &ldquo;If I had taken orders, I could have been
+county attorney and probably a judge. But I respect
+myself too much to take orders from Sorenson and his
+bunch. I choose this sort of thing in preference.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir maintained a non-committal silence.
+Again the thin dark-skinned lawyer swiftly weighed the
+man before him, considered the dangers in which he
+might become involved if he went a step farther, recoiled,
+then grew bolder. Sorenson had marked him for
+poverty and nonentity; under the favoring shelter of
+the irrigation company&rsquo;s power he might arise from
+both. For at moments the acute Mexican sensed the
+inevitable victory of the new forces at work; this, one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
+of the last strong-holds of old time cattle and sheep interests,
+would break down and yield to the plow and
+fence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, there&rsquo;s something more, though I hesitate to
+mention it,&rdquo; he went on, doubtfully. &ldquo;While Sorenson
+and his crowd run things, it&rsquo;s not because the people&ndash;&ndash;and
+that means us Mexicans chiefly&ndash;&ndash;love them. We&rsquo;re
+indolent by nature; we idle rather than work; borrow
+when we can rather than earn&ndash;&ndash;I speak of our race, but
+we&rsquo;re learning that work proves best in the long run.
+These men have squeezed my people, and robbed them,
+and kept them down. Nothing more would I wish than to
+see these leaders deposed. It&rsquo;s no secret they&rsquo;ve built
+their wealth by questionable methods, but who can prove
+it?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know what I suspect? You have something
+on Sorenson&rsquo;s crowd. That&rsquo;s why they&rsquo;re uneasy; that&rsquo;s
+why the four are sitting over in the cattle company&rsquo;s
+office this minute with their heads together, meeting the
+minute Sorenson arrives home. I saw them go in. Leaving
+aside the question of your own affairs, I&rsquo;d like to
+have matters changed here in this county so that every
+man has a fair chance. Anything that will bring that
+about enlists my interest. When I heard your statement
+to Gordon and saw his face, I knew there was something
+in the past that alarmed him. I recalled a name I had
+once run across when abstracting a title&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was not this ingenious twisting of the truth that
+caused the lawyer to become filled with sudden dismay
+and stop, but the savage hardening of the engineer&rsquo;s
+face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; Weir commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the name was Joseph Weir. I looked it up
+again to be sure, and found the property had been deeded
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+to Sorenson and the others, who still have it. I wondered&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you wonder?&rdquo; came with a devouring look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If&ndash;&ndash;if Joseph Weir received consideration according
+to law.&rdquo; Martinez&rsquo; courage flowed back again. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+make no attempt to justify my curiosity, sir, except to
+say that more than one man in the southwest was done
+out of property in early days; and the practice has not
+ceased, for that matter. But in these days the means
+is usually legal and Mexicans the victims. Sharp mortgage
+dealings and so forth. Now, if I&rsquo;ve said too much,
+I&rsquo;ll instantly forget all about it. On the other
+hand&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I might be of assistance. If you wish to look into
+that old transaction, that is. If there was anything
+crooked about the deal, and I set it down that there
+was with Sorenson mixed in, and with Vorse and Burkhardt
+the witnesses named in the deed and Judge Gordon
+taking the acknowledgment of Joseph Weir&rsquo;s signature,
+as the record shows, then there should be some
+weak spot that could be attacked. There may be men
+yet alive conversant with the circumstances; they may
+know whether duress or fraud was exercised, supposing
+the sale was not honest. Some of the old Mexicans may
+remember Weir, and could give a clue; they have good
+memories for things of those days. Of course, if the
+transaction was all right, then I&rsquo;m all wrong in my
+suppositions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir arose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can give you some of the company business, perhaps
+considerable of it,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>Martinez sprang up, an expression of gratitude upon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+his face. He had not realized all that he had hoped for,
+but he was nevertheless delighted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m really sincere when I give you a thousand
+thanks, Mr. Weir,&rdquo; said he, spreading his arms wide.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not make promises as to the efficiency of my
+services; let results speak for themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I always do,&rdquo; was the comment. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll tell you
+what I demand in any one associated with me&ndash;&ndash;absolute
+trustworthiness first of all, then loyalty and ability.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which leaves nothing,&rdquo; Martinez smiled.</p>
+<p>He preceded the engineer and swung the door open,
+stepping aside. To the visitor&rsquo;s question regarding
+fees for the acknowledgments taken, he waved a declining
+hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing, nothing. Delighted to render you the
+service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll attend to the letter,&rdquo; the lawyer again assured
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come out to the dam in a day or two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow, if you wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow afternoon will do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir&rsquo;s frame filled the lighted doorway as he
+stepped forth from the office. He paused to accustom
+his eyes to the darkness, for during his colloquy with the
+attorney full night had descended. On the same side of
+the street with himself and perhaps twelve or fifteen
+paces off he saw a girl&rsquo;s figure appear and disappear before
+a window as she moved along.</p>
+<p>Then suddenly a tongue of red flame darted at him
+across the street, where lay a space of unlighted gloom.
+His hat was whipped off his head. The sharp report
+of a shot cracked between the adobe walls. With an
+unbelievably rapid movement Steele Weir drew the revolver
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+in his pocket, and which he had carried ever
+since his encounter with young Sorenson in the restaurant,
+fired twice where he had seen the flame and leaped
+aside into the darkness beside the doorway. There he
+waited, half crouching, for a further attack.</p>
+<p>But none came. Men began to run towards the place.
+Shouts and calls echoed along the street. In two minutes
+a crowd was surging before Martinez&rsquo; door wildly
+asking questions.</p>
+<p>Weir pocketed his pistol and walked back into the
+office, where he found his bullet-pierced hat lying on the
+floor and the attorney standing frozen with astonishment.
+A stream of people followed at his heels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who did this shooting? Do you know, Felipe?&rdquo; a
+tall raw-boned white man who led them asked hastily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This gentleman, Mr. Weir, was fired on, sheriff,&rdquo;
+Martinez burst out volubly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I fired in return,&rdquo; the engineer stated. &ldquo;The
+fellow was across the street in the dark. You might look
+over there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Turning and pushing his way through the packed
+door, the sheriff disappeared. The crowd melted away
+again. Presently as Weir glanced about he saw a new
+figure at the doorway, staring at him. He went towards
+the girl there outlined in the lamplight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that you I saw moving along just before the
+exchange of compliments, Miss Hosmer?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I was coming towards you on my way home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It probably gave you a fright.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It did, indeed. I heard the shot and saw your hat
+knocked off. I just went cold in my tracks. At first I
+believed you killed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very much alive, as you see.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But it was dreadful! Who would fire at you from
+the dark? Some one tried to murder you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It looks like it. Still here I am, ready to move your
+car out of the water next time it&rsquo;s stalled.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She entered the room slowly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who in San Mateo would do such a terrible thing,
+Mr. Martinez?&rdquo; she addressed the lawyer. The pallor
+was still on her face and her eyes were large with horror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Miss Janet, if we but knew! We&rsquo;d lay hands
+on him and send him to the penitentiary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Real emotion struggled in the lawyer&rsquo;s words. With
+the return of his senses he had just begun to realize by
+what a narrow margin the assassin&rsquo;s bullet had missed
+destroying his future client and prospects.</p>
+<p>A growing murmur across the street attracted their
+attention. Then as they continued to chat of the event,
+the sheriff reappeared, directing half a dozen men who
+laid a burden in the light of Martinez&rsquo; doorway.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got him,&rdquo; he said to Weir, with ominous significance.
+&ldquo;One bullet through the head, one through
+his stomach. He&rsquo;s good and dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir walked forward and inspected that outstretched
+figure. It was the man whose gaze had been so malevolently
+fastened upon him as he joined Martinez before
+Sorenson&rsquo;s office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is he?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A strange Mexican. Some of these men say he
+showed up this morning and hung around the saloons,
+not talking much. Haven&rsquo;t you ever seen him, before?&rdquo;
+The question expressed a perplexed curiosity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once. When Martinez and I were coming here to
+transact some business. He was taking a good look at
+me then when he passed us. That wasn&rsquo;t over half an
+hour ago. Never saw him before that.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He shot at you first?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had just stepped out of this room. Could I see
+him hiding over there? Or know he was there?&rdquo; Then
+he added, &ldquo;I was taken by surprise, but I marked the
+flash of his gun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sheriff, Madden by name, looked at Weir appreciatively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can use a gun yourself,&rdquo; said he, briefly.</p>
+<p>Martinez now repeated the fact of the dead man having
+fired the first shot, which Janet Hosmer confirmed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, is there anything more?&rdquo; Weir questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to-night, I reckon,&rdquo; Madden replied. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+have an inquest in the morning; show up then. Where
+will I find your father, Miss Hosmer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At home.&rdquo; Then to the engineer she explained,
+&ldquo;Father acts in the absence of the coroner, who&rsquo;s away
+just now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very sorry this happened on your account,&rdquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m very glad you were not hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Outside the corpse was being borne away, followed
+by the curious, avid crowd of Mexicans.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re still shaken by the thing,&rdquo; said Steele Weir.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s enough to upset any girl. Let me walk home with
+you, or you may be starting at shadows all the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VI_JANET_HOSMER' id='CHAPTER_VI_JANET_HOSMER'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<h3>JANET HOSMER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A silvery brightness shone in the east as they came
+out of Martinez&rsquo; office, that increased as they went forward
+until all at once the moon arose into view, lighting
+the street, disclosing the flanking lines of squat buildings,
+revealing the tall cottonwoods about the court
+house and elsewhere thrust up in the town.</p>
+<p>Janet Hosmer breathed a sigh of relief. The darkness
+had seemed potent for further evil, but now it was
+as if the latter retreated with the shadows. She felt a
+desire to go on alone, to separate herself from this companion
+with whom chance had brought her in contact
+at a dramatic moment, to get away from the whole
+terrible affair. Involuntarily her spirit shrank at the
+nearness of the man, for though he had struck back in
+self-defense he nevertheless had killed another and the
+act somehow appeared to set him apart from ordinary
+men, isolate him, give him the character of an Ishmael.</p>
+<p>Yet her feelings were confused. Against this inclination
+was an avid curiosity, or rather a wonderment, as
+to what must now be occurring in his soul. Her eyes
+sought his face as he walked beside her. Neither had
+spoken; and his countenance wore the same stern contained
+aspect, calm, forceful, as the first time she had
+ever observed it. But what was below the surface?
+What were the thoughts now revolving in his mind and
+the emotions flowing in his breast? She could read
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+nothing on that composed mask of a face. Was it possible
+for a man to slay another human being, even justifiably,
+without suffering a hurricane of the spirit?</p>
+<p>But perhaps he had killed men before. The fact of
+his carrying a weapon and his swift deadly fire pointed
+ominously to previous experience.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever shoot any one before?&rdquo; popped from
+between her lips. Then she stopped, clapping her hand
+over her mouth in consternation and staring at him
+palely.</p>
+<p>Weir had halted too. He regarded her in silence for
+a little, a slight smile resting on his face. They stood
+before the cattle company&rsquo;s office and his look went past
+her once to embrace the small darkened building.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a murderer by trade, if that&rsquo;s what you
+mean,&rdquo; said he, at last. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve killed a man or two
+before, yes.&rdquo; Then at the white anguish of her lips and
+cheeks, his tone softened a degree as he went on. &ldquo;Unfortunately
+since becoming of age I&rsquo;ve had to fight. If
+not men, then the earth. If not the earth, then men.
+Sometimes both together. You saw what happened to-night;
+that fellow was unknown to me. He was not a
+workman who had been discharged and felt he had a
+grievance&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she interjected. &ldquo;The Mexicans here
+wouldn&rsquo;t attempt to murder you, however angry they
+might feel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure of that,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I am; I know them, I&rsquo;ve lived among them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, let that go. The man tried to kill me, at any
+rate. However, he was merely a tool, hired for the
+business by some one else. Ordinarily I don&rsquo;t discuss my
+affairs with any one, but since you&rsquo;ve raised the matter
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+I&rsquo;ll just say that I&rsquo;ve enemies in San Mateo who are
+anxious to dispose of me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such enemies here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Who would be delighted to see me lie where
+that dead man lies and who are apparently determined
+to effect it.&rdquo; He touched her sleeve warningly. &ldquo;But
+you will speak of this to no one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, oh, no! Not a word!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele gazed at her steadily. He already repented
+disclosing even so little of his private concerns, an impulse
+altogether at variance with his close-mouthed
+habit, but he had, for some vague reason, felt it necessary
+to explain his course, to justify himself to this
+clear-eyed, fine-spirited girl. He could not let her rest
+under a misapprehension that he was a brute who reveled
+in blood-spilling. And as he regarded her a conviction
+that she was absolutely to be trusted settled
+firmly into his mind.</p>
+<p>She would be staunch; oxen and ropes could not drag
+information from her once she had determined not to
+speak. Yes, she would be loyal to her given word&ndash;&ndash;and
+to her friends. Weir&rsquo;s eyes glanced at the diamond on
+her finger. It would be a girl like her with whom he
+would have chosen to mate if fate had not directed his
+feet on a road which seemingly left him no choice but
+incessant and solitary struggle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate it all; I have nothing but crusts and nettles!&rdquo;
+he exclaimed, with sudden fierce passion. And with a
+quick movement of his hand he beckoned her on.</p>
+<p>Submissively she accompanied him, her bosom rising
+and falling with a quickened rhythm. Too much had
+happened, one thing piling on another, for her to sort
+her thoughts or to attempt to understand things yet;
+and in her tossing state of mind she went at his gesture
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+as one follows a guide, or as a simple matter of course.</p>
+<p>In her mental turmoil that last passionate utterance
+of the man played like a lambent flame. Tense, violent,
+spontaneous, it had come from the heart. What
+harsh lot he had lived and sufferings borne she could
+not even guess; but no man spoke with such unconscious
+bitterness who had not undergone pain and travail of
+spirit. His head was now turned a little towards her
+as they walked: she perceived him staring at the moonlit
+street, his lips compressed, his brows knit.</p>
+<p>Then he glanced about at her, his face clearing.
+&ldquo;Pay no attention to what I said,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;I
+shouldn&rsquo;t have let loose that way. Hello, what&rsquo;s on
+now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before them, and in front of the court house, was a
+packed crowd, people who had run forth at the sound
+of shots, augmented by those who had since arrived
+upon the scene. It was motionless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand back, stand back; don&rsquo;t trample the body!&rdquo;
+came Sheriff Madden&rsquo;s voice in an angry order.</p>
+<p>The crowd surged a little apart in the center.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know this dead man fired the first
+shot?&rdquo; asked some one, vehemently.</p>
+<p>The voices went lower so that Steele Weir and Janet
+Hosmer, who had paused at the edge of the throng,
+were able only to catch the tones.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was that who questioned the sheriff?&rdquo; Weir
+whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Burkhardt, I think. Sounded like him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So intent were the Mexicans upon the occurrence in
+their midst that those close by remained with backs
+towards the pair, failing to notice their presence. All
+craned eagerly to miss nothing of the controversy.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know this engineer didn&rsquo;t start it?&rdquo;
+came Burkhardt&rsquo;s voice again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a fool; there were witnesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to talk to those witnesses. I doubt if they
+really saw anything. It looks to me as if there&rsquo;s another
+side to this shooting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, of course you know&ndash;&ndash;you, sitting there in
+Sorenson&rsquo;s office, as you say,&rdquo; was the ironical retort.</p>
+<p>At this juncture another voice interposed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madden, we want no mistake here. This Weir
+doesn&rsquo;t bear a very good reputation for peacefulness,
+from what I&rsquo;ve learned. If this Mexican has simply
+been shot down&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is that?&rdquo; Steele demanded of the girl. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t
+see him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s speech faltered&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;that is
+Mr. Sorenson. Oh, they misunderstand! Let me push
+in there and tell them how it happened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer&rsquo;s hand closed about her arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do nothing of the kind,&rdquo; he commanded, low.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. Remain quiet and listen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her eyes flew up to his at this extraordinary course,
+so injurious to his own interests. She was anxious to
+press to the front and declare his innocence in the affair
+of everything but defending his life from an assassin.
+She could not understand why he also was not eager to
+spring forward, why he restrained her. Then she saw
+the implacable hatred on his face.</p>
+<p>A thrill quivered through her body. The feeling she
+had at that instant was one of being on the point of
+seeing behind the curtain of a mystery, of making a
+discovery so sinister that she would gasp. Her very
+finger almost rested upon it. Why were Mr. Sorenson
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+and Mr. Burkhardt talking as they were? Trying by
+innuendo to make it seem her companion might have been
+guilty of a crime? Could it be&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; Her blood slowly
+congealed to ice at the horror of where her reasoning
+led.</p>
+<p><i>Could it be they were the enemies he meant!</i></p>
+<p>Such a thing was too dreadful, too absurd. They, the
+respected leaders of the community, could never put a
+pistol in the dead wretch&rsquo;s hand to slay this man beside
+her. Mr. Sorenson! The father of Ed, whom&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; She
+stared blankly at her left hand.</p>
+<p>Yet the banker&rsquo;s heavy, smooth words continued to
+assail her ears steadily. She grasped their import once
+more.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;for the story is too thin. No man could hit
+another across the street in the dark as this engineer
+claims, not only once but twice put a bullet where it
+would kill. Probably the dead man had something on
+this Weir, and the latter knew it. It&rsquo;s not impossible
+he found the fellow in his path, drew and murdered him
+at once, quickly put a hole in his own hat and then
+carried the body across the way, running back to Martinez&rsquo;
+office. The thing could have been done in a
+minute. Martinez&rsquo; himself wouldn&rsquo;t have seen how it was
+worked. I&rsquo;m not saying that was exactly how it was
+done, or that this Weir did actually murder him, but&ndash;&ndash;investigate,
+Madden, investigate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir felt an angry tug at his sleeve. He looked
+around and beheld Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s eyes distended with
+incredulity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come away, come away,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;I should
+never have believed it if I hadn&rsquo;t heard with my own
+ears!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Keeping close to the line of buildings, they skirted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span>
+the crowd, still unnoticed, and left it behind. She
+walked with quick nervous steps; her hand yet unconsciously
+grasped his coat sleeve. All the way to her
+home, which they found dark since a messenger had
+called the doctor to the court house and the Mexican
+girl servant also was gone, she said nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come up on the veranda; I want to talk,&rdquo; she announced
+when he opened the gate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t it be best if you took your mind off the
+whole thing, by a book or something else? I&rsquo;ll go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As if I could take my mind off! There are matters
+in this I must know. You may wonder when I say it,
+Mr. Weir, but this happening concerns me more than
+you dream.&rdquo; Her dark glowing gaze brooded on him
+with a sort of intense determination. Then she went on,
+&ldquo;It&ndash;&ndash;it involves my whole future as well as your own,
+though in a different way. So come inside, if you
+please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir in silence accompanied her upon the dark, broad,
+vine-clad porch. In the half-gloom he found chairs for
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to the point at once,&rdquo; she declared. &ldquo;Why
+did Mr. Sorenson talk in such a fashion?&rdquo; And he
+could feel her bending forward as if hanging on his
+answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the one thing I can&rsquo;t discuss,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must know, I must know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And unhappily I must refuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Weir, if you could but understand what
+this involves for me, you wouldn&rsquo;t hesitate! I was
+shocked at the shooting, but I saw its necessity on your
+part; you&rsquo;re not one to run from a foe, a cowardly foe
+least of all. But what I heard there in the street horrified
+me. I couldn&rsquo;t believe it; I can scarcely credit my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span>
+ears yet. Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Burkhardt were not
+near when you were attacked; they are not acquainted
+with the circumstances or facts as you, Mr. Martinez
+and I know them; they apparently didn&rsquo;t appear until
+the crowd started away with the dead man. Yet at
+once&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, at once,&rdquo; Steele Weir let slip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At once, immediately, when they had barely heard
+the story, they began to tear it to pieces and suggest
+another, making you out a villain. You&rsquo;re only an acquaintance,
+sir, scarcely more than a stranger, but as
+I listened it outraged all my sense of justice. Mr.
+Sorenson, of all men! My brain was in a whirl. But
+it&rsquo;s steady now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer failed to open his lips at her pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m no fool, Mr. Weir; I think of other things besides
+dressing my hair and using a powder puff. I can
+sometimes put two and two together&ndash;&ndash;when I see the
+&lsquo;twos&rsquo; clearly. Now, tell me why Mr. Sorenson talked
+as he did, for I must have my eyes clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ask me anything but that, Miss Hosmer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He sat distressed and uneasy at her prolonged muteness.
+Suddenly she questioned quietly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are those two men the enemies you spoke of?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will save me embarrassment if I go,&rdquo; he remarked,
+starting to rise. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want you to hate me, you
+know, and still I can&rsquo;t say anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her grasp pulled him imperatively back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall not go yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I can only continue to decline making answers.
+I frankly say that I regret having uttered a word of
+explanation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t regret it. And I intend to keep questioning
+you, however rude you may think me. I must know,&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+she cried impetuously, &ldquo;and I shall know! Mr. Sorenson
+is one of the men you referred to, or he would never
+seek to direct suspicion at you. I saw the look on your
+face, sir, as he spoke. But why should you two be
+enemies! You come here a stranger to San Mateo, or
+have you been here before sometime? Did you know
+him before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again he could feel her eyes straining at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems mad to think of him and Mr. Burkhardt,
+and perhaps others, hiring some one to shoot you down
+from a dark doorway. It is utterly mad&ndash;&ndash;crazy. But
+why should they want to convict you, in the crowd&rsquo;s
+opinion at least, of murdering the man. It would not
+be just trouble about the dam&ndash;&ndash;oh, no. But I can&rsquo;t see
+through it at all. Why won&rsquo;t you tell me? You can
+trust me&ndash;&ndash;and I want to help you as well as help myself.
+You certainly don&rsquo;t hold against me my silly nonsense
+and unkind words of the day you brought me home from
+the ford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think them silly; they delighted me,&rdquo; he responded.
+&ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t had anything happen to me so refreshing
+in years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must be friends. Something tells me they&rsquo;re
+going to make you trouble over this shooting, and you&rsquo;ll
+need friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something tells me you&rsquo;re right in both respects,&rdquo;
+he laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And friends must stick together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what they should do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the dusk of the vine-clad, flower-scented place
+where they sat he experienced the subtle power of this
+intimacy. Not a soul stirred in the empty moonlit
+street before the house. No sounds disturbed the warm
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
+peace of the night. In this secluded spot only there
+ran the murmur of their voices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could never stand by and see any man unjustly
+accused and defamed if I knew he was innocent, without
+lifting up my word in defense,&rdquo; she proceeded. &ldquo;But
+let me ask if on your side you&rsquo;re treating me fairly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir could have groaned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a noble spirit, Miss Hosmer. You&rsquo;re more
+courageous and kind than any girl I&rsquo;ve ever known.
+Would you have me reveal what my best judgment tells
+me should remain untold?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what of me? Would you keep it to yourself if
+my future happiness might turn on it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The appeal in her words shook Steele&rsquo;s heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How does this business affect your happiness?
+How?&rdquo; he asked, in perplexity.</p>
+<p>Now it was her turn to hesitate. Why should she
+pause, indeed, before telling to this man what every one
+else knew. Yet hesitate she did, from a feeling she could
+but partly analyze. Of her fianc&eacute; she had already had
+disturbing secret doubts that had increased of late:
+doubts of his habits, his character and the genuineness
+of his love; so that it was with a little eddy of dissatisfaction
+and shame that she admitted the relationship.
+More she questioned her own love as an actual thing.
+In a startling way, too, this silent, forceful man, so
+deadly in earnest and so earnestly deadly, so terrible in
+some aspects, seemed at the instant to dwarf the other
+in stature and power as if the latter were a plump manikin.</p>
+<p>Perhaps at the last minute she had a shiver of dread
+at what might issue from the engineer&rsquo;s lips in the way
+of facts if he took her at her word and told her what
+she had demanded to know. Did she want to know?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
+Suppose she let the affair rest where it was and went
+forward to the future in the comfortable assurance of
+ignorance.</p>
+<p>In that case, it might be wooing later revelations that
+then could not be escaped, revelations like consuming
+lightnings. She would settle it now once for all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does concern my future and my happiness vitally,&rdquo;
+she declared, earnestly. &ldquo;For this reason&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m engaged to marry Ed Sorenson, son of Mr. Sorenson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir leaped to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good God! That fellow!&rdquo; he exclaimed, astounded.</p>
+<p>Without another word he sprang down the steps and
+strode away. Janet Hosmer, grasping the arms of her
+chair and staring after him, saw him once bring down
+his clenched fist on nothing. Then he passed rapidly
+along the street and out of sight.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII_IN_THE_COIL' id='CHAPTER_VII_IN_THE_COIL'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<h3>IN THE COIL</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The Spirit of Irony couldn&rsquo;t have devised a more
+intolerable situation. So thought Steele Weir as he
+strode away from the dwelling, still laboring under the
+emotions provoked by the girl&rsquo;s disclosure, wincing at
+his own biting thoughts and writhing at his own helplessness.
+It needed only this revelation to cap the
+whole diabolical evening.</p>
+<p>He could not have remained with her now if his life
+had depended on it. She, engaged to that scoundrel
+Ed Sorenson! How could she have been so blind to the
+lustful beast&rsquo;s nature? She must love him, of course.
+He must have been careful to exhibit to her only such
+qualities as would gain her affection and respect, or
+rather hollow shams of qualities he never had possessed.
+Propinquity, lack of rivals in this little town, no doubt
+were largely responsible for her feeling for the man.
+But it was like standing by and seeing her fair young
+body, her fresh pure life, her high soul, flung to a devouring
+swine.</p>
+<p>And by the rules of the game he couldn&rsquo;t open his
+lips to utter a word of warning! That was the worst
+of it, that was the worst of it. No, not by the rules of
+the game; not, for that matter, by the rules of life; for
+the latter run that only can the person concerned see
+with his or her own eyes what a loved one&rsquo;s character
+is, and must make and abide by her own judgments.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span></div>
+<p>Steele Weir all at once stopped in his tracks. He
+stared straight before him for a time seeing Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s
+face as it appeared when she anxiously gazed at
+him from Martinez&rsquo; door, coming out of the night like
+a pallid moon-flower. At that instant she had feared
+he had been wounded; her heart was fluttering with
+anguish. The tension of his body relaxed and his hands
+slowly unclosed and involuntarily his eyes went up to
+the moon sailing serenely in the sky above the treetops
+and the flat-roofed adobe houses. What vaster blessing
+could life bestow than to have such a look come seeking
+one beloved!</p>
+<p>He went on thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She shall not marry him,&rdquo; he said to himself, with
+a quick resolve.</p>
+<p>What were the rules of any game when an innocent
+girl&rsquo;s happiness was at stake? Did he care for conventions,
+or even the contempt she herself might feel
+for him for apparently belittling her lover? He could
+stand that, so that her eyes were opened and the fellow&rsquo;s
+yellow heart made plain. At the proper time he
+should act, view his part as she might. A snap of his
+fingers for being misunderstood! He would go his own
+way afterwards.</p>
+<p>The thing had its curious features, too. No mistake,
+the shock of hearing Sorenson senior talking to the
+sheriff and the crowd, working up sentiment, had stirred
+her indignation and wonder and uneasiness and alarm.
+She was no fool, as she had said. She had a clear, practical
+mind, give it something to work on. Her intuition
+had immediately grasped the fact that there might
+be cellars under the Sorenson household of which she
+knew nothing and which should be promptly entered with
+a strong light. Whether the momentary desire would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
+last, that was the question. To-morrow, or the first time
+she found herself in Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s reassuring presence,
+she might consider that her brain had been upset by
+events of this night, jiggled awry in a sort of moonlight
+madness, and her apprehensions as to happiness unfounded
+shadows.</p>
+<p>Well, Weir would strike later.</p>
+<p>He turned into the main street. Evidently the body
+of the dead Mexican had been carried into the jail behind
+the court house, or somewhere. The throng had
+dispersed, though its elements were every place talking,
+in pairs or in little knots of people. As he came along,
+these fell silent at his passing. They stared at him,
+motionless, expressionless, with the characteristic Mexican
+stolidity that is the heritage of Indian blood. By
+his automobile he found Martinez posted, stroking his
+long black mustache and regarding Sorenson&rsquo;s office,
+which was still lighted though the curtain remained
+drawn over the broad plate-glass window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just wanted to give you a whispered word,&rdquo; he said,
+in Steele Weir&rsquo;s ear, darting a glance towards some of
+the Mexicans who, drawn by insatiable curiosity, were
+lounging nearer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speak,&rdquo; said the engineer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came out of the office after you did and heard the
+talk.&rdquo; He made a covert movement of forefinger
+towards the nearby building. &ldquo;The four of them are in
+there again. I saw you listening to Sorenson here in the
+street; and would you care to have me express my opinion
+as to what the signs indicate, Mr. Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the light of what I suggested during our talk in
+my office, the silly twaddle of Burkhardt and Sorenson
+is understandable. I look right through their scheme.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+They always frame up something against anybody they
+want to dispose of; they do it in business matters regularly,
+and very skillfully. They immediately perceived
+a chance, sir, in this unfortunate encounter of yours
+and laid hands on it; their talk was the first delicate
+maneuver to &lsquo;frame&rsquo; you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; was the unperturbed answer.</p>
+<p>Martinez laid a finger on Weir&rsquo;s lapel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Frankly, feeling hasn&rsquo;t been good towards you because
+of the work controversy at the dam,&rdquo; he went on,
+with another swift glance about. &ldquo;They will use that.
+On the other hand, you have Miss Janet and me as witnesses
+in support of your story. Unfortunately Miss
+Janet is, as you may not be aware, engaged to&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez paused dramatically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Ed Sorenson,&rdquo; the lawyer half-hissed. &ldquo;Nothing
+could be worse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why? Look at the position she&rsquo;ll be in. Consider the
+pressure they can put on her through that fact&ndash;&ndash;and
+they&rsquo;ll not hesitate to do so, in one way or another.
+Innocent as a dove, she is, Mr. Weir.&rdquo; He thrust his
+head forward, showing his lips drawn apart and shining
+teeth tight set. &ldquo;And she&rsquo;s never heard a rumor of his
+hushed-up affairs with poor, ignorant, Mexican girls
+who knew no better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll simply have to trust to her courage to tell the
+truth on the proper occasion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but they&rsquo;ll trick her some way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez straightened, smiled, twirled his mustache.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I? They aren&rsquo;t quite foxy enough for that, Mr.
+Weir,&rdquo; he boasted, with glistening eyes.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span></div>
+<p>The engineer was almost ready to believe that, but
+cunning was not the only weapon in his enemies&rsquo; arsenal.
+How would this lean lawyer stand up under intimidation,
+bribes, threats?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I trust so, Martinez,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Do you think they
+will try to get me sometime by an out-and-out gun-play?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, no.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think they could if they tried?&rdquo; Weir inquired,
+grimly.</p>
+<p>The attorney paused with finger and thumb on the
+point of his mustache, lifted his eyebrows and smiled
+broadly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll consider twice before they attempt it, after
+your expert exhibition this evening,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;It was
+amazing, your speed, your accuracy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele tapped the man on the breast, who experienced
+a distinct tremor at that significant touch and at the
+veiled menace in the dam manager&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s always one bullet in my gun for the man
+who betrays me, Martinez.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lawyer licked his lips. On general principles he
+disliked statements that committed one to the future.
+But it was necessary to say something.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure. I should feel the same in your circumstances,&rdquo;
+he responded. Then as Weir turned to his
+car, he continued: &ldquo;The inquest to-morrow morning
+should be over early. I&rsquo;ll visit you in the afternoon as
+planned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t forget that letter,&rdquo; Weir called out.</p>
+<p>Martinez marveled. Kill a man, and still remember a
+letter! That magnified his respect immensely. Cool,
+that fellow! Then a slight shiver as if a chill from
+those black peaks west of the town had struck through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
+his flesh rippled along his spine; for he had been over
+at the jail with the crowd and had viewed that dead
+body lying there on the stone floor. Not only cool, but
+dangerous and deadly, this engineer. He, Martinez,
+must be discreet; it would not do to risk gaining Weir&rsquo;s
+enmity. That cold-faced man could not be &ldquo;monkeyed
+with.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez gnawed his mustache and eyed the dully illuminated
+office window. He wondered if those four men
+inside had not at last found their match, perhaps their
+master. Any one with half a brain could see there was
+going to be a desperate struggle between the four and
+the one, and he was not exactly sure yet that he wanted
+to venture farther into the affair. But the very danger
+fascinated him with its subtle and obscure features, exactly
+suited to his manipulation.</p>
+<p>A man who had been standing apart sauntered nearer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Se&ntilde;or,&rdquo; he addressed the lawyer in Spanish.</p>
+<p>Martinez whirled about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, it&rsquo;s only you, Naharo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a bad fighter, eh?&rdquo; And the man, almost white
+because of intermixed blood, moved a hand in the direction
+Weir&rsquo;s car had gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps not bad. Quick with a gun, however,&rdquo; was
+the careful reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With his fists also. I saw, or if I did not see, I very
+nearly did so&ndash;&ndash;it is the same&ndash;&ndash;saw him use them in Bowenville.
+And on that dog of an Ed Sorenson who would
+have seduced my little Dolorosa, as he did Cristobal&rsquo;s
+daughter, if I had not perceived what he was at.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lawyer&rsquo;s ears were instantly pricked up. He
+caught the man by the shirt-sleeve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>Once they were in his office he carefully closed and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+locked the door, drawing the window shades. Literally
+he rubbed his hands one over the other as he bade
+Naharo take a chair. Then the pair of them rolled and
+lighted cigarettes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I should say no more, Se&ntilde;or Martinez.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will go no farther. And if the engineer and Ed
+Sorenson had a fight, then it must have been for that
+reason the latter&rsquo;s father spoke as he did to-night. You
+heard him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. And I did not understand why. It was not because
+of what happened at Bowenville, unquestionably
+not, for it had to do with another girl&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, a girl! And the engineer mixed in it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen. As I say, he would not have told his father,
+because he keeps such things quiet; it is four years since
+he last had to pay money to settle a matter. Some
+think he now behaves, but it is not true. But he is more
+careful. So his father did not know about this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell it all, Naharo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other inhaled a puff of smoke and half-closed his
+eyes. Though nearly white, he retained the Mexican&rsquo;s
+high cheek bones, and languor, and unforgiving nature.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was in Bowenville, freighting up flour to the store
+of Smith&rsquo;s. I had loaded by evening, to make an early
+start next day. I had gone into the restaurant for
+supper, taking a seat far down at the end of the counter
+near the kitchen. I was tired and thinking only of my
+food. As I ate, there was a crash in one of the stalls
+and I looked about. There was a fight, of course. But
+it ended at once. Then I observed Ed Sorenson come
+out presently, jerking his collar and tie straight. He
+was mad. He had been whipped, too. For he yet looked
+as if he wanted to kill the other man in there, but he
+went away. Soon the other man came out and with him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+was a young white girl, whom I did not know. The
+man was this engineer and he carried an old piece of
+baggage, not such as he would carry but as the girl
+might, for she looked like a ranch girl who was poor.
+The girl was scared. The man was calm as a priest.
+That scoundrel Ed Sorenson had been beaten. Aha,
+so; it was clear. The engineer had put a spoke in the
+fellow&rsquo;s wheel. Then I walked to the door and saw the
+two get into a car and start on the trail this way. After
+that, I resumed my supper. You perceive, the man had
+taken the girl away from the wolf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez&rsquo; restless eyes wandered about the room as
+he digested this account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you see the dead man?&rdquo; he inquired, casually.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, se&ntilde;or.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Their looks met, held for an instant, dropped. Each
+read the thought of the other: the motive for the attack
+on the engineer was clear. But some convictions
+are better not expressed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should have liked to see Se&ntilde;or Weir do the shooting,&rdquo;
+Naharo stated. &ldquo;Dios, such shooting! Two
+shots, two hits. And in the dark!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez&rsquo; grinned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not please&ndash;&ndash;whoever hired the dead man. He
+was hired for the job, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unquestionably, se&ntilde;or,&rdquo; was the reply.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII_THE_GATHERING_STORM' id='CHAPTER_VIII_THE_GATHERING_STORM'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<h3>THE GATHERING STORM</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At the inquest next morning no outward sign indicated
+what Weir&rsquo;s enemies might be at. Indeed, none
+of them was present. The engineer made a statement;
+the two witnesses, Janet Hosmer and Felipe Martinez,
+were briefly interrogated, and the finding was returned
+that the unknown Mexican had met death from two
+bullet wounds while attempting to kill Steele Weir.</p>
+<p>One spectator there was who took a strong interest
+in proceedings, Ed Sorenson. When, however, Janet
+Hosmer was notified by her father, who was in charge,
+that she could withdraw, the young fellow hastened to
+lead her away, with an audible remark that it was a
+shame she had had to be &ldquo;dragged into this disreputable
+gun-man&rsquo;s bloody show.&rdquo; Meaning Steele Weir, naturally.</p>
+<p>That feeling was being intensified against him was
+only too apparent in the hostile manner of the crowd
+and in the silence with which it received the finding.
+There was his former unpopularity, to begin with; there
+was now added a race resentment, for the slain man,
+stranger though he was, was Mexican; and finally, he
+knew not what distilled poison of lies concerning his
+innocence in the night fray. Nothing more was needed
+to reveal the swelling hate which secret fear of Weir
+but increased than a volley of curses and abuse hurled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+at his head from a native saloon doorway as he passed
+in his car on his way home.</p>
+<p>During the following week the engineer was too occupied
+with dam work to have time for other matters.
+He pushed the concrete construction and inspired his
+men with something of his own indomitable spirit, who
+had learned of the cowardly attack in San Mateo and
+rallied to his standard with a zeal and ardor for which
+the fact of employment alone did not account. He had
+become a leader as well as their &ldquo;boss.&rdquo; From Meyers
+down to the humblest workman the camp had for him a
+new admiration, a new respect and a new loyalty, which
+he could not help but feel; he had proved that he could
+deliver the &ldquo;goods&rdquo;; and if the Mexicans wanted war,
+the Americans here would be glad to oblige them. Nor
+did they wait to let San Mateo know the fact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re wid &lsquo;Cold Steel&rsquo; Weir, our boss, four hundred
+of us, till ye can skate on hell,&rdquo; a huge Irishman, one of
+half a dozen standing at Vorse&rsquo;s bar on Saturday night,
+remarked when the saloon-man uttered a sneer at the
+manager. &ldquo;Say that agin and we&rsquo;ll tear your rotten
+booze joint to pieces and make ye eat it! And if another
+stinkin&rsquo; greaser tries to wing him from the dark,
+we&rsquo;ll come down here and wipe your dirty little town off
+the map! That goes both ways from the jack!&rdquo; He
+snapped his fingers under the other&rsquo;s nose by way of
+added insult.</p>
+<p>A petty series of hostile acts against the company
+developed. Teamsters were stoned by boys, which left
+them raging and murderous to discover the men who
+set them on. Half a carload of cement in sacks was
+ripped open and emptied on the earth at Bowenville.
+After Meyers, Weir&rsquo;s assistant, found his automobile
+tires slashed to bits on coming out of the post-office in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span>
+San Mateo, it became necessary always to go in pairs,
+one man to remain on watch. Weir himself just avoided
+a serious accident one evening at dusk while a mile from
+the dam when he instinctively ducked in his car as something
+grazed the top of his wind-shield. A wire had been
+stretched across the road from a telephone pole to a
+tree, at just the height to strike him at the throat.</p>
+<p>He halted and removed the deadly contrivance. Men
+on watch of his movements could have prepared it
+against his return; and, indeed, he thought he detected
+a pair of flitting shadows behind a row of willow bushes
+lining a Mexican irrigation ditch, but in the dusk he
+could not be sure. On running thither, he found no
+one.</p>
+<p>The camp was not of a temper, however, to allow the
+attacks to be all on one side. Atkinson, the superintendent,
+came to Weir one morning towards the end of
+the week and informed him workmen were drifting down
+to San Mateo nightly in hope of trouble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll get a knife put into them,&rdquo; Steele Weir replied,
+with a frown that did not entirely hide his satisfaction
+at this evidence of support.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe; and again maybe not,&rdquo; the superintendent
+stated, grinning. &ldquo;A bunch jumped some of our boys
+last night and I guess when the dust settled there were
+a couple of Mexicans beaten nearly to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Call the men all together this noon,&rdquo; Weir ordered.</p>
+<p>At that hour he gave them a talk for what he called
+their long-eared cussedness, and laid down a little law
+and wound up with a number of reasonable explanations
+for the same. Every man who went out hunting trouble
+was a camp liability, and would be fired. He did not
+propose to give the town authorities a chance to jail
+workmen and impair the dam work, just the thing they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+were waiting to do. The men should keep away from
+San Mateo, or at least avoid disputes and rows. If they
+spent no money there whatever it would sting the town
+where it would hurt the most, in its pocket-book; and
+he himself was transferring the company bank account
+to Bowenville, by way of example. If any man felt
+the need of change from camp, he could have two days
+off at the end of the month to spend at Bowenville. But
+keep away from the Mexicans!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if they come up here huntin&rsquo; us when we show
+up no more?&rdquo; yelled the same big Irishman who had
+paid his respects to Vorse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In that case, tear their heads off,&rdquo; was the reply.
+&ldquo;But put on your gloves first or you&rsquo;ll dirty your
+fingers.&rdquo; Which bit of rough humor caught the crowd&rsquo;s
+fancy and won a roar of laughter.</p>
+<p>Later as the crowd dispersed to eat Atkinson said to
+Meyers, &ldquo;The boss knows how to handle men all right,
+all right; he put sugar on the pill. The gang went off
+grinning. They know they&rsquo;ve got to be good&ndash;&ndash;but only
+up to a limit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meantime Felipe Martinez had not been idle. He
+rode up to engineering headquarters on his pony one
+evening and carried Weir out into the open where their
+words would not be overheard. He reported that he
+was quietly working for information of Weir&rsquo;s father
+among the older Mexicans who would be likely to remember
+him, but proceeding cautiously so that no one
+would suspect his purpose. He represented himself to
+them as undertaking to write a history of San Mateo
+County; he must depend upon them for data of early
+days; it would be a fine book bound in leather, in which
+their names and possibly their pictures would appear;&ndash;&ndash;which
+never failed to flatter the parties with whom
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+he talked. And the lawyer laughed with amusement
+as he related the success of his method.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have already seen some thirty or forty people,
+a few of whom recalled your father, but no more. But
+this afternoon,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I discovered a woman
+who worked at the Weir ranch house.&rdquo; Martinez perceived
+the engineer&rsquo;s attention quicken. &ldquo;She said the
+Weirs had a little boy of four years of age, perhaps
+five. You, Mr. Weir, of course. They suddenly paid
+and discharged her one day, packed a trunk and drove
+hurriedly off; and the next morning Sorenson took
+possession of the ranch and she went home. They
+drove off in a great haste&ndash;&ndash;there was no railroad anywhere
+near here then&ndash;&ndash;and that was the last she ever
+saw or heard of them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One thing more there was: she said there was a
+story that went around for awhile afterwards that
+Weir and another had lost their ranches and cattle
+gambling. For that reason Weir left the country;
+and for that reason, too, the other man, Dent, by name,
+committed suicide in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon where they had
+gambled. She said Saurez, an old man living with his
+son up a little creek, would know about that, for he used
+to clean out Vorse&rsquo;s bar-room in those days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir grasped Martinez&rsquo;s shoulder in a quick
+grip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did! Get everything he knows out of him,&rdquo;
+he commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave it to me, Mr. Weir. I understand how to
+wheedle facts out of these old fellows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But it was doubtful if the engineer heard his words.
+He had dropped his hand, stood opening and shutting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+his fingers, while on his face grew the hard implacable
+look that always whetted the attorney&rsquo;s curiosity.</p>
+<p>Weir walked up on the hillside when Martinez had
+ridden away and there sat down on a rock. It was a
+rift, though but a faint rift, that this news made in the
+blank dark wall he had to confront; and he wished to
+think. Proof as well as knowledge of what had happened
+in his father&rsquo;s case was what he must have. Acting
+on intuition he had been able to put fear into the
+hearts of the four men responsible for making his father&rsquo;s
+life a hell, but proof of their guilt was necessary
+to make them suffer in a similar fashion, to reveal their
+crime to the world, to destroy them. Now at last, here
+was a possibility. If this former roustabout of the
+saloon knew anything!</p>
+<p>Well, he must be patient&ndash;&ndash;the mill of the gods grinds
+slowly. But when finally he had gained all the strands
+and woven the net! Unconsciously his hands arose before
+his face like talons closing on prey and shut on air,
+until their veins swelled. That was how he would serve
+them, those men. Though they might fall on their
+knees and implore mercy, not one beat of pity should
+move his heart.</p>
+<p>It was almost dark when he arose. Behind him the
+great peaks soared against the last greenish twilight.
+In the shacks the camp lamps were showing at windows.
+At one side and in the canyon the concrete core of the
+dam appeared white in the gloom, like a bank of snow.
+The murmur of voices, an occasional distant laugh,
+came from men&rsquo;s quarters.</p>
+<p>Presently he slanted down the hillside past the camp,
+until he struck into a road leading towards town, where
+he began to walk forward, hatless and without coat,
+through the soft dusk. He was disinclined for work as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+yet, the work always piled on his desk; he desired yet
+for a little to rest his spirit in the evening calm.</p>
+<p>His thoughts had softened and turned to Janet Hosmer.
+He had not seen her since the morning at the
+court house. He had not spoken with her since that
+interview upon her veranda, which had terminated
+with his shocked utterance. That he had thus given
+away to his feeling he had a hundred times repented;
+and that he had so bruskly departed he was profoundly
+chagrined. But what could he have done? No explanation
+was possible. The situation in which he had
+been allowed of but one thing, escape.</p>
+<p>With the rising tide of emotion reflected by memory
+of that moment his steps had quickened. All at once
+he discovered before him the rippling sheen of water.
+He was at Chico Creek, a mile from camp, where he first
+had met Janet Hosmer. Engaged with his tangled problem,
+he had been unaware of the distance covered.</p>
+<p>Pausing but an instant he waded through, smiling to
+himself at thought of that afternoon&rsquo;s spirited encounter
+with the girl. She had not dreamed then, nor he,
+that events would fling them together in a more dramatic
+second meeting at Martinez&rsquo; door.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he perceived a white-clad figure before him,
+standing motionless, leaning forward to peer his way
+as he walked forth from the ford.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s you, Mr. Weir?&rdquo; came in soft inquiry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. How in the world do you happen to be here,
+Janet Hosmer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought I recognized you marching through the
+stream, so I wasn&rsquo;t alarmed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one would think of harming you, I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But anyway I should have vanished if you had been
+a stranger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not being one, you remained. I had no idea of
+such luck as this when I set out for a walk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both pleasure and satisfaction sounded in his voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was just taking a little stroll myself,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX_AN_UNEXPECTED_ALLY' id='CHAPTER_IX_AN_UNEXPECTED_ALLY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<h3>AN UNEXPECTED ALLY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me take the chance first thing to apologize for
+my behavior the night we talked on your porch,&rdquo; Steele
+Weir exclaimed. &ldquo;Your statement of being engaged
+surprised me into words and conduct that has had me
+in an unhappy state of mind ever since. Mr. Sorenson&rsquo;s
+talk to the crowd stirred my anger. Had I known
+your exact relationship to him and his son, I should
+have made no mistakes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had urged you to speak, had I not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Grant that. But I don&rsquo;t stand excused.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was no questioning the sincerity of your
+last expression that night, in any case,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve not been indignant because of what you exclaimed
+or because you hate the Sorensons. &lsquo;Hate&rsquo;
+isn&rsquo;t too strong a word, is it? I&rsquo;m none the less interested
+however to know what it&rsquo;s all about. You see
+I don&rsquo;t take any stock in the reasons commonly given:
+that you&rsquo;re a &lsquo;bad man,&rsquo; an agent of a rich corporation
+trying to put our people out of business, a public
+menace and all the rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that what they say?&rdquo; Weir asked, with a laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Part of it. Nor does it fool father, for he said
+only yesterday that there&rsquo;s something more at bottom
+of the feeling against you than merely a fight of moneyed
+interests. He knows from what I told him that
+that dead man tried to murder you; yet he hears constant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+talk of your &lsquo;crime,&rsquo; of evidence being gathered
+against you by the county attorney, Mr. Lucerio, and
+of the penalty you shall pay. All absurd, to be sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Martinez tells me the same,&rdquo; Steele responded.
+&ldquo;But he says also that all the people do not believe the
+stories.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true.&rdquo; And she appeared to reflect upon
+the circumstance.</p>
+<p>To Weir nothing could be stranger than this talk
+on the dark road with the girl who, too, should be naturally
+opposed to him. In fact, here at this very spot
+and at their first meeting she had announced herself as
+a critic and an enemy. He could smile over that now;
+she herself probably did smile at the recollection. Yet
+she was calmly discussing his situation without animus
+or even unfriendliness.</p>
+<p>How could that be possible if she actually loved
+the man whom she expected to marry, Ed Sorenson?
+Why did she not at once spring to arms in defense
+of the Sorenson side? Unless&ndash;&ndash;unless she suspected
+the baseness of her lover and his father, and fear had
+replaced love.</p>
+<p>All at once she spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will put you in jail if they can, and bring
+you to trial, and&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And hang me, that&rsquo;s what you hesitate to say,&rdquo;
+Steele finished for her. &ldquo;Whom do you mean by
+&lsquo;they&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are the people here in this county really &lsquo;they&rsquo;?
+Do the people, that is, the mass of poor ignorant Mexicans,
+have anything to do with public affairs? Both
+you and I know they do not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why deny it!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s generally known
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span>
+that four men, with a few more at their skirts, run
+things. They nominate the men who are to fill office&ndash;&ndash;there&rsquo;s
+only one political party in the county worth
+mentioning&ndash;&ndash;and give them orders and expect them to
+obey. For that reason father would never accept an
+office. He could be coroner; he could be county treasurer;
+he could go to the legislature; or anything else&ndash;&ndash;if
+he would but wear their political livery. But he
+prefers to be a free man. I used to think nothing of it,
+see no wrong in such a state of affairs, for everything
+went along well enough and about the same as ever as
+far as I could see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possibly you didn&rsquo;t see everything that was occurring
+below the surface even then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly what father told me yesterday. We talked
+about everything under the sun, I imagine. And I
+informed him that you walked home with me the night
+of the shooting; I had not spoken of it before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was proper; he should know it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t share in the feeling against you, Mr.
+Weir, let me assure you of that. Ever since he heard
+my explanation of the shooting and then met you at
+the inquest, he&rsquo;s convinced that you&rsquo;re being done a
+great injustice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele experienced a warm glow of pleasure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I liked your father at first sight,&rdquo; said he, simply.
+&ldquo;But where does all this leave us?&rdquo; He spoke in a
+light tone of amusement that he was far from feeling.
+&ldquo;Our position is&ndash;&ndash;odd.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; she assented so earnestly that he began to
+laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t allow it to disturb you. I&rsquo;m really
+presuming upon your kindness of heart and innocence
+in enjoying your company now. Acquaintance with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+me is a rather serious matter here in San Mateo and
+carries consequences. You don&rsquo;t think for an instant
+that I&rsquo;d allow my personal pleasure&ndash;&ndash;and pleasure it
+is to be with you, needless to say&ndash;&ndash;to bring you into
+ill-favor among your friends and to make you the subject
+of gossip. I appreciate your good spirit towards
+me; and I admire you greatly. But it will be well if I
+admire you at a distance hereafter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see whose business it is except mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To Steele Weir it was like pushing aside the only
+thing that brightened his hard, toilsome existence thus
+to abjure future companionship with her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good heavens, do you fancy that comes easy for
+me to say?&rdquo; he exclaimed, drawing a deep breath. &ldquo;I
+never before knew any one who&ndash;&ndash;well, I&rsquo;ll stop there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who what?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I nearly overstepped the bounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What imp of perversity was in the girl? Weir
+stared at her for a moment through the gloom.</p>
+<p>And then she remarked that she must be returning
+home, and said she would be glad if he would accompany
+her part way as there was a Mexican&rsquo;s house half
+way to town where a particularly vicious dog always
+rushed out. The dog rushed out exactly as she had
+predicted, barking savagely, so that she slipped her
+arm into the engineer&rsquo;s and held fast until they were
+past.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He does that only after dark; I hadn&rsquo;t expected to
+walk so far and it was still light when I set out,&rdquo; said
+she.</p>
+<p>The touch of her fingers on his sleeve, the light
+swing of her form at his side, the subtle fragrance that
+emanated from her hair and face, this intimate nearness
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
+on the dark road, the heavy scent of flowers in
+the bordering fields,&ndash;&ndash;all sent the blood thumping from
+his heart. If he&ndash;&ndash;if he were in Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s place,
+what love he could pour out!</p>
+<p>Ed Sorenson, the double-faced wretch who while engaged
+to her had attempted to entice away for his own
+vile gratification the simple, trustful girl on Terry
+Creek, he was to marry this sweet and charming companion.
+What diabolical tragedies life could mix!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See, the moon is rising,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>Over the edge of the mesa the yellow globe was
+bulging, rayless for the moment, round and full.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re almost at the edge of town, and I&rsquo;ll stop
+here,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;As I said, I&rsquo;d not bring down upon
+your head a single unpleasant word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My head&rsquo;s not so tender,&rdquo; she responded quickly.
+&ldquo;But I think you&rsquo;re right&ndash;&ndash;for the present.&rdquo; A tight
+little smile followed the words. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I propose to stand by you. I told you that
+night I couldn&rsquo;t remain indifferent when I saw an innocent
+man persecuted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You give me a tremendous amount of happiness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I do, I&rsquo;m glad. I don&rsquo;t believe you ever had
+much of it. Do you know what is said? That you
+never smile. But I can swear that isn&rsquo;t true, and I&rsquo;m
+beginning to wonder if you really are&ndash;&ndash;Heavens, what
+was I about to say!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead. It&rsquo;s nothing terrible, I wager.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I won&rsquo;t finish that, but I&rsquo;ll ask a question
+even more impertinent, if I may. Frankly, I&rsquo;m dying
+of curiosity to know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir turned his head to listen to the approach of a
+horseman. He could see the man galloping towards
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span>
+them for town, having turned into the road from a lane
+a short distance off, his horse&rsquo;s hoofs striking an occasional
+spark from a stone. Then the engineer looked
+smilingly at Janet Hosmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you anything&ndash;&ndash;or almost anything.&rdquo; One
+subject alone was sealed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s that name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Cold Steel.&rsquo; How did you get it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was just pinned on me a few years ago. I&rsquo;m not
+particularly proud of it. I don&rsquo;t even know the rogue
+who gave me the label. And it means nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even your enemies are using it,&ndash;&ndash;and I understand
+what it signifies.&rdquo; She bent her eyes upon him for a
+time. &ldquo;That is, what it signifies to your friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to my enemies?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More gossip. They say it&rsquo;s because you&rsquo;re a gun-man
+and a knife-man. Oh, I wish I didn&rsquo;t have to have
+my ears filled with such vicious slander! But it means
+the same to enemies as to friends if they would but
+admit it. I&rsquo;ll wait until this rider passes, then I must
+go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No thought of friends or foes, both, or of any such
+person as Ed Sorenson in particular, was in Steele&rsquo;s
+mind as he made answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d stand here forever if you didn&rsquo;t go,&rdquo; he said,
+with a low eagerness that caused her breath to flutter
+in spite of herself.</p>
+<p>On her part, her mind was whispering, &ldquo;He means
+it, I believe he really means it.&rdquo; Which caused her to
+lift and lower her eyes hurriedly, and feel a peculiar
+sense of trepidation and excitement. Odd to state, she,
+too, just then had no recollection of any such being as
+Ed Sorenson, which was the extreme of unloverliness.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Before I do go, I&rsquo;ve something to tell you,&rdquo; she
+said hurriedly, dropping her voice. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s this: the dead
+man&rsquo;s name was&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;here her tone went down to a mere
+sibilance&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Pete Ortez.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He leaned forward, once again the hard fierce man
+she had seen in Martinez&rsquo; office the night of the shooting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you learn that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&ndash;&ndash;well, it was let slip inadvertently in my presence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir would not press her further. Nor was there
+need, for the sudden embarrassment on her face and
+indeed the information itself could have but one source,
+the man who knew, Ed Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the equal of a thousand ordinary friends,&rdquo;
+he declared. &ldquo;I can make use of that item. Step aside,
+please; we&rsquo;re in the middle of the road.&rdquo; And he drew
+her from in front of the horseman advancing upon
+them.</p>
+<p>They said nothing, but waited for the man to pass.
+But he pulled his mount from a gallop to a trot, and
+from a trot to a foot pace, and at last when squarely
+even with them came to a full stop. From under his
+broad hat brim he silently considered the girl in white
+summer dress and the bare-headed engineer.</p>
+<p>Then he began to shake with laughter, which lasted
+but an instant. So insulting, so sinister was that
+noiseless laugh that Janet&rsquo;s hand had flown to Weir&rsquo;s
+arm, which she nervously clutched. As for Weir, his
+limbs stiffened&ndash;&ndash;she felt the tightening of the arm she
+grasped&ndash;&ndash;as a tiger&rsquo;s body grows taut preparatory to
+a spring.</p>
+<p>The short, fleshy, insolent rider sitting there in the
+moonlight was Burkhardt.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed Sorenson better keep an eye on his little turtledove,&rdquo;
+he remarked. And touching heel to his animal
+he swung ahead for town.</p>
+<p>For one dazed minute they stared after him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shoot him!&rdquo; she suddenly said, through shut teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t my gun along, or I&rsquo;d be glad to oblige
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He deserves killing, the wretch!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On more accounts than one,&rdquo; he replied, quietly.</p>
+<p>So quietly and so gravely, in truth, that her gust of
+rage subsided before the low-spoken menace of the
+words. No quick anger was his but a steady and
+deadly purpose. Again she felt the hard-held force,
+the mystery of the man, as if flowing suddenly upward
+from subterranean channels. What wrong had he
+suffered, what undeserved torture at the hands of this
+man and others thus to freeze his soul?</p>
+<p>But he immediately turned to her, asking, &ldquo;Does that
+upset the broth?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A wan smile greeted his words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I expect it will keep the cook busy, anyway,&rdquo; she
+said.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X_BY_RIGHT_OF_POSSESSION' id='CHAPTER_X_BY_RIGHT_OF_POSSESSION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<h3>BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Janet Hosmer made no effort to guess what her
+fianc&eacute; would say when next he called, or to prepare a
+defense of explanations and excuses. She was not that
+kind. What was necessary to be stated at the proper
+time would arise to her lips. Nevertheless she had a
+heaviness of heart, a natural distress as to the unpleasantness
+in prospect; and had only the slightest hope
+that Ed would ignore or refuse to hear Burkhardt&rsquo;s
+story. The man would tell her lover, of that she might
+rest assured, out of hatred for the engineer if for no
+other reason.</p>
+<p>She knew how passionately Ed was set against Steele
+Weir, for a score of times she had heard his incensed
+opinions, increasing lately to tirades. It had seemed
+strange at first that one could be so bitter over a simple
+difference like that of who should work at the dam.
+But ever since Weir had uttered his hoarse exclamation
+regarding her engagement, words so full of protest
+and amazed indignation, she was aware the cause
+went deeper.</p>
+<p>At that moved ejaculation of her companion that
+night something, too, had settled on her heart like a
+weight&ndash;&ndash;an indefinable foreboding. The anxiety
+aroused about Ed&rsquo;s father and his integrity came to
+include Ed likewise. Loyalty of course required that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+she accept the man she had promised to marry, without
+reservations. As between him and others there
+should be but one choice. But did she really know
+him? Was he simply the open, jolly, generous, upright
+adoring fellow he appeared? Or were there less pleasant,
+more ignoble sides to his character? Was he, as
+well as his father, capable of a mean, unworthy, selfish
+persecution of another?</p>
+<p>The engineer had made no open accusation against
+him&ndash;&ndash;or against any one, for that matter. She had
+done her best to get him to express himself, but he had
+refused. Enemies he might have, but he would not discuss
+the fact beyond admitting it was true. Only at
+moments when his restraint slipped could she measure
+his feelings. Quite different that from Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s
+voluble, heated denunciations of the other. Yet,
+heavens, how appalled this reserved man had been at
+hearing of her engagement! Far more than words, far
+more than any open charge, did his face and incredulity,
+both so patently sincere, bespeak the mistake she
+was making and justify gnawing doubts of her lover.</p>
+<p>As she approached her home Ed Sorenson came
+dashing out to spring into his runabout waiting before
+the gate. At sight of her he pulled up short.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, here you are,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, here I am,&rdquo; was her reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You doubtless know what I&rsquo;ve been told,&rdquo; he stated,
+significantly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t. I can only suspect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it true you&rsquo;ve been meeting this man Weir on
+the quiet? Meeting him while engaged to me? You
+know what I think of him, and what every other respectable
+person thinks of him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that Mr. Burkhardt&rsquo;s report? That I am
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+meeting Mr. Weir on the quiet, to use your words?&rdquo;
+she countered.</p>
+<p>Sorenson made an angry gesture at what he considered
+an evasion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Janet, listen. He said he saw you at the edge of
+town, that you were both bare-headed, standing close
+together, arms locked. Good heavens, can&rsquo;t you imagine
+my feelings on hearing what he had to say! He
+stopped me on the street and drew me aside to put me
+on my guard, he said. Burkhardt wouldn&rsquo;t just make
+up a yarn like that against you, and he&rsquo;s a good friend
+of mine. He didn&rsquo;t say half what he suggested.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl turned her face towards the house, shut her
+eyes for an instant. She could picture the rider&rsquo;s
+brutal leering face and unspoken insinuations; and
+her brain also placed in the scene her lover greedily if
+angrily drinking in the tale. Harkening to it instead
+of knocking the man down, that was the worst of it.
+Harkening&ndash;&ndash;and believing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not deign to resent your remark of meeting Mr.
+Weir &lsquo;on the quiet&rsquo;,&rdquo; said she, quietly. &ldquo;I met him on
+the road accidentally.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think I&rsquo;m entitled to know something
+about it?&rdquo; he asked, with an edged tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it you desire to know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nearly an oath of wrath escaped his mouth, but he
+kept his control.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Janet, you know what kind of a man he is,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You know what I feel against him, and father,
+and all our friends, and the town. And the whole town,
+too, will probably hear of this, with a lot of gossip
+added that isn&rsquo;t true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I met him accidentally.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t have to chat with him like an old
+friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet Hosmer gave him a slow, meditative look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know how I talked with him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You talked with him. That in itself was too much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t view it in that light,&rdquo; she responded. &ldquo;He
+was perfectly civil. Whatever public opinion may be
+regarding the shooting, I know he killed the man in self-defence.
+So that&rsquo;s nothing against him. You would
+have done the same in his place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ed Sorenson leaned towards her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were mistaken, Janet. I&rsquo;ve said before that I
+feared you were, but the prosecuting attorney has witnesses
+to the gun-play that he&rsquo;s dug up. Martinez saw
+nothing; how could he from inside the office? And
+remember that you&rsquo;re only a girl, Janet; in the darkness
+and with the excitement you were confused. I
+haven&rsquo;t a doubt this scoundrel Weir made you believe
+you saw what never occurred, when you appeared in
+Martinez&rsquo; office. When you&rsquo;ve thought it over, you&rsquo;ll
+realize that yourself. These new witnesses tell just
+the reverse of what you fancied happened. I&rsquo;m going
+to see that you&rsquo;re away from San Mateo when the
+man&rsquo;s tried, as he will be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No reply coming from her, he continued:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He deceived you then and he&rsquo;ll endeavor to poison
+your mind right along. You&rsquo;re too trustful. Now, I
+was angry at first, but if there was anything in this
+meeting to-night that was out of the way, it was his
+doing, I know. If he got familiar with you, as Burkhardt
+hinted&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll kill the dog with my own hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You may rest easy. His conduct was irreproachable,
+Mr. Burkhardt to the contrary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson regarded her in perplexity, divided between
+anger and doubts. Too, a new feeling unaccountably
+sprang into his breast&ndash;&ndash;jealousy. In the
+end apprehension all at once filled his mind, darkening
+his face and bringing down his brows.</p>
+<p>Uneasy as at first he had been after the row in the
+restaurant, he had eventually dismissed the matter from
+his mind, for no rumor of it had reached San Mateo.
+Neither Weir nor Johnson, the girl&rsquo;s father, had
+blabbed of it, so his alarm passed; they didn&rsquo;t want
+to talk of it for the girl&rsquo;s sake, any more than he
+wished it known, was his grinning conclusion. The
+deuce would have been to pay if Janet had got wind of
+the business. But now his fears came winging back a
+hundred-fold as he stared at her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did he say to you?&rdquo; he asked, in a tense
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that tone with me, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson, however, was past observation of her mood
+or temper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told you a lot of lies about me, didn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo; he
+went on, not hiding the sneer. &ldquo;And you believed
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t say much, but what he did say was to
+the point. I don&rsquo;t recall that there were any lies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There were, of course. It would be just his chance
+to give you his made-up story about me and that Johnson
+girl. That was what so interested you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, he didn&rsquo;t say anything about you and any girl
+except me. Then he only said he was sorry he couldn&rsquo;t
+have the pleasure of my friendship&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay-ee,&rdquo; the other grated. His lips worked above
+his teeth.</p>
+<p>A shudder passed over Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s skin at the
+sound and the sight, for she had never seen him like
+this. A cold hand might have been closing about her
+heart: his glare was animal-like and bestial. His nature
+at the instant stood unclothed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he said he would be at pains to avoid even
+chance meetings with me, because it would make talk
+and cause me annoyance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll not meet you another time if I have anything
+to say about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see. But I wanted you to understand that he
+told me no lies, nor repeated any story&ndash;&ndash;about you and
+a Johnson girl, I think you said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A visible breath of relief lifted his breast. He now
+would have been glad for some one to boot him along
+the street for ever mentioning the thing. He almost
+had put his foot in it. Apparently she was not interested
+in seeking further knowledge of the subject that
+he so ill-advisedly had brought up. Lucky for him she
+hadn&rsquo;t the inquisitiveness of some girls.</p>
+<p>The narrow escape restored a trace of his good
+humor, and he was shrewd enough to divert her mind
+before the incident made an impression. He reached
+out and patted her shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think me a scold, darling,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Burkhardt
+upset me with his news, that was all. He hates
+that gun-man so much that it&rsquo;s no wonder he was angry
+at seeing him hoodwink you. He probably imagined a
+lot. Just don&rsquo;t speak to Weir if he tries to stop you
+again. And pretty soon we&rsquo;ll have him where he won&rsquo;t
+interfere with anybody.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will that be?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The county attorney&rsquo;s still collecting evidence.
+Nothing will be done before the grand jury meets, which
+is in a couple of weeks. You must arrange to go off
+on a visit about that time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you won&rsquo;t have to go through the ordeal of
+appearing in court. There are ways of fixing such
+things.&rdquo; He laughed softly. &ldquo;Especially here in San
+Mateo County. It&rsquo;s too rotten a business for you to
+have to step into, this murder. Come along down to
+the drug store and have some ice cream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to-night. I&rsquo;m feeling a little tired.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then let us rest on your porch. I haven&rsquo;t seen
+you twice in the last week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some other evening, Ed. I promised father to help
+get up his account books.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not angry with me?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;re
+not, give me a kiss before I go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A sharp smile showed on her lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not angry, but I&rsquo;m going to penalize you to
+that extent. If you must have a cheek to press, go
+kiss&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; She paused, while the conviction darted into
+his mind that she had remembered that Johnson girl
+blunder after all, then said: &ldquo;Mr. Burkhardt&rsquo;s cheek.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again relief swept him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, be kind, Janet,&rdquo; he began. But she was
+already through the gate and skipping up the walk,
+vanishing in the gloom of the veranda. The screen
+door clapped shut. &ldquo;Peeved, all right. I&rsquo;ll have to be
+extra-nice to her for a day or so until she calms down,&rdquo;
+he murmured to himself. &ldquo;Must send her a box of
+chocolates and some magazines to-morrow to show my
+contrite heart; that always gets &rsquo;em. Hang it, it&rsquo;s
+time to fix a day, too. We&rsquo;ve been engaged long
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span>
+enough. She sure has a figure and face&ndash;&ndash;a beaut! I
+guess she didn&rsquo;t smell the booze on my breath. Got to
+be careful about that till we&rsquo;re married.&rdquo; He jumped
+into his car.</p>
+<p>The screen door had clapped shut, but Janet had not
+entered. She had employed the artifice to convey the
+impression it had. She did not wish to go in to her
+work just yet, for calm as she had appeared during the
+interview her emotions were running full tide. Love
+Ed Sorenson? Marry him? She groped for and
+dropped into a wicker chair, her head sinking in shame
+and self-abasement. Never&ndash;&ndash;never!</p>
+<p>And before her mind swam another face, a face with
+the hair ruffled about the brow, clear of eyes and
+strong-lined, as she had beheld it in the moonlight of
+the road.</p>
+<p>All at once she tugged at a finger, fiercely pulling
+off the engagement ring. She rubbed her cheek as well,
+with an angry hand, for the memory of kisses was burning
+her as by fire.</p>
+<p>Then she sat quite motionless for a long time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just ask father,&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;There can&rsquo;t
+be more than a dozen Johnsons around here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Which would have given Ed Sorenson a fresh jolt
+in his breathing apparatus if he had overheard, and
+shriveled the cocky self-assurance with which he sipped
+a high-ball that moment at Vorse&rsquo;s bar.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI_JANET_AND_MARY' id='CHAPTER_XI_JANET_AND_MARY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<h3>JANET AND MARY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In a region as sparsely settled by white people as
+San Mateo and its adjoining counties there were not,
+as Janet put it, more than a dozen Johnson families.
+In fact, there were but two, she learned from her
+father: one at Bowenville, the small railroad town of
+three hundred people, a merchant with a wife and four
+little children; the other a rancher on Terry Creek,
+whose wife was dead and who had one child, a girl of
+sixteen or seventeen years of age.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I may be away at dinner time, so don&rsquo;t wait for
+me,&rdquo; she told her father next morning. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going
+out in the country a few miles&ndash;&ndash;and you know my car!
+If you&rsquo;d just let me squeeze some of these patients who
+never pay, you could have a new car yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mine&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; he smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But mine isn&rsquo;t. Look at it. You gave it to me
+only because you scorned to ride in it any longer yourself.
+It would do for me, you said, but you prance
+around in a bright shiny one yourself. I blush at the
+row mine makes; sounds like a boiler factory; I drive
+only along side streets. If the patients would pay
+what they owe, I could ride like a lady instead of a
+slinking magpie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The doctor leaned back in his chair and laughed
+(they were at breakfast) and remarked that old friends
+were best.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t call my asthmatic tin beast a friend; we&rsquo;re
+bitter enemies,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>It carried her to Terry Creek about noon, however,
+safely enough, whither she went with a firm resolution
+that crushed a certain embarrassment and anxiety.
+Suppose these people resented her inquiries.</p>
+<p>She placed the bearded, tanned rancher at once, when
+she saw him working on a piece of harness before the
+door as she drove up. She had seen him in town at different
+times. She once had stopped here, too, several
+years previous when accompanying her father, who had
+been called to dress the rancher&rsquo;s injured hand. The
+girl could not have been over twelve or thirteen then,
+a shabby, awkward girl wearing a braid who came out
+to gaze shyly at her sitting in the car.</p>
+<p>Johnson arose from the ground and approached as
+she alighted, while the girl&rsquo;s head popped into sight
+at the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Dr. Hosmer&rsquo;s daughter, Janet,&rdquo; she stated, putting
+out her hand and smiling. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to see you
+on a matter. Shall we go into the house?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With curiosity sharing a vague hostility in his bearing
+he led her in, where his daughter was setting the
+table. Janet also told the girl who she was. At once
+dismay and startlement greeted the announcement.
+But she invited Janet to be seated, she herself withdrawing
+to a spot by the stove.</p>
+<p>No need for Janet to beat about the bush with her
+errand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Johnson,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to you and
+your daughter for a little help if you can give it.&rdquo;
+That seemed the best way to break down their reserve,
+an appeal rather than simply blunt questions&ndash;&ndash;and
+what was it if not an appeal? &ldquo;What I have to say is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+just among the three of us and I know it will go no
+farther. You&rsquo;re acquainted with my father; he&rsquo;s respected
+by every one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is,&rdquo; Johnson stated, nodding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The situation is this, to speak plainly: last night
+I heard something that has caused me to come to you
+for information; I&rsquo;m engaged to Ed Sorenson, and in
+a moment of anger he denounced Mr. Weir, the engineer
+at the dam, for having told me a false story&ndash;&ndash;lies&ndash;&ndash;about
+him and your daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet perceived the quick, troubled look exchanged
+by man and girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir has never mentioned your daughter&rsquo;s
+name in my hearing; I think him incapable of discussing
+any one maliciously. He&rsquo;s very careful of what
+he says. I consider him a very honorable man. At any
+rate, he said nothing of what Ed Sorenson suggested,
+and if the latter himself hadn&rsquo;t spoken of the thing
+I should have had no inkling that there had been anything
+justifying an inquiry on my part. There may
+not be. But why should he imagine Mr. Weir had told
+me &lsquo;lies&rsquo; linking him and your daughter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know Weir&ndash;&ndash;and I know Ed Sorenson, too,&rdquo; was
+the rancher&rsquo;s grim rejoinder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is a disagreeable subject, I know. But I&rsquo;m
+not here out of mere curiosity, but a desire to learn if
+something has been concealed from me by Ed Sorenson
+that I should be informed of. His manner, his
+words, the whole incident has filled me with doubts.
+See, I&rsquo;m trusting you absolutely.&rdquo; And she extended
+a hand in a gesture bespeaking sincerity.</p>
+<p>Johnson peered at her in silence from under shaggy
+brows.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ask myself why Mr. Sorenson took it for granted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+that the engineer had been telling me false stories and
+if there was any ground for such fears,&rdquo; she went on.
+&ldquo;He had nothing to be afraid of, no matter what might
+be said, if he had done nothing unworthy. I can&rsquo;t
+imagine Mr. Weir, for instance, being alarmed in that
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re telling plenty of lies about him, for that
+matter, but I guess it doesn&rsquo;t worry him any,&rdquo; Johnson
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What I ask you touches a delicate subject, perhaps,&rdquo;
+Janet continued, reluctantly. &ldquo;You may feel
+that I&rsquo;m pushing in where I&rsquo;m not concerned. But if
+Mr. Sorenson has done anything discreditable&ndash;&ndash;if he
+has acted in a way to make me ashamed when I know,
+then it becomes a matter affecting my happiness too.
+I would never marry a man who had done something
+dishonorable, for if I did so knowingly I should be dishonored
+and dishonorable as well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson suddenly thrust a brown forefinger at her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you want to know what Sorenson did?&rdquo; he demanded,
+wrathfully.</p>
+<p>Janet gripped her hands together. &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll not go spreading it all around the country?
+But I guess you won&rsquo;t as long as it would make you
+out a fool too. I&rsquo;ll not have Mary&rsquo;s name dragged
+about in a lot of gossip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you I shall remain silent, for her sake and
+my own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right, I&rsquo;ll tell you. You&rsquo;re too good a girl&ndash;&ndash;any
+decent girl is&ndash;&ndash;to marry Ed Sorenson. He met
+Mary at a dance last spring in town where she went
+with some friends of ours, and made love to her but
+wouldn&rsquo;t let her tell me or any one. We don&rsquo;t get to
+town so very often; she never knew he was engaged
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+to marry you, there never happening to be any mention
+of it to her. Then he got her to go to Bowenville
+one day awhile ago, under promise to marry her there&ndash;&ndash;Mary
+is only sixteen, a little girl yet. To me, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet felt the working of his love in those simple
+words. Felt it but half-consciously, though, for her
+own soul was stifling at Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s revealed infamy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When he got her there, he told her they would have
+to go away farther to be married&ndash;&ndash;to Los Angeles.&rdquo;
+Again his finger came up, this time to be shaken at her
+like a hammer. &ldquo;He never intended to marry her; he
+planned to get her there, ruin her, and cast her off.
+That&rsquo;s the sort of man you&rsquo;re going to marry!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember he expected to be away for a couple of
+weeks&ndash;&ndash;a business trip, he said. But afterwards he explained
+that it hadn&rsquo;t been necessary to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A business trip! Yes, the dirty kind of business
+he likes. And if it hadn&rsquo;t been that Weir heard him
+explaining to Mary that she must go on and interfered&ndash;&ndash;there
+in the restaurant&ndash;&ndash;Ed Sorenson might have
+succeeded. Mary trusted him, thought he was straight.
+But he&rsquo;s crooked, crooked as his old man. When Weir
+told him to his face what he thought of his tricks, he
+let it out he was engaged to you. Didn&rsquo;t mean to, of
+course. Weir said he would stay right with them and
+see that they got married next day before a minister,
+then Sorenson snapped out he was to marry you. That
+opened Mary&rsquo;s eyes, that and his refusing to go before
+a preacher as the engineer demanded. So Weir brought
+her home to me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that isn&rsquo;t all I know,&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;Mexicans
+and cowboys and others have talked&ndash;&ndash;women don&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+hear these things&ndash;&ndash;how he&rsquo;s had to pay Mexicans hush-money
+for girls of theirs he&rsquo;s wronged. But what do
+people care? He&rsquo;s rich, he&rsquo;s old man Sorenson&rsquo;s boy;
+everything&rsquo;s kept quiet; and he goes around as big as
+life.&rdquo; With a muttered oath he turned away, his lips
+shut hard and his beard sticking out savagely.</p>
+<p>He came back to her again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The young one gets it from the old one,&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+&ldquo;Bad crooked blood in both of them. I
+know. I&rsquo;ve been here ever since I was a boy and remember
+things Sorenson believes every one has forgotten,
+I know how he got his start, how he and the
+rest of his bunch cleaned out Dent of his ranch and
+cattle gambling and then killed him when he discovered
+they had used marked cards, how at the same time they
+robbed another man&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet struggled to her feet. She had covered her
+eyes and bowed her head before the torrent of his vehemence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more, I want to hear no more,&rdquo; she gasped.
+&ldquo;Let me go home. I&rsquo;m sick.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It all makes me sick, too,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Sick
+and sore, both. But it&rsquo;s the truth. I&rsquo;m sorry if it&rsquo;s
+been a bad pill to swallow, but it&rsquo;s the God&rsquo;s truth,
+girl. I&rsquo;m sorry it couldn&rsquo;t be any other way, but I
+wouldn&rsquo;t see you marry that scoundrel if I lost a hand
+stopping you. Mary felt sick at first, too; she&rsquo;s over
+it now. You&rsquo;ll not feel bad long. Better stay for dinner
+with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t swallow a bite. Thank you for your
+kindness in asking me&ndash;&ndash;and for telling me what I
+wanted to know, too. Father never knew, or he would
+have warned me. People saw I was engaged to Ed
+Sorenson and would say nothing to father, of course.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+I shall always count you as one of my best friends, Mr.
+Johnson. And you too, Mary; you must come down
+and stay with me sometime, for I imagine you get lonely
+here. No, another day I&rsquo;ll remain to dinner&ndash;&ndash;and I
+want to be alone now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They pressed her no further, seeing her wretchedness
+of spirit. But they walked with her to the car and
+shook hands with her when she was in and urged her to
+come again.</p>
+<p>When she had disappeared in the aspens among
+which the trail led, Mary said to her father:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said they killed a man named Dent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They did. I saw the killing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And nothing was ever done about it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. Nobody but me knew of the happening and
+I&rsquo;d of had a bullet through my heart if I&rsquo;d talked. I
+might yet even now, so see that you keep your mouth
+shut.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You told her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was mad, so mad I could say anything. But she
+isn&rsquo;t the kind to repeat the story; I&rsquo;m not afraid on
+that score. She&rsquo;s clean strain all through.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you know the man whom Sorenson and the
+others killed?&rdquo; Mary questioned, in some awe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew of him, but I was only a lad then. I saw it
+all through the back door of Vorse&rsquo;s saloon where it
+happened, but I&rsquo;ve never breathed about it to a soul. I
+didn&rsquo;t want to be murdered some dark night. Those
+four men would see that the job was done quick even
+now, I&rsquo;m saying, if they were on to the fact. I know
+&rsquo;em, if nobody else does.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary&rsquo;s skin crawled with prickles of fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They must be awful bad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were devils then, and I don&rsquo;t think they&rsquo;ve
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
+changed to angels to-day, though they try to appear
+decent. I know &rsquo;em; I know what they&rsquo;ll do once they
+start. You can&rsquo;t make sheep out of wolves just by
+giving &rsquo;em a fleece.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said they robbed another man at the same time
+they killed that Dent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; and it only goes to show the hellish crooks
+they are. It was another man in the saloon. He was
+drunk. They made him believe he had killed Dent.
+Then said they&rsquo;d help him to get away if he gave them
+his property. He was a rich fellow who had come out
+from the east and gone to ranching, a tenderfoot.
+They took his stuff and he skipped the country with his
+wife. That was the last of him, and I reckon he believes
+to this day that he&rsquo;s a murderer. And that&rsquo;s how
+they got the start of their wealth, or a big part of it,
+Sorenson and Vorse and the other two. They&rsquo;ve got
+the San Mateo Cattle Company, with fifty thousand
+head of steers, and ten or twenty bands of sheeps and
+ranches, and the bank, and all the rest, and they walk
+around like honest men. But they&rsquo;re thieves and murderers,
+Mary, thieves and murderers! I&rsquo;d rather be
+the man I am, poor and with nothing but this little
+mortgaged piece of ground and my few cattle, than
+them, who robbed Dent and killed him and then robbed
+and drove out Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that the other man&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s funny. The same as the man who brought
+me home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are lots of Weirs, like the Johnsons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so many, I guess. Maybe they&rsquo;re related. Did
+the man who skipped have any children?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No. None I ever heard of, though I didn&rsquo;t know
+much about him. Just him and his wife, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson had perceived no resemblance between the
+engineer and the vanished man of whom he spoke. As
+for that, however, he had no clear recollection of the
+elder Weir&rsquo;s face; he was but twelve years old at
+the time of the dramatic event, thirty years before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, come along and eat,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And remember!
+Not a word of this to a soul.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Janet Hosmer was driving slowly down
+the canyon, oblivious that opportunity to unlock the
+whole mystery had been hers, never dreaming that she
+had just missed by the slenderest margin what Steele
+Weir would have given the world to know.</p>
+<p>For an instant Fate had placed the key in her hand.
+She knew it not; it was withdrawn again and the door
+remained closed and locked while the threads of Destiny
+continued to be spun.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XII_THE_PLOT' id='CHAPTER_XII_THE_PLOT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<h3>THE PLOT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In Vorse&rsquo;s saloon, where in the past so many evil
+ideas for the acquisition of money or power had
+sprouted, the scheme had its inception. It had been
+of slow growth, with innumerable suggestions considered,
+tested, discarded. The intended arrest and trial
+of Weir had been the first aim; but this had expanded
+until at last the plot had become of really magnificent
+proportions, cunning yet daring, devilish enough even
+to satisfy the hate and greed of its originators, consummate
+in design, absolutely safe and conclusive.</p>
+<p>It was Sorenson who conceived the notion of pulling
+the irrigation project down in ruins at the moment of
+Weir&rsquo;s own fall. Judge Gordon a few days later had
+pieced out the method, which was either to corrupt the
+workmen to wreck dam and camp or to place them in
+the equivocal position of having done so apparently
+though others did it in fact. Vorse and Burkhardt devised
+the details. Weir should be left free until the
+blow had fallen on the camp, whereupon he should be
+immediately clapped into jail on the murder charge,
+which, coming on top of the &ldquo;riot,&rdquo; would paralyze all
+company action and work. From such a crushing
+double-blow no concern could quickly recover, if indeed
+the loss did not result in total cessation of construction.</p>
+<p>Thus shedding their coats of expedient lawfulness,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+they reverted under the menace of Steele Weir&rsquo;s presence
+to the men they were in an earlier age&ndash;&ndash;an age
+when a few white land and cattle &ldquo;barons&rdquo; dominated
+the region, predatory, arrogant, masterful and despotic;
+the age just ceasing when the elder Weir and
+Dent arrived; the age of their youth forty years before,
+the age when railroads and telegraphs and law were
+remote, and chicanery and force were the common
+agents, and &ldquo;guns&rdquo; the final arbiters.</p>
+<p>To them Weir was like a reincarnated spirit of that
+age. He guessed if he did not know their past. He
+had appeared in order to challenge their supremacy,
+end their rule, avenge his father&rsquo;s dispossession at their
+hands. He instinctively and by nature was an enemy;
+he would have been their enemy in any other place and
+under any other circumstances. He was a head-hunter,
+and in turn was to be hunted down. He was the kind
+who neither made compromises nor asked quarter. He
+veiled his purposes in as great secrecy as did they, and
+when he struck it would be suddenly, fiercely, mercilessly&ndash;&ndash;if
+he struck. They were determined he should
+not strike, being himself first surprised and crushed, for
+though in ignorance of what he could bring against
+them their fears were real. Everything, indeed, about
+the man antagonized them, alarmed them, stirred their
+hate and filmed their eyes with blood. He must be
+destroyed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And with him the dam,&rdquo; Sorenson had said. &ldquo;Both
+together.&rdquo; For there was no effort to conceal among
+themselves their savage intention.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll never come to trial,&rdquo; Vorse remarked, with a
+malignant gleam in his blue eyes and a shutting of his
+thin lips. &ldquo;An attempted jail delivery by &lsquo;friends&rsquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+will fix that. All they will have to do then is to buy him
+a pine box.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the man had but stayed away!&rdquo; Judge Gordon
+exclaimed. Cunning, not force, was his forte; and the
+measures in prospect at times had oppressed him with
+dreadful forebodings. He was growing old, feeble, and
+here when he was entitled to peace he still had to fight
+for his own.</p>
+<p>In accordance with the scheme Burkhardt vanished
+from San Mateo for a time, ostensibly on business but
+in fact on a journey across the Mexican line, where he
+conducted negotiations with a certain &ldquo;revolu&ccedil;ionista&rdquo;
+of no particular notoriety as yet, of avaricious character,
+unscrupulous nature, and with a small following
+of fellow bandits and a large animosity for Americans.
+His ambition was to emulate the brilliant Villa. But
+pickings had been poor of late, no more than that of
+stealing a few horses from across the border. To
+Burkhardt, who had heard of him and sought him out,
+he listened with interest and bargained with zest. Five
+thousand in gold for fifty men was like pearls from
+Paradise. And whatever this Yankee&rsquo;s own private
+purpose, it was a chance for the chieftain to strike
+secretly and safely at Americans, in addition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will come through in squads after they&rsquo;ve
+slipped across the line,&rdquo; Burkhardt reported. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
+to pose as laborers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When?&rdquo; Sorenson asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Along next week. They&rsquo;re to drop off down along
+the railroad at different towns and I&rsquo;ll run them up
+into the mountains with some grub. Then we&rsquo;ll assemble
+them quietly a couple miles off from the dam,
+where they&rsquo;ll be handy on the chosen night. Afterwards
+we&rsquo;ll slip them back to the railroad, and they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
+fade into Mexico. Weir&rsquo;s workmen will be drunk and
+rowing&ndash;&ndash;and will have done the job, eh?&rdquo; Burkhardt
+shook with suppressed, evil laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If they&rsquo;re drunk, they may join in and help,&rdquo; Judge
+Gordon stated, acutely. &ldquo;A mob full of whiskey will
+do anything. If they did take a hand, it would round
+out the case against them perfectly. Very likely next
+day they, too, would fade, as you put it, Burkhardt;
+they would want to get out of this part of country as
+quickly as possible when they realized what had happened.
+I see no flaw in our plan. Fortunately the
+three directors who are coming will be gone by the end
+of next week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that? What directors?&rdquo; Burkhardt asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re to be here on an inspection trip, so they
+wrote, and will be pleased to hear our complaints in
+regard to the question of workmen.&rdquo; Gordon&rsquo;s tone
+was ironical. &ldquo;I wrote them protesting Weir&rsquo;s discharge
+of our people, you remember, but that was some
+time ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the use of paying attention to the fools
+now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must carry out the farce, Burkhardt, for the
+sake of appearances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to blow them up along with their dam!&rdquo; was
+the scowling rejoinder, &ldquo;Well, let &rsquo;em inspect. Next
+time they come back there won&rsquo;t be any.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe we should arrest Weir before the thing&rsquo;s
+pulled off,&rdquo; Gordon said, meditatively. &ldquo;It would be
+surer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson set his heavy jaw.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I want him to see the wreck; I want him to
+know just what&rsquo;s happened before he&rsquo;s haled away; I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+want him feeling good and sick already when he gets
+the next jolt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. It&rsquo;s him or us, as I&rsquo;ve said from the first;
+and I&rsquo;ve always believed in making a clean sweep,&rdquo;
+Vorse remarked. &ldquo;We have the right line this time.
+First, make his men drunk and sore; then smash the
+works; then arrest him quick; and last finish him off
+with a bullet during a pretended jail delivery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There will be elements of danger in the last,&rdquo; Judge
+Gordon stated, cautiously.</p>
+<p>Vorse smiled and Burkhardt grinned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so you&rsquo;ll notice it,&rdquo; said the latter. &ldquo;The town
+won&rsquo;t know anything about it until afterwards. Just a
+few good men at night, masked and working fast, and
+the thing is done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not feel easy till it&rsquo;s over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep up your nerve, Judge,&rdquo; Burkhardt grunted.
+&ldquo;You used to be as lively as anybody when you were
+young.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, I know. But this Weir isn&rsquo;t going to stand
+idle. If he ever gets a chance with his gun&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t get it,&rdquo; said Vorse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he&rsquo;ll not resist the sheriff when Madden arrests
+him legally,&rdquo; Sorenson added. &ldquo;Nothing could
+be better for us than if he did. He knows that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still I&rsquo;ll be glad when next week is past,&rdquo; the Judge
+replied, with a sigh.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CURRENT_OF_EVENTS' id='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CURRENT_OF_EVENTS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<h3>THE CURRENT OF EVENTS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Though outwardly the world&rsquo;s face was as calm as
+ever, though peace seemed to bask on San Mateo and
+the broad mesa and lofty mountain range, events were
+rapidly shaping themselves to bring a thunder crash
+of contending forces. Not Weir, not even the little
+evil cabal plotting so desperately against him, guessed
+the scope and power of the passions to be released.</p>
+<p>As a vital impulse towards the climax, though an
+unconscious one on her part so far as the general play
+of circumstance was concerned, Janet Hosmer informed
+Ed Sorenson of her determination to break
+their engagement. This was the same evening she returned
+from the Johnson ranch, when he called at her
+telephoned request. He went to her home under the
+impression that his box of candy and bundle of new
+magazines had restored him to favor. He was very
+jaunty, in fact, and bent on persuading her to name
+an early day for their nuptials.</p>
+<p>Imagine his wrath when she explained that she
+wished to say that she could not marry him, at the
+same time handing him his ring and the other trinkets
+he had bestowed upon her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it because of our little spat last night about the
+engineer?&rdquo; he demanded. &ldquo;I apologized, Janet. I&rsquo;m
+sorry still, and I love you above everything else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But I do, Janet. Above everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, not above yourself and your vices. You deceived
+me for a long time, but now I know the truth.
+You aroused my suspicions when you mentioned a Johnson
+girl; there&rsquo;s only one Johnson girl hereabouts, as I
+learned; and this noon I visited her and her father.
+They informed me fully about your conduct towards
+Mary at Bowenville and your promises to marry her&ndash;&ndash;that,
+when you were engaged to me. There are other
+things I heard to-day. Of affairs with Mexican girls
+that are shameful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lies, lies!&rdquo; was the passionate disclaimer. &ldquo;Or if
+I have been flirting a little, and never since my engagement,
+it&rsquo;s no more than any fellow does.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can neither excuse nor justify your words and
+actions towards Mary Johnson not a month ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re liars, I tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you confront them and say that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Taken by surprise Sorenson hesitated, flushed, and
+then made a gesture of disdain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not, because I&rsquo;ll not condescend to answer such
+baseless charges,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;I thought you had sense
+enough not to believe every little thing you hear. Certainly
+I expect you not to believe this, and I know you
+won&rsquo;t on consideration. Then we&rsquo;ll be married. I came
+here to-night to urge you to marry me soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never marry you, and we&rsquo;re no longer engaged.
+You&rsquo;ve acted faithlessly and dishonorably. You&rsquo;re not
+the decent man I thought you were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you still love me, Janet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I don&rsquo;t think I ever loved you; I was loving a
+man who didn&rsquo;t exist, an illusion I imagined to be Ed
+Sorenson, not your real self. If I loved at all, which
+I now doubt! And you never loved me, though you
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+may think you did and still do. But it&rsquo;s not so; for no
+man who really loved a respectable girl could at the
+same time do what you did. Think of it! While pretending
+to love me, you were secretly trying to inveigle
+that poor ignorant girl away from home. You&rsquo;re not
+a man; you&rsquo;re a beast. The shame and disgust and
+humiliation I suffer at the thought of my position during
+that time, your effort to hoodwink both Mary
+Johnson and me, so fills me with anger I can&rsquo;t talk to
+you. Go, go! And please don&rsquo;t even speak to me
+hereafter, on the street or anywhere else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Instead of departing the man grasped her wrist and
+gave her a venomous look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was this sneak of an engineer, after all, who
+told you this lie and turned you against me,&rdquo; he
+snarled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go. Mr. Weir said nothing. It was you
+yourself who betrayed yourself, or I should not have
+known as I do, thank heavens. Stop holding my
+wrist!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For an instant Sorenson wavered between whether
+he should obey her command or strike her as his rage
+prompted. A very devil of passion beating in his
+breast urged him to show her her place, deal with her
+as he would like to do and as she deserved&ndash;&ndash;throw
+her down and drag her by the hair until she crawled
+forward and clasped his knees in subjection. But the
+look in her eyes cooled this half-insane, whiskey-inspired
+desire.</p>
+<p>He took his hand off her wrist, picked up his hat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t throw me down this way,&rdquo; he sneered.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to marry me just the same, whether you
+think so or not. I have a voice in this engagement,
+and you can&rsquo;t break your word and promise to me
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span>
+because it happens to strike your fancy. Not for a
+single minute!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you were a gentleman and a decent man you
+wouldn&rsquo;t say that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not either, by your judgment, so I do say it.
+I say it again: you&rsquo;re going to marry me, willingly or
+unwillingly. Now if after thinking it over, you want
+to forget all this and go on as before, all right. If not,
+our engagement still holds just the same. You may release
+me, but I haven&rsquo;t released you. Remember that.
+And keep away from that engineer if you know what&rsquo;s
+best for you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a scowl he stalked out of the house, leaving a
+very angry, very tremulous and very heart-sick girl.
+The fellow was in truth not a man, she perceived, but a
+creature so conscienceless and loathsome that she
+seemed contaminated through and through by his
+touch, his words, and their previous relations. How
+grossly he had deceived her as to his real character!
+What a horrible future as his wife she had escaped!
+Nor was she yet free, for he promised to make an infinity
+of trouble.</p>
+<p>That day she could do nothing. Her father noting
+her face asked what was the trouble, and she told him
+the whole affair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard rumors of late about him and was worried,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;You did the only thing, of course.
+Pay no attention to his words; I&rsquo;ll see he doesn&rsquo;t annoy
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was three or four days afterwards that she called
+Weir up at the dam in a desire to hear the voice of a
+man she knew to be straight and upright.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve wondered if a girl is allowed to look at your
+dam,&rdquo; she said on impulse, when they had chatted for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+a moment. &ldquo;Father, who was at your camp to attend
+an injured man, says you&rsquo;re making famous progress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d be more than delighted to show you the work.
+But&ndash;&ndash;I wonder&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let what people say disturb you,&rdquo; she replied
+quickly, divining his thought. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve arranged all
+that.&rdquo; A somewhat obscure remark to Weir.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then come any time&ndash;&ndash;and often. I hope to be able
+to conduct you around, the first visit at least. Next
+week I may not be able to do so as a committee of
+directors arrive who&rsquo;ll take my time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, indeed,&rdquo; Janet answered, politely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A manager has to be directed occasionally, or he
+may run wild,&rdquo; she heard, with his laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come before they do,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>Quite as she had announced she did run up to the
+canyon and go with Weir over the hillsides and dam,
+asking questions and displaying a great interest in the
+men and the operation of the machinery. The concrete
+work was nearing an end. Already tracks were
+laid for the dump trams that were to carry dirt from
+steam-shovels to the dam to form its main body.</p>
+<p>She perceived the immense labor of the project and
+the co&ouml;rdinated effort required. The necessity in itself
+of dragging hither from Bowenville all of the supplies,
+the material, the huge machines, was overwhelming.
+The responsibility of combining scientific knowledge
+and raw industry to an exact result struck her as
+prodigious. The handling of hundreds of subordinate
+workmen and assistants of various grades and skill demanded
+exceptional ability, understanding, will and
+generalship. Yet these things the man at her side,
+Steele Weir, accomplished and supplied; and appeared
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
+quite calm and unmoved about it, as if it was all a matter
+of course.</p>
+<p>She glanced at the ground, flushing. The thought
+of Ed Sorenson, making only a pretense of doing anything
+useful and because his father was rich doing
+nothing in reality but waste himself in vicious practices,
+was in her mind. What must have the engineer
+believed of her all this while when he knew Sorenson&rsquo;s
+true nature and infamous record? Did he suppose her
+a light-headed feather, indifferent to everything except
+that her husband should be rich? Very likely. There
+were plenty of girls of that type. He naturally would
+suppose her one.</p>
+<p>And she could say nothing to put herself in a better
+light and to gain his respect&ndash;&ndash;for that she now desired
+greatly. She saw him as he was, a big man, a strong
+man, a man whose respect was to be prized. Beside
+him she felt herself small and ordinary. That was all
+right, but she was determined he should not believe
+her insignificant, shallow, unworthy, mercenary.</p>
+<p>While she could not explain matters openly without
+shaming herself and still lowering herself in his
+estimation, he being only an acquaintance, yet there
+were ways of getting at the end. Janet could act
+adroitly, like most women, when it best served the purpose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know, I just learned from friends of yours
+on Terry Creek that you&rsquo;re a public benefactor as well
+as an engineer,&rdquo; she stated, when they paused on the
+hillside for a last look at the dam.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>His eyes came around and found hers fixed on him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I happened to stop at the Johnson ranch. They
+didn&rsquo;t say so, but I know they would be pleased to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+death if you would go to dinner there some day. They
+have some fine fat chickens, if you like chicken fried
+or baked, and they hesitate to ask you only because
+they&rsquo;re afraid you&rsquo;ll refuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fried chicken is my weakness. Of course I&rsquo;ll go;
+at the first spare chance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But all the while Steele Weir&rsquo;s mind was eddying
+with wonderment. He had colored at mention of the
+Johnson ranch, as if he had been caught with a hand in
+a jam pot. And it meant only one thing: she knew of
+the Bowenville episode. Involuntarily his eyes flashed
+to her left hand with which she was brushing back the
+hair under her hat brim. There was no diamond solitaire
+on its third finger. Surely, something had happened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I must be returning home. I just thought I&rsquo;d
+give you a tiny hint,&rdquo; said she. An odd smile rested
+on her lips as she spoke, for hints may carry multiple
+suggestions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Jove!&rdquo; Weir said suddenly.</p>
+<p>Man of action though she knew him to be, she never
+anticipated he would or could act so directly. He
+reached out and seized her left hand and scanned it
+significantly. Then he raised his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo; he asked, tapping the finger
+with one of his own. &ldquo;Does this mean&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Janet&rsquo;s turn to become scarlet. She tried
+to smile again, but it was a wavering smile that appeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What does what mean?&rdquo; she fenced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&ndash;&ndash;well, that the ring is off permanently?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that there&rsquo;s now a chance for me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s eyes at that popped open very wide indeed.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+Meanwhile Weir still held to the palm resting in
+his own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You?&rdquo; she breathed, faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Me, yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Presently with a gentle movement she drew her hand
+free. She had been quite dumbfounded, but not so
+dumbfounded that she did not realize that this new situation
+had requirements of its own. He appeared absolutely
+sincere and resolute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I never dreamed of such a thing!&rdquo; she stammered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor I&ndash;&ndash;because until now I hadn&rsquo;t the right. All
+I ask is that you give me your friendship&ndash;&ndash;and a
+chance&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;well, we&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no reason why we shouldn&rsquo;t be friends,&rdquo;
+said she. &ldquo;We are already, aren&rsquo;t we?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;now. I never actually thought so before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things have changed,&rdquo; she stated. And her lips
+closed with a firm pressure as she spoke. &ldquo;Or I
+shouldn&rsquo;t have been here inspecting the dam, should
+I?&rdquo; Again the smile flashed upon her face. &ldquo;You may
+consider this a preliminary inspection to that of your
+high and mighty directors, and I assure you my verdict&ndash;&ndash;is
+that the word?&ndash;&ndash;is favorable. Now I must be
+going to the car. Father likes his meals on time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when shall I see you again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The note of eagerness in his voice set her heart
+moving a bit faster. If he carried on his engineering
+work as he did his friendship, no wonder he got things
+done.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, when you wish to call, Mr. Weir. Both
+father and I shall be pleased to have you come any
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll certainly avail myself of the privilege,&rdquo; said
+he. &ldquo;You must really go now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a feeling of exaltation at this new turn of
+affairs he watched her drive away from camp, a feeling
+that persisted during the succeeding days.</p>
+<p>The three directors arrived. That was Thursday
+evening; and Friday and Saturday were devoted to a
+discussion of construction plans, inspection of the
+works, analysis of costs and so on. Weir found the
+men what he expected: quick to comprehend facts, incisive
+of mind, and though of course not engineers yet
+able to measure results; while they on their part were
+appreciative of the exceptional progress made and of
+his thorough command of the project. They knew
+the first hour that the right manager was in charge
+at last.</p>
+<p>Saturday afternoon Sorenson and Judge Gordon
+called at headquarters, by appointment, to discuss the
+grievance held locally against the company. Weir was
+present at the meeting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As to whether the Mexican workmen who were discharged
+were actually giving a full return in work for
+the wages, as you maintain, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Mr. Pollock,
+one of the directors and a corporation lawyer
+from New York, in reply to the visitors&rsquo; statement,
+&ldquo;that is a question not of opinion but of fact.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fact, yes,&rdquo; Judge Gordon argued. &ldquo;Fact supported
+by the evidence of the three hundred workmen
+against that of a single man, your manager, who
+had just come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are not your three hundred men prejudiced witnesses?&rdquo;
+the New Yorker inquired, a slight smile upon
+his thin face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more than is Mr. Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But Mr. Weir is the manager and consequently has
+the power of decision in such matters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to the extent of revoking unfairly your promise,
+given orally, to be sure, but still given, to employ
+local labor.&rdquo; Sorenson was the speaker and his heavy
+face wore an expression of ill-disguised contempt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Agreed. Local labor was to be hired,&rdquo; said Pollock.
+&ldquo;But our company isn&rsquo;t a philanthropic institution;
+it&rsquo;s run on strictly business principles. Any
+agreement we made implied that local workmen should
+give exactly what other workmen would give in work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They did so,&rdquo; Judge Gordon affirmed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was no trouble until this man came,&rdquo; Sorenson
+remarked. &ldquo;I suppose he felt that he had to show
+his authority.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but there was if not trouble at any rate dissatisfaction
+on our part,&rdquo; Pollock stated, tapping a
+finger on the table. &ldquo;Construction wasn&rsquo;t progressing
+as we knew it should, which was the very reason for
+getting a new manager, one who could speed it up.
+But as I said, it all comes down to a question of fact.
+You gentlemen offer your workmen&rsquo;s avowals of industry
+to support your claim; Mr. Weir, on the other
+hand, gives us some definite records to back up his side.
+Here they are for the last week the workmen from San
+Mateo and neighborhood worked&ndash;&ndash;his first week here;
+and for the succeeding weeks under the men shipped in;
+in material used, in cubic yards of concrete construction,
+and in percentage of work finished. Examine
+them if you please. They show daily and weekly results
+to be just a trifle less than double for the corresponding
+time the imported workmen have been here.
+In other words, the new men have, while shortening the
+time of completion, given twice as much work for exactly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+the same wage paid your Mexicans. In other words,
+too, your local laborers cancelled our agreement by
+their own incompetence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your manager could easily have doctored those records,&rdquo;
+Sorenson stated, coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You scarcely mean that, sir,&rdquo; Pollock instantly replied
+icily, his amiability vanishing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Judge, we may as well go, I think. We&rsquo;re
+appealing to a prejudiced court.&rdquo; And Sorenson
+arose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our decision to view the matter like Mr. Weir is because
+his position is sustained by these facts, not because
+we&rsquo;re prejudiced, as you insinuate. But I may
+add that it would not be strange if we were prejudiced,
+as we&rsquo;ve become convinced that you gentlemen haven&rsquo;t
+been sincere in your attitude towards our company and
+if anything are strongly hostile. Any one may be deceived
+for a time, and we were, but not permanently.
+You would have done much better to have recognized
+that we have a perfect right to build this project on
+land that we bought and with water that we acquired.
+For it will be built in any case and in spite of such
+local opposition as may be made.&rdquo; Pollock flicked the
+ash from his cigar with a careful finger. &ldquo;That is a
+mere piece of information or a declaration of war,
+whichever way you wish to take it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you we were wasting our time coming here,&rdquo;
+the cattleman said to his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good day, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Judge Gordon, politely.</p>
+<p>And the pair went out to Sorenson&rsquo;s machine.</p>
+<p>Shortly after, the two other directors left to catch
+a train at Bowenville, Pollock planning to stay with
+Weir to formulate a report during the next day or two
+for presentation to the entire directorate at its next
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+meeting. Sorenson caught a glimpse of the car whirling
+through town, with Weir at the wheel, who with
+Pollock accompanied the departing men that certain
+unsettled points might be discussed up to the last moment.</p>
+<p>As Weir and Pollock were returning, the latter eyed
+the engineer and laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve evidently brushed these fellows&rsquo;, Sorenson&rsquo;s
+and Gordon&rsquo;s, fur the wrong way to please them. But
+they&rsquo;ll probably leave us alone from now on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll not leave me alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh? How&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I have, as it happens, a little trouble with
+them on my own hook. A private matter antedating
+the building of the dam. They&rsquo;re after me. I had to
+put a piece of lead into a fellow who tried to kill me
+from the dark one night. I speak of it in case you
+should be told and wonder; otherwise I should not have
+mentioned the thing. I&rsquo;m not popular in San Mateo,
+in consequence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, I had heard nothing of that. It interests me.
+You were not touched.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My hat, that was all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very interesting, very interesting, indeed,&rdquo; was
+Pollock&rsquo;s only comment. But if his tone was casual,
+his eyes were busy in sidelong study of the engineer,
+making a new appraisal and drawing fresh conclusions.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile several knots were being tied in the web
+of circumstance. Sorenson took his telephone and conversed
+briefly with Vorse, passing the information that
+he had just seen the three directors leaving for the east.
+So they were out of the way. In reply the saloon-keeper
+stated that he would start the whisky end of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+game that evening. By the morrow, Sunday, when the
+camp was at rest, the workmen would all be &ldquo;celebrating.&rdquo;
+Burkhardt had reported the last load of &ldquo;southern
+cattle&rdquo; shipped in and driven on the range the
+previous evening&ndash;&ndash;a seemingly innocent statement that
+Sorenson understood perfectly. Up in the hills, safely
+hidden in the timber, lay the fifty men brought from
+Mexico to make the assault on the dam the next night,
+men whose instruments of destruction would be fire and
+dynamite. Twenty-four hours more would bring the
+moment of action.</p>
+<p>Ignorant of all this Ed Sorenson had been forming a
+little individual scheme that would promote his own
+affairs, chief of which was to win Janet Hosmer. Drinking
+heavily ever since his rebuff, he had sunk into a condition
+of evil determination and recklessness that made
+him fit for any desperate act. After much meditation
+fed by whisky, he had evolved a plan that would bring
+him success. Thereupon he had loaded his car with a
+quantity of selected stuff and made a mysterious journey
+at night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll learn I meant business,&rdquo; was his frequent soliloquy.</p>
+<p>And while these strands were being knit into the skein
+Martinez was producing another. Quietly, carefully,
+persuasively, he had been pursuing his own particular
+course of eliciting history for use in his &ldquo;Chronicle,&rdquo; as
+he named it,&ndash;&ndash;and for another use concerning which he
+was as still as death.</p>
+<p>That he was successful in obtaining what he had been
+after was made known to Weir about dusk that evening
+while he was talking with Pollock in his office. But that
+he had not been so lucky in covering his tracks was likewise
+apparent.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></div>
+<p>The telephone rang. Steele took down the receiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See Janet Hosmer at once,&rdquo; Felipe Martinez&rsquo; terrified
+voice came over the wire. &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have it, the paper&ndash;&ndash;the
+one you want. They&rsquo;ve learned I got it; they&rsquo;re
+after me now. Hammering on the door. If you don&rsquo;t
+hurry&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His words ceased abruptly in an anguished quaver.
+At the same time Weir heard carried to him the sound
+of a crash as of a door smashed. Excusing himself hurriedly,
+Steele Weir seized his holster from a nail and
+buckled on the belt. Then snatching his hat, he ran
+outside the building to his car.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, who is he gunning for?&rdquo; Pollock asked himself
+aloud, &ldquo;I rather wish he had invited me along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But neither he nor Weir himself, nor any soul in San
+Mateo, knew that at last the furious torrent of events
+had burst upon the community. Weir sensed something.
+But Sorenson brooding on the morrow thought the moment
+had not yet come. His son was occupied with his
+own treacherous scheme. Even Vorse and Burkhardt
+smashing their way into Martinez&rsquo; office saw nothing
+beyond the immediate necessity. Yet the flood was
+bearing down on all.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIV_OLD_SAUREZ_DEPOSITION' id='CHAPTER_XIV_OLD_SAUREZ_DEPOSITION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<h3>OLD SAUREZ&rsquo; DEPOSITION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In order to understand why Vorse and Burkhardt
+were attacking Martinez&rsquo; office it is necessary to trace the
+lawyer&rsquo;s movements and the incidents which precipitated
+that act. Martinez had, as stated, not been idle. Following
+the clue obtained from the woman who had worked
+in the elder Weir&rsquo;s household, he visited the old Mexican
+named as having been used as roustabout by Vorse in
+early days. This was old Saurez, whom he knew. The
+wrinkled old fellow seldom came to town now, spending
+most of the time sitting against the sunny side of his
+son&rsquo;s house on Pina Creek, twenty miles south, where
+he lived.</p>
+<p>Martinez in the ten days that had elapsed since informing
+Weir he had learned of Saurez&rsquo; possible knowledge
+of the past had proceeded to make himself agreeable
+to the gray-headed old man. He had explained his
+&ldquo;history.&rdquo; He exercised all the arts of graciousness and
+flattery. Beginning at the present he worked back
+through the past to the killing of Jim Dent and the
+flight of Joseph Weir, extracting tales of early fights,
+raids, accidents, big storms, violent deaths and killings,
+making elaborate notes, winning the narrator&rsquo;s confidence
+and gradually drawing forth the facts he really
+sought.</p>
+<p>Out of all the rambling talk and vague accounts of the
+Dent and Weir affair Martinez was able to piece together
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span>
+the fragments in a clear statement. This was
+that Saurez had seen Weir and Dent in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon.
+The pair had gambled for a time with Vorse, Burkhardt
+(at that time sheriff), Sorenson and Judge Gordon.
+After losing for a time Weir refused to continue in the
+poker game, although he was drunk. Dent played on
+notwithstanding Weir&rsquo;s urgence to desist; he had already
+lost all his money and began staking his cattle
+and finally his ranch. At this stage Weir had gone to
+sleep at another table, with his head on his arms. Vorse
+had locked the front door to keep out visitors during
+the big game. But the back door remained open for
+air.</p>
+<p>Saurez had busied himself cleaning the bar. All at
+once he saw the players spring up in their game, Dent
+talking angrily about cheating, marked cards and so
+on. Then the guns came out when he pointed at a card
+that was marked&ndash;&ndash;for it had been marked with pinpricks
+as Saurez saw later on examining the deck, which
+Dent had perceived in spite of the whisky in him. And
+Sorenson and Vorse had both shot him where he stood.
+Yes, shootings were not uncommon. Every one but he,
+Saurez, had likely forgotten all about the matter. That
+was long ago.</p>
+<p>Afterwards Vorse had sent the Mexican away for
+something or other, with an injunction to keep his mouth
+closed. As said, speaking of it now made no difference,
+though he expected Martinez to keep his promise to publish
+none of the stories while he was still alive; that was
+agreed. When the Mexican had left the saloon Weir
+was yet sleeping, having only raised his head at the
+pistol shots to stare drunkenly and then relapse. What
+occurred afterwards Saurez did not know. Weir left
+the country. Dent was buried, the story being told
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+that he had committed suicide. Every one believed it:
+had he not lost his ranch at poker? That was the end
+of the business. Other affairs happened and it was forgotten.</p>
+<p>On this Saturday Martinez had persuaded Saurez to
+accompany him to San Mateo. It would be necessary
+to sign the stories, he explained lightly, to give them
+proper weight and in order that when the book was published
+after Saurez&rsquo; death they would be seen to be true
+accounts, with Saurez&rsquo; picture that a photographer
+would make appearing in the middle. He, Saurez, would
+be famous, and his sons and grandsons would have copies
+of the book in their houses to show visitors and the
+priest. Ah, it would be well to have the priest witness
+Saurez&rsquo; signature, then sceptical people would know indeed
+that the stories were Saurez&rsquo; own accounts. So on
+and so on.</p>
+<p>The matter required infinite precautions, patience,
+skill on the lawyer&rsquo;s part. He had prepared two or
+three dozen depositions of events, as a husk for the real
+kernel. With Saurez in his office at last he telephoned
+the priest to call at once and unostentatiously caught
+on the street four other Mexicans of the better class,
+bringing them in. When the priest arrived he closed
+the door and explained his desire they should act as
+witnesses to Saurez&rsquo; statements. He had already solicited
+the <i>padre&rsquo;s</i> advice as to the history; the others all had
+heard of it; he gave them a number of the most harmless
+depositions to read; and set Saurez to work making
+his mark on the rest of the papers. During the reading
+and the accompanying lively discussion of the witnesses,
+he had them pause to witness Saurez&rsquo; mark with their
+own names in the places provided. About the tenth deposition
+when their attention was confused and flagging
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+he slipped the account concerning Weir and Dent, a
+many-paged attestation, upon the table, so folded that
+nothing but the signing space was visible. It was the
+critical instant for Martinez; his thin body was more
+nervous than ever, his eyes brighter and more restless.
+But at last the ordeal was over.</p>
+<p>Saurez&rsquo; heavy black cross was at the bottom of the
+important deposition, the priest and the other four
+men had appended their names, and all that remained
+to do was for Martinez to fill out the acknowledgment
+and affix his seal. He whisked the document behind his
+back and called attention to a humorous episode in a
+paper one of the men still held, starting a laugh. Then
+he suggested they rest and opened a bottle of wine, over
+which the others congratulated Saurez and Martinez
+and predicted a wonderful fame for the &ldquo;Chronicle.&rdquo;
+Finally the lawyer perceived, as he said, that Saurez
+was weary. Anyway, it was supper-time. The remaining
+papers could be signed another day.</p>
+<p>The witnesses departed, much pleased with the affair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Walk up and down outside for a little time while I
+straighten the sheets, then we&rsquo;ll go eat and afterwards
+I&rsquo;ll drive you home to bed,&rdquo; the attorney said. &ldquo;The
+fresh air will give you an appetite. Behold, you&rsquo;re already
+becoming a famous man! I shall preserve these
+documents safely as they are tremendously important
+to our town, our state, our country!&rdquo; And a grandiloquent
+gesture accompanied the words. &ldquo;Come back in
+a little while, my friend, then we&rsquo;ll see how much food
+you can hide away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Saurez much gratified at these words and at everything
+went out slowly, for he was troubled by rheumatism.
+The instant his back disappeared Martinez sprang
+to the table, swiftly filled out the acknowledgment of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+old man&rsquo;s signature to the Weir document, clapped the
+page under the seal and pressed home the stamp. Then
+pushing the folded statement into an envelope and that
+into his pocket, he leaned back with a sigh of exhaustion.
+The thing was accomplished at last, but the strain had
+been great. Weir&rsquo;s command to secure evidence had
+been obeyed. Only the promise to await Saurez&rsquo; death,
+troubled Martinez, and with a convenient sophistry he
+decided that an agreement not to print the narrative
+in a book did not extend to using it in court. Weir
+would be delighted&ndash;&ndash;it was a famous coup.</p>
+<p>How long Martinez sat reveling in this well-earned
+satisfaction he was unaware, until with a start he glanced
+at his watch. Three-quarters of an hour had passed.
+He went out to look for Saurez. But he was not in sight
+and though several persons had seen him they could
+not say where he had gone. Martinez went again into
+his office. When another half-hour had drifted by he
+decided the old man had encountered friends and either
+caught a ride home or gone with one to supper. So
+Martinez proceeded to his own meal.</p>
+<p>Yet he was pervaded by an unaccountable uneasiness.
+The sun had set in a bank of clouds and night was not
+far off. He made another search for the old Mexican,
+inquiring here and there, until he was informed by one
+that he had seen Saurez in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon talking with
+Vorse and sipping a glass of brandy. That was half
+an hour before. A chill of fear spread over the lawyer&rsquo;s
+skin.</p>
+<p>Determined, however, to learn the worst, he stole to
+the saloon and peered over the slatted door. The Mexican
+bar-keeper was wiping a glass; Vorse was not in
+sight; and&ndash;&ndash;ha! there was Saurez himself drowsing by a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+table. Martinez slipped in and made his way to the
+rear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come; time to go home,&rdquo; he said softly, giving the
+old Mexican&rsquo;s shoulder a shake. This did not arouse
+the sleeper, so he added force to his hand, at which the
+other sagged forward limply.</p>
+<p>Martinez jumped back. Next he stood quite still,
+staring. Then he approached and lifting the drooping
+head, gazed at the wrinkled face and glazed eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miguel, come here!&rdquo; he exclaimed, anxiously.
+&ldquo;Saurez is dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dead!&rdquo; The bar-keeper ran to the spot, eyes large
+with alarm and excitement. &ldquo;Dios, I thought him
+asleep! See, there is the glass in which I gave him
+brandy at Se&ntilde;or Vorse&rsquo;s order. The old one said he
+had come in to pay a little visit to his old employer
+and have a chat. They talked for some time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was Vorse asking him questions?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I think Saurez was telling him how he happened
+to be in town. I paid little attention to them,
+however. After a while I glanced up and saw Vorse
+standing by him. They were not talking. Then Vorse
+came away and said the old man had fallen asleep, and
+he went out to supper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez again lifted the head and darted glances
+over the dead man&rsquo;s breast. There were no wounds, but
+on the shriveled brown throat he saw what might have
+been a thumb-mark. He could not be sure, yet that was
+his guess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was an old man,&rdquo; Miguel remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. You should notify his son and also the undertaker,
+so the body can be taken care of. I&rsquo;ll telephone
+the latter too when I reach my office.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This Martinez did, informing Saurez&rsquo;s family that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+the old man had died while apparently asleep at Vorse&rsquo;s,
+and expressed his sympathy and sorrow.</p>
+<p>One feature of the case he instantly perceived; he
+was released from any obligation to keep silent regarding
+the old man&rsquo;s declaration. Fortunate was he to
+have obtained it before Vorse had got wind of his purpose.
+At the thought of Vorse he arose and locked
+both front and back doors of the building, pulled down
+the window shades and turned out the light.</p>
+<p>It was almost dark by now. In the darkness he felt
+safer. Any one passing would suppose him away. Perhaps
+he should spend the night elsewhere&ndash;&ndash;at the dam,
+for instance. Again the same shudder shook his frame
+that he had experienced on seeing the mark on Saurez&rsquo;
+throat. Vorse had killed the old Mexican, of that he
+was convinced. With his tongue made garrulous by
+brandy and by the presence of his old employer the old
+man had doubtless related everything that occurred
+between him and Martinez; and the vulture-like, bald-headed
+saloon-keeper, recognizing that he had been unconsciously
+betrayed had immediately acted to close
+this witness&rsquo; lips forever against a second utterance.</p>
+<p>Martinez himself was in danger. The perspiration
+dampened his face as he realized that as far as he was
+concerned the die was cast. He must fling in his fortunes
+with Weir to the utmost. He would first stand in
+defense on his right as a lawyer to secure evidence for
+a client, but if this failed&ndash;&ndash;and what rights would Vorse
+halt for?&ndash;&ndash;he must depend upon the paper. Once they
+had that, they would speedily put him out of the way as
+they had done Saurez. But if they had it not, they
+would at least hesitate to wreak their vengeance until
+they could get it into their possession. He must place
+it in Weir&rsquo;s hands at once, then if questioned refuse to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span>
+inform them of its whereabouts. Perhaps they would
+try to seize it some time this night. He stood up, lighted
+the lamp, saw that all was well in the office and took his
+hat.</p>
+<p>A peremptory knock sounded on the door of the rear
+room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open up there, Martinez,&rdquo; a voice commanded.</p>
+<p>He stole thither, listened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind. Open this door or I&rsquo;ll pull it down,&rdquo;
+came in hoarse tones he recognized as Burkhardt&rsquo;s. The
+man, or men, outside had chosen the rear to force an entrance
+if necessary, where there would be no spectators.
+&ldquo;Jerk it open quick,&rdquo; Burkhardt continued savagely.
+&ldquo;We want you.&rdquo; Then again, &ldquo;We knew you were
+there, though you kept the place dark. Move lively before
+I use this ax.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Never did Martinez&rsquo; mind work more rapidly. Likewise
+his eyes darted everywhere in search of the object
+he needed. Then he glided to a decrepit arm-chair and
+turning it over stuffed the document in a rent in its
+padded seat, out of sight underneath. Next he filled his
+pockets with other papers signed by Saurez. Last, he
+hastily tore open the little telephone book and ran a
+forefinger down the H&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor Hosmer&rsquo;s, hurry,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Number F28.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Blows were already sounding on the rear door, but
+the lock was strong and resisted. Of all the persons he
+knew Janet Hosmer was the only one he could trust to
+keep her word. And he dare not wait until Weir could
+come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this you, Janet? Martinez talking,&rdquo; he said, when
+he heard her answer. &ldquo;Listen. I&rsquo;m at my office; men
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span>
+are trying to break in to get a paper valuable for Mr.
+Weir&rsquo;s defense. They must not get it. He&rsquo;s to be arrested
+and tried for murder of the man he killed. You
+and I know he&rsquo;s innocent. This is a life and death
+matter. The paper is hidden in the old chair. The men
+are breaking down the door. I&rsquo;ll get them away long
+enough for you to come and obtain it. Give it to Weir&ndash;&ndash;at
+once, to-night, immediately. Promise me you will,
+promise! My own life probably hangs on it. Return
+to your house and stay for half an hour and if he hasn&rsquo;t
+arrived by that time, go to the dam. Thank you, thank
+you&ndash;&ndash;from my heart! Start now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words had tumbled out in an agitated stream,
+occupying but a few seconds. The panels were splintering
+in the door now, as the ax smashed a way through.
+Martinez had no need to look up Weir&rsquo;s number; and it
+was in a strain of terror and excitement that he waited
+for the connection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See Janet Hosmer at once,&rdquo; he shot at the engineer,
+followed by the rest of the warning already quoted which
+had so electrifying an effect upon Steele Weir.</p>
+<p>But the words had broken off abruptly. For as the
+door crashed off its hinges Martinez dropped the telephone
+receiver and darted for the front entrance, shooting
+back the bolt and flinging it open. He almost
+plunged into Vorse who was on guard there.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand still,&rdquo; the man ordered. And Martinez kept
+the spot as if congealed, for in the saloon-keeper&rsquo;s hand
+was a revolver with an exceedingly large muzzle.</p>
+<p>Burkhardt burst in, ax still in hand, eyes bloodshot
+with rage. Vorse turned and closed the front door.
+Then he glanced over the lawyer&rsquo;s table and ran a hand
+into his inside coat pocket bulging with documents. He
+glanced through one or two.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;re after,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take him
+to my place where we can quietly settle the matter.&rdquo;
+His eyes rested on the Mexican with ominous meaning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come along, you snake,&rdquo; Burkhardt growled, seizing
+their prisoner&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;Out the back way&ndash;&ndash;and keep
+your mouth shut. Don&rsquo;t try to make a break of any
+kind, if you know what&rsquo;s best for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez&rsquo; yellow skin was almost white.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, gentlemen, what does this all mean?&rdquo; he began,
+endeavoring to pull back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll learn soon enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Step right along,&rdquo; Vorse added. &ldquo;Take him away,
+Burkhardt, then I&rsquo;ll blow out this light.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With no further word Martinez accompanied his captors
+into the gloom of the night. They moved in silence
+through the dark space behind the row of store buildings.
+The lawyer felt that at least the way was clear
+for Janet Hosmer.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XV_THE_MASK_DROPPED' id='CHAPTER_XV_THE_MASK_DROPPED'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+<h3>THE MASK DROPPED</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When Janet Hosmer, startled by Felipe Martinez&rsquo;
+agitated appeal, turned from the telephone, her single
+thought was to carry out on the instant his fervid injunction.
+Something aimed at the engineer and the
+lawyer was in movement, a plot for the former&rsquo;s arrest
+and the destruction of evidence necessary to his defense,
+according to Martinez&rsquo; quick hurried words; and the
+Mexican now sought her aid, as she was the only one
+within reach whom he could trust. That he must call
+to her showed the desperate nature of the exigency&ndash;&ndash;and
+he had said lives were at stake!</p>
+<p>Haste was the imperative need. As her father was
+absent, she summoned the Mexican girl from the kitchen,
+for instinct advised the wisdom of having a companion
+on this errand; and the two of them, bare-headed and
+walking fast, set out for the house. Dusk was just
+thickening to night. No stars were visible. A warm
+moistness in the air forewarned of rain from the blanket
+of clouds that had spread at sunset along the peaks.
+Indeed, a few fine globules of water touched their faces
+as they came into the main street and hurried along.</p>
+<p>Neither girl had observed the automobile, unlighted
+and moving slowly, that approached the Hosmer house
+as they emerged. Apparently the driver perceiving them
+against the lamplight of the doorway and noting their
+departure thought better of bringing the car to a halt,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+for he kept the machine in motion and as quietly as
+possible trailed the pair by glimpses of their figures
+flitting before an occasional illuminated window. When
+Janet and her companion turned into the main street
+where the stores were lighted his task became easier.</p>
+<p>The street was peaceful. Janet saw no evidence of
+the violence or danger indicated by the Mexican lawyer&rsquo;s
+declaration, but she was too sensible to imagine on that
+account that peril did not exist. The town was not
+aware of what had occurred, that was all,&ndash;&ndash;not yet.
+The chief actors in the conspiracy were still moving
+stealthily against their intended victims; they had
+pounced on Martinez and once they had seized the evidence
+they sought they would arrest Weir. Afterwards
+the people, as she guessed the matter, would be aroused
+to create a strong sentiment against the helpless men.
+It was an atrocious business.</p>
+<p>But as yet things were in a lull&ndash;&ndash;and it was during
+this pause, brief, critical, that Martinez expected her
+to act. That much she had grasped from his hurried
+words. She reached his office and halted to listen. No
+gleam came from the building, nor from the low structure
+on either side, and across the way all was dark&ndash;&ndash;dark
+as it had been that night when the assassin&rsquo;s shot
+had been fired at Steele Weir. Repressing a shudder,
+she bade the Mexican girl follow her, groped for the
+door knob, found it and pushed the door open.</p>
+<p>Martinez had spoken of men forcing an entrance, so
+it must have been at the rear. Inside all was pitchy
+black.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Juanita, you have a match in your pocket, haven&rsquo;t
+you?&rdquo; she demanded, anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Miss Janet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Strike it, then.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></div>
+<p>In the pent stillness of the dark office Janet could
+hear the Mexican girl fumbling in the pocket of her
+gingham dress. There came a scratching sound and a
+tiny flame.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful of it,&rdquo; she warned. &ldquo;Now give it to me.
+And close the door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet lighted the smoky lamp resting on the table,
+next took it up in her hand. A few papers had fallen
+upon the floor. The room was still strong with fresh
+cigarette smoke. Martinez could not have been gone
+more than five minutes.</p>
+<p>And in another five minutes&rsquo; time too Martinez&rsquo; captors
+might be back again!</p>
+<p>Holding the lamp aloft she peered about for an old
+chair, her heart beating rapidly, her lips compressed.
+But all the chairs, the three or four in the room, were
+old. Her eyes encountered the Mexican girl staring
+open-mouthed and scared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take the lamp and keep by me,&rdquo; Janet ordered.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t upset it. What are you shaking for, you
+ninny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t help it&ndash;&ndash;and you&rsquo;re so white,&rdquo; the other
+whimpered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never you mind me; do as I say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet swiftly went from one chair to another, turning
+them about, upside down, all ways. No paper was
+hidden in or under any one of them, or indeed was there
+space capable of holding a document. At last she gave
+up, gazing about in dismay, dread, tears of vexation
+and anxiety almost rising to her lids. Only one conclusion
+was to be drawn: the men who had seized the lawyer
+had found the paper in spite of his precaution.</p>
+<p>She examined the chairs a second time feverishly, for
+time was flying.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t find it, Juanita, the paper he telephoned me
+to come and get,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe it&rsquo;s in there where he sleeps.&rdquo; And the Mexican
+girl pointed at the inner door standing barely ajar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet led the way within. There was Martinez&rsquo; living- and
+sleeping-room. The furnishings comprised a
+bed, an old scratched bureau, a stand with wash-bowl,
+a red and black Navajo blanket on the floor, a trunk,
+a stool and a dilapidated stuffed chair&ndash;&ndash;just such a
+chair as a paper could be hidden in. That into this
+room the lawyer&rsquo;s assailants had burst their way was
+apparent from the splintered door hanging from one
+hinge at the rear.</p>
+<p>Beckoning Juanita to bring the lamp, Janet ran to
+the arm-chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, here it is!&rdquo; she cried, when she had turned the
+piece of furniture over and inserted her hand in the
+rent. &ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t found, after all! Come away now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Relief and exultation replaced her depression of the
+moment before. She had succeeded; she had helped the
+lawyer outwit his enemies; she must now return home to
+await Steele Weir&rsquo;s arrival, or if he failed in that then
+go to the dam.</p>
+<p>In the outer room she bade the Mexican girl place the
+lamp on the table once more and blow it out. This
+was done. They groped forward to the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Follow me out quietly, Juanita,&rdquo; Janet said. &ldquo;Only
+Mr. Martinez knows we&rsquo;ve been here, and Mr. Weir, the
+engineer. See, I&rsquo;m trusting you. This is a very important
+paper for Mr. Weir, and other men are trying
+to keep it out of his hands. So you must say nothing
+to any one about our being here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Juanita assented in a whisper. Janet thereupon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+opened the door and the pair stepped forth. A faint
+hissing sound directly before them startled both.
+But the American girl immediately recognized it for
+what it was, the faint murmur of an automobile
+engine.</p>
+<p>She quietly closed the office door, caught her companion&rsquo;s
+arm to lead her away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk,&rdquo; she whispered in her ear.</p>
+<p>At the same instant the beam of an electric hand torch
+flashed in their eyes, blinding them. Then as quickly
+the light was extinguished and a heavy blanket was flung
+over Janet&rsquo;s head. Her cry was choked off, but not that
+of the Mexican girl who had been struck by the corner
+of the cloth and who heard her mistress struggling in
+the arms of the man who had seized her. The sound
+of the struggle moved towards the car and then Juanita,
+paralyzed by fright, was stunned by a sudden roar of
+the exhaust, a grind of gears, and a rush in the darkness.
+The automobile had gone, carrying off Janet Hosmer
+a muffled prisoner. Juanita regaining use of her
+legs fled for Doctor Hosmer&rsquo;s unmindful of the mist
+against her face.</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s sensation had been that of strangulation and
+terror. In the thick folds of the blanket, held and lifted
+by strong arms, all she could offer in the way of resistance
+was futile kicks. She had been jammed into the
+automobile seat and firmly kept there by an embrace
+while the car was being started, which did not relax as
+the machine gathered speed. For some minutes this
+lasted, while she strained painfully for breath, and then
+she perceived the car was stopping.</p>
+<p>Her terror increased. What now would happen?
+These men after overpowering Felipe Martinez had abducted
+her in their determination to possess themselves
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+of the paper. Finding it in her hand&ndash;&ndash;for she still
+clutched it&ndash;&ndash;what then? Would they kill her?</p>
+<p>The car was now completely at rest. The arm was
+withdrawn from about her; hands gripped her hands and
+forced them together; a handkerchief was tightly knotted
+about her wrists. Afterwards her ankles were bound by
+a strap. Then the blanket was lifted from her form
+and head and she gasped in again pure night air.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a gag,&rdquo; said the man at her side. &ldquo;Keep
+quiet and I&rsquo;ll not use it; if you open your mouth to make
+a sound, I shall. It&rsquo;s up to you.&rdquo; And with the hoarse
+threat she caught the heavy sickening odor of whiskey
+on the speaker&rsquo;s breath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You, Ed Sorenson! You&rsquo;ve dared to do this!&rdquo; she
+exclaimed, fear vanishing in anger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sweetheart,&rdquo; came with a mocking accent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Untie me this minute and let me out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no. You&rsquo;ve got the wrong line on this little
+game. We&rsquo;re going for a ride, just you and me, as
+lovers should.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet began to think fast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you know I was in Mr. Martinez&rsquo; office?&rdquo;
+she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I saw you go in, little one. I was just pulling
+up at your door to coax you out when I saw you and
+the Mexican wench appear. So I followed along. Saved
+me the bother of telling you your father had been hurt
+in an accident. He&rsquo;s chasing off somewhere thirty miles
+from town on a &lsquo;false alarm&rsquo; call to attend a dying man.
+Sorry I had to use the blanket; sorry I have to keep
+your naughty little hands and feet tied up. But it&rsquo;s
+the only way. After we&rsquo;re married, you&rsquo;ll forget all
+about it in loving me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So this was the face of the matter. Not the paper
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+she gripped, but she herself was his object. His abduction
+of her had nothing to do with Martinez&rsquo; affair; he
+knew nothing of the larger plot; and for that reason
+she experienced a degree of relief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never marry you, be certain of that,&rdquo; said she,
+recurring to his statement. &ldquo;If anything had been
+needed to settle that point, what you have done now
+would be enough. You shall pay for this atrocious
+treatment. Untie my hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no. We&rsquo;re starting on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your father as well as mine shall know of this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not, dearie. We&rsquo;re going up into the hills
+where I&rsquo;ve a nice little cabin fixed up. And we&rsquo;ll stay
+there awhile. And then when we come back, you&rsquo;ll not
+do any talking. On the contrary, you&rsquo;ll be anxious to
+marry me&ndash;&ndash;you&rsquo;ll be begging me to marry you. Of
+course! People know we&rsquo;re engaged, and they&rsquo;ll know
+you&rsquo;ve been away with me for two or three days. Do
+you think they&rsquo;ll listen to any story about my carrying
+you off against your will? They&rsquo;ll wink when they hear
+it. Yes, you&rsquo;ll be ready to marry me all right, all right,
+when we come back to San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s blood ran cold at this heartless, black plan
+to ensnare her into marriage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed, you would never do a thing like that,&rdquo; she
+pleaded. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re just trying to scare me with a joke.
+Be a good fellow and untie my hands and take me
+home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No joke about this; straight business. I told you
+you should marry me&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re drunk or mad!&rdquo; she burst out, terrified.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Neither; perfectly calm. But I&rsquo;m not the fellow
+to be tossed over at a whim. I&rsquo;m holding you to your
+word, that&rsquo;s all. You&rsquo;ll change your mind back as it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
+was by to-morrow; you&rsquo;ll be crazy to have me as a
+husband then. I won&rsquo;t have to tie your hands and feet
+to keep you at my side when we come riding home to go
+to the minister&rsquo;s. Now we&rsquo;ve had our little talk and
+understand each other; and it&rsquo;s beginning to drizzle.
+Time to start for our little cabin. The less fuss you
+make, the pleasanter it will be for both of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He set the gears and the car started forward once
+more. A sensation of being under the paws of a beast,
+odious and fetid, savage and pitiless, overwhelmed her.
+That this was no trick of a moment but a calculated
+scheme to abase and possess her she now realized with
+a sort of dull horror. And on top of all he was, despite
+his denial, partly drunk.</p>
+<p>Through the terror of her situation two thoughts now
+continued to course like fiery threads&ndash;&ndash;one a hope, one
+a purpose. The former rested on Juanita, whom in
+his inflamed ferocity of intention, the man seemed to
+have forgotten&ndash;&ndash;on Juanita and Steele Weir, &ldquo;Cold
+Steel&rdquo; Weir; and this failing, there remained the latter,
+a set idea to kill herself before this brute at her
+side worked his will. Somehow she could and would
+kill herself. Somehow she would find the means to free
+her hands and the instrument to pierce her heart.</p>
+<p>Sorenson had switched on his lights. He drove the
+car through the damp darkness at headlong speed along
+the trail that leaped from the gloom to meet them and
+vanished behind. At the end of a quarter of an hour he
+swung into a canyon; and Janet perceived they were ascending
+Terry Creek. He stopped the car anew.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just take no chances with you,&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+&ldquo;We have to pass your friends, the Johnsons, you know.
+Had to take my stuff up here in the middle of the night&ndash;&ndash;up
+one night and back the next&ndash;&ndash;and mighty still too,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span>
+so that they wouldn&rsquo;t suspicion I was fixing a little bower
+for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He bound a cloth over her mouth and again flung the
+blanket over her head. Janet struggled fiercely for a
+moment, but finally sank back choking and half in a
+faint. She was barely conscious of the car&rsquo;s climbing
+again. Though when passing the ranch house the man
+drove with every care for silence, she was not aware
+of the fact. Her breath, mind, soul, were stifled. She
+seemed transfixed in a hideous nightmare.</p>
+<p>At length her lips and head were released. But her
+hands and feet were numb. Still feeling as if she were
+in some dreadful dream she saw the beam of the headlights
+picking out the winding trail, flashing on trees by
+the wayside, shining on wet rocks, heard the chatter of
+the creek over stones and the labor of the engine.</p>
+<p>The road was less plain, a mere track now, and
+steeper. They were climbing, climbing up the mountain
+side, up into the heavier timber, up into one of the
+&ldquo;parks&rdquo; among the peaks. Johnson&rsquo;s ranch was miles
+behind and far below. Occasionally billows of fog
+swathed them in wet folds that sent a chill to Janet&rsquo;s
+bones.</p>
+<p>Sorenson held his watch down to the driver&rsquo;s light.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ten o&rsquo;clock; we&rsquo;re making good time. Must give the
+engine a drink&ndash;&ndash;and take one myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He descended to the creek with a bucket, bringing
+back water to fill the steaming radiator. Afterwards,
+standing in the light of the car&rsquo;s lamps, he tilted a flask
+to his lips and drank deep.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not far now; three or four miles. But it&rsquo;s slow
+going. Have to make it on &lsquo;low&rsquo;,&rdquo; said he, swinging
+himself up into his place.</p>
+<p>Janet held her face turned away. She was thinking
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span>
+of Juanita and Steele Weir. Had the girl gone home
+again? Or, terrified, had she run to her own home and
+said nothing? Had the engineer come and waited and
+learning nothing at last returned to the dam? Despair
+filled her breast. Even should the Mexican girl have
+apprised him of the kidnapping, how should he know
+where to follow? And in the solitude of the wet dark
+mountains all about her hope died.</p>
+<p>She began desperately to tug against the handkerchief
+binding her wrists.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the going became easier and she felt rather
+than saw that the trees had thinned. A flash of the car
+lamps at a curve in the trail showed a great glistening
+wall of rock towering overhead, then this was passed
+and the way appeared to lead into a grassy open space.
+A dark shape beside the road loomed into view&ndash;&ndash;a cabin
+by a clump of pine trees. Sorenson brought the car to
+a stop a few yards from the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here at last,&rdquo; he announced, springing down.</p>
+<p>He unstrapped her feet, bade her get out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I make a last appeal to your decency and manhood&ndash;&ndash;if
+you have either,&rdquo; she said, sitting motionless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rot,&rdquo; he answered. Half dragging her, half lifting
+her, he removed her from the machine. Slipping a hand
+within her arm he led her inside the log house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit there,&rdquo; he ordered.</p>
+<p>Janet dropped upon the seat, a rude plank bench
+against the wall farthest from the door. Indeed, fatigue
+and the numbness of her limbs rendered her incapable
+of standing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I&rsquo;ve touched off this fire and set out some
+grub, then I&rsquo;ll untie your hands,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;A
+snug little cabin, eh? Just the place for us, what? See
+all the stuff I&rsquo;ve brought up here to make you warm and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+happy and comfortable. Regular nest. Lot of work on
+my part, I want to say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He touched a match to the wood already laid in the
+fireplace, flung off his rain coat and stood to warm his
+hands at the blaze. Lighting a cigarette, he began
+placing from a box of supplies plates and food on the
+table in the middle of the room, but paused to reproduce
+his flask. With a sardonic grin he lifted the bottle,
+bowed to Janet and drank the liquor neat. When he had
+finished, he turned the bottle upside down to show it was
+empty, then tossed it into a corner. Again he fixed his
+drunken, mocking smile upon her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t preach to me about booze here, can you,
+honey?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Ought to take a swallow yourself;
+warm you up. I have plenty. Guess I better untie your
+hands now.&rdquo; He advanced towards her, swaying
+slightly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to love me from this time on,
+ain&rsquo;t you, girlie?&rdquo; He untied the handkerchief and
+dropped it at his feet. &ldquo;No nonsense now about trying
+to get away; I&rsquo;ll rope you for good if you try to start
+anything. Hello, what&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; give it to me!&rdquo; she cried, in alarm as he pulled
+the folded sheets of paper from her stiffened fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something I ought to see, maybe.&rdquo; Then he added
+harshly, &ldquo;Sit down, if you don&rsquo;t care to have me teach
+you a thing or two. I&rsquo;m master here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stepped to the table and drawing a box beside him
+settled upon it, pulled the candle-stick nearer and began
+to read the document. Janet glanced swiftly about the
+room for a weapon. Escape past him she could not, for
+by a single spring he could bar the way; but could she
+lay hand on a stick of wood she might fight her way out.
+None was nearer than the fire, and again he could interpose.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span></div>
+<p>He read on and on, with a darkening brow and an
+evil glint showing in his eyes. Page by page he perused
+Saurez&rsquo; deposition until he reached the end. Then he
+got to his feet, shaking the paper at her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were in on this,&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;This is what you
+were in Martinez&rsquo; office to get. You&rsquo;re wise to this
+cursed scheme to help Weir make my father and Vorse
+and Burkhardt and Judge Gordon out a gang of swindlers.
+So they trimmed <i>his</i> father of something&ndash;&ndash;at least
+I fancy they did, and I hope to God they did, the
+coward! And you were in with them! You&rsquo;re not quite
+the little white angel you&rsquo;d have people believe, are you?
+Not quite so innocent and simple as you&rsquo;ve made me
+think, anyway. Well, I&rsquo;ll square all that. That slippery
+snake, Martinez, I&rsquo;ll twist his neck the minute I get back
+to town. I&rsquo;ll bet a thousand it was framed up to use
+this when Weir was arrested&ndash;&ndash;but he&rsquo;ll never use it
+now!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He glared at the girl with a face distorted by rage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll just burn it here and now,&rdquo; he continued.
+&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll be sure it won&rsquo;t be used.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet gripped her hands tightly, while her lips opened
+to utter a wild protest at this desecration. What the
+document contained she did not yet know, except that
+it was evidence that fixed upon the men named guilt for
+some past deed in which Weir had suffered and which
+would bring them to account. But something more than
+protest was needed, she saw in a flash, to deflect the man
+from his purpose and save the sheets from the flame.</p>
+<p>She shut her lips for an instant to choke the cry, then
+said with an assumption of unconcern:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead. I didn&rsquo;t want your father to see it, in any
+case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The paper had almost reached the candle, but the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+hand that held it paused. Sorenson stared at it, and
+from it to her. At last a malignant curl of his lips
+uncovered his teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you didn&rsquo;t want him to see it,&rdquo; he sneered. &ldquo;If
+that&rsquo;s so, I&rsquo;ll just save it. He&rsquo;ll be interested in reading
+what your friends have prepared to destroy his good
+name and reputation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He folded the document and slipped it into his inner
+coat pocket. Then he walked towards her. At the look
+on his face Janet sprang to her feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve changed my mind about the marriage matter,
+just as you did,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I agree with you now; there
+won&rsquo;t be any marriage. But I&rsquo;ll have your arms about
+my neck just the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he seized her wrist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go, let&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; The words ceased on her lips.</p>
+<p>Her eyes were riveted on the cabin door; she scarcely
+felt the man&rsquo;s loathsome touch on her arm. How had
+the door come unlatched? And was it only the wind that
+slowly moved it open?</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVI_WEIR_TAKES_UP_THE_HUNT' id='CHAPTER_XVI_WEIR_TAKES_UP_THE_HUNT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+<h3>WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>On leaving the construction camp Steele Weir had
+whirled away down the river road for San Mateo with a
+feeling both of satisfaction and of enmity&ndash;&ndash;satisfaction
+at Martinez&rsquo; success in at last having secured the evidence
+ardently desired, as betokened by his words;
+enmity at whoever was laying violent hands on the
+lawyer. Unfortunately when yet half a mile from town
+his car suffered one of the common misadventures of
+automobiles:&ndash;&ndash;ping-g-g! sang a tire in a shrill dying
+whine.</p>
+<p>Weir did not stop to change and inflate the tube, but
+pushed ahead on his mission though at slackened speed.
+He brought his car to rest before Doctor Hosmer&rsquo;s
+house. The windows were lighted, yet at his knock there
+was no response; so brushing conventionalities aside he
+entered and called Janet&rsquo;s name. Only echoes and a
+following silence greeted his call.</p>
+<p>Doubtful whether to remain awaiting the girl&rsquo;s return
+or go at once to Martinez&rsquo; office in the hope of still finding
+her, he finally chose the latter course leaving his car
+where it stood and proceeding on foot, as a result of
+which he passed in the darkness Juanita hurrying home
+in a fright. A bad choice and valuable time lost, he
+afterwards discovered. At Martinez&rsquo; office he stepped
+inside, called the lawyer by name, called Janet Hosmer,
+stood for a little while in the black room harkening and
+thinking, then went forth into the street.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span></div>
+<p>This time chance fell his way. He had but come out
+when he heard footsteps and two men in low-toned talk
+as they approached; and he withdrew further into the
+concealing darkness of the street. The new visitors,
+striking matches at the entrance, walked inside. The
+men were Vorse and Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you had been here, we could have nailed him at
+once as soon as I had Saurez&rsquo; story,&rdquo; the former said.
+&ldquo;Martinez had half an hour and more to get the thing
+into somebody else&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I was looking after those men up in the hills,&rdquo;
+was the growled answer. &ldquo;Had to feed &rsquo;em and have
+&rsquo;em ready for to-morrow night. If we don&rsquo;t find the
+document here, we&rsquo;ll screw its hiding-place out of that
+dirty greaser if we have to use a cord on his head
+Indian-fashion. Anyway it ought to be about this office.
+Martinez didn&rsquo;t know you had learned about it from
+Saurez. He&rsquo;d never let go a paper like that until he
+had to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you&rsquo;re right there,&rdquo; Vorse said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;d want
+to sell it for all it was worth. Better shut and lock the
+door while we&rsquo;re searching. Don&rsquo;t care to have any of
+his friends sticking in their heads while we&rsquo;re here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Burkhardt, who had lighted the lamp, now closed the
+door, cutting off so far as Steele Weir was concerned
+both a view of the men and their conversation. However
+he had learned if not enough, at least considerable.
+They had not yet gained possession of the paper. They
+knew nothing of Janet&rsquo;s part in the affair. They had
+so far not succeeded in unlocking Martinez&rsquo; lips, but
+undoubtedly they would be able to wring from the lawyer
+when they went about it the real truth regarding the
+document. Very likely Martinez had anticipated that,
+had known his powers were such as not to be greatly able
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+to resist physical torture and had planned to get the
+evidence into the engineer&rsquo;s hands before he should be
+subjected to pains of the flesh. That would be remembered
+to his credit, along with all the rest. Where
+Martinez was being held prisoner was the additional
+information Weir should have liked to glean before the
+door was shut.</p>
+<p>Postponing for the time the hunt along this line, he
+returned to the Hosmer dwelling. In answer to his
+knock and call on this visit the trembling Juanita
+appeared, immediately pouring forth a recital of the
+happenings at the office as affecting her mistress.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve told no one else?&rdquo; he demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, se&ntilde;or. She said I was to say nothing of her
+being there for the paper, and I was waiting for her
+father to come. But she informed me Mr. Martinez and
+you knew she was there, so I&rsquo;ve told you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you saw nothing of this man who cast the
+blanket over her head and seized her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was dark; we had just come out of the office.
+But&ndash;&ndash;but the car sounded like Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s. I&rsquo;ve
+heard it start from here many times with the same loud
+noise. They had quarreled, Se&ntilde;or Weir, and were no
+longer engaged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know. Which way did he drive off?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;East, down the lower end of the street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring a lamp out to my car, so I can fix my tire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the girl holding the light by his side the engineer
+worked with concentrated energy in stripping the wheel,
+in inserting a new tube, replacing the tire and pumping
+it up. The thin drizzle glistened on his face, but for all
+that it was none the less determined, stern.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need not be afraid for yourself; no one but us
+knows you were there,&rdquo; he said to her, climbing into his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
+machine. &ldquo;Nor for Miss Janet, either. I&rsquo;ll bring her
+home safely. When Dr. Hosmer returns, tell him everything.
+Also ask him to await our coming. Be sure and
+say to him that I&rsquo;ll bring her home unharmed and that
+I advise silence in regard to the matter until I have
+talked with him. You will remain quiet, of course. This
+isn&rsquo;t a thing to be gossiped about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, se&ntilde;or.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Away the automobile shot under the impulsion of the
+gas. Minutes, golden minutes, had been wasted in
+taking up the pursuit because of his going to Martinez&rsquo;
+office and because of the flat tire. Sorenson now would
+be miles away with his prisoner.</p>
+<p>Sweeping out of town with the car&rsquo;s headlights illuminating
+the road, Steele Weir blessed the drizzling mist
+that dampened the dust so as to leave a tire&rsquo;s imprint.
+Almost at once he picked up the track, for not more than
+twenty or twenty-five minutes had elapsed since Sorenson&rsquo;s
+flight and not even a horseman had since been
+over the way.</p>
+<p>Though he knew it not, the interval of time had been
+reduced by the stop made by the first machine, a mile or
+so out of town, when the abductor removed the blanket
+from Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s head to announce his evil scheme.
+From the main road leading to Bowenville Weir saw the
+car&rsquo;s trail turn aside into a mesa track pointing obliquely
+for Terry Creek canyon; and he suspected that Sorenson
+was making a long drive northward, skirting the
+mountain range and working away from the railroad-tapped
+region.</p>
+<p>Once he thought he caught a flash of light far ahead
+of him, but knew this was an illusion. Through this
+rainy darkness no car&rsquo;s beam, however powerful, would
+show half a mile. The mist beat against his face in a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+steady stream as he rushed forward in the night, his
+eyes immovable on the wet twin tire-marks stamped on
+the road, his iron grip on the wheel, his ears filled with
+the steady hum of the engine. If Sorenson had driven
+fast, Steele Weir drove faster.</p>
+<p>At Terry Creek he plunged down the bank, across the
+water and up on the other side without a change of
+gears, rocking and lurching. Once on the smooth trail
+again the car seemed to stretch itself like a greyhound
+for the race northward. But on a sudden he brought
+the automobile to an abrupt halt. The surface of the
+road was undisturbed; nothing had passed here.</p>
+<p>Swinging back again on the way he had come, Weir
+recrossed the creek and slowly retraced his course.
+Then with an exclamation of satisfaction he picked up
+the track where it turned up the canyon trail. But why
+was the man going to the Johnson ranch? Mystified by
+this baffling procedure on Sorenson&rsquo;s part, he nevertheless
+headed up the stream with no lessening of his
+purpose to overtake the other.</p>
+<p>At the ranch house, whose kitchen window was lighted,
+he stopped and leaped out. Johnson and Mary both
+answered his thumping knock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is Janet Hosmer here?&rdquo; he questioned, while his eyes
+darted about the kitchen. Then he made his own reply,
+&ldquo;I see she&rsquo;s not. Ed Sorenson kidnapped her to-night
+and drove to this canyon. Did you hear a car?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary faced her father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remember I thought I heard one!&rdquo; she cried.
+&ldquo;But the sound was so low I wasn&rsquo;t sure, and when I went
+to the window I saw nothing. I didn&rsquo;t hear it again.
+Father said it was just my imagination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where does this road lead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up into the timber and to a &lsquo;park.&rsquo; Used to be an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+old wood road. Sheepmen sometimes use it to take their
+wagons up above; sometimes cattle outfits too while on
+round-ups.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could an auto go ahead on it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I guess so. By hard driving.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he&rsquo;s up there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir ran back to his car, jumped in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go with you,&rdquo; Johnson shouted after him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I can handle the fellow,&rdquo; the engineer answered.
+And again his machine started on. &ldquo;How long ago was
+it that you heard him, Mary?&rdquo; was his parting question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Bout fifteen minutes ago,&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>Fifteen minutes! But the girl&rsquo;s reckoning might be
+vague, and &ldquo;fifteen&rdquo; minutes be half an hour. At any
+rate, with the road ascending among the peaks
+Sorenson&rsquo;s speed would be greatly diminished. The
+incline would be against him, the uneven twisting rain-washed
+trail would require careful driving, the rain
+would hamper his sight. Yet the fellow he pursued
+could not be more than three or four miles ahead at most.</p>
+<p>On and on Weir pressed. The mist thickened; black
+wet tree trunks loomed before him like ghosts and sank
+out of view again; the road wound along the stream
+among rocks and bushes and over hillocks with all the
+difficult sinuosity of a serpent&rsquo;s track; in his ears
+persisted the chuckling talk of the creek, flowing in
+darkness except when lighted by his car&rsquo;s lamps as the
+machine plunged through a ford, as became more and
+more frequent with the ascent and the narrowing of the
+canyon.</p>
+<p>Five miles, ten miles, fifteen miles he must have come
+since leaving the ranch house. His car now was high
+in the mountain range, running on low gear, the engine
+working hard in the thin air and against the steep grade.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
+He was not making more than five miles an hour, he
+judged, at this moment. The radiator was boiling and
+steaming like a cauldron. But he might be sure that if
+his travel was slow, Sorenson&rsquo;s was no better; the road
+was the same for the pursued as for the pursuer.</p>
+<p>At the end of another half hour he came around a
+ledge of rock, where the creek flowed some fifty feet below
+and the granite wall allowed just room to pass in a
+hair-pin turn. There a light gleamed before him like a
+beacon, a dim gleam of a window. It was perhaps a
+hundred yards distant. It marked the end of the trail,
+the end of the search.</p>
+<p>Here was Janet Hosmer!</p>
+<p>And he had come in time. They could not have been
+here long, for Sorenson&rsquo;s start had not been sufficient
+for that; the scoundrel had not yet recovered his breath
+from his hard drive, so to speak. He probably would
+imagine himself safe and so be in no haste to consummate
+his vile plan of enjoying his helpless victim.</p>
+<p>Rage that until now had been lying cold and
+implacable in Steele Weir&rsquo;s breast began to flame in his
+veins and brain. He drove his car past the rock and off
+the trail upon an open grassy space, very carefully,
+very quietly. Next he stopped the engine and put out
+the lights, then he got out, felt his gun in its holster and
+gazed ahead for an instant.</p>
+<p>A form had passed and repassed before the window&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson&rsquo;s
+figure, of course. Brute, coward, degenerate
+he was, and to be dealt with as such. Not only as such,
+indeed, but as a wretch who had dared to touch Janet
+Hosmer against her will, to drag her from her home to
+this lonely spot by violence for his own bestial purposes.</p>
+<p>The blood seemed like to burst Steele Weir&rsquo;s heart.
+This sweet, honest, kind-souled, noble girl! Janet
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span>
+Hosmer, so bright-eyed and pure! She, who had suffered
+this man&rsquo;s hate to save Martinez&rsquo; document, who had
+dared peril to help him, Weir! All the hunger of heart
+of years, and all the stifled affection, now went out to
+her. He loved her; the veil was rent from his mind and
+he realized the fact indisputably&ndash;&ndash;he loved Janet
+Hosmer. And the great creature of an Ed Sorenson
+had dared to seize her with brutal hands!</p>
+<p>Weir broke into a run. By instinct he kept the trail,
+though once or twice stumbling and once barely missing
+a collision with a tree. When he reached the cabin, he
+dropped to a walk and crept to the window, which was
+without glass or frame, open to the night. Peering in
+he perceived Sorenson at the table reading a document,
+and as he watched he had no need to be told this was the
+paper that so vitally concerned himself.</p>
+<p>At last Sorenson got to his feet, shaking his hand at
+Janet Hosmer who sat against the cabin wall and
+beginning to speak. Weir listened for a little. Then
+he stole along the log house to find the door.</p>
+<p>At last his finger touched the latch. He lifted it
+soundlessly, as silently pushed the door ajar until there
+was space for him to slip in. This he did. His mouth
+was shut hard, his eyes watchful, his right hand was
+closed about the butt of his revolver still resting in the
+holster.</p>
+<p>Over Sorenson&rsquo;s shoulder he saw Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s face,
+pale and drawn but with a sudden joy flaming there. If
+ever gratitude were written on human countenance, it
+was on hers. Gratitude&ndash;&ndash;and more! Something that
+sent Steele Weir&rsquo;s blood rushing anew through his body,
+with hope, with a song, with he knew not what.</p>
+<p>Janet suddenly jerked herself free and stepped back,
+her head held high and proud.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll never touch me again, you coward. Look
+behind you,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
+<p>Involuntarily Sorenson turned head on shoulder. The
+frown still darkened his liquor-flushed face and the sneer
+yet twisted his lips so that his mustache was drawn back
+from his teeth. Thus he remained as if changed to stone.</p>
+<p>What he saw was the man he most dreaded, with a
+shadow of a smile on his lips, his figure motionless, his
+hand ready, like an avenging Nemesis from out of the
+night. A perceptible shudder shook the fellow. Weir it
+was&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Cold Steel,&rdquo; whose counter-stroke against one
+man already had been swift and deadly, whom nothing
+checked or turned or terrified, who now for a second time
+was plucking away the fruit of Sorenson&rsquo;s efforts, who
+probably on this occasion would shoot him outright.</p>
+<p>For a moment Steele Weir regarded him in silence.
+But at last he spoke:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand away from that lady, you skunk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson moved hastily aside.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVII_EARTHS_RETRIBUTION' id='CHAPTER_XVII_EARTHS_RETRIBUTION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+<h3>EARTH&rsquo;S RETRIBUTION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Steele Weir crossed the cabin to Janet&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are unhurt?&rdquo; he asked, his eyes scanning her
+face anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. And, oh, how glad I am you came!&rdquo; she cried,
+low. &ldquo;I knew you would not fail me if you but learned
+of my plight; but it&rsquo;s wonderful you should be here so
+soon. I prayed every minute of my ride that Juanita
+would find and tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t come half as fast as I wished.&rdquo; His smile
+assured and cheered her. Then as his glance fell on her
+wrists, still red and creased from being bound, he
+exclaimed, &ldquo;What&rsquo;s this? Let me see.&rdquo; And he caught
+and lifted her hands to look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had you tied?&rdquo; Weir&rsquo;s gaze moved away to
+Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Hands and feet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the way? All the long ride?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;look out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s words, half a gasp, half a shriek, gave
+warning of Sorenson&rsquo;s movement, though none was
+needed. While apparently neglecting to watch the other,
+Weir had kept the man sharp in the corner of his eye.
+The motion with which his hand darted to his hip and
+up again was a single lightning-like sweep; and his
+weapon covered his enemy before the latter&rsquo;s hand so
+much as got his revolver in grasp.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Drop it; drop it on the floor!&rdquo; the engineer ordered.
+The gun clattered on the rough-hewn logs. &ldquo;Now put
+your hands up and turn your back this way.&rdquo; Sorenson
+obeyed, not without his eyes speaking the disappointed
+wrath and hatred his tongue dared not utter. &ldquo;I should
+have allowed you to make a full draw and then killed
+you,&rdquo; Steele Weir went on. &ldquo;That would have been the
+simplest way to settle your case. Only I don&rsquo;t like to
+kill bunglers, even when they deserve it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He re-sheathed his own gun and strode forward,
+picking up the one on the floor&ndash;&ndash;a black, ugly-looking
+automatic. This he dropped into a coat pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now face about, you cur,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;I want
+a good look at a man&ndash;&ndash;no, I&rsquo;ll not call you a man&ndash;&ndash;at a
+low-lived imitation of a man who is such a sneaking, dirty
+beast that all he can do is to trap and tie up a helpless
+girl. I don&rsquo;t know yet just what I shall do with you,
+but I know what I ought to do&ndash;&ndash;I ought to choke the
+miserable life out of you! You&rsquo;re not fit to live. You
+soil the earth and pollute the air. But you&rsquo;re of the
+same treacherous, underhanded, scoundrelly breed as
+your father, same yellow flesh and blood, same crooked
+mind and heart, same sort of poisonous snake, and since
+you get it all from him I suppose it can&rsquo;t be helped. Nor
+changed, except by killing and burying you. One thing
+is sure, when I&rsquo;m done you won&rsquo;t be trying any more
+deals like this. Bah, you slimy reptile, you belong in a
+cess-pool!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Under Steele Weir&rsquo;s biting speech Sorenson&rsquo;s face
+went red and pale by turns. His lips twitched and
+worked, moving his mustache in little angry lifts, while
+he breathed with short spasmodic intakes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;First, you&rsquo;re after Mexican girls,&rdquo; Weir went on
+mercilessly. &ldquo;Then Mary Johnson, whom I pulled out
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
+of your vile fingers. And now it&rsquo;s&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; The engineer&rsquo;s
+fist arose suddenly above the other&rsquo;s head. &ldquo;Why, I
+ought to drop you dead in your tracks for so much as
+looking at Janet Hosmer! Why don&rsquo;t you fight? Why
+don&rsquo;t you give me a chance, you cowardly girl-robber?
+Haven&rsquo;t you a spark of&ndash;&ndash;well, you haven&rsquo;t, I see. I&rsquo;ll
+just tie you up and later figure out some way to make
+you suffer for this night&rsquo;s work.&rdquo; And with a gesture
+of disgust Weir turned away.</p>
+<p>It was the moment Sorenson had been waiting for.
+As the engineer&rsquo;s back came about, exposed in one
+instant of carelessness, the man struck Weir full force on
+the neck, sending him staggering. Then Sorenson leaped
+for the doorway.</p>
+<p>Janet screamed. Weir recovered himself and whirled
+around, whipping forth his revolver and firing two shots.
+But the bullets only buried themselves in the door
+slammed shut after the escaping prisoner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I myself ought to be shot for this,&rdquo; Steele snapped
+out.</p>
+<p>He ran across the cabin, flung the door open, sprang
+out. The uselessness of seeking his enemy in the black
+wet gloom was only too evident, but he would not give up.
+Gun in hand, he stood listening for sound of fleeing
+footsteps.</p>
+<p>A light hand gripped his arm. Janet had followed
+him out, was at his side. Barely audible he heard her
+quick, excited breathing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Must you shoot him?&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why spare him for more deviltry? But I&rsquo;ll not have
+the chance now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t bear to think of even his blood being on our
+hands. Let him go,&rdquo; Janet said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone without our permission, I&rsquo;d say.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it just as well? I&rsquo;m not harmed, and he&rsquo;ll never
+dare show his face in San Mateo again,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll have to stay away; he&rsquo;ll leave for good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not until I see him first. I want that paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the paper, I forgot it! And it&rsquo;s in his pocket,&rdquo;
+she cried, in despair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Like the fool I was, I forgot it for the moment too,&rdquo;
+Steele said bitterly. &ldquo;When I could have had it at once
+I must go off ranting about his meanness. It was
+thought of what he had done to you that made me overlook
+the paper; that set me boiling. Lost my head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s answer was almost sufficient recompense
+for even such a serious deprivation as that of the document.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never forget that you were angry in my behalf,&rdquo;
+she said, softly. &ldquo;But perhaps you can gain possession
+of the paper yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before he could make a reply the sound of a motor
+engine startled them. Sorenson was in his car, not far
+off. Weir immediately plunged forward through the
+darkness in the direction of the noise, uttering a shout
+for the man to stop or be shot. But after the taste of
+liberty that he already had had Sorenson was prepared
+to take further chances; the engine&rsquo;s roar burst into
+full volume and the car leaped ahead, while its driver
+sent back a derisive curse to the cabin.</p>
+<p>Weir fired again, fired two or three times at the sound.
+Perhaps Sorenson was crouching safely out of range; at
+any rate, the bullets did not reach him, for the automobile
+plunged away. Steele slowly went back to the
+girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can he see without lights?&rdquo; she questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t see, but he&rsquo;d rather risk not seeing the road
+than drawing my fire. There&rsquo;s a bad place there at the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+rock; he&rsquo;d better turn on his lamps if he wants to round
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sensing the danger that threatened Sorenson, both
+remained unmoving, trying to penetrate the darkness,
+harkening to the automobile&rsquo;s retreating murmur. A
+curiosity, a sort of detached suspense, rooted them to
+the spot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, he&rsquo;s snapped them on!&rdquo; Janet said, almost with
+relief.</p>
+<p>The powerful beam of the headlights had suddenly
+blazed forth. Either feeling that he was safe from
+Weir&rsquo;s gun or realizing that he was on the verge of a
+graver danger, Sorenson had chosen to make the light.
+He was going at headlong speed; even where they
+watched, Steele and Janet perceived that,&ndash;&ndash;and only his
+fear of the peril behind which made him heedless of the
+difficulties in front could account for that reckless pace.</p>
+<p>The light leaped out into the night. Something else
+too seemed to spring forth within the circle of the glow,
+dark, sudden, imminent, rushing at the machine. A
+frantic jerk this way and that of the beam showed the
+driver&rsquo;s mad effort to avoid the towering wall of granite.
+Then a scream rang back to the man and girl before
+the cabin. Followed instantly a crash, an extinguishment
+of the light, darkness, silence, and finally a thin
+quivering flame at the base of the ledge, delicate and
+blue, like a dancing chimera.</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s hand reached out and closed in Steele Weir&rsquo;s,
+and he covered it with his other hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, how terrible!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Did you see? The
+rock seemed to smite him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remain here and I&rsquo;ll go find out.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span></div>
+<p>He led her into the cabin and to a stool by the table,
+where resting her elbows on the board she pressed her
+hands over her eyes as if to blot out the sight she had
+just witnessed. After all she had suffered, the climax
+of this dreadful spectacle left her unnerved, weak,
+shuddering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t stay long,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Come back as
+quick as you can. This cabin, this whole spot in the
+mountains, is awful. I can almost feel him hovering
+over me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t permit such thoughts.&rdquo; He gave her
+shoulder an encouraging pat. &ldquo;It will take but a few
+minutes to see if he&rsquo;s still alive and then we&rsquo;ll start home.
+You&rsquo;ve been the bravest girl going and will continue to
+be, I know. Everything is over; nothing can happen
+to you now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir went out. He perceived that the wrecked car
+was fully afire by this time, its flames illuminating the
+granite ledge and the ground about. Evidently the
+machine&rsquo;s fuel tank had been smashed under the impact
+and the gasoline had escaped, preventing an explosion
+but fiercely feeding the blaze. He ran towards the place.</p>
+<p>At first he did not find Sorenson, so that he supposed
+him buried beneath the wreckage, but presently he
+discovered his crumpled form lying jammed between the
+base of the ledge and a boulder. Weir lifted the limp
+figure from its resting place and bore it to open ground,
+where he made an examination of the still form. Clearly
+Sorenson had been pitched free of the car and crushed
+against the rock wall. His cap was missing; his coat
+was ripped up the back and a part of it gone as if caught
+and held by some obstruction in the car when he had
+been shot forth; blood and a great bruise marked one
+cheek; and the way his legs dragged when he was lifted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+up indicated some serious injury to those members. But
+the man still breathed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miracles haven&rsquo;t ceased,&rdquo; Weir muttered, when he
+had made sure of the fact. &ldquo;But his chance is slim at
+best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It would be false to say that the engineer felt
+compassion at the other&rsquo;s sudden catastrophe; he
+experienced none. On the contrary he had a sense of
+justice fittingly executed, as if, escaping bullets and
+man&rsquo;s blows, Sorenson had been felled by a more certain
+power, by the inevitable consequences of his own deeds
+and sins, by a wall of evil he himself had raised as much
+as by a wall of stone.</p>
+<p>He searched the man&rsquo;s breast pocket, then hunted for
+the missing document among the stones and bushes. At
+last he gave up for the time further seeking, with a
+conviction that the vital paper was gone for good,
+destroyed in the fire of the burning car. But for his
+own over-confidence, his belief he had Sorenson a safe
+prisoner back there in the cabin, the sheets might be
+secure in his pocket. Well, it was too late now.</p>
+<p>He again lifted the unconscious man in his arms and
+returned to the log house. Inside he laid him on the
+rude bed which Sorenson himself had spread with sheets
+and blankets.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s alive?&rdquo; Janet asked, awed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alive, but badly hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll leave him here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, while I take you away. We could do nothing
+for him in any case; his injuries are grave and need a
+doctor&rsquo;s help. The best service we can perform in his
+behalf is to start your father or some other physician
+here as quickly as possible. He may live or he may die;
+that isn&rsquo;t in our hands. He&rsquo;s unconscious and not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span>
+suffering, and probably will not feel pain for some hours
+if he does live, so we can go without feeling that we&rsquo;re
+robbing him of any of his chances of recovery. Your
+conscience may rest quite easy on that point. Come,
+we&rsquo;ll start at once. The quicker we reach your father,
+the quicker he will arrive here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When they were in his car he wrapped a robe about
+her against the sharp chill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am cold; my teeth are chattering,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been under a great strain. Just lie back and
+rest and think of something else than what has happened,
+if you can,&rdquo; he urged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lamps blazed out at his touch of the switch and
+the car began to move. She closed her eyes. She did
+not wish to see the scene of the smash, with the leaping
+fire and the horrible pile of crushed metal. Indeed, she
+drew the robe before her face, where she kept it for some
+time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are we past the place?&rdquo; she asked, finally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A long way past.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank heaven! Nothing shall ever drag me up this
+road again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not take us long to reach Johnson&rsquo;s and be off
+this trail altogether, for it&rsquo;s down-hill going all the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said nothing about the paper? Did you get it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; it wasn&rsquo;t on him. I&rsquo;ll return for another look,
+but it fell in the fire, I think, and burned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know what was in it, Mr. Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. But I can guess.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know a little of its contents, from what he said
+before you entered. It was a statement, something
+about his father and others doing dishonest acts, I think.
+He didn&rsquo;t seem to be quite clear what it was about
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span>
+either, but he spoke of your father and declared he hoped
+the others had swindled him, which he inferred had
+happened. I didn&rsquo;t know your father ever had been in
+this country. That&rsquo;s the reason you hate those men,
+Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Vorse and Mr. Burkhardt;
+because of some injury they worked your father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the reason. And that too is why they&rsquo;re
+trying to get rid of me one way or another. But they
+didn&rsquo;t hire the Mexican to attempt to shoot me;
+Ed Sorenson employed him. Martinez, when you told
+me the man&rsquo;s name, telegraphed around the country
+from Bowenville till he got track of the fellow. He also
+secured evidence that a white man resembling Ed
+Sorenson had been seen talking with him at the place he
+came from. So we can draw our conclusions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he hired the man to assassinate you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looks like it. Because I took Mary Johnson away
+from him, and from fear. He was afraid you might
+learn of the matter, I suppose, and decided to get rid of
+me. He&rsquo;s a coward at heart, but none the less a criminal
+by instinct, so he hired another to do what he dared not
+attempt himself. A crook like his father, but with less
+nerve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet was silent while the car wound its way down
+the creek road, through the misty darkness and among
+the invisible peaks. The full danger that she had
+escaped was but now making itself clear to her mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he would go so far as to try to murder you,&rdquo; she
+faltered, &ldquo;I surely could have expected no pity from
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now listen to me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to give you
+a little scolding: you must forget all this business; it
+just makes you fearful and unhappy. The past is over,
+and he&rsquo;s out of your life for good. Look at it that way.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+Consider the thing as a bad dream, done with and no
+more important. That&rsquo;s &lsquo;the right view to take&rsquo;&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;he
+paused, then added softly&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Janet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How strong-souled you are!&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+<p>Strong, in truth, he seemed. Ignoring danger he had
+come swift on Sorenson&rsquo;s track and rescued her, saved
+her, kept her clean from her assailant&rsquo;s infamous
+brutishness. The one was a knave and a beast; but he,
+Steele Weir, was a man, clear to see, quick to act, hard
+towards enemies, gentle to friends. Every particle a
+man&ndash;&ndash;sure of himself, and fearless, and true-hearted, and
+firm of soul.</p>
+<p>She pressed her hands tight against her breast. He
+was a man one could love and honor. &ldquo;Cold Steel&rdquo; Weir
+they called him&ndash;&ndash;and, she divined, his love if ever given
+would be as lasting as hoops of steel.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII_IN_THE_NIGHT_WATCHES' id='CHAPTER_XVIII_IN_THE_NIGHT_WATCHES'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+<h3>IN THE NIGHT WATCHES</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A light still burned in the Johnson ranch house, late
+as was the hour, when the car swung round a copse of
+aspens and brought it in view. Johnson himself came
+forth at sound of the automobile, with a sleepy Mary
+following.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go to bed, of course, knowing you were
+to come back,&rdquo; said he. But his true reason appeared in
+his added words, &ldquo;I was just about ready to saddle a
+horse and head up there myself. Mighty glad to see you
+safe back, Miss Hosmer. Mary has had some coffee on
+the fire ever since Weir went along, knowing you&rsquo;d be
+cold and worn out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just the thing!&rdquo; Steele exclaimed. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re both
+chilled. Come, Janet.&rdquo; And he stepped from the
+machine.</p>
+<p>Without demur the girl placed her hand in the one he
+offered and descended stiffly. Mary ran back into the
+house to attend to the coffee-pot and the visitors presently
+were seated at the kitchen table at places already
+laid, with cups of steaming strong coffee and plates of
+food before them.</p>
+<p>Janet contented herself with the hot, reviving drink,
+but Weir ate heartily as well. Coming and going, forty
+miles of driving a rough mountain road had given him a
+laborer&rsquo;s appetite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s late, one o&rsquo;clock,&rdquo; Mary said to Janet. &ldquo;Why
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span>
+don&rsquo;t you stay with us the rest of the night? I wish
+you would.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet put up an arm and drew down the face of the
+girl at her side and kissed her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a good friend, Mary, to be so thoughtful,&rdquo;
+she answered. &ldquo;But father will be terribly anxious
+every minute I&rsquo;m away. I must reach home as quickly
+as possible to ease his mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of Sorenson nothing had been spoken, though a
+repressed curiosity on the part of the ranchman and his
+daughter had been evident from the instant of Weir&rsquo;s
+and Janet&rsquo;s return.</p>
+<p>At this point Johnson jerked his head in the direction
+of the creek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you do to him, Weir?&rdquo; he growled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not as much as I intended at first. But he made up
+for it himself. Ran his car against that granite ledge
+before the cabin while trying to get away, and smashed
+himself up badly. I carried him into the hut and left
+him there; he was alive when we drove off, but he may
+be dead by now. Bad eggs like him are hard to kill,
+however. I&rsquo;ll start a doctor up there when I arrive in
+San Mateo; probably one from Bowenville.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father won&rsquo;t attend him now, so long as there&rsquo;s
+another physician who can, I know,&rdquo; Janet stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say not!&rdquo; Johnson asseverated. &ldquo;If that
+young hound Sorenson had his deserts, we&rsquo;d just leave
+him there and forget all about him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where our civilized notions handicap us,&rdquo;
+Steele Weir said, with a slight smile. &ldquo;But at that, if he
+were the only person concerned, I&rsquo;d do no more than inform
+a doctor where he was and what had happened to
+him, and wash my hands of the affair. There are other
+things, though, to consider. Janet&rsquo;s position, primarily.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+Her case is similar to that of Mary&rsquo;s awhile ago, and we
+must prevent talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The worst of the doings of a scoundrel like him that
+involve innocent people is the talk. There are always
+some people low enough to ascribe evil to the girl as well
+as the man in such a circumstance as this. I propose to
+see that Janet doesn&rsquo;t suffer that. We avoided it in
+Mary&rsquo;s case and we&rsquo;ll do so in this, though the situation
+is more difficult. I&rsquo;ve been thinking the matter over on
+the way down and have a plan that will work out, I
+believe, but it requires your help, Johnson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon you know you&rsquo;ll not have to ask me twice for
+anything,&rdquo; the rancher remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we may have to shuffle the facts a bit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. I&rsquo;ll do all the lying necessary and never
+bat an eye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t require much decorating, the story. But
+you will have to go up and get him, starting at once.&rdquo;
+Then he concluded, &ldquo;I hate to have to ask you to make
+that drive late at night and in the darkness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind that. Glad to do it, if that&rsquo;s what you
+want.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take your wagon and fill the box with hay and bring
+him down. By coming back slowly he won&rsquo;t be jarred,
+and he has to be brought out anyway. If he&rsquo;s dead,
+well, bring his body just the same. A doctor should be
+easily at your house by the time you arrive; and your
+story is that a sheepherder found him lying by his
+wrecked car, carried him into the cabin and then came
+down and told you of the accident, on which you went
+and brought him in, not knowing, of course, in the dark
+who he was or what he was doing up there or how the
+smash-up had occurred. You might suggest that he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+was camping there by himself to fish, and stop at
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll say just enough and no more,&rdquo; he remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you start at once, you&rsquo;ll be there by daylight if
+not before. That will get you back here by nine or ten
+o&rsquo;clock. I don&rsquo;t want him taken to San Mateo; that
+would stir up a swarm of inquiries and might even send
+some of the curious up to the spot. Let the trail get
+cold, so to speak. People aren&rsquo;t half as curious about a
+thing three or four days after it happens as at the
+moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve noticed that myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And another thing, I don&rsquo;t wish his father to learn of
+the matter just yet. Under other circumstances he
+should be the first to know, but I want the news kept
+from him for a special reason. Besides, it would be
+better if he found out about it from others and through
+roundabout channels. His son up there I don&rsquo;t see
+doing any talking himself for some time if he does
+live. When he is able to talk, I believe he&rsquo;ll decide to
+keep his mouth shut or just accept the explanation given
+that he was fishing or something of that kind. When
+the doctor has looked him over, either he or you will
+carry him to Bowenville. If we could ship him at once
+to Gaston, where there&rsquo;s some sort of a hospital, I
+suppose, or even to Santa F&eacute;, that would be the thing.
+He&rsquo;d be out of the way; there&rsquo;d be no talk; there would
+be no explanations to make except to the doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every doctor round these parts probably knows
+him,&rdquo; Johnson said, &ldquo;and so would insist on taking him
+home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a new one at Bowenville, father says,&rdquo; Janet
+put in. &ldquo;A young man, just starting practice. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+hasn&rsquo;t been there but a few weeks and may not know Ed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s the man for us!&rdquo; Weir declared. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll send
+for him. Now we must be going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele arose from the table and stretched his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;ll hitch up my team immediately,&rdquo; the rancher
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go with you,&rdquo; Mary exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tut, tut, girl.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can help you, and I want to do something to help
+Mr. Weir and Janet Hosmer, even if it&rsquo;s only a little bit.
+I&rsquo;m strong, I don&rsquo;t care if it is late&ndash;&ndash;anyway, I&rsquo;d just
+have nightmares if I stayed here alone,&ndash;&ndash;and I can help
+you with him. I&rsquo;m going,&rdquo; she ended, obstinately.</p>
+<p>Johnson eyed her for a moment, then yielded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing to be afraid of now,&rdquo; he rejoined, &ldquo;but
+if you would rather go along with your dad, all
+right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Five minutes later Steele and Janet were emerging
+from the canyon upon the mesa. The drizzling rain still
+continued and the unseen mist beat cool upon their
+cheeks as the car swung away from Terry Creek for
+town. Except for the stream of light projected before
+them, they were engulfed in Stygian darkness; and save
+for the slithering sound of the tires on the wet road,
+they moved in profound night silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That business is arranged,&rdquo; Steele said, after a time.
+&ldquo;But we still have the results of the attack on Martinez
+to deal with. I don&rsquo;t know how long he&rsquo;ll hold out
+against the men who dragged him off, probably not long.
+I suppose Burkhardt and perhaps Vorse took him, and
+they&rsquo;ll stop at nothing to get the paper they&rsquo;re after.
+How they learned of it, I don&rsquo;t know, but find out about
+it they did; and they&rsquo;ll force the information they want
+from Martinez if they have to resort to hot irons.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span>
+That&rsquo;s the kind of men they are. The lawyer will stick
+up to a certain point&ndash;&ndash;then he&rsquo;ll tell. That brings you
+into their way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You also,&rdquo; Janet answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been there for some time,&rdquo; was his grim
+response. &ldquo;But in your case it&rsquo;s different. I&rsquo;m worried,
+I tell you frankly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think they would dare try to intimidate me
+in my own home and with father to protect me?&rdquo; she
+cried, incredulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not there, perhaps. But if they could inveigle you
+away, yes. They wouldn&rsquo;t use hot irons in your case, of
+course, and I can&rsquo;t guess just what they would do, but
+they would do&ndash;&ndash;something. Those men think I have the
+&lsquo;goods&rsquo; on them; I repeat, they would stop at nothing to
+save themselves if worst came to worst; their fear will
+make them fiends. One couldn&rsquo;t suppose they would
+dare seize Martinez in all defiance of law&ndash;&ndash;but they did.
+One can&rsquo;t believe they would dream of torturing him for
+information&ndash;&ndash;but I haven&rsquo;t a doubt that&rsquo;s what they&rsquo;ve
+done. So you see why I&rsquo;m worried about you. If
+anything happened, if any harm came to you now,
+Janet&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His voice was unsteady as he spoke her name and
+ceased abruptly. She thrilled to this betrayal of his
+feeling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I could just stick at your side, then I know I
+should be safe,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>And for answer she felt his hand grope and press her
+own for an instant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can count on me being somewhere around.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know that,&rdquo; she said, confidently.</p>
+<p>San Mateo was asleep, buried in gloom when they
+entered it, and quiet except for the barking of a dog
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+or two that their passage stirred to activity. But in
+Dr. Hosmer&rsquo;s cottage a light was burning and as the
+car came to a stop at its gate the door was flung open
+and the doctor himself appeared framed in the doorway.
+He ran hastily down the walk to meet them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Janet!&rdquo; he cried. And the girl flung her arms about
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Juanita told you? Oh, it was dreadful! But Mr.
+Weir has brought me home safe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Hosmer too agitated to speak reached out and
+grasped the engineer&rsquo;s hand, pressing it fervently.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>At about that moment three men sat in the rear of
+Vorse&rsquo;s saloon. The shades were drawn and the front
+part of the long room was dark. Only a dull light
+burned where they sat. They were talking in low tones,
+with long pauses, with worried but determined, savage
+faces&ndash;&ndash;Vorse, Burkhardt, Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where the devil is she, that&rsquo;s what I want to know!&rdquo;
+Burkhardt growled. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been over twice and looked
+through a window. Doc was there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s in bed and asleep, probably,&rdquo; Sorenson said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it. The old man would be in the sheets
+himself if that were the case. Didn&rsquo;t I call up twice by
+&rsquo;phone too? She was out, they said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t do much with her father there, anyway.
+We&rsquo;ve got to get the paper by soft talk,&rdquo; Vorse
+commented. &ldquo;I still half believe Martinez was lying
+when he said it had been in that old chair. She couldn&rsquo;t
+have got to the office and away in the hour or two before
+he told without some one seeing her, and no one did so far
+as we can learn. We locked the door too the second
+time we went back and it hasn&rsquo;t been opened since; and
+we were there ten minutes after our first visit when we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+learned the papers weren&rsquo;t among those in his pocket. I
+think he&rsquo;s got it cached away somewhere still.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll give him another dose of our medicine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I know anything about men, he told the truth,&rdquo;
+Sorenson said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if the girl has it, we&rsquo;ve got to get it from her if
+I have to wring her neck to do it.&rdquo; It was Burkhardt&rsquo;s
+inflamed utterance.</p>
+<p>A pause followed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorenson, your boy is engaged to her,&rdquo; Vorse stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then it&rsquo;s up to him to get it first thing in the
+morning. Maybe it goes against the grain to let him
+know about this business of the past, but it ain&rsquo;t going to
+knock him over; he&rsquo;s no fool, he&rsquo;s a wise bird, he understands
+that a good many things are done in business that
+aren&rsquo;t advertised. He knows we weren&rsquo;t missionaries in
+the old days. And she&rsquo;ll hand it over for him when she
+might not for any one else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, Sorenson,&rdquo; Burkhardt affirmed, his
+scowling face visibly clearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed went away somewhere this evening, that&rsquo;s the only
+drawback to your scheme. Said something about
+Bowenville and catching the night train to Santa F&eacute;, and
+that he might be gone maybe a couple of days and maybe
+a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hell!&rdquo; Burkhardt exploded, in consternation.</p>
+<p>Vorse however remained cool.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you must start telegrams to head him off, start
+them the instant you get home. Telephone to Bowenville
+the message you want sent and have the operator
+dispatch it to all trains going both ways since early
+evening, in order to make sure. If you can reach him
+within two or three hours, wherever he is, he can hop off,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+catch a train back and be here by to-morrow evening.
+Make your message urgent. And meanwhile we&rsquo;ll do
+what we can to get hold of that paper. At any rate we
+can keep her from seeing Weir. If we have to watch her
+we&rsquo;ll do it; and if we have to stop her from going to the
+dam we&rsquo;ll do that someway too. You might invite her
+over to-morrow to spend the day at your house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think she&rsquo;ll be likely to come if she reads that
+document?&rdquo; the banker inquired coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not? Tell her right off the bat that the thing
+is a lie and a forgery and that you want to explain about
+how it was made. She might fall for that and carry the
+document to you. She&rsquo;s always had a good opinion of
+you, hasn&rsquo;t she?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why should she change at a mere story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; Sorenson exclaimed with sudden
+energy. &ldquo;The matter described happened so long ago
+that she won&rsquo;t probably attach as much importance to it
+as we&rsquo;ve imagined she would. I&rsquo;ll ask her to bring it to
+me to see&ndash;&ndash;and that will be all that&rsquo;s necessary, once it&rsquo;s
+in my fingers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what about him?&rdquo; Burkhardt asked, striking the
+floor with his heel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just leave him there for the present. To-morrow
+we&rsquo;ll have another talk with him,&rdquo; the cattleman stated.
+&ldquo;Better offer him a couple of thousand to go to another
+state; he&rsquo;ll grab at the chance, I fancy. Money heals
+most wounds. But, Vorse, keep your cellar locked and
+the bartender away from it. We can start Martinez
+away sometime to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know about that. To-morrow night will be
+our busy night,&rdquo; the ex-sheriff said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We might let Gordon handle him,&rdquo; Vorse suggested.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought perhaps you intended to keep the Judge in
+ignorance of this Martinez matter. He seems to be
+getting sort of feeble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not too feeble to take his share of the unpleasant
+jobs along with the rest of us,&rdquo; Vorse answered, unfeelingly.
+&ldquo;I shall have him in here first thing in the morning
+and tell him what&rsquo;s happened and what we&rsquo;ve done
+and what he has to do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; said Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s agreeable to me,&rdquo; Sorenson stated,
+looking at his watch and rising: &ldquo;Time we were turning
+in, if there&rsquo;s nothing more.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>At the dam camp Meyers, the assistant chief engineer,
+and Atkinson, the superintendent, were still awake,
+smoking and talking in the office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I smelt enough booze on those fellows who came
+stringing in here to fill the reservoir,&rdquo; the latter was
+saying. &ldquo;Some one&rsquo;s feeding it to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody drunk, though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. But who&rsquo;s giving it to them and why? I asked
+one fellow and he said he&rsquo;d been to a birthday party, and
+wouldn&rsquo;t tell where. They were all feeling pretty lush,
+even if they weren&rsquo;t soused. And to-morrow&rsquo;s Sunday!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll all be idle, you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. If there&rsquo;s more liquor, they&rsquo;ll be after it. All
+day to drink in means a big celebration. The whiskey is
+sent up from town, of course, and I reckon sent just at
+this time to get us all in bad while Mr. Pollock&rsquo;s here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll look up the bootlegging nest to-morrow,&rdquo;
+Meyers said, with finality.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can we do if we do locate it? They&rsquo;re not
+selling the stuff, I judge, but giving it away. That
+clears their skirts and forces us to deal with the men
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+themselves if there&rsquo;s any dealing done. Probably they
+hope to start a big row among us that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll await Weir&rsquo;s advice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve waited all I&rsquo;m going to to-night. Seems
+to me for a steady, quiet, self-respecting, dignified,
+unhooked, unmarried, unmortgaged, unromantic man he&rsquo;s
+skylarking and gallivanting around pretty late.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>On the rocky creek road the ranchman and his
+daughter Mary were driving up among the trees on their
+way to the cabin, a lantern swinging from the end of the
+wagon tongue, the horses straining against the grade.
+On Johnson&rsquo;s beard the moisture formed beads which
+from time to time he brushed away. From the trees
+collected drops of water fell on their hands and knees.
+All about as they proceeded the bushes and rocks
+appeared in shadowy outline, to disappear in the night
+once more, yielding to others.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t this cabin where we&rsquo;re going the one we drove
+to three years ago when you were hunting some cattle?&rdquo;
+Mary asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never thought then that Ed Sorenson would be
+lying up there all mashed to pieces,&rdquo; she said, with awed
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess he didn&rsquo;t either,&rdquo; was the dry response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He ought to be ready to stop chasing girls after
+this,&rdquo; she declared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t if he can walk; his kind never does quit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then his kind ought to be locked up somewhere like
+mad dogs. In a &rsquo;sylum, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess you&rsquo;re right on that, Mary. They&rsquo;re
+dangerous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Funny we didn&rsquo;t know he&rsquo;d been up there, going past
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+our house. He must have been there first before taking
+Janet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sneaked up in the night, probably. He&rsquo;d have to
+have grub and so on if he expected to stay even a day or
+two. Crooks always look after their bellies, be sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon Janet Hosmer will like Mr. Weir a whole lot
+now, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She ought to, if she doesn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A long silence followed while Mary apparently pursued
+the line of thought opened up by this speculation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If she has the good sense I think she has,&rdquo; the rancher
+stated at length, for his mind at least had been following
+out the subject, &ldquo;she&rsquo;ll not only like him a whole
+lot, but she&rsquo;ll lead him to the altar and put her brand on
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He spoke to unhearing ears. For just then Mary
+sagged against him, her head sank on his shoulder. He
+put an arm around her form and let her sleep, thus
+roughly expressing his tenderness and love. Weir had
+not only rescued Janet Hosmer from the clutches of the
+man now lying injured; he also had once saved Johnson&rsquo;s
+own child Mary from the scoundrel&rsquo;s grasp.</p>
+<p>Weir might ask anything of him, even to the laying
+down of his life in his defense.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIX_A_QUEER_PAPER' id='CHAPTER_XIX_A_QUEER_PAPER'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+<h3>A QUEER PAPER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When Mary Johnson next opened her eyes it was at
+a little shake by her father. She had slept heavily despite
+the jolting of the wagon; and now looked about
+drowsy-eyed and at a loss to know where she was. Her
+clothes and face were damp, her hands cold. She wasn&rsquo;t
+sure yet but this was still a dream&ndash;&ndash;the team and wagon,
+the cabin before which they stood, the trees and rocks
+scattered about the grassy park-like basin, and the
+soaring mountain peaks on every hand that were just
+touched by the first early sun-rays.</p>
+<p>The rain and mists were gone, leaving the dawn clear,
+gray, sharp, scented with the pungent odor of balsam
+and pine. From a distance came the subdued murmur of
+Terry Creek, which here high in the mountain range had
+its source in springs and brooks flowing from pools. All
+was peaceful.</p>
+<p>Mary&rsquo;s look came to rest on the cabin. Over it reared
+the great pines that grew in a clump behind. Its door
+was ajar, but the log house for any sign of occupancy
+might have been untenanted. Immediately the girl
+glanced back along the road they had come and beheld
+there in the dim shadow at the foot of the lofty granite
+ledge a shapeless black lump. She shivered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You awake?&rdquo; her father asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; And she began to climb down over the wagon
+wheel.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait here. I&rsquo;ll go in first. He might be&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; But
+though the rancher did not complete his sentence the
+words spoken carried their own grave implication.</p>
+<p>He came out again presently. Mary gazed at his
+face to read from it the news it might carry, and it was
+with a breath of relief she perceived that the injured man
+was still alive, for her father himself appeared easier of
+mind. Neither would by choice have a dead man for a
+passenger on the ride home, even Ed Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s breathing, but is still unconscious,&rdquo; Johnson
+declared. &ldquo;Must have got a crack in the head along with
+the rest. Face is covered with dried blood. From the
+stuff inside the house he must have been fixing for quite
+a stay&ndash;&ndash;blankets, grub, whiskey, candles, and so on.
+We&rsquo;ll eat a bite ourselves before starting back; get the
+pail out of the wagon and bring some water and I&rsquo;ll make
+a pot of coffee. There&rsquo;s a fireplace and wood inside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get the water, but I&rsquo;ll stay out while you&rsquo;re boiling
+it,&rdquo; the girl said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to see him until I have
+to go in and help carry him out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She went off for the water, on her return setting the
+bucket by the door. Then curious to see the place of
+Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s accident, she wandered back along the
+trail to the ledge. There she beheld the crumpled, fire-blackened
+remains of his automobile in a heap near the
+stone wall. Apparently the car had first struck a small
+boulder, which had flung Sorenson out on one side and
+forward, then leaping this hit the ledge full force.</p>
+<p>At the instant he must have been off the road and
+headed wrong, she guessed. The rapid daybreak of the
+mountains had by now dispersed the last dimness and
+indeed the crags far above were bright with sunshine.
+She could plainly see the ruin that the machine was, fire
+having completed what the smash had left undamaged,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
+and the part of the rock that was smoked by the flames,
+and was able to smell yet the reek of burnt oil, varnish
+and rubber.</p>
+<p>With the eyes of the curious she stared at the wreck,
+at the ledge, at the ground, absorbed with simple speculations
+and filled with a sense of awe. The machine must
+have made a big sound when it struck. It was a lot of
+money gone quickly, that car. Not enough of it
+left to make it worth hauling away. And so on and so
+on.</p>
+<p>Then all at once her wandering regard detected something
+white in a crevice between two stones. At first she
+thought it the gleam of a bird or a chipmunk. The thing
+was some yards off from the spot where she stood, but
+the flutter persisted. So she approached it to learn its
+nature.</p>
+<p>The thing was a paper. One corner of a sheet stuck
+up from the crack in which it lay and was waved gently
+by the rising dawn breeze. She drew it out and perceived
+it was fastened to other sheets that were folded, all damp
+from the rain though not soaked because the cranny had
+admitted little moisture. It was the last sheet which
+had come partly unfolded, apparently as it fell, so was
+left in sight or she would never have noticed the white
+flutter. This last sheet was blank, but the others, neatly
+folded though wrinkled, were covered with writing she
+saw on spreading them open. However, she could not
+read the pages; the matter was typewritten, but it was
+not English. Some foreign language, maybe.</p>
+<p>If Mary could not read the document, she could at
+least logically deduce how it had happened to be in its
+present resting-place. The paper was here because the
+wrecked automobile was here, so when Ed Sorenson was
+pitched out the folded sheets of paper must have been
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
+propelled from his pocket by the same force and at the
+same instant. It hit a rock after flying through the air
+and slid down into the crack.</p>
+<p>Perhaps it was only a business document; it looked
+like one. Again perhaps it told something about his
+crooked private affairs&ndash;&ndash;about his schemes for ruining
+girls, possibly. Very likely, indeed. That seemed to be
+about all he engaged himself at. When she found some
+one who could read it, she would know for certain. She
+would just take it along with her and say nothing about
+her find until she could have somebody who understood
+the writing read it over for her.</p>
+<p>In places the typing had stained from dampness, but
+not seriously. She could dry out the pages over the
+kitchen stove at home. So folding the sheets again, she
+doubled the document, tied it in her handkerchief and
+placed it inside her waist, where it could not be lost.
+Perhaps there were other papers. But a further search
+disclosed none, whereupon as her father was shouting to
+her from the cabin to come she retraced her steps.</p>
+<p>When they had drunk their coffee and eaten some of
+Sorenson&rsquo;s food, making their meal before the door, they
+carried the unconscious man out to the wagon, bearing
+him in the blanket on which he lay. Other blankets they
+spread over him. Johnson also placed at the prostrate
+figure&rsquo;s feet the rest of the eatables in the cabin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No need to leave this stuff to the pack-rats,&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll just consider it a little pay towards fetching him
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He ought to be willing to pay you a whole lot more
+when he learns the trouble you&rsquo;ve been to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t touch his money if he offered me a thousand
+dollars; I&rsquo;d throw it back in his face. I&rsquo;m not
+doing this for pay, or friendship, or charity; I&rsquo;m doing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+it to help Janet Hosmer and because Weir asked me.
+If the Sorensons had all the money on earth, they
+couldn&rsquo;t give me a penny as between man and man. If
+they owed it to me, that would be another matter.
+They&rsquo;d pay it if I had to stick a gun down their throats
+to make them come across.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t need any of their money, I guess,&rdquo; Mary
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nope. We&rsquo;re poor but we&rsquo;re straight. So we&rsquo;re
+better off than they are&ndash;&ndash;richer, if we just look at it
+that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Once during the long drive, as they neared the ranch
+house, a low moan came from the form on the straw in
+the wagonbed. Both Johnson and Mary looked around
+quickly, then regarded each other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beginning to suffer,&rdquo; said the parent. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a wonder
+there&rsquo;s a whole bone in his body. I hope the doctor
+is down below waiting for us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This proved to be the case when about ten o&rsquo;clock
+Johnson drove his worn-out team into his dooryard.
+Weir&rsquo;s car was there and with it the engineer himself
+and a young medical practitioner. Climbing up into the
+wagon, the doctor made a hasty examination of the patient.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hips broken. Slight concussion of the skull, but not
+dangerous,&rdquo; was his opinion. &ldquo;I shall not be able to
+tell the full seriousness of his injuries until I have him
+stripped on a table or bed. Probably there are other
+broken bones,&ndash;&ndash;ribs or something. We must get him
+down to Bowenville as quickly as possible, for his is a
+bad case. But I guess if he has pulled through so far
+he&rsquo;ll recover. If you&rsquo;ll drive your wagon down to the
+mouth of the canyon, we&rsquo;ll transfer him to my car, which
+is double seated, and then you can accompany me to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span>
+town; Mr. Weir says you are willing to go along and
+help. I&rsquo;ll send you back from Bowenville.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ll go along. Mary will ride down with us and
+bring back the team and wagon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Strange what he was doing up there in the mountains
+with an automobile alone,&rdquo; the doctor remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he might have wanted a day&rsquo;s fishing, or was
+taking a look at cattle or range, something like that,&rdquo;
+Johnson stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir said a sheepherder found him. Wasn&rsquo;t
+that it, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer turned to the rancher.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t that the way of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Showed up here late and said he had found the
+man and carried him into the cabin. Said his wrecked
+car was still burning, so the accident couldn&rsquo;t have occurred
+very long previous. Said we ought to bring
+him down immediately as he was badly hurt. So I sent
+word to Dr. Hosmer, and my girl and I set off at once,
+the sheepherder going back with us. Said he just happened
+to be looking for a stray sheep or he would never
+have come on this man, as he was heading his band for
+a pass to get over on the west side of the range. S&rsquo;pose
+we&rsquo;ll never see him again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know who this man is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His face seems sort of familiar,&rdquo; Johnson replied,
+scratching his chin. &ldquo;But he looks like a city chap, by
+his clothes, what&rsquo;s left of them. No papers or anything
+on him to tell his name. Might have come over the pass
+himself from the other side; men go everywhere in these
+hill-climbing cars they make nowadays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Somebody will be seeking information soon and then
+we&rsquo;ll know,&rdquo; the physician said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll probably give
+his name and address himself when he comes round. But
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+if I&rsquo;m not mistaken he&rsquo;ll need another sort of car if he
+does any moving about when he&rsquo;s out of bed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speaking off-hand, I&rsquo;ll say he&rsquo;ll never walk again.
+That&rsquo;s the way broken hips usually turn out; and if his
+spine is injured, as I suspect, he will probably be paralyzed
+from the waist down. Hard luck for a young man
+like him. He&rsquo;ll wish at times he was killed outright.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Unobserved by the speaker Weir and Johnson exchanged
+a meaningful look. In the minds of both moved
+the same thought, that Providence had punished Ed
+Sorenson according to his sins and more adequately than
+could man. Dreadful years were before him. He would,
+in truth, wish a thousand times that he had died at the
+foot of the ledge.</p>
+<p>Half an hour later the visitors had departed, the
+rancher going with the physician and his charge to
+Bowenville, Weir returning to San Mateo. Mary had
+driven the wagon up from the mouth of the canyon, unharnessed
+the horses, watered and fed them, and now
+was seated in the kitchen staring absently out the open
+door. After so much excitement she felt distrait, depressed.</p>
+<p>Finally she produced and dried the papers over the
+stove, in which she had re-kindled a fire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Funny how anybody should want to talk or write
+anything but English,&rdquo; she remarked to herself, gazing
+at the pages.</p>
+<p>She attempted to extract some sense from the strange
+words. At the bottom of the last sheet she deciphered,
+Felipe Martinez&rsquo; name under the notorial acknowledgment.
+All at once in scanning certain lines she came
+on names that were plain enough&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson, Vorse,
+Burkhardt, Gordon. The last must mean Judge Gordon.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span>
+Then presently she found two more names that excited
+her curiosity&ndash;&ndash;James Dent&rsquo;s and Joseph Weir&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Springing to her feet she stared at the sheets in her
+hand. For some reason or other her blood was beating
+with an odd sensation of impending discovery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why&ndash;&ndash;why&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; she stammered. &ldquo;Why, those are
+the men father told about being shot, and him looking on
+as a boy! This is a queer paper! I wish he were here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Possession of it gave her a feeling of uneasiness. Her
+father had warned her never to speak of the matter to
+any one&ndash;&ndash;and here was something about it in writing,
+or so she guessed. He had said Sorenson and the other
+men would kill him at once if they learned he had been
+a witness. That meant they would kill her too if they
+found out that she not only knew about their crime
+but had this paper as well.</p>
+<p>She looked about. Finally she retied the document
+in a tea-towel, tight and secure, and buried it deep in
+the flour barrel. They would not think of looking in
+the flour. But she went to the door just the same and
+gazed anxiously down the canyon as if enemies might
+put their heads in sight that very minute.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XX_ANXIETIES' id='CHAPTER_XX_ANXIETIES'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+<h3>ANXIETIES</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear doctor, your talents are wasted in San
+Mateo. They should be employed in the larger field of
+diplomacy,&rdquo; said Steele Weir, when on his arrival from
+Terry Creek he was apprised of what had occurred
+during his absence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From all indications I shall have full opportunity
+for their use hereafter, whatever they may be, in our own
+bailiwick,&rdquo; Doctor Hosmer replied, smiling. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+more going on in our village, apparently, than in many
+a small kingdom. I merely had Janet use the truth with
+certain limitations, and there&rsquo;s no wiser course when
+part of the facts are known. Sorenson seemed quite
+satisfied with her explanation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The colloquy resulted from a meeting between Janet
+and the cattleman while Weir was guiding the young
+physician, summoned from Bowenville, to Johnson&rsquo;s
+ranch. Sorenson had appeared at the house about ten
+o&rsquo;clock that morning desiring to see the girl. They had
+talked together on the veranda, where the visitor stated
+he had effected a settlement and obtained an acknowledgment
+from Martinez, who was trying to blackmail him
+and others; that a certain paper had been prepared by
+the lawyer for use in the disreputable business; that the
+man had said he had asked Janet to secure it from an
+old chair in his office; and he wished to learn if she had
+done so.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></div>
+<p>Janet had admitted such to be the case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was odd Mr. Martinez should telephone me to go
+get it, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; she had asked. &ldquo;But I went, and
+there it was stuffed in the lining of the chair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have it then?&rdquo; Sorenson stated, with a sigh of
+relief and his eyes kindling with eagerness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I haven&rsquo;t it now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What in heaven&rsquo;s name did you do with it?&rdquo; he
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I was coming out of Mr. Martinez&rsquo; office, there
+at the door was Ed. He had seen me go in and so
+stopped his car before the door; after a time he took
+the paper to see what it was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you didn&rsquo;t see its contents?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I didn&rsquo;t even open it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he has it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had it the last I saw of the paper. He read it.
+First, he was going to burn it up because it made him
+angry, then he changed his mind, saying he would take
+it to show to you, as he thought you would be interested.
+Is there anything else you wish to know, Mr. Sorenson?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did he go from there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He drove away. From something he said, I judged
+that he planned to be away from home several days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Revolting as it was to Janet to put so fair a face on
+Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s conduct, nevertheless she had braced herself
+to go through with the part and presented to the
+cattleman a clear, natural countenance. The very simplicity
+of her story, its directness, its accord with the
+facts as he knew them, carried conviction. Innocently
+drawn into the affair, she had, in his view, been quickly
+guided out again by Ed&rsquo;s luck and wit.</p>
+<p>Ed had the deadly document. The four men concerned
+might breathe easily once more. Ed himself, in all
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span>
+probability, did not realize the true menace of old
+Saurez&rsquo; deposition, or he would at once have brought
+it to him instead of continuing on his trip: the boy no
+doubt thought it sufficient to keep it until he returned
+or mailed it back from somewhere; he perhaps had taken
+it along for a more careful reading. Good boy, anyway.
+He had got possession of the thing, that was the main
+consideration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told me too that he was leaving last evening for
+a few days&rsquo; jaunt,&rdquo; Sorenson said, rising to go. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
+likely have a whole basketful of letters from him. Finest
+boy going, Ed, even if it&rsquo;s his own father who says it.
+But he&rsquo;s the lucky one, Janet.&rdquo; The girl lowered her
+eyelids, for at this flattery she felt she could no longer
+dissemble her feelings. &ldquo;Sorry to have bothered you
+about the matter,&rdquo; he concluded. &ldquo;Fellows like this
+Martinez are always making us trouble. Run over and
+eat dinner with us soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He went down the walk, large, dominant and still with
+a trace of his early cowman&rsquo;s walk. Both his step and
+his erectness bespoke the buoyant effect of the talk upon
+his spirits, which was not to be wondered at as he had
+splendid news to import to his confr&egrave;res in crime. They
+would get rid of Martinez, destroy the paper when Ed
+delivered it, and their skeleton&ndash;&ndash;this one (of a number)
+which had unexpectedly kicked the door open and started
+to dance in public&ndash;&ndash;would be safely locked up forever.
+For Saurez, the only witness (as they believed) was now
+dead: he would make no more depositions. Certainly
+Sorenson had reason to walk briskly away from Doctor
+Hosmer&rsquo;s dwelling.</p>
+<p>Janet had somberly watched him till he was out of
+sight, then had gone inside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how I ever imagined him an honorable
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span>
+man,&rdquo; she said to her father. &ldquo;For all his pretended
+politeness he was ready if necessary to bully me. One
+thing he can&rsquo;t ever say is that I didn&rsquo;t tell him exact
+facts; what I omitted was the circumstances giving rise
+to the facts.&rdquo; And her father, who now knew from Weir
+the story of the happening of thirty years before, assured
+her that she need be troubled over no moral hairsplitting.</p>
+<p>The incident, as Steele Weir perceived, diverted both
+suspicion and danger from Janet, at least for a time.
+A big gain that. And he was impressed by the subtle
+sagacity of the maneuver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t just a clever move, it was a flash of genius,&rdquo;
+he told father and daughter. Then after a few
+minutes more of talk he said: &ldquo;Now I must be running
+up to the dam. To-day is Sunday and the works are
+quiet, so if I find everything all right I shall strike back
+immediately for Terry Creek and the cabin up above.
+I want to make a search for that paper by daylight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After your hard night?&rdquo; Janet exclaimed. &ldquo;I
+snatched some sleep when we had done talking last night,
+but father says you and he had none. You can&rsquo;t make
+that terrible ride again without rest!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Missing a night in bed is nothing new,&rdquo; he laughed.
+&ldquo;Once or twice in my life I&rsquo;ve not had my clothes off in
+a week, and only such cat-naps as I could steal meantime.
+But I&rsquo;ll not boast of that; your father probably
+has gone longer periods without sleep, or with only
+broken rest, than ever I did. Most doctors do. Be sure
+and let me know if anything new occurs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But if Weir&rsquo;s mind was put at ease so far as Janet
+was concerned, he had more than enough other cares
+to burden his thoughts. The loss of the deposition,
+chief of all; then the matter of effecting Martinez&rsquo; release,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+wherever he was immured; and finally, as he
+learned from Meyers and Atkinson on reaching camp,
+the insidious promise of trouble in the &ldquo;free whiskey
+party.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps whoever supplied the fire-water underestimated
+this copper-lined crew&rsquo;s capacity and didn&rsquo;t furnish
+enough,&rdquo; Meyers suggested. &ldquo;Nobody was really
+drunk last night and here it is nearly noon, with the
+men all hanging about camp. If there was whiskey yet
+to be had, some of these thirsty, rollicking scrappers
+of ours would be right back at the spigot this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe so,&rdquo; Atkinson admitted. &ldquo;Seems so&ndash;&ndash;and yet
+I ain&rsquo;t easy in my mind. The men don&rsquo;t act right; they
+behave as if they&rsquo;re just waiting; they&rsquo;re restless and
+not a man could I get to open his mouth about where
+they found the stuff. If there wasn&rsquo;t to be any more,
+they would have told and tried to kid me. They appear
+to me as if just biding their time. Some men weren&rsquo;t
+gone, of course, those who don&rsquo;t drink. They stayed in
+the bunk-house and they know nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go on the supposition then that there will be
+more coming, and act accordingly,&rdquo; Weir stated, at
+once. &ldquo;Watch them close, and put up a warning that
+men who are not at work in the morning, or who bring
+booze into camp, will be fired.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the trouble,&rdquo; the superintendent declared. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t think they brought a drop in except in their skins.
+And as we say, they weren&rsquo;t drunk. There&rsquo;s not a thing
+we can object to and they know it; somebody has put
+&rsquo;em wise how to act. Here they are, sober this morning,
+behaving themselves, and so on. We can&rsquo;t keep men
+from going for a walk if they want to; we can&rsquo;t string
+barb-wire around the camp and hold them in; we can&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span>
+even say they can&rsquo;t touch a bottle if a stranger offers
+them one when they&rsquo;re on the outside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we can hold up the consequences if they go on a
+spree,&rdquo; Steele replied. &ldquo;Most of them are satisfied with
+the work and pay and grub; they don&rsquo;t want to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but they like whiskey too, free whiskey in particular.
+They would say they&rsquo;re not getting drunk&ndash;&ndash;no
+man ever really expects to when he starts drinking&ndash;&ndash;and
+talk about their &lsquo;rights.&rsquo; There are two or three fellows
+in camp now who are doing a lot of mouthing about
+labor&rsquo;s rights; I. W. W.&rsquo;s, I&rsquo;d say. Shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised
+if they were the ring-leaders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If more whiskey comes, we must beat them to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my notion,&rdquo; Atkinson said, with a nod. &ldquo;I
+didn&rsquo;t locate the booze fountain last night, but I did
+this morning. Took a horse at daylight and rode along
+the hills; about a mile south in some trees at the foot
+of the mountain, I came across a case of empty bottles
+and a keg half-full of water. That was all, but it
+showed where the &lsquo;birthday party&rsquo; was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the place to watch, then. Better send a
+trusty man there to report to us immediately if he sees
+signs of a supply arriving for to-night. Half a dozen
+of us with axes will soon start a temperance wave in that
+locality.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In accordance with this instruction the superintendent
+dispatched a reliable man to maintain guard at the spot;
+and Weir, feeling that all had been done that was possible
+under the circumstances, gave his attention to other
+matters.</p>
+<p>But he perceived that with this &ldquo;liquor attack&rdquo; in the
+air, for it was but another of his enemies&rsquo; moves against
+him, of course, directed with the purpose of creating
+internal disorder, he must postpone his trip to the headwaters
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span>
+of Terry Creek. Knowing the crafty, persistent,
+conscienceless character of the four men inspiring the
+trick, he was under no delusion that the &ldquo;free whiskey&rdquo;
+would end with a single case of bottles. Among three
+hundred men that would amount to but two or three
+drinks apiece&ndash;&ndash;a mere taste, only a teaser. And because
+it was only a teaser, the men would want more. If he
+could carry them over this idle Sunday sober, they would
+be at work on the morrow and the chief danger be
+passed.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately a manager cannot take his workmen
+into his confidence in such a case and explain the nature
+of such a cunning attack; the thing was too complex,
+and their untutored minds would fail to perceive if
+they did not actually reject the explanation, in jealousy
+for their &ldquo;rights&rdquo; concluding that they were being hoodwinked.
+By very perverseness they would refuse to deny
+themselves a free gift of whiskey.</p>
+<p>With Pollock, however, whose interest as a director
+was vital, he could talk in full expectation of being understood.
+And moreover, owing to the entangled condition
+into which the company&rsquo;s and his own personal
+affairs had come, strict honor required that he inform
+his visitor of the entire situation and offer, if in the
+director&rsquo;s view such action would best serve the company&rsquo;s
+ends, to resign.</p>
+<p>In his office immediately after dinner he gave the
+easterner a complete account of happenings in San
+Mateo since his arrival as manager, with a statement of
+his father&rsquo;s earlier residence here, of the fraud practiced
+by Sorenson and his companions on him and his tragically
+ruined life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This, you see, has resulted not only in bringing the
+animosity of these men against me but in aggravating
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span>
+their hostility to the company,&rdquo; he concluded. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+never been a quitter. It would go sorely against the
+grain with me to quit now while under fire. But my own
+feelings or fortunes should have no weight; the company&rsquo;s
+interests alone are to be considered. I shall
+turn over the management to Meyers and retire if you
+desire; I count my contract not binding upon your board
+under the circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock arose and began to pace the office, gently
+beating the air with his eye-glasses and thoughtfully
+regarding the floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should not do your remarkable story proper justice
+if I did not give it the serious attention it deserves,&rdquo; he
+said, after a time. &ldquo;Certain aspects of the case would
+appear to favor our accepting your resignation, but on
+analysis, Weir, they turn out to be aspects only, not
+real arguments. Assuming the facts are as you relate,
+which I personally don&rsquo;t doubt, these men, if they will
+stop at nothing to injure you, will be no more reluctant
+to injure us. In fact, if you withdrew they would feel
+that they had gained a distinct triumph, forced us to
+yield to their will, and would be inspired to further and
+greater opposition. Personal hatred for you on their
+part is no ground for their fixing their enmity on the
+company. But that enmity, apparently, already existed
+before you came. Therefore if they hate you likewise,
+you and our company have a common bond. And that
+assures us of one thing, or several things: your vigilance,
+care of company property, and loyalty. Last, and
+aside from that, you are, I am confident, possessed of
+the exact qualities essential to the successful solution of
+present difficulties. We prefer as manager an energetic,
+determined, fighting man, however much disliked by envious
+neighbors, to some fellow less firm and more inclined
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+to conciliation. The latter never gained anything
+with out-and-out foes, from what I&rsquo;ve seen. So you perceive,
+Weir, that when my associates and I get into a
+row we&rsquo;re not quitters either. We shall therefore just
+dismiss all talk of your resignation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very good; I wanted you to know the facts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock paced to and fro for a time longer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What really interests me is your own fight,&rdquo; he remarked
+at length. &ldquo;If the paper you spoke of should
+be found, I would be pleased to have it translated for
+you. I should also like to consult with this man Martinez;
+he seems a clever fellow. You expect to settle with
+this quartet who defrauded your father, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly. But the money isn&rsquo;t the main thing. For
+no amount of money would ever pay for the wrong done
+my father. I want to make these men suffer, suffer as
+he suffered. Call it a simple desire for revenge if you
+will; that&rsquo;s what it really is. They robbed him of his
+future as well as of his ranch and cattle. They took
+away hope and implanted in his breast terror and remorse
+wholly undeserved. But for them he might have been a
+happy, prosperous, well-thought of man in this state.
+Yes, revenge is what I want, not money. Revenge that
+will be for them an equivalent of hell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But they should pay the legal penalties of their
+crime as well,&rdquo; the lawyer spoke. &ldquo;Recovery of the
+original amounts gained by fraud from both your
+father and this man Dent, and accumulated interest as
+well as damages, should be had. In all it should make
+a large amount.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose so. Probably enough to clean the four
+men out. But though of course I should enjoy getting
+the property or money that was rightfully my father&rsquo;s
+and now mine, still I&rsquo;d let that go if I could secure the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+satisfaction of making the four men pay in the coin I
+want.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a fool, Weir. Don&rsquo;t overlook any bets, as
+the saying is. Taking their property away from them
+will but add to their pain and to your pleasure. Now
+we must see if Dent&rsquo;s heirs can be found. I suggest
+that you employ some good attorney to start a hunt
+along that line, for an action by Dent&rsquo;s relatives will
+indirectly strengthen your own case. I&rsquo;m doubtful
+about one thing, however&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your courts here, and the value of this old Mexican&rsquo;s
+deposition. The case could be brought in a Federal
+Court as you&rsquo;re a non-resident, which would solve
+the first point, but how much weight would this Mexican&rsquo;s
+testimony have against white men of standing and
+after a period of thirty years. If you could find another
+witness&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was one, a white boy, so Martinez hinted,&rdquo;
+Weir said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Find him, find him. Search the whole country until
+you find him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a big undertaking, when I don&rsquo;t even know
+his name or whether he&rsquo;s alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begin nevertheless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I had better find my lost paper or secure another
+statement from old Saurez first. At present I have
+absolutely nothing that a court would look at; I haven&rsquo;t
+as much as I had yesterday. And even Martinez has
+been spirited away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m interested, greatly interested,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+not actively engaged in legal affairs at home and I may
+stay on here awhile longer. Perhaps I can assist you;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+it promises excitement, at any rate. After dry corporation
+matters, it should be a refreshing change&ndash;&ndash;and I
+haven&rsquo;t had a real vacation in years. Possibly this is
+the time to take one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I appreciate your kindness in speaking so, Mr. Pollock.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;m quite selfish; I&rsquo;m seeking entertainment.
+And your peppery affairs promise it. Do you give me
+permission to take a hand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gladly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then as a beginning I&rsquo;ll go to town. Saurez, you
+say, was the old Mexican&rsquo;s name? And give me the
+facts again as you know them about the affair of your
+father and the man Dent in the saloon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock listened closely as Steele Weir repeated the
+story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all I know, and it&rsquo;s meager at best,&rdquo; the engineer
+concluded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pity you didn&rsquo;t get to read the deposition, which
+would have increased your fund of information. More
+unfortunate it is that you haven&rsquo;t the paper itself. But
+we&rsquo;ll do the best we can without it for the present. Kindly
+have some one drive me in to San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Atkinson, the superintendent, is going there for
+me. I thought he might pick up something of Martinez&rsquo;
+whereabouts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where does Judge Gordon live?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tell you that. But you can easily learn when
+you reach town.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the Judge used to handle company matters,
+you know.&rdquo; The smile on Pollock&rsquo;s lips was inscrutable.
+&ldquo;I used to have frequent conferences with him when I was
+here at the inception of our project. He is very
+shrewd in certain ways, but he impressed me as being
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span>
+not exactly&ndash;&ndash;what shall I say?&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;cold steel&rsquo;, for instance.&rdquo;
+And still wearing the thin smile, he went out.</p>
+<p>If Weir had not had so many things to make his
+mind grave, from a missing paper and a missing lawyer
+to mysterious whiskey and fierce enemies, he would have
+leaned back and laughed.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXI_THE_WEAK_LINK' id='CHAPTER_XXI_THE_WEAK_LINK'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+<h3>THE WEAK LINK</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Though the sun was bright that day, unseen forces
+were gathering in the sky above town, mesa and mountains,
+not of weather but of fate, to loose their
+lightnings. Sunday peace seemed to reign, the languid
+summer Sunday peace of tranquil nature. Yet even
+through this there was a faint breath of impending
+events, a quiver or excitement in the air, an increasing
+expectation on the part of men, who sensed but did not
+realize what was to come.</p>
+<p>All day whispers and hints had passed among the
+people in San Mateo and out to isolated farms and up
+nearby creeks, kindling in the ignorant, brown-skinned
+Mexicans a lively interest and an exorbitant curiosity.
+Nothing was said definitely; nothing was promised outright.
+So in consequence speculation ran wild and rumors
+wilder. The hints had to do with the manager of
+the dam who had shot the strange Mexican: something
+was to be done with him, something was to happen to him.
+He had been arrested, or was to be arrested; he had confessed,
+or was about to confess the murder; he was going
+to kill other Mexicans, or had killed other Mexicans; he
+was about to raid San Mateo with his workmen and slay
+the town; he was to be hanged;&ndash;&ndash;and so on eternally.
+Uncertain as was everything else, what was sure apparently
+was that something would happen at San Mateo
+that night.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span></div>
+<p>Families visiting about in wagons spread the news.
+Horsemen were at pains to ride to outlying Mexican
+ranch houses, for what messenger is so welcome as he
+who brings tales of great doings? He might be sure of
+an audience at once. So it was that the plan craftily put
+in operation by Weir&rsquo;s enemies, to gather and inflame the
+people, under cover of whose pressure and excitement
+when the engineer was arrested he might be slain by a
+pretended rescue or popular demonstration, whichever
+should serve best, produced the expected result. During
+the afternoon wagons and horsemen and men on foot
+began to appear in town, to join already aroused relatives
+or friends at their adobe houses or to loaf along
+the main street in groups.</p>
+<p>Outwardly there were few signs in the aspect of the
+Mexican folk of something extraordinary developing.
+But to the sheriff, Madden, aroused from an afternoon
+nap at his home by a telephoned message from the county
+attorney requesting him to come to the court house, the
+unwonted number in the town was in itself a significant
+fact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know this was a fiesta, Alvarez. What&rsquo;s up
+with you people?&rdquo; he asked of one he met on the street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The fiesta is to be to-night, eh?&rdquo; the man laughed.
+&ldquo;Have you this engineer locked up yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What engineer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The killer, the gun-man, that Weir. It is said he is
+already arrested and is to be hanged from the big cottonwood
+at dark beside the jail. It is also said he is
+still loose and bringing five hundred workmen to burn
+the town, rob the bank, kill the men and steal the girls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he is to do either, it&rsquo;s news to me,&rdquo; Madden said,
+and proceeded to the office of Lucerio, the county attorney.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></div>
+<p>Madden was a blunt man, who for policy&rsquo;s sake might
+close his eyes to unimportant political influence as exercised
+by the Sorenson crowd. But he was no mere
+compliant tool. This was his first term in office. He had
+never yet crossed swords with the cattleman and the
+others associated with him, because the occasion had
+never arisen. When he had allowed himself to be nominated
+for sheriff, though Sorenson might imagine
+Madden to be at his orders, the latter had accepted the
+office with certain well-defined ideas of his duty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want of me?&rdquo; he asked Lucerio, for
+whom he had little liking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I desire to tell you, Madden, that at eight o&rsquo;clock
+I&rsquo;ll have a warrant for you to serve on the engineer
+Weir. You&rsquo;ll go to the dam and arrest him and bring
+him in to the jail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, apparently the whole country except me knew
+this was to happen. The town&rsquo;s filling up as if it were
+going to be a bull-fight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know nothing of that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right; give me the warrant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At eight o&rsquo;clock. I don&rsquo;t want it served before then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have my reasons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorenson? And Vorse and Burkhardt? They&rsquo;ve
+stirred up this charge against the man.&rdquo; Lucerio making
+an angry answer, he continued. &ldquo;Well, everybody
+knows you jump when they pull the string. I&rsquo;ll have
+to serve the warrant, naturally. But I&rsquo;m going to tell
+you what I think: you&rsquo;ve faked the evidence you&rsquo;ve got;
+we had the truth from Martinez and Janet Hosmer at
+the inquest; you&rsquo;re trying to railroad Weir to the gallows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sorenson shall know what you&rsquo;ve said. As for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span>
+me&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;the Mexican swelled with outraged dignity&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;the
+evidence was placed in my hands. It warrants the
+engineer&rsquo;s arrest and trial. You attend to your department
+and I&rsquo;ll attend to mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All to the good, Mr. County Attorney. I&rsquo;ll arrest
+him; he won&rsquo;t make me any trouble on that score. But
+you won&rsquo;t find it so easy to prove his guilt. And afterwards,
+just look out, for if he doesn&rsquo;t come gunning for
+you and fill your carcass full of lead, I miss my guess.
+You won&rsquo;t be able to hide behind Sorenson, either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He left the county attorney at that, the latter unable
+despite all his efforts to hide his uneasiness and
+alarm. Madden reaching the street looked at his watch;
+it was half past five, so he started home for supper.</p>
+<p>Some way before him he saw Martinez walking. The
+lawyer did not stop to converse with any of the loiterers
+along the street, but moved steadily along. He had
+come out of Vorse&rsquo;s saloon and was going towards his
+office. Just then the sound of an automobile caused
+Madden to turn his head in time to see Weir speed along
+but stop with a sudden application of brakes as he
+caught sight of the attorney.</p>
+<p>A hail brought Martinez to the car. A few minutes&rsquo;
+rapid speech there followed. Then the lawyer mounted
+beside Weir, the machine went on, turning into a side
+street and vanishing. To Madden there was nothing unusual
+in the circumstance, and he only noted the surprise
+and silence along the street at the engineer&rsquo;s passage.
+The Mexicans would know the man wasn&rsquo;t yet arrested
+at any rate, he thought. But he should like to
+learn what was the purpose in bringing them all to town!
+He would keep an eye open for any lynching nonsense
+if it were attempted.</p>
+<p>Weir and Martinez were hastening to Judge Gordon&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+house, for shortly before the engineer had received an
+unexpected call from Pollock for him to join him there.
+Evidently the eastern lawyer had turned a card of some
+sort; and Weir had gone at once, wondering what the
+meeting might portend. The sight of Martinez, free and
+composed of hearing, walking along the street, further
+amazed him.</p>
+<p>He perceived, however, when the lawyer stepped out
+to the car from Vorse&rsquo;s place that he was pale, his mouth
+tight-drawn and his eyes glittering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got my message?&rdquo; the latter asked, quickly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The telephone message, yes. Janet Hosmer got the
+paper also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They dragged me to Vorse&rsquo;s cellar,&rdquo; Martinez whispered
+fiercely. &ldquo;They beat me with their fists, Vorse and
+Burkhardt. Then they tied me and squeezed my eyeballs
+till I could stand the pain no longer and told. I&rsquo;ve
+been there ever since, bound and without food or water,
+the devils! Sorenson came with them last night, afterwards.
+And now he and Vorse came again&ndash;&ndash;there they
+are back there in the bar yet&ndash;&ndash;and gave me a draft on a
+Chicago bank for a thousand dollars and said to get out
+and stay out of New Mexico and never open my mouth
+about what had happened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get in with me,&rdquo; Weir ordered.</p>
+<p>At Judge Gordon&rsquo;s house the lawyer said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are going in here? He&rsquo;s one of them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it. Come in, however. I may need you.
+You&rsquo;re not going to leave San Mateo, but there&rsquo;s no reason
+why you shouldn&rsquo;t cash the draft. That&rsquo;s only part
+of the damages you&rsquo;ll make them pay for what you underwent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t money I want from them,&rdquo; Martinez replied,
+between his teeth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></div>
+<p>Judge Gordon lived in a rambling adobe house two
+squares from the Hosmer dwelling. It was old but had
+been kept in good repair, and as he had never married
+he had lived comfortably enough with an old Mexican
+pair as servants. One of these, the woman, admitted the
+visitors at their knock and conducted them, as if expected,
+to the Judge&rsquo;s study, a long room lined with
+cases of books, mostly legal, and filled with old-fashioned
+furniture.</p>
+<p>That something had occurred to change the Judge&rsquo;s
+aspect during the hours in which Pollock had been
+closeted with him was at once apparent. He looked
+older, broken, haggard of face, terrified.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I met Mr. Martinez and brought him along,&rdquo; Weir
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that necessary?&rdquo; Judge Gordon asked, heavily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s my attorney, for one thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;ve been a prisoner in Vorse&rsquo;s cellar for twenty-four
+hours for another, and you&rsquo;re one of those responsible
+for my being there and for the torture to which
+I was subjected,&rdquo; Martinez exclaimed, glaring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Martinez, I give you my word of honor that
+I knew nothing of your incarceration until this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That for your word of honor!&rdquo; the lawyer cried,
+snapping his fingers in the air. &ldquo;And in any case, you&rsquo;re
+an accessory after the fact. You let me stay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this Mr. Martinez? Glad to meet you, sir. Mr.
+Weir has spoken very favorably of you and of your
+handling of legal matters for the irrigation company, of
+which I am a director. Pollock is my name. Are you a
+notary? Ah, that is good. There will be some papers
+to acknowledge and witness and so on.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></div>
+<p>He pointed at seats, seemingly having direction of
+matters, and the visitors sat down. Judge Gordon had
+sagged down in the padded leather chair in which
+he sat; his face was colorless, his eyes moving aimlessly
+to and fro, his white mustache and hair in disorder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us begin on business at once,&rdquo; Pollock stated, on
+his feet as was usual when entering a discussion and
+removing his eye-glasses. &ldquo;I called on Judge Gordon
+this afternoon after my talk with you, Weir, and disclosed
+the evidence which has been gathered relative to
+the fraud perpetrated on your father and the crime
+against the man Dent. I assumed, and rightly, that to a
+man of the Judge&rsquo;s legal mind the facts we hold would
+prove the futility of resistance, and I set out to convince
+him of the wisdom of sparing himself a long losing
+fight, in which he would be opposing not only the evidence
+which was sure to convict him, and not only you,
+Mr. Weir, but our company which proposed to see the
+fight through. I went so far, Weir, as to promise him
+immunity from your wrath and from public prosecution.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir arose slowly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;no.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, my dear fellow&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. He made my father&rsquo;s life a hell for thirty years.
+Why should I spare him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If granting him freedom from prosecution did actually
+spare him anything, I should say &lsquo;No&rsquo; also, standing
+in your place. But with the facts made public as
+they will be, with Judge Gordon losing his legislative
+office and the esteem in which he had been held, with him
+relinquishing the bulk of his fortune as he agrees, with
+his finding it necessary to go elsewhere to live at his time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+of life, with the thought constantly in his mind of how
+low he has been brought, don&rsquo;t you think he will be suffering
+quite adequately? I should think so. He would
+probably die quicker in prison, but I believe he will suffer
+more outside. See, I don&rsquo;t hesitate to measure the alternatives,
+for the Judge and I have discussed and canvassed
+the whole situation, which was necessary, of course, in
+order to arrive at a clear understanding.&rdquo; And Pollock
+smiled genially.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does he admit my charges?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t denied them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will he admit them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve outlined exactly what we must have&ndash;&ndash;deeds to
+his property and an acknowledged statement of the
+Joseph Weir and James Dent affair, supplementing the
+Saurez affidavit, which by the way he at first thought
+we did not possess but which an account of what happened
+last night in the mountains and your recovery of
+the same&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;Pollock&rsquo;s eyelid dropped for an instant
+towards Weir&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;convinced him of. This statement is
+not to be produced as evidence against his associates
+except in the last extremity, and if not needed is always
+to be kept secret. We are to give him, when the papers
+are signed, a draft for ten thousand dollars. This will
+permit him to have something to live on. He states that
+he will want to go from San Mateo at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>During this speech Weir&rsquo;s eyes had glanced to and
+fro between the lawyer ticking off his words with his
+glasses and the figure in the leather chair. Old and
+shattered as Judge Gordon had suddenly become,
+wretched as Weir saw him to be, the engineer nevertheless
+felt no pity. The man had been in the conspiracy that
+had ruined his father; he suffered now not because of
+remorse but through fear of public opinion; and was a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+fox turned craven because he found himself enmeshed
+in a net. And to save his own skin he was selling out
+his friends.</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s face went dark, but Pollock quickly stepped
+forward and drew him into a corner of the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep calm, man,&rdquo; was the lawyer&rsquo;s low advice. &ldquo;Do
+you think if we had him tied up as tightly as I&rsquo;ve made
+him believe that I should propose a compromise in his
+case. He&rsquo;s the weak link. Do you think I&rsquo;ve had an
+easy time the last three hours bringing him to the point
+he&rsquo;s at? I had to invent evidence that couldn&rsquo;t possibly
+exist. I had to give him a merciless mental &lsquo;third degree.&rsquo;
+I told him if he refused I was going to Sorenson with
+the same offer, who would jump at the chance. And, my
+dear man, we haven&rsquo;t, in reality, enough proof to convict
+a mouse since you lost that paper. So now, so far as
+he&rsquo;s concerned, you must bend a little, a very little&ndash;&ndash;and
+you&rsquo;ll be able to hang the remaining three.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This incisive reasoning was not to be denied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I yield,&rdquo; said Weir.</p>
+<p>Beaming, Mr. Pollock walked back to the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir consents,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;Mr. Martinez, if
+you will go to your office and bring the necessary forms
+and your seal we can make the transfers and statement
+and wind the matter up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An hour later Judge Gordon had signed the deeds,
+stock certificates from his safe and bills of sale spread
+before him, passing the ownership of lands, cattle and
+shares in companies to Pollock for equitable division
+between Weir and the Dent heirs if found. The old
+Mexican servants were called in and witnessed his shaky
+signatures to the papers.</p>
+<p>At the statement regarding the Dent shooting and
+Weir fraud, which Pollock had dictated to Martinez with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
+Gordon&rsquo;s assistance, he staggered to his feet while the
+pen dropped from his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t sign it, I can&rsquo;t sign it; they would kill me!&rdquo; he
+groaned.</p>
+<p>The two aged servants stared at him wonderingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Judge, they&rsquo;ll never know of it until it&rsquo;s
+too late for them to do anything&ndash;&ndash;if they ever know,&rdquo;
+came the easterner&rsquo;s words, in smooth persuasiveness.</p>
+<p>Judge Gordon brushed a hand over his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give me a moment,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>He stood for a time motionless. Then he walked across
+the room and opened a door and entered an inner chamber.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t live a year after this,&rdquo; Pollock whispered
+to his companions.</p>
+<p>The speaker could have shortened the time immensely
+and have still been safe in his prophecy. For when at the
+end of five minutes he sent the woman to request the
+Judge to return, she stumbled out of the bed-chamber
+with affrighted eyes. She said the Judge was asleep on
+his bed and could not be aroused.</p>
+<p>Sleep of the profoundest, the men discovered on going
+in. And in his fingers was an empty vial. So far as
+Judge Gordon was concerned Weir had had his revenge.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXII_AN_OLD_ADOBE_HOUSE' id='CHAPTER_XXII_AN_OLD_ADOBE_HOUSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+<h3>AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Revenge Weir had. But even in death Judge Gordon,
+true to his evasive, contriving character, had tricked
+him; and the irony lay in the fact that in this last act
+the trick was unpremeditated, unconscious, unintentional.
+Instead of the signed confession, necessary above everything
+else, which seemed almost in his fingers, the man
+had left a little poison vial.</p>
+<p>Night had settled over the earth when the three men,
+after directing the Mexican servants to bring the undertaker,
+went out of the house, for considerable time had
+been occupied in the discussion and the preparation of
+papers preceding Judge Gordon&rsquo;s tragic end. With
+him Mr. Pollock carried the documents pertaining to the
+property restitution. These, considered in connection
+with the suicide, would constitute something like a confession,
+he grimly asserted.</p>
+<p>Avoiding the main street of San Mateo they drove out
+of the town for camp. The first part of the ride was
+pursued in silence, for each was busy with his own
+thoughts in consequence of the sudden shocking termination
+of the meeting. When about half way to camp,
+however, their attention was taken from the subject by
+a sight wholly unexpected, a scene of high colors and of
+a spirit that mocked at what had just happened.</p>
+<p>Some way off from the road, at one side, two bonfires
+burned brightly before an adobe house, the flames leaping
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span>
+upward in the darkness and lighting the long low-roofed
+dwelling and the innumerable figures of persons.
+At the distance the place was from the highway, perhaps
+two hundred yards, one could make out only the shadowy
+forms of men&ndash;&ndash;of a considerable number of men, at that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never saw any one at that old tumble-down house
+before, Martinez,&rdquo; Weir remarked, lessening the speed
+of the car. &ldquo;Always supposed it empty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one does live there. The ground belongs to
+Vorse, who leases it for farming to Oterez. Perhaps
+Oterez is giving a party there. They are dancing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir brought the machine to a full stop, with suspicion
+rapidly growing in his mind. The place was
+owned by Vorse, for one thing, and the number about the
+house was too large for an ordinary Mexican family
+merry-making, for another. In view of what had occurred
+the previous night all &ldquo;parties&rdquo; in the neighborhood
+of the dam deserved inquiry, and this house was but
+a mile from camp.</p>
+<p>They could now hear the sound of music, the shrill
+quick scrap of a pair of fiddles and the notes of guitars.
+Against the fire-light too they could distinguish the whirl
+of skirts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just run over there, will you, Martinez, and have a
+look at that dance?&rdquo; Weir said. &ldquo;See how much whiskey
+is there, and who the people are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Mexican jumped down, climbed through the barb-wire
+fence bordering the field and disappeared towards
+the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you about some one giving the men booze last
+night,&rdquo; the engineer addressed his remaining companion.
+&ldquo;We found the place off south along the hills where that
+business happened, and stationed a man there to warn
+us if another attempt was made to use the spot. But I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised if this is the location used for
+to-night; it has all the signs. We suspected that this
+evening would be the real blow-out and if the men are
+going there I shall send down the foremen and engineers
+to break it up. Vorse&rsquo;s owning this house and his being
+the source of the liquor is almost proof. I met Atkinson
+returning to the dam when you sent him back from town
+and he&rsquo;ll know something is up if the workmen have been
+melting away from camp. This is simply another damnably
+treacherous move of the gang against us to interfere
+with our work, starting a big drunk and perhaps a
+row. We&rsquo;ll stop it right at the beginning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are the officials of this county so completely under
+Sorenson and his crowd&rsquo;s thumbs that they won&rsquo;t move
+in a case like this?&rdquo; Pollock questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we must act on our own initiative, as you say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s our only recourse. Giving whiskey isn&rsquo;t actually
+an illegal act&ndash;&ndash;and they&rsquo;re giving it away, not
+trying to sell it here without a government licence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The thing&rsquo;s illegal if it&rsquo;s part of a conspiracy to disrupt
+our work, and if we can secure proof that such is
+the fact it will but add one more item to the score to be
+settled with these San Mateo outlaws.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are more men going there. See them?&rdquo; Weir
+asked. &ldquo;You hear them on the road ahead of us.
+They&rsquo;re ducking through the fence and crossing to the
+house. Our workmen. The thing&rsquo;s plain now; they had
+word there would be another &lsquo;party&rsquo; to-night, but they
+didn&rsquo;t know just where until they received word this
+evening. I suppose the whole camp except a few men
+will be here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t they turn ugly if you interfere?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t help that. I&rsquo;ll send men down with axes and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+when the booze is poured on the ground it makes no difference
+then; the men will be kept sober. If they are
+stubborn, I&rsquo;ll run a new bunch in and fire these fellows.
+But I don&rsquo;t imagine they will quit work, however surly,
+for they know whiskey&rsquo;s no excuse. Men usually cool
+down after a night&rsquo;s sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From where they sat and since Weir had turned out
+his car lamps, they could see the steady string of men
+emerging from the darkness of the field and approaching
+the house, to quickly dissolve in the gathering already
+there. In their lively steps, as well as in the eager
+voices occasionally raised along the dark road, the men&rsquo;s
+desire to join in the debauch was apparent.</p>
+<p>With the swelling of the crowd the scraping of the
+fiddles became louder, the dancing more furious, shouts
+and yells more frequent, while a dense line of men passing
+and jamming in and out of the door pointed only too
+plainly that inside the house liquor flowed. This would
+be no matter of a few drinks per man, but a big drunk
+if not stopped.</p>
+<p>Martinez confirmed this opinion on his return.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are two barrels inside and a couple of fellows
+are dipping it up in tin cups like water,&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re not even troubling to draw the stuff; the barrels
+have been placed on end and the heads knocked out.
+It will be the biggest spree San Mateo ever saw, with
+plenty of fighting after awhile. Women, you know, always
+start fights during a spree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those surely are not women from town,&rdquo; Weir exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no. I never saw them before. Brought in here
+from somewhere&ndash;&ndash;Santa F&eacute; perhaps, El Paso more
+likely. You know the kind who would mix with that
+crowd&ndash;&ndash;tough girls. They&rsquo;re wearing low necks and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+short skirts, red stockings and all that. You know the
+kind. Out of joints and dives somewhere. There&rsquo;s only
+a dozen, but they keep circulating and dancing with different
+ones. I just put my head through a window to
+look inside, which is lighted by a big kerosene lamp
+hanging from the roof; and I tell you, gentlemen, it made
+me sick the way those two fellows were dipping up whiskey
+and the crowd drinking it down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And more men coming all the time,&rdquo; Weir stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And more coming, yes. It will be very bad there by
+midnight. Vorse and Burkhardt and Sorenson are managing
+the thing, of course.&rdquo; Martinez lighted a cigarette
+and stepped into the car. &ldquo;No mistake about that,
+for Vorse&rsquo;s bartender is one of the men at the barrels.
+And I imagine Judge Gordon knew this thing was coming
+off though he made no mention of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since we were ignorant of the matter, he naturally
+wouldn&rsquo;t inform us,&rdquo; Pollock remarked, dryly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Time to put a stop to the show before it grows
+bad,&rdquo; Weir stated resolutely. And he started the machine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it can be stopped,&rdquo; Martinez replied.</p>
+<p>That was the question, whether or not now it would
+be possible even to reach and destroy the barrels inside
+the house, what with the numbers who would oppose the
+move and what with the state of intoxication that must
+rapidly prevail at the place.</p>
+<p>For as they drove away they could already detect in
+the mad revel about the old adobe dwelling a faster beat
+in the sharp shrieking music, a wilder abandon in the
+movements of the figures about the flames, a more reckless,
+fiercer note in the cries and oaths.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is deviltry wholesale,&rdquo; Pollock said. &ldquo;On a
+grand scale, one might put it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></div>
+<p>So thought a horseman who approached and halted
+almost at the same spot where the car had rested. This
+was Madden who with a warrant for Weir&rsquo;s arrest in
+his pocket had arrived opposite the house a moment
+after the automobile&rsquo;s departure. He had secured the
+warrant at eight o&rsquo;clock according to the county attorney&rsquo;s
+request, but he had taken his own time about
+setting off to serve it.</p>
+<p>For a quarter of a mile he had been interested in the
+evidences of unwonted hilarity at the usually untenanted
+structure. Now he sat in his saddle, silent and motionless,
+observing the distant scene. He easily guessed the
+men were from the construction camp and that liquor
+was running.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can almost smell it here, Dick,&rdquo; he addressed his
+horse.</p>
+<p>But two circumstances puzzled him. One was that
+there had been no news in town of such a big affair impending
+for the night; the second, that there were
+women present&ndash;&ndash;for no Mexican, however ignorant,
+would take or allow his women folks to attend such a
+howling show. Coming on top of the crowd in town, he
+wondered if this business might not be linked up with
+Weir&rsquo;s affairs. These were his workmen and this was
+Vorse&rsquo;s farm-house and very likely Vorse&rsquo;s liquor. After
+he had arrested the engineer he would look into the thing.</p>
+<p>Fifteen minutes later, when he had gone on, other
+passers-by paused for a minute on the road to stare at
+the amazing picture across the field. These were Dr.
+Hosmer and Janet, Johnson and his daughter Mary: the
+two men being in the doctor&rsquo;s car, the two girls in Janet&rsquo;s
+runabout.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What on earth is going on there!&rdquo; Janet exclaimed,
+when the two machines had pulled up.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span></div>
+<p>The two fires, fed by fresh fuel, were leaping higher
+than ever, bringing out in strong relief the long squat
+building, the dark, restless, noisy throng, and the space
+of illuminated earth. Against the night the flames and
+building and mob of hundreds of men seemed a crimson
+vision from some inferno to an accompaniment of mad
+music.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The camp&rsquo;s gone on a tear; drive ahead,&rdquo; her father
+said. &ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t a sight for you girls to look at.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with that the two cars sped forward towards
+the dam, where on this night so much was converging.
+For their occupants already had had an experience that
+had started them at once to seek the man around whose
+figure were swirling a hundred passions and dark currents
+of destiny.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIII_WITH_FANGS_BARED' id='CHAPTER_XXIII_WITH_FANGS_BARED'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+<h3>WITH FANGS BARED</h3>
+</div>
+<p>That Sunday afternoon Janet Hosmer had awakened
+about sunset from an after-dinner sleep, rested and refreshed,
+with her mind continuing to be occupied by
+thoughts of Steele Weir about whom had eddied her
+dreams. The man was no longer the mystery he had
+been, since now she knew all the circumstances of his
+life, and on that account was nearer, more human, and
+yet as compelling.</p>
+<p>That on his part his interest went beyond mere friendship
+she had recognized from his voice and eyes when
+they were together. Ah, in truth, how his tones deepened
+and his look betrayed his feelings! At the thought
+Janet&rsquo;s heart beat faster and her cheeks grew warm and
+an indefinable joy seemed to fill her breast. She would
+not deny it: his presence, his touch gave her a greater
+happiness than she had ever known. At a single stride,
+as it were, he had come into the middle of her life and
+dominated her mind and changed her whole outlook.</p>
+<p>How he too had changed and grown in the coming!
+From the avaricious, calculating, heartless manager of
+the construction work, as she seeing through colored
+San Mateo eyes had believed him to be, he now stood
+forth a figure of power, undaunted by difficulties, undismayed
+by enemies however numerous, fearless to a
+fault, stern perhaps&ndash;&ndash;but who would not have been made
+stern in his place?&ndash;&ndash;and determined, cool, resourceful,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span>
+alert, and of an integrity as firm and upright as a
+marble shaft. Yet beneath this exterior his heart was
+quick and tender for those who needed sympathy or
+help, and his hand swift to aid.</p>
+<p>More than once a hot flush burned on Janet&rsquo;s face,
+as sitting there on the vine-hung veranda in the gathering
+dusk, recollection assailed her with memories of
+wasted kindnesses given the infamous Ed Sorenson, of
+trust bestowed and of love plighted. That passage in
+her life seemed to leave her contaminated forever. It
+burned in her soul like a disgrace or a dishonorable act.
+But Steele Weir&ndash;&ndash;and she swam in glorious ether at the
+thought&ndash;&ndash;did not appear to view it in that light.</p>
+<p>Juanita running in the twilight to the house interrupted
+her introspection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came to tell you,&rdquo; the Mexican girl exclaimed
+panting before Janet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me what?&rdquo; For Juanita&rsquo;s reappearance in itself
+was unusual, as Sunday afternoon and evening were her
+own to spend at home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;People are saying Mr. Weir is to be arrested and
+hanged from a tree in the court house yard! Everybody
+has come to town to see. Three uncles and aunts and
+nine cousins of ours have already come to our house
+from where they live four miles down the river. All the
+town is talking about it. But though I said nothing, I
+knew how Mr. Weir had saved you and that he had done
+nothing to be hanged for. If anybody is to be killed it
+ought to be that Ed Sorenson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure of this, Juanita?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, Miss Janet. It is so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then this is part of the plot against him; let me
+think. They might arrest him but they would never dare
+try to hang him, unless they could pretend&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span></div>
+<p>What they might pretend Janet never stated, as at
+that instant a motor car dashed up and stopped before
+the gate. Even in the gloom she made out that the
+figure garbed in a gray dust coat was Sorenson&rsquo;s.
+Springing out of the machine, he jerked the gate open
+and strode towards the house, while a premonition of
+a fresh and unpleasant turn of affairs quivered in Janet&rsquo;s
+mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come back again, you see,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Step inside
+where you can hear what I have to say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words were like an order; the man&rsquo;s manner, indeed,
+was overbearing and brutal. But the girl concealing
+her resentment, preceded him into the house and
+bade Juanita light a lamp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now you get out!&rdquo; Sorenson commanded the
+servant in so savage a tone that she fled to the kitchen
+without waiting to consult Janet&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;I see your
+father isn&rsquo;t here,&rdquo; he continued, addressing Janet.</p>
+<p>The latter made no reply. To be sure, Dr. Hosmer
+was not in the room but he was in the house, sleeping.
+Let the cattleman think him absent if he wished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So much the better; if he&rsquo;s not about, he won&rsquo;t try
+to interfere,&rdquo; the man went on. &ldquo;Now, my girl, I&rsquo;ve
+learned all about your tricks, and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, you talk like that to me in my own house!&rdquo;
+Janet broke in, with a flash of eyes. &ldquo;You will walk
+out of that door this instant and never set foot here
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will I, you slippery young Jezebel? I&rsquo;ll do nothing
+of the kind until I&rsquo;m ready, which will be when you&rsquo;ve
+handed over that paper. Don&rsquo;t try to deny that you
+have it or Weir has it; I suppose he has now, and I&rsquo;ll
+be forced to go shoot him down as he deserves. But I
+came here first to make sure. It would be just like the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span>
+rest of the schemes of you two to have you keep it, thinking
+I&rsquo;d be fooled. I have half a notion to wring your
+white neck for lying to me to-day&ndash;&ndash;lying, while all the
+time you knew my son was hanging between life and
+death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So savage was his voice, so threatening his visage and
+air that Janet retreated a step. His hands worked as
+if he actually felt her soft throat in his clutch; his huge
+body and big beefy head swayed towards her ominously;
+while his eyes carried a baleful light that revealed in full
+intensity the man&rsquo;s real brutal soul. Hitherto carefully
+coated in an appearance of respectability fitted to a
+station of wealth, influence and prominence, he now stood
+as he truly was, domineering, repellant, lawless. Janet
+could at that minute measure the close kinship of father
+and son.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fortunately a man in Bowenville recognized Ed, or
+I should never have known he had been injured,&rdquo; Sorenson
+went on. &ldquo;So your little scheme to keep me in ignorance
+went wrong. The doctor &rsquo;phoned me about five
+and I took my wife and we rushed there, and I have just
+this instant returned. Do you know what the doctor
+says? Ed will live, but be a life cripple, a useless wreck,
+a bundle of smashed bones, always sitting in a chair, always
+eating out his heart. And all because of you and
+that engineer! Ed was conscious; he told me the real
+story about which you lied,&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not lie,&rdquo; Janet stated, firmly.</p>
+<p>Sorenson made an angry gesture as if to sweep aside
+this declaration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told me how you promised to slip away with him
+to spend a week in the mountains, and how you warned
+this Weir so that the two of you could trick my son and
+get him out of the way. You, who always pretended to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+be so innocent and virtuous! And then Weir caused the
+accident up there in the hills that has crippled my boy
+for life! Did it to get him out of the path to you, and
+you helped, like the traitress you are; and the two of
+you took the paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s form had stiffened at these insulting speeches.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your son is the liar,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Did he tell you how
+he flung a blanket over my head as Juanita and I were
+coming out of Martinez&rsquo; office? How he tied my hands
+and feet and carried me off like a victim&ndash;&ndash;and victim he
+intended me to be! Yes, Mr. Weir rescued me because
+Juanita met and told him what had happened and he
+followed. Your son was drunk. He tried to commit a
+crime because I had rejected him a week before, on learning
+that during our engagement he had endeavored to
+mislead another girl. A drunkard and a criminal both,
+that&rsquo;s your son. And he alone brought on his accident
+by his drunken, reckless driving. Now I&rsquo;ve told you the
+truth; leave the house!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t put that kind of a story over on me,&rdquo; he
+snarled. &ldquo;I believe what Ed said. Even if he has had
+affairs with other girls, that makes no difference now.
+You tried to double-cross him; you&rsquo;ve wrecked his body
+and life; and you shall pay for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Neither of the pair in their intense excitement had
+heard a wagon drive to a stop before the house. Whether
+in fact they would have heard a peal of thunder might be
+a question. Sorenson, enraged by his son&rsquo;s injury and
+burning for revenge, was oblivious to all else but his
+passion, while Janet Hosmer, divided between contempt
+and fear, had but the single thought of ridding herself
+of the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You cannot injure me,&rdquo; she said, in reply to his savage
+utterance.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll drive you and your father out of this town and
+this state,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;They shall know here in San
+Mateo, and wherever you go if it&rsquo;s in my power to reach
+there, what sort of a pretending, double-faced, disreputable
+wanton&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You coward!&rdquo; Janet burst out.</p>
+<p>Then she turned to flee out of the room to arouse her
+father. But Sorenson was too quick for her; he sprang
+forward and seized one of her wrists.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No you don&rsquo;t, you perfumed wench!&rdquo; he growled.</p>
+<p>A scream formed on Janet&rsquo;s lips. The heavy, rage-crimsoned
+face bent over her as if to kill her by its very
+nearness. Brute the man was, and as a brute he appeared
+determined she should feel his power. She pulled
+back, jerking to free herself, and shrieked.</p>
+<p>Intervention came from an unexpected quarter. Rushing
+into the room came the rancher Johnson, followed by
+his daughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let go of her,&rdquo; the man ordered, harshly.</p>
+<p>Sorenson looked about over his shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep out of this, and get out,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>Johnson leaped forward and struck the other on the
+jaw. The cattleman releasing his hold on Janet staggered
+back, at the same time thrusting a hand under
+his coat.</p>
+<p>But the rancher&rsquo;s pistol was whipped forth first.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d try that game, would you?&rdquo; Johnson said, with
+his ragged beard out-thrust and stiff. &ldquo;Put up your
+hands; I want to see how they look sticking up over
+your head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson though now holding them in sight did not
+at once comply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Johnson, you&rsquo;re butting into something that doesn&rsquo;t
+concern you,&rdquo; he said, endeavoring to speak calmly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve made one mistake in striking me; don&rsquo;t make another
+by keeping that gun pointed at my head. Remember
+I&rsquo;ve a mortgage on your place that you&rsquo;ll wish renewed
+one of these days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The expression of scorn on the rancher&rsquo;s face was
+complete.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trying that line, are you?&rdquo; he sneered. &ldquo;Think you
+can play the money-lender now and scare me? You
+didn&rsquo;t look much like a banker reaching for your gun;
+you just looked like a killer then, a plain bar-room killer&ndash;&ndash;but
+I beat you to the draw. You&rsquo;ve got fat and slow,
+haven&rsquo;t you, since early days when you use to put lead
+into poor devils whose stuff you wanted. And you didn&rsquo;t
+look like a banker to me, either, trying to bulldoze Janet
+when I came in; you looked like the big dirty coward you
+are. Aha, here&rsquo;s the doctor! Now just tell him how it
+comes you can order me out of his house, and why you
+were threatening Janet and making her scream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The physician turned a white, angry countenance to
+Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I heard the scream. Is it true you were abusing my
+daughter?&rdquo; he demanded, stepping in front of the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came here because I learned my son Ed had been
+broken to bits through her trickery and damnable&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words were cut off by the doctor&rsquo;s hand which
+smote the blasphemous lips uttering them.</p>
+<p>Even more than Johnson&rsquo;s blow did this slap upon
+the mouth enrage the cattleman. His face became congested,
+his shoulders heaved, but behind the doctor was
+the revolver still directed at his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve come here uninvited and you&rsquo;ve said too
+much,&rdquo; Doctor Hosmer stated in cold even tones. &ldquo;You
+may be the town magnate, but you&rsquo;re only a ruffian and a
+crook after all. You can&rsquo;t bluff or bully us. More than
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span>
+that, you&rsquo;ve insulted my daughter and me beyond any
+future reparation. As for your son, he got less than he
+deserved.&rdquo; He turned to the rancher. &ldquo;You came just
+in time, it seems. Please see that he leaves the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson waved with his gun significantly towards the
+door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Move right along lively,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;And I&rsquo;ll go
+along with you to see that you don&rsquo;t hamstring my
+horses, which I don&rsquo;t put past an underhanded cattle-thief
+like you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson seemed striving for words that would adequately
+blast those before him, but they appeared lacking.
+With a last malignant glare he walked out upon
+the veranda and down across the yard, with his guard
+following him.</p>
+<p>When Johnson returned after Sorenson&rsquo;s departure
+in his car, he was grinning sardonically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t want him running among my cattle; he&rsquo;d
+bite &rsquo;em and give &rsquo;em the rabies,&rdquo; he remarked.</p>
+<p>Janet caught and pressed his toil-roughened hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll never know how much I thank you for coming
+in just when you did,&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pshaw, your father would have showed up and
+stopped him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure. Father has no weapon, and that
+man did have one. It was the sight of your pistol that
+made him cower. You couldn&rsquo;t have chosen a more
+lucky minute to arrive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it was a little bit timely, as it turned out.
+Considering too that we were coming to see you anyway,
+it was just as well to walk in when we could do some good.
+Mary has something for you to read, if you read Spanish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good. Show &rsquo;em what you have, daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary drew a knotted handkerchief from her bosom and
+undid the knots. Appeared the doubled paper she had
+found. This she passed to Janet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&ndash;&ndash;why, this is the document I had!&rdquo; the latter
+exclaimed, joyfully. &ldquo;Where did you find it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up by the smashed automobile, when father and I
+were at the cabin.&rdquo; She exchanged a guarded look with
+her father. &ldquo;There are names in it that made me think
+it might be valuable. So when father came back from
+Bowenville I showed it to him. But neither of us could
+read it. We thought we&rsquo;d better bring it to you to
+read.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is valuable, very valuable. I had it when I was
+seized by Ed Sorenson and he took it away from me.
+Evidently, then, it fell from his pocket at the time of
+the accident. Yes, indeed, it&rsquo;s important. It means
+everything to certain parties. I&rsquo;ll read it, but you understand
+what it tells is private at present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We understand&ndash;&ndash;and I think I know what it&rsquo;s going
+to say,&rdquo; Johnson remarked, grimly.</p>
+<p>Thereupon while the others listened Janet read a
+translation of the long document. To her and her father
+the facts were not new, for Weir had already related such
+as he knew of the happenings in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon on that
+eventful day thirty years previous. Nor for that matter
+were they strange to Johnson and his daughter, though
+of course neither Janet nor her father were aware of
+the rancher&rsquo;s more intimate knowledge of the subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A pretty good story as far as it goes, but like all
+lawyers&rsquo; papers long-winded,&rdquo; Johnson stated, critically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, far as it goes?&rdquo; Janet asked,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span>
+curiously. &ldquo;Did you know this old Mexican? Did you
+ever hear him tell about the thing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew he was there at the time, but he never told me
+anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here Dr. Hosmer spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saurez died yesterday. It must have been shortly
+after he made this deposition. He died in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon,
+which gives a color of suspicion to his death. In
+addition, Martinez, as you know, was dragged away
+somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then Vorse learned old Saurez had blabbed, and
+killed him,&rdquo; Johnson said, in a convinced tone. &ldquo;Vorse
+is a bad bird, I want to say. But so are all of them,
+Sorenson, Burkhardt and Judge Gordon as well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet brought the talk back to the subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You make me still wonder, Mr. Johnson,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;You seemed to think there&rsquo;s more to the account than is
+told in this paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again the rancher and his daughter glanced at each
+other, hesitatingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell them, father,&rdquo; Mary broke forth all at once.
+&ldquo;They know this much, and you know you can trust
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man, however, shook his head with a certain
+dogged purpose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If this is just a paper in some trifling lawsuit or
+other, it will be better if I keep my own counsel,&rdquo; he
+stated. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve riled Sorenson considerable as it is now,
+and I don&rsquo;t care particularly about having him gunning
+on my trail active-like. If it really mattered&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does matter; it matters everything,&rdquo; Janet cried,
+&ldquo;if you really know something more!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because it concerns Mr. Weir. The Joseph Weir
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span>
+described and named in this affidavit was his father.
+He believes these men robbed his father; this paper
+proves it, but not absolutely, for Mexican evidence here
+in this country doesn&rsquo;t carry as much weight against
+white men&ndash;&ndash;especially men as rich and strong as these
+named&ndash;&ndash;as it would in other places perhaps. You know
+that. This paper was obtained for Mr. Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oho, so that&rsquo;s the way of it!&rdquo; Johnson said, with a
+long drawn-out tone.</p>
+<p>He regarded the paper in silence for a time, busy with
+his thoughts, absently twisting his beard, until at length
+a look of satisfaction grew on his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, this is fine,&rdquo; he went on presently. &ldquo;I
+never thought I should be able to pay the obligation I
+owe him, and I won&rsquo;t fully at that, but this will help.
+No, that paper doesn&rsquo;t tell all, for I reckon Saurez didn&rsquo;t
+see all.&rdquo; He glanced triumphantly at the doctor and the
+girl. &ldquo;But I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You!&rdquo; both exclaimed.</p>
+<p>But before he could explain, the memory of the cattleman&rsquo;s
+threat recurred to Janet to banish thoughts
+of aught else than Weir&rsquo;s danger from her mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sorenson said he was going up to the dam to
+shoot Mr. Weir,&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;We must give warning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he say he was going himself?&rdquo; Johnson asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To get the paper, yes.&rdquo; Then Janet continued anxiously.
+&ldquo;But the paper isn&rsquo;t all. His son told him
+what occurred in the mountains and I believe the man
+wants to harm Mr. Weir as well as to obtain the paper.
+Perhaps he plans on gaining the document first, then
+killing him. In any case, we must put Mr. Weir on
+guard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just drive up there and tell the engineer,&rdquo; Johnson
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+stated. &ldquo;Shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised if I got a chance
+yet to use my gun. You girls can stay here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet gazed at him with a flushing face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man could go to the dam and kill Mr. Weir and
+get safely home while you&rsquo;re starting with your team,&rdquo;
+said she. &ldquo;No, we must drive there in a car. Father,
+you take Mr. Johnson in yours, and I&rsquo;ll carry Mary in
+mine. We&rsquo;ll go along of course, for we&rsquo;ll not remain
+here in the cottage alone with such terrible things happening
+in San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And to this there was no dissent.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIV_THE_ALARM' id='CHAPTER_XXIV_THE_ALARM'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+<h3>THE ALARM</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At the dam Weir found Meyers and Atkinson anxiously
+waiting his return. The sudden concerted melting
+away of workmen from camp had been warning to his
+subordinates that the danger of a general spree had
+taken definite form, which the report of a pair of young
+engineers confirmed when they followed a group of laborers
+to the old adobe house and beheld the beginning
+of the debauch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get out all the staff, Meyers, and you, Atkinson, all
+the foremen and sober men left, then go down the road
+and put that joint out of business, taking axes and whatever
+is necessary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if they fight?&rdquo; Meyers asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Try first to placate them. If that fails, some of you
+draw them off in order to permit the others to enter the
+house and destroy the whiskey. It&rsquo;s a tough job, but
+you may succeed. If the crowd turns ugly as it may,
+being drunk, come back. No need to take the risk of
+broken heads or being beaten up. See, however, if you
+can&rsquo;t outwit the outfit. Possibly you could push that
+mud house over from the rear by means of a beam; that
+would do the business. I leave it to you to decide what&rsquo;s
+best to do, men, after you&rsquo;ve examined the situation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The camp will be unguarded except for you and the
+two men with you,&rdquo; Weir&rsquo;s assistant suggested. &ldquo;If
+the crowd drinking down at that place should take the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
+notion to come here and tear things up, there would be
+nothing to hinder them. A few should stay, anyway,
+I imagine&ndash;&ndash;half a dozen, who can use guns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, pick out six to remain,&rdquo; the other agreed.</p>
+<p>For Meyers&rsquo; suggestion had raised a disagreeable possibility.
+It was never safe to ignore precautions when a
+gang of two or three hundred rough, active laborers,
+however loyal when sober, were made irresponsible and
+crazy by liquor; and one stage of drunkenness in such
+men was usually manifested in a wild desire for violence.
+The scheme of Weir&rsquo;s enemies might comprise using this
+very act for wrecking the camp.</p>
+<p>Six men, to be sure, would offer little resistance to
+stemming the movement once it was started, but the sight
+of steel in the guards&rsquo; hands might cause even a reckless
+mob to pause long enough for an appeal. If the men
+should be brought to listen, they could probably be diverted
+from their purpose, as impassioned crowds are
+easily swayed by men of force.</p>
+<p>In any case the camp and dam should be defended to
+the last. That went without saying.</p>
+<p>Meyers and Atkinson had little more than departed
+with their muster of engineers, foremen and sober workmen,
+some fifty in all, when the two cars driven by Dr.
+Hosmer and Janet arrived at headquarters. To the occupants
+of both machines the camp appeared singularly
+dark and silent, the office building and the commissary
+shack alone showing lights.</p>
+<p>The four visitors entered the main room in the former
+building, where they found Mr. Pollock and Martinez.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir stepped out for a moment to make a round
+of the camp and the horse corrals,&rdquo; the easterner replied
+in answer to an inquiry from the doctor. &ldquo;Will you be
+seated?&rdquo; And he politely placed chairs for Janet and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+Mary, while his look scrutinized the party with discreet
+interest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Martinez, you&rsquo;ve escaped!&rdquo; Janet exclaimed,
+after a surprised stare at the lawyer.</p>
+<p>The Mexican smiled, bowed and drew one point of his
+black mustache through his fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have indeed, Miss Janet,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Not without
+an unpleasant experience, however. I understand you
+secured the paper concerning which I telephoned you,
+and though I understand it has since been lost&ndash;&ndash;through
+no fault of yours&ndash;&ndash;I desire to express my thanks for
+your excellent assistance in the matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it has been found again; we have it with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez gave a start, none the less sincere for being
+dramatic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! Saurez&rsquo; deposition? Weir thought it
+burned. Why, this is the most wonderful luck in the
+world! It gives us the whip-hand again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary Johnson here found it in a crack in the rocks
+when she and her father went up to the cabin to bring
+Ed Sorenson down. Father has it. That&rsquo;s one reason
+we&rsquo;re here. But there&rsquo;s another; Mr. Sorenson has
+learned of his son&rsquo;s accident, has seen him, talked with
+him, been told lies and now is in a dreadful rage, threatening
+every one concerned. He was at our house and
+made a scene. He&rsquo;s coming here, or so he said, to kill
+Mr. Weir and obtain the document. So we hurried to
+the dam to give warning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this juncture Mr. Pollock stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sorenson hasn&rsquo;t yet appeared, and I assure you
+he will be prevented from harming any one if he comes.
+You are Miss Janet Hosmer, I judge, of whom I&rsquo;ve
+heard so much that is praiseworthy. Will you allow
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+me to introduce myself? I&rsquo;m Mr. Pollock, a company
+director, and to a degree in Mr. Weir&rsquo;s confidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet expressed her pleasure at his acquaintance and
+in turn introduced her father and the Johnsons.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir spoke of you to us, but we weren&rsquo;t aware
+he had informed you of the paper.&rdquo; Then she added,
+&ldquo;But he would wish to, naturally.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s voice, without, in conversation with some one
+caused them all to look towards the door. In the panel
+of light falling on the darkness before the house they
+perceived the engineer&rsquo;s tall figure by a horse, from
+which the rider was dismounting. Letting the reins drag
+and leaving the horse to stand, the latter walked with
+Weir into the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, this is a delightful surprise!&rdquo; the engineer exclaimed
+on beholding the four who had come while he was
+out. &ldquo;And unexpected.&rdquo; His eyes rapidly interrogated
+the different faces. &ldquo;I suppose it&rsquo;s business, not pleasure,
+that brings you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so,&rdquo; said Johnson, the rancher, nodding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Madden is here on business, too, it seems.&rdquo;
+He glanced at Mr. Pollock. &ldquo;Mr. Madden is our sheriff
+and he has a warrant for my arrest.&rdquo; He turned back
+to the officer. &ldquo;You come at a bad time for my affairs.
+You saw that big show at the old house half way down
+the road? That crowd is made up of my workmen, who
+are being entertained with free whiskey, and there&rsquo;s no
+telling but what they may come here to tear things up.
+The whiskey is furnished by Vorse, I suspect, and is being
+served at Vorse&rsquo;s place. Your warrant is inspired
+by Vorse and others, isn&rsquo;t it? The two circumstances
+coming at the same moment, the free drunk and my arrest,
+look fishy to me. What do you think? I&rsquo;m in
+charge of a property here representing a good deal of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+money and I should hate to be absent if the men took
+the idea into their heads to turn the camp upside down,
+especially if the idea was inspired by Vorse and his
+friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t served the warrant yet,&rdquo; Madden replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you know that I&rsquo;m not going to skip the country
+at the prospect of your serving it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. There&rsquo;s no hurry; I&rsquo;ll just sit around for
+a while. And understand, Weir, this arrest is none of
+my doings, except officially. I take no stock in the
+yarn about your having attacked the greaser you killed.
+Martinez&rsquo; and Miss Janet&rsquo;s testimony at the inquest
+satisfied me in that respect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Pollock now drew Weir aside for a whispered conference.
+When they rejoined the others the engineer
+made the lawyer acquainted with the sheriff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir has agreed to my suggestion to take you
+into our confidence, Mr. Madden,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;There
+may be other warrants for you to serve soon, and I&rsquo;m
+sure you will respect what we reveal. All of us here except
+you know the facts I&rsquo;m about to relate; indeed,
+have shared in them to an extent; and in addition to our
+word we&rsquo;ll present proof. You know Dr. Hosmer and
+his daughter certainly, you probably know Mr. Johnson
+and the young lady with him, and are aware whether
+their statements are to be relied on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are,&rdquo; Madden answered, without hesitation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re already convinced of the truth of Weir&rsquo;s innocence
+in the charge of murder now being preferred
+against him. Well, now, a friend at court is worth something;
+and we propose to make you that friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not against him like most of the town, anyway,&rdquo;
+was the sheriff&rsquo;s answer.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead with your explanation,&rdquo; Pollock said to the
+engineer.</p>
+<p>Thereupon Weir briefly sketched out events for the officer
+as they had occurred and as showing the motives
+which had inspired his enemies in seeking to destroy him:&ndash;&ndash;the
+original plot against his father, his determination
+to uncover the four conspirators, the episode at the restaurant
+in Bowenville, the discovery of Ed Sorenson as
+the hirer of the dead Mexican assassin, the obtaining of
+Saurez&rsquo; deposition and Martinez&rsquo; imprisonment in
+Vorse&rsquo;s saloon cellar, Janet&rsquo;s abduction and rescue and
+the loss of the paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the paper isn&rsquo;t lost,&rdquo; Dr. Hosmer interrupted.
+&ldquo;Mary Johnson found it and here it is.&rdquo; With which
+he drew the crumpled document from his breast pocket
+and laid it on the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have it again!&rdquo; Weir exclaimed. &ldquo;You found it,
+Mary!&rdquo; He stepped forward and took the girl&rsquo;s hand in
+his for a moment. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a friend indeed to bring
+this back to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I owed you more than that,&rdquo; she said, coloring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Mr. Sorenson has learned about his son and the
+paper and everything that happened, except Ed Sorenson
+told him lies instead of the truth,&rdquo; Janet put in.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s terribly angry at all of us. He said he would
+kill you for crippling Ed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorenson is welcome to try,&rdquo; Weir responded, with a
+quick blaze in his eyes.</p>
+<p>At this point Mr. Pollock interposed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t finish your story, Weir. Relate for Mr.
+Madden&rsquo;s benefit what occurred at Judge Gordon&rsquo;s
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This tragic conclusion to the afternoon&rsquo;s happenings
+the engineer told, though remarking that the company
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+director should be the true narrator. At his announcement
+that Judge Gordon had taken his own life by poison
+his listeners remained dumbfounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s dead, then?&rdquo; Madden asked, at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. And the transfer of property made to Mr.
+Pollock amounts to an acknowledgment of his guilt.
+Now, I should like to have Martinez read this deposition,
+for I&rsquo;ve never heard its contents myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This the Mexican did, translating the Spanish paragraphs
+into English with fluent ease, ending by reading
+the list of witnesses. Martinez gave the paper a slap of
+his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And old Saurez was found dead in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon by
+me an hour after he had signed this,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Draw
+your own conclusions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden shifted on his seat. He glanced at the document
+and at the others and then gazed out the door at
+the darkness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looks like a clear case; I always imagined if these
+men&rsquo;s past was dug into there would be a lot of crooked
+business turned up. But granting that everything is as
+shown, with Lucerio the county attorney under Sorenson&rsquo;s
+thumb and the community as it is there&rsquo;s a question
+if Saurez&rsquo; statement even will be enough to convict
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that Janet jumped up, her eyes gleaming.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not all the proof, not all by any means!&rdquo;
+she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What more is there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Johnson&rsquo;s evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Johnson&rsquo;s!&rdquo; came in surprised tones from all four
+of the men uninformed of the rancher&rsquo;s story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he saw the man Dent killed and the plotters make
+your father, Mr. Weir, believe he had done the killing.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></div>
+<p>Steele stared at Johnson dumbfounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just that; I saw the whole dirty trick worked, looking
+through the back door of the saloon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you were the boy!&rdquo; Weir gasped. &ldquo;The boy
+who looked in! After thirty years I supposed that boy
+gone, lost, vanished beyond finding.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I stayed right here,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;Of course I
+kept my mouth shut about what I had seen. I worked
+on ranches and rode range and at last got the little
+place on Terry Creek and married. Nothing strange in
+my remaining in the country where I grew up, especially
+as I only knew the cattle business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir swung about to Madden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a live witness,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;With the other
+proof his evidence should be final.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whenever you say, I&rsquo;ll arrest the men. As for this
+warrant I have, I&rsquo;ll just continue to carry it in my
+pocket,&rdquo; the sheriff stated. &ldquo;I must remark that I
+never heard of a more villainous plot, taking it all
+around, than you&rsquo;ve brought to light.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the charges must cover everything,&rdquo; Pollock said
+sternly. &ldquo;From Dent&rsquo;s murder to the conspiracy
+against the irrigation company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stay here in case you need me to stop any trouble
+with your workmen,&rdquo; Madden remarked.</p>
+<p>But trouble though imminent was coming from another
+direction, as was suddenly shown when a man,
+dust-covered and hatless, rushed into the office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re on the way,&rdquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who? The workmen?&rdquo; Weir demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I don&rsquo;t know anything about the workmen, but
+a bunch of Mexicans, fifty or more, are headed this way
+to blow up the dam. I saw and heard them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;At the spring a mile south. I was watching down
+there, where Atkinson had sent me after supper, relieving
+the man who kept lookout during the afternoon.
+That was where the booze was dealt out last night, you
+remember. I was sitting there when I heard a crowd
+coming. At first I thought it was our men, but when
+they stopped to drink and smoke, I saw by their talk
+they were Mexicans. But there was one white man with
+them, a leader. He and a Mexican talked in English.
+They&rsquo;re to raid the camp, crawling up the canyon, to
+dynamite the dam first, then fire the buildings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then they&rsquo;re on the road here now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; The speaker licked his lips. &ldquo;I cut along
+the hillside until I got ahead of them, but it was slow
+going in the dark and stumbling through the sage. They
+must be close at hand by this time, though I came faster
+than they did. The white man said to the Mexican that
+they wanted to reach the dam just at moonrise, and that
+will be pretty quick now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go to the bunk-house and call the men waiting there,
+and get a gun yourself,&rdquo; Weir ordered. &ldquo;The storekeeper
+will give you one.&rdquo; When the messenger had
+darted out, he looked at the others. &ldquo;You must take
+these girls away from here, doctor, at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t go,&rdquo; Johnson snapped forth, drawing his
+revolver and giving the cylinder a spin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never could hit anything, and haven&rsquo;t had a firearm
+in my hand for years, but I can try,&rdquo; Pollock stated.
+&ldquo;This promises to be interesting, very interesting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very,&rdquo; said Weir.</p>
+<p>For a little he stood in thought, while the others gazed
+at him without speaking. His straight body seemed to
+gather strength and power before their eyes, his clean-cut
+features to become hard and masterful.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Up the canyon he said they were coming, didn&rsquo;t
+he?&rdquo; he remarked at last, more to himself than to them.
+&ldquo;Very well, so much the better. Johnson, you and Madden
+take charge of the men when they come and line
+them along the hillside this side of the dam. Put out
+all lights.&rdquo; With which he strode out of the building.</p>
+<p>They looked after him in uncertainty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going; you may be hurt, and need me,&rdquo;
+Mary stated, with a stubborn note in her voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then keep out of reach&ndash;&ndash;and run for town if the
+ruffians get into camp,&rdquo; was her father&rsquo;s answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I stay too,&rdquo; Janet exclaimed, resolutely.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXV_NO_QUARTER' id='CHAPTER_XXV_NO_QUARTER'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+<h3>NO QUARTER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The peril threatening the unfinished dam now alone
+engaged Steele Weir&rsquo;s mind. Personal considerations
+did not enter into his calculations, least of all thought
+of personal danger; for when he placed himself in an
+undertaking whatever rested under his hand, as in this
+case the irrigation company&rsquo;s property, became for him
+a trust to attend, to direct, to guard. Even more than
+if it had been his own property did he feel the obligation,
+for the interests concerned were not his. But the matter
+went deeper than a prospective money loss; it struck
+down to principles and rights&ndash;&ndash;the principles of order
+and industry as against viciousness and havoc; the rights
+of law-abiding men who create as against the wantonness
+of lawless men who would destroy.</p>
+<p>Were it his own workmen who, inflamed by drink and
+incited by a spirit of recklessness, were coming to wreck
+the camp in a moment of mad intoxication, he would have
+made allowances for the cause. Before resorting to extreme
+measures in defending his charge, he first would
+have sought to bring them to their senses. Drunken
+men are men unbalanced, irrational.</p>
+<p>But here was another case: an attack by a secret,
+sober, malevolent band, who in cold blood approached to
+demolish the company works. Not liquor moved them on
+their mission, but money&ndash;&ndash;money paid by his arch enemies.
+The men were simply hired tools, brazenly indifferent
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+no doubt to crimes, desperate in character certainly,
+for a handful of coins ready to wipe out a million
+dollars&rsquo; worth of property and effort. Such deserved
+no consideration or quarter.</p>
+<p>Weir proposed to give none. With enemies of this
+kind he had but one policy, strike first and strike with
+deadly force. One does not seek to dissuade a rattlesnake;
+one promptly stamps it under heel. One cannot
+compromise with ravenous wolves; one shoots them down.
+One does not wait to see how far a treacherous foe will
+go; one forestalls and crushes him before he begins.
+Moreover, if wise, one does it in such fashion that the
+enemy will not arise from the blow.</p>
+<p>With the information given him by the guard posted
+at the spring Weir immediately grasped the true nature
+of the plot. The &ldquo;whiskey party&rdquo; was but a means of
+withdrawing the workmen from the scene, of weakening
+the camp, while a picked company of ruffians wrecked
+the property. It was an assault intended to wipe out
+the works and end construction, coincident with his arrest.
+Both the company and he were to pay the penalty
+for resisting the powers that rule San Mateo. And if
+the tale were spread that the destruction had been
+wrought by his workmen while drunk, who would doubt
+it?</p>
+<p>Like shadows the band of Mexican desperadoes would
+come, dynamite the dam, fire the buildings, stampede the
+horses, and like shadows vanish again. In the unexpectedness
+of the raid, in the confusion, in the dim light, no
+one would with certainty be able to say who the assailants
+were. A scheme ferocious in its conception and
+diabolical in its cunning! But there was one flaw&ndash;&ndash;the
+element of chance. Chance had given Weir warning.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></div>
+<p>A strong man warned is a strong man armed.</p>
+<p>As the engineer stood in the office, swiftly measuring
+the imminent menace of which he had just been told,
+calculating the meager instruments of defense at hand,
+his mind sweeping up all the salient aspects, features,
+advantages and disadvantages of the situation, he seized
+on the one weak spot in the attacking party&rsquo;s plan. At
+that spot he would strike.</p>
+<p>So giving Johnson and Madden the order to take
+charge of the little handful of guards, he had plunged
+out into the night.</p>
+<p>The men from the bunk-house were already running toward
+the office, before the door of which the rancher
+gathered them together to make sure of their arms and
+ammunition. All told, when Martinez and Pollock presently
+came from the store with guns, the little party numbered
+eleven.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this all there are of us?&rdquo; Dr. Hosmer asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are worth all that crowd that&rsquo;s coming,&rdquo; Johnson
+exclaimed, taking a spare gun Martinez had brought
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did Weir send the rest of the engineers down to that
+house? I understood so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where they are, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Hosmer considered for a minute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can be there in five minutes in my car. The road
+is on the north side of the stream, as is this camp:
+the gang that&rsquo;s heading here to blow things up is coming
+up from the south, so it will not block the way.
+Men could be here in twenty minutes from down yonder
+by running.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A good suggestion, doctor,&rdquo; Pollock said. &ldquo;It may
+take you a bit longer to find and tell them what&rsquo;s occurring,
+but even so they may return in time. Fifty, or
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span>
+even twenty, might give us enough assistance to beat off
+the attack.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There comes the moon,&rdquo; said the man who had been at
+the spring. &ldquo;They must be near now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Far in the east the moon was stealing above the horizon.
+Under its light the mesa took form out of the
+darkness&ndash;&ndash;the level sagebrush plain criss-crossed by willow-lined
+ditches and checkered by small Mexican fields,
+the winding shimmering Burntwood River with its border
+of cottonwoods, the narrow road, the distant town of
+San Mateo, a vague blot of shadow picked out by tiny
+specks of light.</p>
+<p>The mountains too now reared in view, silent, silvered,
+majestic, towering about the camp on the lower base.
+One could see, as the moon swam higher, the low long
+buildings of the camp clustered on the hillside above the
+canyon, in the bottom of which was the dashing stream
+and the bone-white core of the dam.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look down yonder on the other side!&rdquo; Martinez exclaimed
+suddenly, pointing a long thin forefinger at the
+mouth of the canyon where a group of black dots were
+moving up the river.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s them,&rdquo; said the man who had given the warning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And they&rsquo;re armed,&rdquo; said another. &ldquo;You can see the
+moon shine on their gun-barrels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the opposite side of the stream, some two hundred
+yards below the dam and three or four hundred feet
+lower in elevation than the camp, advancing up the
+canyon in a string, the men looked like a line of insects.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m off for help,&rdquo; the doctor said, springing into his
+car. &ldquo;Janet, you and Mary go higher up among the
+rocks and hide if these buildings are attacked.&rdquo; Away
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+he went, buzzing down the hillside to the long stretch of
+road.</p>
+<p>Weir now came into sight, walking quickly towards the
+group. That he saw the Mexicans down in the canyon
+was evident from his swift appraising glances thither.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Johnson, move your men down halfway to the dam
+and have them scatter there behind bowlders. I shall go
+still lower down,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You will hold your fire until
+I signal with my hat from the dam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to the dam?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to go with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t need you. You&rsquo;ll be more effective hidden
+above. You&rsquo;ll have plenty of light as the moon is shining
+squarely in the gorge. And await my signal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right; you&rsquo;re the general.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But take no extreme risks, Weir. The company
+doesn&rsquo;t ask you to sacrifice yourself,&rdquo; Pollock stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sacrifice will be down among those fellows,&rdquo;
+Steele replied, with set jaw. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t worry about me.
+Now, start, men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stood for a little watching the rate of progress of
+the line of Mexicans ascending the stream, which was
+not rapid owing to the broken rocks lining the bank.
+Then he swung about to the two girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every one here now is under my orders,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;You two will take your car and go at once. This is
+no place for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Janet began.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m taking no chances that you shall fall into the
+hands of those scoundrels,&rdquo; he declared, sternly. &ldquo;They
+may succeed in reaching this spot. You must not be
+here; you must go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Taking each by an arm he piloted them to the car.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry, but it has to be,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;This is work
+for men, and men alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet and Mary climbed up into the seat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&ndash;&ndash;you will take care of yourself,&rdquo; Janet said,
+tremulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I expect to. Still, this isn&rsquo;t going to be a croquet
+party; anything may happen. Good-by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With that he swung about and breaking into a run
+made for a small building half-buried in the hillside and
+apart from the camp. There he stooped and picked up
+under each arm what looked like a cylinder of some size
+and went down towards the dam. For a time they could
+see him, but all at once he slipped behind an outcrop of
+rock and they saw him no more.</p>
+<p>Janet turned to eye her companion. Once more her
+face was pale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; she inquired of Mary.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon we&rsquo;d better do as he says. He&rsquo;d be awful
+mad if we didn&rsquo;t. Did you see his eyes when he talked
+to us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if he&ndash;&ndash;he and others are wounded?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Uneasily Mary gazed at the older girl and then down
+at the canyon. On the hillside the men led by her
+father were no longer in sight, somewhere concealed
+among the stones that dotted the earth. But down by
+the stream and now scarcely fifty yards from the white
+stretch of concrete barring the river bed through a tunnel
+in which the water foamed and escaped, the Mexicans
+were clearly visible, their hats bobbing about, their
+guns flinging upward an occasional gleam.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t seem as if anything was going to happen,&rdquo;
+Mary went on in awed tones. &ldquo;Things are so quiet and
+peaceful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still Janet delayed starting the car, divided in feelings
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span>
+between a wish to respect Steele Weir&rsquo;s insistent
+command and a growing fear for his safety. She could
+see nothing of him. Into the shadow of a rock he had
+disappeared and thither she gazed with straining eyes,
+hoping to see again his straight strong figure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, look down there at the dam,&rdquo; Mary said, whose
+eyes had been wandering from, point to point of the
+scene. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s heart gave a quicker beat, then seemed to sink
+in her breast as staring downward she recognized the engineer.
+He had come out all at once from the shade
+cast by a wooden framework. He had with him the burdens
+he had lifted from the ground before the little detached
+stone house at the edge of the camp, and these,
+the cylinders, he placed on the surface of the concrete
+core at the spot where he stood. Then he knelt down,
+struck a match, lighted a cigar&ndash;&ndash;as if any man in his
+senses would stop to smoke in such a situation!&ndash;&ndash;and
+busied himself at some task over the cylinders.</p>
+<p>Only for an instant had he stood erect on the flat top
+of the dam. Apparently he had been unseen by the
+attackers, engaged in picking their footing: and now in
+his crouching position, retired from the upper edge of
+the dam&rsquo;s front as he was, it was very likely that he
+was wholly out of view of the band.</p>
+<p>At last Weir moved his cylinders forward towards this
+edge. Afterwards he straightened up and standing
+hands on hips, smoking his cigar, the tiny crimson glow
+of which rose and fell, he watched the party nearing
+the foot of the white gleaming wall, fifty feet below
+him.</p>
+<p>For Janet the sight was too much. His indifference
+to risk froze her; he appeared to be courting death; and
+she strove to open her lips to send down to him an imploring
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+cry to draw back, but succeeded in uttering only
+a tremulous wail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll shoot him,&rdquo; Mary was saying, &ldquo;oh, they&rsquo;ll
+kill him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A surge of terror swept Janet. Next thing she knew
+she was out of the car and running down the hillside
+among the stones and the stalks of sagebrush, frantic to
+reach him, to pull him out of view of the men beneath.
+Only a single one of them had to cast a glance upward
+and to raise his gun and fire, then he would die. He
+should not die! She should fling herself as a protection
+before him rather than that he should be slain!</p>
+<p>On a sudden a hand reached up from a rock and seized
+her arm, stopping her with a jerk. Then she was
+roughly pulled down beside it. The man was Madden,
+the sheriff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What in hell are you doing?&rdquo; he demanded harshly.
+&ldquo;Have you gone crazy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His grip was not relinquished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But see him! Aren&rsquo;t you men going to help him?
+Are you going to let him be killed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden forced her to her knees, so that she was sheltered
+by the outcrop of stone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any man who can smoke a cigar like that at such
+a time as this knows just what he&rsquo;s doing,&rdquo; was the
+answer. &ldquo;Keep quiet and watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t want to see,&rdquo; she said. But she continued
+to look with fascinated eyes at the lone, calm
+figure on the dam.</p>
+<p>Presently Madden pushed his gun forward over the
+rock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve caught sight of him,&rdquo; he stated.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_THUNDERBOLT' id='CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_THUNDERBOLT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+<h3>THE THUNDERBOLT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The greater part of the number of bandits had
+stopped in a group a few yards from the base of the
+white dam core, though a few stragglers were some way
+behind. Among these Steele Weir made out the figure
+of one whom he recognized as a white man; he whom
+the guard from the spring had mentioned as directing
+the company; and when at a number of exclamations
+from Mexicans who perceived the engineer the man lifted
+his face, Weir saw he was Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>No more than this was needed to show whose the hand
+behind this treacherous conspiracy. Clear, too, it was
+that Burkhardt, determined that no mistake or abandonment
+of the operation should occur, had come to see it
+through in person. Weir could ask nothing better; he
+had one of the plotters caught in the act.</p>
+<p>Apparently orders had been to carry through the first
+part of the diabolical plan of destruction in silence, that
+of gaining control of the dam, for when two or three
+Mexicans flung up rifles to shoot at Weir a sharp word
+from another Mexican, seemingly their leader, had
+checked the volley and shouted to Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>The latter had stopped; he stared for a few seconds
+at the man on the white wall above and finally signaled
+with a wave of his arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come down here,&rdquo; he ordered.</p>
+<p>But Weir made no move to obey. He continued to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+stand motionless, coolly regarding the party beneath.
+His eyes particularly considered two men who carried
+wooden boxes, square and stout, on their shoulders. At
+last he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come down, then you&rsquo;ll learn,&rdquo; Burkhardt shouted
+up, making no effort to hide the enmity in his voice.</p>
+<p>Weir puffed at his cigar, removed it from his lips to
+glance at its glowing end, while the Mexicans stared up
+at him in silence, puzzled by this lone guard who carried
+no rifle, who did not flee away to spread an alarm and
+seek aid, and who so unexpectedly had appeared as if
+anticipating their visit.</p>
+<p>Murmurs broke out. Why were they not allowed to
+shoot him at once in the approved Mexican bandit fashion
+and proceed to their work? If he were not shot at
+once, he yet could escape for aid. The party had to
+ascend the hillside in order to mount to the top of the
+concrete work. Time would be required to place and
+fire their charges of dynamite&ndash;&ndash;and they were eager to
+get at the loot in the buildings above.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kill him,&rdquo; Burkhardt roared suddenly, jerking forth
+his revolver and blazing at the engineer.</p>
+<p>The bullet sang past Weir&rsquo;s head. He did not duck;
+indeed, kept his place calmly while the Mexicans were
+raising their guns, as if to show his supreme contempt
+for their power. But at the instant Burkhardt fired
+again and a dozen rifles blazed he sprang back and
+dropped flat, leaving the deadly missiles to speed harmlessly
+above the dam.</p>
+<p>Raising himself cautiously he seized the end of a fuse
+projecting from one of the canisters and held the crimson
+end of his cigar against it until a sputter of sparks
+showed that it had caught. From this fuse he turned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+to the one in the second can and repeated the operation.</p>
+<p>This was the essence of his plan of defense. With
+guns the defenders on the hillside would be outnumbered
+and probably killed in an attack. The information that
+the assailants were to steal up the canyon, however,
+was the key that would unlock a desperate situation, and
+his mind had grasped the mode and means of defeating
+the enemy.</p>
+<p>With the first shots quiet had returned. The night
+seemed for Weir as peaceful as ever, the earth bathed
+in moonlight, the camp at rest. Only before him there
+was the sputter of the two fuses, one at the right, one at
+the left, as the trains of fire burned towards the holes
+in the canisters. He watched these calculatingly. His
+cigar no longer of service had been cast aside.</p>
+<p>All at once he rose erect again. A few men were starting
+along the wall to climb the hillside, but the greater
+number were gathered about Burkhardt and the Mexican
+leader. Now Weir glanced at them and now at the
+fuses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I warn you to leave this dam and camp, Burkhardt,&rdquo;
+he shouted, when a few seconds had passed. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say
+I didn&rsquo;t give you warning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Every head jerked upward at this surprising reappearance
+and voice. They had supposed him fled, the
+men down there, and were having a last hasty conference,
+doubtless as to the wisdom of now first attacking
+the camp. A grim smile came on the engineer&rsquo;s face.
+Their astonishment was comic&ndash;&ndash;or would have been at a
+moment less perilous and fraught with less grave consequences.</p>
+<p>An oath ripped from Burkhardt&rsquo;s lips. An angry
+curse it might have been at Madden that he had failed
+to arrest and hold the engineer according to plan. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+gestured right and left, yelling something to the men
+around him. He himself began to run towards one end
+of the dam.</p>
+<p>Weir stooped, picked up one of the canisters, blew on
+the fuse now burned so near the hole. Some men perhaps
+at this instant would have quailed for their own
+safety and at the prospect of hurling death among others.
+For death this tin cylinder meant for those below.
+But there was no tremor in Steele Weir&rsquo;s arm or heart.</p>
+<p>He was the man of metal who had won the name &ldquo;Cold
+Steel&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;calm, implacable, of steel-like purpose. With
+such enemies he could hold no other communion than that
+which gave death. For such there was no mercy. By
+the same sort of law that they would execute let them
+suffer&ndash;&ndash;the law of lawlessness and force. Destruction
+they would give, destruction let them gain.</p>
+<p>He straightened. He took a last look at the snapping,
+sparkling, smoldering fuse, then flung his burden full
+down upon the spot where the Mexicans were again pointing
+their guns at him. Swiftly picking up the second
+canister, while bullets whined by, he cast it down after the
+first. A glimpse of startled faces he had, of men attempting
+to scatter from before the huge missiles, then
+he flung himself full length upon the dam.</p>
+<p>Interminably time seemed to stretch itself out as lying
+there he listened, waited, sought to brace himself for
+the impending shock. A quick doubt assailed his mind.
+Had the charges failed.</p>
+<p>All at once the earth seemed rent by a roar that shook
+the very dam. Followed instantly a second volume of
+sound more terrific, more blasting in its quality, more
+dreadful in its power, deafening, stunning, as if the world
+had erupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their dynamite!&rdquo; Weir breathed to himself.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span></div>
+<p>His ear-drums appeared to be broken. His hat was
+gone. His body ached from the tremendous dispersion
+of air. But that he could still hear he discovered when
+through his shocked auditory nerves he distinguished, as
+if far off, faint booming echoes from the hills.</p>
+<p>He got to his knees, finally to his feet. Pressing his
+hands to his head he gazed slowly about. Stones and a
+rain of earth were still falling, as if from a meteoric
+bombardment. About him he perceived sections of woodwork
+shaken to pieces, collapsed.</p>
+<p>Stepping to the edge of the dam he peered downward.
+A vast hole showed in the earth before the wall though
+the wall itself was uninjured and only smeared with a
+layer of soil. Huge rocks lay where there had been none
+before, uprooted and flung aside by the explosion, dispersed
+by the gigantic blast. On the hillside half a dozen
+men were picking themselves up and struggling wildly to
+flee. Nearer, a few other forms lay in the moonlight
+mangled and still, or mangled, and writhing in pain. Of
+all the rest&ndash;&ndash;nothing.</p>
+<p>Almost completely Burkhardt&rsquo;s predatory band had
+been blotted out. Weir&rsquo;s thunderbolt had struck down
+into its very heart, and it had vanished.</p>
+<p>As he turned and walked towards the end of the dam,
+he staggered a little. The sight had shaken even his
+iron nerve.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVII_WEIR_STRIKES_WHILE_THE_IRON_IS_HOT' id='CHAPTER_XXVII_WEIR_STRIKES_WHILE_THE_IRON_IS_HOT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+<h3>WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In his runabout, with Sheriff Madden at his side, and
+followed by Atkinson and half a dozen men for guards
+in two other machines, Weir sped along the road to San
+Mateo. They carried with them Burkhardt, who had
+been found stunned and slightly injured, and two Mexican
+bandits who had been captured. Those of the party
+of attackers yet alive but seriously hurt were being
+treated at camp by Dr. Hosmer, while the young engineers,
+armed and eager, were scouring the mountain
+side for the few Mexicans who had got away.</p>
+<p>It seemed a miracle that Burkhardt had escaped death,
+but the explanation was found no doubt in the fact he
+had started from the spot where the canisters fell and
+so at the moment of explosion was outside the area
+of its full destruction. To Weir the matter went deeper
+than that. Providence appeared to have saved him for
+punishment, for the long term of imprisonment he deserved
+for his crimes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d much rather have him alive than dead,&rdquo; Steele
+had remarked to Madden, when the man was brought up
+from the canyon a prisoner.</p>
+<p>The tremendous thunder-clap of sound from the camp
+had quickened the return of the superintendent and his
+men, already reached and warned by the doctor. More,
+it had startled even the drunken workmen so that when
+some one shouted that the dam had been blown up the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+debauch came to an immediate end, the house was deserted
+and the throng, incited by curiosity and wonder,
+went staggering and running for camp.</p>
+<p>The first of these had arrived and the rest were tailing
+behind for half a mile when Weir and his companions
+set out for town, the blinding headlights of the machines
+scattering on either side of the road the approaching
+workmen. It was not likely many would go
+back to the house when they were told at headquarters
+how narrowly destruction of the works had been averted
+and how their spree had been a move in the plot. Between
+shame at being-duped and drowsiness resulting
+from drink they would, after a look at the hole blown
+in the earth at the base of the dam, want to seek their
+bunk-houses.</p>
+<p>As they sped towards town Weir and Madden rapidly
+made their plans, for the sheriff having witnessed with
+his own eyes the enormity of the plotters&rsquo; guilt was all
+for quick action.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These engineers of yours with us and the other men
+Meyers will bring down can be thrown as a guard around
+the jail,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll swear them all in as deputies.
+With Sorenson and Vorse locked up along with Burkhardt&ndash;&ndash;and
+I&rsquo;ll throw Lucerio, the county attorney, in
+with them on the off chance he&rsquo;s an accomplice&ndash;&ndash;there
+will be high feeling running in San Mateo. As quick as
+I can make arrangements, we&rsquo;ll take them to safe quarters
+elsewhere&ndash;&ndash;to-night if possible, to-morrow at the
+latest, in fast machines. These men have friends, remember.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve Burkhardt handcuffed; it might be well to
+gag him, too, for fear the crowd might make trouble if
+he yelled for help,&rdquo; Weir replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, we&rsquo;ll do that, though I think we can rush him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+into the jail before anyone knows what&rsquo;s happening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the outskirts of town therefore the cars stopped.
+When Burkhardt, who had recovered his senses and with
+them a knowledge of his plight, perceived the sheriff&rsquo;s
+intention his rage burst all bounds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You fool, you muddle-headed blunderer!&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+with a string of oaths. &ldquo;Take these cuffs off!
+You&rsquo;ll lose your job for this trick. When I see Sorenson&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When you see him, you&rsquo;ll see him; and that will be
+inside a cell,&rdquo; was the cool rejoinder. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know
+you were a dynamiter and would-be murderer until to-night,
+but I watched you at work and saw you shoot
+twice at Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll unlock these, I say, here and now!&rdquo; And the
+raging voice went off in a further stream of biting curses.
+&ldquo;Look at me; I&rsquo;m Burkhardt. You&rsquo;re crazy to talk of
+throwing me in jail, with my influence and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your influence be damned,&rdquo; was the imperturbable
+answer. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have a long time in a penitentiary to
+see how much influence you have, if you don&rsquo;t swing
+first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Burkhardt struggled fiercely for a moment against
+the steel bands about his wrists and the men who held
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No crook like this Weir shall ever send me behind
+bars, or any other man put me there. Wait till Sorenson
+and Vorse and Judge Gordon learn what you&rsquo;re trying!
+Wait till they find out you&rsquo;ve double-crossed us
+for this engineer! Wait till Gordon turns me loose with
+a <i>habeas corpus</i>, you&rsquo;ll sweat blood for this night&rsquo;s work,
+Madden!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sheriff shook out the red handkerchief with which
+he expected to bind the prisoner&rsquo;s mouth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll wait for a long time if I wait for Gordon to issue
+the writ,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;Seeing that he&rsquo;s dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dead! You&rsquo;re a liar, you sneaking cur; you can&rsquo;t
+bluff me. And when I&rsquo;m loose, if I don&rsquo;t fill you full
+of lead it will be because&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Burkhardt&rsquo;s explanation was never finished on
+that point, for Madden whipped the rolled handkerchief
+over his mouth and quickly knotted it behind, shutting
+off the flow of seething vituperative speech. If looks
+could slay, those he received from the prisoner&rsquo;s bloodshot
+maddened eyes would have dropped the sheriff in his
+tracks; as it was, they fell harmless against the law officer&rsquo;s
+person.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things have changed sort of sudden, haven&rsquo;t they,
+Burkhardt?&rdquo; Madden stated, sardonically. &ldquo;Never can
+tell what&rsquo;s going to happen between supper and breakfast.
+Here I go out to serve a warrant on Weir, and
+instead I&rsquo;m bringing you in for trying a low I.W.W.
+trick. Surprising cards a fellow sometimes gets on the
+draw.&rdquo; With which he went back to the other car.</p>
+<p>Counting on quickness for the safe delivery of his
+men in jail, Madden did not attempt to approach the
+court house by a side street. On the contrary he drove
+fast down the main way, with the other two cars following
+close, passing without pause through the crowd
+of Mexicans drawn forth in wonder at the booming report
+of the explosion that had sounded from the dam.</p>
+<p>One could see that excitement was at a high pitch.
+With the rumors that all day had been in circulation,
+with later vague tales of the great debauch proceeding
+at the old &rsquo;dobe house half way up the road to camp,
+with the thunder-clap that had burst from the base of
+the mountains coming on top of all, every man, woman
+and child had run to the main street, where those in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span>
+automobiles could see by wagging tongues and gesticulating
+hands that speculation was rife and curiosity
+afire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The talk this evening when I set out for your camp
+was that I expected to bring you in and hang you,&rdquo;
+Madden said dryly, to the engineer. &ldquo;Quite a crowd had
+come to town. Plain to see now that Burkhardt and his
+bunch had started the talk. I shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised
+if there had been trouble had I arrested and locked you
+up. There are a few bad Mexicans around these parts
+that would do anything for money, and it&rsquo;s evident from
+what&rsquo;s happened that Sorenson&rsquo;s gang was ready to go
+the limit. What I&rsquo;m trying to figure out is where these
+fellows Burkhardt had with him up yonder came from.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can tell you. From across the line. I&rsquo;ve seen
+plenty just like them down there,&rdquo; Weir affirmed. &ldquo;Look
+at their hats and clothes&ndash;&ndash;but you&rsquo;ll be able to make
+them talk after a while. However, you won&rsquo;t find any
+of them speaking English. Offer one of them some
+money and a trip home and he&rsquo;ll give you the story quick
+enough, especially after you&rsquo;ve thrown a scare into him.
+We can afford to let one go to get the facts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You better keep out of sight after we have the men
+in the jail. Slip behind the jail to the rear of the yard,
+and when I&rsquo;ve locked them up and told Atkinson what
+to do about keeping the people away from the building,
+I&rsquo;ll join you there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; Weir stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we can slip off and grab Vorse if he&rsquo;s in his
+saloon and then Sorenson before any one knows what&rsquo;s
+happening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right; don&rsquo;t want the game spoiled now. Here
+we are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The cars had arrived at the gate before the courthouse.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
+Here, too, however, the crowd was densest, having
+gathered at the spot as if the roar of powder from
+the camp was an overture to Weir&rsquo;s arrest and appearance.
+It had proved a prelude to his appearance, at any
+rate. The crowd perceived him with Madden and it believed
+him a prisoner even if not handcuffed and marched
+with a pistol at his head.</p>
+<p>A profound silence at first greeted the party as it
+alighted. Madden, assisting Burkhardt to alight, pulled
+the man&rsquo;s broad-brimmed hat low over his eyes to conceal
+his face from the revealing moonlight. A short
+struggle again ensued, but Burkhardt finally yielded to
+the pressure exerted by his companion guards.</p>
+<p>A murmur of astonishment ran over the surrounding
+throng, each instant being augmented by the voices of
+others running to the place. Not only did it appear
+that the engineer was under arrest, but likewise others,&ndash;&ndash;a
+handcuffed, gagged man and two sullen Mexicans,
+strangers to the community. Yet a number of the onlookers,
+possibly men with Vorse&rsquo;s or Sorenson&rsquo;s money
+in their pockets, shouted as the new-comers moved
+through the press:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Killer, murderer! Hang him, shoot him!&rdquo; And
+more voices began to join in the cry.</p>
+<p>Clearly the intent was to stir up feeling in the crowd
+to a point where action against Weir would seem a
+spontaneous outbreak. Even women joined in the cry;
+curses followed; fists were shaken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open up the way,&rdquo; Madden ordered, as a surge of
+the crowd threatened to surround him and his party.
+In his hand, as if to emphasize his command, a six-shooter
+swung into view, sweeping to and fro and menacing
+the press of people.</p>
+<p>The frightened men directly before the party struggled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+to get out of line of the weapon, yielding suddenly
+a clear passage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick! Around the courthouse and back to the
+jail,&rdquo; Madden exclaimed to those with him.</p>
+<p>Pushing forward from the moonlight into the shade
+cast by the cottonwoods, they dragged their prisoners
+past the first building towards the low stout stone structure
+at the rear, half-illuminated and half-concealed
+by the patches of light and shade falling from the
+trees.</p>
+<p>A minute later Madden whipped out his keys.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two men remain here at the door and don&rsquo;t be afraid
+to show your rifles to that bunch,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;In with
+you, Burkhardt; there&rsquo;s a nice soft stone floor to sleep
+on. Keep those Mexican camp-burners covered, Atkinson,
+till I get the cells open. You, Weir, slip on back
+there in the shadow and wait for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer had taken but three steps into the gloom
+along the outside jail wall, glancing about to avoid any
+curious straggler of the crowd already hurrying around
+the court house towards the jail, when he heard a call.
+In the advance was a slim well-dressed Mexican, full in
+the moonlight and very important of bearing. The call
+was directed not at Weir but at Madden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got him all right, sheriff?&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. He came in with me,&rdquo; was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But who are these others?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Step inside and I&rsquo;ll tell you, Lucerio.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The county attorney joined the sheriff, peered inside
+the doorway and hesitated. It was dark within; no light
+showed except a patch of moonlight at the far side of
+the building that fell through a barred window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go right in,&rdquo; Madden exclaimed. And laying hand
+on the other&rsquo;s shoulder he forced him ahead. The door
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span>
+closed after the pair. Before the doorway there remained,
+however, the pair of young engineers, rifle in
+hand, whose threatening bearing and glistening gun-barrels
+were apparent even in the patchy light dropping
+through the boughs. At a distance of about ten feet off
+the crowd of people halted, staring eagerly at the jail
+building, showing their white teeth as they carried on
+low talk in Spanish and awaiting with impatience the return
+of Madden and Lucerio that they might flood them
+with questions.</p>
+<p>Weir remained to see no more, for the increasing crowd
+pushed out further and further on the flanks, a circumstance
+that would eventually result in his discovery. So
+slipping to the rear of the jail and keeping well in the
+shadows he gained the fence. This he leaped and, lighting
+a cigarette, examined his pistol, then proceeded to
+smoke calmly until Madden arrived.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hurry; slip away,&rdquo; the latter said. &ldquo;They wondered
+what the devil I dodged back here for and are coming,
+curious as cats.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two men glided away, keeping well in shadows
+until they gained the side street and thence passed to
+the main thoroughfare.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What if Sorenson and Vorse are somewhere in that
+crowd?&rdquo; Madden asked. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re likely to be, expecting
+your arrest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll have to wait till they leave it. But I
+don&rsquo;t believe they&rsquo;re there. They won&rsquo;t want to show
+their hand even by being on the scene.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Probably they&rsquo;ve found out Gordon is dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Probably. But on the other side, they suppose now
+that the dam has been destroyed and that I&rsquo;m locked
+up,&rdquo; Weir said. &ldquo;Still, I&rsquo;ll guess that if they&rsquo;ve learned
+Pollock and Martinez and I were at Gordon&rsquo;s all the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span>
+afternoon, and he committed suicide, they&rsquo;ll be worrying
+some just the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden glanced at his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe we&rsquo;ll bring Vorse in&ndash;&ndash;alive,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the way I want him, and Sorenson, too. I
+want to see them go up for life, but if not that then
+hanged. But a life term for both, along with Burkhardt,
+is my choice. I want them to suffer as my father
+suffered. Only worse. Dying&rsquo;s too easy for them. Let
+them have hell here for awhile before they get it on the
+other side. Let the iron bars and stone walls kill them.
+I hope they live for twenty years to gnaw out their
+hearts every day and every night behind steel doors.
+That wouldn&rsquo;t half pay what they owe. But if they
+finish in prison, knowing there&rsquo;s no hope, knowing I&rsquo;ve
+put them there for what they did to my father and Jim
+Dent, knowing that all the money and cattle they stole
+had slipped through their fingers, that they&rsquo;ve lost all
+they gained and more, that their curses and crimes are
+crushing their own heads, why, that will help. And
+Sorenson&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson there every day knowing his son lies
+a helpless cripple, without the money that has been piled
+up for him! I couldn&rsquo;t invent a worse hell for him.
+And that&rsquo;s the hell he&rsquo;s going to have!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though a man not easy to move, Madden at Weir&rsquo;s
+cold implacable expression of hatred shivered slightly.
+Sorenson and his accomplices would be lucky indeed if
+they died by the rope.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVIII_VORSE' id='CHAPTER_XXVIII_VORSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+<h3>VORSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Across the main street the two men walked, wearing
+their hats low and making no answer to shouted questions
+of those hurrying to the courthouse yard. Already
+the grounds about the court house and the street
+in front were jammed with eager, excited Mexicans,
+thrilled with an expectation of something to happen,
+though they knew not exactly what. The murderer, the
+killer, they have taken the killer, was the constant statement
+tossed from mouth to mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But not the killer they think,&rdquo; Madden said, in a low
+aside to Weir as they moved ahead on their errand.</p>
+<p>The pair were now advancing toward the saloon, along
+the opposite side of the street where a slight shadow afforded
+them concealment. By the time they came opposite
+the building they had escaped altogether from the
+crowd, though looking thither over shoulder they could
+see the black press of people in the moonlight at the public
+building; and here the street was empty except for a
+few belated women and children running toward the
+assemblage.</p>
+<p>Madden&rsquo;s hand suddenly gripped the engineer&rsquo;s arm as
+they were about to step forth from the shadow to cross
+the street to the saloon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There he is,&rdquo; the sheriff whispered.</p>
+<p>Vorse had pushed open the slatted door of his place
+and stepped outside. In the moonlight his figure and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
+face were clearly visible: his thin whip-cord body and
+predatory face, and bald head as shiny and hard as a
+fish-scale. He wore no coat, while his vest hung unbuttoned
+and open as usual. About his waist was an
+ammunition belt carrying a holster, as if he were prepared
+for action.</p>
+<p>Thus he stood for a time, hands on hips, motionless,
+his cruel hatchet-like face directed towards the scene
+further along the street. Presently a man came running
+to him, Miguel, his bartender, who had been one
+of the two men serving out whiskey to the workmen at
+the old adobe house and who at the break-up of the
+spree had hastened back to town to report to his employer.
+Now, it seemed, he had fresher news to give.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is the engineer, for a certainty,&rdquo; he exclaimed
+panting, as he stopped before Vorse. &ldquo;The sheriff arrested
+him and he now lies in jail there. It is said he
+fought and tried to shoot Madden, but that the sheriff
+was too quick and shot the gun out of his hand. It is
+said also that the dam is blown into a million little
+stones, but men are riding there on horses to see for
+themselves. They will soon return. Anyway a fight
+there was up there undoubtedly, for Madden brought in
+not only the engineer but three other men, bound and
+handcuffed and struggling furiously, trying to strike and
+bite the crowd like mad dogs. From time to time the
+sheriff had to beat them on the heads with his pistol,
+especially the engineer, who is the worst. I did not see
+them, but those who did said their faces were streaming
+with blood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. Go find Jos&eacute; Molina and &lsquo;Silver&rsquo;
+Leon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are they not up in the hills with their bands of
+sheep?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No. They are here. Look around till you find
+them; then send them to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That means something lively to happen, eh?&rdquo; Miguel
+said with a laugh.</p>
+<p>He did not wait, however, for an answer, but set off
+at once for the court house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope Meyers shows up soon with more men,&rdquo; Madden
+said to Weir. &ldquo;Those two sheepherders of Vorse&rsquo;s
+are a pair of snakes; he always hires that kind; and they
+probably have some fellows with them like themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Meyers is on the way with twenty men or so by this
+time. They had to come in wagons, as we had the cars.
+Atkinson ought to be able to stand off the crowd
+with the half dozen boys he has until the others arrive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While they had conducted this brief exchange of
+opinions they had kept their gaze on the saloon-keeper,
+who continued to stand before his door. The cold and
+merciless character of the man was never more revealed
+than now as he waited for his hired assassins to come
+to receive orders. Possessing already a full knowledge
+of the plot, Weir and Madden were able to guess what
+culmination was now contemplated and measure the true
+depth of the conspirators&rsquo; infamy. The sheriff especially
+boiled with inward wrath that they should expect
+to make him not only a dupe but a tool in their
+crime.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s clear they never intended you should come to trial
+when arrested,&rdquo; he said to his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not. That isn&rsquo;t the way they play the
+game. And I suppose Vorse there imagines the cards
+are all falling his way at this moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s going in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good. Now then!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></div>
+<p>Weir struck off across the street, striding forward at
+a pace Madden found it difficult to keep. As they neared
+the door, Weir loosened the gun in his holster.</p>
+<p>In this action the sheriff imitated him and then changing
+his mind drew the weapon itself. Plain man that he
+was, he was an instinctive judge of character; he had
+encountered men of Vorse&rsquo;s type before, less shrewd but
+equally savage; their nature was to fight, not surrender;
+their way was to kill or be killed in the final issue. He
+anticipated no arrest.</p>
+<p>He felt no necessity, however, to express this view to
+the engineer, who had proved himself in the time he had
+been at San Mateo wholly competent to deal with any
+situation that arose. Moreover, while Vorse had had a
+reputation of being a quick shot in the past, he was
+confident Weir was his master.</p>
+<p>With a quiet movement the engineer pushed open the
+door and stepped into the saloon. Madden following
+him had allowed the slatted door to swing shut again and
+the sound of its hinges caused Vorse, who was just starting
+away from the bar, to turn about. In his hand was
+a tray holding a bottle of whiskey, a bottle of mineral
+water and glasses, which apparently he had just lifted
+up.</p>
+<p>For a space of ten seconds or so he remained unmoving,
+the tray in his hand and his eyes regarding the
+visitors fixedly. Behind him in the rear of the saloon
+a second man had sprung up from the table where he
+sat, but after that first startled action he, too, had not
+stirred. The man was Sorenson.</p>
+<p>With Madden at his side and with a grim smile on his
+lips Weir walked slowly towards Vorse. In his tread
+there was something of the quality of a tiger&rsquo;s, the light,
+deliberate, poised advance, the easy and dangerous movement
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
+of body, the effortless glide of a powerful animal
+ready to spring and strike. His hands swung idly at
+his sides, but that did not mean they would not be swift
+once they responded to the call of the brain that controlled
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You gentlemen were just about to celebrate my downfall,
+I perceive, by pouring a libation,&rdquo; Weir said.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let me interrupt. Only I must request you to
+conduct the proceedings there where you&rsquo;re standing,
+Vorse, instead of at the rear of the room: Madden and
+I wish a good view of the ceremony. If Mr. Sorenson
+will be so agreeable as to step forward, you may go
+ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson did not join Vorse, but instead he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why haven&rsquo;t you locked up your prisoner, Madden?&rdquo;
+he demanded harshly. &ldquo;And you&rsquo;re letting him keep his
+gun. Don&rsquo;t you know enough to disarm a murderer and
+throw him into jail when you arrest him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t arrested him yet,&rdquo; was the sheriff&rsquo;s answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, do it then. You have the warrant for the
+scoundrel. Perhaps you haven&rsquo;t heard he almost killed
+my boy Ed last night&ndash;&ndash;and you&rsquo;re allowing him to walk
+around with you as if he were a bosom friend. Do your
+duty, or we&rsquo;ll get a sheriff who will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;m here, to do my duty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t have to bring this man here to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I decided to bring him, however.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From Vorse had come not a word. Only his gleaming
+evil eyes continued to rest on the two men without wink
+or change. For him explanations were unnecessary; he
+had divined instantly that somewhere, somehow the plotters&rsquo;
+plans had gone awry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you know that Gordon is dead?&rdquo; Weir asked, all
+at once.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span></div>
+<p>Vorse lowered the tray to the bar and ran the tip of
+his tongue over his lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we didn&rsquo;t know it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He deeded his property over this evening and then
+swallowed poison,&rdquo; the engineer stated. &ldquo;He saw the
+game was up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t make me believe your lies,&rdquo; came sneering
+from Sorenson. &ldquo;And you shall pay, you and that girl,
+for every broken bone in my boy&rsquo;s body. I&rsquo;ll spend my
+last dollar for that if necessary. Madden, do your duty
+and lock him up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sheriff said nothing, but lifted his gun a little.
+Vorse by a slight movement of his body had edged from
+the bar as if to gain freedom for action.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The game&rsquo;s up for you men too,&rdquo; Weir said.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve murdered and robbed and swindled in this country
+long enough; I&rsquo;ve got the proof and I&rsquo;m going to remove
+you from this community. It&rsquo;s not I who will be
+arrested. You killed Jim Dent after cleaning him out
+at cards and then made my father believe he was guilty
+of the crime. All I fear is that the court will hang you
+instead of sending you up for life; that would be too good
+for you. I want your crooked souls to die a thousand
+deaths within stone walls before you die in body. The
+game&rsquo;s up, I say. I&rsquo;ve Saurez&rsquo; deposition and I&rsquo;ve the
+man who was the boy looking in the back door there
+that day thirty years ago and saw you shoot Dent, and
+he&rsquo;ll go on the stand against you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A stillness so profound that one could hear the tiny
+insects hovering about the lamps succeeded this statement.
+If words had not been enough, Weir&rsquo;s cold, harsh
+face would have removed the men&rsquo;s last hope, for on it
+was not a single trace of relenting. A stone could have
+been no flintier.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Vorse inquired softly.</p>
+<p>His arched bony nose appeared thinner and more
+hawk-like. His lips were compressed in a white scornful
+smile, while his eyelids now drooped until but slits
+of light showed from the orbs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you may be interested to know Burkhardt and
+some of the Mexicans he hired are now locked up in
+jail; the rest, or nearly all, are dead,&rdquo; Weir continued,
+with slow distinctness. &ldquo;Your little scheme to blow up
+the dam and burn the camp failed. We caught Burkhardt
+at the spot leading the gang. Your plot to make
+the workmen drunk and leave the dam unprotected
+worked well enough so far as that part was concerned,
+but a keg of powder dropped on your bunch of imported
+bandits ended that part of the show. And we have
+Burkhardt! You gentlemen are going to join him in the
+jail, where we shall give you all the care and attention
+you deserve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Vorse turned his head about towards Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you hear?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madden, you&rsquo;ve too much sense to believe all this
+trumped-up libel!&rdquo; Sorenson exclaimed furiously.
+&ldquo;About us, respected leaders of this town! Arrest the
+blackguard!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even facing assured proof of his complicity and guilt,
+the cattleman still believed in the power of his wealth
+and influence, in his ability to browbeat opponents, to
+command the man he had elected to office, to dominate
+and ruthlessly crush by sheer will power all resistance,
+as he had done for years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I take no orders from you,&rdquo; the sheriff replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I suppose I can empty the till and lock the safe
+before going?&rdquo; Vorse questioned.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No. Keep in front of the bar where you are,&rdquo; the
+sheriff commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And have everything stolen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your bar-keeper will be back presently. He will
+look after things for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say Burkhardt is locked up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That will hurt his pride,&rdquo; Vorse laughed. &ldquo;He always
+swore that no one should put him behind bars. He
+wouldn&rsquo;t have minded so much finishing in a gun-fight,
+but to serve a term in prison would surely go against the
+grain with Burk. Though I think with Sorenson&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s eyes had never left the speaker. Through the
+other&rsquo;s inconsequential talk and apparently careless acceptance
+of the fact of arrest the engineer had noted the
+tense gathering of the man&rsquo;s body.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Put your hands up,&rdquo; he interrupted at this point.</p>
+<p>Vorse had uttered no following word after speaking
+Sorenson&rsquo;s name; his voice terminated abruptly. At the
+same instant his right hand flew to his holster and
+whipped out his gun. It was the advantageous time for
+which he had waited, for Madden&rsquo;s look which had been
+moving back and forth from Vorse to Sorenson so as to
+cover both had passed to the latter. And Weir&rsquo;s weapon
+was undrawn.</p>
+<p>But if Vorse drew fast, the engineer&rsquo;s motion was like
+a flash of light. His weapon leaped on a level with the
+other&rsquo;s breast. The report sounded a second before that
+of Vorse&rsquo;s and three before Madden&rsquo;s, who also had
+fired.</p>
+<p>Then, if ever, Steele Weir had displayed his amazing
+speed in beating an enemy to his gun, for Vorse had indeed
+been quick, keyed by a knowledge that for him this
+meant imprisonment or freedom, a slow death or liberty.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span></div>
+<p>For a minute he stood half crouching as he had been
+at the instant of shooting, his eyes glaring balefully at
+his enemy and the thin cruel smile on his lips, while the
+two men in front stood warily waiting with weapons extended.
+Then Vorse clutched at his breast, muttered
+thickly and toppled over full length on the floor.</p>
+<p>The sharp pungent smell of powder smoke mingled
+with the reek of liquor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s dead,&rdquo; Madden said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you hit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. His bullet went past my hip; he never got his
+gun up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden glanced about towards the rear of the room.
+A command for Sorenson to stop broke from his lips.
+Next he fired. And Weir swinging his look that way
+saw Sorenson&rsquo;s form, untouched by the bullet, vanishing
+through the rear door into the night. Using the minute
+that the two men&rsquo;s surveillance had been lifted he had
+escaped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hard luck when we had him,&rdquo; Weir growled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t get away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure. And he&rsquo;s armed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll strike for home to get his car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or to the office for money,&rdquo; Weir exclaimed.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIX_THE_FOURTH_MAN' id='CHAPTER_XXIX_THE_FOURTH_MAN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+<h3>THE FOURTH MAN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A last look Steele Weir had at the dead man on the
+floor before he turned to go in search of Sorenson. Not
+so astute or crafty as Judge Gordon, nor so intelligent
+as Sorenson, nor so belligerent as Burkhardt, he had
+been as rapacious and infinitely more cool-minded than
+any of the three. If anything, he was the one of them all
+to proceed to a crime, whether fraud or murder, in sheer
+cold blood and by natural craving. No uneasy conscience
+would have ever disturbed his rest: no remorse or
+pity ever stirred in his breast. He was the human counterpart
+of a bird of prey.</p>
+<p>Well, he was dead now. Three of the quartette who
+had been joined by avarice and lawless actions were taken
+care of&ndash;&ndash;Burkhardt a prisoner, Gordon dead by self-administered
+poison, Vorse by bullets. Almost did Steele
+Weir feel himself an embodiment of Fate, clipping the
+strands of these men&rsquo;s power and lives as with shears.
+Sorenson alone remained to be dealt with and his freedom
+should be short.</p>
+<p>Beckoning Madden, he went swiftly through the door
+where the cattleman had leaped into the shadows. Where
+the gloom ceased and the space behind the row of store
+buildings was clear in the moonlight, nothing was to be
+seen. Naturally the man had kept within black shade
+in his flight.</p>
+<p>When they reached the rear of the cattle company&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+office building, they peered in through its barred back
+windows, but all was dark inside the structure so far as
+they could determine. To all appearance Sorenson had
+not stopped here: it was quiet, gloomy, untenanted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have to try his home now,&rdquo; the sheriff stated.
+&ldquo;If we don&rsquo;t find him there, we&rsquo;ll set the telephones going
+to warn all the ranches and towns around to be on
+the lookout and either to stop or report him if he shows
+up. He hasn&rsquo;t start enough to get away now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They hastened on along the line of buildings until they
+reached a side street. But when they had proceeded a
+short way, Weir stopped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not satisfied about the office,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Suppose
+you go on to his house and I&rsquo;ll return for a look inside
+from the front. If you fail to find him join me at Martinez&rsquo;
+office, where no one is likely to be around and we
+can then lay further plans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That suits,&rdquo; Madden responded, and set off alone.</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s alert brain had been turning over the possibilities
+of Sorenson&rsquo;s course. Rather by pursuing what
+would be the man&rsquo;s line of reasoning than by depending
+on chance, he had come to the quick decision to turn
+back once again to the office. Sorenson would so act as
+would best serve his immediate escape and that of the future.</p>
+<p>Would he expect the sheriff and the engineer to look
+for him to flee by the speediest means, an automobile,
+and to the natural avenue of escape, the railroad? Yes.
+Therefore on that expectation he would adopt another
+way to throw off pursuit. And perilous as a delay would
+be in getting away from San Mateo, yet he must risk the
+few minutes necessary to get money. For to fly with
+pockets empty meant eventual, certain capture. Money
+a fugitive from justice must possess above everything
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+in order to possess wings; and no one would know that
+better than Sorenson.</p>
+<p>Though Madden and he had seen no light in the office
+building, the cattleman nevertheless might have been
+within. If he had been in the vault, he could safely have
+lighted a candle without their perceiving its beams; and
+though the safe was modern it probably had no time lock.
+Sorenson could unlock it with a few twirls of the combination,
+stuff his pockets with currency and negotiable
+paper to the amount of thousands and then slip away.</p>
+<p>Fortunately the moonlight was to Weir&rsquo;s advantage.
+He quickened his steps, passed round the corner into
+the main street and moved towards the building. For
+him the crowd at the court house at that moment had
+no interest; one person, and one person alone, commanded
+his thoughts.</p>
+<p>How correct had been his logic&ndash;&ndash;logic not unmixed
+with intuition, perhaps&ndash;&ndash;appeared when he was yet some
+fifty yards away from the door he sought. A tall bulky
+figure suddenly stepped forth from the building and instantly
+ran across the street and lost itself in the shifting,
+jostling crowd that was half-disclosed, half-concealed
+by the broken shadows of the moonlit trees.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir proceeded to a spot near the office and
+halted. His first impulse to rush after Sorenson had
+been promptly suppressed, as cooler judgment ruled. To
+seek his quarry in that throng would be labor wasted,
+while to reveal his identity would be to court a disastrous
+interference with the business at hand. From where he
+stood he should much better be able to see Sorenson when
+he did emerge, unless he chose to remain in the crowd or
+steal away at the rear of the court house yard, a chance
+Weir must take.</p>
+<p>Five minutes passed. The restless, talkative Mexicans
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span>
+continued to swarm and buzz with excitement, ceaselessly
+moving about, forming and reforming in groups, agitatedly
+repeating newer and wilder rumors concerning
+events. Despite Weir&rsquo;s intent watch for Sorenson, the
+engineer could not but observe the mob&rsquo;s manifestations,
+observe them with sardonic humor. For their ebullition
+of the present would be nothing to what it would be if
+they learned he stood across the street, uncaged, unfettered,
+free and armed, a &ldquo;gun-man&rdquo; loose instead of
+a &ldquo;gun-man&rdquo; in jail.</p>
+<p>All at once Weir noted out of the tail of his eye a
+slight stir among a number of horses standing with reins
+a-trail before a store a little way down the street. The
+horses were partly in the light, partly in the shadow,
+so that all he could see was that one or two of them
+had jerked aside quickly, then resumed their listless postures.</p>
+<p>He was about to withdraw his eyes when he saw a man
+swing upon the back of one of them and start off at
+an easy canter. Weir sprang towards the spot at a run.
+That big figure could only be Sorenson&rsquo;s, for no Mexican
+he had ever seen in San Mateo could match it. And the
+plan of escape showed the other&rsquo;s craft in an emergency;
+gradually working his way through the crowd he had at
+last gained the protective shadow of the building on that
+side of the street and slipped along in it until he reached
+the horses.</p>
+<p>Doubtless the man had conceived the plan at the instant
+he had stepped from his office, sweeping the street
+by one gauging look. With the whole town assembled
+at the court house, his departure was little likely to be
+noted by the Mexicans, while Madden and Weir would
+never suspect him of riding off on a horse, or suspect too
+late. Indeed, he rode at first as if in no great haste,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+but as he turned his mount into a narrow by-way, more
+a lane than a street that disappeared between two mud
+walls, Weir saw him strike his heels into the pony&rsquo;s
+flanks.</p>
+<p>But for the startled movement of the nearby horses
+when Sorenson took stirrup, Weir would not have looked
+that way. He might possibly have seen the horseman
+start off, but that is not certain. He unquestionably
+would have supposed him an ordinary rider if he had not
+noticed the man until he reached the mouth of the lane.</p>
+<p>Meantime the engineer had made his best speed to the
+line of waiting horses. Slowing to a walk so as not to
+scare them, though as he discovered on examination most
+of them looked too bony and spiritless for that, he approached
+and carefully inspected the bunch. He took
+his time in the selection: the more haste in choosing a
+mount might prove less speed in the end. He tightened
+the saddle-girths and ran a finger along the head straps
+of the bridle of the horse picked to judge their fit, receiving
+a snap from the pony&rsquo;s teeth, which gave him
+satisfaction. Not only was this animal a wiry, tough-looking
+little beast, but he had life.</p>
+<p>Up into the saddle Weir went, followed Sorenson&rsquo;s
+line to the lane, down which he swung. Coming out into
+the next street, he pursued it to an intersecting street,
+and there galloped for the edge of town without trying
+to guess the way taken by his enemy. Once he reached
+the open fields he would quickly get sight of the man racing
+away somewhere on the mesa.</p>
+<p>Evidently the quarry he pursued had not taken so
+direct a course as Weir, for when the latter at length
+came forth where he could have a wide view he perceived
+the horseman a quarter of a mile off and further east,
+galloping south. The engineer at once raced thither to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span>
+gain the same road and turning into it made for Sorenson.</p>
+<p>Thus the two men sped away from San Mateo. The
+wire fences and the adobe houses of Mexicans owning
+little farms adjoining soon ceased. The wide mesa lay
+on either side. Though a quarter of a mile had separated
+the men when Weir first observed the other, the distance
+between had been increased while the engineer was
+gaining the road, until now the interval was almost twice
+as great.</p>
+<p>Weir guessed the fleeing man&rsquo;s plan. Instead of seeking
+the railroad for the present, he would disappear in
+the mountains, where with the assistance of some loyal
+employee, cowman or sheepherder, he would lie hid until
+the first fury of the hunt had subsided. Possibly his
+bold brain even conceived the idea of again returning to
+San Mateo some dark night soon and further looting the
+office, vigilance being relaxed.</p>
+<p>In any case, he would expect to remain safe from pursuit
+in a mountain fastness until either on horseback or
+by automobile he could work his way out of the country.
+With what he had unquestionably carried off he would
+not be a poor man. In some spot far away he could
+assume a new name, start in business and later be joined
+by his wife and crippled son.</p>
+<p>Alas, for those plans, arising like mushrooms on the
+ruins of his life! Behind him followed the same inexorable
+antagonist who so swiftly had brought everything
+crashing about his head. Possibly Sorenson once out of
+the town had failed to look back; possibly looking back
+he had been unable to distinguish against the blur of
+houses and trees the horseman galloping in the moonlight
+along the same road.</p>
+<p>But all at once when they were two miles away from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+San Mateo he discovered Weir, who had been gradually
+cutting down the space between until now again he was
+within a quarter of a mile of his quarry. Sorenson had
+been riding rapidly but not hard; he now beat his horse
+to a furious gallop,&ndash;&ndash;a good pony, too, from its speed,
+showing that the banker as well as Weir had picked his
+mount with care.</p>
+<p>Weir did not urge his horse to a similar pace, only
+maintaining a fast steady gallop that kept the other in
+sight though the space between again widened. Apparently
+Sorenson realized the folly of attempting to outrun,
+his pursuer at once, for he soon dropped back into
+a regular, mile-eating gallop. Gradually in turn Weir
+crept up to his old position.</p>
+<p>To each the only sound was that of drumming hoof-beats.
+In front rode the fleeing man&ndash;&ndash;dethroned leader
+and criminal and murderer. Behind relentlessly came
+his Nemesis, the son of the man whom he had deceived
+and damned to mental suffering. All about them as they
+flew along was the silent, moonlit, sage-covered mesa.
+At their right towered the misty, unchanging peaks, as if
+watching unmoved this strange race of two human beings.
+A strange race, in truth,&ndash;&ndash;a race where vengeance rode.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXX_THE_VICTOR' id='CHAPTER_XXX_THE_VICTOR'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+<h3>THE VICTOR</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Ten miles the two men had gone when Sorenson&rsquo;s horse
+began to fail. The rider&rsquo;s weight was proving too much
+for the sturdy little animal and though he strove to maintain
+his speed the strain told on lungs and legs. Weir
+had reduced the distance first to three hundred yards,
+then to two hundred, and at last but a hundred separated
+him from the man and horse ahead.</p>
+<p>The hard chase indeed was beginning to tell on his
+own mount. Flecks of foam flew from its lips; its neck
+was wet with sweat; the whistle of its breath was audible
+to the engineer at every stride. For as both men had
+realized that now the end could not be far off, they had
+pushed their horses to faster and faster galloping.</p>
+<p>On a sudden Sorenson swung his animal into a dim
+trail leading from the main road skirting the mountain
+range to the base of the mountains themselves. The first
+slopes were but a mile away, covered with a scattering
+growth of pinyon pines. Just in front, too, for which
+the trail seemed pointing, was a dark ravine filled with
+brush that rose to the denser timber above. This was
+the fugitive&rsquo;s goal. Once he could fling himself from
+the saddle and plunge into the undergrowth he would
+be safe from his pursuer.</p>
+<p>The two ponies struggled on with exhausted leaps.
+Weir had reduced the interval to seventy-five yards by
+the time half the distance was covered and to fifty as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+they drew near the mouth of the ravine. He measured
+his gain and the remaining two hundred yards or so with
+savage eyes, then drew his revolver. He desired to take
+Sorenson unharmed. But rather than that the man
+should escape he would kill him.</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s horse stumbled, but a jerk of the reins
+saved him and kept him moving on. The engineer struck
+his own pony fiercely on the flank, which produced a tremendous
+effort in the striving beast that brought it
+within thirty paces or so of Sorenson. That, however,
+was the best it could do, labor as it would. Its knees
+were trembling at every stride, its head swinging heavily.</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s horse suddenly went to its knees. But the
+man leaping clear took the ground on his feet and instantly
+set off at a run for the line of brush in the draw
+some seventy or eighty paces away. A last spurt Weir&rsquo;s
+pony made, bringing his rider to within thirty yards of
+the cattleman, who glancing over his shoulder halted,
+swung about, fired a shot and again started to run.</p>
+<p>The pony under Weir came to an abrupt stop, shaking.
+He was done, whether from exhaustion or the bullet
+the engineer did not wait to see. Flinging himself out
+the saddle he raced after his man, taking the rough trail
+leading up the slope in swift strides. On foot Sorenson
+was no match for him. But the latter had the start; he
+was now almost within reach of the thick screen of
+bushes; and he bent every energy to make the ambuscade.</p>
+<p>Still running, Weir flung up his gun and fired. Close
+the shot must have gone to Sorenson, so close as to
+inject into the man&rsquo;s mind recollection of his pursuer&rsquo;s
+accuracy and a fear of a bullet in his back, for when
+within twenty feet of the bushes he dropped behind a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+small bowlder, whence he fired twice at Weir but without
+striking his mark.</p>
+<p>Neither man after the furious ride and the concluding
+run on foot was fit for sure marksmanship. This Weir
+realized, so stopped where he was some forty feet off
+from Sorenson&rsquo;s stone in order to regain his breath and
+calm his nerves. Of the cattleman he could see nothing;
+the man crouched low out of sight, perhaps reloading his
+weapon, perhaps steeling himself for a dash across that
+small moonlit space that separated him from safety, or
+perhaps preparing for a quick upward spring and a
+fresh volley directed at his foe.</p>
+<p>It may be questioned if in his heart Sorenson was not
+almost disposed to fight the matter out. He was no
+coward; his original hatred for the engineer had by
+recent events been swelled to a diabolical desire to kill;
+and now even if he, Sorenson, succeeded in slipping away,
+his whereabouts would be known unless he destroyed the
+man. Safety demanded that he not only escape but
+escape without this witness.</p>
+<p>Weir had not sought cover. He stood upright, his
+revolver ready, trusting to have an advantage in his
+speed when it came to an exchange of shots. Then he
+began an advance, a slow noiseless circling advance that
+at the same time of taking him closer to his enemy
+brought him round on his flank.</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s hand and pistol appeared and half his face
+while three shots rattled from his gun, two at the spot
+where Weir had been and one at him in his new position,
+which the hiding man had immediately located. The last
+shot ticked the engineer&rsquo;s sleeve. In return Weir fired
+twice, the first bullet striking the rock and ricocheting
+off with a loud whine, while the second struck the pistol
+from Sorenson&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span></div>
+<p>Instantly Weir sprang forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Show yourself,&rdquo; he ordered. And the kneeling fugitive,
+disarmed, gripping his bleeding hand, sullenly arose
+to his feet. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve led me a chase, but I have you at
+last,&rdquo; the engineer continued. &ldquo;Now you&rsquo;re going back
+to San Mateo and jail. Walk towards the horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson cast one bitter glance at the thicket in the
+ravine; by only the little matter of a few yards he had
+failed to gain liberty. For Weir his visage when he
+looked around again was never more hard, hostile, full
+of undying hatred. Though balked, he was not submissive,
+and was the kind who kept his animosity to the end.
+Then he started off towards the horses, his own which
+had staggered to its feet again and Weir&rsquo;s, both standing
+with hanging heads and heaving, quivering sides.</p>
+<p>All at once the cattleman halted and faced about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Most men have a price, and I suppose you have
+yours,&rdquo; he said, with forced calmness. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m ready to
+pay it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to pay it,&rdquo; was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much will you ask to let me go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you offered me ten million, which you haven&rsquo;t got,
+I wouldn&rsquo;t accept it,&rdquo; Weir said, harshly. &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t
+enough money in the world to buy your liberty. You&rsquo;re
+going back to San Mateo, and from there to the penitentiary
+or to the gallows, one or the other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will be neither,&rdquo; Sorenson stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re mistaken, but I shall not argue the matter
+with you. Keep walking towards the horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s lips became compressed. He glanced down
+at his bleeding hand, shook the blood from his fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I stay here,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>Weir went a step nearer and thrust his face forward,
+jaw set, eyes smoldering.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on, I say,&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>But the other did not retreat before him or indeed
+move at all. A sneer lifted his gray mustache.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a gun; you&rsquo;re a killer; here I am unarmed
+and in your power,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You intend to take me
+in; I propose to stay here. If I go to San Mateo, it
+will be as a dead man. I&rsquo;ll see whether you have the
+nerve to shoot me down where I now stand. If you have,
+go to it. You can then take my body to town, but I&rsquo;ll
+not have paid the price you name and I&rsquo;ll have the
+satisfaction of knowing I beat you at the last&ndash;&ndash;in that,
+at least. Your bragging will be empty. Start your
+shooting any time you please.&rdquo; The tone spoke complete
+contempt.</p>
+<p>Weir said nothing. The defiance, the supreme audacity
+of this assertion, coming so unexpectedly, surprised
+him and left him at a loss. He would not kill an unresisting
+man, even Sorenson, his worst enemy. Sorenson
+in his place probably would not have hesitated to do
+so, for he had no fine scruples in such matters; but for
+Steele Weir the thing was no more possible than striking
+a woman or a child.</p>
+<p>It was not a question of nerve, as the other had stated.
+It was a test of brutality and consciencelessness. To
+shoot a man while escaping is one thing; to kill him
+while a prisoner, however contemptuous and brazen, was
+another. But there are means other than bullets for
+handling obstinate prisoners.</p>
+<p>Weir shifted his weapon so as to grasp the barrel and
+have the butt free.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll leave your execution to the proper officials, if
+an execution is what you want,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Now will
+you go?&rdquo; he demanded, threateningly.</p>
+<p>His foe gazed at the clubbed pistol and turned as if
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span>
+to yield. Next instant he whirled, lunging at Weir and
+flinging his arms about his captor. An exultant exclamation
+slipped from his lips; his hot breath fell on the
+engineer&rsquo;s cheek; his eyes glared into those of the man
+his arms encircled. He had tricked Weir by his pretense
+of obstinacy, led him to weaken his guard and
+had him in his grasp.</p>
+<p>Weir braced himself to resist the man&rsquo;s effort to force
+him down. Strong arms the other had, now doubly
+strengthened by hate and a belief in victory. All the
+power of Sorenson&rsquo;s great body was exerted to lift him
+off his feet, crush him in a terrific bear-hug, put him on
+his back and render him helpless; and Weir in his turn
+was tensing his muscles and arching his frame with every
+ounce of his lean, iron-like frame.</p>
+<p>Thus they swayed and struggled in the moonlight,
+without witnesses. A sinister silent fight, marked only
+by their fierce breathing and fiercer heart-beats. The
+pistol had dropped from Steele Weir&rsquo;s hand; instead of
+attempting to break the other&rsquo;s hold he had yielded to
+it and pushing his own arms forward had clasped his
+hands behind Sorenson&rsquo;s back in the wrestler&rsquo;s true defense
+to such an attack.</p>
+<p>Once Sorenson almost had him on his knees, but by a
+quick powerful upthrust of his legs he regained his upright
+position. However, it had been a close shave for
+Weir, for he well knew that his opponent would use any
+tactics, fair or foul, to kill him if he once lay on his back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You hound from hell!&rdquo; Sorenson snarled. &ldquo;You
+crippled my boy, and you shall die for that. You&rsquo;ve
+ruined me in San Mateo, and you shall die for that. You
+jailed Burkhardt and poisoned Gordon and shot Vorse,
+and you shall die for that. I&rsquo;m going to choke the life
+out of you, and grind your dead head into the dust, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+then spit on you. That&rsquo;s how I treat snakes. Say your
+prayers, if you know any, for you&rsquo;ll never get another
+chance. Your friends won&rsquo;t recognize your remains
+when I&rsquo;m done with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Venomous and impassioned, all the hate in the man&rsquo;s
+heart flowed forth in a fuming stream. For hate and
+murderous desire was all that was left him in the wreck
+of life caused by the engineer. If he could no longer
+rule, he could at least destroy.</p>
+<p>Weir had made no response to the fierce imprecations.
+He was working his hands upward, straining his arms
+so as to reach Sorenson&rsquo;s head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the coyotes are gnawing your skull,&rdquo; Sorenson
+went on, raging, &ldquo;when the worms are feeding on
+you&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words died in a gurgle of pain. Weir&rsquo;s hands had
+closed about his temples, a finger sunk in each eye, forcing
+his head back. Sorenson shook himself frantically
+to break the torturing hold. His head went farther and
+farther back as if it seemed his neck would snap; his
+mouth opened to gasp, &ldquo;Oh, God!&rdquo; and all at once his
+hug slipped apart.</p>
+<p>Instantly Weir tripped him, falling on top. Reaching
+out like a flash he seized his pistol lying on the
+ground and brought it down on the head of his enemy,
+who momentarily blinded and suffering could not resist.
+Sorenson went limp. From the savage beast of a minute
+before he had been changed to a huge, motionless, sprawling
+figure, with face upturned to the moon.</p>
+<p>And on that face the victor of the life and death
+struggle could still behold, through the contorted lines
+stamped by pain, the man&rsquo;s brutal passion and fixed malevolence.</p>
+<p>Weir arose.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You felt the hound of hell&rsquo;s teeth,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>With thongs from one of the saddles he bound Sorenson&rsquo;s
+hands, pulling the knots tight and hard. The prostrate
+man moaned, opened his eyes. Weir jerked him
+dazed and staggering to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up into the saddle with you if you don&rsquo;t want another
+rap on the head,&rdquo; Steele ordered, bruskly. &ldquo;And
+go straight this time. From now on I&rsquo;ll take you at your
+word and put a hole through your black heart if you
+try any more tricks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When his prisoner was mounted, he fastened his ankles
+together by another thong under the belly of the pony.
+Weir was taking no chances. Up into his own saddle
+then he swung himself.</p>
+<p>No exultant curses now came from his captive&rsquo;s lips.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXXI_A_FINAL_CHALLENGE' id='CHAPTER_XXXI_A_FINAL_CHALLENGE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+<h3>A FINAL CHALLENGE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The hour was drawing near midnight when Weir and
+his prisoner entered the town. Most of the women and
+children of the crowd of Mexicans had gone to their
+homes, but men yet remained before the court house and
+in the street, discussing and arguing the exciting events
+of the night.</p>
+<p>In some mysterious manner knowledge that Burkhardt
+and not Weir was the prisoner in the jail, together with
+news of Judge Gordon&rsquo;s suicide and Vorse&rsquo;s death, had
+spread from mouth to mouth. Amazement and incredulity
+had been followed by an aroused feeling of anger,
+for to the Mexicans it appeared that the crushing blow
+dealt the leaders of the town was the arbitrary act of
+the man they believed a lawless gun-man. Were not
+Weir&rsquo;s foremen and engineers guarding the jail? Men
+who were strangers, not even citizens of the county?</p>
+<p>But though an undercurrent of feeling ran among the
+talking groups, gradually increasing as the time passed,
+yet was there no active desire on the part of all or a
+concerted movement to drive away the seeming invaders
+of the law. For any such attempt a strong leader was
+necessary. There was none: Madden frowned upon
+them, only saying as he moved about that he was executing
+the law; Sorenson, the dominating figure of the
+town, and Burkhardt&rsquo;s, Vorse&rsquo;s and Gordon&rsquo;s friend, was
+strangely absent.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span></div>
+<p>The determined guard about the jail was in itself a
+deterrent to mob action. Meyers had brought twenty
+or more men from camp, armed and alert, who with those
+already about the building constituted a force to make
+any crowd of Mexicans, however angry, think twice
+before seeking to rescue prisoners. But the wish and
+the spirit were not lacking. Employees of the plotters,
+men who had received favors from Sorenson or Vorse or
+Burkhardt, Mexicans of a naturally vicious and unruly
+temper, were all for rushing the jail. The great number
+of the people, however, peaceful and indolent, preferred
+to content themselves with satisfying their curiosity
+by talk instead of seeking a taste of blood. And so as
+a result of this divided opinion the hostility for Weir had
+not expressed itself in an effort to assail the keepers of
+the jail.</p>
+<p>When he was discovered to have returned to town,
+this angry feeling assumed a menacing form. He approached
+the court house by the side street, Sorenson
+riding at his side, for it was his plan to lodge his prisoner
+in the Jail with as much secrecy as possible. Nevertheless
+in this he was disappointed; men saw him arrive,
+assist his prisoner to alight and climb the board fence
+about the yard; and drawn by the expectation of new
+events the nearer groups hastened forward.</p>
+<p>Weir impelled his man towards the jail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand back,&rdquo; he commanded the Mexicans.</p>
+<p>The latter at first stared in astonishment at beholding
+the pair, one of whom was San Mateo&rsquo;s foremost citizen,
+now sullenly advancing with wrists bound. Exclamations
+burst from their lips.</p>
+<p>At that a flash of hope filled Sorenson&rsquo;s breast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To my rescue, friends!&rdquo; he cried, beginning to
+struggle.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span></div>
+<p>Weir jerked him ahead fiercely and cast fiercer looks
+at the Mexicans.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This man is under arrest. And remember I can still
+shoot straight,&rdquo; he warned.</p>
+<p>Towards him came Madden running, who in Weir&rsquo;s
+disappearance earlier in the night he had guessed a pursuit
+of the cattleman and had therefore returned to the
+jail. He placed himself at Sorenson&rsquo;s right.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoever tries to take Sorenson from the hands of
+the law does so at his own peril,&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>A few mocking shouts resulted. These were gradually
+increased until the Mexicans, now being joined by scores
+of others from the street, became a howling, cursing, hysterical
+mob, crying Sorenson and Burkhardt&rsquo;s innocence,
+calling down imprecations on the heads of the sheriff
+and the engineer, stirred by certain lawless spirits to
+wilder and wilder passion.</p>
+<p>Weir and Madden had not been standing still, for the
+crowd was not yet numerous enough at first or bold
+enough to attack. Moreover the two men held their
+pistols well in view. Forcing Sorenson ahead, driving
+apart those who blocked their way, they pushed across
+the yard until but a few paces from the jail.</p>
+<p>One Mexican, a ranch hand from one of Vorse&rsquo;s
+ranches, wearing a great high-peaked felt hat and chaps,
+insolently thrust himself before the trio, spitting at
+Weir&rsquo;s face and in Spanish begging companions to help
+him release Sorenson. His right hand was resting on his
+holster as if but awaiting an excuse to use his gun.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get to one side,&rdquo; was Weir&rsquo;s harsh order.</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s answer was a string of foul curses. Like
+a panther the engineer leaped forward and struck the
+fellow on the side of his head with revolver barrel,
+dropping him where he stood.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span></div>
+<p>As the crowd remained suddenly mute, unmoving, their
+howls checked by this swift reprisal, Weir spoke to
+Madden:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick! To the door!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Each with an arm in Sorenson&rsquo;s, they made a run for
+the jail, passed through the line of armed guards and
+for the moment were safe. The sheriff lost no time in
+dragging the prisoner inside and when presently he
+stepped forth again, locking the door after him, he
+showed a relieved face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I put irons on him, hands and feet,&rdquo; he informed
+Weir. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s out of the way at any rate if we&rsquo;re in for
+a row.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was exactly what appeared in prospect. Only
+the rifles in the grip of the two dozen men about the
+jail kept the now thoroughly aroused mob from
+rushing forward. From yelling it had changed to low
+fierce murmurs that bespoke a more desperate
+mood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to move the men somewhere else,&rdquo; Steele
+Weir stated. &ldquo;Pretty soon they&rsquo;ll go for arms and then
+we&rsquo;ll have real trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I arranged while you were gone to transfer them to
+the county seat in the next county,&rdquo; Madden said.
+&ldquo;Telephoned the sheriff; he&rsquo;s expecting them. To-morrow
+we can take them to Santa F&eacute;, out of this part of
+the country till time for their trial. I placed the automobile
+your man brought Burkhardt in from the dam
+and another machine back in the alley; they are there
+now in the shadow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good. The quicker you take them, the better. They
+ought to be gagged when brought out. Get them here to
+the door; the men who are to drive should have the cars
+ready, engines going&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s fixed. Your superintendent will drive one
+car and one of the engineers the other; they can slip
+back there at once. Six more of the guards are to go
+with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. You know whom you want. Station them
+here at the door to rush the prisoners back the instant
+you&rsquo;re ready. Have them go round to the rear on the
+dark side of the jail; they should gain a good start
+before they&rsquo;re discovered.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden called from the line Atkinson and the men
+whom he had chosen to accompany him on the night ride.
+A brief parley followed. Then he and two of the engineers
+went inside the jail, while the superintendent and
+one young fellow stole away in the shadows towards the
+spot where stood the cars.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the throng had grown until it filled all the
+space about the rear of the court house and formed a
+mass of human bodies on which the checkered moonlight
+played reaching to within half a dozen paces of the jail.
+A shot rang out and a bullet struck the jail. It was
+like a match lighted near powder, that if allowed to burn
+would set off an explosion. One shot would lead to others
+from reckless spirits, to a volley and in the end to an
+onslaught.</p>
+<p>Perhaps that was the reasoning and the purpose of
+the man who had fired. In any case, it must not be repeated.</p>
+<p>Weir strode forward towards the crowd.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If that man, or any of you, want to shoot this out
+with me, let him show himself,&rdquo; he said, threateningly
+and swinging the muzzle of his weapon along the line
+of faces.</p>
+<p>A quick retreat on the part of those nearest marked
+the respect with which it was considered. Frantically
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span>
+they strove to push further back into the mob, clawing
+and elbowing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you try any more shots,&rdquo; he continued, speaking
+in Spanish as before, &ldquo;those rifles will open fire.&rdquo; He
+paused to allow this information to have full effect.
+&ldquo;Finally, if you attempt wrecking this jail, the three
+hundred workmen from the dam will march down to San
+Mateo and teach you proper observance of the law. If
+you&rsquo;re really looking for trouble, those three hundred
+men will give this town trouble that will be remembered
+for twenty years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Standing there in the moonlight between the two
+parties, between the thin line of sentinels about the jail
+and the dense mob in front, Steele Weir&rsquo;s action seemed
+the height of rashness. A rush of the Mexicans and he
+would be overwhelmed, a cowardly shot from somewhere
+in the rear and he might be killed. It was like inviting
+disaster.</p>
+<p>If, however, he recognized his danger, he gave no sign
+of it. By the power of his gun and sheer boldness he
+faced them, calm, fearless, masterful. His unexpected
+advance had surprised the Mexicans, left them confused
+and uncertain. Wild and sinister tales concerning his
+prowess magnified him in their eyes notwithstanding their
+animosity. Now they seemed to feel his iron will beating
+against their faces.</p>
+<p>During the pause that ensued Weir heard the jail door
+open. Madden was preparing to take his prisoners out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not seeking trouble, but I&rsquo;m not avoiding it,&rdquo; the
+engineer proceeded, for this was the critical minute, and
+he sought to have all eyes focused upon him instead of
+upon the activity at his back. &ldquo;The sheriff represents
+the law here in San Mateo, and I give you plain warning
+that every man who attempts violence to-night will be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300' name='page_300'></a>300</span>
+called upon to pay the account. By to-morrow the Governor
+may have soldiers stationed in your houses and in
+your streets, for the prisoners are now the prisoners of
+the state, arrested for stealing cattle&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was a happy inspiration. Had Weir stated the
+whole category of Sorenson&rsquo;s and Burkhardt&rsquo;s crimes,
+including murder and dynamiting, he could not have
+struck so shrewdly as in naming the sin of cattle-stealing.
+For this was a cattle country and even the most
+ignorant Mexican grasped the significance of this charge.</p>
+<p>A visible stir answered the statement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For stealing cattle from other men&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;he did not
+trouble to mention the fact the crime had occurred thirty
+years previous&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;and for that and other things Sheriff
+Madden has arrested them. Because they are rich, their
+guilt is all the worse. Perhaps they have taken cattle
+belonging to you, who knows? That may come out in
+their trial; if they have taken them, you shall have them
+back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From the rear of the grounds came the low sounds of
+automobile engines being started. Weir dared not look
+about to learn if Madden and his party were safely on
+their way thither. As for the Mexicans, the speaker&rsquo;s
+words had created a sensation. For men were there
+who owned small herds now feeding on the range, and
+from anger their minds yielded to sudden anxiety; each
+saw himself a possible sufferer from cattle depredations;
+and in the minds of these, at least, thought of loss supplanted
+thought of Sorenson and Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I helped Sheriff Madden arrest these men because
+they stole cattle, possibly some of your steers among
+them. Is that why you would like to lynch me, as I&rsquo;ve
+heard you wanted to do?&rdquo; he demanded, savagely. &ldquo;Because
+I save your animals? Or is it because I shot that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301' name='page_301'></a>301</span>
+renegade Mexican whom Ed Sorenson hired to try and
+kill me? Ed Sorenson, yes. Sheriff Madden has the
+knowledge of it. Not only would Sorenson the father like
+to see me die because I know about his cattle-stealing,
+but Ed Sorenson, the son, hired that strange Mexican
+to shoot me from the dark because I stopped him from
+trying to steal a girl. Has Ed Sorenson left your daughters
+alone? I would save your daughters from his evil
+hands, as I would your cattle from his father&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A man all at once pushed forth from the crowd, wrathfully
+elbowing his way among neighbors. He was
+Naharo, the Mexican who had chatted once with Martinez
+in the latter&rsquo;s office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; he shouted, facing his countrymen. &ldquo;I,
+Naharo, vow it the truth. For I saw this engineer take
+a young girl away from Ed Sorenson in the restaurant
+at Bowenville that the scoundrel intended to seduce. It
+is so, the truth; the engineer saved her. And are there
+not men among you&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;his voice gained a savage, rasping
+note&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;whose girls have been betrayed by the cattle-stealing
+Sorenson&rsquo;s son?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he&ndash;&ndash;where is he now?&rdquo; some one shouted,
+angrily. It might have been a father who stood in
+Naharo&rsquo;s case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He lies crippled,&rdquo; Weir stated. &ldquo;Last night he tried
+to steal yet another girl from San Mateo, and fleeing
+when overtaken was pitched from his car and crushed
+against a rock. He will steal no more daughters of
+San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sensation on sensation. The crowd fairly hummed
+with new excitement resulting from these disclosures.
+Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s ways were known to most and the revelations
+seemed true to his character; and from believing
+the statements of the son to accepting those concerning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302' name='page_302'></a>302</span>
+the father was but a step. Cattle&ndash;&ndash;girls! It began to
+look as if this engineer was in the right.</p>
+<p>With half of his attention Weir was harkening for the
+sound of starting automobiles. He had heard the scuffle
+of feet when the party slipped away from the jail door
+into the shadows. He had almost measured their passage
+to the alley. Ah, and now! There was a quick grind of
+gears, the pop of exhausts, then a dying of the sounds
+as the cars left the grounds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You wished to kill me when you came here, but I had
+not then and have not now any intention of dying,&rdquo; he
+stated. &ldquo;For I have work to do&ndash;&ndash;and work for you if
+you want it. Instead of stealing your cattle and daughters
+as the Sorensons did, I&rsquo;ll give you jobs. We are
+about to begin digging canals and ditches on the mesa;
+I want men and teams&ndash;&ndash;you and yours at good pay for
+a good day&rsquo;s work. Our quarrel of the past need not
+be remembered. I have never been your enemy, only the
+enemy of the four men who deceived and oppressed you.
+And now they are gone, two dead and two off to be tried
+for their crimes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir stood for a moment silent, while they as silently
+stared at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, bueno, we shall work!&rdquo; Naharo exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We shall work and build your ditches, se&ntilde;or,&rdquo; cried
+a score of voices.</p>
+<p>Then the cry swelled to a noisy chorus. The crowd
+began to stir and disintegrate and break into groups,
+gesticulating, talking, discussing all the astonishing
+items of news given by the engineer, from the particulars
+of the Sorensons&rsquo; depravity to announcement of renewed
+hire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Se&ntilde;or, we hold you in greatest respect,&rdquo; said a man to
+Weir, smiling in friendly fashion.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303' name='page_303'></a>303</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And also your pistol,&rdquo; said a companion, laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one will need to wear pistols here in San Mateo
+from now on,&rdquo; was the answer. And he politely bade
+them good-night.</p>
+<p>His belief was sincere. San Mateo had gained an end
+of violence, and henceforth his weapon would gather
+dust. He had triumphed. Not only had he subdued his
+enemies, but he had won the good will of the people.</p>
+<p>One thing more alone remained to be won to bring
+him utter happiness.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304' name='page_304'></a>304</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXXII_THE_RECLUSE' id='CHAPTER_XXXII_THE_RECLUSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+<h3>THE RECLUSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>As Weir drove his car homeward through the moonlight,
+he knew that at last the dark shadow upon his life
+had passed forever. Memories poignant and sad, memories
+bitter and stern, returned again and again to his
+mind; but these henceforth with time would soften and
+change. Of these his last visit to his father was most
+vivid, that day in spring that had proved their last
+together....</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>He had been there with his father for a week, and
+now must go. He was chopping wood that morning, with
+his father looking on. Steele had cast a measuring
+glance at the pile of wood cut, then wiped the fine dew
+of perspiration from his brow, buried the ax blade in the
+chopping-log and seated himself upon a sawn block. A
+smile shaped itself upon his lips. Though he never
+chopped wood now except on these rare visits to his recluse
+father&rsquo;s cabin here on the forested mountain side,
+his tall lean figure was as tough and wiry as ever, his
+arm as tireless, his eye as true to cut the exact line.
+There was yet no softening of his fibers or fat on his
+ribs, and there would be neither if he had anything to
+say about it.</p>
+<p>From the little Idaho town in the valley below, which
+he viewed through the clearing before the cabin, his gaze
+came around to his father seated on the doorstep. Taciturn
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305' name='page_305'></a>305</span>
+and brooding the latter had always been, but the
+pity and sorrow struck at the son&rsquo;s heart as he perceived
+what a mere shell of a man now sat there, gray-haired,
+bent, fleshless, consumed body and soul by the destroying
+acid of some dark secret. Even when a lad Steele Weir
+had sensed the mystery clouding his father&rsquo;s life. Like
+an evil spell it had condemned them to solitude here in
+the mountains, until Steele&rsquo;s youth at last rebelled and
+he had departed, hungry for schooling, for human society
+and for a wider field of action.</p>
+<p>What that secret might be he had for years not allowed
+himself to speculate. Unbidden at times the memory
+of certain revealing looks or acts of his father&rsquo;s
+floated into his mind:&ndash;&ndash;a dread if not terror that on occasion
+dilated the elder man&rsquo;s eyes, and a steadfast driving
+of himself at work as if to obliterate painful and
+despairing thoughts, and an uneasy, furtive vigilance
+when forced to visit town. Once when a stranger, a
+short heavy-set bearded man, had unexpectedly appeared
+at the door, his father had leaped for the revolver hanging
+in its holster on the wall.</p>
+<p>On catching a second view of the chance visitor he had
+exclaimed, &ldquo;Not Burkhardt after all!&rdquo; With which he
+burst into a wild laugh, the shrill mirthless laugh of a
+man suddenly freed of a terrible fear. However, as he
+returned the gun-belt to its place, his hand shook so
+that he pawed all around the nail on which it was accustomed
+to hang.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir would never forget that moment of panic,
+his father&rsquo;s spring to the wall and following laugh&ndash;&ndash;the
+only laugh he had heard from those lips; and though but
+twelve years old at the time he could not misread the
+episode. On another occasion he found his father kneeling
+at the grave under the giant pine beyond the cabin&ndash;&ndash;the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306' name='page_306'></a>306</span>
+grave of the gentle mother of whom Steele had but
+dim recollections&ndash;&ndash;and his father&rsquo;s hands were clasped,
+his head bowed. With an infinite yearning he had longed
+to creep forward and comfort him by his presence, by
+a clasp of the hand, but the recollection of his father&rsquo;s
+habitual chill reserve daunted him and he stole away.</p>
+<p>On his own life the mystery had left its gloomy impress.
+A solitary and joyless boyhood, overhung by
+he knew not what danger, haunted by a parent&rsquo;s lurking
+fear and anguish, had made him a silent, cold, ever watchful
+man, never entirely free from the expectation that
+his father&rsquo;s sealed past at some instant would open and
+confront him with the terrible facts. For that reason
+he felt that the success he had gained as an engineer,
+a success won by relentless toil and solid ability, rested
+on a quicksand. For that cause he had welcomed engineering
+projects full of danger and by his indifference
+to that danger gained his name &ldquo;Cold Steel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now on this day with his father he once again put
+the question he always asked on his visits, and with no
+more hope of a consenting reply than before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must be going to-morrow. Won&rsquo;t you come along
+with me this time, father? I want you to live with me,
+so that I can look after you and be with you. We can
+fix up a good cabin at the engineering camp. You&rsquo;re
+not so strong as you were; you could fall sick here and
+die and never a person know it. I doubt if you spend,
+making yourself comfortable, one dollar in ten of the
+money I send you. You would be interested in the building
+of this big irrigation project I&rsquo;m to direct.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His father appeared to shudder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve lived here and I&rsquo;ll die
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m afraid of,&rdquo; Steele responded.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307' name='page_307'></a>307</span>
+&ldquo;Afraid you may become sick and die for lack of care.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I&rsquo;ll remain, my son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was conclusive. It was the answer of not only
+thirty years of living at the spot, but of his secret dread.
+Steele saw once more the stark fear in his eyes, the fear
+of contact with men, of venturing out into the world, of
+precipitating fate.</p>
+<p>For a time his father plucked his white unkempt beard
+with unsteady hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s the place you&rsquo;re going this time?&rdquo; he presently
+inquired, without real interest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;New Mexico.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the elder&rsquo;s face appeared suddenly a gray shadow
+as if the blood were ebbing from his heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where in New Mexico?&rdquo; he whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The town of San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His father struggled to his feet. With one hand he
+clutched the doorframe for support. The skin of his
+cheeks had gone a sickly white.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;San Mateo!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Not there,
+not there, Steele! Keep away, keep away, keep away!
+My God, not San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He swayed as if about to fall full length, gesturing
+blindly before his face as if to sweep away the thought,
+while his son ran towards him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father, you&rsquo;re sick,&rdquo; Steele exclaimed, putting an
+arm about the other. And, in truth, the elder man
+seemed fainting, ready to collapse. &ldquo;Come, let me help
+you in so you can lie down. I must bring a doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele almost carried him to the bed. On it his father
+sank, remaining with closed eyes and scarcely breathing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doctor; bring no doctor,&rdquo; he said painfully, at
+last. &ldquo;I feel&ndash;&ndash;I feel as if dying.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308' name='page_308'></a>308</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I must bring a doctor. And I have a flask of whiskey;
+let me pour you a little to revive your heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The change the words wrought from passivity to
+action was startling. The elder Weir arose suddenly on
+elbow, glaring fiercely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whiskey, never! It brought me to this, it damned
+my life. If it had not been for whiskey&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Without
+finishing the words he fell back on the bed.</p>
+<p>The loathing, the hatred, the utter horror of his exclamation,
+banished from his son&rsquo;s mind further thought
+of using this stimulant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the doctor?&rdquo; he inquired, gently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No use, Steele. I&rsquo;ve been the same as a dead man
+for days. Just ashes. I want to die; I want to lie by
+your mother there under the big pine. And maybe I&rsquo;ll
+have peace&ndash;&ndash;peace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele took in his own the wasted hand hanging from
+the bed. He held it tight, with a feeling of infinite
+tragedy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be yourself again soon,&rdquo; he said comfortingly,
+though without faith in the assurance.</p>
+<p>His father&rsquo;s lips moved in a whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; my time is here at last,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;But don&rsquo;t go
+to San Mateo, Steele,&ndash;&ndash;don&rsquo;t go, don&rsquo;t go. Oh, my God,
+spare me that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you have me break my word? I never have
+to any man, father. I accepted this offer and signed a
+contract. I&rsquo;m morally bound; these men are depending
+on me. Were you ever at San Mateo? Was it something
+that happened there that makes you fearful to have me
+go? San Mateo is a thousand miles from here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The face before him became like the face of a corpse.
+For an instant Steele&rsquo;s heart went cold in the belief that
+his father had died under the effect of his declaration.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309' name='page_309'></a>309</span>
+But at last the eyelids raised, the eyes gazed at him.
+And all at once the features of the harsh visage seemed
+softened, changed, lightened by a dim illumination.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see you now as you are, a man, stronger than I
+ever was,&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;I lived in fear, but my fear
+was not for myself. Had I been alone, nothing would
+have mattered after your mother died. But my fear
+was for you&ndash;&ndash;and of you. I was afraid your life would
+be blasted; I was in terror lest you should hate and
+despise me when you learned the truth. So I sought to
+conceal it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You had no need to fear that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see it now. Tell me everything or nothing as you
+wish about your going to San Mateo to work; it will
+frighten me no longer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele briefly spoke of his new work there, of the
+magnitude of the project and the desire he had had that
+his father might be with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m proud of you,&rdquo; his father said. &ldquo;God knows I
+have not been the parent I would or should have been.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s enough for me if your heart&rsquo;s easy now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I feel as if I were gaining peace at last and&ndash;&ndash;and
+I must speak. In San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;ah, Steele, you will hear
+of me there,&ndash;&ndash;you may have to fight the damning influence
+of my name and past, but I know now you&rsquo;ll come
+through it. And all I pray for is that you can retain a
+little love for me despite everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whatever it is I shall hear of my father, I should
+rather hear it from his lips than from strangers&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The hand in his closed spasmodically. For a long
+time nothing was said, and the only sound in the room
+was the ticking of the tin clock on the shelf busily
+measuring off the seconds of the old man&rsquo;s failing span.
+To Steele it was as if his father was slowly summoning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310' name='page_310'></a>310</span>
+the few remaining shreds of his fortitude to reveal the
+cancer of his past.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a branded murderer,&rdquo; he said at last, gasping.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you never killed a man out of mere wanton desire
+to slay,&rdquo; Steele responded firmly. &ldquo;I too have
+killed men in fights in Mexico. That fact doesn&rsquo;t weight
+my mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the line of your duty, in the line of your duty.
+But I was drunk. He was a friend. When I became
+sober, I saw him with a bullet hole in his head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you remember nothing of shooting him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing, nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know you killed him?&rdquo; his son demanded
+with inexorable logic. &ldquo;What is the proof?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A low groan escaped his father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Men said I had killed him. But my own mind was
+blank.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who were the men? Were they present at the time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were four&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon, Burkhardt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were you arrested and tried?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. They helped me to escape. Because of your
+mother, they said, and because they said they were my
+friends. But I never felt they were really friends. For
+they were always against new-comers and wanted to keep
+things in their own hands. You were only three or four
+years old at that time, Steele, so you wouldn&rsquo;t remember
+anything about matters there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What were you doing at San Mateo, father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now that the hideous past at last stood uncovered the
+son was able to turn upon it his incisive mind; he would
+drag out and scrutinize every bone of the skeleton which
+had terrorized his father and shadowed his own life
+Facts faced are never so dreadful as fears unmaterialized.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311' name='page_311'></a>311</span>
+And more, he sought with all the love of a son for circumstances
+that would mitigate, excuse, or even justify
+his father&rsquo;s act.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was ranching,&rdquo; was the low answer. &ldquo;I had come
+to San Mateo two years before from the east, bringing
+you and your mother and considerable money. I bought
+a ranch and stocked it with cattle; I was doing well, in
+spite of the fact I was new to the country and the business.
+Also I was making friends, and I had been nominated
+for the legislature of the Territory to run against
+Gordon. But I had taken to drinking with the men I
+met, other cattlemen, because I fancied no harm in it.
+And then while in a drunken stupor I killed Jim Dent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had you quarreled with him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never, never&ndash;&ndash;till that moment I killed Jim. They
+said I quarreled with him then. But I remember nothing.
+Jim was my best friend; I would have trusted him with
+my life. Even now I can&rsquo;t make it seem real I shot him,
+though it must be true by those four witnesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What of your ranch? Your political nomination?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I withdrew from the latter; that was one of the terms
+made by Gordon on which they were to help me escape
+instead of turning me over for prosecution. And my
+ranch and cattle, I had to deed them over to the four
+men too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then their friendship wasn&rsquo;t disinterested,&rdquo; Steele
+said quickly, with suspicion dawning on his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They weren&rsquo;t really friends, I knew that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How were they to arrange your escape?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The senior Weir seemed to shudder at the question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By bribing the sheriff and county attorney. I was
+then to leave the country at once, never showing my face
+again, or I should be arrested. I was still half dazed
+by whiskey and terror; I took your mother and you and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312' name='page_312'></a>312</span>
+fled this far, when my money gave out. So here I&rsquo;ve remained
+ever since, for here I could hide and here was her
+grave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the last thing you remember of the circumstance
+previous to learning Dent was dead?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, though I had been drinking I can remember
+clearly up to the time I stopped playing poker with Jim
+and the four men, for we were losing and I felt they
+were working a crooked deal on us somehow. I asked
+Jim to quit also, for though I hadn&rsquo;t lost much he was
+losing fast and playing recklessly. But he wouldn&rsquo;t drop
+out of the game, and when Vorse and Sorenson cursed
+me and said for me to mind my own business I went back
+to a table near the rear door and laid my head on my
+arms and went to sleep. When I was awake again, Vorse
+and Gordon were holding me up by their table and Jim
+was dead on the floor. I had come forward, they said,
+begun a big row with Dent and finally shot him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then the only witnesses were these four men who
+were gambling with him, who cursed you when you attempted
+to persuade him to drop his cards,&rdquo; Steele proceeded,
+&ldquo;one of whom was your political adversary, men
+who were old-timers and opposed to new-comers, who
+pretended to be your friends but took your ranch and
+cattle. It begins to look to me as if they not only killed
+your friend Dent but double-crossed you in the bargain.
+Did you look in your gun afterwards?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I was sick with the horror of the accusation, I
+tell you, Steele. I had no way to deny it; it seemed indeed
+as if I must have killed him. And from that day
+until this I&rsquo;ve never had the courage of soul to reload
+my pistol, or even clean it. It hangs there on the wall
+with the very shells, two empty, the rest unfired, that it
+carried that day in San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313' name='page_313'></a>313</span></div>
+<p>Weir sprang up and crossed to the nail where hung
+the weapon. The latter he drew from the holster and
+broke open, so that the cartridges were ejected into his
+hand. For an instant he stared at them, but at length
+walked to the bed before which he extended his palm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look&ndash;&ndash;look for yourself!&rdquo; he exclaimed hoarsely.
+&ldquo;You never killed Jim Dent; drunk or sober, you never
+killed any one. You&rsquo;re not a murderer. You&rsquo;re the innocent
+victim of those four infamous scoundrels; they
+deceived you, they ruined your life; and their damnable
+fraud not only killed my mother in her youth, as I guess,
+by grief and despair, but has brought you now to your
+death too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His father had raised himself on an arm to gaze
+incredulously at the six unfired cartridges lying in
+Weir&rsquo;s palm. Then all at once his bearded lips trembled
+and a great light of joy flashed upon his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Innocent&ndash;&ndash;innocent!&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Steele, my son,&ndash;&ndash;Helen,
+my wife! No stain on my soul!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he sank back Steele&rsquo;s arms caught him. He did
+not speak again, but his eyes rested radiantly on his
+boy&rsquo;s before they glazed in death. Fear had passed
+from them, forever.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314' name='page_314'></a>314</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXXIII_UNDER_THE_MOON' id='CHAPTER_XXXIII_UNDER_THE_MOON'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+<h3>UNDER THE MOON</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Lights still were burning at headquarters when Steele
+Weir slowly drove his runabout up the hillside slope to
+the dam camp. The men who had acted as guards about
+the jail, except those who went with Madden, were somewhere
+on the road behind him, returning home in the
+wagons. A reaction of mind and body had set in for
+Weir; after the previous night&rsquo;s loss of sleep and prolonged
+exertions, after the swift succession of dramatic
+events, after the tremendous call that had been made
+upon his brain power, nervous force and will, he experienced
+a strange unrest of spirit. His triumph
+seemed yet incomplete, somehow unsatisfying.</p>
+<p>It was as he approached the camp that he saw a
+slender girlish figure sitting on a rock in the moonlight.
+He swung his car off the road beside the spot where
+Janet Hosmer sat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, you are still awake?&rdquo; he asked, with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could I sleep while not knowing what was happening
+or what danger you might be in?&rdquo; she returned. &ldquo;Mr.
+Pollock said we must not think of returning home until
+quiet was restored in San Mateo. One of the engineer&rsquo;s
+houses was given to us by Mr. Meyers before he left,
+where Mary and I could sleep. But I could not close
+my eyes. So much had happened, so much was yet going
+on! So I came out here to be alone and to think and
+watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315' name='page_315'></a>315</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And your father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s attending the wounded Mexicans in the store.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steel alighted and tossing his hat upon the car seat
+gazed out over the mesa, misty in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There will be no more trouble,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Sorenson
+and Burkhardt are Madden&rsquo;s prisoners, and on their way
+to a place of safe-keeping in another county. Vorse is
+dead. The people in town have a fairly good understanding
+of matters now, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How in the world did such a change of opinion occur?&rdquo;
+Janet exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had a little talk with the crowd and made explanations.
+The feeling for me was almost friendly when I
+left; what enmity remains will soon die out, I&rsquo;m
+sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though unaware from Steele Weir&rsquo;s laconic statement
+of what had actually occurred, the girl divined that his
+words concealed vastly more than their surface purport.
+With the general hostility against the engineer that had
+existed, for him to swing the community to his side meant
+a dramatic moment and a remarkable moral conquest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your friends have always known you would win,&rdquo; she
+said, smiling up at him.</p>
+<p>He seated himself on the rock beside her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s but a short time ago, Janet, that I had no
+friends, or so few they could be counted on the fingers
+of one hand. Business acquaintances, yes. Professional
+companions, yes. Men who perhaps respected my ability
+as an engineer, yes. But real friends, scarcely one.
+And now I think I have gained some, which is the greatest
+satisfaction I have from all that has happened. After
+years the pendulum has swung to my side. Do you know
+the hour my luck changed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet shook her head wonderingly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316' name='page_316'></a>316</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I can&rsquo;t even guess,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it was that afternoon, and that moment, I
+found you sitting in your stalled car in the creek down
+there. That was the beginning. From that time things
+began to run in my favor and they haven&rsquo;t ceased to do
+so for a moment since, I now see looking back over
+events. You brought good luck to me that day in your
+car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What an extraordinary idea! Then at bottom you&rsquo;re
+superstitious,&rdquo; Janet replied. &ldquo;I shall have to give
+you a new name; I must no longer call you &lsquo;Cold
+Steel.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I really never liked that name,&rdquo; Weir said quickly.
+&ldquo;Perhaps I was cold steel once, but I have changed along
+with everything else. And you&rsquo;re responsible for that
+too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet leaned forward and looked into his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were never truly harsh to any one except those
+who deserved it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I know! You would never
+have been so quick to help Mary Johnson or me, or
+others who needed help, if your heart was not always
+generous and sympathetic. Only against evil were you
+as steel, and in moments requiring supreme courage and
+sacrifice. And that&rsquo;s how you gained the name before
+you ever came here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anyway I&rsquo;ve changed,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m out from under
+the cloud which I felt always hung above me. As I say,
+you brought me good luck that day&ndash;&ndash;and I see clearly
+that I shall continue to be superstitious.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, all occasion for that is past now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Steele Weir. &ldquo;No, less than ever. For
+I&rsquo;m certain you hold my good fortune in your hand yet,
+and will continue to hold it. And that means&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He paused, regarding her so intensely that the blood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317' name='page_317'></a>317</span>
+beat up into her face. There was no mistaking that
+look and it thrilled her to the soul.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; she managed to say.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It means my happiness, now and for all time to
+come,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;See, I shall have accomplished
+what I set out to do and what in justice had to be done,
+bringing these men to punishment&ndash;&ndash;to punishment in one
+form or another. I shall have given my employer, the
+company, service worthy of the hire. I shall have rid
+you and San Mateo of an unscrupulous parasite in the
+person of Ed Sorenson, though my persecution of him
+now shall stop and I shall leave him enough out of the
+property recovered from his father to live in comfort
+somewhere with his mother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Pollock states I shall have no trouble in getting
+legal title and possession of most of the wealth of these
+four men,&ndash;&ndash;I and any relatives of the dead Jim Dent who
+can be found. For thirty years&rsquo; accumulated interest
+charges owing me will swallow up all the men&rsquo;s properties.
+That, however, is only a material victory. I shall
+have relieved Johnson of fear of financial constraint;
+and saved his daughter from a serious mistake. I shall
+have started Martinez on the road to success&ndash;&ndash;and I
+should not be surprised if he prospered, became the
+leading attorney in this county, was elected judge and
+so on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a way, too, I shall have helped to remove the
+oppressive weight of these men, Sorenson, Burkhardt,
+Judge Gordon and Vorse, with their sinister influence,
+from this community and region. They have always
+held the natives in more or less open subjection, financial,
+political, and moral. There should be a freer air
+in San Mateo henceforth. The people will have a chance
+to grow. They no longer will feel the threat of brutal
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318' name='page_318'></a>318</span>
+masters always over them; and with the completion of
+the irrigation project and the infusion of new settlers
+they will become better citizens.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see all this,&rdquo; he concluded. &ldquo;It pleases me; it gives
+me cause for satisfaction. But it doesn&rsquo;t give me the
+happiness I want, or the love. That is alone in your
+hands to bestow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet felt herself trembling; she could not speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I felt the stirring of love from the moment I
+saw you there at the ford,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Last night
+when I knew that wretch had carried you off to the
+mountains, I could have torn him limb from limb. That
+was my love speaking, Janet. If I should have to go
+through life without you&ndash;&ndash;oh, the thought is too bitter
+to dwell on!&ndash;&ndash;then I should think life not worth living.
+But I have imagined that you might have for me a
+little&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet swiftly clasped his hand with her own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I love you,&rdquo; she cried softly. &ldquo;I was sitting here
+when you came because I loved you. If I am necessary
+to your happiness, you also are necessary to mine. I
+honor you for what you have done and love you for what
+you are, a strong true heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Janet, you give me the greatest joy in
+the world,&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Love&ndash;&ndash;that is more than
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His arms drew her to his breast. Her lips went to
+his in consecration of that love. Their hearts beat the
+rapture of that love.</p>
+<p>Over the silent peaceful mountains the moon spread
+its effulgent light. Over the mesa that was no more to
+know the fierce sound of strife. Over the town, at last
+free of its avaricious masters, free of the savage spirit
+of an outlaw time. Over the Burntwood River flowing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319' name='page_319'></a>319</span>
+in a shimmering band to the horizon. Over the camp
+where centered so many men&rsquo;s plans and labors. And
+over the lovers, chief of all, that light fell as in a silvery
+halo.</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;margin-bottom:1em'>THE END</p>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.14 -->
+<!-- timestamp: Sat Sep 19 18:37:51 -0600 2009 -->
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 30037 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #30037 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/30037)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: In the Shadow of the Hills
+
+Author: George C. Shedd
+
+Release Date: September 20, 2009 [EBook #30037]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+THE PRINCESS OF FORGE
+
+THE ISLE OF STRIFE
+
+THE INCORRIGIBLE DUKANE
+
+THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE
+
+THE INVISIBLE ENEMY
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE C. SHEDD
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+"THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE," ETC.
+
+NEW YORK
+
+THE MACAULAY COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, 1919, By THE MACAULAY COMPANY
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE FRANK A. MUNSEY CO.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY 11
+ II A COMEDY--AND SOMETHING ELSE 23
+ III THE ENEMY'S SPAWN 34
+ IV A SECRET CONFERENCE 42
+ V A SHOT IN THE DARK 53
+ VI JANET HOSMER 64
+ VII IN THE COIL 75
+ VIII THE GATHERING STORM 83
+ IX AN UNEXPECTED ALLY 91
+ X BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION 99
+ XI JANET AND MARY 107
+ XII THE PLOT 116
+ XIII THE CURRENT OF EVENTS 121
+ XIV OLD SAUREZ' DEPOSITION 135
+ XV THE MASK DROPPED 145
+ XVI WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT 158
+ XVII EARTH'S RETRIBUTION 167
+ XVIII IN THE NIGHT WATCHES 177
+ XIX A QUEER PAPER 189
+ XX ANXIETIES 197
+ XXI THE WEAK LINK 209
+ XXII AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE 219
+ XXIII WITH FANGS BARED 226
+ XXIV THE ALARM 238
+ XXV NO QUARTER 248
+ XXVI THE THUNDERBOLT 256
+ XXVII WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT 261
+ XXVIII VORSE 270
+ XXIX THE FOURTH MAN 279
+ XXX THE VICTOR 286
+ XXXI A FINAL CHALLENGE 294
+ XXXII THE RECLUSE 304
+ XXXIII UNDER THE MOON 314
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY
+
+
+Eastward out of the Torquilla Range the Burntwood River emerged from a
+gorge, flowing swift and turbulent during the spring months, shallow
+and murmurous the rest of the year, to pass through a basin formed by
+low mountains and break forth at last from a canyon and wind away over
+the mesa. In the canyon was being erected the huge reservoir dam which
+was in the future to store water for irrigating the broad acres
+spreading from its base.
+
+The construction camp rested on one of the hillsides above the dam.
+And here one summer afternoon a man stepped forth from the long low
+tar-papered shack that served as headquarters, directing his gaze down
+the road across the mesa at a departing automobile. He was Steele
+Weir, the new chief, a tall, strong, tanned man of thirty-five, with
+lean smooth-shaven face, a straight heavy nose, mouth that by habit
+was set in grim lines, and heavy brows under which ruled cold, level,
+insistent, gray eyes. He had come suddenly, unexpectedly, returning
+with Magney, the engineer in charge, when the latter had been summoned
+east for a conference with the company's directors. He had replaced
+Magney, who was now whirling away to the nearest railway point,
+Bowenville, thirty-five miles distant.
+
+He thoughtfully watched the car, a black spot in a haze of dust,
+speeding towards the New Mexican town of San Mateo, on the Burntwood
+River two miles below camp, its cluster of brown adobe houses showing
+indistinctly through the cottonwoods that embowered the place. For
+Magney he felt a certain amount of sympathy, for the engineer was
+leaving with a recognition of defeat; he was a likeable man, as Steele
+Weir had discovered during their brief acquaintance, a good
+theoretical engineer, but lacking in the prime quality of a successful
+chief--fighting spirit and an indomitable will.
+
+Under Magney the work of construction had been inaugurated the
+previous summer, but progress had not been as rapid as desired; there
+had been delays, labor difficulties, local opposition during the
+months since; and Weir had been chosen to succeed Magney. In his
+profession Weir had a reputation, built on relentless toil and sound
+ideas and daring achievements--a reputation enhanced by a character of
+mystery, for the man was unmarried, reserved, without intimates or
+even friends, locking his lips about his life, and welcoming and
+executing with grim indifference to risk engineering commissions of
+extreme hazard, on which account he had acquired the soubriquet of
+"Cold Steel" Weir.
+
+Who first bestowed upon Weir that name is not known. But it was not
+misapplied. Cold steel he had proved himself to be a score of times in
+critical moments when other men would have broken: in pushing bridges
+over mountain chasms, in mine disasters, in strikes, in almost
+hopeless fights against bandits in Mexico. And it was this ability to
+handle difficulties that had brought about the decision of the
+directors of the company to put him in charge, as the man best
+qualified, at San Mateo, where the situation was unsatisfactory,
+costly, baffling.
+
+Since his arrival a week before he had been consulting with Magney,
+studying maps and blue-prints, examining the work and analyzing
+general conditions. What had been accomplished had been well done; he
+had no criticism to offer on that score. It was the delay; the work
+was considerably behind schedule, which of course meant excessive
+cost; and this had undermined the spirit of the enterprise. In a dozen
+places, in a dozen ways, Magney, his predecessor, had been hampered,
+checked, defeated--and the main contributing cause was poor workmen,
+inefficient work. On that sore Weir's skillful finger fell at once.
+
+Standing there before the low office building he watched Magney
+depart. He, Steele Weir, had now taken over full charge of the camp
+and assumed full responsibility for the project's failure or success.
+His eye passed beyond the distant automobile to the town of San
+Mateo--a new town for him, but a town like many he had seen in the
+southwest and in Mexico. And aside from its connection with the
+construction work, it held a fascinating interest, a profound interest
+for the man, the interest that any spot would which has at a distance
+cast a black and sinister shadow over one's life. San Mateo--the name
+lay like a smoldering coal in his breast!
+
+At length he turned and strode down the hillside to the dam site in
+the canyon. The time had come to shut his hand about the work and let
+his hold be felt. He located the superintendent directing the pouring
+of concrete in the frames of the dam core, Atkinson, a man of fifty
+with a stubby gray mustache, a wind-bitten face and a tall angular
+frame. When Weir joined him he was observing with speculative eyes the
+indolent movements of a group of Mexican laborers.
+
+"Those _hombres_ don't appear to be breaking any speed records, I
+see," Weir remarked, quietly.
+
+"Humph," Atkinson grunted.
+
+"What do they think this is? A rest cure?"
+
+The superintendent's silence suddenly gave way.
+
+"I ought to land on 'em with an ax-handle and put the fear of God in
+their lazy souls," he exclaimed, bitterly.
+
+"Well, do it."
+
+"What!"
+
+"Do it."
+
+"Say, am I hearing right?" Atkinson swung fully about to stare at the
+new chief. Then he went on, "They'd quit to a man if made to do a
+man's work; I supposed that Magney had told you that. A dozen times
+I've been ready to throw up my job from self-respect; I'm ashamed to
+boss work where men can loaf and I must keep my tongue between my
+teeth. I was considering just now the matter of leaving."
+
+"No need, Atkinson. From this time these men will work or get their
+dismissal."
+
+The other pushed his hat atilt and rubbed his head in surprise.
+
+"What about that 'company policy' of hiring nothing but local labor to
+keep the community friendly which Magney was always kicking about?" he
+asked. "That was what made him sorer than anything else, and beat him.
+He said the directors had tied his hands by promising that no workmen
+should be imported. If they promised that, they sure bunkoed
+themselves. Friendly, huh."
+
+"The people haven't been friendly, eh?" Weir said.
+
+"Does it look like it when these Mexicans won't work enough to earn
+their salt? They openly boast that we dare neither make them work
+nor fire them. They say Sorenson and his bunch will pull every man off
+the works if we lift a finger; and they all know about that fool
+promise of the directors. Friendly? Just about as friendly as a
+bunch of wildcats. This whole section, white men and Mexicans, are
+putting a knife into this project whenever they can. Do you think they
+want all that mesa fenced up and farmed? This is a range country;
+they propose to keep it range; they don't want any more people
+coming here--farmers, store-keepers, and white people generally."
+
+"That's always the case in a range country before it's opened up,"
+Weir said. "But they have to swallow the pill."
+
+"Let me tell you something; they don't intend to swallow it here. They
+figure on keeping this county just as it is, for only themselves and
+their cattle and woolies, and everybody else keep out. The few big
+sheep and cattle men, white and Mex, have their minds made up to that,
+and they're the only ones who count; all the rest are poor Mexicans
+with nothing but fleas, children, goats and votes to keep Sorenson and
+his gang in control. They've set out to bust this company, or tire it
+out till it throws up the sponge. They've spiked Magney, and they'll
+try to spike you next, and every manager who comes. That's plain talk
+I'm giving you, Mr. Weir, but it's fact; and if it doesn't sound nice
+to your ears, you can have my resignation any minute."
+
+"I've been hoping to hear it. From now on drive this crowd of
+coffee-colored loafers. Put the lash on their backs."
+
+A gleam of unholy joy shone in Atkinson's eyes as he heard Weir's
+words.
+
+"All right; that goes," he said. "But I'm warning you that they'll
+quit. You'll see 'em stringing out of camp for home to-night, and
+those who hang out till to-morrow will leave then for sure. By
+to-morrow night the dam will be as quiet as a church week-days.
+They'll not show up again, either, until you send word for them to
+come back--and then they'll know you've surrendered. Magney tried it
+once, just once. And that's why you found me chewing tobacco so
+lamb-like and saying nothing."
+
+"Turn your gat loose," Weir said. And turning on his heel, he went
+back to headquarters.
+
+Before Atkinson fired a volley at the unsuspecting workmen he crossed
+the canyon to where a cub engineer was peering through a transit. The
+superintendent had overheard a scrap of gossip among the staff one
+evening before Weir's arrival when they were discussing the advent of
+the new chief.
+
+"What was that name you fellows were saying Weir was called by?" he
+asked.
+
+The boy straightened up.
+
+"'Cold Steel'--'Cold Steel' Weir. Anyway that's what Fergueson says,"
+was the answer. "I never heard it before myself. His first name's
+Steele, you know, and he looks cold enough to be ice when he's asking
+questions about things, boring into a fellow with his eyes. But he's
+up against a hard game here."
+
+"Maybe. But a man doesn't get a name like that for just parting his
+hair nice," Atkinson remarked. "He told me to stretch 'em"--a horny
+thumb jerked towards the workmen--"and you'll see some real work
+hereabouts for the rest of the afternoon."
+
+"And to-morrow will be Sunday three days ahead of time."
+
+"Sure."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"You know as much about that as I do. Make your own guess." With which
+the speaker started off.
+
+The morrow was "Sunday" with a vengeance. The majority of the laborers
+demanded their pay checks the minute work ceased at the end of the
+afternoon; Atkinson tightened orders, and by noon next day the last of
+the Mexicans had quit. The fires in the stationary engines were
+banked; the concrete mixers did not revolve; the conveyers were still;
+the dam site wore an air of abandonment. In headquarters the engineers
+worked over tracings or notes; and in the commissary store the
+half-dozen white foremen gathered to smoke and yarn. That was the
+extent of the activity.
+
+Two days passed. After dinner Weir held a terse long-distance
+telephone conversation, the only incident of the second day; and it
+was overheard by no one. On the fourth day this was repeated. At dawn
+of the fifth he despatched all of the foremen, enginemen and engineers
+with wagons to Bowenville; and about the middle of the afternoon,
+accompanied by his assistant, Meyers, and Atkinson, he sped in the
+manager's car down the river for San Mateo, two miles below the camp.
+
+Of the town Steele Weir had had but a glimpse as he flashed through on
+his way to the dam the morning of his arrival twelve days earlier. It
+had but a single main street, from which littered side streets and
+alleys ran off between mud walls of houses. The county court house sat
+among cottonwood trees in an open space. A few pretentious dwellings,
+homes of white men and the well-to-do Mexicans, arose among long low
+adobe structures that were as brown and characterless as the sun-dried
+bricks of which they were built. That was San Mateo.
+
+Before doors and everywhere along the street workmen from the dam were
+idling. As Meyers brought the automobile to a stop before the court
+house, news of Weir's visit spread miraculously and Mexicans began to
+saunter forward to hear the engineer's words of surrender, couched in
+the form of a suave invitation to return to work. While the crowd
+gathered the three Americans sat quietly in the car. Then Steele Weir
+stood up.
+
+"Who can speak for these men?" he demanded.
+
+A lean Mexican with a long shiny black mustache and a thin neck
+protruding from a soiled linen collar elbowed a way to the front.
+
+"I'm authorized to speak for them," he announced, disclosing his white
+teeth in an engaging smile.
+
+"Are you one of the workmen?"
+
+"No. I'm a lawyer and represent them in this controversy. By your
+favor therefore let us proceed. You've come to persuade them to resume
+work, and that is well. But there are conditions to be agreed upon
+before they return, which with your permission I shall state--first,
+no harsh driving of the workmen by foremen; second, full wages for the
+days they have been idle; third, no Sunday work."
+
+The engineer regarded the speaker without change of countenance.
+
+"Have you finished?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. There are minor matters, but they can be adjusted later. These
+are the important points."
+
+"Very well, this is my reply: I, not the workmen, make the terms for
+work on this job--I, not these men, name the conditions on which they
+may return. And they are as follows: no pay for the idle days; if the
+workmen return they agree to work as ordered by superintendent and
+foremen; and last, they must start for the dam within an hour or not
+at all."
+
+Incredulity, amazement rested on the Mexican spokesman's face as he
+listened to this curt rejoinder.
+
+"Preposterous, impossible, absurd!" he exclaimed. Then revolving on
+his heels so as to face the crowd he swiftly repeated in Spanish what
+Weir had said.
+
+An angry stir followed, murmurs, sullen looks, a number of oaths and
+jeers. The lawyer turned again to the engineer, spreading his hands in
+a wide gesture and lifting his brows with exaggerated significance.
+
+"You see, Mr. Weir, your position is hopeless," he remarked.
+
+"Ask them if they definitely refuse."
+
+The lawyer put the question to the crowd. A chorus of shouts
+vehemently gave affirmation--a refusal immediate, disdainful,
+unanimous.
+
+"We'll now discuss the men's terms," the lawyer remarked politely and
+with an air of satisfaction.
+
+"There's nothing more to discuss. The matter is settled. They have
+refused; they need not seek work at the dam again. Start the car,
+Meyers."
+
+The roar of the machine drowned the indignant lawyer's protest, the
+crowd hastened to give an opening and the conference was at an end.
+
+"Drive to Vorse's saloon; I want a look at Vorse," said Weir. "I see
+the place a short way ahead."
+
+When they entered the long low adobe building an anemic-appearing
+Mexican standing at the far end of the bar languidly started forward
+to serve them, but a bald-headed, hawk-nosed man seated at a desk
+behind the cigar-case laid aside his newspaper, arose and checked the
+other by a sidewise jerk of his head.
+
+He received their orders for beer and lifted three dripping bottles
+from a tub of water at his feet. His eyes passed casually over Steele
+Weir's face, glanced away, then came back for a swift unblinking
+scrutiny. The eyes his own met were as hard, stony and inscrutable as
+his own. Finally Vorse, the saloon-keeper, turned his gaze towards the
+window and extracting a quill tooth-pick from a vest pocket began
+thoughtfully to pick his teeth.
+
+"You're the new manager at the dam?" he asked presently, still
+considering the street through the window.
+
+"I am."
+
+"And your name is Weir?"
+
+"You've got it right."
+
+The questions ended there. The three men from camp slowly consumed
+their beer and exchanged indifferent remarks. At the end of five
+minutes the Mexican lawyer, clutching the arm of an elderly,
+gray-mustached man, entered the saloon.
+
+They lined up at the bar nearby the others. The older of the pair
+regarded the trio shrewdly, laid a calf-bound book that he carried
+under his arm upon the counter and ordered "a little bourbon." When he
+had swallowed this, he addressed the men from the engineering camp.
+
+"Which of you is Mr. Weir?"
+
+"I am he," Steele replied.
+
+"Mr. Martinez here has solicited me, Mr. Weir, to use my offices in
+explaining to you the workmen's point of view in the controversy that
+exists relative to the work. I'm Senator Gordon, a member of the state
+legislature, and I have no interest in the matter beyond seeing an
+amicable and just arrangement effected."
+
+Steele Weir fixed his eyes on the speaker with an intentness, a cold
+penetration, that seemed to bore to the very recesses of his mind. In
+that look there was something questioning and something menacing.
+
+"There's no controversy and hence no need of your services. The men
+stopped work, refused to return, and now the case is closed."
+
+"My dear sir, let us talk it over," said the Senator, bringing forth a
+pair of spectacles and setting the bow upon his nose.
+
+The engineer's visage failed to relax at this pacific proposal.
+
+"I gave them their chance and they declined; they'll have no other,"
+he stated. "Those men have browbeaten the company long enough. They
+refused, and as I anticipated that refusal I made preparations
+accordingly; a hundred and fifty white workmen arrived at Bowenville
+from Denver this morning and a hundred and fifty more will come
+to-morrow. They will do the work."
+
+The Senator's lips quivered and the upper one lifted in a movement
+like a snarl, showing tobacco-stained teeth.
+
+"The matter isn't closed, understand that," he snapped out. "We have
+the directors' promise no outside labor shall be brought in here for
+this job, and the promise shall be kept."
+
+"The new men go to work in the morning," Weir said.
+
+"You'll repent of this action, young man, you'll repent of it." The
+Senator seized the whisky bottle and angrily poured himself a second
+drink. "You'll repent of it as sure as your name is--is--whatever it
+is."
+
+The engineer took a step nearer the older man. His face now was as
+hard as granite.
+
+"Weir is my name," he said. "Did you ever hear it before?"
+
+"Weir--Weir?" came in a questioning mutter.
+
+"Yes, Weir."
+
+The speaker's eyes held the Senator's in savage leash, and a slight
+tremble presently began to shake the old man. Atkinson and Meyers and
+even the volatile Mexican lawyer, Martinez, remained unstirring, for
+in the situation they suddenly sensed something beyond their ken, some
+current of deep unknown forces, some play of fierce, obscure and
+fateful passion.
+
+A shadow of gray stole over Gordon's lineaments.
+
+"You are--are the son of----" came gasping forth.
+
+"I am. His son."
+
+"And--and----"
+
+"And I know what happened thirty years ago in this selfsame room!"
+
+The whisky that the Senator had poured into his glass suddenly slopped
+over his fingers; his figure all at once appeared more aged, hollow,
+bent. Without further word, with his hand still shaking, he set the
+glass on the bar, mechanically picked up the law book and walked
+feebly towards the door.
+
+Steele Weir turned his gaze on the saloon-keeper, Vorse. The man's
+right hand was under the bar and he seemed to be awaiting the
+engineer's next move, taut, tight-lipped, malignant.
+
+"That was for you too, Vorse," was flung at him. "One Weir went out of
+here, but another has returned."
+
+And he led his companions away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+A COMEDY--AND SOMETHING ELSE
+
+
+Towards noon one day a week later Steele Weir, headed for Bowenville
+in his car, had gained Chico Creek, half way between camp and San
+Mateo, when he perceived that another machine blocked the ford. About
+the wheels of the stalled car the shallow water rippled briskly, four
+or five inches deep; entirely deep enough, by all appearances, to keep
+marooned in the runabout the girl sitting disconsolately at the
+wheel.
+
+She was a very attractive-looking girl, Steele noted casually as he
+brought his own car to a halt and sprang out to join her, wading the
+water with his laced boots. As he approached he perceived that she had
+a slender well-rounded figure, fine-spun brown hair under her hat
+brim, clear brown eyes and the pink of peach blossoms in her soft
+smooth cheeks.
+
+But her look of relief vanished when she distinguished his face and
+her shoulders squared themselves.
+
+"Has your engine stopped?" he inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'll look into the hood."
+
+"I prefer that you would not."
+
+For an instant surprise marked his countenance.
+
+"You mean that you desire to remain here?" he asked.
+
+"I don't wish to remain here, but I choose that in preference to your
+aid."
+
+The man, who had bent forward to lift one cover of the engine,
+straightened up at that. He considered her intently and in silence
+for a time, marking her heightened color, the haughty poise of her
+head, the firm set of her lips.
+
+"To my knowledge, I never saw you before in my life," he remarked at
+last. "What, may I ask, is your particular reason for declining my
+services?"
+
+She was dumb for a little, while she tucked back a stray tendril of
+hair. The act was performed with the left hand; and Weir's eyes, which
+seldom missed anything, observed a diamond flash on the third finger.
+
+"Well, I'd choose not to explain," said she, afterwards, "but if you
+insist----"
+
+"I don't insist, I merely request ... your highness."
+
+A flash of anger shot from her eyes at this irony.
+
+"Don't think I'm afraid to tell you!" she cried. "It's because you're
+the manager of the construction camp; and if you've never seen me
+before, I've at least had you pointed out to me. I wish no assistance
+from the man who turns off his poor workmen without excuse or warning,
+and brings want and trouble upon the community. It was like striking
+them in the face. And then you break your promise not to bring in
+other workmen!"
+
+As she had said, she did not lack courage. Her words gushed forth in a
+torrent, as if an expression of pent up and outraged justice,
+disclosing a fervent sympathy and a fine zeal--and, likewise, a fine
+ignorance of the facts.
+
+"Well, why don't you say something?" she added, when he gave no
+indication of replying.
+
+Steele could have smiled at this feminine view of the matter that
+violent assertions required affirmations or denials.
+
+"What am I supposed to say?" he asked.
+
+Apparently that exhausted her patience.
+
+"You'll please molest me no longer," she stated, icily.
+
+"Very well."
+
+He raised the hood and inspected the engine. During his attempts to
+start it, she sat nonchalantly humming an air and gazing at the
+mountains as if her mind were a thousand miles away--which it was
+not.
+
+"Something wrong; it will have to be hauled in," said he finally.
+
+No reply. Steele returned to his own car and descending into the creek
+bed worked his way around her. When he was on the far bank, he
+rejoined her again, carrying a coil of rope. One end of this he
+fastened securely to the rear axle of her runabout.
+
+"What are you going to do, sir?" she demanded, whirling about on her
+seat and glaring angrily.
+
+"Drag you out."
+
+"You'll do nothing of the kind!"
+
+"Oh, yes," was his calm response.
+
+"Against my wishes, sir?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"This is abominable!"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+"I'll put on the brakes." And put them on she did, with a savage
+jerk.
+
+But nevertheless Weir's powerful machine drew her car slowly up out of
+the creek upon the road, where he forced it about until it pointed
+towards San Mateo. Then he retied the rope on the front axle.
+
+"Now for town," said he.
+
+"Why did you haul me out of there, I demand to know?"
+
+"Why? Because you were a public obstruction blocking traffic. If you
+had remained there long enough you would have become a public
+nuisance; and it's the duty of every citizen to abate nuisances. No
+one would call you a nuisance, of course,--not to your face, at any
+rate. But travelers might have felt some annoyance if compelled to
+drive around you; they might even have had you arrested when they
+learned you were acting out of willful stubbornness."
+
+In a sort of incredulous wonder, of charmed horror, the girl heard
+herself thus unfeelingly described.
+
+"You--you barbarian!" she cried.
+
+"Ready? We're off for town now."
+
+"I'll run my car in the ditch and wreck it if you so much as pull it
+another inch!"
+
+"I don't like to be frustrated in my generous acts; they are so few,
+according to common report. Well, we'll leave the car, but it must be
+drawn off the road."
+
+When this was accomplished, Weir replaced the rope in his machine.
+Then he returned to her.
+
+"What now? Do you intend to sit here in the hot sunshine, to say
+nothing of missing your dinner?"
+
+"That doesn't concern you."
+
+Weir shook his head gravely.
+
+"You must be saved from your own folly," said he.
+
+Before she had realized what was happening, he had opened the door of
+the runabout, swung her out upon the ground and was marching her
+towards his own machine. Stupefaction at this quick, atrocious deed
+left her an automaton; and before she had fully regained her control
+they were speeding towards San Mateo, she at his side.
+
+"This is outrageous!" she gasped.
+
+Steele Weir did not speak until they entered town.
+
+"Where is your home?" he asked.
+
+"Turn to the right at the end of the street."
+
+It was before a house of modern structure, banked with a bewildering
+number of flowers and shaded by trees, that he halted the car. He
+alighted, bared his head, assisted her to descend, bowed and then
+without a word drove away, leaving her to stare after him with a
+baffling mixture of feelings and the single indignant statement, "And
+he didn't even wait long enough for me to thank him!" Nor did her
+perplexity lessen when her car was left before the door during the
+afternoon by one of the camp mechanics to whom Weir had telephoned
+from San Mateo and who had put it in running order.
+
+Weir himself proceeded to Bowenville, where matters regarding
+shipments and the unloading of machinery engaged him the rest of the
+day. Into his mind, however, there floated at moments the image of the
+girl's face, banish it as he would. He had learned her name by asking
+who was the owner of the house where she had alighted, information
+necessary to direct the mechanic as to the delivery of the stalled
+car. Hosmer it was; and the residence was that of Dr. Hosmer.
+Presumably she was his daughter. And what a vivid, charming,
+never-surrender enemy! Lucky the chap who had won this high-spirited
+girl.
+
+The memory of her eyes and her personality was still with him when
+he ate his supper that evening in a restaurant in Bowenville. His own
+past in relation to the other sex had been starred by no love
+affair, not even by episodes of a sentimental nature; the character of
+his work had for long periods kept him away from women's society,
+but further than this there was the shadow upon his life, the shadow
+of mystery that obliged him to follow a solitary course. He
+considered himself unfree to seek friendships or favors among women.
+By every demand of honor he was bound to solicit no girl's trust or
+affection until that mystery was cleared and his father's innocence
+established. It was for this reason that he seemed even to himself to
+grow more hard, more harsh, more silent and aloof, until at last he
+had come to believe that no fair face had the power to arouse his
+interest or to quicken his pulse.
+
+But now, this girl he had met at the ford!
+
+Long-stifled emotions struggled in his breast. Sleeping desires awoke.
+His spirit swelled like a caged thing within the shell of years of
+indurated habit. A strange restlessness pervaded him. He had a fierce
+passion somehow to rip in pieces the gray drab pattern of his
+commonplace life.
+
+Perhaps it was this revolt against the fetters of fate that caused him
+to welcome the chance for action that presently was offered. The
+restaurant was of an ordinary type, with a lunch counter at one side,
+a row of tables down the middle and half a dozen booths along the wall
+offering some degree of privacy. In one of these Steele Weir was
+smoking a cigar and finishing his coffee before making his ride back
+to camp. From the booth adjoining he had for some time been hearing
+scraps of conversation; now all at once the voices rose in protest and
+in answering explanation, in perplexed appeal and earnest assurance.
+
+Weir's own reflections ceased. His head turned and remained fixed to
+listen, while the cigar grew cold between his fingers. For ten minutes
+or so his attitude of concentrated harkening to the two voices, a
+girl's and a man's, remained unchanged. Little by little he was
+piecing out the thread of the confidential dialogue--and of the little
+drama being enacted in the booth.
+
+His brows became lowering as he gathered its significance, his lips
+drew together in a tight thin line. He did not move when he heard the
+man push back his chair to leave the place, nor alter his position
+until there came the sound of the door closing at the front of the
+restaurant. Then he reached for his hat, stood up and went lightly
+around into the other booth, where he pulled the green calico curtain
+across the opening.
+
+A girl of about seventeen, of plump clean prettiness, still sat at the
+table, which was littered with dishes. The cheap finery of her hat and
+dress showed a pathetic attempt to increase her natural comeliness. At
+this minute her face showed amazement and a hint of apprehension.
+
+"What are you coming in here for?" she demanded.
+
+"I want to talk to you for a little while," Weir replied, seating
+himself. "You will please listen. I've overheard enough of your talk
+to catch its drift; you came here to be married, but now this man
+wants to induce you to go to Los Angeles first."
+
+"That isn't any of your business," the girl flashed back, going white
+and red by turns.
+
+"I'm making it mine, however. You live up on Terry Creek, by what I
+heard; that's not far from my camp. I'm manager at the dam and my
+name's Weir."
+
+At this statement the girl shrank back, beginning to bite the hem of
+her handkerchief nervously and gazing at him with terrified eyes.
+
+"I'm here to help you, not harm you. You've run away from home to-day
+to marry this fellow. Did he promise to marry you if you came to
+Bowenville?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And now he wants you to go with him to Los Angeles first, promising
+to marry you there?"
+
+The girl hesitated, with a wavering look.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He gives you excuses, of course. But they don't satisfy your mind,
+do they? They don't satisfy mine, at any rate. It's the old trick.
+Suppose when you reached the coast he didn't marry you after all and
+put you off with more promises and after a week or two abandoned
+you?"
+
+"Oh, he wouldn't do that!" she cried, with a gulp.
+
+"That's just what he is planning. He didn't meet you here until after
+dark, I judge. You'll both go to the train separately--I overheard
+that part. Afterwards he could return from the coast and deny that he
+had ever had anything to do with you, and it would simply be your word
+against his. And which would people hereabouts believe, tell me that,
+which would they believe, yours or his, after you had gone wrong?"
+
+The girl sat frozen. Then suddenly she began to cry, softly and with
+jerks of her shoulders. Weir reached out and patted her arm.
+
+"What's your name?" he asked.
+
+"Mary--Mary Johnson."
+
+"Mary, I'm interfering in your affairs only because I know what men
+will do. You must take no chances. If this fellow is really anxious to
+marry you, he'll do it here in Bowenville."
+
+After a few sobs she wiped her eyes.
+
+"He said he didn't dare get the license in San Mateo, or his folks
+would have stopped our marriage."
+
+"Then you should stay here to-night, go to the next county seat and be
+married to-morrow. His parents are bound to learn about it once you're
+married. A few days more or less make no difference. And though I
+should return to my work, I'll just stay over a day and take you in my
+car to-morrow to see that you're married straight and proper. Why go
+clear to Los Angeles?"
+
+"He said it would be our honeymoon--and--and I had never been away
+from here."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+She hesitated in uncertainty whether or not she should answer.
+
+"Ed Sorenson," came at last from her lips.
+
+Steele Weir slowly thrust his head forward, fixing her with burning
+eyes.
+
+"Son of the big cattleman?" he demanded.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"And you love him?"
+
+"Yes, oh, yes!"
+
+Weir sat back in his seat, lighted a cigarette and stared past her
+head at the opposite partition. The evil strain of the father had been
+continued in the son and was working here to seduce this simple,
+ignorant girl, incited by her physical freshness and the expectation
+that she should be easy prey.
+
+"Well, I doubt if he loves you," he said, presently.
+
+"He does, he does!"
+
+"If he really does above everything else in the world, he'll be
+willing to marry you openly, no matter what his father may say or do.
+That's the test, Mary. If he's in earnest, he'll agree at once to go
+with us to the next county seat to-morrow and be married there by a
+minister. Isn't that true? Answer me that squarely; isn't it true?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then by that we'll decide. If he agrees, well and good; if he
+refuses, that will show him up--show he never had any intention of
+marrying you. I'm a stranger to you, but I'm your friend. And you're
+not going to Los Angeles unmarried!"
+
+The last words were uttered in a level menacing tone that caused Mary
+Johnson to shiver. To her, reared in the humble adobe house on her
+father's little ranch on Terry Creek, a man who could manage the great
+irrigation project seemed a figure out of her ken, a vast form working
+against the sky. His statements were not to be disputed, whatever she
+might think.
+
+"Yes, sir," she said, just above a whisper.
+
+"All right. Now we'll wait for him. He was coming back for you, wasn't
+he?"
+
+"Yes. I was to stay at the hotel till train time."
+
+"Is this your grip?"
+
+Weir jerked a thumb towards a worn canvas "telescope" fastened with a
+single shawl strap, resting in the corner of the booth.
+
+"It's mine. Yes, sir."
+
+"How old is Ed Sorenson," he asked, after a pause.
+
+"About thirty, maybe."
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Seventeen next month."
+
+"But sixteen yet this month."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+He said nothing more. As the minutes passed, her timorous gaze
+continued steadfastly on the stern countenance before her. She dully
+expected something terrible to happen when Ed Sorenson appeared, for
+she knew Ed would be angry; but she had been powerless to prevent the
+intrusion of this terrible stranger.
+
+Fear, in truth, a fear that left her heart cold, was her feeling as
+she contemplated Weir. Yet under that, was there not something else? A
+sense of safety, of comforting assurance of protection?
+
+"You--you won't hurt Ed if he won't go with us?" she asked, in a low
+voice. "If he gets mad and won't marry me here, I mean?"
+
+The man's eyes came round to hers.
+
+"I'll just break him in two, nothing more, Mary," was the calm
+answer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE ENEMY'S SPAWN
+
+
+The curtain to the booth was flung back.
+
+"I've the train tickets; come along to the hotel----" exclaimed the
+man who quickly entered. But the words died in his mouth at sight of
+Weir sitting in the place he had vacated.
+
+He was over average height, of strong fleshy build, with a small
+blonde mustache on his upper lip. Under his eyes little pouches had
+already begun to form; his mouth was full and sensual; but he still
+retained an air of liveliness, of carelessness and agility, that might
+at first sight seem the spontaneity of youth. He wore a brown suit, a
+gray flannel shirt and Stetson hat--the common apparel of the
+country.
+
+"Who the devil are you? And what are you butting in here for?" he
+exclaimed, with a vicious spark showing in his pale blue eyes. At the
+same time he clapped a hand on Weir's shoulder, closing it in a hard
+grasp.
+
+Instantly Weir struck the hand off with his fist.
+
+"Keep your dirty flippers to yourself," he said, rising.
+
+The blood faded from the other's countenance, leaving it white with
+rage.
+
+"Get out of this booth, or I'll throw you out."
+
+It was Weir's turn to act. Like a flash he caught Sorenson's elbow,
+jerked him forward, spun him about and dropped him upon the chair.
+
+"Sit there, you cradle-robber, until I'm through with you," he
+commanded. "And if you don't want everybody in this restaurant to know
+about your business with this girl, you'll lower your voice when you
+talk."
+
+Sorenson shot an uneasy glance towards the curtain and his wrath
+became not less furious but better controlled. Clearly public
+attention was the last thing he desired in this affair. He leaned
+back, staring at Steele Weir insolently, and produced a cigarette, at
+which he began to puff.
+
+"Mary, get ready. We'll be going in a minute," said he.
+
+"No, you'll not, Sorenson. I've taken a hand in your game. This girl
+says you're going to marry her, is that right?" The other rolled his
+eyes upward and began to whistle a jig tune softly. "Well, this is the
+plan she and I've made. She'll remain at the hotel to-night--as will
+you and I--and to-morrow we'll drive to another county seat in my car
+and you'll secure a licence there. Then you'll go to a minister's,
+where I'll act as a witness, and the ceremony will be performed.
+Afterwards the pair of you can proceed to Los Angeles, or elsewhere as
+you please, on your wedding journey."
+
+"You're quite a little planner, aren't you?" the other jeered.
+
+"That's the arrangement if you agree."
+
+"I don't agree."
+
+Mary Johnson, in whose eyes a light of hope had dawned during Weir's
+low-toned statement, began nervously to bite her lip.
+
+"Won't you do it, Ed?" she asked, timidly.
+
+"We'll do as I planned, or nothing," he stated. Then with sudden spite
+he continued, "You're responsible for this mixup. What did you let
+this fellow in here for while I was gone? Didn't you have sense
+enough to keep your mouth shut?"
+
+Steele halted him by a gesture.
+
+"Don't begin abusing her; you're not married to her yet. I overheard
+your talk and guessed the low-lived, scoundrelly trick you proposed to
+play on her."
+
+"You damned eavesdropper----"
+
+"Sure, eavesdropper is right," Weir interrupted, coolly. "So I just
+stepped in here from my booth next door to discuss the situation with
+her; you can't mislead an innocent girl like her with the intention of
+shaking her when you get her into a city, not if I know about it and
+am around. If you sincerely intend to marry her, and will do so
+to-morrow in my presence, then I'll withdraw. Afterwards I mean, of
+course."
+
+Sorenson arose.
+
+"Come, Mary. Stand aside, you!"
+
+"She doesn't go with you," the engineer stated.
+
+For a moment the men's eyes locked, those of one full of blue fire and
+hatred, those of the other quiet as pieces of flint.
+
+"And she shall keep with me while I telephone to your father that you
+brought her here under promise of marriage, a girl of sixteen, without
+her own parents' consent, and now refuse to marry her," Steele added.
+
+A sneer twisted the other man's mouth.
+
+"My father happens to be in the east, where he's been for a month," he
+mocked. "If he were here, he wouldn't believe you; he'd know you were
+a liar. He knows I'm engaged to marry----" Bite off the words as he
+tried, they had escaped.
+
+"Ah, that's the way of it!" Weir remarked with a silky smoothness.
+"You expect to marry some other girl--and have no intention whatever
+of marrying Mary here."
+
+"To hell with you and your opinions!"
+
+"First, you coax her to Bowenville by a promise, then you persuade her
+by more promises to go to Los Angeles," the engineer proceeded
+steadily, "and there you would betray and abandon her to a life on the
+streets, like the yellow cur you are."
+
+Sorenson snapped his fingers and moved round to the girl's side.
+
+"Pay no attention to him," he addressed her. "He's only a crazy
+fool."
+
+But she drew back against the wall, staring at him with a strained,
+searching regard.
+
+"Will you marry me to-morrow as he asks?" she questioned anxiously.
+
+"No. I explained the reason why once. Come on; let's get away from
+him. Then I'll make everything clear and satisfactory to you."
+
+For a moment she stood wavering, picking at her handkerchief, her face
+pale and unhappy, questioning his countenance. Finally she turned to
+look at Steele Weir, standing silently by.
+
+"You never said you were engaged to another girl; you told me I was
+the only one you loved," she muttered in a choked voice. "But I see
+now you won't marry me. You wish me to go with you--but not to marry.
+I'm going away--away anywhere. By myself! Where I'll never see any
+one!" Burying her face in her hands, she shook with sobs.
+
+"This is what comes from your putting an oar in," said Sorenson,
+lifting his fist in a burst of fury to strike Weir.
+
+The latter at once smote him across the mouth with open palm at the
+vile epithet that followed. Sorenson staggered, then lunged forward,
+tugging at something in his hip-pocket, while the table and dishes
+went over in a crash.
+
+Before he could draw the weapon Steele's fingers shot forth and seized
+his wrist; his other hand closed about Sorenson's throat in an iron
+grasp. Slowly under that powerful grip the younger man's struggles
+ceased, his eyes dilated, his knees yielded and gave way. The revolver
+was wrenched from his numbed hold. His eyeballs seemed afire; his
+breast heaved in violent spasms for the denied breath; and his heart
+appeared about to burst.
+
+"You miserable skunk!" Weir said, barely moving his mouth. "I ought to
+choke the life out of you." Then he released his hold. "I'll keep this
+gun--and use it if you ever try to pull another on me! Now, make
+tracks. Remember, too, to pay your bill as you go out."
+
+When Sorenson had straightened his coat, giving Weir a malignant look
+during the process, he departed. His air of disdainful insolence had
+quite evaporated, but that he considered the action between them only
+begun was plain, though he spoke not a word. Weir, however, heard him
+give a quieting explanation to the waiter hovering outside, who had
+been drawn by the crash of dishes.
+
+"Thought a fight was going on," the aproned dispenser of food said to
+Steele when he and the girl emerged.
+
+"Just an accident. Nothing broken, I imagine," was the response.
+
+"You couldn't break those dishes with a hammer; they're made for rough
+work."
+
+"If there's any damage, this may cover it." And Steele tossed the
+fellow a dollar.
+
+Outside the restaurant he slipped his hand inside Mary Johnson's arm
+and led her along the street. With him he had brought the old strapped
+grip.
+
+"Where you taking me?" she asked, in a worried quaver.
+
+"Home, Mary."
+
+"Oh, I'm afraid to go home."
+
+"Are you afraid of your own father and mother? They're the ones to
+trust first of all."
+
+"But when father--mother is dead--sees the telescope, he'll want to
+know where I've been. He doesn't know I have it. I told him I might
+stay with a girl at San Mateo over night, and then sneaked it out."
+
+"The best thing is to tell him all about this occurrence."
+
+"Oh, I can't."
+
+"Then I shall. Leave that part to me."
+
+And though her heart was filled with fresh alarms and fears at the
+prospect, there seemed nothing else to do. She longed to flee, to hide
+in some dark hole, to cover her shame from her father and the world,
+but in the hands of this determined man she felt herself powerless.
+What he willed, she dumbly did.
+
+Terry Creek flowed out of the mountains four miles north of San Mateo,
+an insignificant stream entering the Burntwood halfway down to
+Bowenville. The Johnson ranch house was a mile up the canyon, where
+the rocky walls expanded into a grassy park of no great area. They
+reached the girl's home about half-past nine that night.
+
+For two hours Weir remained talking with the father, describing the
+affair at Bowenville, fending off his first bitter anger at the girl
+and gradually persuading him to see that Mary had been deceived, lured
+away on hollow promises and was guiltless of all except failing to
+take him into her confidence. At last peace was made. Mary wept for a
+time, and was patted on the head by her rough, bearded father, who
+exclaimed, "There, there, don't cry. You're safe back again; we'll
+just forget it."
+
+Outside of the house, however, where he had accompanied Weir to his
+car, he said with an oath:
+
+"But I'll not forget Ed Sorenson, if I go to hell for it. My little
+girl!"
+
+"She's half a child yet, that's the worse of his offense," Steele
+replied, savagely.
+
+"Mary said you choked him."
+
+"Some. Not enough."
+
+"I'll not forget him--or you, Mr. Weir."
+
+Steele mounted into his machine. He thoughtfully studied the rancher's
+bearded, weather-tanned face, illuminated by the moonlight.
+
+"At present I'd say nothing about this matter to any one. Later on you
+may be able to use it in squaring accounts," the engineer advised.
+
+"I hope so," was the answer, with a bitter note. "But talking would
+only hurt Mary, not Ed Sorenson. Whatever the Sorensons do is all
+right, you know, because they're rich. The daughter of a poor man like
+me would get all the black end of the gossip; and I can't lift a
+finger, that's what grinds me, unless I go out and shoot him, then
+hang for it. For the bank's got a mortgage on my little bunch of
+stock, and on my ranch here, and Sorenson, of course, is the bank.
+Gordon and Vorse and a few others are in it too, but he's the bull of
+the herd. If I opened my mouth about his son, I'd be kicked off of
+Terry Creek, lock, stock and barrel. That's the way Sorenson keeps all
+of us poor devils, white and Mexican, eating out of his hand. I've
+just been poor since I came here a boy; the gang in San Mateo won't
+let anybody but themselves have a chance. And I reckon old man
+Sorenson wouldn't care much if his boy had ruined my girl. Cuss him a
+little, maybe; that would be all. But I won't forget the whelp. Some
+day my chance will come to play even." "Sure; if one just keeps quiet
+and waits," Steele agreed. "Well, I must hit the trail. If you want
+work any time, come over to the dam; we can always use a man with a
+team." Johnson nodded. "After haying is done, maybe. And remember, I'm
+much obliged to you for looking after my little girl. I won't forget
+that, either." He reached up diffidently and shook hands with the
+engineer. Weir's grip was sympathetic and sincere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A SECRET CONFERENCE
+
+
+On a certain afternoon Felipe Martinez, the lean and restless attorney
+who had acted as the Mexican workmen's mouthpiece, observed through
+the broad plate-glass window of the San Mateo Cattle Company's office
+an incident that greatly interested him. For the moment he forgot the
+resentment kindled by Sorenson's abrupt refusal and brutal words when
+he asked for the nomination for county attorney. The election was in
+the autumn; the nomination was equivalent to election; and Felipe
+considered that he had too long been kept apart from that particular
+spoil.
+
+Martinez had once had a slight difference with the banker, and now
+outrageously Sorenson had recalled it. He had stated that Martinez
+should hold no political office; he gave offices only to men who did
+exactly as he advised; his exact words were that the Mexican was
+"tricky and no good." And picking up his hat Sorenson who had that day
+returned home from the east went out of the bank, leaving Martinez to
+stare out of the window and meditatively twist a point of his silky
+black mustache.
+
+It was before the window that there occurred the meeting between
+Sorenson and the manager of the dam. Martinez perceived the two men
+glance at each other and pass, but after a step or two both men
+halted. As if worked by a single wire, they slowly swung about for a
+second look. The Mexican's nimble brain calculated that they could not
+have previously met and in consequence their behavior bespoke
+something out of the ordinary.
+
+The pair stood exactly where they had turned, three or four paces
+apart, he noted. The Mexican's mind palpitated with a slight thrill of
+excitement. The manner of each of the men was that of a fighting
+animal looking over another animal of the same sort: neither uttering
+a word, nor stirring a finger, nor yielding a particle in his fixed
+unwinking gaze. Martinez could almost feel the exchanged challenge,
+the cold antagonism, the hostile curiosity, the matching of wills, the
+instant hate, between the men.
+
+Though they had not met before, to be sure, nevertheless they were
+enemies. Was it because of the discharge of the workmen? Then
+Martinez' mind flashed back to the scene in Vorse's saloon when Gordon
+had showed such sudden emotion at the engineer's name and his
+enigmatical reference to some event in the past. That was it!
+Something which had occurred thirty years ago, probably something
+crooked. Men committed deeds in those early days that they would now
+like to forget. He, Martinez, would look into the matter.
+
+Sorenson passed out of sight, and Weir likewise proceeded on his way.
+Thereupon the lawyer sauntered over to the court house, where
+presently he became engrossed in a pile of tomes in the register's
+office. As examining records is a part of a lawyer's regular work, it
+never excites curiosity or arouses suspicion.
+
+That same evening Martinez perceived Vorse enter Sorenson's office.
+Vorse, he recalled, had been included in the engineer's threatening
+remarks to Gordon. Shortly thereafter Gordon himself ambled along the
+street and passed through the door. Last of all, Burkhardt, a short,
+fleshy, bearded man, went into the building. The vultures of San
+Mateo, as he secretly called them, had flocked together for
+conference. Presently Martinez strolled by the office, outwardly
+displaying no interest in the structure but furtively seeking to catch
+a glimpse of the interior through a crack of the drawn shade. But in
+this he was unsuccessful.
+
+Of one thing he was certain, however. His prolonged examination of the
+county records had revealed an old bill of sale of a ranch and several
+herds of cattle from one Joseph Weir to Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon and
+Burkhardt. He had placed his finger on the link connecting the
+engineer with these men, the entire four, as this old bill of sale
+thus recorded showed the intimate though unexpressed partnership of
+the men, which was common knowledge over the country; and intuition
+told him also that this private assembly of the quartette quickly on
+Sorenson's return home had its inspiration in the new manager of the
+dam.
+
+Martinez determined to continue his investigations. Events might yet
+prove that it would have been much better for the cattleman to have
+given him the political nomination. Truly, it was possible. In any
+case, it would do no harm to have "something on" Sorenson and the
+others, these rulers of San Mateo. And there was the opposite side of
+the affair--Weir's side; so it looked as if there might be profit
+either way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The four men sitting in the railed-off space in the San Mateo Cattle
+Company's office constituted the cattle company. Moreover, they
+comprised the financial, political and general power of this remote
+section of New Mexico. In face, manner, garb, they were dissimilar.
+Vorse, clothed in gray, was hawk-nosed and impassive; and though now,
+like his companions, wealthy beyond simple needs he nevertheless
+continued the operation of his saloon that had been a landmark in San
+Mateo for forty years. Burkhardt was rough-featured, rough-tongued,
+choleric, and coatless: typically the burly, uncurried, uncouth
+stock man, whose commonest words were oaths or curses and whose way
+with obstinate cattle or men was the way of the club or the fist.
+Gordon was the wily, cautious, unscrupulous politician; he had
+represented San Mateo in the legislature for years, both during
+the Territorial period and since New Mexico had become a state, and
+was not unknown in other parts of the southwest; but he was "Judge"
+only by courtesy, the title most frequently given him, never having
+been admitted to the bar or having practiced, and engaged himself
+ostensibly in the insurance and real estate business. Like the
+others, his share of the large cattle, sheep and land holdings of
+the group made him independent. Sorenson, the last of the four and
+in reality the leader because of a greater breadth of vision and a
+natural capacity for business, was dressed in a tailored suit of
+greenish plaid--a man with bushy eyebrows, a long fleshy nose,
+predatory eyes, a heavy cat-fish mouth and a great, barrel-like body
+that reared two or three inches over six feet when he stood on his
+feet. But one thing they had in common, in addition to the gray hair
+of age, and that was a joint liability for the past. For years they
+had believed that liability extinguished through the operation of
+time. They had considered as closed and sealed the account of early
+secret, lawless acts by which they had acquired wealth and a grip on
+the community. They were now law-observing members of society; they
+controlled even if they sometimes failed to possess the goodwill
+of the county--and they were not men to measure position by
+friendships; their councils determined how much or how little other
+men should own and in local politics their fingers moved the puppets
+that served their will.
+
+With the entrance here of the powerful group of financiers who were
+constructing the irrigation project they recognized the threat to
+their old-time supremacy. Cattle and sheep interests would succumb to
+farming; a swarm of new, independent settlers would arrive like
+locusts; and their leadership would eventually be challenged if not
+ended. New towns would spring up. New money would flow in to dispute
+their financial mastery. New leaders would arise to assail their
+political dominion. And against the prospect of all this they had
+initiated a secret warfare, endeavoring by stealth to ruin the
+irrigation company at the beginning and nip the danger in the bud.
+
+Now it had been revealed all at once that they had not only a
+general and impersonal enemy in the form of the company, but a
+specific one in the form of a man, its manager. Out of nowhere he
+had emerged, out of thirty years' silence, a sinister figure who
+tapped with significant finger the book of their secret past while
+his eyes steadfastly demanded a reckoning. Did he know all, or
+nothing? Knowing, did he deliberately leave them in doubt in order
+to shatter their confidence?
+
+At least one of the four had been badly shaken on learning Weir's
+identity, and all now were uneasy. It was as if Fate after a long
+silence was about to open the sealed record.
+
+"Perhaps you were just imagining things, Judge," Sorenson was saying.
+
+Senator Gordon moistened his lips and tugged nervously at his gray
+mustache.
+
+"No, no," he exclaimed. "Just ask Vorse. The man said his name was
+Weir and that he was the son of Joe Weir. Then--then----"
+
+"Well?" Sorenson demanded, frowning at the other's visible trepidation.
+
+"Weir added, 'And I know what happened thirty years ago in this
+selfsame room.' Those were his very words. Isn't that true, Vorse?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"They could mean only one thing," said Gordon.
+
+"When the Judge went out he said to me," Vorse stated, "'That was for
+you too.' I had my hand on my gun under the counter as he said it,
+ready if he made a move. He knew what I had there, but it didn't faze
+him. He's a better man than Joe Weir ever was, I want to remark, and
+different; he has nerve and a bad eye. He knows something, lay your
+bets on that."
+
+"How much? How much? If we only knew how much!" Judge Gordon
+vouchsafed, testily.
+
+"How would he know anything? Joe Weir didn't know, so how can this
+fellow know? Don't get scared at a shadow." It was the bearded,
+rough-tongued Burkhardt who spoke, concluding his words with a
+blasphemous oath.
+
+"There's the Mexican who saw what happened--and that boy who looked in
+at the back door," Gordon asserted. "We just caught sight of him and
+couldn't make out his face against the light. Then he had skipped when
+we ran there. We never did learn who he was."
+
+"Do you think he remembers?" Sorenson said, scornfully. "He may be
+dead. He may be on the other side of the world. Just some kid who
+happened to drift by at the minute and look in, and there's not one
+chance in a million he's anywhere around these parts yet. He would
+have blabbed long ago to some one if he had been; don't figure him in,
+he's lost."
+
+"Saurez isn't, though."
+
+At this Vorse put in a word.
+
+"He saw more than one killing in those days when he was roustabout for
+me. It was only one more to him. Probably he has forgotten it.
+Anyway," Vorse ended with deadly emphasis, "he knows what would happen
+to him even now if he remembered it and talked. Leave him out of the
+calculation too."
+
+"Then that just makes the four of us," said Burkhardt. "Nobody else.
+So this fellow Weir doesn't know a thing."
+
+"But we can't be absolutely sure," Judge Gordon replied.
+
+"Well, he'd need proof, wouldn't he?"
+
+"Certainly, to bring legal action. But how do we know he hasn't even
+that? Look all around the question as a lawyer does; let us assume the
+millionth chance, for instance. Suppose that he somewhere met and
+became acquainted with that boy. Suppose that he learned the latter
+had been here at the time and saw the shooting; and heard his story.
+Suppose that Weir knows this instant where he is and can produce him
+as a witness in court."
+
+"I reckon in this county his testimony wouldn't count for much,"
+Burkhardt, who had been sheriff, stated, with a harsh laugh.
+
+Sorenson, however, was impressed by the Judge's reasoning, for he
+drummed with fingers on the desk and sat in brooding silence. So
+likewise sat Vorse, who had heard Weir's utterance and beheld his
+face.
+
+"He knows something," he repeated, in a convinced tone. "Or he's a
+damned good bluffer."
+
+"I passed him here at the door this afternoon," the banker remarked.
+"I turned to look at him, guessing who he was, and he had stopped and
+was looking at me. Cool about it too. We'll have to watch him."
+
+"Perhaps if we just tip him off to keep his mouth shut tight, that
+will be enough," Burkhardt suggested. "If he knows the four of us are
+ready----"
+
+Vorse sniffed.
+
+"You think he can be bluffed?" he said. "You haven't seen him yet; go
+take a look. We'll not throw any scare into him. If he were that kind,
+he wouldn't have told us who he is. He wanted us to know he's after
+us, that's my opinion. He wants to shake our nerve--and he shook the
+Judge's all right that day at my bar."
+
+"He did," Gordon admitted. "The thing was so infernally unexpected.
+Almost like Joe Weir himself appearing. I didn't sleep a wink that
+night, what with my heart being bad and what with seeing him."
+
+"Suppose he _has_ proofs?" Vorse asked after a pause, while his
+narrowed eyes moved from one to another of his companions.
+
+A considerable silence followed. The question jerked into full light
+the issue that had all the while been lurking in the recesses of their
+minds--an issue full of ghastly possibilities. Judge Gordon's fingers
+trembled as he wiped with handkerchief the cold sweat on his brow.
+
+"We're all in it," Vorse added.
+
+Burkhardt brought his fist down on the desk with a sudden crash.
+
+"If he has proofs, then it's him or us," he exclaimed, while the
+blood suffused his face. "Him or us--and that means him! I'll never go
+behind bars!"
+
+"Sure not. None of us," Vorse said.
+
+"It will mean----" Judge Gordon began in an agitated voice, but did
+not finish.
+
+Sorenson gave a nod of his head. His bear-trap mouth was compressed in
+a determined evil line.
+
+"Exactly. He'll never use his proofs. We're in too far to halt now if
+matters come to the point of his trying to use them. He has a grip on
+us in one way; he knows we can't declare his father, Joe Weir, did the
+killing; that would make us--what do you call it, Judge?"
+
+"Accomplices after the fact. Besides, it would then come out that we
+had taken over and shared among us his stuff, fifty thousand apiece.
+It's a deplorable situation we're in, gentlemen, deplorable. If we
+were but able to start the story Joe Weir believed and fled because
+of, it would cut the ground out from under this man's feet at once."
+
+"It's him we'll cut, not the ground under him," Burkhardt growled,
+thrusting his hairy chin forward towards the lawyer. "And cut his
+damned throat."
+
+"I hate to think of our being forced to--to homicide. Even justifiable
+homicide."
+
+"Homicide nothing! It's just killing a rattlesnake waiting in the
+brush to strike. That's the way we used to do in the old days, and if
+he's going to bring them back that's what we'll do again."
+
+Sorenson smiled grimly.
+
+"We'll wait till we're sure he has the proofs, then----"
+
+"Then we'll act quick and sure," Vorse shot out.
+
+"And quietly," the cattleman added. "We'll take no more chances this
+time. It will be arranged carefully beforehand; all four of us will be
+in it, of course,--equal responsibility; and there'll be no
+witnesses."
+
+Judge Gordon's face wore a pallid, sickish look.
+
+"I hope to God there's some other way out of it," he muttered.
+
+"So do all of us," Burkhardt snarled. "But if there isn't, it means
+guns. For you, too, along with the rest of us."
+
+Sorenson leaned forward and gazed from under his heavy brows,
+compelling Gordon to meet his fixed look.
+
+"You were keen enough at the time for your share of Joe Weir's stuff,"
+he said. "So you'll play the hand out to the end now, the bad cards as
+well as the good. You're no better than the rest of us, and it was you
+who hatched the scheme for cleaning him up and who put over the
+story."
+
+"I know, I know. But--but this would be too much like cold-blooded
+murder."
+
+"Murder!" Sorenson grated. "Did you look straight into this fellow
+Weir's eyes? Didn't you see something there that resembled murder?
+He'd like only the chance to kill us one by one with his own hands: I
+saw that much. Just as Burkhardt said, it's him or us. After you told
+me about him, I had only to take one look. If he has the goods on
+us--well, he'll have to die. Make up your mind to that. We're back to
+the time of thirty years ago and fighting for our lives. We were not
+only all in on the Weir job, but the Dent killing--all of us. Remember
+that. If the facts become known, we'll be run into some other county
+and court and hanged. And every enemy we've made in these years past
+will put up his head and clamor for our blood. Let that sink into your
+mind."
+
+The effect of this low fierce utterance was to hammer the truth home.
+The Judge was ashen. Vorse's face appeared like an evil mask.
+Burkhardt glowered savagely.
+
+At that instant there sounded the faint report of a shot in the
+street. Then as the group sat unmoving, rigid, keyed to the highest
+pitch of expectancy, there followed quickly two more shots.
+Afterwards, silence.
+
+"A gun-play!" issued from Vorse's lips, softly.
+
+They all sprang up to hasten to the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A SHOT IN THE DARK
+
+
+Steele Weir driving his car down the street in the dusk had caught
+sight of Felipe Martinez standing near the cattle company's office. He
+stopped close by, beckoned. Martinez would do as well as another.
+
+"You're a notary, I suppose?" he questioned.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Weir. Most of us lawyers here are," he replied politely,
+when he had advanced.
+
+"I've some papers I want acknowledged to-night. Must get them into the
+mail going down to Bowenville in the morning."
+
+"Only too pleased to facilitate your business, Mr. Weir. My office is
+down a few doors."
+
+"Jump in."
+
+"It's but a few steps."
+
+"Then I'll get out here." And the engineer stopped the engine and
+descended to the ground.
+
+Along the street open doorways and windows were already beginning to
+make yellow panels of lamplight in the thin gloom. The air was still
+warm, balmy, scented by the lingering aroma of the greasewood smoke of
+supper fires in Mexican ovens. Stars were jeweling the sky. Few
+persons moved in the twilight.
+
+One of these was a man who, standing at the door of a native saloon
+across the street and a little farther up, had come diagonally over
+towards the bank on seeing the engineer halt his car. He walked with a
+slouching haste seldom exhibited by a Mexican and gained the spot as
+Weir stepped out. There he slackened his pace while he scanned the
+American with an intense, slow gaze that the engineer, chancing to
+raise his eyes, squarely met.
+
+The Mexicans always looked at him and fell silent when he passed since
+he had shown who was master at the dam. In the eyes of some was merely
+stupid curiosity, in some a shrinking, and in many a half-veiled
+hostility. That did not trouble Weir. In Mexico he had dealt with
+recalcitrant workmen of more lawless nature than these. He usually
+ignored them altogether now as they no longer were in his employ. But
+this man seized his attention.
+
+It was not yet too dark to mark his face as he lounged past, slowly
+turning his head about as he progressed until his chin was on his
+shoulder, staring back. His look the while remained riveted on Weir--a
+steady, contemplative, evil regard. In Chihuahua the engineer had once
+seen a notorious local "killer" who had that same gaze.
+
+Martinez had also glanced at the fellow.
+
+"Who is that man? One of the discharged workmen?" Weir asked him, when
+moving forward they in turn had passed the Mexican.
+
+"No, I imagine not. At any rate, he doesn't belong in San Mateo or
+anywhere hereabouts. I know everybody for fifty miles, for I've been
+active in social and political affairs. He's unknown to me. A
+stranger." Then a little farther along: "Here is my office, Mr. Weir.
+I'll have a light in an instant. Ah, now. Be so good as to have a
+chair and we'll expedite your business."
+
+As Martinez filled out the acknowledgment blanks on the papers, his
+eyes furtively skipped over the vital portions of the documents. The
+latter were connected with company business. He had hoped they would
+be personal so that he might learn something more of this manager's
+affairs, possibly more of his secret antagonism for Sorenson and his
+friends. Any intrigue appealed to the thin, slippery lawyer's soul,
+but most of all some one's else intrigue into which he might
+profitably put a finger. However, from these papers he was to learn
+nothing.
+
+He had considered all possibilities of the affair, all possible
+solutions of what long ago might have occurred between Joseph Weir,
+undoubtedly the father of the man sitting across the table from him,
+and the four men now conferring in Sorenson's office. This was no
+petty squabble, he divined. There was something going on under the
+surface that was big--big! And very dangerous too, for the spirit of
+that moment in Vorse's bar was not to be mistaken; it had been tense,
+electric. Utmost caution on Martinez's part would therefore be
+necessary.
+
+As between the two parties, his sympathies at present inclined towards
+Weir. The refusal on the latter's part to reëmploy the Mexican workmen
+on their own terms was purely a matter of policy, and the lawyer's
+first gusty anger had long been forgotten. But not so Sorenson's
+sneering words of that afternoon. They struck to the heart of his
+vanity, breeding an animosity that would last. Had not the banker
+stated that the lawyer should hold no political office whatever? After
+all his services? Had he not definitely shown that Martinez might
+never expect anything there? Well, the lawyer wasn't one tamely to
+yield his rights; he did not propose always to remain a scrimping,
+pettifogging attorney, existing on crumbs.
+
+When with a flourish he had appended his name to the acknowledgments
+and affixed his seal, he sat back thoughtfully studying the engineer,
+who was carefully examining the paragraphs for errors. He knew his
+business, did Martinez; the man would find no mistakes. Then the
+lawyer's eyes suddenly glistened. He arose and closed the door as Weir
+thrust the documents into a stout linen envelope, addressed and
+stamped.
+
+"I'll be pleased to see your letter goes in the mail in the morning,"
+he said, returning to his place. "The stage leaves at eight-thirty."
+
+"Post-office is closed now, I suppose. Very well. It will be an
+accommodation," the engineer responded.
+
+Martinez leaned forward.
+
+"If you can spare the time, I should like to have a little talk with
+you," said he. "Pardon me if I appear presumptuous, but as you're
+aware, Mr. Weir, I overheard your words to Judge Gordon in Vorse's
+saloon. I inferred--check me at any instant if you consider this none
+of my business!--that there exists some unpleasant feeling between you
+two gentlemen and possibly others. Judge Gordon has always handled the
+company's business in his private capacity of counselor. As you know,
+he's a silent partner in many enterprises with Sorenson, Vorse and a
+man named Burkhardt. They run this town and county. You should also
+know that they're secretly opposed to your irrigation project,
+whatever they profess. They've misled the people into believing it
+will work an injury to this district, whereas it will of course be
+beneficial. Unfortunately too they lead the people by the noses--but
+not me! I refuse to be subservient."
+
+He paused to note the effect of his words.
+
+"Now, Mr. Weir, these are facts you can confirm if you're not already
+informed of them, which I imagine you are. Because I'm independent in
+my opinions and actions, I stand in disfavor with these gentlemen,
+which may or may not be an objection in your view to what I have in
+mind. And this is it. I should be pleased to execute any legal work
+that you care to give me; it might be of advantage to your company at
+times to have an attorney other than Judge Gordon, who is aligned
+against you and will serve his own interests first. He's in a position
+to cause you embarrassment."
+
+"Our eastern attorneys draw all documents."
+
+"Of course. But I was thinking of delays more than anything else.
+There are a thousand ways a lawyer can push or halt matters at will,
+and your project will never be free of legal red tape until
+completed--if then! I'm not unselfish in this, I admit; the business
+would be valuable to me. But aside from that, I'll give you this
+advice anyway:--secure another lawyer in any case, one without
+antagonistic personal interests, if you can find another in San Mateo
+besides me. See, I'm frank! That may sound egotistical, but really I'm
+the only free man of the lawyers here. And I've paid for my liberty!"
+He made a sweeping gesture to indicate his shabby office. "If I had
+taken orders, I could have been county attorney and probably a judge.
+But I respect myself too much to take orders from Sorenson and his
+bunch. I choose this sort of thing in preference."
+
+Steele Weir maintained a non-committal silence. Again the thin
+dark-skinned lawyer swiftly weighed the man before him, considered the
+dangers in which he might become involved if he went a step farther,
+recoiled, then grew bolder. Sorenson had marked him for poverty and
+nonentity; under the favoring shelter of the irrigation company's
+power he might arise from both. For at moments the acute Mexican
+sensed the inevitable victory of the new forces at work; this, one of
+the last strong-holds of old time cattle and sheep interests, would
+break down and yield to the plow and fence.
+
+"Now, there's something more, though I hesitate to mention it," he
+went on, doubtfully. "While Sorenson and his crowd run things, it's
+not because the people--and that means us Mexicans chiefly--love them.
+We're indolent by nature; we idle rather than work; borrow when we can
+rather than earn--I speak of our race, but we're learning that work
+proves best in the long run. These men have squeezed my people, and
+robbed them, and kept them down. Nothing more would I wish than to see
+these leaders deposed. It's no secret they've built their wealth by
+questionable methods, but who can prove it?
+
+"Do you know what I suspect? You have something on Sorenson's crowd.
+That's why they're uneasy; that's why the four are sitting over in the
+cattle company's office this minute with their heads together, meeting
+the minute Sorenson arrives home. I saw them go in. Leaving aside the
+question of your own affairs, I'd like to have matters changed here in
+this county so that every man has a fair chance. Anything that will
+bring that about enlists my interest. When I heard your statement to
+Gordon and saw his face, I knew there was something in the past that
+alarmed him. I recalled a name I had once run across when abstracting
+a title----"
+
+It was not this ingenious twisting of the truth that caused the lawyer
+to become filled with sudden dismay and stop, but the savage hardening
+of the engineer's face.
+
+"Go on," Weir commanded.
+
+"Well, the name was Joseph Weir. I looked it up again to be sure, and
+found the property had been deeded to Sorenson and the others, who
+still have it. I wondered----"
+
+"What did you wonder?" came with a devouring look.
+
+"If--if Joseph Weir received consideration according to law."
+Martinez' courage flowed back again. "I'll make no attempt to justify
+my curiosity, sir, except to say that more than one man in the
+southwest was done out of property in early days; and the practice has
+not ceased, for that matter. But in these days the means is usually
+legal and Mexicans the victims. Sharp mortgage dealings and so forth.
+Now, if I've said too much, I'll instantly forget all about it. On the
+other hand----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I might be of assistance. If you wish to look into that old
+transaction, that is. If there was anything crooked about the deal,
+and I set it down that there was with Sorenson mixed in, and with
+Vorse and Burkhardt the witnesses named in the deed and Judge Gordon
+taking the acknowledgment of Joseph Weir's signature, as the record
+shows, then there should be some weak spot that could be attacked.
+There may be men yet alive conversant with the circumstances; they
+may know whether duress or fraud was exercised, supposing the sale
+was not honest. Some of the old Mexicans may remember Weir, and could
+give a clue; they have good memories for things of those days. Of
+course, if the transaction was all right, then I'm all wrong in my
+suppositions."
+
+Weir arose.
+
+"I can give you some of the company business, perhaps considerable of
+it," he said.
+
+Martinez sprang up, an expression of gratitude upon his face. He had
+not realized all that he had hoped for, but he was nevertheless
+delighted.
+
+"I'm really sincere when I give you a thousand thanks, Mr. Weir," said
+he, spreading his arms wide. "I'll not make promises as to the
+efficiency of my services; let results speak for themselves."
+
+"I always do," was the comment. "But I'll tell you what I demand in
+any one associated with me--absolute trustworthiness first of all,
+then loyalty and ability."
+
+"Which leaves nothing," Martinez smiled.
+
+He preceded the engineer and swung the door open, stepping aside. To
+the visitor's question regarding fees for the acknowledgments taken,
+he waved a declining hand.
+
+"Nothing, nothing. Delighted to render you the service."
+
+"Very well."
+
+"I'll attend to the letter," the lawyer again assured him.
+
+"Come out to the dam in a day or two."
+
+"To-morrow, if you wish."
+
+"To-morrow afternoon will do."
+
+Steele Weir's frame filled the lighted doorway as he stepped forth
+from the office. He paused to accustom his eyes to the darkness, for
+during his colloquy with the attorney full night had descended. On the
+same side of the street with himself and perhaps twelve or fifteen
+paces off he saw a girl's figure appear and disappear before a window
+as she moved along.
+
+Then suddenly a tongue of red flame darted at him across the street,
+where lay a space of unlighted gloom. His hat was whipped off his
+head. The sharp report of a shot cracked between the adobe walls. With
+an unbelievably rapid movement Steele Weir drew the revolver in his
+pocket, and which he had carried ever since his encounter with young
+Sorenson in the restaurant, fired twice where he had seen the flame
+and leaped aside into the darkness beside the doorway. There he
+waited, half crouching, for a further attack.
+
+But none came. Men began to run towards the place. Shouts and calls
+echoed along the street. In two minutes a crowd was surging before
+Martinez' door wildly asking questions.
+
+Weir pocketed his pistol and walked back into the office, where he
+found his bullet-pierced hat lying on the floor and the attorney
+standing frozen with astonishment. A stream of people followed at his
+heels.
+
+"Who did this shooting? Do you know, Felipe?" a tall raw-boned white
+man who led them asked hastily.
+
+"This gentleman, Mr. Weir, was fired on, sheriff," Martinez burst out
+volubly.
+
+"And I fired in return," the engineer stated. "The fellow was across
+the street in the dark. You might look over there."
+
+Turning and pushing his way through the packed door, the sheriff
+disappeared. The crowd melted away again. Presently as Weir glanced
+about he saw a new figure at the doorway, staring at him. He went
+towards the girl there outlined in the lamplight.
+
+"Was that you I saw moving along just before the exchange of
+compliments, Miss Hosmer?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. I was coming towards you on my way home."
+
+"It probably gave you a fright."
+
+"It did, indeed. I heard the shot and saw your hat knocked off. I just
+went cold in my tracks. At first I believed you killed."
+
+"I'm very much alive, as you see."
+
+"But it was dreadful! Who would fire at you from the dark? Some one
+tried to murder you!"
+
+"It looks like it. Still here I am, ready to move your car out of the
+water next time it's stalled."
+
+She entered the room slowly.
+
+"Who in San Mateo would do such a terrible thing, Mr. Martinez?" she
+addressed the lawyer. The pallor was still on her face and her eyes
+were large with horror.
+
+"Ah, Miss Janet, if we but knew! We'd lay hands on him and send him to
+the penitentiary."
+
+Real emotion struggled in the lawyer's words. With the return of his
+senses he had just begun to realize by what a narrow margin the
+assassin's bullet had missed destroying his future client and
+prospects.
+
+A growing murmur across the street attracted their attention. Then as
+they continued to chat of the event, the sheriff reappeared, directing
+half a dozen men who laid a burden in the light of Martinez' doorway.
+
+"You got him," he said to Weir, with ominous significance. "One bullet
+through the head, one through his stomach. He's good and dead."
+
+Weir walked forward and inspected that outstretched figure. It was the
+man whose gaze had been so malevolently fastened upon him as he joined
+Martinez before Sorenson's office.
+
+"Who is he?" he asked.
+
+"A strange Mexican. Some of these men say he showed up this morning
+and hung around the saloons, not talking much. Haven't you ever seen
+him, before?" The question expressed a perplexed curiosity.
+
+"Once. When Martinez and I were coming here to transact some business.
+He was taking a good look at me then when he passed us. That wasn't
+over half an hour ago. Never saw him before that."
+
+"He shot at you first?"
+
+"I had just stepped out of this room. Could I see him hiding over
+there? Or know he was there?" Then he added, "I was taken by surprise,
+but I marked the flash of his gun."
+
+The sheriff, Madden by name, looked at Weir appreciatively.
+
+"You can use a gun yourself," said he, briefly.
+
+Martinez now repeated the fact of the dead man having fired the first
+shot, which Janet Hosmer confirmed.
+
+"Well, is there anything more?" Weir questioned.
+
+"Not to-night, I reckon," Madden replied. "We'll have an inquest in
+the morning; show up then. Where will I find your father, Miss
+Hosmer?"
+
+"At home." Then to the engineer she explained, "Father acts in the
+absence of the coroner, who's away just now."
+
+"I'm very sorry this happened on your account," said he.
+
+"And I'm very glad you were not hurt."
+
+Outside the corpse was being borne away, followed by the curious, avid
+crowd of Mexicans.
+
+"You're still shaken by the thing," said Steele Weir. "It's enough to
+upset any girl. Let me walk home with you, or you may be starting at
+shadows all the way."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+JANET HOSMER
+
+
+A silvery brightness shone in the east as they came out of Martinez'
+office, that increased as they went forward until all at once the moon
+arose into view, lighting the street, disclosing the flanking lines of
+squat buildings, revealing the tall cottonwoods about the court house
+and elsewhere thrust up in the town.
+
+Janet Hosmer breathed a sigh of relief. The darkness had seemed potent
+for further evil, but now it was as if the latter retreated with the
+shadows. She felt a desire to go on alone, to separate herself from
+this companion with whom chance had brought her in contact at a
+dramatic moment, to get away from the whole terrible affair.
+Involuntarily her spirit shrank at the nearness of the man, for though
+he had struck back in self-defense he nevertheless had killed another
+and the act somehow appeared to set him apart from ordinary men,
+isolate him, give him the character of an Ishmael.
+
+Yet her feelings were confused. Against this inclination was an avid
+curiosity, or rather a wonderment, as to what must now be occurring in
+his soul. Her eyes sought his face as he walked beside her. Neither
+had spoken; and his countenance wore the same stern contained aspect,
+calm, forceful, as the first time she had ever observed it. But what
+was below the surface? What were the thoughts now revolving in his
+mind and the emotions flowing in his breast? She could read nothing
+on that composed mask of a face. Was it possible for a man to slay
+another human being, even justifiably, without suffering a hurricane
+of the spirit?
+
+But perhaps he had killed men before. The fact of his carrying a
+weapon and his swift deadly fire pointed ominously to previous
+experience.
+
+"Did you ever shoot any one before?" popped from between her lips.
+Then she stopped, clapping her hand over her mouth in consternation
+and staring at him palely.
+
+Weir had halted too. He regarded her in silence for a little, a slight
+smile resting on his face. They stood before the cattle company's
+office and his look went past her once to embrace the small darkened
+building.
+
+"I'm not a murderer by trade, if that's what you mean," said he, at
+last. "But I've killed a man or two before, yes." Then at the white
+anguish of her lips and cheeks, his tone softened a degree as he went
+on. "Unfortunately since becoming of age I've had to fight. If not
+men, then the earth. If not the earth, then men. Sometimes both
+together. You saw what happened to-night; that fellow was unknown to
+me. He was not a workman who had been discharged and felt he had a
+grievance----"
+
+"Oh, no!" she interjected. "The Mexicans here wouldn't attempt to
+murder you, however angry they might feel."
+
+"I'm not so sure of that," he answered.
+
+"But I am; I know them, I've lived among them!"
+
+"Well, let that go. The man tried to kill me, at any rate. However, he
+was merely a tool, hired for the business by some one else. Ordinarily
+I don't discuss my affairs with any one, but since you've raised the
+matter I'll just say that I've enemies in San Mateo who are anxious
+to dispose of me."
+
+"Such enemies here!"
+
+"Yes. Who would be delighted to see me lie where that dead man lies
+and who are apparently determined to effect it." He touched her sleeve
+warningly. "But you will speak of this to no one."
+
+"No, oh, no! Not a word!"
+
+Steele gazed at her steadily. He already repented disclosing even so
+little of his private concerns, an impulse altogether at variance with
+his close-mouthed habit, but he had, for some vague reason, felt it
+necessary to explain his course, to justify himself to this
+clear-eyed, fine-spirited girl. He could not let her rest under a
+misapprehension that he was a brute who reveled in blood-spilling. And
+as he regarded her a conviction that she was absolutely to be trusted
+settled firmly into his mind.
+
+She would be staunch; oxen and ropes could not drag information from
+her once she had determined not to speak. Yes, she would be loyal to
+her given word--and to her friends. Weir's eyes glanced at the diamond
+on her finger. It would be a girl like her with whom he would have
+chosen to mate if fate had not directed his feet on a road which
+seemingly left him no choice but incessant and solitary struggle.
+
+"I hate it all; I have nothing but crusts and nettles!" he exclaimed,
+with sudden fierce passion. And with a quick movement of his hand he
+beckoned her on.
+
+Submissively she accompanied him, her bosom rising and falling with a
+quickened rhythm. Too much had happened, one thing piling on another,
+for her to sort her thoughts or to attempt to understand things yet;
+and in her tossing state of mind she went at his gesture as one
+follows a guide, or as a simple matter of course.
+
+In her mental turmoil that last passionate utterance of the man played
+like a lambent flame. Tense, violent, spontaneous, it had come from
+the heart. What harsh lot he had lived and sufferings borne she could
+not even guess; but no man spoke with such unconscious bitterness who
+had not undergone pain and travail of spirit. His head was now turned
+a little towards her as they walked: she perceived him staring at the
+moonlit street, his lips compressed, his brows knit.
+
+Then he glanced about at her, his face clearing. "Pay no attention to
+what I said," he remarked. "I shouldn't have let loose that way.
+Hello, what's on now?"
+
+Before them, and in front of the court house, was a packed crowd,
+people who had run forth at the sound of shots, augmented by those who
+had since arrived upon the scene. It was motionless.
+
+"Stand back, stand back; don't trample the body!" came Sheriff
+Madden's voice in an angry order.
+
+The crowd surged a little apart in the center.
+
+"How do you know this dead man fired the first shot?" asked some one,
+vehemently.
+
+The voices went lower so that Steele Weir and Janet Hosmer, who had
+paused at the edge of the throng, were able only to catch the tones.
+
+"Who was that who questioned the sheriff?" Weir whispered.
+
+"Mr. Burkhardt, I think. Sounded like him."
+
+So intent were the Mexicans upon the occurrence in their midst that
+those close by remained with backs towards the pair, failing to
+notice their presence. All craned eagerly to miss nothing of the
+controversy.
+
+"How do you know this engineer didn't start it?" came Burkhardt's
+voice again.
+
+"Don't be a fool; there were witnesses."
+
+"I'd like to talk to those witnesses. I doubt if they really saw
+anything. It looks to me as if there's another side to this
+shooting."
+
+"Well, of course you know--you, sitting there in Sorenson's office, as
+you say," was the ironical retort.
+
+At this juncture another voice interposed.
+
+"Madden, we want no mistake here. This Weir doesn't bear a very good
+reputation for peacefulness, from what I've learned. If this Mexican
+has simply been shot down----"
+
+"Who is that?" Steele demanded of the girl. "I can't see him."
+
+"That"--Janet Hosmer's speech faltered--"that is Mr. Sorenson. Oh,
+they misunderstand! Let me push in there and tell them how it
+happened."
+
+The engineer's hand closed about her arm.
+
+"You'll do nothing of the kind," he commanded, low.
+
+"But----"
+
+"No. Remain quiet and listen."
+
+Her eyes flew up to his at this extraordinary course, so injurious to
+his own interests. She was anxious to press to the front and declare
+his innocence in the affair of everything but defending his life from
+an assassin. She could not understand why he also was not eager to
+spring forward, why he restrained her. Then she saw the implacable
+hatred on his face.
+
+A thrill quivered through her body. The feeling she had at that
+instant was one of being on the point of seeing behind the curtain of
+a mystery, of making a discovery so sinister that she would gasp. Her
+very finger almost rested upon it. Why were Mr. Sorenson and Mr.
+Burkhardt talking as they were? Trying by innuendo to make it seem her
+companion might have been guilty of a crime? Could it be---- Her blood
+slowly congealed to ice at the horror of where her reasoning led.
+
+_Could it be they were the enemies he meant!_
+
+Such a thing was too dreadful, too absurd. They, the respected leaders
+of the community, could never put a pistol in the dead wretch's hand
+to slay this man beside her. Mr. Sorenson! The father of Ed, whom----
+She stared blankly at her left hand.
+
+Yet the banker's heavy, smooth words continued to assail her ears
+steadily. She grasped their import once more.
+
+"--for the story is too thin. No man could hit another across the
+street in the dark as this engineer claims, not only once but twice
+put a bullet where it would kill. Probably the dead man had something
+on this Weir, and the latter knew it. It's not impossible he found the
+fellow in his path, drew and murdered him at once, quickly put a hole
+in his own hat and then carried the body across the way, running back
+to Martinez' office. The thing could have been done in a minute.
+Martinez' himself wouldn't have seen how it was worked. I'm not saying
+that was exactly how it was done, or that this Weir did actually
+murder him, but--investigate, Madden, investigate."
+
+Steele Weir felt an angry tug at his sleeve. He looked around and
+beheld Janet Hosmer's eyes distended with incredulity.
+
+"Come away, come away," she whispered. "I should never have believed
+it if I hadn't heard with my own ears!"
+
+Keeping close to the line of buildings, they skirted the crowd, still
+unnoticed, and left it behind. She walked with quick nervous steps;
+her hand yet unconsciously grasped his coat sleeve. All the way to her
+home, which they found dark since a messenger had called the doctor to
+the court house and the Mexican girl servant also was gone, she said
+nothing.
+
+"Come up on the veranda; I want to talk," she announced when he opened
+the gate.
+
+"Wouldn't it be best if you took your mind off the whole thing, by a
+book or something else? I'll go."
+
+"As if I could take my mind off! There are matters in this I must
+know. You may wonder when I say it, Mr. Weir, but this happening
+concerns me more than you dream." Her dark glowing gaze brooded on him
+with a sort of intense determination. Then she went on, "It--it
+involves my whole future as well as your own, though in a different
+way. So come inside, if you please."
+
+Weir in silence accompanied her upon the dark, broad, vine-clad porch.
+In the half-gloom he found chairs for them.
+
+"I'm going to the point at once," she declared. "Why did Mr. Sorenson
+talk in such a fashion?" And he could feel her bending forward as if
+hanging on his answer.
+
+"That's the one thing I can't discuss," said he.
+
+"I must know, I must know."
+
+"And unhappily I must refuse."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Weir, if you could but understand what this involves for me,
+you wouldn't hesitate! I was shocked at the shooting, but I saw its
+necessity on your part; you're not one to run from a foe, a cowardly
+foe least of all. But what I heard there in the street horrified me. I
+couldn't believe it; I can scarcely credit my ears yet. Mr. Sorenson
+and Mr. Burkhardt were not near when you were attacked; they are not
+acquainted with the circumstances or facts as you, Mr. Martinez and I
+know them; they apparently didn't appear until the crowd started away
+with the dead man. Yet at once----"
+
+"Ay, at once," Steele Weir let slip.
+
+"At once, immediately, when they had barely heard the story, they
+began to tear it to pieces and suggest another, making you out a
+villain. You're only an acquaintance, sir, scarcely more than a
+stranger, but as I listened it outraged all my sense of justice. Mr.
+Sorenson, of all men! My brain was in a whirl. But it's steady now."
+
+The engineer failed to open his lips at her pause.
+
+"I'm no fool, Mr. Weir; I think of other things besides dressing my
+hair and using a powder puff. I can sometimes put two and two
+together--when I see the 'twos' clearly. Now, tell me why Mr. Sorenson
+talked as he did, for I must have my eyes clear."
+
+"Ask me anything but that, Miss Hosmer."
+
+He sat distressed and uneasy at her prolonged muteness. Suddenly she
+questioned quietly:
+
+"Are those two men the enemies you spoke of?"
+
+"It will save me embarrassment if I go," he remarked, starting to
+rise. "I don't want you to hate me, you know, and still I can't say
+anything."
+
+Her grasp pulled him imperatively back.
+
+"You shall not go yet."
+
+"Then I can only continue to decline making answers. I frankly say
+that I regret having uttered a word of explanation."
+
+"I don't regret it. And I intend to keep questioning you, however rude
+you may think me. I must know," she cried impetuously, "and I shall
+know! Mr. Sorenson is one of the men you referred to, or he would
+never seek to direct suspicion at you. I saw the look on your face,
+sir, as he spoke. But why should you two be enemies! You come here a
+stranger to San Mateo, or have you been here before sometime? Did you
+know him before?"
+
+Again he could feel her eyes straining at him.
+
+"It seems mad to think of him and Mr. Burkhardt, and perhaps others,
+hiring some one to shoot you down from a dark doorway. It is utterly
+mad--crazy. But why should they want to convict you, in the crowd's
+opinion at least, of murdering the man. It would not be just trouble
+about the dam--oh, no. But I can't see through it at all. Why won't
+you tell me? You can trust me--and I want to help you as well as help
+myself. You certainly don't hold against me my silly nonsense and
+unkind words of the day you brought me home from the ford."
+
+"I didn't think them silly; they delighted me," he responded. "I
+hadn't had anything happen to me so refreshing in years."
+
+"We must be friends. Something tells me they're going to make you
+trouble over this shooting, and you'll need friends."
+
+"Something tells me you're right in both respects," he laughed.
+
+"And friends must stick together."
+
+"That's what they should do."
+
+In the dusk of the vine-clad, flower-scented place where they sat he
+experienced the subtle power of this intimacy. Not a soul stirred in
+the empty moonlit street before the house. No sounds disturbed the
+warm peace of the night. In this secluded spot only there ran the
+murmur of their voices.
+
+"I could never stand by and see any man unjustly accused and defamed
+if I knew he was innocent, without lifting up my word in defense," she
+proceeded. "But let me ask if on your side you're treating me
+fairly?"
+
+Weir could have groaned.
+
+"You have a noble spirit, Miss Hosmer. You're more courageous and kind
+than any girl I've ever known. Would you have me reveal what my best
+judgment tells me should remain untold?"
+
+"But what of me? Would you keep it to yourself if my future happiness
+might turn on it?"
+
+The appeal in her words shook Steele's heart.
+
+"How does this business affect your happiness? How?" he asked, in
+perplexity.
+
+Now it was her turn to hesitate. Why should she pause, indeed, before
+telling to this man what every one else knew. Yet hesitate she did,
+from a feeling she could but partly analyze. Of her fiancé she had
+already had disturbing secret doubts that had increased of late:
+doubts of his habits, his character and the genuineness of his love;
+so that it was with a little eddy of dissatisfaction and shame that
+she admitted the relationship. More she questioned her own love as an
+actual thing. In a startling way, too, this silent, forceful man, so
+deadly in earnest and so earnestly deadly, so terrible in some
+aspects, seemed at the instant to dwarf the other in stature and power
+as if the latter were a plump manikin.
+
+Perhaps at the last minute she had a shiver of dread at what might
+issue from the engineer's lips in the way of facts if he took her at
+her word and told her what she had demanded to know. Did she want to
+know? Suppose she let the affair rest where it was and went forward
+to the future in the comfortable assurance of ignorance.
+
+In that case, it might be wooing later revelations that then could not
+be escaped, revelations like consuming lightnings. She would settle it
+now once for all.
+
+"It does concern my future and my happiness vitally," she declared,
+earnestly. "For this reason----"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"I'm engaged to marry Ed Sorenson, son of Mr. Sorenson."
+
+Weir leaped to his feet.
+
+"Good God! That fellow!" he exclaimed, astounded.
+
+Without another word he sprang down the steps and strode away. Janet
+Hosmer, grasping the arms of her chair and staring after him, saw him
+once bring down his clenched fist on nothing. Then he passed rapidly
+along the street and out of sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+IN THE COIL
+
+
+The Spirit of Irony couldn't have devised a more intolerable
+situation. So thought Steele Weir as he strode away from the
+dwelling, still laboring under the emotions provoked by the girl's
+disclosure, wincing at his own biting thoughts and writhing at his
+own helplessness. It needed only this revelation to cap the whole
+diabolical evening.
+
+He could not have remained with her now if his life had depended on
+it. She, engaged to that scoundrel Ed Sorenson! How could she have
+been so blind to the lustful beast's nature? She must love him, of
+course. He must have been careful to exhibit to her only such
+qualities as would gain her affection and respect, or rather hollow
+shams of qualities he never had possessed. Propinquity, lack of rivals
+in this little town, no doubt were largely responsible for her feeling
+for the man. But it was like standing by and seeing her fair young
+body, her fresh pure life, her high soul, flung to a devouring swine.
+
+And by the rules of the game he couldn't open his lips to utter a word
+of warning! That was the worst of it, that was the worst of it. No,
+not by the rules of the game; not, for that matter, by the rules of
+life; for the latter run that only can the person concerned see with
+his or her own eyes what a loved one's character is, and must make and
+abide by her own judgments.
+
+Steele Weir all at once stopped in his tracks. He stared straight
+before him for a time seeing Janet Hosmer's face as it appeared when
+she anxiously gazed at him from Martinez' door, coming out of the
+night like a pallid moon-flower. At that instant she had feared he had
+been wounded; her heart was fluttering with anguish. The tension of
+his body relaxed and his hands slowly unclosed and involuntarily his
+eyes went up to the moon sailing serenely in the sky above the
+treetops and the flat-roofed adobe houses. What vaster blessing could
+life bestow than to have such a look come seeking one beloved!
+
+He went on thoughtfully.
+
+"She shall not marry him," he said to himself, with a quick resolve.
+
+What were the rules of any game when an innocent girl's happiness was
+at stake? Did he care for conventions, or even the contempt she
+herself might feel for him for apparently belittling her lover? He
+could stand that, so that her eyes were opened and the fellow's yellow
+heart made plain. At the proper time he should act, view his part as
+she might. A snap of his fingers for being misunderstood! He would go
+his own way afterwards.
+
+The thing had its curious features, too. No mistake, the shock of
+hearing Sorenson senior talking to the sheriff and the crowd, working
+up sentiment, had stirred her indignation and wonder and uneasiness
+and alarm. She was no fool, as she had said. She had a clear,
+practical mind, give it something to work on. Her intuition had
+immediately grasped the fact that there might be cellars under the
+Sorenson household of which she knew nothing and which should be
+promptly entered with a strong light. Whether the momentary desire
+would last, that was the question. To-morrow, or the first time she
+found herself in Ed Sorenson's reassuring presence, she might consider
+that her brain had been upset by events of this night, jiggled awry in
+a sort of moonlight madness, and her apprehensions as to happiness
+unfounded shadows.
+
+Well, Weir would strike later.
+
+He turned into the main street. Evidently the body of the dead Mexican
+had been carried into the jail behind the court house, or somewhere.
+The throng had dispersed, though its elements were every place
+talking, in pairs or in little knots of people. As he came along,
+these fell silent at his passing. They stared at him, motionless,
+expressionless, with the characteristic Mexican stolidity that is the
+heritage of Indian blood. By his automobile he found Martinez posted,
+stroking his long black mustache and regarding Sorenson's office,
+which was still lighted though the curtain remained drawn over the
+broad plate-glass window.
+
+"Just wanted to give you a whispered word," he said, in Steele Weir's
+ear, darting a glance towards some of the Mexicans who, drawn by
+insatiable curiosity, were lounging nearer.
+
+"Speak," said the engineer.
+
+"I came out of the office after you did and heard the talk." He made a
+covert movement of forefinger towards the nearby building. "The four
+of them are in there again. I saw you listening to Sorenson here in
+the street; and would you care to have me express my opinion as to
+what the signs indicate, Mr. Weir?"
+
+"Go ahead."
+
+"In the light of what I suggested during our talk in my office, the
+silly twaddle of Burkhardt and Sorenson is understandable. I look
+right through their scheme. They always frame up something against
+anybody they want to dispose of; they do it in business matters
+regularly, and very skillfully. They immediately perceived a chance,
+sir, in this unfortunate encounter of yours and laid hands on it;
+their talk was the first delicate maneuver to 'frame' you."
+
+"Sure," was the unperturbed answer.
+
+Martinez laid a finger on Weir's lapel.
+
+"Frankly, feeling hasn't been good towards you because of the work
+controversy at the dam," he went on, with another swift glance about.
+"They will use that. On the other hand, you have Miss Janet and me as
+witnesses in support of your story. Unfortunately Miss Janet is, as
+you may not be aware, engaged to----"
+
+Martinez paused dramatically.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"To Ed Sorenson," the lawyer half-hissed. "Nothing could be worse."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Why? Look at the position she'll be in. Consider the pressure they
+can put on her through that fact--and they'll not hesitate to do so,
+in one way or another. Innocent as a dove, she is, Mr. Weir." He
+thrust his head forward, showing his lips drawn apart and shining
+teeth tight set. "And she's never heard a rumor of his hushed-up
+affairs with poor, ignorant, Mexican girls who knew no better."
+
+"We'll simply have to trust to her courage to tell the truth on the
+proper occasion."
+
+"Ah, but they'll trick her some way."
+
+"And you?"
+
+Martinez straightened, smiled, twirled his mustache.
+
+"I? They aren't quite foxy enough for that, Mr. Weir," he boasted,
+with glistening eyes.
+
+The engineer was almost ready to believe that, but cunning was not the
+only weapon in his enemies' arsenal. How would this lean lawyer stand
+up under intimidation, bribes, threats?
+
+"I trust so, Martinez," said he. "Do you think they will try to get me
+sometime by an out-and-out gun-play?"
+
+"No, no, no."
+
+"Do you think they could if they tried?" Weir inquired, grimly.
+
+The attorney paused with finger and thumb on the point of his
+mustache, lifted his eyebrows and smiled broadly.
+
+"They'll consider twice before they attempt it, after your expert
+exhibition this evening," said he. "It was amazing, your speed, your
+accuracy."
+
+Steele tapped the man on the breast, who experienced a distinct tremor
+at that significant touch and at the veiled menace in the dam
+manager's eyes.
+
+"There's always one bullet in my gun for the man who betrays me,
+Martinez."
+
+The lawyer licked his lips. On general principles he disliked
+statements that committed one to the future. But it was necessary to
+say something.
+
+"To be sure. I should feel the same in your circumstances," he
+responded. Then as Weir turned to his car, he continued: "The inquest
+to-morrow morning should be over early. I'll visit you in the
+afternoon as planned."
+
+"Don't forget that letter," Weir called out.
+
+Martinez marveled. Kill a man, and still remember a letter! That
+magnified his respect immensely. Cool, that fellow! Then a slight
+shiver as if a chill from those black peaks west of the town had
+struck through his flesh rippled along his spine; for he had been
+over at the jail with the crowd and had viewed that dead body lying
+there on the stone floor. Not only cool, but dangerous and deadly,
+this engineer. He, Martinez, must be discreet; it would not do to risk
+gaining Weir's enmity. That cold-faced man could not be "monkeyed
+with."
+
+Martinez gnawed his mustache and eyed the dully illuminated office
+window. He wondered if those four men inside had not at last found
+their match, perhaps their master. Any one with half a brain could see
+there was going to be a desperate struggle between the four and the
+one, and he was not exactly sure yet that he wanted to venture farther
+into the affair. But the very danger fascinated him with its subtle
+and obscure features, exactly suited to his manipulation.
+
+A man who had been standing apart sauntered nearer.
+
+"Señor," he addressed the lawyer in Spanish.
+
+Martinez whirled about.
+
+"Ah, it's only you, Naharo."
+
+"He is a bad fighter, eh?" And the man, almost white because of
+intermixed blood, moved a hand in the direction Weir's car had gone.
+
+"Perhaps not bad. Quick with a gun, however," was the careful reply.
+
+"With his fists also. I saw, or if I did not see, I very nearly did
+so--it is the same--saw him use them in Bowenville. And on that dog of
+an Ed Sorenson who would have seduced my little Dolorosa, as he did
+Cristobal's daughter, if I had not perceived what he was at."
+
+The lawyer's ears were instantly pricked up. He caught the man by the
+shirt-sleeve.
+
+"Come with me," he said.
+
+Once they were in his office he carefully closed and locked the door,
+drawing the window shades. Literally he rubbed his hands one over the
+other as he bade Naharo take a chair. Then the pair of them rolled and
+lighted cigarettes.
+
+"Perhaps I should say no more, Señor Martinez."
+
+"It will go no farther. And if the engineer and Ed Sorenson had a
+fight, then it must have been for that reason the latter's father
+spoke as he did to-night. You heard him."
+
+"Yes. And I did not understand why. It was not because of what
+happened at Bowenville, unquestionably not, for it had to do with
+another girl----"
+
+"Ha, a girl! And the engineer mixed in it?"
+
+"Listen. As I say, he would not have told his father, because he keeps
+such things quiet; it is four years since he last had to pay money to
+settle a matter. Some think he now behaves, but it is not true. But he
+is more careful. So his father did not know about this."
+
+"Tell it all, Naharo."
+
+The other inhaled a puff of smoke and half-closed his eyes. Though
+nearly white, he retained the Mexican's high cheek bones, and languor,
+and unforgiving nature.
+
+"I was in Bowenville, freighting up flour to the store of Smith's. I
+had loaded by evening, to make an early start next day. I had gone
+into the restaurant for supper, taking a seat far down at the end of
+the counter near the kitchen. I was tired and thinking only of my
+food. As I ate, there was a crash in one of the stalls and I looked
+about. There was a fight, of course. But it ended at once. Then I
+observed Ed Sorenson come out presently, jerking his collar and tie
+straight. He was mad. He had been whipped, too. For he yet looked as
+if he wanted to kill the other man in there, but he went away. Soon
+the other man came out and with him was a young white girl, whom I
+did not know. The man was this engineer and he carried an old piece of
+baggage, not such as he would carry but as the girl might, for she
+looked like a ranch girl who was poor. The girl was scared. The man
+was calm as a priest. That scoundrel Ed Sorenson had been beaten. Aha,
+so; it was clear. The engineer had put a spoke in the fellow's wheel.
+Then I walked to the door and saw the two get into a car and start on
+the trail this way. After that, I resumed my supper. You perceive, the
+man had taken the girl away from the wolf."
+
+Martinez' restless eyes wandered about the room as he digested this
+account.
+
+"Did you see the dead man?" he inquired, casually.
+
+"Yes, señor."
+
+Their looks met, held for an instant, dropped. Each read the thought
+of the other: the motive for the attack on the engineer was clear. But
+some convictions are better not expressed.
+
+"I should have liked to see Señor Weir do the shooting," Naharo
+stated. "Dios, such shooting! Two shots, two hits. And in the dark!"
+
+Martinez' grinned.
+
+"It will not please--whoever hired the dead man. He was hired for the
+job, of course."
+
+"Unquestionably, señor," was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE GATHERING STORM
+
+
+At the inquest next morning no outward sign indicated what Weir's
+enemies might be at. Indeed, none of them was present. The engineer
+made a statement; the two witnesses, Janet Hosmer and Felipe Martinez,
+were briefly interrogated, and the finding was returned that the
+unknown Mexican had met death from two bullet wounds while attempting
+to kill Steele Weir.
+
+One spectator there was who took a strong interest in proceedings, Ed
+Sorenson. When, however, Janet Hosmer was notified by her father, who
+was in charge, that she could withdraw, the young fellow hastened to
+lead her away, with an audible remark that it was a shame she had had
+to be "dragged into this disreputable gun-man's bloody show." Meaning
+Steele Weir, naturally.
+
+That feeling was being intensified against him was only too apparent
+in the hostile manner of the crowd and in the silence with which it
+received the finding. There was his former unpopularity, to begin
+with; there was now added a race resentment, for the slain man,
+stranger though he was, was Mexican; and finally, he knew not what
+distilled poison of lies concerning his innocence in the night fray.
+Nothing more was needed to reveal the swelling hate which secret fear
+of Weir but increased than a volley of curses and abuse hurled at his
+head from a native saloon doorway as he passed in his car on his way
+home.
+
+During the following week the engineer was too occupied with dam work
+to have time for other matters. He pushed the concrete construction
+and inspired his men with something of his own indomitable spirit, who
+had learned of the cowardly attack in San Mateo and rallied to his
+standard with a zeal and ardor for which the fact of employment alone
+did not account. He had become a leader as well as their "boss." From
+Meyers down to the humblest workman the camp had for him a new
+admiration, a new respect and a new loyalty, which he could not help
+but feel; he had proved that he could deliver the "goods"; and if the
+Mexicans wanted war, the Americans here would be glad to oblige them.
+Nor did they wait to let San Mateo know the fact.
+
+"We're wid 'Cold Steel' Weir, our boss, four hundred of us, till ye
+can skate on hell," a huge Irishman, one of half a dozen standing at
+Vorse's bar on Saturday night, remarked when the saloon-man uttered a
+sneer at the manager. "Say that agin and we'll tear your rotten booze
+joint to pieces and make ye eat it! And if another stinkin' greaser
+tries to wing him from the dark, we'll come down here and wipe your
+dirty little town off the map! That goes both ways from the jack!" He
+snapped his fingers under the other's nose by way of added insult.
+
+A petty series of hostile acts against the company developed.
+Teamsters were stoned by boys, which left them raging and murderous to
+discover the men who set them on. Half a carload of cement in sacks
+was ripped open and emptied on the earth at Bowenville. After Meyers,
+Weir's assistant, found his automobile tires slashed to bits on coming
+out of the post-office in San Mateo, it became necessary always to go
+in pairs, one man to remain on watch. Weir himself just avoided a
+serious accident one evening at dusk while a mile from the dam when he
+instinctively ducked in his car as something grazed the top of his
+wind-shield. A wire had been stretched across the road from a
+telephone pole to a tree, at just the height to strike him at the
+throat.
+
+He halted and removed the deadly contrivance. Men on watch of his
+movements could have prepared it against his return; and, indeed, he
+thought he detected a pair of flitting shadows behind a row of willow
+bushes lining a Mexican irrigation ditch, but in the dusk he could not
+be sure. On running thither, he found no one.
+
+The camp was not of a temper, however, to allow the attacks to be all
+on one side. Atkinson, the superintendent, came to Weir one morning
+towards the end of the week and informed him workmen were drifting
+down to San Mateo nightly in hope of trouble.
+
+"They'll get a knife put into them," Steele Weir replied, with a frown
+that did not entirely hide his satisfaction at this evidence of
+support.
+
+"Maybe; and again maybe not," the superintendent stated, grinning. "A
+bunch jumped some of our boys last night and I guess when the dust
+settled there were a couple of Mexicans beaten nearly to death."
+
+"Call the men all together this noon," Weir ordered.
+
+At that hour he gave them a talk for what he called their long-eared
+cussedness, and laid down a little law and wound up with a number of
+reasonable explanations for the same. Every man who went out hunting
+trouble was a camp liability, and would be fired. He did not propose
+to give the town authorities a chance to jail workmen and impair the
+dam work, just the thing they were waiting to do. The men should keep
+away from San Mateo, or at least avoid disputes and rows. If they
+spent no money there whatever it would sting the town where it would
+hurt the most, in its pocket-book; and he himself was transferring the
+company bank account to Bowenville, by way of example. If any man felt
+the need of change from camp, he could have two days off at the end of
+the month to spend at Bowenville. But keep away from the Mexicans!
+
+"And if they come up here huntin' us when we show up no more?" yelled
+the same big Irishman who had paid his respects to Vorse.
+
+"In that case, tear their heads off," was the reply. "But put on your
+gloves first or you'll dirty your fingers." Which bit of rough humor
+caught the crowd's fancy and won a roar of laughter.
+
+Later as the crowd dispersed to eat Atkinson said to Meyers, "The boss
+knows how to handle men all right, all right; he put sugar on the
+pill. The gang went off grinning. They know they've got to be
+good--but only up to a limit."
+
+Meantime Felipe Martinez had not been idle. He rode up to engineering
+headquarters on his pony one evening and carried Weir out into the
+open where their words would not be overheard. He reported that he was
+quietly working for information of Weir's father among the older
+Mexicans who would be likely to remember him, but proceeding
+cautiously so that no one would suspect his purpose. He represented
+himself to them as undertaking to write a history of San Mateo County;
+he must depend upon them for data of early days; it would be a fine
+book bound in leather, in which their names and possibly their
+pictures would appear;--which never failed to flatter the parties with
+whom he talked. And the lawyer laughed with amusement as he related
+the success of his method.
+
+"I have already seen some thirty or forty people, a few of whom
+recalled your father, but no more. But this afternoon," he continued,
+"I discovered a woman who worked at the Weir ranch house." Martinez
+perceived the engineer's attention quicken. "She said the Weirs had a
+little boy of four years of age, perhaps five. You, Mr. Weir, of
+course. They suddenly paid and discharged her one day, packed a trunk
+and drove hurriedly off; and the next morning Sorenson took possession
+of the ranch and she went home. They drove off in a great haste--there
+was no railroad anywhere near here then--and that was the last she
+ever saw or heard of them."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"One thing more there was: she said there was a story that went around
+for awhile afterwards that Weir and another had lost their ranches and
+cattle gambling. For that reason Weir left the country; and for that
+reason, too, the other man, Dent, by name, committed suicide in
+Vorse's saloon where they had gambled. She said Saurez, an old man
+living with his son up a little creek, would know about that, for he
+used to clean out Vorse's bar-room in those days."
+
+Steele Weir grasped Martinez's shoulder in a quick grip.
+
+"He did! Get everything he knows out of him," he commanded.
+
+"Leave it to me, Mr. Weir. I understand how to wheedle facts out of
+these old fellows."
+
+But it was doubtful if the engineer heard his words. He had dropped
+his hand, stood opening and shutting his fingers, while on his face
+grew the hard implacable look that always whetted the attorney's
+curiosity.
+
+Weir walked up on the hillside when Martinez had ridden away and there
+sat down on a rock. It was a rift, though but a faint rift, that this
+news made in the blank dark wall he had to confront; and he wished to
+think. Proof as well as knowledge of what had happened in his father's
+case was what he must have. Acting on intuition he had been able to
+put fear into the hearts of the four men responsible for making his
+father's life a hell, but proof of their guilt was necessary to make
+them suffer in a similar fashion, to reveal their crime to the world,
+to destroy them. Now at last, here was a possibility. If this former
+roustabout of the saloon knew anything!
+
+Well, he must be patient--the mill of the gods grinds slowly. But when
+finally he had gained all the strands and woven the net! Unconsciously
+his hands arose before his face like talons closing on prey and shut
+on air, until their veins swelled. That was how he would serve them,
+those men. Though they might fall on their knees and implore mercy,
+not one beat of pity should move his heart.
+
+It was almost dark when he arose. Behind him the great peaks soared
+against the last greenish twilight. In the shacks the camp lamps were
+showing at windows. At one side and in the canyon the concrete core of
+the dam appeared white in the gloom, like a bank of snow. The murmur
+of voices, an occasional distant laugh, came from men's quarters.
+
+Presently he slanted down the hillside past the camp, until he struck
+into a road leading towards town, where he began to walk forward,
+hatless and without coat, through the soft dusk. He was disinclined
+for work as yet, the work always piled on his desk; he desired yet
+for a little to rest his spirit in the evening calm.
+
+His thoughts had softened and turned to Janet Hosmer. He had not seen
+her since the morning at the court house. He had not spoken with her
+since that interview upon her veranda, which had terminated with his
+shocked utterance. That he had thus given away to his feeling he had a
+hundred times repented; and that he had so bruskly departed he was
+profoundly chagrined. But what could he have done? No explanation was
+possible. The situation in which he had been allowed of but one thing,
+escape.
+
+With the rising tide of emotion reflected by memory of that moment his
+steps had quickened. All at once he discovered before him the rippling
+sheen of water. He was at Chico Creek, a mile from camp, where he
+first had met Janet Hosmer. Engaged with his tangled problem, he had
+been unaware of the distance covered.
+
+Pausing but an instant he waded through, smiling to himself at thought
+of that afternoon's spirited encounter with the girl. She had not
+dreamed then, nor he, that events would fling them together in a more
+dramatic second meeting at Martinez' door.
+
+Suddenly he perceived a white-clad figure before him, standing
+motionless, leaning forward to peer his way as he walked forth from
+the ford.
+
+"It's you, Mr. Weir?" came in soft inquiry.
+
+"Yes. How in the world do you happen to be here, Janet Hosmer?"
+
+She laughed.
+
+"I thought I recognized you marching through the stream, so I wasn't
+alarmed."
+
+"No one would think of harming you, I'm sure."
+
+"But anyway I should have vanished if you had been a stranger."
+
+"Not being one, you remained. I had no idea of such luck as this when
+I set out for a walk."
+
+Both pleasure and satisfaction sounded in his voice.
+
+"I was just taking a little stroll myself," said she.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+AN UNEXPECTED ALLY
+
+
+"Let me take the chance first thing to apologize for my behavior the
+night we talked on your porch," Steele Weir exclaimed. "Your statement
+of being engaged surprised me into words and conduct that has had me
+in an unhappy state of mind ever since. Mr. Sorenson's talk to the
+crowd stirred my anger. Had I known your exact relationship to him and
+his son, I should have made no mistakes."
+
+"I had urged you to speak, had I not?"
+
+"Grant that. But I don't stand excused."
+
+"There was no questioning the sincerity of your last expression that
+night, in any case," she said. "But I've not been indignant because of
+what you exclaimed or because you hate the Sorensons. 'Hate' isn't too
+strong a word, is it? I'm none the less interested however to know
+what it's all about. You see I don't take any stock in the reasons
+commonly given: that you're a 'bad man,' an agent of a rich
+corporation trying to put our people out of business, a public menace
+and all the rest."
+
+"Is that what they say?" Weir asked, with a laugh.
+
+"Part of it. Nor does it fool father, for he said only yesterday that
+there's something more at bottom of the feeling against you than
+merely a fight of moneyed interests. He knows from what I told him
+that that dead man tried to murder you; yet he hears constant talk of
+your 'crime,' of evidence being gathered against you by the county
+attorney, Mr. Lucerio, and of the penalty you shall pay. All absurd,
+to be sure."
+
+"Mr. Martinez tells me the same," Steele responded. "But he says also
+that all the people do not believe the stories."
+
+"That's true." And she appeared to reflect upon the circumstance.
+
+To Weir nothing could be stranger than this talk on the dark road with
+the girl who, too, should be naturally opposed to him. In fact, here
+at this very spot and at their first meeting she had announced herself
+as a critic and an enemy. He could smile over that now; she herself
+probably did smile at the recollection. Yet she was calmly discussing
+his situation without animus or even unfriendliness.
+
+How could that be possible if she actually loved the man whom she
+expected to marry, Ed Sorenson? Why did she not at once spring to arms
+in defense of the Sorenson side? Unless--unless she suspected the
+baseness of her lover and his father, and fear had replaced love.
+
+All at once she spoke.
+
+"They will put you in jail if they can, and bring you to trial,
+and--and----"
+
+"And hang me, that's what you hesitate to say," Steele finished for
+her. "Whom do you mean by 'they'?"
+
+"The people."
+
+"Are the people here in this county really 'they'? Do the people, that
+is, the mass of poor ignorant Mexicans, have anything to do with
+public affairs? Both you and I know they do not."
+
+"Why deny it!" she sighed. "It's generally known that four men, with
+a few more at their skirts, run things. They nominate the men who are
+to fill office--there's only one political party in the county worth
+mentioning--and give them orders and expect them to obey. For that
+reason father would never accept an office. He could be coroner; he
+could be county treasurer; he could go to the legislature; or anything
+else--if he would but wear their political livery. But he prefers to
+be a free man. I used to think nothing of it, see no wrong in such a
+state of affairs, for everything went along well enough and about the
+same as ever as far as I could see."
+
+"Possibly you didn't see everything that was occurring below the
+surface even then."
+
+"Exactly what father told me yesterday. We talked about everything
+under the sun, I imagine. And I informed him that you walked home with
+me the night of the shooting; I had not spoken of it before."
+
+"That was proper; he should know it."
+
+"He doesn't share in the feeling against you, Mr. Weir, let me assure
+you of that. Ever since he heard my explanation of the shooting and
+then met you at the inquest, he's convinced that you're being done a
+great injustice."
+
+Steele experienced a warm glow of pleasure.
+
+"I liked your father at first sight," said he, simply. "But where does
+all this leave us?" He spoke in a light tone of amusement that he was
+far from feeling. "Our position is--odd."
+
+"It is," she assented so earnestly that he began to laugh.
+
+"You mustn't allow it to disturb you. I'm really presuming upon your
+kindness of heart and innocence in enjoying your company now.
+Acquaintance with me is a rather serious matter here in San Mateo and
+carries consequences. You don't think for an instant that I'd allow my
+personal pleasure--and pleasure it is to be with you, needless to
+say--to bring you into ill-favor among your friends and to make you
+the subject of gossip. I appreciate your good spirit towards me; and I
+admire you greatly. But it will be well if I admire you at a distance
+hereafter."
+
+"I don't see whose business it is except mine."
+
+To Steele Weir it was like pushing aside the only thing that
+brightened his hard, toilsome existence thus to abjure future
+companionship with her.
+
+"Good heavens, do you fancy that comes easy for me to say?" he
+exclaimed, drawing a deep breath. "I never before knew any one
+who--well, I'll stop there."
+
+"Who what?" she demanded.
+
+"I nearly overstepped the bounds."
+
+"Oh, that's it."
+
+What imp of perversity was in the girl? Weir stared at her for a
+moment through the gloom.
+
+And then she remarked that she must be returning home, and said she
+would be glad if he would accompany her part way as there was a
+Mexican's house half way to town where a particularly vicious dog
+always rushed out. The dog rushed out exactly as she had predicted,
+barking savagely, so that she slipped her arm into the engineer's and
+held fast until they were past.
+
+"He does that only after dark; I hadn't expected to walk so far and it
+was still light when I set out," said she.
+
+The touch of her fingers on his sleeve, the light swing of her form at
+his side, the subtle fragrance that emanated from her hair and face,
+this intimate nearness on the dark road, the heavy scent of flowers
+in the bordering fields,--all sent the blood thumping from his heart.
+If he--if he were in Ed Sorenson's place, what love he could pour
+out!
+
+Ed Sorenson, the double-faced wretch who while engaged to her had
+attempted to entice away for his own vile gratification the simple,
+trustful girl on Terry Creek, he was to marry this sweet and charming
+companion. What diabolical tragedies life could mix!
+
+"See, the moon is rising," she said.
+
+Over the edge of the mesa the yellow globe was bulging, rayless for
+the moment, round and full.
+
+"We're almost at the edge of town, and I'll stop here," he replied.
+"As I said, I'd not bring down upon your head a single unpleasant
+word."
+
+"My head's not so tender," she responded quickly. "But I think you're
+right--for the present." A tight little smile followed the words.
+"We'll see."
+
+"That's best."
+
+"But I propose to stand by you. I told you that night I couldn't
+remain indifferent when I saw an innocent man persecuted."
+
+"You give me a tremendous amount of happiness."
+
+"If I do, I'm glad. I don't believe you ever had much of it. Do you
+know what is said? That you never smile. But I can swear that isn't
+true, and I'm beginning to wonder if you really are--Heavens, what was
+I about to say!"
+
+"Go ahead. It's nothing terrible, I wager."
+
+"Well, I won't finish that, but I'll ask a question even more
+impertinent, if I may. Frankly, I'm dying of curiosity to know."
+
+Weir turned his head to listen to the approach of a horseman. He could
+see the man galloping towards them for town, having turned into the
+road from a lane a short distance off, his horse's hoofs striking an
+occasional spark from a stone. Then the engineer looked smilingly at
+Janet Hosmer.
+
+"I'll tell you anything--or almost anything." One subject alone was
+sealed.
+
+"It's that name."
+
+"Name?"
+
+"'Cold Steel.' How did you get it?"
+
+"It was just pinned on me a few years ago. I'm not particularly proud
+of it. I don't even know the rogue who gave me the label. And it means
+nothing."
+
+"Even your enemies are using it,--and I understand what it signifies."
+She bent her eyes upon him for a time. "That is, what it signifies to
+your friends."
+
+"And to my enemies?"
+
+"More gossip. They say it's because you're a gun-man and a knife-man.
+Oh, I wish I didn't have to have my ears filled with such vicious
+slander! But it means the same to enemies as to friends if they would
+but admit it. I'll wait until this rider passes, then I must go."
+
+No thought of friends or foes, both, or of any such person as Ed
+Sorenson in particular, was in Steele's mind as he made answer.
+
+"I'd stand here forever if you didn't go," he said, with a low
+eagerness that caused her breath to flutter in spite of herself.
+
+On her part, her mind was whispering, "He means it, I believe he
+really means it." Which caused her to lift and lower her eyes
+hurriedly, and feel a peculiar sense of trepidation and excitement.
+Odd to state, she, too, just then had no recollection of any such
+being as Ed Sorenson, which was the extreme of unloverliness.
+
+"Before I do go, I've something to tell you," she said hurriedly,
+dropping her voice. "It's this: the dead man's name was"--here her
+tone went down to a mere sibilance--"Pete Ortez."
+
+He leaned forward, once again the hard fierce man she had seen in
+Martinez' office the night of the shooting.
+
+"How did you learn that?"
+
+"It--well, it was let slip inadvertently in my presence."
+
+Weir would not press her further. Nor was there need, for the sudden
+embarrassment on her face and indeed the information itself could have
+but one source, the man who knew, Ed Sorenson.
+
+"You're the equal of a thousand ordinary friends," he declared. "I can
+make use of that item. Step aside, please; we're in the middle of the
+road." And he drew her from in front of the horseman advancing upon
+them.
+
+They said nothing, but waited for the man to pass. But he pulled his
+mount from a gallop to a trot, and from a trot to a foot pace, and at
+last when squarely even with them came to a full stop. From under his
+broad hat brim he silently considered the girl in white summer dress
+and the bare-headed engineer.
+
+Then he began to shake with laughter, which lasted but an instant. So
+insulting, so sinister was that noiseless laugh that Janet's hand had
+flown to Weir's arm, which she nervously clutched. As for Weir, his
+limbs stiffened--she felt the tightening of the arm she grasped--as a
+tiger's body grows taut preparatory to a spring.
+
+The short, fleshy, insolent rider sitting there in the moonlight was
+Burkhardt.
+
+"Ed Sorenson better keep an eye on his little turtledove," he
+remarked. And touching heel to his animal he swung ahead for town.
+
+For one dazed minute they stared after him.
+
+"Shoot him!" she suddenly said, through shut teeth.
+
+"I haven't my gun along, or I'd be glad to oblige you."
+
+"He deserves killing, the wretch!"
+
+"On more accounts than one," he replied, quietly.
+
+So quietly and so gravely, in truth, that her gust of rage subsided
+before the low-spoken menace of the words. No quick anger was his but
+a steady and deadly purpose. Again she felt the hard-held force, the
+mystery of the man, as if flowing suddenly upward from subterranean
+channels. What wrong had he suffered, what undeserved torture at the
+hands of this man and others thus to freeze his soul?
+
+But he immediately turned to her, asking, "Does that upset the
+broth?"
+
+A wan smile greeted his words.
+
+"I expect it will keep the cook busy, anyway," she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION
+
+
+Janet Hosmer made no effort to guess what her fiancé would say when
+next he called, or to prepare a defense of explanations and excuses.
+She was not that kind. What was necessary to be stated at the proper
+time would arise to her lips. Nevertheless she had a heaviness of
+heart, a natural distress as to the unpleasantness in prospect; and
+had only the slightest hope that Ed would ignore or refuse to hear
+Burkhardt's story. The man would tell her lover, of that she might
+rest assured, out of hatred for the engineer if for no other reason.
+
+She knew how passionately Ed was set against Steele Weir, for a score
+of times she had heard his incensed opinions, increasing lately to
+tirades. It had seemed strange at first that one could be so bitter
+over a simple difference like that of who should work at the dam. But
+ever since Weir had uttered his hoarse exclamation regarding her
+engagement, words so full of protest and amazed indignation, she was
+aware the cause went deeper.
+
+At that moved ejaculation of her companion that night something, too,
+had settled on her heart like a weight--an indefinable foreboding. The
+anxiety aroused about Ed's father and his integrity came to include Ed
+likewise. Loyalty of course required that she accept the man she had
+promised to marry, without reservations. As between him and others
+there should be but one choice. But did she really know him? Was he
+simply the open, jolly, generous, upright adoring fellow he appeared?
+Or were there less pleasant, more ignoble sides to his character? Was
+he, as well as his father, capable of a mean, unworthy, selfish
+persecution of another?
+
+The engineer had made no open accusation against him--or against any
+one, for that matter. She had done her best to get him to express
+himself, but he had refused. Enemies he might have, but he would not
+discuss the fact beyond admitting it was true. Only at moments when
+his restraint slipped could she measure his feelings. Quite different
+that from Ed Sorenson's voluble, heated denunciations of the other.
+Yet, heavens, how appalled this reserved man had been at hearing of
+her engagement! Far more than words, far more than any open charge,
+did his face and incredulity, both so patently sincere, bespeak the
+mistake she was making and justify gnawing doubts of her lover.
+
+As she approached her home Ed Sorenson came dashing out to spring into
+his runabout waiting before the gate. At sight of her he pulled up
+short.
+
+"Ah, here you are," he said.
+
+"Yes, here I am," was her reply.
+
+"You doubtless know what I've been told," he stated, significantly.
+
+"No, I don't. I can only suspect."
+
+"Is it true you've been meeting this man Weir on the quiet? Meeting
+him while engaged to me? You know what I think of him, and what every
+other respectable person thinks of him."
+
+"Was that Mr. Burkhardt's report? That I am meeting Mr. Weir on the
+quiet, to use your words?" she countered.
+
+Sorenson made an angry gesture at what he considered an evasion.
+
+"Janet, listen. He said he saw you at the edge of town, that you
+were both bare-headed, standing close together, arms locked. Good
+heavens, can't you imagine my feelings on hearing what he had to
+say! He stopped me on the street and drew me aside to put me on my
+guard, he said. Burkhardt wouldn't just make up a yarn like that
+against you, and he's a good friend of mine. He didn't say half
+what he suggested."
+
+The girl turned her face towards the house, shut her eyes for an
+instant. She could picture the rider's brutal leering face and
+unspoken insinuations; and her brain also placed in the scene her
+lover greedily if angrily drinking in the tale. Harkening to it
+instead of knocking the man down, that was the worst of it.
+Harkening--and believing.
+
+"I'll not deign to resent your remark of meeting Mr. Weir 'on the
+quiet'," said she, quietly. "I met him on the road accidentally."
+
+"Don't you think I'm entitled to know something about it?" he asked,
+with an edged tone.
+
+"What is it you desire to know?"
+
+Nearly an oath of wrath escaped his mouth, but he kept his control.
+
+"Janet, you know what kind of a man he is," he said. "You know what I
+feel against him, and father, and all our friends, and the town. And
+the whole town, too, will probably hear of this, with a lot of gossip
+added that isn't true."
+
+"But I met him accidentally."
+
+"You didn't have to chat with him like an old friend."
+
+Janet Hosmer gave him a slow, meditative look.
+
+"How do you know how I talked with him?"
+
+"You talked with him. That in itself was too much."
+
+"I don't view it in that light," she responded. "He was perfectly
+civil. Whatever public opinion may be regarding the shooting, I know
+he killed the man in self-defence. So that's nothing against him. You
+would have done the same in his place."
+
+Ed Sorenson leaned towards her.
+
+"You were mistaken, Janet. I've said before that I feared you were,
+but the prosecuting attorney has witnesses to the gun-play that he's
+dug up. Martinez saw nothing; how could he from inside the office? And
+remember that you're only a girl, Janet; in the darkness and with the
+excitement you were confused. I haven't a doubt this scoundrel Weir
+made you believe you saw what never occurred, when you appeared in
+Martinez' office. When you've thought it over, you'll realize that
+yourself. These new witnesses tell just the reverse of what you
+fancied happened. I'm going to see that you're away from San Mateo
+when the man's tried, as he will be."
+
+No reply coming from her, he continued:
+
+"He deceived you then and he'll endeavor to poison your mind right
+along. You're too trustful. Now, I was angry at first, but if there
+was anything in this meeting to-night that was out of the way, it was
+his doing, I know. If he got familiar with you, as Burkhardt
+hinted----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I'll kill the dog with my own hands!"
+
+"You may rest easy. His conduct was irreproachable, Mr. Burkhardt to
+the contrary."
+
+Sorenson regarded her in perplexity, divided between anger and doubts.
+Too, a new feeling unaccountably sprang into his breast--jealousy. In
+the end apprehension all at once filled his mind, darkening his face
+and bringing down his brows.
+
+Uneasy as at first he had been after the row in the restaurant, he had
+eventually dismissed the matter from his mind, for no rumor of it had
+reached San Mateo. Neither Weir nor Johnson, the girl's father, had
+blabbed of it, so his alarm passed; they didn't want to talk of it for
+the girl's sake, any more than he wished it known, was his grinning
+conclusion. The deuce would have been to pay if Janet had got wind of
+the business. But now his fears came winging back a hundred-fold as he
+stared at her.
+
+"What did he say to you?" he asked, in a tense voice.
+
+"Not that tone with me, if you please."
+
+Sorenson, however, was past observation of her mood or temper.
+
+"He told you a lot of lies about me, didn't he?" he went on, not
+hiding the sneer. "And you believed them."
+
+"He didn't say much, but what he did say was to the point. I don't
+recall that there were any lies."
+
+"There were, of course. It would be just his chance to give you his
+made-up story about me and that Johnson girl. That was what so
+interested you."
+
+"No, he didn't say anything about you and any girl except me. Then
+he only said he was sorry he couldn't have the pleasure of my
+friendship----"
+
+"Ay-ee," the other grated. His lips worked above his teeth.
+
+A shudder passed over Janet Hosmer's skin at the sound and the sight,
+for she had never seen him like this. A cold hand might have been
+closing about her heart: his glare was animal-like and bestial. His
+nature at the instant stood unclothed.
+
+"And he said he would be at pains to avoid even chance meetings with
+me, because it would make talk and cause me annoyance."
+
+"He'll not meet you another time if I have anything to say about it."
+
+"I see. But I wanted you to understand that he told me no lies, nor
+repeated any story--about you and a Johnson girl, I think you said."
+
+A visible breath of relief lifted his breast. He now would have
+been glad for some one to boot him along the street for ever
+mentioning the thing. He almost had put his foot in it. Apparently
+she was not interested in seeking further knowledge of the subject
+that he so ill-advisedly had brought up. Lucky for him she hadn't the
+inquisitiveness of some girls.
+
+The narrow escape restored a trace of his good humor, and he was
+shrewd enough to divert her mind before the incident made an
+impression. He reached out and patted her shoulder.
+
+"Don't think me a scold, darling," said he. "Burkhardt upset me with
+his news, that was all. He hates that gun-man so much that it's no
+wonder he was angry at seeing him hoodwink you. He probably imagined a
+lot. Just don't speak to Weir if he tries to stop you again. And
+pretty soon we'll have him where he won't interfere with anybody."
+
+"When will that be?"
+
+"The county attorney's still collecting evidence. Nothing will be done
+before the grand jury meets, which is in a couple of weeks. You must
+arrange to go off on a visit about that time."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So you won't have to go through the ordeal of appearing in court.
+There are ways of fixing such things." He laughed softly. "Especially
+here in San Mateo County. It's too rotten a business for you to have
+to step into, this murder. Come along down to the drug store and have
+some ice cream."
+
+"Not to-night. I'm feeling a little tired."
+
+"Then let us rest on your porch. I haven't seen you twice in the last
+week."
+
+"Some other evening, Ed. I promised father to help get up his account
+books."
+
+"You're not angry with me?" he asked. "If you're not, give me a kiss
+before I go."
+
+A sharp smile showed on her lips.
+
+"I'm not angry, but I'm going to penalize you to that extent. If you
+must have a cheek to press, go kiss----" She paused, while the
+conviction darted into his mind that she had remembered that Johnson
+girl blunder after all, then said: "Mr. Burkhardt's cheek."
+
+Again relief swept him.
+
+"Come, be kind, Janet," he began. But she was already through the gate
+and skipping up the walk, vanishing in the gloom of the veranda. The
+screen door clapped shut. "Peeved, all right. I'll have to be
+extra-nice to her for a day or so until she calms down," he murmured
+to himself. "Must send her a box of chocolates and some magazines
+to-morrow to show my contrite heart; that always gets 'em. Hang it,
+it's time to fix a day, too. We've been engaged long enough. She sure
+has a figure and face--a beaut! I guess she didn't smell the booze on
+my breath. Got to be careful about that till we're married." He jumped
+into his car.
+
+The screen door had clapped shut, but Janet had not entered. She had
+employed the artifice to convey the impression it had. She did not
+wish to go in to her work just yet, for calm as she had appeared
+during the interview her emotions were running full tide. Love Ed
+Sorenson? Marry him? She groped for and dropped into a wicker chair,
+her head sinking in shame and self-abasement. Never--never!
+
+And before her mind swam another face, a face with the hair ruffled
+about the brow, clear of eyes and strong-lined, as she had beheld it
+in the moonlight of the road.
+
+All at once she tugged at a finger, fiercely pulling off the
+engagement ring. She rubbed her cheek as well, with an angry hand, for
+the memory of kisses was burning her as by fire.
+
+Then she sat quite motionless for a long time.
+
+"I'll just ask father," she exclaimed. "There can't be more than a
+dozen Johnsons around here."
+
+Which would have given Ed Sorenson a fresh jolt in his breathing
+apparatus if he had overheard, and shriveled the cocky self-assurance
+with which he sipped a high-ball that moment at Vorse's bar.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+JANET AND MARY
+
+
+In a region as sparsely settled by white people as San Mateo and its
+adjoining counties there were not, as Janet put it, more than a dozen
+Johnson families. In fact, there were but two, she learned from her
+father: one at Bowenville, the small railroad town of three hundred
+people, a merchant with a wife and four little children; the other a
+rancher on Terry Creek, whose wife was dead and who had one child, a
+girl of sixteen or seventeen years of age.
+
+"I may be away at dinner time, so don't wait for me," she told her
+father next morning. "I'm going out in the country a few miles--and
+you know my car! If you'd just let me squeeze some of these patients
+who never pay, you could have a new car yourself."
+
+"Mine's all right," he smiled.
+
+"But mine isn't. Look at it. You gave it to me only because you
+scorned to ride in it any longer yourself. It would do for me, you
+said, but you prance around in a bright shiny one yourself. I blush at
+the row mine makes; sounds like a boiler factory; I drive only along
+side streets. If the patients would pay what they owe, I could ride
+like a lady instead of a slinking magpie."
+
+The doctor leaned back in his chair and laughed (they were at
+breakfast) and remarked that old friends were best.
+
+"Don't call my asthmatic tin beast a friend; we're bitter enemies,"
+said she.
+
+It carried her to Terry Creek about noon, however, safely enough,
+whither she went with a firm resolution that crushed a certain
+embarrassment and anxiety. Suppose these people resented her
+inquiries.
+
+She placed the bearded, tanned rancher at once, when she saw him
+working on a piece of harness before the door as she drove up. She had
+seen him in town at different times. She once had stopped here, too,
+several years previous when accompanying her father, who had been
+called to dress the rancher's injured hand. The girl could not have
+been over twelve or thirteen then, a shabby, awkward girl wearing a
+braid who came out to gaze shyly at her sitting in the car.
+
+Johnson arose from the ground and approached as she alighted, while
+the girl's head popped into sight at the door.
+
+"I'm Dr. Hosmer's daughter, Janet," she stated, putting out her hand
+and smiling. "I've come to see you on a matter. Shall we go into the
+house?"
+
+With curiosity sharing a vague hostility in his bearing he led her in,
+where his daughter was setting the table. Janet also told the girl who
+she was. At once dismay and startlement greeted the announcement. But
+she invited Janet to be seated, she herself withdrawing to a spot by
+the stove.
+
+No need for Janet to beat about the bush with her errand.
+
+"Mr. Johnson," she said, "I've come to you and your daughter for a
+little help if you can give it." That seemed the best way to break
+down their reserve, an appeal rather than simply blunt questions--and
+what was it if not an appeal? "What I have to say is just among the
+three of us and I know it will go no farther. You're acquainted with
+my father; he's respected by every one."
+
+"He is," Johnson stated, nodding.
+
+"The situation is this, to speak plainly: last night I heard something
+that has caused me to come to you for information; I'm engaged to Ed
+Sorenson, and in a moment of anger he denounced Mr. Weir, the engineer
+at the dam, for having told me a false story--lies--about him and your
+daughter."
+
+Janet perceived the quick, troubled look exchanged by man and girl.
+
+"Mr. Weir has never mentioned your daughter's name in my hearing; I
+think him incapable of discussing any one maliciously. He's very
+careful of what he says. I consider him a very honorable man. At any
+rate, he said nothing of what Ed Sorenson suggested, and if the latter
+himself hadn't spoken of the thing I should have had no inkling that
+there had been anything justifying an inquiry on my part. There may
+not be. But why should he imagine Mr. Weir had told me 'lies' linking
+him and your daughter?"
+
+"I know Weir--and I know Ed Sorenson, too," was the rancher's grim
+rejoinder.
+
+"This is a disagreeable subject, I know. But I'm not here out of mere
+curiosity, but a desire to learn if something has been concealed from
+me by Ed Sorenson that I should be informed of. His manner, his words,
+the whole incident has filled me with doubts. See, I'm trusting you
+absolutely." And she extended a hand in a gesture bespeaking
+sincerity.
+
+Johnson peered at her in silence from under shaggy brows.
+
+"I ask myself why Mr. Sorenson took it for granted that the engineer
+had been telling me false stories and if there was any ground for such
+fears," she went on. "He had nothing to be afraid of, no matter what
+might be said, if he had done nothing unworthy. I can't imagine Mr.
+Weir, for instance, being alarmed in that way."
+
+"They're telling plenty of lies about him, for that matter, but I
+guess it doesn't worry him any," Johnson said.
+
+"What I ask you touches a delicate subject, perhaps," Janet continued,
+reluctantly. "You may feel that I'm pushing in where I'm not
+concerned. But if Mr. Sorenson has done anything discreditable--if he
+has acted in a way to make me ashamed when I know, then it becomes a
+matter affecting my happiness too. I would never marry a man who had
+done something dishonorable, for if I did so knowingly I should be
+dishonored and dishonorable as well."
+
+Johnson suddenly thrust a brown forefinger at her.
+
+"Do you want to know what Sorenson did?" he demanded, wrathfully.
+
+Janet gripped her hands together. "Yes."
+
+"You'll not go spreading it all around the country? But I guess you
+won't as long as it would make you out a fool too. I'll not have
+Mary's name dragged about in a lot of gossip."
+
+"I assure you I shall remain silent, for her sake and my own."
+
+"All right, I'll tell you. You're too good a girl--any decent girl
+is--to marry Ed Sorenson. He met Mary at a dance last spring in town
+where she went with some friends of ours, and made love to her but
+wouldn't let her tell me or any one. We don't get to town so very
+often; she never knew he was engaged to marry you, there never
+happening to be any mention of it to her. Then he got her to go to
+Bowenville one day awhile ago, under promise to marry her there--Mary
+is only sixteen, a little girl yet. To me, anyway."
+
+Janet felt the working of his love in those simple words. Felt it but
+half-consciously, though, for her own soul was stifling at Ed
+Sorenson's revealed infamy.
+
+"When he got her there, he told her they would have to go away farther
+to be married--to Los Angeles." Again his finger came up, this time to
+be shaken at her like a hammer. "He never intended to marry her; he
+planned to get her there, ruin her, and cast her off. That's the sort
+of man you're going to marry!"
+
+"I remember he expected to be away for a couple of weeks--a business
+trip, he said. But afterwards he explained that it hadn't been
+necessary to go."
+
+"A business trip! Yes, the dirty kind of business he likes. And if it
+hadn't been that Weir heard him explaining to Mary that she must go on
+and interfered--there in the restaurant--Ed Sorenson might have
+succeeded. Mary trusted him, thought he was straight. But he's
+crooked, crooked as his old man. When Weir told him to his face what
+he thought of his tricks, he let it out he was engaged to you. Didn't
+mean to, of course. Weir said he would stay right with them and see
+that they got married next day before a minister, then Sorenson
+snapped out he was to marry you. That opened Mary's eyes, that and his
+refusing to go before a preacher as the engineer demanded. So Weir
+brought her home to me.
+
+"And that isn't all I know," he snarled. "Mexicans and cowboys and
+others have talked--women don't hear these things--how he's had to
+pay Mexicans hush-money for girls of theirs he's wronged. But what do
+people care? He's rich, he's old man Sorenson's boy; everything's kept
+quiet; and he goes around as big as life." With a muttered oath he
+turned away, his lips shut hard and his beard sticking out savagely.
+
+He came back to her again.
+
+"The young one gets it from the old one," he exclaimed. "Bad crooked
+blood in both of them. I know. I've been here ever since I was a boy
+and remember things Sorenson believes every one has forgotten, I know
+how he got his start, how he and the rest of his bunch cleaned out
+Dent of his ranch and cattle gambling and then killed him when he
+discovered they had used marked cards, how at the same time they
+robbed another man----"
+
+Janet struggled to her feet. She had covered her eyes and bowed her
+head before the torrent of his vehemence.
+
+"No more, I want to hear no more," she gasped. "Let me go home. I'm
+sick."
+
+"It all makes me sick, too," he answered. "Sick and sore, both. But
+it's the truth. I'm sorry if it's been a bad pill to swallow, but it's
+the God's truth, girl. I'm sorry it couldn't be any other way, but I
+wouldn't see you marry that scoundrel if I lost a hand stopping you.
+Mary felt sick at first, too; she's over it now. You'll not feel bad
+long. Better stay for dinner with us."
+
+"I couldn't swallow a bite. Thank you for your kindness in asking
+me--and for telling me what I wanted to know, too. Father never knew,
+or he would have warned me. People saw I was engaged to Ed Sorenson
+and would say nothing to father, of course. I shall always count you
+as one of my best friends, Mr. Johnson. And you too, Mary; you must
+come down and stay with me sometime, for I imagine you get lonely
+here. No, another day I'll remain to dinner--and I want to be alone
+now."
+
+They pressed her no further, seeing her wretchedness of spirit. But
+they walked with her to the car and shook hands with her when she was
+in and urged her to come again.
+
+When she had disappeared in the aspens among which the trail led, Mary
+said to her father:
+
+"You said they killed a man named Dent."
+
+"They did. I saw the killing."
+
+"And nothing was ever done about it?"
+
+"No. Nobody but me knew of the happening and I'd of had a bullet
+through my heart if I'd talked. I might yet even now, so see that you
+keep your mouth shut."
+
+"You told her."
+
+"I was mad, so mad I could say anything. But she isn't the kind to
+repeat the story; I'm not afraid on that score. She's clean strain all
+through."
+
+"Did you know the man whom Sorenson and the others killed?" Mary
+questioned, in some awe.
+
+"I knew of him, but I was only a lad then. I saw it all through the
+back door of Vorse's saloon where it happened, but I've never breathed
+about it to a soul. I didn't want to be murdered some dark night.
+Those four men would see that the job was done quick even now, I'm
+saying, if they were on to the fact. I know 'em, if nobody else
+does."
+
+Mary's skin crawled with prickles of fear.
+
+"They must be awful bad."
+
+"They were devils then, and I don't think they've changed to angels
+to-day, though they try to appear decent. I know 'em; I know what
+they'll do once they start. You can't make sheep out of wolves just by
+giving 'em a fleece."
+
+"You said they robbed another man at the same time they killed that
+Dent."
+
+"Yes; and it only goes to show the hellish crooks they are. It was
+another man in the saloon. He was drunk. They made him believe he had
+killed Dent. Then said they'd help him to get away if he gave them his
+property. He was a rich fellow who had come out from the east and gone
+to ranching, a tenderfoot. They took his stuff and he skipped the
+country with his wife. That was the last of him, and I reckon he
+believes to this day that he's a murderer. And that's how they got the
+start of their wealth, or a big part of it, Sorenson and Vorse and the
+other two. They've got the San Mateo Cattle Company, with fifty
+thousand head of steers, and ten or twenty bands of sheeps and
+ranches, and the bank, and all the rest, and they walk around like
+honest men. But they're thieves and murderers, Mary, thieves and
+murderers! I'd rather be the man I am, poor and with nothing but this
+little mortgaged piece of ground and my few cattle, than them, who
+robbed Dent and killed him and then robbed and drove out Weir."
+
+"Was that the other man's name?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That's funny. The same as the man who brought me home."
+
+"There are lots of Weirs, like the Johnsons."
+
+"Not so many, I guess. Maybe they're related. Did the man who skipped
+have any children?"
+
+"No. None I ever heard of, though I didn't know much about him. Just
+him and his wife, I think."
+
+Johnson had perceived no resemblance between the engineer and the
+vanished man of whom he spoke. As for that, however, he had no clear
+recollection of the elder Weir's face; he was but twelve years old at
+the time of the dramatic event, thirty years before.
+
+"Now, come along and eat," he said. "And remember! Not a word of this
+to a soul."
+
+Meanwhile Janet Hosmer was driving slowly down the canyon, oblivious
+that opportunity to unlock the whole mystery had been hers, never
+dreaming that she had just missed by the slenderest margin what Steele
+Weir would have given the world to know.
+
+For an instant Fate had placed the key in her hand. She knew it not;
+it was withdrawn again and the door remained closed and locked while
+the threads of Destiny continued to be spun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE PLOT
+
+
+In Vorse's saloon, where in the past so many evil ideas for the
+acquisition of money or power had sprouted, the scheme had its
+inception. It had been of slow growth, with innumerable suggestions
+considered, tested, discarded. The intended arrest and trial of Weir
+had been the first aim; but this had expanded until at last the plot
+had become of really magnificent proportions, cunning yet daring,
+devilish enough even to satisfy the hate and greed of its originators,
+consummate in design, absolutely safe and conclusive.
+
+It was Sorenson who conceived the notion of pulling the irrigation
+project down in ruins at the moment of Weir's own fall. Judge Gordon a
+few days later had pieced out the method, which was either to corrupt
+the workmen to wreck dam and camp or to place them in the equivocal
+position of having done so apparently though others did it in fact.
+Vorse and Burkhardt devised the details. Weir should be left free
+until the blow had fallen on the camp, whereupon he should be
+immediately clapped into jail on the murder charge, which, coming on
+top of the "riot," would paralyze all company action and work. From
+such a crushing double-blow no concern could quickly recover, if
+indeed the loss did not result in total cessation of construction.
+
+Thus shedding their coats of expedient lawfulness, they reverted
+under the menace of Steele Weir's presence to the men they were in an
+earlier age--an age when a few white land and cattle "barons"
+dominated the region, predatory, arrogant, masterful and despotic; the
+age just ceasing when the elder Weir and Dent arrived; the age of
+their youth forty years before, the age when railroads and telegraphs
+and law were remote, and chicanery and force were the common agents,
+and "guns" the final arbiters.
+
+To them Weir was like a reincarnated spirit of that age. He guessed if
+he did not know their past. He had appeared in order to challenge
+their supremacy, end their rule, avenge his father's dispossession at
+their hands. He instinctively and by nature was an enemy; he would
+have been their enemy in any other place and under any other
+circumstances. He was a head-hunter, and in turn was to be hunted
+down. He was the kind who neither made compromises nor asked quarter.
+He veiled his purposes in as great secrecy as did they, and when he
+struck it would be suddenly, fiercely, mercilessly--if he struck. They
+were determined he should not strike, being himself first surprised
+and crushed, for though in ignorance of what he could bring against
+them their fears were real. Everything, indeed, about the man
+antagonized them, alarmed them, stirred their hate and filmed their
+eyes with blood. He must be destroyed.
+
+"And with him the dam," Sorenson had said. "Both together." For there
+was no effort to conceal among themselves their savage intention.
+
+"He'll never come to trial," Vorse remarked, with a malignant gleam in
+his blue eyes and a shutting of his thin lips. "An attempted jail
+delivery by 'friends' will fix that. All they will have to do then is
+to buy him a pine box."
+
+"If the man had but stayed away!" Judge Gordon exclaimed. Cunning, not
+force, was his forte; and the measures in prospect at times had
+oppressed him with dreadful forebodings. He was growing old, feeble,
+and here when he was entitled to peace he still had to fight for his
+own.
+
+In accordance with the scheme Burkhardt vanished from San Mateo for a
+time, ostensibly on business but in fact on a journey across the
+Mexican line, where he conducted negotiations with a certain
+"revoluçionista" of no particular notoriety as yet, of avaricious
+character, unscrupulous nature, and with a small following of fellow
+bandits and a large animosity for Americans. His ambition was to
+emulate the brilliant Villa. But pickings had been poor of late, no
+more than that of stealing a few horses from across the border. To
+Burkhardt, who had heard of him and sought him out, he listened with
+interest and bargained with zest. Five thousand in gold for fifty men
+was like pearls from Paradise. And whatever this Yankee's own private
+purpose, it was a chance for the chieftain to strike secretly and
+safely at Americans, in addition.
+
+"They will come through in squads after they've slipped across the
+line," Burkhardt reported. "They're to pose as laborers."
+
+"When?" Sorenson asked.
+
+"Along next week. They're to drop off down along the railroad at
+different towns and I'll run them up into the mountains with some
+grub. Then we'll assemble them quietly a couple miles off from the
+dam, where they'll be handy on the chosen night. Afterwards we'll slip
+them back to the railroad, and they fade into Mexico. Weir's workmen
+will be drunk and rowing--and will have done the job, eh?" Burkhardt
+shook with suppressed, evil laughter.
+
+"If they're drunk, they may join in and help," Judge Gordon stated,
+acutely. "A mob full of whiskey will do anything. If they did take a
+hand, it would round out the case against them perfectly. Very likely
+next day they, too, would fade, as you put it, Burkhardt; they would
+want to get out of this part of country as quickly as possible when
+they realized what had happened. I see no flaw in our plan.
+Fortunately the three directors who are coming will be gone by the end
+of next week."
+
+"What's that? What directors?" Burkhardt asked.
+
+"They're to be here on an inspection trip, so they wrote, and will be
+pleased to hear our complaints in regard to the question of workmen."
+Gordon's tone was ironical. "I wrote them protesting Weir's discharge
+of our people, you remember, but that was some time ago."
+
+"What's the use of paying attention to the fools now?"
+
+"We must carry out the farce, Burkhardt, for the sake of appearances."
+
+"I'd like to blow them up along with their dam!" was the scowling
+rejoinder, "Well, let 'em inspect. Next time they come back there
+won't be any."
+
+"I believe we should arrest Weir before the thing's pulled off,"
+Gordon said, meditatively. "It would be surer."
+
+Sorenson set his heavy jaw.
+
+"No. I want him to see the wreck; I want him to know just what's
+happened before he's haled away; I want him feeling good and sick
+already when he gets the next jolt."
+
+"Sure. It's him or us, as I've said from the first; and I've always
+believed in making a clean sweep," Vorse remarked. "We have the right
+line this time. First, make his men drunk and sore; then smash the
+works; then arrest him quick; and last finish him off with a bullet
+during a pretended jail delivery."
+
+"There will be elements of danger in the last," Judge Gordon stated,
+cautiously.
+
+Vorse smiled and Burkhardt grinned.
+
+"Not so you'll notice it," said the latter. "The town won't know
+anything about it until afterwards. Just a few good men at night,
+masked and working fast, and the thing is done."
+
+"I'll not feel easy till it's over."
+
+"Keep up your nerve, Judge," Burkhardt grunted. "You used to be as
+lively as anybody when you were young."
+
+"I know, I know. But this Weir isn't going to stand idle. If he ever
+gets a chance with his gun----"
+
+"He won't get it," said Vorse.
+
+"And he'll not resist the sheriff when Madden arrests him legally,"
+Sorenson added. "Nothing could be better for us than if he did. He
+knows that."
+
+"Still I'll be glad when next week is past," the Judge replied, with a
+sigh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE CURRENT OF EVENTS
+
+
+Though outwardly the world's face was as calm as ever, though peace
+seemed to bask on San Mateo and the broad mesa and lofty mountain
+range, events were rapidly shaping themselves to bring a thunder crash
+of contending forces. Not Weir, not even the little evil cabal
+plotting so desperately against him, guessed the scope and power of
+the passions to be released.
+
+As a vital impulse towards the climax, though an unconscious one on
+her part so far as the general play of circumstance was concerned,
+Janet Hosmer informed Ed Sorenson of her determination to break their
+engagement. This was the same evening she returned from the Johnson
+ranch, when he called at her telephoned request. He went to her home
+under the impression that his box of candy and bundle of new magazines
+had restored him to favor. He was very jaunty, in fact, and bent on
+persuading her to name an early day for their nuptials.
+
+Imagine his wrath when she explained that she wished to say that she
+could not marry him, at the same time handing him his ring and the
+other trinkets he had bestowed upon her.
+
+"Is it because of our little spat last night about the engineer?" he
+demanded. "I apologized, Janet. I'm sorry still, and I love you above
+everything else."
+
+"I think not," said she.
+
+"But I do, Janet. Above everything."
+
+"No, not above yourself and your vices. You deceived me for a long
+time, but now I know the truth. You aroused my suspicions when you
+mentioned a Johnson girl; there's only one Johnson girl hereabouts, as
+I learned; and this noon I visited her and her father. They informed
+me fully about your conduct towards Mary at Bowenville and your
+promises to marry her--that, when you were engaged to me. There are
+other things I heard to-day. Of affairs with Mexican girls that are
+shameful."
+
+"Lies, lies!" was the passionate disclaimer. "Or if I have been
+flirting a little, and never since my engagement, it's no more than
+any fellow does."
+
+"You can neither excuse nor justify your words and actions towards
+Mary Johnson not a month ago."
+
+"They're liars, I tell you."
+
+"Will you confront them and say that?"
+
+Taken by surprise Sorenson hesitated, flushed, and then made a gesture
+of disdain.
+
+"I'll not, because I'll not condescend to answer such baseless
+charges," he stated. "I thought you had sense enough not to believe
+every little thing you hear. Certainly I expect you not to believe
+this, and I know you won't on consideration. Then we'll be married. I
+came here to-night to urge you to marry me soon."
+
+"I'll never marry you, and we're no longer engaged. You've acted
+faithlessly and dishonorably. You're not the decent man I thought you
+were."
+
+"Don't you still love me, Janet?"
+
+"No. I don't think I ever loved you; I was loving a man who didn't
+exist, an illusion I imagined to be Ed Sorenson, not your real self.
+If I loved at all, which I now doubt! And you never loved me, though
+you may think you did and still do. But it's not so; for no man who
+really loved a respectable girl could at the same time do what you
+did. Think of it! While pretending to love me, you were secretly
+trying to inveigle that poor ignorant girl away from home. You're not
+a man; you're a beast. The shame and disgust and humiliation I suffer
+at the thought of my position during that time, your effort to
+hoodwink both Mary Johnson and me, so fills me with anger I can't talk
+to you. Go, go! And please don't even speak to me hereafter, on the
+street or anywhere else."
+
+Instead of departing the man grasped her wrist and gave her a venomous
+look.
+
+"It was this sneak of an engineer, after all, who told you this lie
+and turned you against me," he snarled.
+
+"Let me go. Mr. Weir said nothing. It was you yourself who betrayed
+yourself, or I should not have known as I do, thank heavens. Stop
+holding my wrist!"
+
+For an instant Sorenson wavered between whether he should obey her
+command or strike her as his rage prompted. A very devil of passion
+beating in his breast urged him to show her her place, deal with her
+as he would like to do and as she deserved--throw her down and drag
+her by the hair until she crawled forward and clasped his knees in
+subjection. But the look in her eyes cooled this half-insane,
+whiskey-inspired desire.
+
+He took his hand off her wrist, picked up his hat.
+
+"You can't throw me down this way," he sneered. "You're going to marry
+me just the same, whether you think so or not. I have a voice in this
+engagement, and you can't break your word and promise to me because
+it happens to strike your fancy. Not for a single minute!"
+
+"If you were a gentleman and a decent man you wouldn't say that."
+
+"I'm not either, by your judgment, so I do say it. I say it again:
+you're going to marry me, willingly or unwillingly. Now if after
+thinking it over, you want to forget all this and go on as before, all
+right. If not, our engagement still holds just the same. You may
+release me, but I haven't released you. Remember that. And keep away
+from that engineer if you know what's best for you!"
+
+With a scowl he stalked out of the house, leaving a very angry, very
+tremulous and very heart-sick girl. The fellow was in truth not a man,
+she perceived, but a creature so conscienceless and loathsome that she
+seemed contaminated through and through by his touch, his words, and
+their previous relations. How grossly he had deceived her as to his
+real character! What a horrible future as his wife she had escaped!
+Nor was she yet free, for he promised to make an infinity of trouble.
+
+That day she could do nothing. Her father noting her face asked what
+was the trouble, and she told him the whole affair.
+
+"I've heard rumors of late about him and was worried," he said. "You
+did the only thing, of course. Pay no attention to his words; I'll see
+he doesn't annoy you."
+
+It was three or four days afterwards that she called Weir up at the
+dam in a desire to hear the voice of a man she knew to be straight and
+upright.
+
+"I've wondered if a girl is allowed to look at your dam," she said on
+impulse, when they had chatted for a moment. "Father, who was at your
+camp to attend an injured man, says you're making famous progress."
+
+"I'd be more than delighted to show you the work. But--I wonder----"
+
+"Don't let what people say disturb you," she replied quickly, divining
+his thought. "I've arranged all that." A somewhat obscure remark to
+Weir.
+
+"Then come any time--and often. I hope to be able to conduct you
+around, the first visit at least. Next week I may not be able to do so
+as a committee of directors arrive who'll take my time."
+
+"Oh, indeed," Janet answered, politely.
+
+"A manager has to be directed occasionally, or he may run wild," she
+heard, with his laugh.
+
+"I'll come before they do," she said.
+
+Quite as she had announced she did run up to the canyon and go with
+Weir over the hillsides and dam, asking questions and displaying a
+great interest in the men and the operation of the machinery. The
+concrete work was nearing an end. Already tracks were laid for the
+dump trams that were to carry dirt from steam-shovels to the dam to
+form its main body.
+
+She perceived the immense labor of the project and the coördinated
+effort required. The necessity in itself of dragging hither from
+Bowenville all of the supplies, the material, the huge machines, was
+overwhelming. The responsibility of combining scientific knowledge and
+raw industry to an exact result struck her as prodigious. The handling
+of hundreds of subordinate workmen and assistants of various grades
+and skill demanded exceptional ability, understanding, will and
+generalship. Yet these things the man at her side, Steele Weir,
+accomplished and supplied; and appeared quite calm and unmoved about
+it, as if it was all a matter of course.
+
+She glanced at the ground, flushing. The thought of Ed Sorenson,
+making only a pretense of doing anything useful and because his father
+was rich doing nothing in reality but waste himself in vicious
+practices, was in her mind. What must have the engineer believed of
+her all this while when he knew Sorenson's true nature and infamous
+record? Did he suppose her a light-headed feather, indifferent to
+everything except that her husband should be rich? Very likely. There
+were plenty of girls of that type. He naturally would suppose her
+one.
+
+And she could say nothing to put herself in a better light and to gain
+his respect--for that she now desired greatly. She saw him as he was,
+a big man, a strong man, a man whose respect was to be prized. Beside
+him she felt herself small and ordinary. That was all right, but she
+was determined he should not believe her insignificant, shallow,
+unworthy, mercenary.
+
+While she could not explain matters openly without shaming herself
+and still lowering herself in his estimation, he being only an
+acquaintance, yet there were ways of getting at the end. Janet could
+act adroitly, like most women, when it best served the purpose.
+
+"Do you know, I just learned from friends of yours on Terry Creek that
+you're a public benefactor as well as an engineer," she stated, when
+they paused on the hillside for a last look at the dam.
+
+"I?" he exclaimed.
+
+His eyes came around and found hers fixed on him.
+
+"I happened to stop at the Johnson ranch. They didn't say so, but I
+know they would be pleased to death if you would go to dinner there
+some day. They have some fine fat chickens, if you like chicken fried
+or baked, and they hesitate to ask you only because they're afraid
+you'll refuse."
+
+"Fried chicken is my weakness. Of course I'll go; at the first spare
+chance."
+
+But all the while Steele Weir's mind was eddying with wonderment. He
+had colored at mention of the Johnson ranch, as if he had been caught
+with a hand in a jam pot. And it meant only one thing: she knew of the
+Bowenville episode. Involuntarily his eyes flashed to her left hand
+with which she was brushing back the hair under her hat brim. There
+was no diamond solitaire on its third finger. Surely, something had
+happened.
+
+"Well, I must be returning home. I just thought I'd give you a tiny
+hint," said she. An odd smile rested on her lips as she spoke, for
+hints may carry multiple suggestions.
+
+"By Jove!" Weir said suddenly.
+
+Man of action though she knew him to be, she never anticipated he
+would or could act so directly. He reached out and seized her left
+hand and scanned it significantly. Then he raised his eyes.
+
+"What does this mean?" he asked, tapping the finger with one of his
+own. "Does this mean----"
+
+It was Janet's turn to become scarlet. She tried to smile again, but
+it was a wavering smile that appeared.
+
+"What does what mean?" she fenced.
+
+"That--well, that the ring is off permanently?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"And that there's now a chance for me?"
+
+Janet's eyes at that popped open very wide indeed. Meanwhile Weir
+still held to the palm resting in his own.
+
+"You?" she breathed, faintly.
+
+"Me, yes."
+
+Presently with a gentle movement she drew her hand free. She had been
+quite dumbfounded, but not so dumbfounded that she did not realize
+that this new situation had requirements of its own. He appeared
+absolutely sincere and resolute.
+
+"But I never dreamed of such a thing!" she stammered.
+
+"Nor I--because until now I hadn't the right. All I ask is that you
+give me your friendship--and a chance--and--well, we'll see."
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't be friends," said she. "We are
+already, aren't we?"
+
+"Yes--now. I never actually thought so before."
+
+"Things have changed," she stated. And her lips closed with a firm
+pressure as she spoke. "Or I shouldn't have been here inspecting the
+dam, should I?" Again the smile flashed upon her face. "You may
+consider this a preliminary inspection to that of your high and mighty
+directors, and I assure you my verdict--is that the word?--is
+favorable. Now I must be going to the car. Father likes his meals on
+time."
+
+"And when shall I see you again?"
+
+The note of eagerness in his voice set her heart moving a bit faster.
+If he carried on his engineering work as he did his friendship, no
+wonder he got things done.
+
+"Why, when you wish to call, Mr. Weir. Both father and I shall be
+pleased to have you come any time."
+
+"I'll certainly avail myself of the privilege," said he. "You must
+really go now?"
+
+With a feeling of exaltation at this new turn of affairs he watched
+her drive away from camp, a feeling that persisted during the
+succeeding days.
+
+The three directors arrived. That was Thursday evening; and Friday and
+Saturday were devoted to a discussion of construction plans,
+inspection of the works, analysis of costs and so on. Weir found the
+men what he expected: quick to comprehend facts, incisive of mind, and
+though of course not engineers yet able to measure results; while they
+on their part were appreciative of the exceptional progress made and
+of his thorough command of the project. They knew the first hour that
+the right manager was in charge at last.
+
+Saturday afternoon Sorenson and Judge Gordon called at headquarters,
+by appointment, to discuss the grievance held locally against the
+company. Weir was present at the meeting.
+
+"As to whether the Mexican workmen who were discharged were actually
+giving a full return in work for the wages, as you maintain,
+gentlemen," said Mr. Pollock, one of the directors and a corporation
+lawyer from New York, in reply to the visitors' statement, "that is a
+question not of opinion but of fact."
+
+"Fact, yes," Judge Gordon argued. "Fact supported by the evidence of
+the three hundred workmen against that of a single man, your manager,
+who had just come."
+
+"Are not your three hundred men prejudiced witnesses?" the New Yorker
+inquired, a slight smile upon his thin face.
+
+"No more than is Mr. Weir."
+
+"But Mr. Weir is the manager and consequently has the power of
+decision in such matters."
+
+"Not to the extent of revoking unfairly your promise, given orally, to
+be sure, but still given, to employ local labor." Sorenson was the
+speaker and his heavy face wore an expression of ill-disguised
+contempt.
+
+"Agreed. Local labor was to be hired," said Pollock. "But our company
+isn't a philanthropic institution; it's run on strictly business
+principles. Any agreement we made implied that local workmen should
+give exactly what other workmen would give in work."
+
+"They did so," Judge Gordon affirmed.
+
+"There was no trouble until this man came," Sorenson remarked. "I
+suppose he felt that he had to show his authority."
+
+"Ah, but there was if not trouble at any rate dissatisfaction on our
+part," Pollock stated, tapping a finger on the table. "Construction
+wasn't progressing as we knew it should, which was the very reason for
+getting a new manager, one who could speed it up. But as I said, it
+all comes down to a question of fact. You gentlemen offer your
+workmen's avowals of industry to support your claim; Mr. Weir, on the
+other hand, gives us some definite records to back up his side. Here
+they are for the last week the workmen from San Mateo and neighborhood
+worked--his first week here; and for the succeeding weeks under the
+men shipped in; in material used, in cubic yards of concrete
+construction, and in percentage of work finished. Examine them if you
+please. They show daily and weekly results to be just a trifle less
+than double for the corresponding time the imported workmen have been
+here. In other words, the new men have, while shortening the time of
+completion, given twice as much work for exactly the same wage paid
+your Mexicans. In other words, too, your local laborers cancelled our
+agreement by their own incompetence."
+
+"Your manager could easily have doctored those records," Sorenson
+stated, coldly.
+
+"You scarcely mean that, sir," Pollock instantly replied icily, his
+amiability vanishing.
+
+"Come, Judge, we may as well go, I think. We're appealing to a
+prejudiced court." And Sorenson arose.
+
+"Our decision to view the matter like Mr. Weir is because his position
+is sustained by these facts, not because we're prejudiced, as you
+insinuate. But I may add that it would not be strange if we were
+prejudiced, as we've become convinced that you gentlemen haven't been
+sincere in your attitude towards our company and if anything are
+strongly hostile. Any one may be deceived for a time, and we were, but
+not permanently. You would have done much better to have recognized
+that we have a perfect right to build this project on land that we
+bought and with water that we acquired. For it will be built in any
+case and in spite of such local opposition as may be made." Pollock
+flicked the ash from his cigar with a careful finger. "That is a mere
+piece of information or a declaration of war, whichever way you wish
+to take it."
+
+"I told you we were wasting our time coming here," the cattleman said
+to his companion.
+
+"Good day, gentlemen," said Judge Gordon, politely.
+
+And the pair went out to Sorenson's machine.
+
+Shortly after, the two other directors left to catch a train at
+Bowenville, Pollock planning to stay with Weir to formulate a report
+during the next day or two for presentation to the entire directorate
+at its next meeting. Sorenson caught a glimpse of the car whirling
+through town, with Weir at the wheel, who with Pollock accompanied the
+departing men that certain unsettled points might be discussed up to
+the last moment.
+
+As Weir and Pollock were returning, the latter eyed the engineer and
+laughed.
+
+"You've evidently brushed these fellows', Sorenson's and Gordon's, fur
+the wrong way to please them. But they'll probably leave us alone from
+now on."
+
+"They'll not leave me alone."
+
+"Eh? How's that?"
+
+"Well, I have, as it happens, a little trouble with them on my own
+hook. A private matter antedating the building of the dam. They're
+after me. I had to put a piece of lead into a fellow who tried to kill
+me from the dark one night. I speak of it in case you should be told
+and wonder; otherwise I should not have mentioned the thing. I'm not
+popular in San Mateo, in consequence."
+
+"Ah, I had heard nothing of that. It interests me. You were not
+touched."
+
+"My hat, that was all."
+
+"Very interesting, very interesting, indeed," was Pollock's only
+comment. But if his tone was casual, his eyes were busy in sidelong
+study of the engineer, making a new appraisal and drawing fresh
+conclusions.
+
+Meanwhile several knots were being tied in the web of circumstance.
+Sorenson took his telephone and conversed briefly with Vorse, passing
+the information that he had just seen the three directors leaving for
+the east. So they were out of the way. In reply the saloon-keeper
+stated that he would start the whisky end of the game that evening.
+By the morrow, Sunday, when the camp was at rest, the workmen would
+all be "celebrating." Burkhardt had reported the last load of
+"southern cattle" shipped in and driven on the range the previous
+evening--a seemingly innocent statement that Sorenson understood
+perfectly. Up in the hills, safely hidden in the timber, lay the fifty
+men brought from Mexico to make the assault on the dam the next night,
+men whose instruments of destruction would be fire and dynamite.
+Twenty-four hours more would bring the moment of action.
+
+Ignorant of all this Ed Sorenson had been forming a little individual
+scheme that would promote his own affairs, chief of which was to win
+Janet Hosmer. Drinking heavily ever since his rebuff, he had sunk into
+a condition of evil determination and recklessness that made him fit
+for any desperate act. After much meditation fed by whisky, he had
+evolved a plan that would bring him success. Thereupon he had loaded
+his car with a quantity of selected stuff and made a mysterious
+journey at night.
+
+"She'll learn I meant business," was his frequent soliloquy.
+
+And while these strands were being knit into the skein Martinez was
+producing another. Quietly, carefully, persuasively, he had been
+pursuing his own particular course of eliciting history for use in his
+"Chronicle," as he named it,--and for another use concerning which he
+was as still as death.
+
+That he was successful in obtaining what he had been after was made
+known to Weir about dusk that evening while he was talking with
+Pollock in his office. But that he had not been so lucky in covering
+his tracks was likewise apparent.
+
+The telephone rang. Steele took down the receiver.
+
+"See Janet Hosmer at once," Felipe Martinez' terrified voice came over
+the wire. "She'll have it, the paper--the one you want. They've
+learned I got it; they're after me now. Hammering on the door. If you
+don't hurry----"
+
+His words ceased abruptly in an anguished quaver. At the same time
+Weir heard carried to him the sound of a crash as of a door smashed.
+Excusing himself hurriedly, Steele Weir seized his holster from a nail
+and buckled on the belt. Then snatching his hat, he ran outside the
+building to his car.
+
+"Now, who is he gunning for?" Pollock asked himself aloud, "I rather
+wish he had invited me along."
+
+But neither he nor Weir himself, nor any soul in San Mateo, knew that
+at last the furious torrent of events had burst upon the community.
+Weir sensed something. But Sorenson brooding on the morrow thought the
+moment had not yet come. His son was occupied with his own treacherous
+scheme. Even Vorse and Burkhardt smashing their way into Martinez'
+office saw nothing beyond the immediate necessity. Yet the flood was
+bearing down on all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+OLD SAUREZ' DEPOSITION
+
+
+In order to understand why Vorse and Burkhardt were attacking
+Martinez' office it is necessary to trace the lawyer's movements and
+the incidents which precipitated that act. Martinez had, as stated,
+not been idle. Following the clue obtained from the woman who had
+worked in the elder Weir's household, he visited the old Mexican named
+as having been used as roustabout by Vorse in early days. This was old
+Saurez, whom he knew. The wrinkled old fellow seldom came to town now,
+spending most of the time sitting against the sunny side of his son's
+house on Pina Creek, twenty miles south, where he lived.
+
+Martinez in the ten days that had elapsed since informing Weir he had
+learned of Saurez' possible knowledge of the past had proceeded to
+make himself agreeable to the gray-headed old man. He had explained
+his "history." He exercised all the arts of graciousness and flattery.
+Beginning at the present he worked back through the past to the
+killing of Jim Dent and the flight of Joseph Weir, extracting tales of
+early fights, raids, accidents, big storms, violent deaths and
+killings, making elaborate notes, winning the narrator's confidence
+and gradually drawing forth the facts he really sought.
+
+Out of all the rambling talk and vague accounts of the Dent and Weir
+affair Martinez was able to piece together the fragments in a clear
+statement. This was that Saurez had seen Weir and Dent in Vorse's
+saloon. The pair had gambled for a time with Vorse, Burkhardt (at that
+time sheriff), Sorenson and Judge Gordon. After losing for a time Weir
+refused to continue in the poker game, although he was drunk. Dent
+played on notwithstanding Weir's urgence to desist; he had already
+lost all his money and began staking his cattle and finally his ranch.
+At this stage Weir had gone to sleep at another table, with his head
+on his arms. Vorse had locked the front door to keep out visitors
+during the big game. But the back door remained open for air.
+
+Saurez had busied himself cleaning the bar. All at once he saw the
+players spring up in their game, Dent talking angrily about cheating,
+marked cards and so on. Then the guns came out when he pointed at a
+card that was marked--for it had been marked with pinpricks as Saurez
+saw later on examining the deck, which Dent had perceived in spite of
+the whisky in him. And Sorenson and Vorse had both shot him where he
+stood. Yes, shootings were not uncommon. Every one but he, Saurez, had
+likely forgotten all about the matter. That was long ago.
+
+Afterwards Vorse had sent the Mexican away for something or other,
+with an injunction to keep his mouth closed. As said, speaking of it
+now made no difference, though he expected Martinez to keep his
+promise to publish none of the stories while he was still alive; that
+was agreed. When the Mexican had left the saloon Weir was yet
+sleeping, having only raised his head at the pistol shots to stare
+drunkenly and then relapse. What occurred afterwards Saurez did not
+know. Weir left the country. Dent was buried, the story being told
+that he had committed suicide. Every one believed it: had he not lost
+his ranch at poker? That was the end of the business. Other affairs
+happened and it was forgotten.
+
+On this Saturday Martinez had persuaded Saurez to accompany him to San
+Mateo. It would be necessary to sign the stories, he explained
+lightly, to give them proper weight and in order that when the book
+was published after Saurez' death they would be seen to be true
+accounts, with Saurez' picture that a photographer would make
+appearing in the middle. He, Saurez, would be famous, and his sons and
+grandsons would have copies of the book in their houses to show
+visitors and the priest. Ah, it would be well to have the priest
+witness Saurez' signature, then sceptical people would know indeed
+that the stories were Saurez' own accounts. So on and so on.
+
+The matter required infinite precautions, patience, skill on the
+lawyer's part. He had prepared two or three dozen depositions of
+events, as a husk for the real kernel. With Saurez in his office at
+last he telephoned the priest to call at once and unostentatiously
+caught on the street four other Mexicans of the better class, bringing
+them in. When the priest arrived he closed the door and explained his
+desire they should act as witnesses to Saurez' statements. He had
+already solicited the _padre's_ advice as to the history; the others
+all had heard of it; he gave them a number of the most harmless
+depositions to read; and set Saurez to work making his mark on the
+rest of the papers. During the reading and the accompanying lively
+discussion of the witnesses, he had them pause to witness Saurez' mark
+with their own names in the places provided. About the tenth
+deposition when their attention was confused and flagging he slipped
+the account concerning Weir and Dent, a many-paged attestation, upon
+the table, so folded that nothing but the signing space was visible.
+It was the critical instant for Martinez; his thin body was more
+nervous than ever, his eyes brighter and more restless. But at last
+the ordeal was over.
+
+Saurez' heavy black cross was at the bottom of the important
+deposition, the priest and the other four men had appended their
+names, and all that remained to do was for Martinez to fill out the
+acknowledgment and affix his seal. He whisked the document behind his
+back and called attention to a humorous episode in a paper one of the
+men still held, starting a laugh. Then he suggested they rest and
+opened a bottle of wine, over which the others congratulated Saurez
+and Martinez and predicted a wonderful fame for the "Chronicle."
+Finally the lawyer perceived, as he said, that Saurez was weary.
+Anyway, it was supper-time. The remaining papers could be signed
+another day.
+
+The witnesses departed, much pleased with the affair.
+
+"Walk up and down outside for a little time while I straighten the
+sheets, then we'll go eat and afterwards I'll drive you home to bed,"
+the attorney said. "The fresh air will give you an appetite. Behold,
+you're already becoming a famous man! I shall preserve these documents
+safely as they are tremendously important to our town, our state, our
+country!" And a grandiloquent gesture accompanied the words. "Come
+back in a little while, my friend, then we'll see how much food you
+can hide away."
+
+Saurez much gratified at these words and at everything went out
+slowly, for he was troubled by rheumatism. The instant his back
+disappeared Martinez sprang to the table, swiftly filled out the
+acknowledgment of the old man's signature to the Weir document,
+clapped the page under the seal and pressed home the stamp. Then
+pushing the folded statement into an envelope and that into his
+pocket, he leaned back with a sigh of exhaustion. The thing was
+accomplished at last, but the strain had been great. Weir's command to
+secure evidence had been obeyed. Only the promise to await Saurez'
+death, troubled Martinez, and with a convenient sophistry he decided
+that an agreement not to print the narrative in a book did not extend
+to using it in court. Weir would be delighted--it was a famous coup.
+
+How long Martinez sat reveling in this well-earned satisfaction he was
+unaware, until with a start he glanced at his watch. Three-quarters of
+an hour had passed. He went out to look for Saurez. But he was not in
+sight and though several persons had seen him they could not say where
+he had gone. Martinez went again into his office. When another
+half-hour had drifted by he decided the old man had encountered
+friends and either caught a ride home or gone with one to supper. So
+Martinez proceeded to his own meal.
+
+Yet he was pervaded by an unaccountable uneasiness. The sun had set in
+a bank of clouds and night was not far off. He made another search for
+the old Mexican, inquiring here and there, until he was informed by
+one that he had seen Saurez in Vorse's saloon talking with Vorse and
+sipping a glass of brandy. That was half an hour before. A chill of
+fear spread over the lawyer's skin.
+
+Determined, however, to learn the worst, he stole to the saloon and
+peered over the slatted door. The Mexican bar-keeper was wiping a
+glass; Vorse was not in sight; and--ha! there was Saurez himself
+drowsing by a table. Martinez slipped in and made his way to the
+rear.
+
+"Come; time to go home," he said softly, giving the old Mexican's
+shoulder a shake. This did not arouse the sleeper, so he added force
+to his hand, at which the other sagged forward limply.
+
+Martinez jumped back. Next he stood quite still, staring. Then he
+approached and lifting the drooping head, gazed at the wrinkled face
+and glazed eyes.
+
+"Miguel, come here!" he exclaimed, anxiously. "Saurez is dead."
+
+"Dead!" The bar-keeper ran to the spot, eyes large with alarm and
+excitement. "Dios, I thought him asleep! See, there is the glass in
+which I gave him brandy at Señor Vorse's order. The old one said he
+had come in to pay a little visit to his old employer and have a chat.
+They talked for some time."
+
+"Was Vorse asking him questions?"
+
+"Yes. I think Saurez was telling him how he happened to be in town. I
+paid little attention to them, however. After a while I glanced up and
+saw Vorse standing by him. They were not talking. Then Vorse came away
+and said the old man had fallen asleep, and he went out to supper."
+
+Martinez again lifted the head and darted glances over the dead man's
+breast. There were no wounds, but on the shriveled brown throat he saw
+what might have been a thumb-mark. He could not be sure, yet that was
+his guess.
+
+"He was an old man," Miguel remarked.
+
+"Yes. You should notify his son and also the undertaker, so the body
+can be taken care of. I'll telephone the latter too when I reach my
+office."
+
+This Martinez did, informing Saurez's family that the old man had
+died while apparently asleep at Vorse's, and expressed his sympathy
+and sorrow.
+
+One feature of the case he instantly perceived; he was released from
+any obligation to keep silent regarding the old man's declaration.
+Fortunate was he to have obtained it before Vorse had got wind of his
+purpose. At the thought of Vorse he arose and locked both front and
+back doors of the building, pulled down the window shades and turned
+out the light.
+
+It was almost dark by now. In the darkness he felt safer. Any one
+passing would suppose him away. Perhaps he should spend the night
+elsewhere--at the dam, for instance. Again the same shudder shook his
+frame that he had experienced on seeing the mark on Saurez' throat.
+Vorse had killed the old Mexican, of that he was convinced. With his
+tongue made garrulous by brandy and by the presence of his old
+employer the old man had doubtless related everything that occurred
+between him and Martinez; and the vulture-like, bald-headed
+saloon-keeper, recognizing that he had been unconsciously betrayed had
+immediately acted to close this witness' lips forever against a second
+utterance.
+
+Martinez himself was in danger. The perspiration dampened his face as
+he realized that as far as he was concerned the die was cast. He must
+fling in his fortunes with Weir to the utmost. He would first stand in
+defense on his right as a lawyer to secure evidence for a client, but
+if this failed--and what rights would Vorse halt for?--he must depend
+upon the paper. Once they had that, they would speedily put him out of
+the way as they had done Saurez. But if they had it not, they would at
+least hesitate to wreak their vengeance until they could get it into
+their possession. He must place it in Weir's hands at once, then if
+questioned refuse to inform them of its whereabouts. Perhaps they
+would try to seize it some time this night. He stood up, lighted the
+lamp, saw that all was well in the office and took his hat.
+
+A peremptory knock sounded on the door of the rear room.
+
+"Open up there, Martinez," a voice commanded.
+
+He stole thither, listened.
+
+"Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"Never mind. Open this door or I'll pull it down," came in hoarse
+tones he recognized as Burkhardt's. The man, or men, outside had
+chosen the rear to force an entrance if necessary, where there would
+be no spectators. "Jerk it open quick," Burkhardt continued savagely.
+"We want you." Then again, "We knew you were there, though you kept
+the place dark. Move lively before I use this ax."
+
+Never did Martinez' mind work more rapidly. Likewise his eyes darted
+everywhere in search of the object he needed. Then he glided to a
+decrepit arm-chair and turning it over stuffed the document in a rent
+in its padded seat, out of sight underneath. Next he filled his
+pockets with other papers signed by Saurez. Last, he hastily tore open
+the little telephone book and ran a forefinger down the H's.
+
+"Doctor Hosmer's, hurry," he exclaimed. "Number F28."
+
+Blows were already sounding on the rear door, but the lock was strong
+and resisted. Of all the persons he knew Janet Hosmer was the only one
+he could trust to keep her word. And he dare not wait until Weir could
+come.
+
+"Is this you, Janet? Martinez talking," he said, when he heard her
+answer. "Listen. I'm at my office; men are trying to break in to get
+a paper valuable for Mr. Weir's defense. They must not get it. He's to
+be arrested and tried for murder of the man he killed. You and I know
+he's innocent. This is a life and death matter. The paper is hidden in
+the old chair. The men are breaking down the door. I'll get them away
+long enough for you to come and obtain it. Give it to Weir--at once,
+to-night, immediately. Promise me you will, promise! My own life
+probably hangs on it. Return to your house and stay for half an hour
+and if he hasn't arrived by that time, go to the dam. Thank you, thank
+you--from my heart! Start now."
+
+The words had tumbled out in an agitated stream, occupying but a few
+seconds. The panels were splintering in the door now, as the ax
+smashed a way through. Martinez had no need to look up Weir's number;
+and it was in a strain of terror and excitement that he waited for the
+connection.
+
+"See Janet Hosmer at once," he shot at the engineer, followed by the
+rest of the warning already quoted which had so electrifying an effect
+upon Steele Weir.
+
+But the words had broken off abruptly. For as the door crashed off its
+hinges Martinez dropped the telephone receiver and darted for the
+front entrance, shooting back the bolt and flinging it open. He almost
+plunged into Vorse who was on guard there.
+
+"Stand still," the man ordered. And Martinez kept the spot as if
+congealed, for in the saloon-keeper's hand was a revolver with an
+exceedingly large muzzle.
+
+Burkhardt burst in, ax still in hand, eyes bloodshot with rage. Vorse
+turned and closed the front door. Then he glanced over the lawyer's
+table and ran a hand into his inside coat pocket bulging with
+documents. He glanced through one or two.
+
+"Here's what we're after," said he. "We'll take him to my place where
+we can quietly settle the matter." His eyes rested on the Mexican with
+ominous meaning.
+
+"Come along, you snake," Burkhardt growled, seizing their prisoner's
+arm. "Out the back way--and keep your mouth shut. Don't try to make a
+break of any kind, if you know what's best for you."
+
+Martinez' yellow skin was almost white.
+
+"But, gentlemen, what does this all mean?" he began, endeavoring to
+pull back.
+
+"You'll learn soon enough."
+
+"Step right along," Vorse added. "Take him away, Burkhardt, then I'll
+blow out this light."
+
+With no further word Martinez accompanied his captors into the gloom
+of the night. They moved in silence through the dark space behind the
+row of store buildings. The lawyer felt that at least the way was
+clear for Janet Hosmer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE MASK DROPPED
+
+
+When Janet Hosmer, startled by Felipe Martinez' agitated appeal,
+turned from the telephone, her single thought was to carry out on the
+instant his fervid injunction. Something aimed at the engineer and the
+lawyer was in movement, a plot for the former's arrest and the
+destruction of evidence necessary to his defense, according to
+Martinez' quick hurried words; and the Mexican now sought her aid, as
+she was the only one within reach whom he could trust. That he must
+call to her showed the desperate nature of the exigency--and he had
+said lives were at stake!
+
+Haste was the imperative need. As her father was absent, she summoned
+the Mexican girl from the kitchen, for instinct advised the wisdom of
+having a companion on this errand; and the two of them, bare-headed
+and walking fast, set out for the house. Dusk was just thickening to
+night. No stars were visible. A warm moistness in the air forewarned
+of rain from the blanket of clouds that had spread at sunset along the
+peaks. Indeed, a few fine globules of water touched their faces as
+they came into the main street and hurried along.
+
+Neither girl had observed the automobile, unlighted and moving slowly,
+that approached the Hosmer house as they emerged. Apparently the
+driver perceiving them against the lamplight of the doorway and noting
+their departure thought better of bringing the car to a halt, for he
+kept the machine in motion and as quietly as possible trailed the pair
+by glimpses of their figures flitting before an occasional illuminated
+window. When Janet and her companion turned into the main street where
+the stores were lighted his task became easier.
+
+The street was peaceful. Janet saw no evidence of the violence or
+danger indicated by the Mexican lawyer's declaration, but she was too
+sensible to imagine on that account that peril did not exist. The town
+was not aware of what had occurred, that was all,--not yet. The chief
+actors in the conspiracy were still moving stealthily against their
+intended victims; they had pounced on Martinez and once they had
+seized the evidence they sought they would arrest Weir. Afterwards the
+people, as she guessed the matter, would be aroused to create a strong
+sentiment against the helpless men. It was an atrocious business.
+
+But as yet things were in a lull--and it was during this pause, brief,
+critical, that Martinez expected her to act. That much she had grasped
+from his hurried words. She reached his office and halted to listen.
+No gleam came from the building, nor from the low structure on either
+side, and across the way all was dark--dark as it had been that night
+when the assassin's shot had been fired at Steele Weir. Repressing a
+shudder, she bade the Mexican girl follow her, groped for the door
+knob, found it and pushed the door open.
+
+Martinez had spoken of men forcing an entrance, so it must have been
+at the rear. Inside all was pitchy black.
+
+"Juanita, you have a match in your pocket, haven't you?" she demanded,
+anxiously.
+
+"Yes, Miss Janet."
+
+"Strike it, then."
+
+In the pent stillness of the dark office Janet could hear the Mexican
+girl fumbling in the pocket of her gingham dress. There came a
+scratching sound and a tiny flame.
+
+"Be careful of it," she warned. "Now give it to me. And close the
+door."
+
+Janet lighted the smoky lamp resting on the table, next took it up in
+her hand. A few papers had fallen upon the floor. The room was still
+strong with fresh cigarette smoke. Martinez could not have been gone
+more than five minutes.
+
+And in another five minutes' time too Martinez' captors might be back
+again!
+
+Holding the lamp aloft she peered about for an old chair, her heart
+beating rapidly, her lips compressed. But all the chairs, the three or
+four in the room, were old. Her eyes encountered the Mexican girl
+staring open-mouthed and scared.
+
+"Take the lamp and keep by me," Janet ordered. "Don't upset it. What
+are you shaking for, you ninny?"
+
+"I can't help it--and you're so white," the other whimpered.
+
+"Never you mind me; do as I say."
+
+Janet swiftly went from one chair to another, turning them about,
+upside down, all ways. No paper was hidden in or under any one of
+them, or indeed was there space capable of holding a document. At last
+she gave up, gazing about in dismay, dread, tears of vexation and
+anxiety almost rising to her lids. Only one conclusion was to be
+drawn: the men who had seized the lawyer had found the paper in spite
+of his precaution.
+
+She examined the chairs a second time feverishly, for time was
+flying.
+
+"I can't find it, Juanita, the paper he telephoned me to come and
+get," she exclaimed.
+
+"Maybe it's in there where he sleeps." And the Mexican girl pointed at
+the inner door standing barely ajar.
+
+"We'll see."
+
+Janet led the way within. There was Martinez' living- and sleeping-room.
+The furnishings comprised a bed, an old scratched bureau, a stand
+with wash-bowl, a red and black Navajo blanket on the floor, a trunk,
+a stool and a dilapidated stuffed chair--just such a chair as a paper
+could be hidden in. That into this room the lawyer's assailants had
+burst their way was apparent from the splintered door hanging from one
+hinge at the rear.
+
+Beckoning Juanita to bring the lamp, Janet ran to the arm-chair.
+
+"Ah, here it is!" she cried, when she had turned the piece of
+furniture over and inserted her hand in the rent. "It wasn't found,
+after all! Come away now."
+
+Relief and exultation replaced her depression of the moment before.
+She had succeeded; she had helped the lawyer outwit his enemies; she
+must now return home to await Steele Weir's arrival, or if he failed
+in that then go to the dam.
+
+In the outer room she bade the Mexican girl place the lamp on the
+table once more and blow it out. This was done. They groped forward to
+the door.
+
+"Follow me out quietly, Juanita," Janet said. "Only Mr. Martinez knows
+we've been here, and Mr. Weir, the engineer. See, I'm trusting you.
+This is a very important paper for Mr. Weir, and other men are trying
+to keep it out of his hands. So you must say nothing to any one about
+our being here."
+
+Juanita assented in a whisper. Janet thereupon opened the door and
+the pair stepped forth. A faint hissing sound directly before them
+startled both. But the American girl immediately recognized it for
+what it was, the faint murmur of an automobile engine.
+
+She quietly closed the office door, caught her companion's arm to lead
+her away.
+
+"Don't talk," she whispered in her ear.
+
+At the same instant the beam of an electric hand torch flashed in
+their eyes, blinding them. Then as quickly the light was extinguished
+and a heavy blanket was flung over Janet's head. Her cry was choked
+off, but not that of the Mexican girl who had been struck by the
+corner of the cloth and who heard her mistress struggling in the arms
+of the man who had seized her. The sound of the struggle moved towards
+the car and then Juanita, paralyzed by fright, was stunned by a sudden
+roar of the exhaust, a grind of gears, and a rush in the darkness. The
+automobile had gone, carrying off Janet Hosmer a muffled prisoner.
+Juanita regaining use of her legs fled for Doctor Hosmer's unmindful
+of the mist against her face.
+
+Janet's sensation had been that of strangulation and terror. In the
+thick folds of the blanket, held and lifted by strong arms, all she
+could offer in the way of resistance was futile kicks. She had been
+jammed into the automobile seat and firmly kept there by an embrace
+while the car was being started, which did not relax as the machine
+gathered speed. For some minutes this lasted, while she strained
+painfully for breath, and then she perceived the car was stopping.
+
+Her terror increased. What now would happen? These men after
+overpowering Felipe Martinez had abducted her in their determination
+to possess themselves of the paper. Finding it in her hand--for she
+still clutched it--what then? Would they kill her?
+
+The car was now completely at rest. The arm was withdrawn from about
+her; hands gripped her hands and forced them together; a handkerchief
+was tightly knotted about her wrists. Afterwards her ankles were bound
+by a strap. Then the blanket was lifted from her form and head and she
+gasped in again pure night air.
+
+"Here's a gag," said the man at her side. "Keep quiet and I'll not use
+it; if you open your mouth to make a sound, I shall. It's up to you."
+And with the hoarse threat she caught the heavy sickening odor of
+whiskey on the speaker's breath.
+
+"You, Ed Sorenson! You've dared to do this!" she exclaimed, fear
+vanishing in anger.
+
+"Yes, sweetheart," came with a mocking accent.
+
+"Untie me this minute and let me out!"
+
+"Oh, no. You've got the wrong line on this little game. We're going
+for a ride, just you and me, as lovers should."
+
+Janet began to think fast.
+
+"How did you know I was in Mr. Martinez' office?" she demanded.
+
+"Because I saw you go in, little one. I was just pulling up at your
+door to coax you out when I saw you and the Mexican wench appear. So I
+followed along. Saved me the bother of telling you your father had
+been hurt in an accident. He's chasing off somewhere thirty miles from
+town on a 'false alarm' call to attend a dying man. Sorry I had to use
+the blanket; sorry I have to keep your naughty little hands and feet
+tied up. But it's the only way. After we're married, you'll forget all
+about it in loving me."
+
+So this was the face of the matter. Not the paper she gripped, but
+she herself was his object. His abduction of her had nothing to do
+with Martinez' affair; he knew nothing of the larger plot; and for
+that reason she experienced a degree of relief.
+
+"I'll never marry you, be certain of that," said she, recurring to his
+statement. "If anything had been needed to settle that point, what you
+have done now would be enough. You shall pay for this atrocious
+treatment. Untie my hands."
+
+"Oh, no. We're starting on."
+
+"Your father as well as mine shall know of this."
+
+"I think not, dearie. We're going up into the hills where I've a nice
+little cabin fixed up. And we'll stay there awhile. And then when we
+come back, you'll not do any talking. On the contrary, you'll be
+anxious to marry me--you'll be begging me to marry you. Of course!
+People know we're engaged, and they'll know you've been away with me
+for two or three days. Do you think they'll listen to any story about
+my carrying you off against your will? They'll wink when they hear it.
+Yes, you'll be ready to marry me all right, all right, when we come
+back to San Mateo."
+
+Janet's blood ran cold at this heartless, black plan to ensnare her
+into marriage.
+
+"Ed, you would never do a thing like that," she pleaded. "You're just
+trying to scare me with a joke. Be a good fellow and untie my hands
+and take me home."
+
+"No joke about this; straight business. I told you you should marry
+me----"
+
+"You're drunk or mad!" she burst out, terrified.
+
+"Neither; perfectly calm. But I'm not the fellow to be tossed over at
+a whim. I'm holding you to your word, that's all. You'll change your
+mind back as it was by to-morrow; you'll be crazy to have me as a
+husband then. I won't have to tie your hands and feet to keep you at
+my side when we come riding home to go to the minister's. Now we've
+had our little talk and understand each other; and it's beginning to
+drizzle. Time to start for our little cabin. The less fuss you make,
+the pleasanter it will be for both of us."
+
+He set the gears and the car started forward once more. A sensation of
+being under the paws of a beast, odious and fetid, savage and
+pitiless, overwhelmed her. That this was no trick of a moment but a
+calculated scheme to abase and possess her she now realized with a
+sort of dull horror. And on top of all he was, despite his denial,
+partly drunk.
+
+Through the terror of her situation two thoughts now continued to
+course like fiery threads--one a hope, one a purpose. The former
+rested on Juanita, whom in his inflamed ferocity of intention, the man
+seemed to have forgotten--on Juanita and Steele Weir, "Cold Steel"
+Weir; and this failing, there remained the latter, a set idea to kill
+herself before this brute at her side worked his will. Somehow she
+could and would kill herself. Somehow she would find the means to free
+her hands and the instrument to pierce her heart.
+
+Sorenson had switched on his lights. He drove the car through the damp
+darkness at headlong speed along the trail that leaped from the gloom
+to meet them and vanished behind. At the end of a quarter of an hour
+he swung into a canyon; and Janet perceived they were ascending Terry
+Creek. He stopped the car anew.
+
+"I'll just take no chances with you," he exclaimed. "We have to pass
+your friends, the Johnsons, you know. Had to take my stuff up here in
+the middle of the night--up one night and back the next--and mighty
+still too, so that they wouldn't suspicion I was fixing a little
+bower for you."
+
+He bound a cloth over her mouth and again flung the blanket over her
+head. Janet struggled fiercely for a moment, but finally sank back
+choking and half in a faint. She was barely conscious of the car's
+climbing again. Though when passing the ranch house the man drove with
+every care for silence, she was not aware of the fact. Her breath,
+mind, soul, were stifled. She seemed transfixed in a hideous
+nightmare.
+
+At length her lips and head were released. But her hands and feet were
+numb. Still feeling as if she were in some dreadful dream she saw the
+beam of the headlights picking out the winding trail, flashing on
+trees by the wayside, shining on wet rocks, heard the chatter of the
+creek over stones and the labor of the engine.
+
+The road was less plain, a mere track now, and steeper. They were
+climbing, climbing up the mountain side, up into the heavier timber,
+up into one of the "parks" among the peaks. Johnson's ranch was miles
+behind and far below. Occasionally billows of fog swathed them in wet
+folds that sent a chill to Janet's bones.
+
+Sorenson held his watch down to the driver's light.
+
+"Ten o'clock; we're making good time. Must give the engine a
+drink--and take one myself."
+
+He descended to the creek with a bucket, bringing back water to fill
+the steaming radiator. Afterwards, standing in the light of the car's
+lamps, he tilted a flask to his lips and drank deep.
+
+"Not far now; three or four miles. But it's slow going. Have to make
+it on 'low'," said he, swinging himself up into his place.
+
+Janet held her face turned away. She was thinking of Juanita and
+Steele Weir. Had the girl gone home again? Or, terrified, had she run
+to her own home and said nothing? Had the engineer come and waited and
+learning nothing at last returned to the dam? Despair filled her
+breast. Even should the Mexican girl have apprised him of the
+kidnapping, how should he know where to follow? And in the solitude of
+the wet dark mountains all about her hope died.
+
+She began desperately to tug against the handkerchief binding her
+wrists.
+
+Suddenly the going became easier and she felt rather than saw that the
+trees had thinned. A flash of the car lamps at a curve in the trail
+showed a great glistening wall of rock towering overhead, then this
+was passed and the way appeared to lead into a grassy open space. A
+dark shape beside the road loomed into view--a cabin by a clump of
+pine trees. Sorenson brought the car to a stop a few yards from the
+house.
+
+"Here at last," he announced, springing down.
+
+He unstrapped her feet, bade her get out.
+
+"I make a last appeal to your decency and manhood--if you have
+either," she said, sitting motionless.
+
+"Rot," he answered. Half dragging her, half lifting her, he removed
+her from the machine. Slipping a hand within her arm he led her inside
+the log house.
+
+"Sit there," he ordered.
+
+Janet dropped upon the seat, a rude plank bench against the wall
+farthest from the door. Indeed, fatigue and the numbness of her limbs
+rendered her incapable of standing.
+
+"When I've touched off this fire and set out some grub, then I'll
+untie your hands," he continued. "A snug little cabin, eh? Just the
+place for us, what? See all the stuff I've brought up here to make you
+warm and happy and comfortable. Regular nest. Lot of work on my part,
+I want to say."
+
+He touched a match to the wood already laid in the fireplace, flung
+off his rain coat and stood to warm his hands at the blaze. Lighting a
+cigarette, he began placing from a box of supplies plates and food on
+the table in the middle of the room, but paused to reproduce his
+flask. With a sardonic grin he lifted the bottle, bowed to Janet and
+drank the liquor neat. When he had finished, he turned the bottle
+upside down to show it was empty, then tossed it into a corner. Again
+he fixed his drunken, mocking smile upon her.
+
+"Can't preach to me about booze here, can you, honey?" he said. "Ought
+to take a swallow yourself; warm you up. I have plenty. Guess I better
+untie your hands now." He advanced towards her, swaying slightly.
+"You're going to love me from this time on, ain't you, girlie?" He
+untied the handkerchief and dropped it at his feet. "No nonsense now
+about trying to get away; I'll rope you for good if you try to start
+anything. Hello, what's that?"
+
+"No; give it to me!" she cried, in alarm as he pulled the folded
+sheets of paper from her stiffened fingers.
+
+"Something I ought to see, maybe." Then he added harshly, "Sit down,
+if you don't care to have me teach you a thing or two. I'm master
+here."
+
+He stepped to the table and drawing a box beside him settled upon it,
+pulled the candle-stick nearer and began to read the document. Janet
+glanced swiftly about the room for a weapon. Escape past him she could
+not, for by a single spring he could bar the way; but could she lay
+hand on a stick of wood she might fight her way out. None was nearer
+than the fire, and again he could interpose.
+
+He read on and on, with a darkening brow and an evil glint showing in
+his eyes. Page by page he perused Saurez' deposition until he reached
+the end. Then he got to his feet, shaking the paper at her head.
+
+"You were in on this," he snarled. "This is what you were in Martinez'
+office to get. You're wise to this cursed scheme to help Weir make my
+father and Vorse and Burkhardt and Judge Gordon out a gang of
+swindlers. So they trimmed _his_ father of something--at least I fancy
+they did, and I hope to God they did, the coward! And you were in with
+them! You're not quite the little white angel you'd have people
+believe, are you? Not quite so innocent and simple as you've made me
+think, anyway. Well, I'll square all that. That slippery snake,
+Martinez, I'll twist his neck the minute I get back to town. I'll bet
+a thousand it was framed up to use this when Weir was arrested--but
+he'll never use it now!"
+
+He glared at the girl with a face distorted by rage.
+
+"We'll just burn it here and now," he continued. "Then we'll be sure
+it won't be used."
+
+Janet gripped her hands tightly, while her lips opened to utter a wild
+protest at this desecration. What the document contained she did not
+yet know, except that it was evidence that fixed upon the men named
+guilt for some past deed in which Weir had suffered and which would
+bring them to account. But something more than protest was needed, she
+saw in a flash, to deflect the man from his purpose and save the
+sheets from the flame.
+
+She shut her lips for an instant to choke the cry, then said with an
+assumption of unconcern:
+
+"Go ahead. I didn't want your father to see it, in any case."
+
+The paper had almost reached the candle, but the hand that held it
+paused. Sorenson stared at it, and from it to her. At last a malignant
+curl of his lips uncovered his teeth.
+
+"Oh, you didn't want him to see it," he sneered. "If that's so, I'll
+just save it. He'll be interested in reading what your friends have
+prepared to destroy his good name and reputation."
+
+He folded the document and slipped it into his inner coat pocket. Then
+he walked towards her. At the look on his face Janet sprang to her
+feet.
+
+"I've changed my mind about the marriage matter, just as you did," he
+said. "I agree with you now; there won't be any marriage. But I'll
+have your arms about my neck just the same."
+
+And he seized her wrist.
+
+"Let me go, let----" The words ceased on her lips.
+
+Her eyes were riveted on the cabin door; she scarcely felt the man's
+loathsome touch on her arm. How had the door come unlatched? And was
+it only the wind that slowly moved it open?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT
+
+
+On leaving the construction camp Steele Weir had whirled away down the
+river road for San Mateo with a feeling both of satisfaction and of
+enmity--satisfaction at Martinez' success in at last having secured
+the evidence ardently desired, as betokened by his words; enmity at
+whoever was laying violent hands on the lawyer. Unfortunately when yet
+half a mile from town his car suffered one of the common misadventures
+of automobiles:--ping-g-g! sang a tire in a shrill dying whine.
+
+Weir did not stop to change and inflate the tube, but pushed ahead on
+his mission though at slackened speed. He brought his car to rest
+before Doctor Hosmer's house. The windows were lighted, yet at his
+knock there was no response; so brushing conventionalities aside he
+entered and called Janet's name. Only echoes and a following silence
+greeted his call.
+
+Doubtful whether to remain awaiting the girl's return or go at once to
+Martinez' office in the hope of still finding her, he finally chose
+the latter course leaving his car where it stood and proceeding on
+foot, as a result of which he passed in the darkness Juanita hurrying
+home in a fright. A bad choice and valuable time lost, he afterwards
+discovered. At Martinez' office he stepped inside, called the lawyer
+by name, called Janet Hosmer, stood for a little while in the black
+room harkening and thinking, then went forth into the street.
+
+This time chance fell his way. He had but come out when he heard
+footsteps and two men in low-toned talk as they approached; and he
+withdrew further into the concealing darkness of the street. The new
+visitors, striking matches at the entrance, walked inside. The men
+were Vorse and Burkhardt.
+
+"If you had been here, we could have nailed him at once as soon as I
+had Saurez' story," the former said. "Martinez had half an hour and
+more to get the thing into somebody else's hands."
+
+"Well, I was looking after those men up in the hills," was the growled
+answer. "Had to feed 'em and have 'em ready for to-morrow night. If we
+don't find the document here, we'll screw its hiding-place out of that
+dirty greaser if we have to use a cord on his head Indian-fashion.
+Anyway it ought to be about this office. Martinez didn't know you had
+learned about it from Saurez. He'd never let go a paper like that
+until he had to."
+
+"I think you're right there," Vorse said. "He'd want to sell it for
+all it was worth. Better shut and lock the door while we're searching.
+Don't care to have any of his friends sticking in their heads while
+we're here."
+
+Burkhardt, who had lighted the lamp, now closed the door, cutting off
+so far as Steele Weir was concerned both a view of the men and their
+conversation. However he had learned if not enough, at least
+considerable. They had not yet gained possession of the paper. They
+knew nothing of Janet's part in the affair. They had so far not
+succeeded in unlocking Martinez' lips, but undoubtedly they would be
+able to wring from the lawyer when they went about it the real truth
+regarding the document. Very likely Martinez had anticipated that, had
+known his powers were such as not to be greatly able to resist
+physical torture and had planned to get the evidence into the
+engineer's hands before he should be subjected to pains of the flesh.
+That would be remembered to his credit, along with all the rest. Where
+Martinez was being held prisoner was the additional information Weir
+should have liked to glean before the door was shut.
+
+Postponing for the time the hunt along this line, he returned to the
+Hosmer dwelling. In answer to his knock and call on this visit the
+trembling Juanita appeared, immediately pouring forth a recital of the
+happenings at the office as affecting her mistress.
+
+"You've told no one else?" he demanded.
+
+"No, señor. She said I was to say nothing of her being there for the
+paper, and I was waiting for her father to come. But she informed me
+Mr. Martinez and you knew she was there, so I've told you."
+
+"And you saw nothing of this man who cast the blanket over her head
+and seized her?"
+
+"It was dark; we had just come out of the office. But--but the car
+sounded like Ed Sorenson's. I've heard it start from here many times
+with the same loud noise. They had quarreled, Señor Weir, and were no
+longer engaged."
+
+"I know. Which way did he drive off?"
+
+"East, down the lower end of the street."
+
+"Bring a lamp out to my car, so I can fix my tire."
+
+With the girl holding the light by his side the engineer worked with
+concentrated energy in stripping the wheel, in inserting a new tube,
+replacing the tire and pumping it up. The thin drizzle glistened on
+his face, but for all that it was none the less determined, stern.
+
+"You need not be afraid for yourself; no one but us knows you were
+there," he said to her, climbing into his machine. "Nor for Miss
+Janet, either. I'll bring her home safely. When Dr. Hosmer returns,
+tell him everything. Also ask him to await our coming. Be sure and say
+to him that I'll bring her home unharmed and that I advise silence in
+regard to the matter until I have talked with him. You will remain
+quiet, of course. This isn't a thing to be gossiped about."
+
+"No, señor."
+
+Away the automobile shot under the impulsion of the gas. Minutes,
+golden minutes, had been wasted in taking up the pursuit because of
+his going to Martinez' office and because of the flat tire. Sorenson
+now would be miles away with his prisoner.
+
+Sweeping out of town with the car's headlights illuminating the road,
+Steele Weir blessed the drizzling mist that dampened the dust so as to
+leave a tire's imprint. Almost at once he picked up the track, for not
+more than twenty or twenty-five minutes had elapsed since Sorenson's
+flight and not even a horseman had since been over the way.
+
+Though he knew it not, the interval of time had been reduced by the
+stop made by the first machine, a mile or so out of town, when the
+abductor removed the blanket from Janet Hosmer's head to announce his
+evil scheme. From the main road leading to Bowenville Weir saw the
+car's trail turn aside into a mesa track pointing obliquely for Terry
+Creek canyon; and he suspected that Sorenson was making a long drive
+northward, skirting the mountain range and working away from the
+railroad-tapped region.
+
+Once he thought he caught a flash of light far ahead of him, but knew
+this was an illusion. Through this rainy darkness no car's beam,
+however powerful, would show half a mile. The mist beat against his
+face in a steady stream as he rushed forward in the night, his eyes
+immovable on the wet twin tire-marks stamped on the road, his iron
+grip on the wheel, his ears filled with the steady hum of the engine.
+If Sorenson had driven fast, Steele Weir drove faster.
+
+At Terry Creek he plunged down the bank, across the water and up on
+the other side without a change of gears, rocking and lurching. Once
+on the smooth trail again the car seemed to stretch itself like a
+greyhound for the race northward. But on a sudden he brought the
+automobile to an abrupt halt. The surface of the road was undisturbed;
+nothing had passed here.
+
+Swinging back again on the way he had come, Weir recrossed the creek
+and slowly retraced his course. Then with an exclamation of
+satisfaction he picked up the track where it turned up the canyon
+trail. But why was the man going to the Johnson ranch? Mystified by
+this baffling procedure on Sorenson's part, he nevertheless headed up
+the stream with no lessening of his purpose to overtake the other.
+
+At the ranch house, whose kitchen window was lighted, he stopped and
+leaped out. Johnson and Mary both answered his thumping knock.
+
+"Is Janet Hosmer here?" he questioned, while his eyes darted about the
+kitchen. Then he made his own reply, "I see she's not. Ed Sorenson
+kidnapped her to-night and drove to this canyon. Did you hear a car?"
+
+Mary faced her father.
+
+"You remember I thought I heard one!" she cried. "But the sound was so
+low I wasn't sure, and when I went to the window I saw nothing. I
+didn't hear it again. Father said it was just my imagination."
+
+"Where does this road lead?"
+
+"Up into the timber and to a 'park.' Used to be an old wood road.
+Sheepmen sometimes use it to take their wagons up above; sometimes
+cattle outfits too while on round-ups."
+
+"Could an auto go ahead on it?"
+
+"Yes, I guess so. By hard driving."
+
+"Then he's up there."
+
+Weir ran back to his car, jumped in.
+
+"Let me go with you," Johnson shouted after him.
+
+"No, I can handle the fellow," the engineer answered. And again his
+machine started on. "How long ago was it that you heard him, Mary?"
+was his parting question.
+
+"'Bout fifteen minutes ago," she cried.
+
+Fifteen minutes! But the girl's reckoning might be vague, and
+"fifteen" minutes be half an hour. At any rate, with the road
+ascending among the peaks Sorenson's speed would be greatly
+diminished. The incline would be against him, the uneven twisting
+rain-washed trail would require careful driving, the rain would hamper
+his sight. Yet the fellow he pursued could not be more than three or
+four miles ahead at most.
+
+On and on Weir pressed. The mist thickened; black wet tree trunks
+loomed before him like ghosts and sank out of view again; the road
+wound along the stream among rocks and bushes and over hillocks with
+all the difficult sinuosity of a serpent's track; in his ears
+persisted the chuckling talk of the creek, flowing in darkness except
+when lighted by his car's lamps as the machine plunged through a ford,
+as became more and more frequent with the ascent and the narrowing of
+the canyon.
+
+Five miles, ten miles, fifteen miles he must have come since leaving
+the ranch house. His car now was high in the mountain range, running
+on low gear, the engine working hard in the thin air and against the
+steep grade. He was not making more than five miles an hour, he
+judged, at this moment. The radiator was boiling and steaming like a
+cauldron. But he might be sure that if his travel was slow, Sorenson's
+was no better; the road was the same for the pursued as for the
+pursuer.
+
+At the end of another half hour he came around a ledge of rock, where
+the creek flowed some fifty feet below and the granite wall allowed
+just room to pass in a hair-pin turn. There a light gleamed before him
+like a beacon, a dim gleam of a window. It was perhaps a hundred yards
+distant. It marked the end of the trail, the end of the search.
+
+Here was Janet Hosmer!
+
+And he had come in time. They could not have been here long, for
+Sorenson's start had not been sufficient for that; the scoundrel had
+not yet recovered his breath from his hard drive, so to speak. He
+probably would imagine himself safe and so be in no haste to
+consummate his vile plan of enjoying his helpless victim.
+
+Rage that until now had been lying cold and implacable in Steele
+Weir's breast began to flame in his veins and brain. He drove his car
+past the rock and off the trail upon an open grassy space, very
+carefully, very quietly. Next he stopped the engine and put out the
+lights, then he got out, felt his gun in its holster and gazed ahead
+for an instant.
+
+A form had passed and repassed before the window--Sorenson's figure,
+of course. Brute, coward, degenerate he was, and to be dealt with as
+such. Not only as such, indeed, but as a wretch who had dared to touch
+Janet Hosmer against her will, to drag her from her home to this
+lonely spot by violence for his own bestial purposes.
+
+The blood seemed like to burst Steele Weir's heart. This sweet,
+honest, kind-souled, noble girl! Janet Hosmer, so bright-eyed and
+pure! She, who had suffered this man's hate to save Martinez'
+document, who had dared peril to help him, Weir! All the hunger of
+heart of years, and all the stifled affection, now went out to her. He
+loved her; the veil was rent from his mind and he realized the fact
+indisputably--he loved Janet Hosmer. And the great creature of an Ed
+Sorenson had dared to seize her with brutal hands!
+
+Weir broke into a run. By instinct he kept the trail, though once or
+twice stumbling and once barely missing a collision with a tree. When
+he reached the cabin, he dropped to a walk and crept to the window,
+which was without glass or frame, open to the night. Peering in he
+perceived Sorenson at the table reading a document, and as he watched
+he had no need to be told this was the paper that so vitally concerned
+himself.
+
+At last Sorenson got to his feet, shaking his hand at Janet Hosmer who
+sat against the cabin wall and beginning to speak. Weir listened for a
+little. Then he stole along the log house to find the door.
+
+At last his finger touched the latch. He lifted it soundlessly, as
+silently pushed the door ajar until there was space for him to slip
+in. This he did. His mouth was shut hard, his eyes watchful, his right
+hand was closed about the butt of his revolver still resting in the
+holster.
+
+Over Sorenson's shoulder he saw Janet Hosmer's face, pale and drawn
+but with a sudden joy flaming there. If ever gratitude were written on
+human countenance, it was on hers. Gratitude--and more! Something that
+sent Steele Weir's blood rushing anew through his body, with hope,
+with a song, with he knew not what.
+
+Janet suddenly jerked herself free and stepped back, her head held
+high and proud.
+
+"You'll never touch me again, you coward. Look behind you," she
+exclaimed.
+
+Involuntarily Sorenson turned head on shoulder. The frown still
+darkened his liquor-flushed face and the sneer yet twisted his lips so
+that his mustache was drawn back from his teeth. Thus he remained as
+if changed to stone.
+
+What he saw was the man he most dreaded, with a shadow of a smile on
+his lips, his figure motionless, his hand ready, like an avenging
+Nemesis from out of the night. A perceptible shudder shook the fellow.
+Weir it was--"Cold Steel," whose counter-stroke against one man
+already had been swift and deadly, whom nothing checked or turned or
+terrified, who now for a second time was plucking away the fruit of
+Sorenson's efforts, who probably on this occasion would shoot him
+outright.
+
+For a moment Steele Weir regarded him in silence. But at last he
+spoke:
+
+"Stand away from that lady, you skunk!"
+
+Sorenson moved hastily aside.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+EARTH'S RETRIBUTION
+
+
+Steele Weir crossed the cabin to Janet's side.
+
+"You are unhurt?" he asked, his eyes scanning her face anxiously.
+
+"Yes. And, oh, how glad I am you came!" she cried, low. "I knew you
+would not fail me if you but learned of my plight; but it's wonderful
+you should be here so soon. I prayed every minute of my ride that
+Juanita would find and tell you."
+
+"I couldn't come half as fast as I wished." His smile assured and
+cheered her. Then as his glance fell on her wrists, still red and
+creased from being bound, he exclaimed, "What's this? Let me see." And
+he caught and lifted her hands to look.
+
+"He had you tied?" Weir's gaze moved away to Sorenson.
+
+"Yes. Hands and feet."
+
+"All the way? All the long ride?"
+
+"Yes--look out!"
+
+Janet's words, half a gasp, half a shriek, gave warning of Sorenson's
+movement, though none was needed. While apparently neglecting to watch
+the other, Weir had kept the man sharp in the corner of his eye. The
+motion with which his hand darted to his hip and up again was a single
+lightning-like sweep; and his weapon covered his enemy before the
+latter's hand so much as got his revolver in grasp.
+
+"Drop it; drop it on the floor!" the engineer ordered. The gun
+clattered on the rough-hewn logs. "Now put your hands up and turn your
+back this way." Sorenson obeyed, not without his eyes speaking the
+disappointed wrath and hatred his tongue dared not utter. "I should
+have allowed you to make a full draw and then killed you," Steele Weir
+went on. "That would have been the simplest way to settle your case.
+Only I don't like to kill bunglers, even when they deserve it."
+
+He re-sheathed his own gun and strode forward, picking up the one on
+the floor--a black, ugly-looking automatic. This he dropped into a
+coat pocket.
+
+"Now face about, you cur," he commanded. "I want a good look at a
+man--no, I'll not call you a man--at a low-lived imitation of a man
+who is such a sneaking, dirty beast that all he can do is to trap and
+tie up a helpless girl. I don't know yet just what I shall do with
+you, but I know what I ought to do--I ought to choke the miserable
+life out of you! You're not fit to live. You soil the earth and
+pollute the air. But you're of the same treacherous, underhanded,
+scoundrelly breed as your father, same yellow flesh and blood, same
+crooked mind and heart, same sort of poisonous snake, and since you
+get it all from him I suppose it can't be helped. Nor changed, except
+by killing and burying you. One thing is sure, when I'm done you won't
+be trying any more deals like this. Bah, you slimy reptile, you belong
+in a cess-pool!"
+
+Under Steele Weir's biting speech Sorenson's face went red and pale by
+turns. His lips twitched and worked, moving his mustache in little
+angry lifts, while he breathed with short spasmodic intakes.
+
+"First, you're after Mexican girls," Weir went on mercilessly. "Then
+Mary Johnson, whom I pulled out of your vile fingers. And now it's--"
+The engineer's fist arose suddenly above the other's head. "Why, I
+ought to drop you dead in your tracks for so much as looking at Janet
+Hosmer! Why don't you fight? Why don't you give me a chance, you
+cowardly girl-robber? Haven't you a spark of--well, you haven't, I
+see. I'll just tie you up and later figure out some way to make you
+suffer for this night's work." And with a gesture of disgust Weir
+turned away.
+
+It was the moment Sorenson had been waiting for. As the engineer's
+back came about, exposed in one instant of carelessness, the man
+struck Weir full force on the neck, sending him staggering. Then
+Sorenson leaped for the doorway.
+
+Janet screamed. Weir recovered himself and whirled around, whipping
+forth his revolver and firing two shots. But the bullets only buried
+themselves in the door slammed shut after the escaping prisoner.
+
+"I myself ought to be shot for this," Steele snapped out.
+
+He ran across the cabin, flung the door open, sprang out. The
+uselessness of seeking his enemy in the black wet gloom was only too
+evident, but he would not give up. Gun in hand, he stood listening for
+sound of fleeing footsteps.
+
+A light hand gripped his arm. Janet had followed him out, was at his
+side. Barely audible he heard her quick, excited breathing.
+
+"Must you shoot him?" she whispered.
+
+"Why spare him for more deviltry? But I'll not have the chance now."
+
+"I can't bear to think of even his blood being on our hands. Let him
+go," Janet said.
+
+"He's gone without our permission, I'd say."
+
+"Isn't it just as well? I'm not harmed, and he'll never dare show his
+face in San Mateo again," she said. "He'll have to stay away; he'll
+leave for good."
+
+"Not until I see him first. I want that paper."
+
+"Oh, the paper, I forgot it! And it's in his pocket," she cried, in
+despair.
+
+"Like the fool I was, I forgot it for the moment too," Steele said
+bitterly. "When I could have had it at once I must go off ranting
+about his meanness. It was thought of what he had done to you that
+made me overlook the paper; that set me boiling. Lost my head."
+
+Janet's answer was almost sufficient recompense for even such a
+serious deprivation as that of the document.
+
+"I'll never forget that you were angry in my behalf," she said,
+softly. "But perhaps you can gain possession of the paper yet."
+
+Before he could make a reply the sound of a motor engine startled
+them. Sorenson was in his car, not far off. Weir immediately plunged
+forward through the darkness in the direction of the noise, uttering a
+shout for the man to stop or be shot. But after the taste of liberty
+that he already had had Sorenson was prepared to take further chances;
+the engine's roar burst into full volume and the car leaped ahead,
+while its driver sent back a derisive curse to the cabin.
+
+Weir fired again, fired two or three times at the sound. Perhaps
+Sorenson was crouching safely out of range; at any rate, the bullets
+did not reach him, for the automobile plunged away. Steele slowly went
+back to the girl.
+
+"How can he see without lights?" she questioned.
+
+"He can't see, but he'd rather risk not seeing the road than drawing
+my fire. There's a bad place there at the rock; he'd better turn on
+his lamps if he wants to round that."
+
+Sensing the danger that threatened Sorenson, both remained unmoving,
+trying to penetrate the darkness, harkening to the automobile's
+retreating murmur. A curiosity, a sort of detached suspense, rooted
+them to the spot.
+
+"Ah, he's snapped them on!" Janet said, almost with relief.
+
+The powerful beam of the headlights had suddenly blazed forth. Either
+feeling that he was safe from Weir's gun or realizing that he was on
+the verge of a graver danger, Sorenson had chosen to make the light.
+He was going at headlong speed; even where they watched, Steele and
+Janet perceived that,--and only his fear of the peril behind which
+made him heedless of the difficulties in front could account for that
+reckless pace.
+
+The light leaped out into the night. Something else too seemed to
+spring forth within the circle of the glow, dark, sudden, imminent,
+rushing at the machine. A frantic jerk this way and that of the beam
+showed the driver's mad effort to avoid the towering wall of granite.
+Then a scream rang back to the man and girl before the cabin. Followed
+instantly a crash, an extinguishment of the light, darkness, silence,
+and finally a thin quivering flame at the base of the ledge, delicate
+and blue, like a dancing chimera.
+
+Janet's hand reached out and closed in Steele Weir's, and he covered
+it with his other hand.
+
+"Oh, how terrible!" she gasped. "Did you see? The rock seemed to smite
+him!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He must be dead."
+
+"You remain here and I'll go find out."
+
+He led her into the cabin and to a stool by the table, where resting
+her elbows on the board she pressed her hands over her eyes as if to
+blot out the sight she had just witnessed. After all she had suffered,
+the climax of this dreadful spectacle left her unnerved, weak,
+shuddering.
+
+"Don't stay long," she whispered. "Come back as quick as you can. This
+cabin, this whole spot in the mountains, is awful. I can almost feel
+him hovering over me."
+
+"You mustn't permit such thoughts." He gave her shoulder an
+encouraging pat. "It will take but a few minutes to see if he's still
+alive and then we'll start home. You've been the bravest girl going
+and will continue to be, I know. Everything is over; nothing can
+happen to you now."
+
+Weir went out. He perceived that the wrecked car was fully afire by
+this time, its flames illuminating the granite ledge and the ground
+about. Evidently the machine's fuel tank had been smashed under the
+impact and the gasoline had escaped, preventing an explosion but
+fiercely feeding the blaze. He ran towards the place.
+
+At first he did not find Sorenson, so that he supposed him buried
+beneath the wreckage, but presently he discovered his crumpled form
+lying jammed between the base of the ledge and a boulder. Weir lifted
+the limp figure from its resting place and bore it to open ground,
+where he made an examination of the still form. Clearly Sorenson had
+been pitched free of the car and crushed against the rock wall. His
+cap was missing; his coat was ripped up the back and a part of it gone
+as if caught and held by some obstruction in the car when he had been
+shot forth; blood and a great bruise marked one cheek; and the way his
+legs dragged when he was lifted up indicated some serious injury to
+those members. But the man still breathed.
+
+"Miracles haven't ceased," Weir muttered, when he had made sure of the
+fact. "But his chance is slim at best."
+
+It would be false to say that the engineer felt compassion at the
+other's sudden catastrophe; he experienced none. On the contrary he
+had a sense of justice fittingly executed, as if, escaping bullets and
+man's blows, Sorenson had been felled by a more certain power, by the
+inevitable consequences of his own deeds and sins, by a wall of evil
+he himself had raised as much as by a wall of stone.
+
+He searched the man's breast pocket, then hunted for the missing
+document among the stones and bushes. At last he gave up for the time
+further seeking, with a conviction that the vital paper was gone for
+good, destroyed in the fire of the burning car. But for his own
+over-confidence, his belief he had Sorenson a safe prisoner back there
+in the cabin, the sheets might be secure in his pocket. Well, it was
+too late now.
+
+He again lifted the unconscious man in his arms and returned to the
+log house. Inside he laid him on the rude bed which Sorenson himself
+had spread with sheets and blankets.
+
+"He's alive?" Janet asked, awed.
+
+"Alive, but badly hurt."
+
+"You'll leave him here?"
+
+"Yes, while I take you away. We could do nothing for him in any case;
+his injuries are grave and need a doctor's help. The best service we
+can perform in his behalf is to start your father or some other
+physician here as quickly as possible. He may live or he may die; that
+isn't in our hands. He's unconscious and not suffering, and probably
+will not feel pain for some hours if he does live, so we can go
+without feeling that we're robbing him of any of his chances of
+recovery. Your conscience may rest quite easy on that point. Come,
+we'll start at once. The quicker we reach your father, the quicker he
+will arrive here."
+
+When they were in his car he wrapped a robe about her against the
+sharp chill.
+
+"I am cold; my teeth are chattering," she said.
+
+"You've been under a great strain. Just lie back and rest and think of
+something else than what has happened, if you can," he urged.
+
+"I'll try to."
+
+The lamps blazed out at his touch of the switch and the car began to
+move. She closed her eyes. She did not wish to see the scene of the
+smash, with the leaping fire and the horrible pile of crushed metal.
+Indeed, she drew the robe before her face, where she kept it for some
+time.
+
+"Are we past the place?" she asked, finally.
+
+"A long way past."
+
+"Thank heaven! Nothing shall ever drag me up this road again!"
+
+"It will not take us long to reach Johnson's and be off this trail
+altogether, for it's down-hill going all the way."
+
+"You said nothing about the paper? Did you get it?"
+
+"No; it wasn't on him. I'll return for another look, but it fell in
+the fire, I think, and burned."
+
+"Do you know what was in it, Mr. Weir?"
+
+"No. But I can guess."
+
+"I know a little of its contents, from what he said before you
+entered. It was a statement, something about his father and others
+doing dishonest acts, I think. He didn't seem to be quite clear what
+it was about either, but he spoke of your father and declared he
+hoped the others had swindled him, which he inferred had happened. I
+didn't know your father ever had been in this country. That's the
+reason you hate those men, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Vorse and Mr.
+Burkhardt; because of some injury they worked your father."
+
+"That's the reason. And that too is why they're trying to get rid of
+me one way or another. But they didn't hire the Mexican to attempt to
+shoot me; Ed Sorenson employed him. Martinez, when you told me the
+man's name, telegraphed around the country from Bowenville till he got
+track of the fellow. He also secured evidence that a white man
+resembling Ed Sorenson had been seen talking with him at the place he
+came from. So we can draw our conclusions."
+
+"Then he hired the man to assassinate you!"
+
+"Looks like it. Because I took Mary Johnson away from him, and from
+fear. He was afraid you might learn of the matter, I suppose, and
+decided to get rid of me. He's a coward at heart, but none the less a
+criminal by instinct, so he hired another to do what he dared not
+attempt himself. A crook like his father, but with less nerve."
+
+Janet was silent while the car wound its way down the creek road,
+through the misty darkness and among the invisible peaks. The full
+danger that she had escaped was but now making itself clear to her
+mind.
+
+"If he would go so far as to try to murder you," she faltered, "I
+surely could have expected no pity from him."
+
+"Now listen to me," he said. "I'm going to give you a little scolding:
+you must forget all this business; it just makes you fearful and
+unhappy. The past is over, and he's out of your life for good. Look at
+it that way. Consider the thing as a bad dream, done with and no more
+important. That's 'the right view to take'"--he paused, then added
+softly--"Janet."
+
+"How strong-souled you are!" she whispered.
+
+Strong, in truth, he seemed. Ignoring danger he had come swift on
+Sorenson's track and rescued her, saved her, kept her clean from her
+assailant's infamous brutishness. The one was a knave and a beast; but
+he, Steele Weir, was a man, clear to see, quick to act, hard towards
+enemies, gentle to friends. Every particle a man--sure of himself, and
+fearless, and true-hearted, and firm of soul.
+
+She pressed her hands tight against her breast. He was a man one could
+love and honor. "Cold Steel" Weir they called him--and, she divined,
+his love if ever given would be as lasting as hoops of steel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+IN THE NIGHT WATCHES
+
+
+A light still burned in the Johnson ranch house, late as was the hour,
+when the car swung round a copse of aspens and brought it in view.
+Johnson himself came forth at sound of the automobile, with a sleepy
+Mary following.
+
+"I wouldn't go to bed, of course, knowing you were to come back," said
+he. But his true reason appeared in his added words, "I was just about
+ready to saddle a horse and head up there myself. Mighty glad to see
+you safe back, Miss Hosmer. Mary has had some coffee on the fire ever
+since Weir went along, knowing you'd be cold and worn out."
+
+"Just the thing!" Steele exclaimed. "We're both chilled. Come, Janet."
+And he stepped from the machine.
+
+Without demur the girl placed her hand in the one he offered and
+descended stiffly. Mary ran back into the house to attend to the
+coffee-pot and the visitors presently were seated at the kitchen table
+at places already laid, with cups of steaming strong coffee and plates
+of food before them.
+
+Janet contented herself with the hot, reviving drink, but Weir ate
+heartily as well. Coming and going, forty miles of driving a rough
+mountain road had given him a laborer's appetite.
+
+"It's late, one o'clock," Mary said to Janet. "Why don't you stay
+with us the rest of the night? I wish you would."
+
+Janet put up an arm and drew down the face of the girl at her side and
+kissed her.
+
+"You're a good friend, Mary, to be so thoughtful," she answered. "But
+father will be terribly anxious every minute I'm away. I must reach
+home as quickly as possible to ease his mind."
+
+Of Sorenson nothing had been spoken, though a repressed curiosity on
+the part of the ranchman and his daughter had been evident from the
+instant of Weir's and Janet's return.
+
+At this point Johnson jerked his head in the direction of the creek.
+
+"What did you do to him, Weir?" he growled.
+
+"Not as much as I intended at first. But he made up for it himself.
+Ran his car against that granite ledge before the cabin while trying
+to get away, and smashed himself up badly. I carried him into the hut
+and left him there; he was alive when we drove off, but he may be dead
+by now. Bad eggs like him are hard to kill, however. I'll start a
+doctor up there when I arrive in San Mateo; probably one from
+Bowenville."
+
+"Father won't attend him now, so long as there's another physician who
+can, I know," Janet stated.
+
+"I should say not!" Johnson asseverated. "If that young hound Sorenson
+had his deserts, we'd just leave him there and forget all about him."
+
+"That's where our civilized notions handicap us," Steele Weir said,
+with a slight smile. "But at that, if he were the only person
+concerned, I'd do no more than inform a doctor where he was and what
+had happened to him, and wash my hands of the affair. There are other
+things, though, to consider. Janet's position, primarily. Her case is
+similar to that of Mary's awhile ago, and we must prevent talk."
+
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"The worst of the doings of a scoundrel like him that involve innocent
+people is the talk. There are always some people low enough to ascribe
+evil to the girl as well as the man in such a circumstance as this. I
+propose to see that Janet doesn't suffer that. We avoided it in Mary's
+case and we'll do so in this, though the situation is more difficult.
+I've been thinking the matter over on the way down and have a plan
+that will work out, I believe, but it requires your help, Johnson."
+
+"I reckon you know you'll not have to ask me twice for anything," the
+rancher remarked.
+
+"And we may have to shuffle the facts a bit."
+
+"All right. I'll do all the lying necessary and never bat an eye."
+
+"It won't require much decorating, the story. But you will have to go
+up and get him, starting at once." Then he concluded, "I hate to have
+to ask you to make that drive late at night and in the darkness."
+
+"Never mind that. Glad to do it, if that's what you want."
+
+"Take your wagon and fill the box with hay and bring him down. By
+coming back slowly he won't be jarred, and he has to be brought out
+anyway. If he's dead, well, bring his body just the same. A doctor
+should be easily at your house by the time you arrive; and your story
+is that a sheepherder found him lying by his wrecked car, carried him
+into the cabin and then came down and told you of the accident, on
+which you went and brought him in, not knowing, of course, in the dark
+who he was or what he was doing up there or how the smash-up had
+occurred. You might suggest that he was camping there by himself to
+fish, and stop at that."
+
+Johnson nodded.
+
+"I'll say just enough and no more," he remarked.
+
+"If you start at once, you'll be there by daylight if not before. That
+will get you back here by nine or ten o'clock. I don't want him taken
+to San Mateo; that would stir up a swarm of inquiries and might even
+send some of the curious up to the spot. Let the trail get cold, so to
+speak. People aren't half as curious about a thing three or four days
+after it happens as at the moment."
+
+"I've noticed that myself."
+
+"And another thing, I don't wish his father to learn of the matter
+just yet. Under other circumstances he should be the first to know,
+but I want the news kept from him for a special reason. Besides, it
+would be better if he found out about it from others and through
+roundabout channels. His son up there I don't see doing any talking
+himself for some time if he does live. When he is able to talk, I
+believe he'll decide to keep his mouth shut or just accept the
+explanation given that he was fishing or something of that kind. When
+the doctor has looked him over, either he or you will carry him to
+Bowenville. If we could ship him at once to Gaston, where there's some
+sort of a hospital, I suppose, or even to Santa Fé, that would be the
+thing. He'd be out of the way; there'd be no talk; there would be no
+explanations to make except to the doctor."
+
+"Every doctor round these parts probably knows him," Johnson said,
+"and so would insist on taking him home."
+
+"There's a new one at Bowenville, father says," Janet put in. "A young
+man, just starting practice. He hasn't been there but a few weeks and
+may not know Ed."
+
+"He's the man for us!" Weir declared. "We'll send for him. Now we must
+be going."
+
+Steele arose from the table and stretched his shoulders.
+
+"And I'll hitch up my team immediately," the rancher said.
+
+"I'll go with you," Mary exclaimed.
+
+"Tut, tut, girl."
+
+"I can help you, and I want to do something to help Mr. Weir and Janet
+Hosmer, even if it's only a little bit. I'm strong, I don't care if it
+is late--anyway, I'd just have nightmares if I stayed here alone,--and
+I can help you with him. I'm going," she ended, obstinately.
+
+Johnson eyed her for a moment, then yielded.
+
+"Nothing to be afraid of now," he rejoined, "but if you would rather
+go along with your dad, all right."
+
+Five minutes later Steele and Janet were emerging from the canyon upon
+the mesa. The drizzling rain still continued and the unseen mist beat
+cool upon their cheeks as the car swung away from Terry Creek for
+town. Except for the stream of light projected before them, they were
+engulfed in Stygian darkness; and save for the slithering sound of the
+tires on the wet road, they moved in profound night silence.
+
+"That business is arranged," Steele said, after a time. "But we still
+have the results of the attack on Martinez to deal with. I don't know
+how long he'll hold out against the men who dragged him off, probably
+not long. I suppose Burkhardt and perhaps Vorse took him, and they'll
+stop at nothing to get the paper they're after. How they learned of
+it, I don't know, but find out about it they did; and they'll force
+the information they want from Martinez if they have to resort to hot
+irons. That's the kind of men they are. The lawyer will stick up to a
+certain point--then he'll tell. That brings you into their way."
+
+"You also," Janet answered.
+
+"I've been there for some time," was his grim response. "But in your
+case it's different. I'm worried, I tell you frankly."
+
+"Do you think they would dare try to intimidate me in my own home and
+with father to protect me?" she cried, incredulously.
+
+"Not there, perhaps. But if they could inveigle you away, yes. They
+wouldn't use hot irons in your case, of course, and I can't guess just
+what they would do, but they would do--something. Those men think I
+have the 'goods' on them; I repeat, they would stop at nothing to save
+themselves if worst came to worst; their fear will make them fiends.
+One couldn't suppose they would dare seize Martinez in all defiance of
+law--but they did. One can't believe they would dream of torturing him
+for information--but I haven't a doubt that's what they've done. So
+you see why I'm worried about you. If anything happened, if any harm
+came to you now, Janet--"
+
+His voice was unsteady as he spoke her name and ceased abruptly. She
+thrilled to this betrayal of his feeling.
+
+"I wish I could just stick at your side, then I know I should be
+safe," she said.
+
+And for answer she felt his hand grope and press her own for an
+instant.
+
+"You can count on me being somewhere around."
+
+"I know that," she said, confidently.
+
+San Mateo was asleep, buried in gloom when they entered it, and quiet
+except for the barking of a dog or two that their passage stirred to
+activity. But in Dr. Hosmer's cottage a light was burning and as the
+car came to a stop at its gate the door was flung open and the doctor
+himself appeared framed in the doorway. He ran hastily down the walk
+to meet them.
+
+"Janet!" he cried. And the girl flung her arms about him.
+
+"Juanita told you? Oh, it was dreadful! But Mr. Weir has brought me
+home safe."
+
+Dr. Hosmer too agitated to speak reached out and grasped the
+engineer's hand, pressing it fervently.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At about that moment three men sat in the rear of Vorse's saloon. The
+shades were drawn and the front part of the long room was dark. Only a
+dull light burned where they sat. They were talking in low tones, with
+long pauses, with worried but determined, savage faces--Vorse,
+Burkhardt, Sorenson.
+
+"Where the devil is she, that's what I want to know!" Burkhardt
+growled. "I've been over twice and looked through a window. Doc was
+there."
+
+"She's in bed and asleep, probably," Sorenson said.
+
+"I don't believe it. The old man would be in the sheets himself if
+that were the case. Didn't I call up twice by 'phone too? She was out,
+they said."
+
+"Couldn't do much with her father there, anyway. We've got to get the
+paper by soft talk," Vorse commented. "I still half believe Martinez
+was lying when he said it had been in that old chair. She couldn't
+have got to the office and away in the hour or two before he told
+without some one seeing her, and no one did so far as we can learn. We
+locked the door too the second time we went back and it hasn't been
+opened since; and we were there ten minutes after our first visit when
+we learned the papers weren't among those in his pocket. I think he's
+got it cached away somewhere still."
+
+"Then we'll give him another dose of our medicine."
+
+"If I know anything about men, he told the truth," Sorenson said.
+
+"Well, if the girl has it, we've got to get it from her if I have to
+wring her neck to do it." It was Burkhardt's inflamed utterance.
+
+A pause followed.
+
+"Sorenson, your boy is engaged to her," Vorse stated.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it's up to him to get it first thing in the morning. Maybe it
+goes against the grain to let him know about this business of the
+past, but it ain't going to knock him over; he's no fool, he's a wise
+bird, he understands that a good many things are done in business that
+aren't advertised. He knows we weren't missionaries in the old days.
+And she'll hand it over for him when she might not for any one else."
+
+"That's right, Sorenson," Burkhardt affirmed, his scowling face
+visibly clearing.
+
+"Ed went away somewhere this evening, that's the only drawback to your
+scheme. Said something about Bowenville and catching the night train
+to Santa Fé, and that he might be gone maybe a couple of days and
+maybe a week."
+
+"Hell!" Burkhardt exploded, in consternation.
+
+Vorse however remained cool.
+
+"Then you must start telegrams to head him off, start them the instant
+you get home. Telephone to Bowenville the message you want sent and
+have the operator dispatch it to all trains going both ways since
+early evening, in order to make sure. If you can reach him within two
+or three hours, wherever he is, he can hop off, catch a train back
+and be here by to-morrow evening. Make your message urgent. And
+meanwhile we'll do what we can to get hold of that paper. At any rate
+we can keep her from seeing Weir. If we have to watch her we'll do it;
+and if we have to stop her from going to the dam we'll do that someway
+too. You might invite her over to-morrow to spend the day at your
+house."
+
+"Do you think she'll be likely to come if she reads that document?"
+the banker inquired coldly.
+
+"Why not? Tell her right off the bat that the thing is a lie and a
+forgery and that you want to explain about how it was made. She might
+fall for that and carry the document to you. She's always had a good
+opinion of you, hasn't she?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then why should she change at a mere story."
+
+"You're right," Sorenson exclaimed with sudden energy. "The matter
+described happened so long ago that she won't probably attach as much
+importance to it as we've imagined she would. I'll ask her to bring it
+to me to see--and that will be all that's necessary, once it's in my
+fingers."
+
+"And what about him?" Burkhardt asked, striking the floor with his
+heel.
+
+"Just leave him there for the present. To-morrow we'll have another
+talk with him," the cattleman stated. "Better offer him a couple of
+thousand to go to another state; he'll grab at the chance, I fancy.
+Money heals most wounds. But, Vorse, keep your cellar locked and the
+bartender away from it. We can start Martinez away sometime
+to-morrow."
+
+"Don't know about that. To-morrow night will be our busy night," the
+ex-sheriff said.
+
+"We might let Gordon handle him," Vorse suggested.
+
+"I thought perhaps you intended to keep the Judge in ignorance of this
+Martinez matter. He seems to be getting sort of feeble."
+
+"He's not too feeble to take his share of the unpleasant jobs along
+with the rest of us," Vorse answered, unfeelingly. "I shall have him
+in here first thing in the morning and tell him what's happened and
+what we've done and what he has to do."
+
+"Sure," said Burkhardt.
+
+"Well, that's agreeable to me," Sorenson stated, looking at his watch
+and rising: "Time we were turning in, if there's nothing more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the dam camp Meyers, the assistant chief engineer, and Atkinson,
+the superintendent, were still awake, smoking and talking in the
+office.
+
+"I smelt enough booze on those fellows who came stringing in here to
+fill the reservoir," the latter was saying. "Some one's feeding it to
+them."
+
+"Nobody drunk, though."
+
+"No. But who's giving it to them and why? I asked one fellow and he
+said he'd been to a birthday party, and wouldn't tell where. They were
+all feeling pretty lush, even if they weren't soused. And to-morrow's
+Sunday!"
+
+"They'll all be idle, you mean?"
+
+"Sure. If there's more liquor, they'll be after it. All day to drink
+in means a big celebration. The whiskey is sent up from town, of
+course, and I reckon sent just at this time to get us all in bad while
+Mr. Pollock's here."
+
+"We'll look up the bootlegging nest to-morrow," Meyers said, with
+finality.
+
+"What can we do if we do locate it? They're not selling the stuff, I
+judge, but giving it away. That clears their skirts and forces us to
+deal with the men themselves if there's any dealing done. Probably
+they hope to start a big row among us that way."
+
+"We'll await Weir's advice."
+
+"Well, I've waited all I'm going to to-night. Seems to me for a
+steady, quiet, self-respecting, dignified, unhooked, unmarried,
+unmortgaged, unromantic man he's skylarking and gallivanting around
+pretty late."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the rocky creek road the ranchman and his daughter Mary were
+driving up among the trees on their way to the cabin, a lantern
+swinging from the end of the wagon tongue, the horses straining
+against the grade. On Johnson's beard the moisture formed beads which
+from time to time he brushed away. From the trees collected drops of
+water fell on their hands and knees. All about as they proceeded the
+bushes and rocks appeared in shadowy outline, to disappear in the
+night once more, yielding to others.
+
+"Isn't this cabin where we're going the one we drove to three years
+ago when you were hunting some cattle?" Mary asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I never thought then that Ed Sorenson would be lying up there all
+mashed to pieces," she said, with awed voice.
+
+"I guess he didn't either," was the dry response.
+
+"He ought to be ready to stop chasing girls after this," she
+declared.
+
+"He won't if he can walk; his kind never does quit."
+
+"Then his kind ought to be locked up somewhere like mad dogs. In a
+'sylum, maybe."
+
+"I guess you're right on that, Mary. They're dangerous."
+
+"Funny we didn't know he'd been up there, going past our house. He
+must have been there first before taking Janet."
+
+"Sneaked up in the night, probably. He'd have to have grub and so on
+if he expected to stay even a day or two. Crooks always look after
+their bellies, be sure."
+
+"I reckon Janet Hosmer will like Mr. Weir a whole lot now, don't
+you?"
+
+"She ought to, if she doesn't."
+
+A long silence followed while Mary apparently pursued the line of
+thought opened up by this speculation.
+
+"If she has the good sense I think she has," the rancher stated at
+length, for his mind at least had been following out the subject,
+"she'll not only like him a whole lot, but she'll lead him to the
+altar and put her brand on him."
+
+He spoke to unhearing ears. For just then Mary sagged against him, her
+head sank on his shoulder. He put an arm around her form and let her
+sleep, thus roughly expressing his tenderness and love. Weir had not
+only rescued Janet Hosmer from the clutches of the man now lying
+injured; he also had once saved Johnson's own child Mary from the
+scoundrel's grasp.
+
+Weir might ask anything of him, even to the laying down of his life in
+his defense.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A QUEER PAPER
+
+
+When Mary Johnson next opened her eyes it was at a little shake by her
+father. She had slept heavily despite the jolting of the wagon; and
+now looked about drowsy-eyed and at a loss to know where she was. Her
+clothes and face were damp, her hands cold. She wasn't sure yet but
+this was still a dream--the team and wagon, the cabin before which
+they stood, the trees and rocks scattered about the grassy park-like
+basin, and the soaring mountain peaks on every hand that were just
+touched by the first early sun-rays.
+
+The rain and mists were gone, leaving the dawn clear, gray, sharp,
+scented with the pungent odor of balsam and pine. From a distance came
+the subdued murmur of Terry Creek, which here high in the mountain
+range had its source in springs and brooks flowing from pools. All was
+peaceful.
+
+Mary's look came to rest on the cabin. Over it reared the great pines
+that grew in a clump behind. Its door was ajar, but the log house for
+any sign of occupancy might have been untenanted. Immediately the girl
+glanced back along the road they had come and beheld there in the dim
+shadow at the foot of the lofty granite ledge a shapeless black lump.
+She shivered.
+
+"You awake?" her father asked.
+
+"Yes." And she began to climb down over the wagon wheel.
+
+"Wait here. I'll go in first. He might be----" But though the rancher
+did not complete his sentence the words spoken carried their own grave
+implication.
+
+He came out again presently. Mary gazed at his face to read from it
+the news it might carry, and it was with a breath of relief she
+perceived that the injured man was still alive, for her father himself
+appeared easier of mind. Neither would by choice have a dead man for a
+passenger on the ride home, even Ed Sorenson.
+
+"He's breathing, but is still unconscious," Johnson declared. "Must
+have got a crack in the head along with the rest. Face is covered with
+dried blood. From the stuff inside the house he must have been fixing
+for quite a stay--blankets, grub, whiskey, candles, and so on. We'll
+eat a bite ourselves before starting back; get the pail out of the
+wagon and bring some water and I'll make a pot of coffee. There's a
+fireplace and wood inside."
+
+"I'll get the water, but I'll stay out while you're boiling it," the
+girl said. "I don't want to see him until I have to go in and help
+carry him out."
+
+She went off for the water, on her return setting the bucket by the
+door. Then curious to see the place of Ed Sorenson's accident, she
+wandered back along the trail to the ledge. There she beheld the
+crumpled, fire-blackened remains of his automobile in a heap near the
+stone wall. Apparently the car had first struck a small boulder, which
+had flung Sorenson out on one side and forward, then leaping this hit
+the ledge full force.
+
+At the instant he must have been off the road and headed wrong, she
+guessed. The rapid daybreak of the mountains had by now dispersed the
+last dimness and indeed the crags far above were bright with sunshine.
+She could plainly see the ruin that the machine was, fire having
+completed what the smash had left undamaged, and the part of the rock
+that was smoked by the flames, and was able to smell yet the reek of
+burnt oil, varnish and rubber.
+
+With the eyes of the curious she stared at the wreck, at the ledge, at
+the ground, absorbed with simple speculations and filled with a sense
+of awe. The machine must have made a big sound when it struck. It was
+a lot of money gone quickly, that car. Not enough of it left to make
+it worth hauling away. And so on and so on.
+
+Then all at once her wandering regard detected something white in a
+crevice between two stones. At first she thought it the gleam of a
+bird or a chipmunk. The thing was some yards off from the spot where
+she stood, but the flutter persisted. So she approached it to learn
+its nature.
+
+The thing was a paper. One corner of a sheet stuck up from the crack
+in which it lay and was waved gently by the rising dawn breeze. She
+drew it out and perceived it was fastened to other sheets that were
+folded, all damp from the rain though not soaked because the cranny
+had admitted little moisture. It was the last sheet which had come
+partly unfolded, apparently as it fell, so was left in sight or she
+would never have noticed the white flutter. This last sheet was blank,
+but the others, neatly folded though wrinkled, were covered with
+writing she saw on spreading them open. However, she could not read
+the pages; the matter was typewritten, but it was not English. Some
+foreign language, maybe.
+
+If Mary could not read the document, she could at least logically
+deduce how it had happened to be in its present resting-place. The
+paper was here because the wrecked automobile was here, so when Ed
+Sorenson was pitched out the folded sheets of paper must have been
+propelled from his pocket by the same force and at the same instant.
+It hit a rock after flying through the air and slid down into the
+crack.
+
+Perhaps it was only a business document; it looked like one. Again
+perhaps it told something about his crooked private affairs--about his
+schemes for ruining girls, possibly. Very likely, indeed. That seemed
+to be about all he engaged himself at. When she found some one who
+could read it, she would know for certain. She would just take it
+along with her and say nothing about her find until she could have
+somebody who understood the writing read it over for her.
+
+In places the typing had stained from dampness, but not seriously. She
+could dry out the pages over the kitchen stove at home. So folding the
+sheets again, she doubled the document, tied it in her handkerchief
+and placed it inside her waist, where it could not be lost. Perhaps
+there were other papers. But a further search disclosed none,
+whereupon as her father was shouting to her from the cabin to come she
+retraced her steps.
+
+When they had drunk their coffee and eaten some of Sorenson's food,
+making their meal before the door, they carried the unconscious man
+out to the wagon, bearing him in the blanket on which he lay. Other
+blankets they spread over him. Johnson also placed at the prostrate
+figure's feet the rest of the eatables in the cabin.
+
+"No need to leave this stuff to the pack-rats," said he. "We'll just
+consider it a little pay towards fetching him out."
+
+"He ought to be willing to pay you a whole lot more when he learns the
+trouble you've been to."
+
+"I wouldn't touch his money if he offered me a thousand dollars; I'd
+throw it back in his face. I'm not doing this for pay, or friendship,
+or charity; I'm doing it to help Janet Hosmer and because Weir asked
+me. If the Sorensons had all the money on earth, they couldn't give me
+a penny as between man and man. If they owed it to me, that would be
+another matter. They'd pay it if I had to stick a gun down their
+throats to make them come across."
+
+"We don't need any of their money, I guess," Mary said.
+
+"Nope. We're poor but we're straight. So we're better off than they
+are--richer, if we just look at it that way."
+
+Once during the long drive, as they neared the ranch house, a low moan
+came from the form on the straw in the wagonbed. Both Johnson and Mary
+looked around quickly, then regarded each other.
+
+"Beginning to suffer," said the parent. "It's a wonder there's a whole
+bone in his body. I hope the doctor is down below waiting for us."
+
+This proved to be the case when about ten o'clock Johnson drove his
+worn-out team into his dooryard. Weir's car was there and with it the
+engineer himself and a young medical practitioner. Climbing up into
+the wagon, the doctor made a hasty examination of the patient.
+
+"Hips broken. Slight concussion of the skull, but not dangerous," was
+his opinion. "I shall not be able to tell the full seriousness of his
+injuries until I have him stripped on a table or bed. Probably there
+are other broken bones,--ribs or something. We must get him down to
+Bowenville as quickly as possible, for his is a bad case. But I guess
+if he has pulled through so far he'll recover. If you'll drive your
+wagon down to the mouth of the canyon, we'll transfer him to my car,
+which is double seated, and then you can accompany me to town; Mr.
+Weir says you are willing to go along and help. I'll send you back
+from Bowenville."
+
+"Yes, I'll go along. Mary will ride down with us and bring back the
+team and wagon."
+
+"Strange what he was doing up there in the mountains with an
+automobile alone," the doctor remarked.
+
+"Oh, he might have wanted a day's fishing, or was taking a look at
+cattle or range, something like that," Johnson stated.
+
+"Mr. Weir said a sheepherder found him. Wasn't that it, sir?"
+
+The engineer turned to the rancher.
+
+"Wasn't that the way of it?"
+
+"Yes. Showed up here late and said he had found the man and carried
+him into the cabin. Said his wrecked car was still burning, so the
+accident couldn't have occurred very long previous. Said we ought to
+bring him down immediately as he was badly hurt. So I sent word to Dr.
+Hosmer, and my girl and I set off at once, the sheepherder going back
+with us. Said he just happened to be looking for a stray sheep or he
+would never have come on this man, as he was heading his band for a
+pass to get over on the west side of the range. S'pose we'll never see
+him again."
+
+"Do you know who this man is?"
+
+"His face seems sort of familiar," Johnson replied, scratching his
+chin. "But he looks like a city chap, by his clothes, what's left of
+them. No papers or anything on him to tell his name. Might have come
+over the pass himself from the other side; men go everywhere in these
+hill-climbing cars they make nowadays."
+
+"Somebody will be seeking information soon and then we'll know," the
+physician said. "He'll probably give his name and address himself when
+he comes round. But if I'm not mistaken he'll need another sort of
+car if he does any moving about when he's out of bed."
+
+"Why's that?"
+
+"Speaking off-hand, I'll say he'll never walk again. That's the way
+broken hips usually turn out; and if his spine is injured, as I
+suspect, he will probably be paralyzed from the waist down. Hard luck
+for a young man like him. He'll wish at times he was killed
+outright."
+
+Unobserved by the speaker Weir and Johnson exchanged a meaningful
+look. In the minds of both moved the same thought, that Providence had
+punished Ed Sorenson according to his sins and more adequately than
+could man. Dreadful years were before him. He would, in truth, wish a
+thousand times that he had died at the foot of the ledge.
+
+Half an hour later the visitors had departed, the rancher going with
+the physician and his charge to Bowenville, Weir returning to San
+Mateo. Mary had driven the wagon up from the mouth of the canyon,
+unharnessed the horses, watered and fed them, and now was seated in
+the kitchen staring absently out the open door. After so much
+excitement she felt distrait, depressed.
+
+Finally she produced and dried the papers over the stove, in which she
+had re-kindled a fire.
+
+"Funny how anybody should want to talk or write anything but English,"
+she remarked to herself, gazing at the pages.
+
+She attempted to extract some sense from the strange words. At the
+bottom of the last sheet she deciphered, Felipe Martinez' name under
+the notorial acknowledgment. All at once in scanning certain lines she
+came on names that were plain enough--Sorenson, Vorse, Burkhardt,
+Gordon. The last must mean Judge Gordon. Then presently she found two
+more names that excited her curiosity--James Dent's and Joseph
+Weir's.
+
+Springing to her feet she stared at the sheets in her hand. For some
+reason or other her blood was beating with an odd sensation of
+impending discovery.
+
+"Why--why----" she stammered. "Why, those are the men father told
+about being shot, and him looking on as a boy! This is a queer paper!
+I wish he were here."
+
+Possession of it gave her a feeling of uneasiness. Her father had
+warned her never to speak of the matter to any one--and here was
+something about it in writing, or so she guessed. He had said Sorenson
+and the other men would kill him at once if they learned he had been a
+witness. That meant they would kill her too if they found out that she
+not only knew about their crime but had this paper as well.
+
+She looked about. Finally she retied the document in a tea-towel,
+tight and secure, and buried it deep in the flour barrel. They would
+not think of looking in the flour. But she went to the door just the
+same and gazed anxiously down the canyon as if enemies might put their
+heads in sight that very minute.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ANXIETIES
+
+
+"My dear doctor, your talents are wasted in San Mateo. They should be
+employed in the larger field of diplomacy," said Steele Weir, when on
+his arrival from Terry Creek he was apprised of what had occurred
+during his absence.
+
+"From all indications I shall have full opportunity for their use
+hereafter, whatever they may be, in our own bailiwick," Doctor
+Hosmer replied, smiling. "There's more going on in our village,
+apparently, than in many a small kingdom. I merely had Janet use the
+truth with certain limitations, and there's no wiser course when
+part of the facts are known. Sorenson seemed quite satisfied with her
+explanation."
+
+The colloquy resulted from a meeting between Janet and the cattleman
+while Weir was guiding the young physician, summoned from Bowenville,
+to Johnson's ranch. Sorenson had appeared at the house about ten
+o'clock that morning desiring to see the girl. They had talked
+together on the veranda, where the visitor stated he had effected a
+settlement and obtained an acknowledgment from Martinez, who was
+trying to blackmail him and others; that a certain paper had been
+prepared by the lawyer for use in the disreputable business; that the
+man had said he had asked Janet to secure it from an old chair in his
+office; and he wished to learn if she had done so.
+
+Janet had admitted such to be the case.
+
+"It was odd Mr. Martinez should telephone me to go get it, wasn't it?"
+she had asked. "But I went, and there it was stuffed in the lining of
+the chair."
+
+"You have it then?" Sorenson stated, with a sigh of relief and his
+eyes kindling with eagerness.
+
+"No, I haven't it now."
+
+"What in heaven's name did you do with it?" he asked.
+
+"As I was coming out of Mr. Martinez' office, there at the door was
+Ed. He had seen me go in and so stopped his car before the door; after
+a time he took the paper to see what it was."
+
+"Then you didn't see its contents?"
+
+"No; I didn't even open it."
+
+"And he has it?"
+
+"He had it the last I saw of the paper. He read it. First, he was
+going to burn it up because it made him angry, then he changed his
+mind, saying he would take it to show to you, as he thought you would
+be interested. Is there anything else you wish to know, Mr.
+Sorenson?"
+
+"Where did he go from there?"
+
+"He drove away. From something he said, I judged that he planned to be
+away from home several days."
+
+Revolting as it was to Janet to put so fair a face on Ed Sorenson's
+conduct, nevertheless she had braced herself to go through with the
+part and presented to the cattleman a clear, natural countenance. The
+very simplicity of her story, its directness, its accord with the
+facts as he knew them, carried conviction. Innocently drawn into the
+affair, she had, in his view, been quickly guided out again by Ed's
+luck and wit.
+
+Ed had the deadly document. The four men concerned might breathe
+easily once more. Ed himself, in all probability, did not realize the
+true menace of old Saurez' deposition, or he would at once have
+brought it to him instead of continuing on his trip: the boy no doubt
+thought it sufficient to keep it until he returned or mailed it back
+from somewhere; he perhaps had taken it along for a more careful
+reading. Good boy, anyway. He had got possession of the thing, that
+was the main consideration.
+
+"He told me too that he was leaving last evening for a few days'
+jaunt," Sorenson said, rising to go. "You'll likely have a whole
+basketful of letters from him. Finest boy going, Ed, even if it's his
+own father who says it. But he's the lucky one, Janet." The girl
+lowered her eyelids, for at this flattery she felt she could no longer
+dissemble her feelings. "Sorry to have bothered you about the matter,"
+he concluded. "Fellows like this Martinez are always making us
+trouble. Run over and eat dinner with us soon."
+
+He went down the walk, large, dominant and still with a trace of
+his early cowman's walk. Both his step and his erectness bespoke
+the buoyant effect of the talk upon his spirits, which was not to
+be wondered at as he had splendid news to import to his confrères
+in crime. They would get rid of Martinez, destroy the paper when
+Ed delivered it, and their skeleton--this one (of a number) which
+had unexpectedly kicked the door open and started to dance in
+public--would be safely locked up forever. For Saurez, the only
+witness (as they believed) was now dead: he would make no more
+depositions. Certainly Sorenson had reason to walk briskly away
+from Doctor Hosmer's dwelling.
+
+Janet had somberly watched him till he was out of sight, then had gone
+inside.
+
+"I don't see how I ever imagined him an honorable man," she said to
+her father. "For all his pretended politeness he was ready if
+necessary to bully me. One thing he can't ever say is that I didn't
+tell him exact facts; what I omitted was the circumstances giving rise
+to the facts." And her father, who now knew from Weir the story of the
+happening of thirty years before, assured her that she need be
+troubled over no moral hairsplitting.
+
+The incident, as Steele Weir perceived, diverted both suspicion and
+danger from Janet, at least for a time. A big gain that. And he was
+impressed by the subtle sagacity of the maneuver.
+
+"That wasn't just a clever move, it was a flash of genius," he told
+father and daughter. Then after a few minutes more of talk he said:
+"Now I must be running up to the dam. To-day is Sunday and the works
+are quiet, so if I find everything all right I shall strike back
+immediately for Terry Creek and the cabin up above. I want to make a
+search for that paper by daylight."
+
+"After your hard night?" Janet exclaimed. "I snatched some sleep when
+we had done talking last night, but father says you and he had none.
+You can't make that terrible ride again without rest!"
+
+"Missing a night in bed is nothing new," he laughed. "Once or twice in
+my life I've not had my clothes off in a week, and only such cat-naps
+as I could steal meantime. But I'll not boast of that; your father
+probably has gone longer periods without sleep, or with only broken
+rest, than ever I did. Most doctors do. Be sure and let me know if
+anything new occurs."
+
+But if Weir's mind was put at ease so far as Janet was concerned, he
+had more than enough other cares to burden his thoughts. The loss of
+the deposition, chief of all; then the matter of effecting Martinez'
+release, wherever he was immured; and finally, as he learned from
+Meyers and Atkinson on reaching camp, the insidious promise of trouble
+in the "free whiskey party."
+
+"Perhaps whoever supplied the fire-water underestimated this
+copper-lined crew's capacity and didn't furnish enough," Meyers
+suggested. "Nobody was really drunk last night and here it is nearly
+noon, with the men all hanging about camp. If there was whiskey yet to
+be had, some of these thirsty, rollicking scrappers of ours would be
+right back at the spigot this morning."
+
+"Maybe so," Atkinson admitted. "Seems so--and yet I ain't easy in my
+mind. The men don't act right; they behave as if they're just waiting;
+they're restless and not a man could I get to open his mouth about
+where they found the stuff. If there wasn't to be any more, they would
+have told and tried to kid me. They appear to me as if just biding
+their time. Some men weren't gone, of course, those who don't drink.
+They stayed in the bunk-house and they know nothing."
+
+"We'll go on the supposition then that there will be more coming, and
+act accordingly," Weir stated, at once. "Watch them close, and put up
+a warning that men who are not at work in the morning, or who bring
+booze into camp, will be fired."
+
+"That's the trouble," the superintendent declared. "I don't think they
+brought a drop in except in their skins. And as we say, they weren't
+drunk. There's not a thing we can object to and they know it; somebody
+has put 'em wise how to act. Here they are, sober this morning,
+behaving themselves, and so on. We can't keep men from going for a
+walk if they want to; we can't string barb-wire around the camp and
+hold them in; we can't even say they can't touch a bottle if a
+stranger offers them one when they're on the outside."
+
+"But we can hold up the consequences if they go on a spree," Steele
+replied. "Most of them are satisfied with the work and pay and grub;
+they don't want to go."
+
+"No, but they like whiskey too, free whiskey in particular. They would
+say they're not getting drunk--no man ever really expects to when he
+starts drinking--and talk about their 'rights.' There are two or three
+fellows in camp now who are doing a lot of mouthing about labor's
+rights; I. W. W.'s, I'd say. Shouldn't be surprised if they were the
+ring-leaders."
+
+"If more whiskey comes, we must beat them to it."
+
+"That's my notion," Atkinson said, with a nod. "I didn't locate the
+booze fountain last night, but I did this morning. Took a horse at
+daylight and rode along the hills; about a mile south in some trees at
+the foot of the mountain, I came across a case of empty bottles and a
+keg half-full of water. That was all, but it showed where the
+'birthday party' was."
+
+"That's the place to watch, then. Better send a trusty man there to
+report to us immediately if he sees signs of a supply arriving for
+to-night. Half a dozen of us with axes will soon start a temperance
+wave in that locality."
+
+In accordance with this instruction the superintendent dispatched a
+reliable man to maintain guard at the spot; and Weir, feeling that all
+had been done that was possible under the circumstances, gave his
+attention to other matters.
+
+But he perceived that with this "liquor attack" in the air, for it was
+but another of his enemies' moves against him, of course, directed
+with the purpose of creating internal disorder, he must postpone his
+trip to the headwaters of Terry Creek. Knowing the crafty,
+persistent, conscienceless character of the four men inspiring the
+trick, he was under no delusion that the "free whiskey" would end with
+a single case of bottles. Among three hundred men that would amount to
+but two or three drinks apiece--a mere taste, only a teaser. And
+because it was only a teaser, the men would want more. If he could
+carry them over this idle Sunday sober, they would be at work on the
+morrow and the chief danger be passed.
+
+Unfortunately a manager cannot take his workmen into his confidence in
+such a case and explain the nature of such a cunning attack; the thing
+was too complex, and their untutored minds would fail to perceive if
+they did not actually reject the explanation, in jealousy for their
+"rights" concluding that they were being hoodwinked. By very
+perverseness they would refuse to deny themselves a free gift of
+whiskey.
+
+With Pollock, however, whose interest as a director was vital, he
+could talk in full expectation of being understood. And moreover,
+owing to the entangled condition into which the company's and his own
+personal affairs had come, strict honor required that he inform his
+visitor of the entire situation and offer, if in the director's view
+such action would best serve the company's ends, to resign.
+
+In his office immediately after dinner he gave the easterner a
+complete account of happenings in San Mateo since his arrival as
+manager, with a statement of his father's earlier residence here, of
+the fraud practiced by Sorenson and his companions on him and his
+tragically ruined life.
+
+"This, you see, has resulted not only in bringing the animosity of
+these men against me but in aggravating their hostility to the
+company," he concluded. "I've never been a quitter. It would go sorely
+against the grain with me to quit now while under fire. But my own
+feelings or fortunes should have no weight; the company's interests
+alone are to be considered. I shall turn over the management to Meyers
+and retire if you desire; I count my contract not binding upon your
+board under the circumstances."
+
+Pollock arose and began to pace the office, gently beating the air
+with his eye-glasses and thoughtfully regarding the floor.
+
+"I should not do your remarkable story proper justice if I did not
+give it the serious attention it deserves," he said, after a time.
+"Certain aspects of the case would appear to favor our accepting
+your resignation, but on analysis, Weir, they turn out to be aspects
+only, not real arguments. Assuming the facts are as you relate, which
+I personally don't doubt, these men, if they will stop at nothing
+to injure you, will be no more reluctant to injure us. In fact, if
+you withdrew they would feel that they had gained a distinct
+triumph, forced us to yield to their will, and would be inspired to
+further and greater opposition. Personal hatred for you on their
+part is no ground for their fixing their enmity on the company. But
+that enmity, apparently, already existed before you came. Therefore if
+they hate you likewise, you and our company have a common bond. And
+that assures us of one thing, or several things: your vigilance,
+care of company property, and loyalty. Last, and aside from that,
+you are, I am confident, possessed of the exact qualities essential to
+the successful solution of present difficulties. We prefer as manager
+an energetic, determined, fighting man, however much disliked by
+envious neighbors, to some fellow less firm and more inclined to
+conciliation. The latter never gained anything with out-and-out
+foes, from what I've seen. So you perceive, Weir, that when my
+associates and I get into a row we're not quitters either. We shall
+therefore just dismiss all talk of your resignation."
+
+"Very good; I wanted you to know the facts."
+
+Pollock paced to and fro for a time longer.
+
+"What really interests me is your own fight," he remarked at length.
+"If the paper you spoke of should be found, I would be pleased to have
+it translated for you. I should also like to consult with this man
+Martinez; he seems a clever fellow. You expect to settle with this
+quartet who defrauded your father, of course."
+
+"Certainly. But the money isn't the main thing. For no amount of money
+would ever pay for the wrong done my father. I want to make these men
+suffer, suffer as he suffered. Call it a simple desire for revenge if
+you will; that's what it really is. They robbed him of his future as
+well as of his ranch and cattle. They took away hope and implanted in
+his breast terror and remorse wholly undeserved. But for them he might
+have been a happy, prosperous, well-thought of man in this state. Yes,
+revenge is what I want, not money. Revenge that will be for them an
+equivalent of hell."
+
+"But they should pay the legal penalties of their crime as well," the
+lawyer spoke. "Recovery of the original amounts gained by fraud from
+both your father and this man Dent, and accumulated interest as well
+as damages, should be had. In all it should make a large amount."
+
+"I suppose so. Probably enough to clean the four men out. But though
+of course I should enjoy getting the property or money that was
+rightfully my father's and now mine, still I'd let that go if I could
+secure the satisfaction of making the four men pay in the coin I
+want."
+
+"Don't be a fool, Weir. Don't overlook any bets, as the saying is.
+Taking their property away from them will but add to their pain and to
+your pleasure. Now we must see if Dent's heirs can be found. I suggest
+that you employ some good attorney to start a hunt along that line,
+for an action by Dent's relatives will indirectly strengthen your own
+case. I'm doubtful about one thing, however----"
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"Your courts here, and the value of this old Mexican's deposition. The
+case could be brought in a Federal Court as you're a non-resident,
+which would solve the first point, but how much weight would this
+Mexican's testimony have against white men of standing and after a
+period of thirty years. If you could find another witness----"
+
+"There was one, a white boy, so Martinez hinted," Weir said.
+
+"Find him, find him. Search the whole country until you find him!"
+
+"That's a big undertaking, when I don't even know his name or whether
+he's alive."
+
+"Begin nevertheless."
+
+"Well, I had better find my lost paper or secure another statement
+from old Saurez first. At present I have absolutely nothing that a
+court would look at; I haven't as much as I had yesterday. And even
+Martinez has been spirited away."
+
+Pollock smiled.
+
+"I'm interested, greatly interested," he said. "I'm not actively
+engaged in legal affairs at home and I may stay on here awhile longer.
+Perhaps I can assist you; it promises excitement, at any rate. After
+dry corporation matters, it should be a refreshing change--and I
+haven't had a real vacation in years. Possibly this is the time to
+take one."
+
+"I appreciate your kindness in speaking so, Mr. Pollock."
+
+"But I'm quite selfish; I'm seeking entertainment. And your peppery
+affairs promise it. Do you give me permission to take a hand?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+"Then as a beginning I'll go to town. Saurez, you say, was the old
+Mexican's name? And give me the facts again as you know them about the
+affair of your father and the man Dent in the saloon."
+
+Pollock listened closely as Steele Weir repeated the story.
+
+"That's all I know, and it's meager at best," the engineer concluded.
+
+"Pity you didn't get to read the deposition, which would have
+increased your fund of information. More unfortunate it is that you
+haven't the paper itself. But we'll do the best we can without it for
+the present. Kindly have some one drive me in to San Mateo."
+
+"Atkinson, the superintendent, is going there for me. I thought he
+might pick up something of Martinez' whereabouts."
+
+"Where does Judge Gordon live?"
+
+"I can't tell you that. But you can easily learn when you reach
+town."
+
+"Well, the Judge used to handle company matters, you know." The smile
+on Pollock's lips was inscrutable. "I used to have frequent
+conferences with him when I was here at the inception of our project.
+He is very shrewd in certain ways, but he impressed me as being not
+exactly--what shall I say?--'cold steel', for instance." And still
+wearing the thin smile, he went out.
+
+If Weir had not had so many things to make his mind grave, from a
+missing paper and a missing lawyer to mysterious whiskey and fierce
+enemies, he would have leaned back and laughed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE WEAK LINK
+
+
+Though the sun was bright that day, unseen forces were gathering in
+the sky above town, mesa and mountains, not of weather but of fate, to
+loose their lightnings. Sunday peace seemed to reign, the languid
+summer Sunday peace of tranquil nature. Yet even through this there
+was a faint breath of impending events, a quiver or excitement in the
+air, an increasing expectation on the part of men, who sensed but did
+not realize what was to come.
+
+All day whispers and hints had passed among the people in San Mateo
+and out to isolated farms and up nearby creeks, kindling in the
+ignorant, brown-skinned Mexicans a lively interest and an exorbitant
+curiosity. Nothing was said definitely; nothing was promised outright.
+So in consequence speculation ran wild and rumors wilder. The hints
+had to do with the manager of the dam who had shot the strange
+Mexican: something was to be done with him, something was to happen to
+him. He had been arrested, or was to be arrested; he had confessed, or
+was about to confess the murder; he was going to kill other Mexicans,
+or had killed other Mexicans; he was about to raid San Mateo with his
+workmen and slay the town; he was to be hanged;--and so on eternally.
+Uncertain as was everything else, what was sure apparently was that
+something would happen at San Mateo that night.
+
+Families visiting about in wagons spread the news. Horsemen were at
+pains to ride to outlying Mexican ranch houses, for what messenger is
+so welcome as he who brings tales of great doings? He might be sure of
+an audience at once. So it was that the plan craftily put in operation
+by Weir's enemies, to gather and inflame the people, under cover of
+whose pressure and excitement when the engineer was arrested he might
+be slain by a pretended rescue or popular demonstration, whichever
+should serve best, produced the expected result. During the afternoon
+wagons and horsemen and men on foot began to appear in town, to join
+already aroused relatives or friends at their adobe houses or to loaf
+along the main street in groups.
+
+Outwardly there were few signs in the aspect of the Mexican folk of
+something extraordinary developing. But to the sheriff, Madden,
+aroused from an afternoon nap at his home by a telephoned message from
+the county attorney requesting him to come to the court house, the
+unwonted number in the town was in itself a significant fact.
+
+"I didn't know this was a fiesta, Alvarez. What's up with you people?"
+he asked of one he met on the street.
+
+"The fiesta is to be to-night, eh?" the man laughed. "Have you this
+engineer locked up yet?"
+
+"What engineer?"
+
+"The killer, the gun-man, that Weir. It is said he is already arrested
+and is to be hanged from the big cottonwood at dark beside the jail.
+It is also said he is still loose and bringing five hundred workmen to
+burn the town, rob the bank, kill the men and steal the girls."
+
+"If he is to do either, it's news to me," Madden said, and proceeded
+to the office of Lucerio, the county attorney.
+
+Madden was a blunt man, who for policy's sake might close his eyes to
+unimportant political influence as exercised by the Sorenson crowd.
+But he was no mere compliant tool. This was his first term in office.
+He had never yet crossed swords with the cattleman and the others
+associated with him, because the occasion had never arisen. When he
+had allowed himself to be nominated for sheriff, though Sorenson might
+imagine Madden to be at his orders, the latter had accepted the office
+with certain well-defined ideas of his duty.
+
+"What do you want of me?" he asked Lucerio, for whom he had little
+liking.
+
+"I desire to tell you, Madden, that at eight o'clock I'll have a
+warrant for you to serve on the engineer Weir. You'll go to the dam
+and arrest him and bring him in to the jail."
+
+"Well, apparently the whole country except me knew this was to happen.
+The town's filling up as if it were going to be a bull-fight."
+
+"I know nothing of that."
+
+"All right; give me the warrant."
+
+"At eight o'clock. I don't want it served before then."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I have my reasons."
+
+"Sorenson? And Vorse and Burkhardt? They've stirred up this charge
+against the man." Lucerio making an angry answer, he continued. "Well,
+everybody knows you jump when they pull the string. I'll have to serve
+the warrant, naturally. But I'm going to tell you what I think: you've
+faked the evidence you've got; we had the truth from Martinez and
+Janet Hosmer at the inquest; you're trying to railroad Weir to the
+gallows."
+
+"Mr. Sorenson shall know what you've said. As for me"--the Mexican
+swelled with outraged dignity--"the evidence was placed in my hands.
+It warrants the engineer's arrest and trial. You attend to your
+department and I'll attend to mine."
+
+"All to the good, Mr. County Attorney. I'll arrest him; he won't make
+me any trouble on that score. But you won't find it so easy to prove
+his guilt. And afterwards, just look out, for if he doesn't come
+gunning for you and fill your carcass full of lead, I miss my guess.
+You won't be able to hide behind Sorenson, either."
+
+He left the county attorney at that, the latter unable despite all his
+efforts to hide his uneasiness and alarm. Madden reaching the street
+looked at his watch; it was half past five, so he started home for
+supper.
+
+Some way before him he saw Martinez walking. The lawyer did not stop
+to converse with any of the loiterers along the street, but moved
+steadily along. He had come out of Vorse's saloon and was going
+towards his office. Just then the sound of an automobile caused Madden
+to turn his head in time to see Weir speed along but stop with a
+sudden application of brakes as he caught sight of the attorney.
+
+A hail brought Martinez to the car. A few minutes' rapid speech there
+followed. Then the lawyer mounted beside Weir, the machine went on,
+turning into a side street and vanishing. To Madden there was nothing
+unusual in the circumstance, and he only noted the surprise and
+silence along the street at the engineer's passage. The Mexicans would
+know the man wasn't yet arrested at any rate, he thought. But he
+should like to learn what was the purpose in bringing them all to
+town! He would keep an eye open for any lynching nonsense if it were
+attempted.
+
+Weir and Martinez were hastening to Judge Gordon's house, for shortly
+before the engineer had received an unexpected call from Pollock for
+him to join him there. Evidently the eastern lawyer had turned a card
+of some sort; and Weir had gone at once, wondering what the meeting
+might portend. The sight of Martinez, free and composed of hearing,
+walking along the street, further amazed him.
+
+He perceived, however, when the lawyer stepped out to the car from
+Vorse's place that he was pale, his mouth tight-drawn and his eyes
+glittering.
+
+"You got my message?" the latter asked, quickly.
+
+"The telephone message, yes. Janet Hosmer got the paper also."
+
+"They dragged me to Vorse's cellar," Martinez whispered fiercely.
+"They beat me with their fists, Vorse and Burkhardt. Then they tied me
+and squeezed my eyeballs till I could stand the pain no longer and
+told. I've been there ever since, bound and without food or water, the
+devils! Sorenson came with them last night, afterwards. And now he and
+Vorse came again--there they are back there in the bar yet--and gave
+me a draft on a Chicago bank for a thousand dollars and said to get
+out and stay out of New Mexico and never open my mouth about what had
+happened."
+
+"Get in with me," Weir ordered.
+
+At Judge Gordon's house the lawyer said:
+
+"You are going in here? He's one of them."
+
+"I know it. Come in, however. I may need you. You're not going to
+leave San Mateo, but there's no reason why you shouldn't cash the
+draft. That's only part of the damages you'll make them pay for what
+you underwent."
+
+"It isn't money I want from them," Martinez replied, between his
+teeth.
+
+Judge Gordon lived in a rambling adobe house two squares from the
+Hosmer dwelling. It was old but had been kept in good repair, and as
+he had never married he had lived comfortably enough with an old
+Mexican pair as servants. One of these, the woman, admitted the
+visitors at their knock and conducted them, as if expected, to the
+Judge's study, a long room lined with cases of books, mostly legal,
+and filled with old-fashioned furniture.
+
+That something had occurred to change the Judge's aspect during the
+hours in which Pollock had been closeted with him was at once
+apparent. He looked older, broken, haggard of face, terrified.
+
+"I met Mr. Martinez and brought him along," Weir said.
+
+"Was that necessary?" Judge Gordon asked, heavily.
+
+"He's my attorney, for one thing."
+
+"And I've been a prisoner in Vorse's cellar for twenty-four hours for
+another, and you're one of those responsible for my being there and
+for the torture to which I was subjected," Martinez exclaimed,
+glaring.
+
+"Mr. Martinez, I give you my word of honor that I knew nothing of your
+incarceration until this morning."
+
+"That for your word of honor!" the lawyer cried, snapping his fingers
+in the air. "And in any case, you're an accessory after the fact. You
+let me stay."
+
+Pollock stepped forward.
+
+"Is this Mr. Martinez? Glad to meet you, sir. Mr. Weir has spoken very
+favorably of you and of your handling of legal matters for the
+irrigation company, of which I am a director. Pollock is my name. Are
+you a notary? Ah, that is good. There will be some papers to
+acknowledge and witness and so on."
+
+He pointed at seats, seemingly having direction of matters, and the
+visitors sat down. Judge Gordon had sagged down in the padded leather
+chair in which he sat; his face was colorless, his eyes moving
+aimlessly to and fro, his white mustache and hair in disorder.
+
+"Let us begin on business at once," Pollock stated, on his feet as was
+usual when entering a discussion and removing his eye-glasses. "I
+called on Judge Gordon this afternoon after my talk with you, Weir,
+and disclosed the evidence which has been gathered relative to the
+fraud perpetrated on your father and the crime against the man Dent. I
+assumed, and rightly, that to a man of the Judge's legal mind the
+facts we hold would prove the futility of resistance, and I set out to
+convince him of the wisdom of sparing himself a long losing fight, in
+which he would be opposing not only the evidence which was sure to
+convict him, and not only you, Mr. Weir, but our company which
+proposed to see the fight through. I went so far, Weir, as to promise
+him immunity from your wrath and from public prosecution."
+
+Weir arose slowly.
+
+"No," said he, "no."
+
+"But, my dear fellow----"
+
+"No. He made my father's life a hell for thirty years. Why should I
+spare him?"
+
+"If granting him freedom from prosecution did actually spare him
+anything, I should say 'No' also, standing in your place. But with the
+facts made public as they will be, with Judge Gordon losing his
+legislative office and the esteem in which he had been held, with him
+relinquishing the bulk of his fortune as he agrees, with his finding
+it necessary to go elsewhere to live at his time of life, with the
+thought constantly in his mind of how low he has been brought, don't
+you think he will be suffering quite adequately? I should think so. He
+would probably die quicker in prison, but I believe he will suffer
+more outside. See, I don't hesitate to measure the alternatives, for
+the Judge and I have discussed and canvassed the whole situation,
+which was necessary, of course, in order to arrive at a clear
+understanding." And Pollock smiled genially.
+
+"Does he admit my charges?"
+
+"He hasn't denied them."
+
+"Will he admit them?"
+
+"I've outlined exactly what we must have--deeds to his property and an
+acknowledged statement of the Joseph Weir and James Dent affair,
+supplementing the Saurez affidavit, which by the way he at first
+thought we did not possess but which an account of what happened last
+night in the mountains and your recovery of the same"--Pollock's
+eyelid dropped for an instant towards Weir--"convinced him of. This
+statement is not to be produced as evidence against his associates
+except in the last extremity, and if not needed is always to be kept
+secret. We are to give him, when the papers are signed, a draft for
+ten thousand dollars. This will permit him to have something to live
+on. He states that he will want to go from San Mateo at once."
+
+During this speech Weir's eyes had glanced to and fro between the
+lawyer ticking off his words with his glasses and the figure in the
+leather chair. Old and shattered as Judge Gordon had suddenly become,
+wretched as Weir saw him to be, the engineer nevertheless felt no
+pity. The man had been in the conspiracy that had ruined his father;
+he suffered now not because of remorse but through fear of public
+opinion; and was a fox turned craven because he found himself
+enmeshed in a net. And to save his own skin he was selling out his
+friends.
+
+Weir's face went dark, but Pollock quickly stepped forward and drew
+him into a corner of the room.
+
+"Keep calm, man," was the lawyer's low advice. "Do you think if we had
+him tied up as tightly as I've made him believe that I should propose
+a compromise in his case. He's the weak link. Do you think I've had an
+easy time the last three hours bringing him to the point he's at? I
+had to invent evidence that couldn't possibly exist. I had to give him
+a merciless mental 'third degree.' I told him if he refused I was
+going to Sorenson with the same offer, who would jump at the chance.
+And, my dear man, we haven't, in reality, enough proof to convict a
+mouse since you lost that paper. So now, so far as he's concerned, you
+must bend a little, a very little--and you'll be able to hang the
+remaining three."
+
+This incisive reasoning was not to be denied.
+
+"I yield," said Weir.
+
+Beaming, Mr. Pollock walked back to the table.
+
+"Mr. Weir consents," he stated. "Mr. Martinez, if you will go to your
+office and bring the necessary forms and your seal we can make the
+transfers and statement and wind the matter up."
+
+An hour later Judge Gordon had signed the deeds, stock certificates
+from his safe and bills of sale spread before him, passing the
+ownership of lands, cattle and shares in companies to Pollock for
+equitable division between Weir and the Dent heirs if found. The old
+Mexican servants were called in and witnessed his shaky signatures to
+the papers.
+
+At the statement regarding the Dent shooting and Weir fraud, which
+Pollock had dictated to Martinez with Gordon's assistance, he
+staggered to his feet while the pen dropped from his hand.
+
+"I can't sign it, I can't sign it; they would kill me!" he groaned.
+
+The two aged servants stared at him wonderingly.
+
+"My dear Judge, they'll never know of it until it's too late for them
+to do anything--if they ever know," came the easterner's words, in
+smooth persuasiveness.
+
+Judge Gordon brushed a hand over his eyes.
+
+"Give me a moment," he muttered.
+
+He stood for a time motionless. Then he walked across the room and
+opened a door and entered an inner chamber.
+
+"He won't live a year after this," Pollock whispered to his
+companions.
+
+The speaker could have shortened the time immensely and have still
+been safe in his prophecy. For when at the end of five minutes he sent
+the woman to request the Judge to return, she stumbled out of the
+bed-chamber with affrighted eyes. She said the Judge was asleep on his
+bed and could not be aroused.
+
+Sleep of the profoundest, the men discovered on going in. And in his
+fingers was an empty vial. So far as Judge Gordon was concerned Weir
+had had his revenge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE
+
+
+Revenge Weir had. But even in death Judge Gordon, true to his evasive,
+contriving character, had tricked him; and the irony lay in the fact
+that in this last act the trick was unpremeditated, unconscious,
+unintentional. Instead of the signed confession, necessary above
+everything else, which seemed almost in his fingers, the man had left
+a little poison vial.
+
+Night had settled over the earth when the three men, after directing
+the Mexican servants to bring the undertaker, went out of the house,
+for considerable time had been occupied in the discussion and the
+preparation of papers preceding Judge Gordon's tragic end. With him
+Mr. Pollock carried the documents pertaining to the property
+restitution. These, considered in connection with the suicide, would
+constitute something like a confession, he grimly asserted.
+
+Avoiding the main street of San Mateo they drove out of the town for
+camp. The first part of the ride was pursued in silence, for each was
+busy with his own thoughts in consequence of the sudden shocking
+termination of the meeting. When about half way to camp, however,
+their attention was taken from the subject by a sight wholly
+unexpected, a scene of high colors and of a spirit that mocked at what
+had just happened.
+
+Some way off from the road, at one side, two bonfires burned brightly
+before an adobe house, the flames leaping upward in the darkness and
+lighting the long low-roofed dwelling and the innumerable figures of
+persons. At the distance the place was from the highway, perhaps two
+hundred yards, one could make out only the shadowy forms of men--of a
+considerable number of men, at that.
+
+"I never saw any one at that old tumble-down house before, Martinez,"
+Weir remarked, lessening the speed of the car. "Always supposed it
+empty."
+
+"No one does live there. The ground belongs to Vorse, who leases it
+for farming to Oterez. Perhaps Oterez is giving a party there. They
+are dancing."
+
+Weir brought the machine to a full stop, with suspicion rapidly
+growing in his mind. The place was owned by Vorse, for one thing, and
+the number about the house was too large for an ordinary Mexican
+family merry-making, for another. In view of what had occurred the
+previous night all "parties" in the neighborhood of the dam deserved
+inquiry, and this house was but a mile from camp.
+
+They could now hear the sound of music, the shrill quick scrap of a
+pair of fiddles and the notes of guitars. Against the fire-light too
+they could distinguish the whirl of skirts.
+
+"Just run over there, will you, Martinez, and have a look at that
+dance?" Weir said. "See how much whiskey is there, and who the people
+are."
+
+The Mexican jumped down, climbed through the barb-wire fence bordering
+the field and disappeared towards the house.
+
+"I told you about some one giving the men booze last night," the
+engineer addressed his remaining companion. "We found the place off
+south along the hills where that business happened, and stationed a
+man there to warn us if another attempt was made to use the spot. But
+I shouldn't be surprised if this is the location used for to-night;
+it has all the signs. We suspected that this evening would be the real
+blow-out and if the men are going there I shall send down the foremen
+and engineers to break it up. Vorse's owning this house and his being
+the source of the liquor is almost proof. I met Atkinson returning to
+the dam when you sent him back from town and he'll know something is
+up if the workmen have been melting away from camp. This is simply
+another damnably treacherous move of the gang against us to interfere
+with our work, starting a big drunk and perhaps a row. We'll stop it
+right at the beginning."
+
+"Are the officials of this county so completely under Sorenson and his
+crowd's thumbs that they won't move in a case like this?" Pollock
+questioned.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then we must act on our own initiative, as you say."
+
+"That's our only recourse. Giving whiskey isn't actually an illegal
+act--and they're giving it away, not trying to sell it here without a
+government licence."
+
+"The thing's illegal if it's part of a conspiracy to disrupt our work,
+and if we can secure proof that such is the fact it will but add one
+more item to the score to be settled with these San Mateo outlaws."
+
+"There are more men going there. See them?" Weir asked. "You hear them
+on the road ahead of us. They're ducking through the fence and
+crossing to the house. Our workmen. The thing's plain now; they had
+word there would be another 'party' to-night, but they didn't know
+just where until they received word this evening. I suppose the whole
+camp except a few men will be here."
+
+"Won't they turn ugly if you interfere?"
+
+"Can't help that. I'll send men down with axes and when the booze is
+poured on the ground it makes no difference then; the men will be kept
+sober. If they are stubborn, I'll run a new bunch in and fire these
+fellows. But I don't imagine they will quit work, however surly, for
+they know whiskey's no excuse. Men usually cool down after a night's
+sleep."
+
+From where they sat and since Weir had turned out his car lamps, they
+could see the steady string of men emerging from the darkness of the
+field and approaching the house, to quickly dissolve in the gathering
+already there. In their lively steps, as well as in the eager voices
+occasionally raised along the dark road, the men's desire to join in
+the debauch was apparent.
+
+With the swelling of the crowd the scraping of the fiddles became
+louder, the dancing more furious, shouts and yells more frequent,
+while a dense line of men passing and jamming in and out of the door
+pointed only too plainly that inside the house liquor flowed. This
+would be no matter of a few drinks per man, but a big drunk if not
+stopped.
+
+Martinez confirmed this opinion on his return.
+
+"There are two barrels inside and a couple of fellows are dipping it
+up in tin cups like water," said he. "They're not even troubling to
+draw the stuff; the barrels have been placed on end and the heads
+knocked out. It will be the biggest spree San Mateo ever saw, with
+plenty of fighting after awhile. Women, you know, always start fights
+during a spree."
+
+"Those surely are not women from town," Weir exclaimed.
+
+"Oh, no. I never saw them before. Brought in here from somewhere--Santa
+Fé perhaps, El Paso more likely. You know the kind who would mix with
+that crowd--tough girls. They're wearing low necks and short skirts,
+red stockings and all that. You know the kind. Out of joints and dives
+somewhere. There's only a dozen, but they keep circulating and dancing
+with different ones. I just put my head through a window to look inside,
+which is lighted by a big kerosene lamp hanging from the roof; and I
+tell you, gentlemen, it made me sick the way those two fellows were
+dipping up whiskey and the crowd drinking it down."
+
+"And more men coming all the time," Weir stated.
+
+"And more coming, yes. It will be very bad there by midnight. Vorse
+and Burkhardt and Sorenson are managing the thing, of course."
+Martinez lighted a cigarette and stepped into the car. "No mistake
+about that, for Vorse's bartender is one of the men at the barrels.
+And I imagine Judge Gordon knew this thing was coming off though he
+made no mention of it."
+
+"Since we were ignorant of the matter, he naturally wouldn't inform
+us," Pollock remarked, dryly.
+
+"Time to put a stop to the show before it grows bad," Weir stated
+resolutely. And he started the machine.
+
+"If it can be stopped," Martinez replied.
+
+That was the question, whether or not now it would be possible even to
+reach and destroy the barrels inside the house, what with the numbers
+who would oppose the move and what with the state of intoxication that
+must rapidly prevail at the place.
+
+For as they drove away they could already detect in the mad revel
+about the old adobe dwelling a faster beat in the sharp shrieking
+music, a wilder abandon in the movements of the figures about the
+flames, a more reckless, fiercer note in the cries and oaths.
+
+"This is deviltry wholesale," Pollock said. "On a grand scale, one
+might put it."
+
+So thought a horseman who approached and halted almost at the same
+spot where the car had rested. This was Madden who with a warrant for
+Weir's arrest in his pocket had arrived opposite the house a moment
+after the automobile's departure. He had secured the warrant at eight
+o'clock according to the county attorney's request, but he had taken
+his own time about setting off to serve it.
+
+For a quarter of a mile he had been interested in the evidences of
+unwonted hilarity at the usually untenanted structure. Now he sat in
+his saddle, silent and motionless, observing the distant scene. He
+easily guessed the men were from the construction camp and that liquor
+was running.
+
+"I can almost smell it here, Dick," he addressed his horse.
+
+But two circumstances puzzled him. One was that there had been no news
+in town of such a big affair impending for the night; the second, that
+there were women present--for no Mexican, however ignorant, would take
+or allow his women folks to attend such a howling show. Coming on top
+of the crowd in town, he wondered if this business might not be linked
+up with Weir's affairs. These were his workmen and this was Vorse's
+farm-house and very likely Vorse's liquor. After he had arrested the
+engineer he would look into the thing.
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when he had gone on, other passers-by paused
+for a minute on the road to stare at the amazing picture across the
+field. These were Dr. Hosmer and Janet, Johnson and his daughter Mary:
+the two men being in the doctor's car, the two girls in Janet's
+runabout.
+
+"What on earth is going on there!" Janet exclaimed, when the two
+machines had pulled up.
+
+The two fires, fed by fresh fuel, were leaping higher than ever,
+bringing out in strong relief the long squat building, the dark,
+restless, noisy throng, and the space of illuminated earth. Against
+the night the flames and building and mob of hundreds of men seemed a
+crimson vision from some inferno to an accompaniment of mad music.
+
+"The camp's gone on a tear; drive ahead," her father said. "This isn't
+a sight for you girls to look at."
+
+And with that the two cars sped forward towards the dam, where on this
+night so much was converging. For their occupants already had had an
+experience that had started them at once to seek the man around whose
+figure were swirling a hundred passions and dark currents of destiny.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+WITH FANGS BARED
+
+
+That Sunday afternoon Janet Hosmer had awakened about sunset from an
+after-dinner sleep, rested and refreshed, with her mind continuing to
+be occupied by thoughts of Steele Weir about whom had eddied her
+dreams. The man was no longer the mystery he had been, since now she
+knew all the circumstances of his life, and on that account was
+nearer, more human, and yet as compelling.
+
+That on his part his interest went beyond mere friendship she had
+recognized from his voice and eyes when they were together. Ah, in
+truth, how his tones deepened and his look betrayed his feelings! At
+the thought Janet's heart beat faster and her cheeks grew warm and an
+indefinable joy seemed to fill her breast. She would not deny it: his
+presence, his touch gave her a greater happiness than she had ever
+known. At a single stride, as it were, he had come into the middle of
+her life and dominated her mind and changed her whole outlook.
+
+How he too had changed and grown in the coming! From the avaricious,
+calculating, heartless manager of the construction work, as she seeing
+through colored San Mateo eyes had believed him to be, he now stood
+forth a figure of power, undaunted by difficulties, undismayed by
+enemies however numerous, fearless to a fault, stern perhaps--but who
+would not have been made stern in his place?--and determined, cool,
+resourceful, alert, and of an integrity as firm and upright as a
+marble shaft. Yet beneath this exterior his heart was quick and tender
+for those who needed sympathy or help, and his hand swift to aid.
+
+More than once a hot flush burned on Janet's face, as sitting there on
+the vine-hung veranda in the gathering dusk, recollection assailed her
+with memories of wasted kindnesses given the infamous Ed Sorenson, of
+trust bestowed and of love plighted. That passage in her life seemed
+to leave her contaminated forever. It burned in her soul like a
+disgrace or a dishonorable act. But Steele Weir--and she swam in
+glorious ether at the thought--did not appear to view it in that
+light.
+
+Juanita running in the twilight to the house interrupted her
+introspection.
+
+"I came to tell you," the Mexican girl exclaimed panting before
+Janet.
+
+"Tell me what?" For Juanita's reappearance in itself was unusual, as
+Sunday afternoon and evening were her own to spend at home.
+
+"People are saying Mr. Weir is to be arrested and hanged from a tree
+in the court house yard! Everybody has come to town to see. Three
+uncles and aunts and nine cousins of ours have already come to our
+house from where they live four miles down the river. All the town is
+talking about it. But though I said nothing, I knew how Mr. Weir had
+saved you and that he had done nothing to be hanged for. If anybody is
+to be killed it ought to be that Ed Sorenson."
+
+"Are you sure of this, Juanita?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Miss Janet. It is so."
+
+"Then this is part of the plot against him; let me think. They might
+arrest him but they would never dare try to hang him, unless they
+could pretend----"
+
+What they might pretend Janet never stated, as at that instant a motor
+car dashed up and stopped before the gate. Even in the gloom she made
+out that the figure garbed in a gray dust coat was Sorenson's.
+Springing out of the machine, he jerked the gate open and strode
+towards the house, while a premonition of a fresh and unpleasant turn
+of affairs quivered in Janet's mind.
+
+"I've come back again, you see," he said. "Step inside where you can
+hear what I have to say."
+
+The words were like an order; the man's manner, indeed, was
+overbearing and brutal. But the girl concealing her resentment,
+preceded him into the house and bade Juanita light a lamp.
+
+"And now you get out!" Sorenson commanded the servant in so savage a
+tone that she fled to the kitchen without waiting to consult Janet's
+eyes. "I see your father isn't here," he continued, addressing Janet.
+
+The latter made no reply. To be sure, Dr. Hosmer was not in the room
+but he was in the house, sleeping. Let the cattleman think him absent
+if he wished.
+
+"So much the better; if he's not about, he won't try to interfere,"
+the man went on. "Now, my girl, I've learned all about your tricks,
+and----"
+
+"Sir, you talk like that to me in my own house!" Janet broke in, with
+a flash of eyes. "You will walk out of that door this instant and
+never set foot here again."
+
+"Will I, you slippery young Jezebel? I'll do nothing of the kind until
+I'm ready, which will be when you've handed over that paper. Don't try
+to deny that you have it or Weir has it; I suppose he has now, and
+I'll be forced to go shoot him down as he deserves. But I came here
+first to make sure. It would be just like the rest of the schemes of
+you two to have you keep it, thinking I'd be fooled. I have half a
+notion to wring your white neck for lying to me to-day--lying, while
+all the time you knew my son was hanging between life and death."
+
+So savage was his voice, so threatening his visage and air that Janet
+retreated a step. His hands worked as if he actually felt her soft
+throat in his clutch; his huge body and big beefy head swayed towards
+her ominously; while his eyes carried a baleful light that revealed in
+full intensity the man's real brutal soul. Hitherto carefully coated
+in an appearance of respectability fitted to a station of wealth,
+influence and prominence, he now stood as he truly was, domineering,
+repellant, lawless. Janet could at that minute measure the close
+kinship of father and son.
+
+"Fortunately a man in Bowenville recognized Ed, or I should never have
+known he had been injured," Sorenson went on. "So your little scheme
+to keep me in ignorance went wrong. The doctor 'phoned me about five
+and I took my wife and we rushed there, and I have just this instant
+returned. Do you know what the doctor says? Ed will live, but be a
+life cripple, a useless wreck, a bundle of smashed bones, always
+sitting in a chair, always eating out his heart. And all because of
+you and that engineer! Ed was conscious; he told me the real story
+about which you lied,----"
+
+"I did not lie," Janet stated, firmly.
+
+Sorenson made an angry gesture as if to sweep aside this declaration.
+
+"He told me how you promised to slip away with him to spend a week in
+the mountains, and how you warned this Weir so that the two of you
+could trick my son and get him out of the way. You, who always
+pretended to be so innocent and virtuous! And then Weir caused the
+accident up there in the hills that has crippled my boy for life! Did
+it to get him out of the path to you, and you helped, like the
+traitress you are; and the two of you took the paper."
+
+Janet's form had stiffened at these insulting speeches.
+
+"Your son is the liar," said she. "Did he tell you how he flung a
+blanket over my head as Juanita and I were coming out of Martinez'
+office? How he tied my hands and feet and carried me off like a
+victim--and victim he intended me to be! Yes, Mr. Weir rescued me
+because Juanita met and told him what had happened and he followed.
+Your son was drunk. He tried to commit a crime because I had rejected
+him a week before, on learning that during our engagement he had
+endeavored to mislead another girl. A drunkard and a criminal both,
+that's your son. And he alone brought on his accident by his drunken,
+reckless driving. Now I've told you the truth; leave the house!"
+
+"You can't put that kind of a story over on me," he snarled. "I
+believe what Ed said. Even if he has had affairs with other girls,
+that makes no difference now. You tried to double-cross him; you've
+wrecked his body and life; and you shall pay for it."
+
+Neither of the pair in their intense excitement had heard a wagon
+drive to a stop before the house. Whether in fact they would have
+heard a peal of thunder might be a question. Sorenson, enraged by his
+son's injury and burning for revenge, was oblivious to all else but
+his passion, while Janet Hosmer, divided between contempt and fear,
+had but the single thought of ridding herself of the man.
+
+"You cannot injure me," she said, in reply to his savage utterance.
+
+"I'll drive you and your father out of this town and this state," he
+exclaimed. "They shall know here in San Mateo, and wherever you go if
+it's in my power to reach there, what sort of a pretending,
+double-faced, disreputable wanton----"
+
+"You coward!" Janet burst out.
+
+Then she turned to flee out of the room to arouse her father. But
+Sorenson was too quick for her; he sprang forward and seized one of
+her wrists.
+
+"No you don't, you perfumed wench!" he growled.
+
+A scream formed on Janet's lips. The heavy, rage-crimsoned face bent
+over her as if to kill her by its very nearness. Brute the man was,
+and as a brute he appeared determined she should feel his power. She
+pulled back, jerking to free herself, and shrieked.
+
+Intervention came from an unexpected quarter. Rushing into the room
+came the rancher Johnson, followed by his daughter.
+
+"Let go of her," the man ordered, harshly.
+
+Sorenson looked about over his shoulder.
+
+"Keep out of this, and get out," he answered.
+
+Johnson leaped forward and struck the other on the jaw. The cattleman
+releasing his hold on Janet staggered back, at the same time thrusting
+a hand under his coat.
+
+But the rancher's pistol was whipped forth first.
+
+"You'd try that game, would you?" Johnson said, with his ragged beard
+out-thrust and stiff. "Put up your hands; I want to see how they look
+sticking up over your head."
+
+Sorenson though now holding them in sight did not at once comply.
+
+"Johnson, you're butting into something that doesn't concern you," he
+said, endeavoring to speak calmly.
+
+"You've made one mistake in striking me; don't make another by keeping
+that gun pointed at my head. Remember I've a mortgage on your place
+that you'll wish renewed one of these days."
+
+The expression of scorn on the rancher's face was complete.
+
+"Trying that line, are you?" he sneered. "Think you can play the
+money-lender now and scare me? You didn't look much like a banker
+reaching for your gun; you just looked like a killer then, a plain
+bar-room killer--but I beat you to the draw. You've got fat and slow,
+haven't you, since early days when you use to put lead into poor
+devils whose stuff you wanted. And you didn't look like a banker to
+me, either, trying to bulldoze Janet when I came in; you looked like
+the big dirty coward you are. Aha, here's the doctor! Now just tell
+him how it comes you can order me out of his house, and why you were
+threatening Janet and making her scream."
+
+The physician turned a white, angry countenance to Sorenson.
+
+"I heard the scream. Is it true you were abusing my daughter?" he
+demanded, stepping in front of the man.
+
+"I came here because I learned my son Ed had been broken to bits
+through her trickery and damnable----"
+
+The words were cut off by the doctor's hand which smote the
+blasphemous lips uttering them.
+
+Even more than Johnson's blow did this slap upon the mouth enrage the
+cattleman. His face became congested, his shoulders heaved, but behind
+the doctor was the revolver still directed at his head.
+
+"You've come here uninvited and you've said too much," Doctor Hosmer
+stated in cold even tones. "You may be the town magnate, but you're
+only a ruffian and a crook after all. You can't bluff or bully us.
+More than that, you've insulted my daughter and me beyond any future
+reparation. As for your son, he got less than he deserved." He turned
+to the rancher. "You came just in time, it seems. Please see that he
+leaves the house."
+
+Johnson waved with his gun significantly towards the door.
+
+"Move right along lively," he added. "And I'll go along with you to
+see that you don't hamstring my horses, which I don't put past an
+underhanded cattle-thief like you."
+
+Sorenson seemed striving for words that would adequately blast those
+before him, but they appeared lacking. With a last malignant glare he
+walked out upon the veranda and down across the yard, with his guard
+following him.
+
+When Johnson returned after Sorenson's departure in his car, he was
+grinning sardonically.
+
+"I shouldn't want him running among my cattle; he'd bite 'em and give
+'em the rabies," he remarked.
+
+Janet caught and pressed his toil-roughened hand.
+
+"You'll never know how much I thank you for coming in just when you
+did," she cried.
+
+"Pshaw, your father would have showed up and stopped him."
+
+"I'm not so sure. Father has no weapon, and that man did have one. It
+was the sight of your pistol that made him cower. You couldn't have
+chosen a more lucky minute to arrive."
+
+"Well, it was a little bit timely, as it turned out. Considering too
+that we were coming to see you anyway, it was just as well to walk in
+when we could do some good. Mary has something for you to read, if you
+read Spanish."
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"That's good. Show 'em what you have, daughter."
+
+Mary drew a knotted handkerchief from her bosom and undid the knots.
+Appeared the doubled paper she had found. This she passed to Janet.
+
+"Why,--why, this is the document I had!" the latter exclaimed,
+joyfully. "Where did you find it?"
+
+"Up by the smashed automobile, when father and I were at the cabin."
+She exchanged a guarded look with her father. "There are names in it
+that made me think it might be valuable. So when father came back from
+Bowenville I showed it to him. But neither of us could read it. We
+thought we'd better bring it to you to read."
+
+"It is valuable, very valuable. I had it when I was seized by Ed
+Sorenson and he took it away from me. Evidently, then, it fell from
+his pocket at the time of the accident. Yes, indeed, it's important.
+It means everything to certain parties. I'll read it, but you
+understand what it tells is private at present."
+
+"We understand--and I think I know what it's going to say," Johnson
+remarked, grimly.
+
+Thereupon while the others listened Janet read a translation of the
+long document. To her and her father the facts were not new, for Weir
+had already related such as he knew of the happenings in Vorse's
+saloon on that eventful day thirty years previous. Nor for that matter
+were they strange to Johnson and his daughter, though of course
+neither Janet nor her father were aware of the rancher's more intimate
+knowledge of the subject.
+
+"A pretty good story as far as it goes, but like all lawyers' papers
+long-winded," Johnson stated, critically.
+
+"What do you mean, far as it goes?" Janet asked, curiously. "Did you
+know this old Mexican? Did you ever hear him tell about the thing?"
+
+"I knew he was there at the time, but he never told me anything."
+
+Here Dr. Hosmer spoke.
+
+"Saurez died yesterday. It must have been shortly after he made this
+deposition. He died in Vorse's saloon, which gives a color of
+suspicion to his death. In addition, Martinez, as you know, was
+dragged away somewhere."
+
+"Then Vorse learned old Saurez had blabbed, and killed him," Johnson
+said, in a convinced tone. "Vorse is a bad bird, I want to say. But so
+are all of them, Sorenson, Burkhardt and Judge Gordon as well."
+
+Janet brought the talk back to the subject.
+
+"You make me still wonder, Mr. Johnson," she said. "You seemed to
+think there's more to the account than is told in this paper."
+
+Again the rancher and his daughter glanced at each other, hesitatingly.
+
+"Tell them, father," Mary broke forth all at once. "They know this
+much, and you know you can trust them."
+
+The man, however, shook his head with a certain dogged purpose.
+
+"If this is just a paper in some trifling lawsuit or other, it will be
+better if I keep my own counsel," he stated. "I've riled Sorenson
+considerable as it is now, and I don't care particularly about having
+him gunning on my trail active-like. If it really mattered----"
+
+"It does matter; it matters everything," Janet cried, "if you really
+know something more!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because it concerns Mr. Weir. The Joseph Weir described and named in
+this affidavit was his father. He believes these men robbed his
+father; this paper proves it, but not absolutely, for Mexican evidence
+here in this country doesn't carry as much weight against white
+men--especially men as rich and strong as these named--as it would in
+other places perhaps. You know that. This paper was obtained for Mr.
+Weir."
+
+"Oho, so that's the way of it!" Johnson said, with a long drawn-out
+tone.
+
+He regarded the paper in silence for a time, busy with his thoughts,
+absently twisting his beard, until at length a look of satisfaction
+grew on his face.
+
+"Well, well, this is fine," he went on presently. "I never thought I
+should be able to pay the obligation I owe him, and I won't fully at
+that, but this will help. No, that paper doesn't tell all, for I
+reckon Saurez didn't see all." He glanced triumphantly at the doctor
+and the girl. "But I did."
+
+"You!" both exclaimed.
+
+But before he could explain, the memory of the cattleman's threat
+recurred to Janet to banish thoughts of aught else than Weir's danger
+from her mind.
+
+"Mr. Sorenson said he was going up to the dam to shoot Mr. Weir," she
+exclaimed. "We must give warning."
+
+"Did he say he was going himself?" Johnson asked.
+
+"To get the paper, yes." Then Janet continued anxiously. "But the
+paper isn't all. His son told him what occurred in the mountains and I
+believe the man wants to harm Mr. Weir as well as to obtain the paper.
+Perhaps he plans on gaining the document first, then killing him. In
+any case, we must put Mr. Weir on guard."
+
+"I'll just drive up there and tell the engineer," Johnson stated.
+"Shouldn't be surprised if I got a chance yet to use my gun. You girls
+can stay here."
+
+Janet gazed at him with a flushing face.
+
+"The man could go to the dam and kill Mr. Weir and get safely home
+while you're starting with your team," said she. "No, we must drive
+there in a car. Father, you take Mr. Johnson in yours, and I'll carry
+Mary in mine. We'll go along of course, for we'll not remain here in
+the cottage alone with such terrible things happening in San Mateo."
+
+And to this there was no dissent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE ALARM
+
+
+At the dam Weir found Meyers and Atkinson anxiously waiting his
+return. The sudden concerted melting away of workmen from camp had
+been warning to his subordinates that the danger of a general spree
+had taken definite form, which the report of a pair of young engineers
+confirmed when they followed a group of laborers to the old adobe
+house and beheld the beginning of the debauch.
+
+"Get out all the staff, Meyers, and you, Atkinson, all the foremen and
+sober men left, then go down the road and put that joint out of
+business, taking axes and whatever is necessary."
+
+"And if they fight?" Meyers asked.
+
+"Try first to placate them. If that fails, some of you draw them off
+in order to permit the others to enter the house and destroy the
+whiskey. It's a tough job, but you may succeed. If the crowd turns
+ugly as it may, being drunk, come back. No need to take the risk of
+broken heads or being beaten up. See, however, if you can't outwit the
+outfit. Possibly you could push that mud house over from the rear by
+means of a beam; that would do the business. I leave it to you to
+decide what's best to do, men, after you've examined the situation."
+
+"The camp will be unguarded except for you and the two men with you,"
+Weir's assistant suggested. "If the crowd drinking down at that place
+should take the notion to come here and tear things up, there would
+be nothing to hinder them. A few should stay, anyway, I imagine--half
+a dozen, who can use guns."
+
+"Well, pick out six to remain," the other agreed.
+
+For Meyers' suggestion had raised a disagreeable possibility. It was
+never safe to ignore precautions when a gang of two or three hundred
+rough, active laborers, however loyal when sober, were made
+irresponsible and crazy by liquor; and one stage of drunkenness in
+such men was usually manifested in a wild desire for violence. The
+scheme of Weir's enemies might comprise using this very act for
+wrecking the camp.
+
+Six men, to be sure, would offer little resistance to stemming the
+movement once it was started, but the sight of steel in the guards'
+hands might cause even a reckless mob to pause long enough for an
+appeal. If the men should be brought to listen, they could probably be
+diverted from their purpose, as impassioned crowds are easily swayed
+by men of force.
+
+In any case the camp and dam should be defended to the last. That went
+without saying.
+
+Meyers and Atkinson had little more than departed with their muster of
+engineers, foremen and sober workmen, some fifty in all, when the two
+cars driven by Dr. Hosmer and Janet arrived at headquarters. To the
+occupants of both machines the camp appeared singularly dark and
+silent, the office building and the commissary shack alone showing
+lights.
+
+The four visitors entered the main room in the former building, where
+they found Mr. Pollock and Martinez.
+
+"Mr. Weir stepped out for a moment to make a round of the camp and the
+horse corrals," the easterner replied in answer to an inquiry from the
+doctor. "Will you be seated?" And he politely placed chairs for Janet
+and Mary, while his look scrutinized the party with discreet
+interest.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Martinez, you've escaped!" Janet exclaimed, after a surprised
+stare at the lawyer.
+
+The Mexican smiled, bowed and drew one point of his black mustache
+through his fingers.
+
+"I have indeed, Miss Janet," said he. "Not without an unpleasant
+experience, however. I understand you secured the paper concerning
+which I telephoned you, and though I understand it has since been
+lost--through no fault of yours--I desire to express my thanks for
+your excellent assistance in the matter."
+
+"But it has been found again; we have it with us."
+
+Martinez gave a start, none the less sincere for being dramatic.
+
+"What! Saurez' deposition? Weir thought it burned. Why, this is the
+most wonderful luck in the world! It gives us the whip-hand again."
+
+Janet nodded.
+
+"Mary Johnson here found it in a crack in the rocks when she and her
+father went up to the cabin to bring Ed Sorenson down. Father has it.
+That's one reason we're here. But there's another; Mr. Sorenson has
+learned of his son's accident, has seen him, talked with him, been
+told lies and now is in a dreadful rage, threatening every one
+concerned. He was at our house and made a scene. He's coming here, or
+so he said, to kill Mr. Weir and obtain the document. So we hurried to
+the dam to give warning."
+
+At this juncture Mr. Pollock stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. Sorenson hasn't yet appeared, and I assure you he will be
+prevented from harming any one if he comes. You are Miss Janet Hosmer,
+I judge, of whom I've heard so much that is praiseworthy. Will you
+allow me to introduce myself? I'm Mr. Pollock, a company director,
+and to a degree in Mr. Weir's confidence."
+
+Janet expressed her pleasure at his acquaintance and in turn
+introduced her father and the Johnsons.
+
+"Mr. Weir spoke of you to us, but we weren't aware he had informed you
+of the paper." Then she added, "But he would wish to, naturally."
+
+Weir's voice, without, in conversation with some one caused them all
+to look towards the door. In the panel of light falling on the
+darkness before the house they perceived the engineer's tall figure by
+a horse, from which the rider was dismounting. Letting the reins drag
+and leaving the horse to stand, the latter walked with Weir into the
+room.
+
+"Why, this is a delightful surprise!" the engineer exclaimed on
+beholding the four who had come while he was out. "And unexpected."
+His eyes rapidly interrogated the different faces. "I suppose it's
+business, not pleasure, that brings you."
+
+"That's so," said Johnson, the rancher, nodding.
+
+"Well, Madden is here on business, too, it seems." He glanced at Mr.
+Pollock. "Mr. Madden is our sheriff and he has a warrant for my
+arrest." He turned back to the officer. "You come at a bad time for my
+affairs. You saw that big show at the old house half way down the
+road? That crowd is made up of my workmen, who are being entertained
+with free whiskey, and there's no telling but what they may come here
+to tear things up. The whiskey is furnished by Vorse, I suspect, and
+is being served at Vorse's place. Your warrant is inspired by Vorse
+and others, isn't it? The two circumstances coming at the same moment,
+the free drunk and my arrest, look fishy to me. What do you think? I'm
+in charge of a property here representing a good deal of money and I
+should hate to be absent if the men took the idea into their heads to
+turn the camp upside down, especially if the idea was inspired by
+Vorse and his friends."
+
+"I haven't served the warrant yet," Madden replied.
+
+"And you know that I'm not going to skip the country at the prospect
+of your serving it?"
+
+"No. There's no hurry; I'll just sit around for a while. And
+understand, Weir, this arrest is none of my doings, except officially.
+I take no stock in the yarn about your having attacked the greaser you
+killed. Martinez' and Miss Janet's testimony at the inquest satisfied
+me in that respect."
+
+Mr. Pollock now drew Weir aside for a whispered conference. When they
+rejoined the others the engineer made the lawyer acquainted with the
+sheriff.
+
+"Mr. Weir has agreed to my suggestion to take you into our confidence,
+Mr. Madden," he stated. "There may be other warrants for you to serve
+soon, and I'm sure you will respect what we reveal. All of us here
+except you know the facts I'm about to relate; indeed, have shared in
+them to an extent; and in addition to our word we'll present proof.
+You know Dr. Hosmer and his daughter certainly, you probably know Mr.
+Johnson and the young lady with him, and are aware whether their
+statements are to be relied on."
+
+"They are," Madden answered, without hesitation.
+
+"You're already convinced of the truth of Weir's innocence in the
+charge of murder now being preferred against him. Well, now, a friend
+at court is worth something; and we propose to make you that friend."
+
+"I'm not against him like most of the town, anyway," was the sheriff's
+answer.
+
+"Go ahead with your explanation," Pollock said to the engineer.
+
+Thereupon Weir briefly sketched out events for the officer as they had
+occurred and as showing the motives which had inspired his enemies in
+seeking to destroy him:--the original plot against his father, his
+determination to uncover the four conspirators, the episode at the
+restaurant in Bowenville, the discovery of Ed Sorenson as the hirer of
+the dead Mexican assassin, the obtaining of Saurez' deposition and
+Martinez' imprisonment in Vorse's saloon cellar, Janet's abduction and
+rescue and the loss of the paper.
+
+"But the paper isn't lost," Dr. Hosmer interrupted. "Mary Johnson
+found it and here it is." With which he drew the crumpled document
+from his breast pocket and laid it on the table.
+
+"You have it again!" Weir exclaimed. "You found it, Mary!" He stepped
+forward and took the girl's hand in his for a moment. "You're a friend
+indeed to bring this back to me."
+
+"I owed you more than that," she said, coloring.
+
+"But Mr. Sorenson has learned about his son and the paper and
+everything that happened, except Ed Sorenson told him lies instead of
+the truth," Janet put in. "He's terribly angry at all of us. He said
+he would kill you for crippling Ed."
+
+"Sorenson is welcome to try," Weir responded, with a quick blaze in
+his eyes.
+
+At this point Mr. Pollock interposed.
+
+"You didn't finish your story, Weir. Relate for Mr. Madden's benefit
+what occurred at Judge Gordon's house."
+
+This tragic conclusion to the afternoon's happenings the engineer
+told, though remarking that the company director should be the true
+narrator. At his announcement that Judge Gordon had taken his own life
+by poison his listeners remained dumbfounded.
+
+"He's dead, then?" Madden asked, at last.
+
+"Yes. And the transfer of property made to Mr. Pollock amounts to an
+acknowledgment of his guilt. Now, I should like to have Martinez read
+this deposition, for I've never heard its contents myself."
+
+This the Mexican did, translating the Spanish paragraphs into English
+with fluent ease, ending by reading the list of witnesses. Martinez
+gave the paper a slap of his hand.
+
+"And old Saurez was found dead in Vorse's saloon by me an hour after
+he had signed this," he said. "Draw your own conclusions."
+
+Madden shifted on his seat. He glanced at the document and at the
+others and then gazed out the door at the darkness.
+
+"Looks like a clear case; I always imagined if these men's past was
+dug into there would be a lot of crooked business turned up. But
+granting that everything is as shown, with Lucerio the county attorney
+under Sorenson's thumb and the community as it is there's a question
+if Saurez' statement even will be enough to convict them."
+
+At that Janet jumped up, her eyes gleaming.
+
+"That is not all the proof, not all by any means!" she cried.
+
+"What more is there?"
+
+"Mr. Johnson's evidence."
+
+"Johnson's!" came in surprised tones from all four of the men
+uninformed of the rancher's story.
+
+"Yes, he saw the man Dent killed and the plotters make your father,
+Mr. Weir, believe he had done the killing."
+
+Steele stared at Johnson dumbfounded.
+
+"Just that; I saw the whole dirty trick worked, looking through the
+back door of the saloon."
+
+"Then you were the boy!" Weir gasped. "The boy who looked in! After
+thirty years I supposed that boy gone, lost, vanished beyond
+finding."
+
+"I stayed right here," was the reply. "Of course I kept my mouth shut
+about what I had seen. I worked on ranches and rode range and at last
+got the little place on Terry Creek and married. Nothing strange in my
+remaining in the country where I grew up, especially as I only knew
+the cattle business."
+
+Weir swung about to Madden.
+
+"Here's a live witness," said he. "With the other proof his evidence
+should be final."
+
+"Whenever you say, I'll arrest the men. As for this warrant I have,
+I'll just continue to carry it in my pocket," the sheriff stated. "I
+must remark that I never heard of a more villainous plot, taking it
+all around, than you've brought to light."
+
+"And the charges must cover everything," Pollock said sternly. "From
+Dent's murder to the conspiracy against the irrigation company."
+
+"I'll stay here in case you need me to stop any trouble with your
+workmen," Madden remarked.
+
+But trouble though imminent was coming from another direction, as was
+suddenly shown when a man, dust-covered and hatless, rushed into the
+office.
+
+"They're on the way," he cried.
+
+"Who? The workmen?" Weir demanded.
+
+"No. I don't know anything about the workmen, but a bunch of Mexicans,
+fifty or more, are headed this way to blow up the dam. I saw and heard
+them."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"At the spring a mile south. I was watching down there, where Atkinson
+had sent me after supper, relieving the man who kept lookout during
+the afternoon. That was where the booze was dealt out last night, you
+remember. I was sitting there when I heard a crowd coming. At first I
+thought it was our men, but when they stopped to drink and smoke, I
+saw by their talk they were Mexicans. But there was one white man with
+them, a leader. He and a Mexican talked in English. They're to raid
+the camp, crawling up the canyon, to dynamite the dam first, then fire
+the buildings."
+
+"Then they're on the road here now?"
+
+"Yes." The speaker licked his lips. "I cut along the hillside until I
+got ahead of them, but it was slow going in the dark and stumbling
+through the sage. They must be close at hand by this time, though I
+came faster than they did. The white man said to the Mexican that they
+wanted to reach the dam just at moonrise, and that will be pretty
+quick now."
+
+"Go to the bunk-house and call the men waiting there, and get a gun
+yourself," Weir ordered. "The storekeeper will give you one." When the
+messenger had darted out, he looked at the others. "You must take
+these girls away from here, doctor, at once."
+
+"But I don't go," Johnson snapped forth, drawing his revolver and
+giving the cylinder a spin.
+
+"I never could hit anything, and haven't had a firearm in my hand for
+years, but I can try," Pollock stated. "This promises to be
+interesting, very interesting."
+
+"Very," said Weir.
+
+For a little he stood in thought, while the others gazed at him
+without speaking. His straight body seemed to gather strength and
+power before their eyes, his clean-cut features to become hard and
+masterful.
+
+"Up the canyon he said they were coming, didn't he?" he remarked at
+last, more to himself than to them. "Very well, so much the better.
+Johnson, you and Madden take charge of the men when they come and line
+them along the hillside this side of the dam. Put out all lights."
+With which he strode out of the building.
+
+They looked after him in uncertainty.
+
+"I'm not going; you may be hurt, and need me," Mary stated, with a
+stubborn note in her voice.
+
+"Then keep out of reach--and run for town if the ruffians get into
+camp," was her father's answer.
+
+"I stay too," Janet exclaimed, resolutely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+NO QUARTER
+
+
+The peril threatening the unfinished dam now alone engaged Steele
+Weir's mind. Personal considerations did not enter into his
+calculations, least of all thought of personal danger; for when he
+placed himself in an undertaking whatever rested under his hand, as in
+this case the irrigation company's property, became for him a trust to
+attend, to direct, to guard. Even more than if it had been his own
+property did he feel the obligation, for the interests concerned were
+not his. But the matter went deeper than a prospective money loss; it
+struck down to principles and rights--the principles of order and
+industry as against viciousness and havoc; the rights of law-abiding
+men who create as against the wantonness of lawless men who would
+destroy.
+
+Were it his own workmen who, inflamed by drink and incited by a spirit
+of recklessness, were coming to wreck the camp in a moment of mad
+intoxication, he would have made allowances for the cause. Before
+resorting to extreme measures in defending his charge, he first would
+have sought to bring them to their senses. Drunken men are men
+unbalanced, irrational.
+
+But here was another case: an attack by a secret, sober, malevolent
+band, who in cold blood approached to demolish the company works. Not
+liquor moved them on their mission, but money--money paid by his arch
+enemies. The men were simply hired tools, brazenly indifferent no
+doubt to crimes, desperate in character certainly, for a handful of
+coins ready to wipe out a million dollars' worth of property and
+effort. Such deserved no consideration or quarter.
+
+Weir proposed to give none. With enemies of this kind he had but one
+policy, strike first and strike with deadly force. One does not seek
+to dissuade a rattlesnake; one promptly stamps it under heel. One
+cannot compromise with ravenous wolves; one shoots them down. One does
+not wait to see how far a treacherous foe will go; one forestalls and
+crushes him before he begins. Moreover, if wise, one does it in such
+fashion that the enemy will not arise from the blow.
+
+With the information given him by the guard posted at the spring Weir
+immediately grasped the true nature of the plot. The "whiskey party"
+was but a means of withdrawing the workmen from the scene, of
+weakening the camp, while a picked company of ruffians wrecked the
+property. It was an assault intended to wipe out the works and end
+construction, coincident with his arrest. Both the company and he were
+to pay the penalty for resisting the powers that rule San Mateo. And
+if the tale were spread that the destruction had been wrought by his
+workmen while drunk, who would doubt it?
+
+Like shadows the band of Mexican desperadoes would come, dynamite the
+dam, fire the buildings, stampede the horses, and like shadows vanish
+again. In the unexpectedness of the raid, in the confusion, in the dim
+light, no one would with certainty be able to say who the assailants
+were. A scheme ferocious in its conception and diabolical in its
+cunning! But there was one flaw--the element of chance. Chance had
+given Weir warning.
+
+A strong man warned is a strong man armed.
+
+As the engineer stood in the office, swiftly measuring the imminent
+menace of which he had just been told, calculating the meager
+instruments of defense at hand, his mind sweeping up all the salient
+aspects, features, advantages and disadvantages of the situation, he
+seized on the one weak spot in the attacking party's plan. At that
+spot he would strike.
+
+So giving Johnson and Madden the order to take charge of the little
+handful of guards, he had plunged out into the night.
+
+The men from the bunk-house were already running toward the office,
+before the door of which the rancher gathered them together to make
+sure of their arms and ammunition. All told, when Martinez and Pollock
+presently came from the store with guns, the little party numbered
+eleven.
+
+"Is this all there are of us?" Dr. Hosmer asked.
+
+"We are worth all that crowd that's coming," Johnson exclaimed, taking
+a spare gun Martinez had brought him.
+
+"Did Weir send the rest of the engineers down to that house? I
+understood so."
+
+"That's where they are, I reckon."
+
+Dr. Hosmer considered for a minute.
+
+"I can be there in five minutes in my car. The road is on the north
+side of the stream, as is this camp: the gang that's heading here to
+blow things up is coming up from the south, so it will not block the
+way. Men could be here in twenty minutes from down yonder by
+running."
+
+"A good suggestion, doctor," Pollock said. "It may take you a bit
+longer to find and tell them what's occurring, but even so they may
+return in time. Fifty, or even twenty, might give us enough
+assistance to beat off the attack."
+
+"There comes the moon," said the man who had been at the spring. "They
+must be near now."
+
+Far in the east the moon was stealing above the horizon. Under its
+light the mesa took form out of the darkness--the level sagebrush
+plain criss-crossed by willow-lined ditches and checkered by small
+Mexican fields, the winding shimmering Burntwood River with its border
+of cottonwoods, the narrow road, the distant town of San Mateo, a
+vague blot of shadow picked out by tiny specks of light.
+
+The mountains too now reared in view, silent, silvered, majestic,
+towering about the camp on the lower base. One could see, as the moon
+swam higher, the low long buildings of the camp clustered on the
+hillside above the canyon, in the bottom of which was the dashing
+stream and the bone-white core of the dam.
+
+"Look down yonder on the other side!" Martinez exclaimed suddenly,
+pointing a long thin forefinger at the mouth of the canyon where a
+group of black dots were moving up the river.
+
+"That's them," said the man who had given the warning.
+
+"And they're armed," said another. "You can see the moon shine on
+their gun-barrels."
+
+On the opposite side of the stream, some two hundred yards below the
+dam and three or four hundred feet lower in elevation than the camp,
+advancing up the canyon in a string, the men looked like a line of
+insects.
+
+"I'm off for help," the doctor said, springing into his car. "Janet,
+you and Mary go higher up among the rocks and hide if these buildings
+are attacked." Away he went, buzzing down the hillside to the long
+stretch of road.
+
+Weir now came into sight, walking quickly towards the group. That he
+saw the Mexicans down in the canyon was evident from his swift
+appraising glances thither.
+
+"Johnson, move your men down halfway to the dam and have them scatter
+there behind bowlders. I shall go still lower down," he said. "You
+will hold your fire until I signal with my hat from the dam."
+
+"You're going to the dam?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We ought to go with you."
+
+"I don't need you. You'll be more effective hidden above. You'll have
+plenty of light as the moon is shining squarely in the gorge. And
+await my signal."
+
+"All right; you're the general."
+
+"But take no extreme risks, Weir. The company doesn't ask you to
+sacrifice yourself," Pollock stated.
+
+"The sacrifice will be down among those fellows," Steele replied, with
+set jaw. "Don't worry about me. Now, start, men."
+
+He stood for a little watching the rate of progress of the line of
+Mexicans ascending the stream, which was not rapid owing to the broken
+rocks lining the bank. Then he swung about to the two girls.
+
+"Every one here now is under my orders," he said. "You two will take
+your car and go at once. This is no place for you."
+
+"But----" Janet began.
+
+"I'm taking no chances that you shall fall into the hands of those
+scoundrels," he declared, sternly. "They may succeed in reaching this
+spot. You must not be here; you must go."
+
+Taking each by an arm he piloted them to the car.
+
+"Sorry, but it has to be," he added. "This is work for men, and men
+alone."
+
+Janet and Mary climbed up into the seat.
+
+"You--you will take care of yourself," Janet said, tremulously.
+
+"I expect to. Still, this isn't going to be a croquet party; anything
+may happen. Good-by."
+
+With that he swung about and breaking into a run made for a small
+building half-buried in the hillside and apart from the camp. There he
+stooped and picked up under each arm what looked like a cylinder of
+some size and went down towards the dam. For a time they could see
+him, but all at once he slipped behind an outcrop of rock and they saw
+him no more.
+
+Janet turned to eye her companion. Once more her face was pale.
+
+"Well?" she inquired of Mary.
+
+"I reckon we'd better do as he says. He'd be awful mad if we didn't.
+Did you see his eyes when he talked to us?"
+
+"But if he--he and others are wounded?"
+
+Uneasily Mary gazed at the older girl and then down at the canyon. On
+the hillside the men led by her father were no longer in sight,
+somewhere concealed among the stones that dotted the earth. But down
+by the stream and now scarcely fifty yards from the white stretch of
+concrete barring the river bed through a tunnel in which the water
+foamed and escaped, the Mexicans were clearly visible, their hats
+bobbing about, their guns flinging upward an occasional gleam.
+
+"It doesn't seem as if anything was going to happen," Mary went on in
+awed tones. "Things are so quiet and peaceful."
+
+Still Janet delayed starting the car, divided in feelings between a
+wish to respect Steele Weir's insistent command and a growing fear for
+his safety. She could see nothing of him. Into the shadow of a rock he
+had disappeared and thither she gazed with straining eyes, hoping to
+see again his straight strong figure.
+
+"Why, look down there at the dam," Mary said, whose eyes had been
+wandering from, point to point of the scene. "Isn't that him?"
+
+Janet's heart gave a quicker beat, then seemed to sink in her breast
+as staring downward she recognized the engineer. He had come out all
+at once from the shade cast by a wooden framework. He had with him the
+burdens he had lifted from the ground before the little detached stone
+house at the edge of the camp, and these, the cylinders, he placed on
+the surface of the concrete core at the spot where he stood. Then he
+knelt down, struck a match, lighted a cigar--as if any man in his
+senses would stop to smoke in such a situation!--and busied himself at
+some task over the cylinders.
+
+Only for an instant had he stood erect on the flat top of the dam.
+Apparently he had been unseen by the attackers, engaged in picking
+their footing: and now in his crouching position, retired from the
+upper edge of the dam's front as he was, it was very likely that he
+was wholly out of view of the band.
+
+At last Weir moved his cylinders forward towards this edge. Afterwards
+he straightened up and standing hands on hips, smoking his cigar, the
+tiny crimson glow of which rose and fell, he watched the party nearing
+the foot of the white gleaming wall, fifty feet below him.
+
+For Janet the sight was too much. His indifference to risk froze her;
+he appeared to be courting death; and she strove to open her lips to
+send down to him an imploring cry to draw back, but succeeded in
+uttering only a tremulous wail.
+
+"They'll shoot him," Mary was saying, "oh, they'll kill him!"
+
+A surge of terror swept Janet. Next thing she knew she was out of the
+car and running down the hillside among the stones and the stalks of
+sagebrush, frantic to reach him, to pull him out of view of the men
+beneath. Only a single one of them had to cast a glance upward and to
+raise his gun and fire, then he would die. He should not die! She
+should fling herself as a protection before him rather than that he
+should be slain!
+
+On a sudden a hand reached up from a rock and seized her arm, stopping
+her with a jerk. Then she was roughly pulled down beside it. The man
+was Madden, the sheriff.
+
+"What in hell are you doing?" he demanded harshly. "Have you gone
+crazy?"
+
+His grip was not relinquished.
+
+"But see him! Aren't you men going to help him? Are you going to let
+him be killed?"
+
+Madden forced her to her knees, so that she was sheltered by the
+outcrop of stone.
+
+"Any man who can smoke a cigar like that at such a time as this knows
+just what he's doing," was the answer. "Keep quiet and watch."
+
+"Oh, I don't want to see," she said. But she continued to look with
+fascinated eyes at the lone, calm figure on the dam.
+
+Presently Madden pushed his gun forward over the rock.
+
+"They've caught sight of him," he stated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE THUNDERBOLT
+
+
+The greater part of the number of bandits had stopped in a group a few
+yards from the base of the white dam core, though a few stragglers
+were some way behind. Among these Steele Weir made out the figure of
+one whom he recognized as a white man; he whom the guard from the
+spring had mentioned as directing the company; and when at a number of
+exclamations from Mexicans who perceived the engineer the man lifted
+his face, Weir saw he was Burkhardt.
+
+No more than this was needed to show whose the hand behind this
+treacherous conspiracy. Clear, too, it was that Burkhardt, determined
+that no mistake or abandonment of the operation should occur, had come
+to see it through in person. Weir could ask nothing better; he had one
+of the plotters caught in the act.
+
+Apparently orders had been to carry through the first part of the
+diabolical plan of destruction in silence, that of gaining control of
+the dam, for when two or three Mexicans flung up rifles to shoot at
+Weir a sharp word from another Mexican, seemingly their leader, had
+checked the volley and shouted to Burkhardt.
+
+The latter had stopped; he stared for a few seconds at the man on the
+white wall above and finally signaled with a wave of his arm.
+
+"Come down here," he ordered.
+
+But Weir made no move to obey. He continued to stand motionless,
+coolly regarding the party beneath. His eyes particularly considered
+two men who carried wooden boxes, square and stout, on their
+shoulders. At last he spoke.
+
+"What do you want here?"
+
+"Come down, then you'll learn," Burkhardt shouted up, making no effort
+to hide the enmity in his voice.
+
+Weir puffed at his cigar, removed it from his lips to glance at its
+glowing end, while the Mexicans stared up at him in silence, puzzled
+by this lone guard who carried no rifle, who did not flee away to
+spread an alarm and seek aid, and who so unexpectedly had appeared as
+if anticipating their visit.
+
+Murmurs broke out. Why were they not allowed to shoot him at once in
+the approved Mexican bandit fashion and proceed to their work? If
+he were not shot at once, he yet could escape for aid. The party
+had to ascend the hillside in order to mount to the top of the
+concrete work. Time would be required to place and fire their charges
+of dynamite--and they were eager to get at the loot in the buildings
+above.
+
+"Kill him," Burkhardt roared suddenly, jerking forth his revolver and
+blazing at the engineer.
+
+The bullet sang past Weir's head. He did not duck; indeed, kept his
+place calmly while the Mexicans were raising their guns, as if to show
+his supreme contempt for their power. But at the instant Burkhardt
+fired again and a dozen rifles blazed he sprang back and dropped flat,
+leaving the deadly missiles to speed harmlessly above the dam.
+
+Raising himself cautiously he seized the end of a fuse projecting from
+one of the canisters and held the crimson end of his cigar against it
+until a sputter of sparks showed that it had caught. From this fuse he
+turned to the one in the second can and repeated the operation.
+
+This was the essence of his plan of defense. With guns the defenders
+on the hillside would be outnumbered and probably killed in an attack.
+The information that the assailants were to steal up the canyon,
+however, was the key that would unlock a desperate situation, and his
+mind had grasped the mode and means of defeating the enemy.
+
+With the first shots quiet had returned. The night seemed for Weir as
+peaceful as ever, the earth bathed in moonlight, the camp at rest.
+Only before him there was the sputter of the two fuses, one at the
+right, one at the left, as the trains of fire burned towards the holes
+in the canisters. He watched these calculatingly. His cigar no longer
+of service had been cast aside.
+
+All at once he rose erect again. A few men were starting along the
+wall to climb the hillside, but the greater number were gathered about
+Burkhardt and the Mexican leader. Now Weir glanced at them and now at
+the fuses.
+
+"I warn you to leave this dam and camp, Burkhardt," he shouted, when a
+few seconds had passed. "Don't say I didn't give you warning."
+
+Every head jerked upward at this surprising reappearance and voice.
+They had supposed him fled, the men down there, and were having a last
+hasty conference, doubtless as to the wisdom of now first attacking
+the camp. A grim smile came on the engineer's face. Their astonishment
+was comic--or would have been at a moment less perilous and fraught
+with less grave consequences.
+
+An oath ripped from Burkhardt's lips. An angry curse it might have
+been at Madden that he had failed to arrest and hold the engineer
+according to plan. He gestured right and left, yelling something to
+the men around him. He himself began to run towards one end of the
+dam.
+
+Weir stooped, picked up one of the canisters, blew on the fuse now
+burned so near the hole. Some men perhaps at this instant would have
+quailed for their own safety and at the prospect of hurling death
+among others. For death this tin cylinder meant for those below. But
+there was no tremor in Steele Weir's arm or heart.
+
+He was the man of metal who had won the name "Cold Steel"--calm,
+implacable, of steel-like purpose. With such enemies he could hold no
+other communion than that which gave death. For such there was no
+mercy. By the same sort of law that they would execute let them
+suffer--the law of lawlessness and force. Destruction they would give,
+destruction let them gain.
+
+He straightened. He took a last look at the snapping, sparkling,
+smoldering fuse, then flung his burden full down upon the spot where
+the Mexicans were again pointing their guns at him. Swiftly picking up
+the second canister, while bullets whined by, he cast it down after
+the first. A glimpse of startled faces he had, of men attempting to
+scatter from before the huge missiles, then he flung himself full
+length upon the dam.
+
+Interminably time seemed to stretch itself out as lying there he
+listened, waited, sought to brace himself for the impending shock. A
+quick doubt assailed his mind. Had the charges failed.
+
+All at once the earth seemed rent by a roar that shook the very dam.
+Followed instantly a second volume of sound more terrific, more
+blasting in its quality, more dreadful in its power, deafening,
+stunning, as if the world had erupted.
+
+"Their dynamite!" Weir breathed to himself.
+
+His ear-drums appeared to be broken. His hat was gone. His body ached
+from the tremendous dispersion of air. But that he could still hear he
+discovered when through his shocked auditory nerves he distinguished,
+as if far off, faint booming echoes from the hills.
+
+He got to his knees, finally to his feet. Pressing his hands to his
+head he gazed slowly about. Stones and a rain of earth were still
+falling, as if from a meteoric bombardment. About him he perceived
+sections of woodwork shaken to pieces, collapsed.
+
+Stepping to the edge of the dam he peered downward. A vast hole showed
+in the earth before the wall though the wall itself was uninjured and
+only smeared with a layer of soil. Huge rocks lay where there had been
+none before, uprooted and flung aside by the explosion, dispersed by
+the gigantic blast. On the hillside half a dozen men were picking
+themselves up and struggling wildly to flee. Nearer, a few other forms
+lay in the moonlight mangled and still, or mangled, and writhing in
+pain. Of all the rest--nothing.
+
+Almost completely Burkhardt's predatory band had been blotted out.
+Weir's thunderbolt had struck down into its very heart, and it had
+vanished.
+
+As he turned and walked towards the end of the dam, he staggered a
+little. The sight had shaken even his iron nerve.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT
+
+
+In his runabout, with Sheriff Madden at his side, and followed by
+Atkinson and half a dozen men for guards in two other machines, Weir
+sped along the road to San Mateo. They carried with them Burkhardt,
+who had been found stunned and slightly injured, and two Mexican
+bandits who had been captured. Those of the party of attackers yet
+alive but seriously hurt were being treated at camp by Dr. Hosmer,
+while the young engineers, armed and eager, were scouring the mountain
+side for the few Mexicans who had got away.
+
+It seemed a miracle that Burkhardt had escaped death, but the
+explanation was found no doubt in the fact he had started from the
+spot where the canisters fell and so at the moment of explosion was
+outside the area of its full destruction. To Weir the matter went
+deeper than that. Providence appeared to have saved him for
+punishment, for the long term of imprisonment he deserved for his
+crimes.
+
+"I'd much rather have him alive than dead," Steele had remarked to
+Madden, when the man was brought up from the canyon a prisoner.
+
+The tremendous thunder-clap of sound from the camp had quickened the
+return of the superintendent and his men, already reached and warned
+by the doctor. More, it had startled even the drunken workmen so that
+when some one shouted that the dam had been blown up the debauch came
+to an immediate end, the house was deserted and the throng, incited by
+curiosity and wonder, went staggering and running for camp.
+
+The first of these had arrived and the rest were tailing behind for
+half a mile when Weir and his companions set out for town, the
+blinding headlights of the machines scattering on either side of the
+road the approaching workmen. It was not likely many would go back to
+the house when they were told at headquarters how narrowly destruction
+of the works had been averted and how their spree had been a move in
+the plot. Between shame at being-duped and drowsiness resulting from
+drink they would, after a look at the hole blown in the earth at the
+base of the dam, want to seek their bunk-houses.
+
+As they sped towards town Weir and Madden rapidly made their plans,
+for the sheriff having witnessed with his own eyes the enormity of the
+plotters' guilt was all for quick action.
+
+"These engineers of yours with us and the other men Meyers will bring
+down can be thrown as a guard around the jail," he stated. "I'll swear
+them all in as deputies. With Sorenson and Vorse locked up along with
+Burkhardt--and I'll throw Lucerio, the county attorney, in with them
+on the off chance he's an accomplice--there will be high feeling
+running in San Mateo. As quick as I can make arrangements, we'll take
+them to safe quarters elsewhere--to-night if possible, to-morrow at
+the latest, in fast machines. These men have friends, remember."
+
+"You've Burkhardt handcuffed; it might be well to gag him, too, for
+fear the crowd might make trouble if he yelled for help," Weir
+replied.
+
+"Yes, we'll do that, though I think we can rush him into the jail
+before anyone knows what's happening."
+
+On the outskirts of town therefore the cars stopped. When Burkhardt,
+who had recovered his senses and with them a knowledge of his plight,
+perceived the sheriff's intention his rage burst all bounds.
+
+"You fool, you muddle-headed blunderer!" he exclaimed, with a string
+of oaths. "Take these cuffs off! You'll lose your job for this trick.
+When I see Sorenson----"
+
+"When you see him, you'll see him; and that will be inside a cell,"
+was the cool rejoinder. "I didn't know you were a dynamiter and
+would-be murderer until to-night, but I watched you at work and saw
+you shoot twice at Weir."
+
+"You'll unlock these, I say, here and now!" And the raging voice went
+off in a further stream of biting curses. "Look at me; I'm Burkhardt.
+You're crazy to talk of throwing me in jail, with my influence
+and----"
+
+"Your influence be damned," was the imperturbable answer. "You'll have
+a long time in a penitentiary to see how much influence you have, if
+you don't swing first."
+
+Burkhardt struggled fiercely for a moment against the steel bands
+about his wrists and the men who held him.
+
+"No crook like this Weir shall ever send me behind bars, or any other
+man put me there. Wait till Sorenson and Vorse and Judge Gordon learn
+what you're trying! Wait till they find out you've double-crossed us
+for this engineer! Wait till Gordon turns me loose with a _habeas
+corpus_, you'll sweat blood for this night's work, Madden!"
+
+The sheriff shook out the red handkerchief with which he expected to
+bind the prisoner's mouth.
+
+"I'll wait for a long time if I wait for Gordon to issue the writ," he
+remarked. "Seeing that he's dead."
+
+"Dead! You're a liar, you sneaking cur; you can't bluff me. And when
+I'm loose, if I don't fill you full of lead it will be because----"
+
+But Burkhardt's explanation was never finished on that point, for
+Madden whipped the rolled handkerchief over his mouth and quickly
+knotted it behind, shutting off the flow of seething vituperative
+speech. If looks could slay, those he received from the prisoner's
+bloodshot maddened eyes would have dropped the sheriff in his tracks;
+as it was, they fell harmless against the law officer's person.
+
+"Things have changed sort of sudden, haven't they, Burkhardt?" Madden
+stated, sardonically. "Never can tell what's going to happen between
+supper and breakfast. Here I go out to serve a warrant on Weir, and
+instead I'm bringing you in for trying a low I.W.W. trick. Surprising
+cards a fellow sometimes gets on the draw." With which he went back to
+the other car.
+
+Counting on quickness for the safe delivery of his men in jail, Madden
+did not attempt to approach the court house by a side street. On the
+contrary he drove fast down the main way, with the other two cars
+following close, passing without pause through the crowd of Mexicans
+drawn forth in wonder at the booming report of the explosion that had
+sounded from the dam.
+
+One could see that excitement was at a high pitch. With the rumors
+that all day had been in circulation, with later vague tales of the
+great debauch proceeding at the old 'dobe house half way up the road
+to camp, with the thunder-clap that had burst from the base of the
+mountains coming on top of all, every man, woman and child had run to
+the main street, where those in the automobiles could see by wagging
+tongues and gesticulating hands that speculation was rife and
+curiosity afire.
+
+"The talk this evening when I set out for your camp was that I
+expected to bring you in and hang you," Madden said dryly, to the
+engineer. "Quite a crowd had come to town. Plain to see now that
+Burkhardt and his bunch had started the talk. I shouldn't be surprised
+if there had been trouble had I arrested and locked you up. There are
+a few bad Mexicans around these parts that would do anything for
+money, and it's evident from what's happened that Sorenson's gang was
+ready to go the limit. What I'm trying to figure out is where these
+fellows Burkhardt had with him up yonder came from."
+
+"I can tell you. From across the line. I've seen plenty just like them
+down there," Weir affirmed. "Look at their hats and clothes--but
+you'll be able to make them talk after a while. However, you won't
+find any of them speaking English. Offer one of them some money and a
+trip home and he'll give you the story quick enough, especially after
+you've thrown a scare into him. We can afford to let one go to get the
+facts."
+
+"You better keep out of sight after we have the men in the jail. Slip
+behind the jail to the rear of the yard, and when I've locked them up
+and told Atkinson what to do about keeping the people away from the
+building, I'll join you there."
+
+"I understand," Weir stated.
+
+"And we can slip off and grab Vorse if he's in his saloon and then
+Sorenson before any one knows what's happening."
+
+"That's right; don't want the game spoiled now. Here we are."
+
+The cars had arrived at the gate before the courthouse. Here, too,
+however, the crowd was densest, having gathered at the spot as if the
+roar of powder from the camp was an overture to Weir's arrest and
+appearance. It had proved a prelude to his appearance, at any rate.
+The crowd perceived him with Madden and it believed him a prisoner
+even if not handcuffed and marched with a pistol at his head.
+
+A profound silence at first greeted the party as it alighted. Madden,
+assisting Burkhardt to alight, pulled the man's broad-brimmed hat low
+over his eyes to conceal his face from the revealing moonlight. A
+short struggle again ensued, but Burkhardt finally yielded to the
+pressure exerted by his companion guards.
+
+A murmur of astonishment ran over the surrounding throng, each instant
+being augmented by the voices of others running to the place. Not only
+did it appear that the engineer was under arrest, but likewise
+others,--a handcuffed, gagged man and two sullen Mexicans, strangers
+to the community. Yet a number of the onlookers, possibly men with
+Vorse's or Sorenson's money in their pockets, shouted as the
+new-comers moved through the press:
+
+"Killer, murderer! Hang him, shoot him!" And more voices began to join
+in the cry.
+
+Clearly the intent was to stir up feeling in the crowd to a point
+where action against Weir would seem a spontaneous outbreak. Even
+women joined in the cry; curses followed; fists were shaken.
+
+"Open up the way," Madden ordered, as a surge of the crowd threatened
+to surround him and his party. In his hand, as if to emphasize his
+command, a six-shooter swung into view, sweeping to and fro and
+menacing the press of people.
+
+The frightened men directly before the party struggled to get out of
+line of the weapon, yielding suddenly a clear passage.
+
+"Quick! Around the courthouse and back to the jail," Madden exclaimed
+to those with him.
+
+Pushing forward from the moonlight into the shade cast by the
+cottonwoods, they dragged their prisoners past the first building
+towards the low stout stone structure at the rear, half-illuminated
+and half-concealed by the patches of light and shade falling from the
+trees.
+
+A minute later Madden whipped out his keys.
+
+"Two men remain here at the door and don't be afraid to show your
+rifles to that bunch," he said. "In with you, Burkhardt; there's a
+nice soft stone floor to sleep on. Keep those Mexican camp-burners
+covered, Atkinson, till I get the cells open. You, Weir, slip on back
+there in the shadow and wait for me."
+
+The engineer had taken but three steps into the gloom along the
+outside jail wall, glancing about to avoid any curious straggler of
+the crowd already hurrying around the court house towards the jail,
+when he heard a call. In the advance was a slim well-dressed Mexican,
+full in the moonlight and very important of bearing. The call was
+directed not at Weir but at Madden.
+
+"You got him all right, sheriff?" he said.
+
+"Yes. He came in with me," was the answer.
+
+"But who are these others?"
+
+"Step inside and I'll tell you, Lucerio."
+
+The county attorney joined the sheriff, peered inside the doorway and
+hesitated. It was dark within; no light showed except a patch of
+moonlight at the far side of the building that fell through a barred
+window.
+
+"Go right in," Madden exclaimed. And laying hand on the other's
+shoulder he forced him ahead. The door closed after the pair. Before
+the doorway there remained, however, the pair of young engineers,
+rifle in hand, whose threatening bearing and glistening gun-barrels
+were apparent even in the patchy light dropping through the boughs. At
+a distance of about ten feet off the crowd of people halted, staring
+eagerly at the jail building, showing their white teeth as they
+carried on low talk in Spanish and awaiting with impatience the return
+of Madden and Lucerio that they might flood them with questions.
+
+Weir remained to see no more, for the increasing crowd pushed out
+further and further on the flanks, a circumstance that would
+eventually result in his discovery. So slipping to the rear of the
+jail and keeping well in the shadows he gained the fence. This he
+leaped and, lighting a cigarette, examined his pistol, then proceeded
+to smoke calmly until Madden arrived.
+
+"Hurry; slip away," the latter said. "They wondered what the devil I
+dodged back here for and are coming, curious as cats."
+
+The two men glided away, keeping well in shadows until they gained the
+side street and thence passed to the main thoroughfare.
+
+"What if Sorenson and Vorse are somewhere in that crowd?" Madden
+asked. "They're likely to be, expecting your arrest."
+
+"Then we'll have to wait till they leave it. But I don't believe
+they're there. They won't want to show their hand even by being on the
+scene."
+
+"Probably they've found out Gordon is dead."
+
+"Probably. But on the other side, they suppose now that the dam has
+been destroyed and that I'm locked up," Weir said. "Still, I'll guess
+that if they've learned Pollock and Martinez and I were at Gordon's
+all the afternoon, and he committed suicide, they'll be worrying some
+just the same."
+
+Madden glanced at his companion.
+
+"I don't believe we'll bring Vorse in--alive," he said.
+
+"That's the way I want him, and Sorenson, too. I want to see them go
+up for life, but if not that then hanged. But a life term for both,
+along with Burkhardt, is my choice. I want them to suffer as my father
+suffered. Only worse. Dying's too easy for them. Let them have hell
+here for awhile before they get it on the other side. Let the iron
+bars and stone walls kill them. I hope they live for twenty years to
+gnaw out their hearts every day and every night behind steel doors.
+That wouldn't half pay what they owe. But if they finish in prison,
+knowing there's no hope, knowing I've put them there for what they did
+to my father and Jim Dent, knowing that all the money and cattle they
+stole had slipped through their fingers, that they've lost all they
+gained and more, that their curses and crimes are crushing their own
+heads, why, that will help. And Sorenson--Sorenson there every day
+knowing his son lies a helpless cripple, without the money that has
+been piled up for him! I couldn't invent a worse hell for him. And
+that's the hell he's going to have!"
+
+Though a man not easy to move, Madden at Weir's cold implacable
+expression of hatred shivered slightly. Sorenson and his accomplices
+would be lucky indeed if they died by the rope.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+VORSE
+
+
+Across the main street the two men walked, wearing their hats low and
+making no answer to shouted questions of those hurrying to the
+courthouse yard. Already the grounds about the court house and the
+street in front were jammed with eager, excited Mexicans, thrilled
+with an expectation of something to happen, though they knew not
+exactly what. The murderer, the killer, they have taken the killer,
+was the constant statement tossed from mouth to mouth.
+
+"But not the killer they think," Madden said, in a low aside to Weir
+as they moved ahead on their errand.
+
+The pair were now advancing toward the saloon, along the opposite side
+of the street where a slight shadow afforded them concealment. By the
+time they came opposite the building they had escaped altogether from
+the crowd, though looking thither over shoulder they could see the
+black press of people in the moonlight at the public building; and
+here the street was empty except for a few belated women and children
+running toward the assemblage.
+
+Madden's hand suddenly gripped the engineer's arm as they were about
+to step forth from the shadow to cross the street to the saloon.
+
+"There he is," the sheriff whispered.
+
+Vorse had pushed open the slatted door of his place and stepped
+outside. In the moonlight his figure and face were clearly visible:
+his thin whip-cord body and predatory face, and bald head as shiny and
+hard as a fish-scale. He wore no coat, while his vest hung unbuttoned
+and open as usual. About his waist was an ammunition belt carrying a
+holster, as if he were prepared for action.
+
+Thus he stood for a time, hands on hips, motionless, his cruel
+hatchet-like face directed towards the scene further along the street.
+Presently a man came running to him, Miguel, his bartender, who had
+been one of the two men serving out whiskey to the workmen at the old
+adobe house and who at the break-up of the spree had hastened back to
+town to report to his employer. Now, it seemed, he had fresher news to
+give.
+
+"Yes, it is the engineer, for a certainty," he exclaimed panting, as
+he stopped before Vorse. "The sheriff arrested him and he now lies in
+jail there. It is said he fought and tried to shoot Madden, but that
+the sheriff was too quick and shot the gun out of his hand. It is said
+also that the dam is blown into a million little stones, but men are
+riding there on horses to see for themselves. They will soon return.
+Anyway a fight there was up there undoubtedly, for Madden brought in
+not only the engineer but three other men, bound and handcuffed and
+struggling furiously, trying to strike and bite the crowd like mad
+dogs. From time to time the sheriff had to beat them on the heads with
+his pistol, especially the engineer, who is the worst. I did not see
+them, but those who did said their faces were streaming with blood."
+
+"All right. Go find José Molina and 'Silver' Leon."
+
+"Are they not up in the hills with their bands of sheep?"
+
+"No. They are here. Look around till you find them; then send them to
+me."
+
+"That means something lively to happen, eh?" Miguel said with a
+laugh.
+
+He did not wait, however, for an answer, but set off at once for the
+court house.
+
+"I hope Meyers shows up soon with more men," Madden said to Weir.
+"Those two sheepherders of Vorse's are a pair of snakes; he always
+hires that kind; and they probably have some fellows with them like
+themselves."
+
+"Meyers is on the way with twenty men or so by this time. They had to
+come in wagons, as we had the cars. Atkinson ought to be able to stand
+off the crowd with the half dozen boys he has until the others
+arrive."
+
+While they had conducted this brief exchange of opinions they had kept
+their gaze on the saloon-keeper, who continued to stand before his
+door. The cold and merciless character of the man was never more
+revealed than now as he waited for his hired assassins to come to
+receive orders. Possessing already a full knowledge of the plot, Weir
+and Madden were able to guess what culmination was now contemplated
+and measure the true depth of the conspirators' infamy. The sheriff
+especially boiled with inward wrath that they should expect to make
+him not only a dupe but a tool in their crime.
+
+"It's clear they never intended you should come to trial when
+arrested," he said to his companion.
+
+"Certainly not. That isn't the way they play the game. And I suppose
+Vorse there imagines the cards are all falling his way at this
+moment."
+
+"He's going in."
+
+"Good. Now then!"
+
+Weir struck off across the street, striding forward at a pace Madden
+found it difficult to keep. As they neared the door, Weir loosened the
+gun in his holster.
+
+In this action the sheriff imitated him and then changing his mind
+drew the weapon itself. Plain man that he was, he was an instinctive
+judge of character; he had encountered men of Vorse's type before,
+less shrewd but equally savage; their nature was to fight, not
+surrender; their way was to kill or be killed in the final issue. He
+anticipated no arrest.
+
+He felt no necessity, however, to express this view to the engineer,
+who had proved himself in the time he had been at San Mateo wholly
+competent to deal with any situation that arose. Moreover, while Vorse
+had had a reputation of being a quick shot in the past, he was
+confident Weir was his master.
+
+With a quiet movement the engineer pushed open the door and stepped
+into the saloon. Madden following him had allowed the slatted door to
+swing shut again and the sound of its hinges caused Vorse, who was
+just starting away from the bar, to turn about. In his hand was a tray
+holding a bottle of whiskey, a bottle of mineral water and glasses,
+which apparently he had just lifted up.
+
+For a space of ten seconds or so he remained unmoving, the tray in his
+hand and his eyes regarding the visitors fixedly. Behind him in the
+rear of the saloon a second man had sprung up from the table where he
+sat, but after that first startled action he, too, had not stirred.
+The man was Sorenson.
+
+With Madden at his side and with a grim smile on his lips Weir walked
+slowly towards Vorse. In his tread there was something of the quality
+of a tiger's, the light, deliberate, poised advance, the easy and
+dangerous movement of body, the effortless glide of a powerful animal
+ready to spring and strike. His hands swung idly at his sides, but
+that did not mean they would not be swift once they responded to the
+call of the brain that controlled them.
+
+"You gentlemen were just about to celebrate my downfall, I perceive,
+by pouring a libation," Weir said. "Don't let me interrupt. Only I
+must request you to conduct the proceedings there where you're
+standing, Vorse, instead of at the rear of the room: Madden and I wish
+a good view of the ceremony. If Mr. Sorenson will be so agreeable as
+to step forward, you may go ahead."
+
+Sorenson did not join Vorse, but instead he spoke.
+
+"Why haven't you locked up your prisoner, Madden?" he demanded
+harshly. "And you're letting him keep his gun. Don't you know enough
+to disarm a murderer and throw him into jail when you arrest him?"
+
+"I haven't arrested him yet," was the sheriff's answer.
+
+"Well, do it then. You have the warrant for the scoundrel. Perhaps you
+haven't heard he almost killed my boy Ed last night--and you're
+allowing him to walk around with you as if he were a bosom friend. Do
+your duty, or we'll get a sheriff who will."
+
+"That's why I'm here, to do my duty."
+
+"You didn't have to bring this man here to do it."
+
+"I decided to bring him, however."
+
+From Vorse had come not a word. Only his gleaming evil eyes continued
+to rest on the two men without wink or change. For him explanations
+were unnecessary; he had divined instantly that somewhere, somehow the
+plotters' plans had gone awry.
+
+"Did you know that Gordon is dead?" Weir asked, all at once.
+
+Vorse lowered the tray to the bar and ran the tip of his tongue over
+his lips.
+
+"No," said he, "we didn't know it."
+
+"He deeded his property over this evening and then swallowed poison,"
+the engineer stated. "He saw the game was up."
+
+"You can't make me believe your lies," came sneering from Sorenson.
+"And you shall pay, you and that girl, for every broken bone in my
+boy's body. I'll spend my last dollar for that if necessary. Madden,
+do your duty and lock him up."
+
+The sheriff said nothing, but lifted his gun a little. Vorse by a
+slight movement of his body had edged from the bar as if to gain
+freedom for action.
+
+"The game's up for you men too," Weir said. "You've murdered and
+robbed and swindled in this country long enough; I've got the proof
+and I'm going to remove you from this community. It's not I who will
+be arrested. You killed Jim Dent after cleaning him out at cards and
+then made my father believe he was guilty of the crime. All I fear is
+that the court will hang you instead of sending you up for life; that
+would be too good for you. I want your crooked souls to die a thousand
+deaths within stone walls before you die in body. The game's up, I
+say. I've Saurez' deposition and I've the man who was the boy looking
+in the back door there that day thirty years ago and saw you shoot
+Dent, and he'll go on the stand against you."
+
+A stillness so profound that one could hear the tiny insects hovering
+about the lamps succeeded this statement. If words had not been
+enough, Weir's cold, harsh face would have removed the men's last
+hope, for on it was not a single trace of relenting. A stone could
+have been no flintier.
+
+"Well?" Vorse inquired softly.
+
+His arched bony nose appeared thinner and more hawk-like. His lips
+were compressed in a white scornful smile, while his eyelids now
+drooped until but slits of light showed from the orbs.
+
+"And you may be interested to know Burkhardt and some of the Mexicans
+he hired are now locked up in jail; the rest, or nearly all, are
+dead," Weir continued, with slow distinctness. "Your little scheme to
+blow up the dam and burn the camp failed. We caught Burkhardt at the
+spot leading the gang. Your plot to make the workmen drunk and leave
+the dam unprotected worked well enough so far as that part was
+concerned, but a keg of powder dropped on your bunch of imported
+bandits ended that part of the show. And we have Burkhardt! You
+gentlemen are going to join him in the jail, where we shall give you
+all the care and attention you deserve."
+
+Vorse turned his head about towards Sorenson.
+
+"Do you hear?" he asked.
+
+"Madden, you've too much sense to believe all this trumped-up libel!"
+Sorenson exclaimed furiously. "About us, respected leaders of this
+town! Arrest the blackguard!"
+
+Even facing assured proof of his complicity and guilt, the cattleman
+still believed in the power of his wealth and influence, in his
+ability to browbeat opponents, to command the man he had elected to
+office, to dominate and ruthlessly crush by sheer will power all
+resistance, as he had done for years.
+
+"I take no orders from you," the sheriff replied.
+
+"Well, I suppose I can empty the till and lock the safe before going?"
+Vorse questioned.
+
+"No. Keep in front of the bar where you are," the sheriff commanded.
+
+"And have everything stolen."
+
+"Your bar-keeper will be back presently. He will look after things for
+you."
+
+"You say Burkhardt is locked up?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That will hurt his pride," Vorse laughed. "He always swore that no
+one should put him behind bars. He wouldn't have minded so much
+finishing in a gun-fight, but to serve a term in prison would surely
+go against the grain with Burk. Though I think with Sorenson----"
+
+Weir's eyes had never left the speaker. Through the other's
+inconsequential talk and apparently careless acceptance of the fact of
+arrest the engineer had noted the tense gathering of the man's body.
+
+"Put your hands up," he interrupted at this point.
+
+Vorse had uttered no following word after speaking Sorenson's name;
+his voice terminated abruptly. At the same instant his right hand flew
+to his holster and whipped out his gun. It was the advantageous time
+for which he had waited, for Madden's look which had been moving back
+and forth from Vorse to Sorenson so as to cover both had passed to the
+latter. And Weir's weapon was undrawn.
+
+But if Vorse drew fast, the engineer's motion was like a flash of
+light. His weapon leaped on a level with the other's breast. The
+report sounded a second before that of Vorse's and three before
+Madden's, who also had fired.
+
+Then, if ever, Steele Weir had displayed his amazing speed in beating
+an enemy to his gun, for Vorse had indeed been quick, keyed by a
+knowledge that for him this meant imprisonment or freedom, a slow
+death or liberty.
+
+For a minute he stood half crouching as he had been at the instant of
+shooting, his eyes glaring balefully at his enemy and the thin cruel
+smile on his lips, while the two men in front stood warily waiting
+with weapons extended. Then Vorse clutched at his breast, muttered
+thickly and toppled over full length on the floor.
+
+The sharp pungent smell of powder smoke mingled with the reek of
+liquor.
+
+"He's dead," Madden said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you hit?"
+
+"No. His bullet went past my hip; he never got his gun up."
+
+Madden glanced about towards the rear of the room. A command for
+Sorenson to stop broke from his lips. Next he fired. And Weir swinging
+his look that way saw Sorenson's form, untouched by the bullet,
+vanishing through the rear door into the night. Using the minute that
+the two men's surveillance had been lifted he had escaped.
+
+"Hard luck when we had him," Weir growled.
+
+"He can't get away."
+
+"I'm not so sure. And he's armed."
+
+"He'll strike for home to get his car."
+
+"Or to the office for money," Weir exclaimed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE FOURTH MAN
+
+
+A last look Steele Weir had at the dead man on the floor before he
+turned to go in search of Sorenson. Not so astute or crafty as Judge
+Gordon, nor so intelligent as Sorenson, nor so belligerent as
+Burkhardt, he had been as rapacious and infinitely more cool-minded
+than any of the three. If anything, he was the one of them all to
+proceed to a crime, whether fraud or murder, in sheer cold blood and
+by natural craving. No uneasy conscience would have ever disturbed his
+rest: no remorse or pity ever stirred in his breast. He was the human
+counterpart of a bird of prey.
+
+Well, he was dead now. Three of the quartette who had been joined by
+avarice and lawless actions were taken care of--Burkhardt a prisoner,
+Gordon dead by self-administered poison, Vorse by bullets. Almost did
+Steele Weir feel himself an embodiment of Fate, clipping the strands
+of these men's power and lives as with shears. Sorenson alone remained
+to be dealt with and his freedom should be short.
+
+Beckoning Madden, he went swiftly through the door where the cattleman
+had leaped into the shadows. Where the gloom ceased and the space
+behind the row of store buildings was clear in the moonlight, nothing
+was to be seen. Naturally the man had kept within black shade in his
+flight.
+
+When they reached the rear of the cattle company's office building,
+they peered in through its barred back windows, but all was dark
+inside the structure so far as they could determine. To all appearance
+Sorenson had not stopped here: it was quiet, gloomy, untenanted.
+
+"We'll have to try his home now," the sheriff stated. "If we don't
+find him there, we'll set the telephones going to warn all the ranches
+and towns around to be on the lookout and either to stop or report him
+if he shows up. He hasn't start enough to get away now."
+
+They hastened on along the line of buildings until they reached a side
+street. But when they had proceeded a short way, Weir stopped.
+
+"I'm not satisfied about the office," said he. "Suppose you go on to
+his house and I'll return for a look inside from the front. If you
+fail to find him join me at Martinez' office, where no one is likely
+to be around and we can then lay further plans."
+
+"That suits," Madden responded, and set off alone.
+
+Weir's alert brain had been turning over the possibilities of
+Sorenson's course. Rather by pursuing what would be the man's line of
+reasoning than by depending on chance, he had come to the quick
+decision to turn back once again to the office. Sorenson would so act
+as would best serve his immediate escape and that of the future.
+
+Would he expect the sheriff and the engineer to look for him to flee
+by the speediest means, an automobile, and to the natural avenue of
+escape, the railroad? Yes. Therefore on that expectation he would
+adopt another way to throw off pursuit. And perilous as a delay would
+be in getting away from San Mateo, yet he must risk the few minutes
+necessary to get money. For to fly with pockets empty meant eventual,
+certain capture. Money a fugitive from justice must possess above
+everything in order to possess wings; and no one would know that
+better than Sorenson.
+
+Though Madden and he had seen no light in the office building, the
+cattleman nevertheless might have been within. If he had been in the
+vault, he could safely have lighted a candle without their perceiving
+its beams; and though the safe was modern it probably had no time
+lock. Sorenson could unlock it with a few twirls of the combination,
+stuff his pockets with currency and negotiable paper to the amount of
+thousands and then slip away.
+
+Fortunately the moonlight was to Weir's advantage. He quickened his
+steps, passed round the corner into the main street and moved towards
+the building. For him the crowd at the court house at that moment had
+no interest; one person, and one person alone, commanded his
+thoughts.
+
+How correct had been his logic--logic not unmixed with intuition,
+perhaps--appeared when he was yet some fifty yards away from the door
+he sought. A tall bulky figure suddenly stepped forth from the
+building and instantly ran across the street and lost itself in the
+shifting, jostling crowd that was half-disclosed, half-concealed by
+the broken shadows of the moonlit trees.
+
+Steele Weir proceeded to a spot near the office and halted. His first
+impulse to rush after Sorenson had been promptly suppressed, as cooler
+judgment ruled. To seek his quarry in that throng would be labor
+wasted, while to reveal his identity would be to court a disastrous
+interference with the business at hand. From where he stood he should
+much better be able to see Sorenson when he did emerge, unless he
+chose to remain in the crowd or steal away at the rear of the court
+house yard, a chance Weir must take.
+
+Five minutes passed. The restless, talkative Mexicans continued to
+swarm and buzz with excitement, ceaselessly moving about, forming and
+reforming in groups, agitatedly repeating newer and wilder rumors
+concerning events. Despite Weir's intent watch for Sorenson, the
+engineer could not but observe the mob's manifestations, observe them
+with sardonic humor. For their ebullition of the present would be
+nothing to what it would be if they learned he stood across the
+street, uncaged, unfettered, free and armed, a "gun-man" loose instead
+of a "gun-man" in jail.
+
+All at once Weir noted out of the tail of his eye a slight stir among
+a number of horses standing with reins a-trail before a store a little
+way down the street. The horses were partly in the light, partly in
+the shadow, so that all he could see was that one or two of them had
+jerked aside quickly, then resumed their listless postures.
+
+He was about to withdraw his eyes when he saw a man swing upon the
+back of one of them and start off at an easy canter. Weir sprang
+towards the spot at a run. That big figure could only be Sorenson's,
+for no Mexican he had ever seen in San Mateo could match it. And the
+plan of escape showed the other's craft in an emergency; gradually
+working his way through the crowd he had at last gained the protective
+shadow of the building on that side of the street and slipped along in
+it until he reached the horses.
+
+Doubtless the man had conceived the plan at the instant he had stepped
+from his office, sweeping the street by one gauging look. With the
+whole town assembled at the court house, his departure was little
+likely to be noted by the Mexicans, while Madden and Weir would never
+suspect him of riding off on a horse, or suspect too late. Indeed, he
+rode at first as if in no great haste, but as he turned his mount
+into a narrow by-way, more a lane than a street that disappeared
+between two mud walls, Weir saw him strike his heels into the pony's
+flanks.
+
+But for the startled movement of the nearby horses when Sorenson
+took stirrup, Weir would not have looked that way. He might
+possibly have seen the horseman start off, but that is not certain.
+He unquestionably would have supposed him an ordinary rider if he
+had not noticed the man until he reached the mouth of the lane.
+
+Meantime the engineer had made his best speed to the line of waiting
+horses. Slowing to a walk so as not to scare them, though as he
+discovered on examination most of them looked too bony and spiritless
+for that, he approached and carefully inspected the bunch. He took his
+time in the selection: the more haste in choosing a mount might prove
+less speed in the end. He tightened the saddle-girths and ran a finger
+along the head straps of the bridle of the horse picked to judge their
+fit, receiving a snap from the pony's teeth, which gave him
+satisfaction. Not only was this animal a wiry, tough-looking little
+beast, but he had life.
+
+Up into the saddle Weir went, followed Sorenson's line to the lane,
+down which he swung. Coming out into the next street, he pursued it to
+an intersecting street, and there galloped for the edge of town
+without trying to guess the way taken by his enemy. Once he reached
+the open fields he would quickly get sight of the man racing away
+somewhere on the mesa.
+
+Evidently the quarry he pursued had not taken so direct a course as
+Weir, for when the latter at length came forth where he could have a
+wide view he perceived the horseman a quarter of a mile off and
+further east, galloping south. The engineer at once raced thither to
+gain the same road and turning into it made for Sorenson.
+
+Thus the two men sped away from San Mateo. The wire fences and the
+adobe houses of Mexicans owning little farms adjoining soon ceased.
+The wide mesa lay on either side. Though a quarter of a mile had
+separated the men when Weir first observed the other, the distance
+between had been increased while the engineer was gaining the road,
+until now the interval was almost twice as great.
+
+Weir guessed the fleeing man's plan. Instead of seeking the railroad
+for the present, he would disappear in the mountains, where with the
+assistance of some loyal employee, cowman or sheepherder, he would lie
+hid until the first fury of the hunt had subsided. Possibly his bold
+brain even conceived the idea of again returning to San Mateo some
+dark night soon and further looting the office, vigilance being
+relaxed.
+
+In any case, he would expect to remain safe from pursuit in a mountain
+fastness until either on horseback or by automobile he could work his
+way out of the country. With what he had unquestionably carried off he
+would not be a poor man. In some spot far away he could assume a new
+name, start in business and later be joined by his wife and crippled
+son.
+
+Alas, for those plans, arising like mushrooms on the ruins of his
+life! Behind him followed the same inexorable antagonist who so
+swiftly had brought everything crashing about his head. Possibly
+Sorenson once out of the town had failed to look back; possibly
+looking back he had been unable to distinguish against the blur of
+houses and trees the horseman galloping in the moonlight along the
+same road.
+
+But all at once when they were two miles away from San Mateo he
+discovered Weir, who had been gradually cutting down the space between
+until now again he was within a quarter of a mile of his quarry.
+Sorenson had been riding rapidly but not hard; he now beat his horse
+to a furious gallop,--a good pony, too, from its speed, showing that
+the banker as well as Weir had picked his mount with care.
+
+Weir did not urge his horse to a similar pace, only maintaining a fast
+steady gallop that kept the other in sight though the space between
+again widened. Apparently Sorenson realized the folly of attempting to
+outrun, his pursuer at once, for he soon dropped back into a regular,
+mile-eating gallop. Gradually in turn Weir crept up to his old
+position.
+
+To each the only sound was that of drumming hoof-beats. In front rode
+the fleeing man--dethroned leader and criminal and murderer. Behind
+relentlessly came his Nemesis, the son of the man whom he had deceived
+and damned to mental suffering. All about them as they flew along was
+the silent, moonlit, sage-covered mesa. At their right towered the
+misty, unchanging peaks, as if watching unmoved this strange race of
+two human beings. A strange race, in truth,--a race where vengeance
+rode.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE VICTOR
+
+
+Ten miles the two men had gone when Sorenson's horse began to fail.
+The rider's weight was proving too much for the sturdy little animal
+and though he strove to maintain his speed the strain told on lungs
+and legs. Weir had reduced the distance first to three hundred yards,
+then to two hundred, and at last but a hundred separated him from the
+man and horse ahead.
+
+The hard chase indeed was beginning to tell on his own mount. Flecks
+of foam flew from its lips; its neck was wet with sweat; the whistle
+of its breath was audible to the engineer at every stride. For as both
+men had realized that now the end could not be far off, they had
+pushed their horses to faster and faster galloping.
+
+On a sudden Sorenson swung his animal into a dim trail leading from
+the main road skirting the mountain range to the base of the mountains
+themselves. The first slopes were but a mile away, covered with a
+scattering growth of pinyon pines. Just in front, too, for which the
+trail seemed pointing, was a dark ravine filled with brush that rose
+to the denser timber above. This was the fugitive's goal. Once he
+could fling himself from the saddle and plunge into the undergrowth he
+would be safe from his pursuer.
+
+The two ponies struggled on with exhausted leaps. Weir had reduced the
+interval to seventy-five yards by the time half the distance was
+covered and to fifty as they drew near the mouth of the ravine. He
+measured his gain and the remaining two hundred yards or so with
+savage eyes, then drew his revolver. He desired to take Sorenson
+unharmed. But rather than that the man should escape he would kill
+him.
+
+Sorenson's horse stumbled, but a jerk of the reins saved him and kept
+him moving on. The engineer struck his own pony fiercely on the flank,
+which produced a tremendous effort in the striving beast that brought
+it within thirty paces or so of Sorenson. That, however, was the best
+it could do, labor as it would. Its knees were trembling at every
+stride, its head swinging heavily.
+
+Sorenson's horse suddenly went to its knees. But the man leaping clear
+took the ground on his feet and instantly set off at a run for the
+line of brush in the draw some seventy or eighty paces away. A last
+spurt Weir's pony made, bringing his rider to within thirty yards of
+the cattleman, who glancing over his shoulder halted, swung about,
+fired a shot and again started to run.
+
+The pony under Weir came to an abrupt stop, shaking. He was done,
+whether from exhaustion or the bullet the engineer did not wait to
+see. Flinging himself out the saddle he raced after his man, taking
+the rough trail leading up the slope in swift strides. On foot
+Sorenson was no match for him. But the latter had the start; he was
+now almost within reach of the thick screen of bushes; and he bent
+every energy to make the ambuscade.
+
+Still running, Weir flung up his gun and fired. Close the shot must
+have gone to Sorenson, so close as to inject into the man's mind
+recollection of his pursuer's accuracy and a fear of a bullet in his
+back, for when within twenty feet of the bushes he dropped behind a
+small bowlder, whence he fired twice at Weir but without striking his
+mark.
+
+Neither man after the furious ride and the concluding run on foot was
+fit for sure marksmanship. This Weir realized, so stopped where he was
+some forty feet off from Sorenson's stone in order to regain his
+breath and calm his nerves. Of the cattleman he could see nothing; the
+man crouched low out of sight, perhaps reloading his weapon, perhaps
+steeling himself for a dash across that small moonlit space that
+separated him from safety, or perhaps preparing for a quick upward
+spring and a fresh volley directed at his foe.
+
+It may be questioned if in his heart Sorenson was not almost disposed
+to fight the matter out. He was no coward; his original hatred for the
+engineer had by recent events been swelled to a diabolical desire to
+kill; and now even if he, Sorenson, succeeded in slipping away, his
+whereabouts would be known unless he destroyed the man. Safety
+demanded that he not only escape but escape without this witness.
+
+Weir had not sought cover. He stood upright, his revolver ready,
+trusting to have an advantage in his speed when it came to an exchange
+of shots. Then he began an advance, a slow noiseless circling advance
+that at the same time of taking him closer to his enemy brought him
+round on his flank.
+
+Sorenson's hand and pistol appeared and half his face while three
+shots rattled from his gun, two at the spot where Weir had been and
+one at him in his new position, which the hiding man had immediately
+located. The last shot ticked the engineer's sleeve. In return Weir
+fired twice, the first bullet striking the rock and ricocheting off
+with a loud whine, while the second struck the pistol from Sorenson's
+hand.
+
+Instantly Weir sprang forward.
+
+"Show yourself," he ordered. And the kneeling fugitive, disarmed,
+gripping his bleeding hand, sullenly arose to his feet. "You've led me
+a chase, but I have you at last," the engineer continued. "Now you're
+going back to San Mateo and jail. Walk towards the horses."
+
+Sorenson cast one bitter glance at the thicket in the ravine; by only
+the little matter of a few yards he had failed to gain liberty. For
+Weir his visage when he looked around again was never more hard,
+hostile, full of undying hatred. Though balked, he was not submissive,
+and was the kind who kept his animosity to the end. Then he started
+off towards the horses, his own which had staggered to its feet again
+and Weir's, both standing with hanging heads and heaving, quivering
+sides.
+
+All at once the cattleman halted and faced about.
+
+"Most men have a price, and I suppose you have yours," he said, with
+forced calmness. "I'm ready to pay it."
+
+"You're going to pay it," was the answer.
+
+"How much will you ask to let me go?"
+
+"If you offered me ten million, which you haven't got, I wouldn't
+accept it," Weir said, harshly. "There isn't enough money in the world
+to buy your liberty. You're going back to San Mateo, and from there to
+the penitentiary or to the gallows, one or the other."
+
+"It will be neither," Sorenson stated.
+
+"You're mistaken, but I shall not argue the matter with you. Keep
+walking towards the horses."
+
+Sorenson's lips became compressed. He glanced down at his bleeding
+hand, shook the blood from his fingers.
+
+"I stay here," said he.
+
+Weir went a step nearer and thrust his face forward, jaw set, eyes
+smoldering.
+
+"Go on, I say," he exclaimed.
+
+But the other did not retreat before him or indeed move at all. A
+sneer lifted his gray mustache.
+
+"You have a gun; you're a killer; here I am unarmed and in your
+power," he said. "You intend to take me in; I propose to stay here. If
+I go to San Mateo, it will be as a dead man. I'll see whether you have
+the nerve to shoot me down where I now stand. If you have, go to it.
+You can then take my body to town, but I'll not have paid the price
+you name and I'll have the satisfaction of knowing I beat you at the
+last--in that, at least. Your bragging will be empty. Start your
+shooting any time you please." The tone spoke complete contempt.
+
+Weir said nothing. The defiance, the supreme audacity of this
+assertion, coming so unexpectedly, surprised him and left him at a
+loss. He would not kill an unresisting man, even Sorenson, his worst
+enemy. Sorenson in his place probably would not have hesitated to do
+so, for he had no fine scruples in such matters; but for Steele Weir
+the thing was no more possible than striking a woman or a child.
+
+It was not a question of nerve, as the other had stated. It was a test
+of brutality and consciencelessness. To shoot a man while escaping is
+one thing; to kill him while a prisoner, however contemptuous and
+brazen, was another. But there are means other than bullets for
+handling obstinate prisoners.
+
+Weir shifted his weapon so as to grasp the barrel and have the butt
+free.
+
+"I'll leave your execution to the proper officials, if an execution
+is what you want," he said. "Now will you go?" he demanded,
+threateningly.
+
+His foe gazed at the clubbed pistol and turned as if to yield. Next
+instant he whirled, lunging at Weir and flinging his arms about his
+captor. An exultant exclamation slipped from his lips; his hot breath
+fell on the engineer's cheek; his eyes glared into those of the man
+his arms encircled. He had tricked Weir by his pretense of obstinacy,
+led him to weaken his guard and had him in his grasp.
+
+Weir braced himself to resist the man's effort to force him down.
+Strong arms the other had, now doubly strengthened by hate and a
+belief in victory. All the power of Sorenson's great body was exerted
+to lift him off his feet, crush him in a terrific bear-hug, put him on
+his back and render him helpless; and Weir in his turn was tensing his
+muscles and arching his frame with every ounce of his lean, iron-like
+frame.
+
+Thus they swayed and struggled in the moonlight, without witnesses. A
+sinister silent fight, marked only by their fierce breathing and
+fiercer heart-beats. The pistol had dropped from Steele Weir's hand;
+instead of attempting to break the other's hold he had yielded to it
+and pushing his own arms forward had clasped his hands behind
+Sorenson's back in the wrestler's true defense to such an attack.
+
+Once Sorenson almost had him on his knees, but by a quick powerful
+upthrust of his legs he regained his upright position. However, it had
+been a close shave for Weir, for he well knew that his opponent would
+use any tactics, fair or foul, to kill him if he once lay on his
+back.
+
+"You hound from hell!" Sorenson snarled. "You crippled my boy, and you
+shall die for that. You've ruined me in San Mateo, and you shall die
+for that. You jailed Burkhardt and poisoned Gordon and shot Vorse, and
+you shall die for that. I'm going to choke the life out of you, and
+grind your dead head into the dust, and then spit on you. That's how
+I treat snakes. Say your prayers, if you know any, for you'll never
+get another chance. Your friends won't recognize your remains when I'm
+done with you."
+
+Venomous and impassioned, all the hate in the man's heart flowed forth
+in a fuming stream. For hate and murderous desire was all that was
+left him in the wreck of life caused by the engineer. If he could no
+longer rule, he could at least destroy.
+
+Weir had made no response to the fierce imprecations. He was working
+his hands upward, straining his arms so as to reach Sorenson's head.
+
+"When the coyotes are gnawing your skull," Sorenson went on, raging,
+"when the worms are feeding on you----"
+
+The words died in a gurgle of pain. Weir's hands had closed about his
+temples, a finger sunk in each eye, forcing his head back. Sorenson
+shook himself frantically to break the torturing hold. His head went
+farther and farther back as if it seemed his neck would snap; his
+mouth opened to gasp, "Oh, God!" and all at once his hug slipped
+apart.
+
+Instantly Weir tripped him, falling on top. Reaching out like a flash
+he seized his pistol lying on the ground and brought it down on the
+head of his enemy, who momentarily blinded and suffering could not
+resist. Sorenson went limp. From the savage beast of a minute before
+he had been changed to a huge, motionless, sprawling figure, with face
+upturned to the moon.
+
+And on that face the victor of the life and death struggle could still
+behold, through the contorted lines stamped by pain, the man's brutal
+passion and fixed malevolence.
+
+Weir arose.
+
+"You felt the hound of hell's teeth," he muttered.
+
+With thongs from one of the saddles he bound Sorenson's hands, pulling
+the knots tight and hard. The prostrate man moaned, opened his eyes.
+Weir jerked him dazed and staggering to his feet.
+
+"Up into the saddle with you if you don't want another rap on the
+head," Steele ordered, bruskly. "And go straight this time. From now
+on I'll take you at your word and put a hole through your black heart
+if you try any more tricks."
+
+When his prisoner was mounted, he fastened his ankles together by
+another thong under the belly of the pony. Weir was taking no chances.
+Up into his own saddle then he swung himself.
+
+No exultant curses now came from his captive's lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+A FINAL CHALLENGE
+
+
+The hour was drawing near midnight when Weir and his prisoner entered
+the town. Most of the women and children of the crowd of Mexicans had
+gone to their homes, but men yet remained before the court house and
+in the street, discussing and arguing the exciting events of the
+night.
+
+In some mysterious manner knowledge that Burkhardt and not Weir was
+the prisoner in the jail, together with news of Judge Gordon's suicide
+and Vorse's death, had spread from mouth to mouth. Amazement and
+incredulity had been followed by an aroused feeling of anger, for to
+the Mexicans it appeared that the crushing blow dealt the leaders of
+the town was the arbitrary act of the man they believed a lawless
+gun-man. Were not Weir's foremen and engineers guarding the jail? Men
+who were strangers, not even citizens of the county?
+
+But though an undercurrent of feeling ran among the talking groups,
+gradually increasing as the time passed, yet was there no active
+desire on the part of all or a concerted movement to drive away the
+seeming invaders of the law. For any such attempt a strong leader was
+necessary. There was none: Madden frowned upon them, only saying as he
+moved about that he was executing the law; Sorenson, the dominating
+figure of the town, and Burkhardt's, Vorse's and Gordon's friend, was
+strangely absent.
+
+The determined guard about the jail was in itself a deterrent to mob
+action. Meyers had brought twenty or more men from camp, armed and
+alert, who with those already about the building constituted a force
+to make any crowd of Mexicans, however angry, think twice before
+seeking to rescue prisoners. But the wish and the spirit were not
+lacking. Employees of the plotters, men who had received favors from
+Sorenson or Vorse or Burkhardt, Mexicans of a naturally vicious and
+unruly temper, were all for rushing the jail. The great number of the
+people, however, peaceful and indolent, preferred to content
+themselves with satisfying their curiosity by talk instead of seeking
+a taste of blood. And so as a result of this divided opinion the
+hostility for Weir had not expressed itself in an effort to assail the
+keepers of the jail.
+
+When he was discovered to have returned to town, this angry feeling
+assumed a menacing form. He approached the court house by the side
+street, Sorenson riding at his side, for it was his plan to lodge his
+prisoner in the Jail with as much secrecy as possible. Nevertheless in
+this he was disappointed; men saw him arrive, assist his prisoner to
+alight and climb the board fence about the yard; and drawn by the
+expectation of new events the nearer groups hastened forward.
+
+Weir impelled his man towards the jail.
+
+"Stand back," he commanded the Mexicans.
+
+The latter at first stared in astonishment at beholding the pair, one
+of whom was San Mateo's foremost citizen, now sullenly advancing with
+wrists bound. Exclamations burst from their lips.
+
+At that a flash of hope filled Sorenson's breast.
+
+"To my rescue, friends!" he cried, beginning to struggle.
+
+Weir jerked him ahead fiercely and cast fiercer looks at the
+Mexicans.
+
+"This man is under arrest. And remember I can still shoot straight,"
+he warned.
+
+Towards him came Madden running, who in Weir's disappearance earlier
+in the night he had guessed a pursuit of the cattleman and had
+therefore returned to the jail. He placed himself at Sorenson's
+right.
+
+"Whoever tries to take Sorenson from the hands of the law does so at
+his own peril," he exclaimed.
+
+A few mocking shouts resulted. These were gradually increased until
+the Mexicans, now being joined by scores of others from the street,
+became a howling, cursing, hysterical mob, crying Sorenson and
+Burkhardt's innocence, calling down imprecations on the heads of the
+sheriff and the engineer, stirred by certain lawless spirits to wilder
+and wilder passion.
+
+Weir and Madden had not been standing still, for the crowd was not yet
+numerous enough at first or bold enough to attack. Moreover the two
+men held their pistols well in view. Forcing Sorenson ahead, driving
+apart those who blocked their way, they pushed across the yard until
+but a few paces from the jail.
+
+One Mexican, a ranch hand from one of Vorse's ranches, wearing a great
+high-peaked felt hat and chaps, insolently thrust himself before the
+trio, spitting at Weir's face and in Spanish begging companions to
+help him release Sorenson. His right hand was resting on his holster
+as if but awaiting an excuse to use his gun.
+
+"Get to one side," was Weir's harsh order.
+
+The man's answer was a string of foul curses. Like a panther the
+engineer leaped forward and struck the fellow on the side of his head
+with revolver barrel, dropping him where he stood.
+
+As the crowd remained suddenly mute, unmoving, their howls checked by
+this swift reprisal, Weir spoke to Madden:
+
+"Quick! To the door!"
+
+Each with an arm in Sorenson's, they made a run for the jail, passed
+through the line of armed guards and for the moment were safe. The
+sheriff lost no time in dragging the prisoner inside and when
+presently he stepped forth again, locking the door after him, he
+showed a relieved face.
+
+"I put irons on him, hands and feet," he informed Weir. "He's out of
+the way at any rate if we're in for a row."
+
+That was exactly what appeared in prospect. Only the rifles in the
+grip of the two dozen men about the jail kept the now thoroughly
+aroused mob from rushing forward. From yelling it had changed to low
+fierce murmurs that bespoke a more desperate mood.
+
+"We ought to move the men somewhere else," Steele Weir stated. "Pretty
+soon they'll go for arms and then we'll have real trouble."
+
+"I arranged while you were gone to transfer them to the county seat in
+the next county," Madden said. "Telephoned the sheriff; he's expecting
+them. To-morrow we can take them to Santa Fé, out of this part of the
+country till time for their trial. I placed the automobile your man
+brought Burkhardt in from the dam and another machine back in the
+alley; they are there now in the shadow."
+
+"Good. The quicker you take them, the better. They ought to be gagged
+when brought out. Get them here to the door; the men who are to drive
+should have the cars ready, engines going----"
+
+"That's fixed. Your superintendent will drive one car and one of the
+engineers the other; they can slip back there at once. Six more of the
+guards are to go with us."
+
+"All right. You know whom you want. Station them here at the door to
+rush the prisoners back the instant you're ready. Have them go round
+to the rear on the dark side of the jail; they should gain a good
+start before they're discovered."
+
+Madden called from the line Atkinson and the men whom he had chosen to
+accompany him on the night ride. A brief parley followed. Then he and
+two of the engineers went inside the jail, while the superintendent
+and one young fellow stole away in the shadows towards the spot where
+stood the cars.
+
+Meanwhile the throng had grown until it filled all the space about the
+rear of the court house and formed a mass of human bodies on which the
+checkered moonlight played reaching to within half a dozen paces of
+the jail. A shot rang out and a bullet struck the jail. It was like a
+match lighted near powder, that if allowed to burn would set off an
+explosion. One shot would lead to others from reckless spirits, to a
+volley and in the end to an onslaught.
+
+Perhaps that was the reasoning and the purpose of the man who had
+fired. In any case, it must not be repeated.
+
+Weir strode forward towards the crowd.
+
+"If that man, or any of you, want to shoot this out with me, let him
+show himself," he said, threateningly and swinging the muzzle of his
+weapon along the line of faces.
+
+A quick retreat on the part of those nearest marked the respect with
+which it was considered. Frantically they strove to push further back
+into the mob, clawing and elbowing.
+
+"If you try any more shots," he continued, speaking in Spanish as
+before, "those rifles will open fire." He paused to allow this
+information to have full effect. "Finally, if you attempt wrecking
+this jail, the three hundred workmen from the dam will march down to
+San Mateo and teach you proper observance of the law. If you're really
+looking for trouble, those three hundred men will give this town
+trouble that will be remembered for twenty years."
+
+Standing there in the moonlight between the two parties, between the
+thin line of sentinels about the jail and the dense mob in front,
+Steele Weir's action seemed the height of rashness. A rush of the
+Mexicans and he would be overwhelmed, a cowardly shot from somewhere
+in the rear and he might be killed. It was like inviting disaster.
+
+If, however, he recognized his danger, he gave no sign of it. By the
+power of his gun and sheer boldness he faced them, calm, fearless,
+masterful. His unexpected advance had surprised the Mexicans, left
+them confused and uncertain. Wild and sinister tales concerning his
+prowess magnified him in their eyes notwithstanding their animosity.
+Now they seemed to feel his iron will beating against their faces.
+
+During the pause that ensued Weir heard the jail door open. Madden was
+preparing to take his prisoners out.
+
+"I'm not seeking trouble, but I'm not avoiding it," the engineer
+proceeded, for this was the critical minute, and he sought to have all
+eyes focused upon him instead of upon the activity at his back. "The
+sheriff represents the law here in San Mateo, and I give you plain
+warning that every man who attempts violence to-night will be called
+upon to pay the account. By to-morrow the Governor may have soldiers
+stationed in your houses and in your streets, for the prisoners are
+now the prisoners of the state, arrested for stealing cattle----"
+
+That was a happy inspiration. Had Weir stated the whole category of
+Sorenson's and Burkhardt's crimes, including murder and dynamiting,
+he could not have struck so shrewdly as in naming the sin of
+cattle-stealing. For this was a cattle country and even the most
+ignorant Mexican grasped the significance of this charge.
+
+A visible stir answered the statement.
+
+"For stealing cattle from other men"--he did not trouble to mention
+the fact the crime had occurred thirty years previous--"and for that
+and other things Sheriff Madden has arrested them. Because they are
+rich, their guilt is all the worse. Perhaps they have taken cattle
+belonging to you, who knows? That may come out in their trial; if they
+have taken them, you shall have them back."
+
+From the rear of the grounds came the low sounds of automobile engines
+being started. Weir dared not look about to learn if Madden and his
+party were safely on their way thither. As for the Mexicans, the
+speaker's words had created a sensation. For men were there who owned
+small herds now feeding on the range, and from anger their minds
+yielded to sudden anxiety; each saw himself a possible sufferer from
+cattle depredations; and in the minds of these, at least, thought of
+loss supplanted thought of Sorenson and Burkhardt.
+
+"I helped Sheriff Madden arrest these men because they stole cattle,
+possibly some of your steers among them. Is that why you would like to
+lynch me, as I've heard you wanted to do?" he demanded, savagely.
+"Because I save your animals? Or is it because I shot that renegade
+Mexican whom Ed Sorenson hired to try and kill me? Ed Sorenson, yes.
+Sheriff Madden has the knowledge of it. Not only would Sorenson the
+father like to see me die because I know about his cattle-stealing,
+but Ed Sorenson, the son, hired that strange Mexican to shoot me from
+the dark because I stopped him from trying to steal a girl. Has Ed
+Sorenson left your daughters alone? I would save your daughters from
+his evil hands, as I would your cattle from his father's."
+
+A man all at once pushed forth from the crowd, wrathfully elbowing his
+way among neighbors. He was Naharo, the Mexican who had chatted once
+with Martinez in the latter's office.
+
+"It is true," he shouted, facing his countrymen. "I, Naharo, vow it
+the truth. For I saw this engineer take a young girl away from Ed
+Sorenson in the restaurant at Bowenville that the scoundrel intended
+to seduce. It is so, the truth; the engineer saved her. And are there
+not men among you"--his voice gained a savage, rasping note--"whose
+girls have been betrayed by the cattle-stealing Sorenson's son?"
+
+"Where is he--where is he now?" some one shouted, angrily. It might
+have been a father who stood in Naharo's case.
+
+"He lies crippled," Weir stated. "Last night he tried to steal yet
+another girl from San Mateo, and fleeing when overtaken was pitched
+from his car and crushed against a rock. He will steal no more
+daughters of San Mateo."
+
+Sensation on sensation. The crowd fairly hummed with new excitement
+resulting from these disclosures. Ed Sorenson's ways were known to
+most and the revelations seemed true to his character; and from
+believing the statements of the son to accepting those concerning the
+father was but a step. Cattle--girls! It began to look as if this
+engineer was in the right.
+
+With half of his attention Weir was harkening for the sound of
+starting automobiles. He had heard the scuffle of feet when the party
+slipped away from the jail door into the shadows. He had almost
+measured their passage to the alley. Ah, and now! There was a quick
+grind of gears, the pop of exhausts, then a dying of the sounds as the
+cars left the grounds.
+
+"You wished to kill me when you came here, but I had not then and have
+not now any intention of dying," he stated. "For I have work to
+do--and work for you if you want it. Instead of stealing your cattle
+and daughters as the Sorensons did, I'll give you jobs. We are about
+to begin digging canals and ditches on the mesa; I want men and
+teams--you and yours at good pay for a good day's work. Our quarrel of
+the past need not be remembered. I have never been your enemy, only
+the enemy of the four men who deceived and oppressed you. And now they
+are gone, two dead and two off to be tried for their crimes."
+
+Weir stood for a moment silent, while they as silently stared at him.
+
+"Ha, bueno, we shall work!" Naharo exclaimed.
+
+"We shall work and build your ditches, señor," cried a score of
+voices.
+
+Then the cry swelled to a noisy chorus. The crowd began to stir and
+disintegrate and break into groups, gesticulating, talking, discussing
+all the astonishing items of news given by the engineer, from the
+particulars of the Sorensons' depravity to announcement of renewed
+hire.
+
+"Señor, we hold you in greatest respect," said a man to Weir, smiling
+in friendly fashion.
+
+"And also your pistol," said a companion, laughing.
+
+"No one will need to wear pistols here in San Mateo from now on," was
+the answer. And he politely bade them good-night.
+
+His belief was sincere. San Mateo had gained an end of violence, and
+henceforth his weapon would gather dust. He had triumphed. Not only
+had he subdued his enemies, but he had won the good will of the
+people.
+
+One thing more alone remained to be won to bring him utter happiness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+THE RECLUSE
+
+
+As Weir drove his car homeward through the moonlight, he knew that at
+last the dark shadow upon his life had passed forever. Memories
+poignant and sad, memories bitter and stern, returned again and again
+to his mind; but these henceforth with time would soften and change.
+Of these his last visit to his father was most vivid, that day in
+spring that had proved their last together....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had been there with his father for a week, and now must go. He was
+chopping wood that morning, with his father looking on. Steele had
+cast a measuring glance at the pile of wood cut, then wiped the fine
+dew of perspiration from his brow, buried the ax blade in the
+chopping-log and seated himself upon a sawn block. A smile shaped
+itself upon his lips. Though he never chopped wood now except on these
+rare visits to his recluse father's cabin here on the forested
+mountain side, his tall lean figure was as tough and wiry as ever, his
+arm as tireless, his eye as true to cut the exact line. There was yet
+no softening of his fibers or fat on his ribs, and there would be
+neither if he had anything to say about it.
+
+From the little Idaho town in the valley below, which he viewed
+through the clearing before the cabin, his gaze came around to his
+father seated on the doorstep. Taciturn and brooding the latter had
+always been, but the pity and sorrow struck at the son's heart as he
+perceived what a mere shell of a man now sat there, gray-haired, bent,
+fleshless, consumed body and soul by the destroying acid of some dark
+secret. Even when a lad Steele Weir had sensed the mystery clouding
+his father's life. Like an evil spell it had condemned them to
+solitude here in the mountains, until Steele's youth at last rebelled
+and he had departed, hungry for schooling, for human society and for a
+wider field of action.
+
+What that secret might be he had for years not allowed himself to
+speculate. Unbidden at times the memory of certain revealing looks or
+acts of his father's floated into his mind:--a dread if not terror
+that on occasion dilated the elder man's eyes, and a steadfast driving
+of himself at work as if to obliterate painful and despairing
+thoughts, and an uneasy, furtive vigilance when forced to visit town.
+Once when a stranger, a short heavy-set bearded man, had unexpectedly
+appeared at the door, his father had leaped for the revolver hanging
+in its holster on the wall.
+
+On catching a second view of the chance visitor he had exclaimed, "Not
+Burkhardt after all!" With which he burst into a wild laugh, the
+shrill mirthless laugh of a man suddenly freed of a terrible fear.
+However, as he returned the gun-belt to its place, his hand shook so
+that he pawed all around the nail on which it was accustomed to hang.
+
+Steele Weir would never forget that moment of panic, his father's
+spring to the wall and following laugh--the only laugh he had
+heard from those lips; and though but twelve years old at the time
+he could not misread the episode. On another occasion he found his
+father kneeling at the grave under the giant pine beyond the
+cabin--the grave of the gentle mother of whom Steele had but dim
+recollections--and his father's hands were clasped, his head bowed.
+With an infinite yearning he had longed to creep forward and
+comfort him by his presence, by a clasp of the hand, but the
+recollection of his father's habitual chill reserve daunted him and
+he stole away.
+
+On his own life the mystery had left its gloomy impress. A solitary
+and joyless boyhood, overhung by he knew not what danger, haunted by a
+parent's lurking fear and anguish, had made him a silent, cold, ever
+watchful man, never entirely free from the expectation that his
+father's sealed past at some instant would open and confront him with
+the terrible facts. For that reason he felt that the success he had
+gained as an engineer, a success won by relentless toil and solid
+ability, rested on a quicksand. For that cause he had welcomed
+engineering projects full of danger and by his indifference to that
+danger gained his name "Cold Steel."
+
+Now on this day with his father he once again put the question he
+always asked on his visits, and with no more hope of a consenting
+reply than before.
+
+"I must be going to-morrow. Won't you come along with me this time,
+father? I want you to live with me, so that I can look after you and
+be with you. We can fix up a good cabin at the engineering camp.
+You're not so strong as you were; you could fall sick here and die and
+never a person know it. I doubt if you spend, making yourself
+comfortable, one dollar in ten of the money I send you. You would be
+interested in the building of this big irrigation project I'm to
+direct."
+
+His father appeared to shudder.
+
+"No, no," he muttered. "I've lived here and I'll die here."
+
+"That's what I'm afraid of," Steele responded. "Afraid you may become
+sick and die for lack of care."
+
+"No. I'll remain, my son."
+
+That was conclusive. It was the answer of not only thirty years of
+living at the spot, but of his secret dread. Steele saw once more the
+stark fear in his eyes, the fear of contact with men, of venturing out
+into the world, of precipitating fate.
+
+For a time his father plucked his white unkempt beard with unsteady
+hand.
+
+"Where's the place you're going this time?" he presently inquired,
+without real interest.
+
+"New Mexico."
+
+On the elder's face appeared suddenly a gray shadow as if the blood
+were ebbing from his heart.
+
+"Where in New Mexico?" he whispered.
+
+"The town of San Mateo."
+
+His father struggled to his feet. With one hand he clutched the
+doorframe for support. The skin of his cheeks had gone a sickly
+white.
+
+"San Mateo--San Mateo!" he gasped. "Not there, not there, Steele! Keep
+away, keep away, keep away! My God, not San Mateo--you!"
+
+He swayed as if about to fall full length, gesturing blindly before
+his face as if to sweep away the thought, while his son ran towards
+him.
+
+"Father, you're sick," Steele exclaimed, putting an arm about the
+other. And, in truth, the elder man seemed fainting, ready to
+collapse. "Come, let me help you in so you can lie down. I must bring
+a doctor."
+
+Steele almost carried him to the bed. On it his father sank, remaining
+with closed eyes and scarcely breathing.
+
+"No doctor; bring no doctor," he said painfully, at last. "I feel--I
+feel as if dying."
+
+"I must bring a doctor. And I have a flask of whiskey; let me pour you
+a little to revive your heart."
+
+The change the words wrought from passivity to action was startling.
+The elder Weir arose suddenly on elbow, glaring fiercely.
+
+"Whiskey, never! It brought me to this, it damned my life. If it had
+not been for whiskey----" Without finishing the words he fell back on
+the bed.
+
+The loathing, the hatred, the utter horror of his exclamation,
+banished from his son's mind further thought of using this stimulant.
+
+"But the doctor?" he inquired, gently.
+
+"No use, Steele. I've been the same as a dead man for days. Just
+ashes. I want to die; I want to lie by your mother there under the big
+pine. And maybe I'll have peace--peace."
+
+Steele took in his own the wasted hand hanging from the bed. He held
+it tight, with a feeling of infinite tragedy.
+
+"You'll be yourself again soon," he said comfortingly, though without
+faith in the assurance.
+
+His father's lips moved in a whisper.
+
+"No; my time is here at last," said he. "But don't go to San Mateo,
+Steele,--don't go, don't go. Oh, my God, spare me that!"
+
+"Would you have me break my word? I never have to any man, father. I
+accepted this offer and signed a contract. I'm morally bound; these
+men are depending on me. Were you ever at San Mateo? Was it something
+that happened there that makes you fearful to have me go? San Mateo is
+a thousand miles from here."
+
+The face before him became like the face of a corpse. For an instant
+Steele's heart went cold in the belief that his father had died under
+the effect of his declaration. But at last the eyelids raised, the
+eyes gazed at him. And all at once the features of the harsh visage
+seemed softened, changed, lightened by a dim illumination.
+
+"I see you now as you are, a man, stronger than I ever was," he
+murmured. "I lived in fear, but my fear was not for myself. Had I been
+alone, nothing would have mattered after your mother died. But my fear
+was for you--and of you. I was afraid your life would be blasted; I
+was in terror lest you should hate and despise me when you learned the
+truth. So I sought to conceal it."
+
+"You had no need to fear that."
+
+"I see it now. Tell me everything or nothing as you wish about your
+going to San Mateo to work; it will frighten me no longer."
+
+Steele briefly spoke of his new work there, of the magnitude of the
+project and the desire he had had that his father might be with him.
+
+"I'm proud of you," his father said. "God knows I have not been the
+parent I would or should have been."
+
+"It's enough for me if your heart's easy now."
+
+"I feel as if I were gaining peace at last and--and I must speak. In
+San Mateo--ah, Steele, you will hear of me there,--you may have to
+fight the damning influence of my name and past, but I know now you'll
+come through it. And all I pray for is that you can retain a little
+love for me despite everything."
+
+"Whatever it is I shall hear of my father, I should rather hear it
+from his lips than from strangers'."
+
+The hand in his closed spasmodically. For a long time nothing was
+said, and the only sound in the room was the ticking of the tin clock
+on the shelf busily measuring off the seconds of the old man's failing
+span. To Steele it was as if his father was slowly summoning the few
+remaining shreds of his fortitude to reveal the cancer of his past.
+
+"I'm a branded murderer," he said at last, gasping.
+
+"But you never killed a man out of mere wanton desire to slay," Steele
+responded firmly. "I too have killed men in fights in Mexico. That
+fact doesn't weight my mind."
+
+"In the line of your duty, in the line of your duty. But I was drunk.
+He was a friend. When I became sober, I saw him with a bullet hole in
+his head."
+
+"Do you remember nothing of shooting him?"
+
+"Nothing, nothing."
+
+"How do you know you killed him?" his son demanded with inexorable
+logic. "What is the proof?"
+
+A low groan escaped his father.
+
+"Men said I had killed him. But my own mind was blank."
+
+"Who were the men? Were they present at the time?"
+
+"They were four--Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon, Burkhardt."
+
+"Were you arrested and tried?"
+
+"No. They helped me to escape. Because of your mother, they said, and
+because they said they were my friends. But I never felt they were
+really friends. For they were always against new-comers and wanted to
+keep things in their own hands. You were only three or four years old
+at that time, Steele, so you wouldn't remember anything about matters
+there."
+
+"What were you doing at San Mateo, father?"
+
+Now that the hideous past at last stood uncovered the son was able to
+turn upon it his incisive mind; he would drag out and scrutinize every
+bone of the skeleton which had terrorized his father and shadowed his
+own life Facts faced are never so dreadful as fears unmaterialized.
+And more, he sought with all the love of a son for circumstances that
+would mitigate, excuse, or even justify his father's act.
+
+"I was ranching," was the low answer. "I had come to San Mateo two
+years before from the east, bringing you and your mother and
+considerable money. I bought a ranch and stocked it with cattle; I was
+doing well, in spite of the fact I was new to the country and the
+business. Also I was making friends, and I had been nominated for the
+legislature of the Territory to run against Gordon. But I had taken to
+drinking with the men I met, other cattlemen, because I fancied no
+harm in it. And then while in a drunken stupor I killed Jim Dent."
+
+"Had you quarreled with him?"
+
+"Never, never--till that moment I killed Jim. They said I quarreled
+with him then. But I remember nothing. Jim was my best friend; I would
+have trusted him with my life. Even now I can't make it seem real I
+shot him, though it must be true by those four witnesses."
+
+"What of your ranch? Your political nomination?"
+
+"I withdrew from the latter; that was one of the terms made by Gordon
+on which they were to help me escape instead of turning me over for
+prosecution. And my ranch and cattle, I had to deed them over to the
+four men too."
+
+"Then their friendship wasn't disinterested," Steele said quickly,
+with suspicion dawning on his face.
+
+"They weren't really friends, I knew that."
+
+"How were they to arrange your escape?"
+
+The senior Weir seemed to shudder at the question.
+
+"By bribing the sheriff and county attorney. I was then to leave the
+country at once, never showing my face again, or I should be arrested.
+I was still half dazed by whiskey and terror; I took your mother and
+you and fled this far, when my money gave out. So here I've remained
+ever since, for here I could hide and here was her grave."
+
+"What's the last thing you remember of the circumstance previous to
+learning Dent was dead?" he asked.
+
+"Ah, though I had been drinking I can remember clearly up to the time
+I stopped playing poker with Jim and the four men, for we were losing
+and I felt they were working a crooked deal on us somehow. I asked Jim
+to quit also, for though I hadn't lost much he was losing fast and
+playing recklessly. But he wouldn't drop out of the game, and when
+Vorse and Sorenson cursed me and said for me to mind my own business I
+went back to a table near the rear door and laid my head on my arms
+and went to sleep. When I was awake again, Vorse and Gordon were
+holding me up by their table and Jim was dead on the floor. I had come
+forward, they said, begun a big row with Dent and finally shot him."
+
+"Then the only witnesses were these four men who were gambling with
+him, who cursed you when you attempted to persuade him to drop his
+cards," Steele proceeded, "one of whom was your political adversary,
+men who were old-timers and opposed to new-comers, who pretended to be
+your friends but took your ranch and cattle. It begins to look to me
+as if they not only killed your friend Dent but double-crossed you in
+the bargain. Did you look in your gun afterwards?"
+
+"No. I was sick with the horror of the accusation, I tell you, Steele.
+I had no way to deny it; it seemed indeed as if I must have killed
+him. And from that day until this I've never had the courage of soul
+to reload my pistol, or even clean it. It hangs there on the wall with
+the very shells, two empty, the rest unfired, that it carried that day
+in San Mateo."
+
+Weir sprang up and crossed to the nail where hung the weapon. The
+latter he drew from the holster and broke open, so that the cartridges
+were ejected into his hand. For an instant he stared at them, but at
+length walked to the bed before which he extended his palm.
+
+"Look--look for yourself!" he exclaimed hoarsely. "You never killed
+Jim Dent; drunk or sober, you never killed any one. You're not a
+murderer. You're the innocent victim of those four infamous
+scoundrels; they deceived you, they ruined your life; and their
+damnable fraud not only killed my mother in her youth, as I guess, by
+grief and despair, but has brought you now to your death too."
+
+His father had raised himself on an arm to gaze incredulously at the
+six unfired cartridges lying in Weir's palm. Then all at once his
+bearded lips trembled and a great light of joy flashed upon his face.
+
+"Innocent--innocent!" he whispered. "Steele, my son,--Helen, my wife!
+No stain on my soul!"
+
+As he sank back Steele's arms caught him. He did not speak again, but
+his eyes rested radiantly on his boy's before they glazed in death.
+Fear had passed from them, forever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+UNDER THE MOON
+
+
+Lights still were burning at headquarters when Steele Weir slowly
+drove his runabout up the hillside slope to the dam camp. The men who
+had acted as guards about the jail, except those who went with Madden,
+were somewhere on the road behind him, returning home in the wagons. A
+reaction of mind and body had set in for Weir; after the previous
+night's loss of sleep and prolonged exertions, after the swift
+succession of dramatic events, after the tremendous call that had been
+made upon his brain power, nervous force and will, he experienced a
+strange unrest of spirit. His triumph seemed yet incomplete, somehow
+unsatisfying.
+
+It was as he approached the camp that he saw a slender girlish figure
+sitting on a rock in the moonlight. He swung his car off the road
+beside the spot where Janet Hosmer sat.
+
+"What, you are still awake?" he asked, with a smile.
+
+"Could I sleep while not knowing what was happening or what danger you
+might be in?" she returned. "Mr. Pollock said we must not think of
+returning home until quiet was restored in San Mateo. One of the
+engineer's houses was given to us by Mr. Meyers before he left, where
+Mary and I could sleep. But I could not close my eyes. So much had
+happened, so much was yet going on! So I came out here to be alone and
+to think and watch."
+
+"And your father?"
+
+"He's attending the wounded Mexicans in the store."
+
+Steel alighted and tossing his hat upon the car seat gazed out over
+the mesa, misty in the moonlight.
+
+"There will be no more trouble," said he. "Sorenson and Burkhardt are
+Madden's prisoners, and on their way to a place of safe-keeping in
+another county. Vorse is dead. The people in town have a fairly good
+understanding of matters now, I think."
+
+"How in the world did such a change of opinion occur?" Janet
+exclaimed.
+
+"I had a little talk with the crowd and made explanations. The feeling
+for me was almost friendly when I left; what enmity remains will soon
+die out, I'm sure."
+
+Though unaware from Steele Weir's laconic statement of what had
+actually occurred, the girl divined that his words concealed vastly
+more than their surface purport. With the general hostility against
+the engineer that had existed, for him to swing the community to his
+side meant a dramatic moment and a remarkable moral conquest.
+
+"Your friends have always known you would win," she said, smiling up
+at him.
+
+He seated himself on the rock beside her.
+
+"It's but a short time ago, Janet, that I had no friends, or so
+few they could be counted on the fingers of one hand. Business
+acquaintances, yes. Professional companions, yes. Men who perhaps
+respected my ability as an engineer, yes. But real friends, scarcely
+one. And now I think I have gained some, which is the greatest
+satisfaction I have from all that has happened. After years the
+pendulum has swung to my side. Do you know the hour my luck changed?"
+
+Janet shook her head wonderingly.
+
+"No, I can't even guess," said she.
+
+"Well, it was that afternoon, and that moment, I found you sitting in
+your stalled car in the creek down there. That was the beginning. From
+that time things began to run in my favor and they haven't ceased to
+do so for a moment since, I now see looking back over events. You
+brought good luck to me that day in your car."
+
+"What an extraordinary idea! Then at bottom you're superstitious,"
+Janet replied. "I shall have to give you a new name; I must no longer
+call you 'Cold Steel.'"
+
+"I really never liked that name," Weir said quickly. "Perhaps I was
+cold steel once, but I have changed along with everything else. And
+you're responsible for that too."
+
+Janet leaned forward and looked into his eyes.
+
+"You were never truly harsh to any one except those who deserved it,"
+she said. "I know! You would never have been so quick to help Mary
+Johnson or me, or others who needed help, if your heart was not always
+generous and sympathetic. Only against evil were you as steel, and in
+moments requiring supreme courage and sacrifice. And that's how you
+gained the name before you ever came here."
+
+"Anyway I've changed," said he. "I'm out from under the cloud which I
+felt always hung above me. As I say, you brought me good luck that
+day--and I see clearly that I shall continue to be superstitious."
+
+"Why, all occasion for that is past now."
+
+"No," said Steele Weir. "No, less than ever. For I'm certain you hold
+my good fortune in your hand yet, and will continue to hold it. And
+that means----"
+
+He paused, regarding her so intensely that the blood beat up into her
+face. There was no mistaking that look and it thrilled her to the
+soul.
+
+"Yes?" she managed to say.
+
+"It means my happiness, now and for all time to come," he went on.
+"See, I shall have accomplished what I set out to do and what in
+justice had to be done, bringing these men to punishment--to
+punishment in one form or another. I shall have given my employer, the
+company, service worthy of the hire. I shall have rid you and San
+Mateo of an unscrupulous parasite in the person of Ed Sorenson, though
+my persecution of him now shall stop and I shall leave him enough out
+of the property recovered from his father to live in comfort somewhere
+with his mother.
+
+"Mr. Pollock states I shall have no trouble in getting legal title and
+possession of most of the wealth of these four men,--I and any
+relatives of the dead Jim Dent who can be found. For thirty years'
+accumulated interest charges owing me will swallow up all the men's
+properties. That, however, is only a material victory. I shall have
+relieved Johnson of fear of financial constraint; and saved his
+daughter from a serious mistake. I shall have started Martinez on the
+road to success--and I should not be surprised if he prospered, became
+the leading attorney in this county, was elected judge and so on.
+
+"In a way, too, I shall have helped to remove the oppressive weight of
+these men, Sorenson, Burkhardt, Judge Gordon and Vorse, with their
+sinister influence, from this community and region. They have always
+held the natives in more or less open subjection, financial,
+political, and moral. There should be a freer air in San Mateo
+henceforth. The people will have a chance to grow. They no longer will
+feel the threat of brutal masters always over them; and with the
+completion of the irrigation project and the infusion of new settlers
+they will become better citizens.
+
+"I see all this," he concluded. "It pleases me; it gives me cause for
+satisfaction. But it doesn't give me the happiness I want, or the
+love. That is alone in your hands to bestow."
+
+Janet felt herself trembling; she could not speak.
+
+"I think I felt the stirring of love from the moment I saw you there
+at the ford," he exclaimed. "Last night when I knew that wretch had
+carried you off to the mountains, I could have torn him limb from
+limb. That was my love speaking, Janet. If I should have to go through
+life without you--oh, the thought is too bitter to dwell on!--then I
+should think life not worth living. But I have imagined that you might
+have for me a little----"
+
+Janet swiftly clasped his hand with her own.
+
+"I love you," she cried softly. "I was sitting here when you came
+because I loved you. If I am necessary to your happiness, you also are
+necessary to mine. I honor you for what you have done and love you for
+what you are, a strong true heart."
+
+"Ah, Janet, you give me the greatest joy in the world," he whispered.
+"Love--that is more than all."
+
+His arms drew her to his breast. Her lips went to his in consecration
+of that love. Their hearts beat the rapture of that love.
+
+Over the silent peaceful mountains the moon spread its effulgent
+light. Over the mesa that was no more to know the fierce sound of
+strife. Over the town, at last free of its avaricious masters, free of
+the savage spirit of an outlaw time. Over the Burntwood River flowing
+in a shimmering band to the horizon. Over the camp where centered so
+many men's plans and labors. And over the lovers, chief of all, that
+light fell as in a silvery halo.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: In the Shadow of the Hills
+
+Author: George C. Shedd
+
+Release Date: September 20, 2009 [EBook #30037]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS ***
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+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
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+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS</h1>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:larger;margin-bottom:10px;'>BY THE SAME AUTHOR</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<p class='cg'>The Princess of Forge<br />
+The Isle of Strife<br />
+The Incorrigible Dukane<br />
+The Lady of Mystery House<br />
+The Invisible Enemy<br />
+In the Shadow of the Hills</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:2.0em;margin-bottom:40px;'>IN THE<br />SHADOW OF THE HILLS</p>
+<p class='tp' >BY</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:10px;'>GEORGE C. SHEDD</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:smaller;margin-bottom:160px;'>AUTHOR OF<br />&ldquo;THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE,&rdquo; ETC.</p>
+<p class='tp' >NEW YORK</p>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.2em;'>THE MACAULAY COMPANY</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-variant:small-caps;'>Copyright, 1919,<br />By THE MACAULAY COMPANY</p>
+<hr class='p10' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:smaller;'>COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE FRANK A. MUNSEY CO.</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h3>CONTENTS</h3>
+<table border='0' cellpadding='2' cellspacing='0' summary='Contents' style='margin:1em auto;'>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'><span style='font-size:0.8em'>CHAPTER</span></td>
+ <td />
+ <td valign='top' align='right'><span style='font-size:0.8em'>PAGE</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>I</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In a Hostile Country</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_I_IN_A_HOSTILE_COUNTRY'>11</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>II</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Comedy&ndash;&ndash;And Something Else</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_II_A_COMEDYAND_SOMETHING_ELSE'>23</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>III</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Enemy&rsquo;s Spawn</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_III_THE_ENEMYS_SPAWN'>34</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Secret Conference</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IV_A_SECRET_CONFERENCE'>42</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>V</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Shot in the Dark</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_V_A_SHOT_IN_THE_DARK'>53</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Janet Hosmer</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VI_JANET_HOSMER'>64</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In the Coil</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VII_IN_THE_COIL'>75</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>VIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Gathering Storm</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII_THE_GATHERING_STORM'>83</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>IX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>An Unexpected Ally</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_IX_AN_UNEXPECTED_ALLY'>91</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>X</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>By Right of Possession</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_X_BY_RIGHT_OF_POSSESSION'>99</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Janet and Mary</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XI_JANET_AND_MARY'>107</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Plot</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XII_THE_PLOT'>116</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Current of Events</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CURRENT_OF_EVENTS'>121</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Old Saurez&rsquo; Deposition</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIV_OLD_SAUREZ_DEPOSITION'>135</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Mask Dropped</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XV_THE_MASK_DROPPED'>145</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Weir Takes up the Hunt</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVI_WEIR_TAKES_UP_THE_HUNT'>158</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Earth&rsquo;s Retribution</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVII_EARTHS_RETRIBUTION'>167</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XVIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>In the Night Watches</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII_IN_THE_NIGHT_WATCHES'>177</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XIX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Queer Paper</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XIX_A_QUEER_PAPER'>189</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Anxieties</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XX_ANXIETIES'>197</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Weak Link</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXI_THE_WEAK_LINK'>209</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>An Old Adobe House</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXII_AN_OLD_ADOBE_HOUSE'>219</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>With Fangs Bared</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIII_WITH_FANGS_BARED'>226</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXIV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Alarm</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIV_THE_ALARM'>238</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXV</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>No Quarter</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXV_NO_QUARTER'>248</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXVI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Thunderbolt</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_THUNDERBOLT'>256</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXVII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Weir Strikes While the Iron Is Hot</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVII_WEIR_STRIKES_WHILE_THE_IRON_IS_HOT'>261</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXVIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Vorse</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXVIII_VORSE'>270</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXIX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Fourth Man</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXIX_THE_FOURTH_MAN'>279</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXX</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Victor</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXX_THE_VICTOR'>286</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXXI</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>A Final Challenge</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXXI_A_FINAL_CHALLENGE'>294</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXXII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>The Recluse</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXXII_THE_RECLUSE'>304</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td valign='top' class='chalgn'>XXXIII</td>
+ <td valign='top' align='left' style='padding-right:4em;'><span class='smcap'>Under the Moon</span></td>
+ <td valign='bottom' align='right'><a href='#CHAPTER_XXXIII_UNDER_THE_MOON'>314</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.6em;'>IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS</p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span></div>
+<p class='tp' style='font-size:1.4em;'>IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS</p>
+<div class='chsp' style='padding-top:0'>
+<a name='CHAPTER_I_IN_A_HOSTILE_COUNTRY' id='CHAPTER_I_IN_A_HOSTILE_COUNTRY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<h3>IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Eastward out of the Torquilla Range the Burntwood
+River emerged from a gorge, flowing swift and turbulent
+during the spring months, shallow and murmurous
+the rest of the year, to pass through a basin formed
+by low mountains and break forth at last from a canyon
+and wind away over the mesa. In the canyon was
+being erected the huge reservoir dam which was in the
+future to store water for irrigating the broad acres
+spreading from its base.</p>
+<p>The construction camp rested on one of the hillsides
+above the dam. And here one summer afternoon a man
+stepped forth from the long low tar-papered shack that
+served as headquarters, directing his gaze down the road
+across the mesa at a departing automobile. He was
+Steele Weir, the new chief, a tall, strong, tanned man of
+thirty-five, with lean smooth-shaven face, a straight
+heavy nose, mouth that by habit was set in grim lines,
+and heavy brows under which ruled cold, level, insistent,
+gray eyes. He had come suddenly, unexpectedly, returning
+with Magney, the engineer in charge, when the
+latter had been summoned east for a conference with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span>
+the company&rsquo;s directors. He had replaced Magney,
+who was now whirling away to the nearest railway
+point, Bowenville, thirty-five miles distant.</p>
+<p>He thoughtfully watched the car, a black spot in a
+haze of dust, speeding towards the New Mexican town
+of San Mateo, on the Burntwood River two miles below
+camp, its cluster of brown adobe houses showing indistinctly
+through the cottonwoods that embowered the
+place. For Magney he felt a certain amount of sympathy,
+for the engineer was leaving with a recognition
+of defeat; he was a likeable man, as Steele Weir had
+discovered during their brief acquaintance, a good theoretical
+engineer, but lacking in the prime quality of a
+successful chief&ndash;&ndash;fighting spirit and an indomitable will.</p>
+<p>Under Magney the work of construction had been inaugurated
+the previous summer, but progress had not
+been as rapid as desired; there had been delays, labor
+difficulties, local opposition during the months since;
+and Weir had been chosen to succeed Magney. In his
+profession Weir had a reputation, built on relentless toil
+and sound ideas and daring achievements&ndash;&ndash;a reputation
+enhanced by a character of mystery, for the man was
+unmarried, reserved, without intimates or even friends,
+locking his lips about his life, and welcoming and executing
+with grim indifference to risk engineering commissions
+of extreme hazard, on which account he had acquired
+the soubriquet of &ldquo;Cold Steel&rdquo; Weir.</p>
+<p>Who first bestowed upon Weir that name is not
+known. But it was not misapplied. Cold steel he had
+proved himself to be a score of times in critical moments
+when other men would have broken: in pushing bridges
+over mountain chasms, in mine disasters, in strikes, in
+almost hopeless fights against bandits in Mexico. And
+it was this ability to handle difficulties that had brought
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span>
+about the decision of the directors of the company to
+put him in charge, as the man best qualified, at San
+Mateo, where the situation was unsatisfactory, costly,
+baffling.</p>
+<p>Since his arrival a week before he had been consulting
+with Magney, studying maps and blue-prints, examining
+the work and analyzing general conditions. What
+had been accomplished had been well done; he had no
+criticism to offer on that score. It was the delay; the
+work was considerably behind schedule, which of course
+meant excessive cost; and this had undermined the spirit
+of the enterprise. In a dozen places, in a dozen ways,
+Magney, his predecessor, had been hampered, checked,
+defeated&ndash;&ndash;and the main contributing cause was poor
+workmen, inefficient work. On that sore Weir&rsquo;s skillful
+finger fell at once.</p>
+<p>Standing there before the low office building he
+watched Magney depart. He, Steele Weir, had now
+taken over full charge of the camp and assumed full responsibility
+for the project&rsquo;s failure or success. His eye
+passed beyond the distant automobile to the town of
+San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;a new town for him, but a town like many
+he had seen in the southwest and in Mexico. And aside
+from its connection with the construction work, it held
+a fascinating interest, a profound interest for the man,
+the interest that any spot would which has at a distance
+cast a black and sinister shadow over one&rsquo;s life. San
+Mateo&ndash;&ndash;the name lay like a smoldering coal in his
+breast!</p>
+<p>At length he turned and strode down the hillside to
+the dam site in the canyon. The time had come to shut
+his hand about the work and let his hold be felt. He located
+the superintendent directing the pouring of concrete
+in the frames of the dam core, Atkinson, a man
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span>
+of fifty with a stubby gray mustache, a wind-bitten face
+and a tall angular frame. When Weir joined him he
+was observing with speculative eyes the indolent movements
+of a group of Mexican laborers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those <i>hombres</i> don&rsquo;t appear to be breaking any
+speed records, I see,&rdquo; Weir remarked, quietly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Humph,&rdquo; Atkinson grunted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do they think this is? A rest cure?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The superintendent&rsquo;s silence suddenly gave way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ought to land on &rsquo;em with an ax-handle and put
+the fear of God in their lazy souls,&rdquo; he exclaimed, bitterly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say, am I hearing right?&rdquo; Atkinson swung fully
+about to stare at the new chief. Then he went on,
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;d quit to a man if made to do a man&rsquo;s work; I
+supposed that Magney had told you that. A dozen
+times I&rsquo;ve been ready to throw up my job from self-respect;
+I&rsquo;m ashamed to boss work where men can loaf
+and I must keep my tongue between my teeth. I was
+considering just now the matter of leaving.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No need, Atkinson. From this time these men will
+work or get their dismissal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other pushed his hat atilt and rubbed his head
+in surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What about that &lsquo;company policy&rsquo; of hiring nothing
+but local labor to keep the community friendly which
+Magney was always kicking about?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;That
+was what made him sorer than anything else, and beat
+him. He said the directors had tied his hands by promising
+that no workmen should be imported. If they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span>
+promised that, they sure bunkoed themselves. Friendly,
+huh.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The people haven&rsquo;t been friendly, eh?&rdquo; Weir said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does it look like it when these Mexicans won&rsquo;t work
+enough to earn their salt? They openly boast that we
+dare neither make them work nor fire them. They say
+Sorenson and his bunch will pull every man off the works
+if we lift a finger; and they all know about that fool
+promise of the directors. Friendly? Just about as
+friendly as a bunch of wildcats. This whole section,
+white men and Mexicans, are putting a knife into this
+project whenever they can. Do you think they want
+all that mesa fenced up and farmed? This is a range
+country; they propose to keep it range; they don&rsquo;t want
+any more people coming here&ndash;&ndash;farmers, store-keepers,
+and white people generally.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s always the case in a range country before it&rsquo;s
+opened up,&rdquo; Weir said. &ldquo;But they have to swallow the
+pill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me tell you something; they don&rsquo;t intend to
+swallow it here. They figure on keeping this county
+just as it is, for only themselves and their cattle and
+woolies, and everybody else keep out. The few big
+sheep and cattle men, white and Mex, have their minds
+made up to that, and they&rsquo;re the only ones who count;
+all the rest are poor Mexicans with nothing but fleas,
+children, goats and votes to keep Sorenson and his gang
+in control. They&rsquo;ve set out to bust this company, or
+tire it out till it throws up the sponge. They&rsquo;ve spiked
+Magney, and they&rsquo;ll try to spike you next, and every
+manager who comes. That&rsquo;s plain talk I&rsquo;m giving you,
+Mr. Weir, but it&rsquo;s fact; and if it doesn&rsquo;t sound nice to
+your ears, you can have my resignation any minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been hoping to hear it. From now on drive this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span>
+crowd of coffee-colored loafers. Put the lash on their
+backs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A gleam of unholy joy shone in Atkinson&rsquo;s eyes as
+he heard Weir&rsquo;s words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right; that goes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;m warning
+you that they&rsquo;ll quit. You&rsquo;ll see &rsquo;em stringing out of
+camp for home to-night, and those who hang out till
+to-morrow will leave then for sure. By to-morrow night
+the dam will be as quiet as a church week-days. They&rsquo;ll
+not show up again, either, until you send word for them
+to come back&ndash;&ndash;and then they&rsquo;ll know you&rsquo;ve surrendered.
+Magney tried it once, just once. And that&rsquo;s
+why you found me chewing tobacco so lamb-like and
+saying nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turn your gat loose,&rdquo; Weir said. And turning on
+his heel, he went back to headquarters.</p>
+<p>Before Atkinson fired a volley at the unsuspecting
+workmen he crossed the canyon to where a cub engineer
+was peering through a transit. The superintendent
+had overheard a scrap of gossip among the staff one
+evening before Weir&rsquo;s arrival when they were discussing
+the advent of the new chief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was that name you fellows were saying Weir
+was called by?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>The boy straightened up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Cold Steel&rsquo;&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;Cold Steel&rsquo; Weir. Anyway that&rsquo;s
+what Fergueson says,&rdquo; was the answer. &ldquo;I never heard
+it before myself. His first name&rsquo;s Steele, you know, and
+he looks cold enough to be ice when he&rsquo;s asking questions
+about things, boring into a fellow with his eyes.
+But he&rsquo;s up against a hard game here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe. But a man doesn&rsquo;t get a name like that
+for just parting his hair nice,&rdquo; Atkinson remarked.
+&ldquo;He told me to stretch &rsquo;em&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;a horny thumb jerked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span>
+towards the workmen&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;and you&rsquo;ll see some real work
+hereabouts for the rest of the afternoon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to-morrow will be Sunday three days ahead of
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You know as much about that as I do. Make your
+own guess.&rdquo; With which the speaker started off.</p>
+<p>The morrow was &ldquo;Sunday&rdquo; with a vengeance. The
+majority of the laborers demanded their pay checks the
+minute work ceased at the end of the afternoon; Atkinson
+tightened orders, and by noon next day the last of
+the Mexicans had quit. The fires in the stationary engines
+were banked; the concrete mixers did not revolve;
+the conveyers were still; the dam site wore an air of
+abandonment. In headquarters the engineers worked
+over tracings or notes; and in the commissary store the
+half-dozen white foremen gathered to smoke and yarn.
+That was the extent of the activity.</p>
+<p>Two days passed. After dinner Weir held a terse
+long-distance telephone conversation, the only incident
+of the second day; and it was overheard by no one. On
+the fourth day this was repeated. At dawn of the fifth
+he despatched all of the foremen, enginemen and engineers
+with wagons to Bowenville; and about the middle
+of the afternoon, accompanied by his assistant, Meyers,
+and Atkinson, he sped in the manager&rsquo;s car down the
+river for San Mateo, two miles below the camp.</p>
+<p>Of the town Steele Weir had had but a glimpse as he
+flashed through on his way to the dam the morning of
+his arrival twelve days earlier. It had but a single
+main street, from which littered side streets and alleys
+ran off between mud walls of houses. The county court
+house sat among cottonwood trees in an open space. A
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span>
+few pretentious dwellings, homes of white men and the
+well-to-do Mexicans, arose among long low adobe structures
+that were as brown and characterless as the sun-dried
+bricks of which they were built. That was San
+Mateo.</p>
+<p>Before doors and everywhere along the street workmen
+from the dam were idling. As Meyers brought the
+automobile to a stop before the court house, news of
+Weir&rsquo;s visit spread miraculously and Mexicans began to
+saunter forward to hear the engineer&rsquo;s words of surrender,
+couched in the form of a suave invitation to return
+to work. While the crowd gathered the three
+Americans sat quietly in the car. Then Steele Weir
+stood up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who can speak for these men?&rdquo; he demanded.</p>
+<p>A lean Mexican with a long shiny black mustache
+and a thin neck protruding from a soiled linen collar
+elbowed a way to the front.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m authorized to speak for them,&rdquo; he announced,
+disclosing his white teeth in an engaging smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you one of the workmen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I&rsquo;m a lawyer and represent them in this controversy.
+By your favor therefore let us proceed.
+You&rsquo;ve come to persuade them to resume work, and that
+is well. But there are conditions to be agreed upon
+before they return, which with your permission I shall
+state&ndash;&ndash;first, no harsh driving of the workmen by foremen;
+second, full wages for the days they have been
+idle; third, no Sunday work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer regarded the speaker without change of
+countenance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you finished?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. There are minor matters, but they can be
+adjusted later. These are the important points.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, this is my reply: I, not the workmen,
+make the terms for work on this job&ndash;&ndash;I, not these men,
+name the conditions on which they may return. And
+they are as follows: no pay for the idle days; if the
+workmen return they agree to work as ordered by superintendent
+and foremen; and last, they must start
+for the dam within an hour or not at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Incredulity, amazement rested on the Mexican spokesman&rsquo;s
+face as he listened to this curt rejoinder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Preposterous, impossible, absurd!&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+Then revolving on his heels so as to face the crowd he
+swiftly repeated in Spanish what Weir had said.</p>
+<p>An angry stir followed, murmurs, sullen looks, a number
+of oaths and jeers. The lawyer turned again to the
+engineer, spreading his hands in a wide gesture and lifting
+his brows with exaggerated significance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You see, Mr. Weir, your position is hopeless,&rdquo; he
+remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ask them if they definitely refuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lawyer put the question to the crowd. A chorus
+of shouts vehemently gave affirmation&ndash;&ndash;a refusal immediate,
+disdainful, unanimous.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll now discuss the men&rsquo;s terms,&rdquo; the lawyer remarked
+politely and with an air of satisfaction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing more to discuss. The matter is
+settled. They have refused; they need not seek work
+at the dam again. Start the car, Meyers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The roar of the machine drowned the indignant lawyer&rsquo;s
+protest, the crowd hastened to give an opening
+and the conference was at an end.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drive to Vorse&rsquo;s saloon; I want a look at Vorse,&rdquo;
+said Weir. &ldquo;I see the place a short way ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When they entered the long low adobe building an
+anemic-appearing Mexican standing at the far end of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span>
+the bar languidly started forward to serve them, but a
+bald-headed, hawk-nosed man seated at a desk behind
+the cigar-case laid aside his newspaper, arose and
+checked the other by a sidewise jerk of his head.</p>
+<p>He received their orders for beer and lifted three dripping
+bottles from a tub of water at his feet. His eyes
+passed casually over Steele Weir&rsquo;s face, glanced away,
+then came back for a swift unblinking scrutiny. The
+eyes his own met were as hard, stony and inscrutable
+as his own. Finally Vorse, the saloon-keeper, turned
+his gaze towards the window and extracting a quill
+tooth-pick from a vest pocket began thoughtfully to
+pick his teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the new manager at the dam?&rdquo; he asked
+presently, still considering the street through the window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And your name is Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got it right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The questions ended there. The three men from camp
+slowly consumed their beer and exchanged indifferent
+remarks. At the end of five minutes the Mexican lawyer,
+clutching the arm of an elderly, gray-mustached man,
+entered the saloon.</p>
+<p>They lined up at the bar nearby the others. The older
+of the pair regarded the trio shrewdly, laid a calf-bound
+book that he carried under his arm upon the counter
+and ordered &ldquo;a little bourbon.&rdquo; When he had swallowed
+this, he addressed the men from the engineering
+camp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which of you is Mr. Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am he,&rdquo; Steele replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Martinez here has solicited me, Mr. Weir, to use
+my offices in explaining to you the workmen&rsquo;s point of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span>
+view in the controversy that exists relative to the work.
+I&rsquo;m Senator Gordon, a member of the state legislature,
+and I have no interest in the matter beyond seeing an
+amicable and just arrangement effected.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir fixed his eyes on the speaker with an intentness,
+a cold penetration, that seemed to bore to the
+very recesses of his mind. In that look there was something
+questioning and something menacing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no controversy and hence no need of your
+services. The men stopped work, refused to return, and
+now the case is closed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear sir, let us talk it over,&rdquo; said the Senator,
+bringing forth a pair of spectacles and setting the bow
+upon his nose.</p>
+<p>The engineer&rsquo;s visage failed to relax at this pacific
+proposal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I gave them their chance and they declined; they&rsquo;ll
+have no other,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;Those men have browbeaten
+the company long enough. They refused, and as I anticipated
+that refusal I made preparations accordingly;
+a hundred and fifty white workmen arrived at Bowenville
+from Denver this morning and a hundred and fifty more
+will come to-morrow. They will do the work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Senator&rsquo;s lips quivered and the upper one lifted
+in a movement like a snarl, showing tobacco-stained
+teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The matter isn&rsquo;t closed, understand that,&rdquo; he
+snapped out. &ldquo;We have the directors&rsquo; promise no outside
+labor shall be brought in here for this job, and the
+promise shall be kept.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The new men go to work in the morning,&rdquo; Weir said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll repent of this action, young man, you&rsquo;ll repent
+of it.&rdquo; The Senator seized the whisky bottle and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span>
+angrily poured himself a second drink. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll repent
+of it as sure as your name is&ndash;&ndash;is&ndash;&ndash;whatever it is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer took a step nearer the older man. His
+face now was as hard as granite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weir is my name,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Did you ever hear it
+before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weir&ndash;&ndash;Weir?&rdquo; came in a questioning mutter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The speaker&rsquo;s eyes held the Senator&rsquo;s in savage leash,
+and a slight tremble presently began to shake the old
+man. Atkinson and Meyers and even the volatile Mexican
+lawyer, Martinez, remained unstirring, for in the
+situation they suddenly sensed something beyond their
+ken, some current of deep unknown forces, some play of
+fierce, obscure and fateful passion.</p>
+<p>A shadow of gray stole over Gordon&rsquo;s lineaments.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are&ndash;&ndash;are the son of&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; came gasping forth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am. His son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I know what happened thirty years ago in this
+selfsame room!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The whisky that the Senator had poured into his
+glass suddenly slopped over his fingers; his figure all
+at once appeared more aged, hollow, bent. Without
+further word, with his hand still shaking, he set the
+glass on the bar, mechanically picked up the law book
+and walked feebly towards the door.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir turned his gaze on the saloon-keeper,
+Vorse. The man&rsquo;s right hand was under the bar and
+he seemed to be awaiting the engineer&rsquo;s next move, taut,
+tight-lipped, malignant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was for you too, Vorse,&rdquo; was flung at him.
+&ldquo;One Weir went out of here, but another has returned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he led his companions away.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_II_A_COMEDYAND_SOMETHING_ELSE' id='CHAPTER_II_A_COMEDYAND_SOMETHING_ELSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<h3>A COMEDY&ndash;&ndash;AND SOMETHING ELSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Towards noon one day a week later Steele Weir,
+headed for Bowenville in his car, had gained Chico
+Creek, half way between camp and San Mateo, when he
+perceived that another machine blocked the ford. About
+the wheels of the stalled car the shallow water rippled
+briskly, four or five inches deep; entirely deep enough,
+by all appearances, to keep marooned in the runabout
+the girl sitting disconsolately at the wheel.</p>
+<p>She was a very attractive-looking girl, Steele noted
+casually as he brought his own car to a halt and sprang
+out to join her, wading the water with his laced boots.
+As he approached he perceived that she had a slender
+well-rounded figure, fine-spun brown hair under her
+hat brim, clear brown eyes and the pink of peach blossoms
+in her soft smooth cheeks.</p>
+<p>But her look of relief vanished when she distinguished
+his face and her shoulders squared themselves.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has your engine stopped?&rdquo; he inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll look into the hood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I prefer that you would not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For an instant surprise marked his countenance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean that you desire to remain here?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t wish to remain here, but I choose that in
+preference to your aid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man, who had bent forward to lift one cover of
+the engine, straightened up at that. He considered her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span>
+intently and in silence for a time, marking her heightened
+color, the haughty poise of her head, the firm set
+of her lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To my knowledge, I never saw you before in my life,&rdquo;
+he remarked at last. &ldquo;What, may I ask, is your particular
+reason for declining my services?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was dumb for a little, while she tucked back a
+stray tendril of hair. The act was performed with the
+left hand; and Weir&rsquo;s eyes, which seldom missed anything,
+observed a diamond flash on the third finger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;d choose not to explain,&rdquo; said she, afterwards,
+&ldquo;but if you insist&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t insist, I merely request ... your highness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A flash of anger shot from her eyes at this irony.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m afraid to tell you!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+because you&rsquo;re the manager of the construction camp;
+and if you&rsquo;ve never seen me before, I&rsquo;ve at least had you
+pointed out to me. I wish no assistance from the man
+who turns off his poor workmen without excuse or warning,
+and brings want and trouble upon the community.
+It was like striking them in the face. And then you
+break your promise not to bring in other workmen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As she had said, she did not lack courage. Her words
+gushed forth in a torrent, as if an expression of pent
+up and outraged justice, disclosing a fervent sympathy
+and a fine zeal&ndash;&ndash;and, likewise, a fine ignorance of the
+facts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, why don&rsquo;t you say something?&rdquo; she added,
+when he gave no indication of replying.</p>
+<p>Steele could have smiled at this feminine view of the
+matter that violent assertions required affirmations or
+denials.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What am I supposed to say?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>Apparently that exhausted her patience.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll please molest me no longer,&rdquo; she stated, icily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He raised the hood and inspected the engine. During
+his attempts to start it, she sat nonchalantly humming
+an air and gazing at the mountains as if her mind were a
+thousand miles away&ndash;&ndash;which it was not.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something wrong; it will have to be hauled in,&rdquo; said
+he finally.</p>
+<p>No reply. Steele returned to his own car and descending
+into the creek bed worked his way around her.
+When he was on the far bank, he rejoined her again,
+carrying a coil of rope. One end of this he fastened
+securely to the rear axle of her runabout.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you going to do, sir?&rdquo; she demanded,
+whirling about on her seat and glaring angrily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drag you out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do nothing of the kind!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes,&rdquo; was his calm response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Against my wishes, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is abominable!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put on the brakes.&rdquo; And put them on she did,
+with a savage jerk.</p>
+<p>But nevertheless Weir&rsquo;s powerful machine drew her
+car slowly up out of the creek upon the road, where he
+forced it about until it pointed towards San Mateo.
+Then he retied the rope on the front axle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now for town,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you haul me out of there, I demand to
+know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why? Because you were a public obstruction
+blocking traffic. If you had remained there long enough
+you would have become a public nuisance; and it&rsquo;s the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span>
+duty of every citizen to abate nuisances. No one would
+call you a nuisance, of course,&ndash;&ndash;not to your face, at
+any rate. But travelers might have felt some annoyance
+if compelled to drive around you; they might even
+have had you arrested when they learned you were
+acting out of willful stubbornness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a sort of incredulous wonder, of charmed horror,
+the girl heard herself thus unfeelingly described.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&ndash;&ndash;you barbarian!&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ready? We&rsquo;re off for town now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll run my car in the ditch and wreck it if you so
+much as pull it another inch!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like to be frustrated in my generous acts;
+they are so few, according to common report. Well,
+we&rsquo;ll leave the car, but it must be drawn off the road.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When this was accomplished, Weir replaced the rope
+in his machine. Then he returned to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What now? Do you intend to sit here in the hot
+sunshine, to say nothing of missing your dinner?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That doesn&rsquo;t concern you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir shook his head gravely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must be saved from your own folly,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>Before she had realized what was happening, he had
+opened the door of the runabout, swung her out upon
+the ground and was marching her towards his own machine.
+Stupefaction at this quick, atrocious deed left
+her an automaton; and before she had fully regained
+her control they were speeding towards San Mateo, she
+at his side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is outrageous!&rdquo; she gasped.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir did not speak until they entered town.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is your home?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turn to the right at the end of the street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was before a house of modern structure, banked
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span>
+with a bewildering number of flowers and shaded by
+trees, that he halted the car. He alighted, bared his
+head, assisted her to descend, bowed and then without
+a word drove away, leaving her to stare after him with
+a baffling mixture of feelings and the single indignant
+statement, &ldquo;And he didn&rsquo;t even wait long enough for me
+to thank him!&rdquo; Nor did her perplexity lessen when her
+car was left before the door during the afternoon by one
+of the camp mechanics to whom Weir had telephoned
+from San Mateo and who had put it in running order.</p>
+<p>Weir himself proceeded to Bowenville, where matters
+regarding shipments and the unloading of machinery
+engaged him the rest of the day. Into his mind, however,
+there floated at moments the image of the girl&rsquo;s face,
+banish it as he would. He had learned her name by
+asking who was the owner of the house where she had
+alighted, information necessary to direct the mechanic
+as to the delivery of the stalled car. Hosmer it was;
+and the residence was that of Dr. Hosmer. Presumably
+she was his daughter. And what a vivid, charming,
+never-surrender enemy! Lucky the chap who had won
+this high-spirited girl.</p>
+<p>The memory of her eyes and her personality was still
+with him when he ate his supper that evening in a restaurant
+in Bowenville. His own past in relation to the
+other sex had been starred by no love affair, not even
+by episodes of a sentimental nature; the character of
+his work had for long periods kept him away from
+women&rsquo;s society, but further than this there was the
+shadow upon his life, the shadow of mystery that obliged
+him to follow a solitary course. He considered himself
+unfree to seek friendships or favors among women. By
+every demand of honor he was bound to solicit no girl&rsquo;s
+trust or affection until that mystery was cleared and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span>
+his father&rsquo;s innocence established. It was for this reason
+that he seemed even to himself to grow more hard, more
+harsh, more silent and aloof, until at last he had come
+to believe that no fair face had the power to arouse
+his interest or to quicken his pulse.</p>
+<p>But now, this girl he had met at the ford!</p>
+<p>Long-stifled emotions struggled in his breast. Sleeping
+desires awoke. His spirit swelled like a caged thing
+within the shell of years of indurated habit. A strange
+restlessness pervaded him. He had a fierce passion
+somehow to rip in pieces the gray drab pattern of his
+commonplace life.</p>
+<p>Perhaps it was this revolt against the fetters of fate
+that caused him to welcome the chance for action that
+presently was offered. The restaurant was of an ordinary
+type, with a lunch counter at one side, a row of
+tables down the middle and half a dozen booths along
+the wall offering some degree of privacy. In one of
+these Steele Weir was smoking a cigar and finishing his
+coffee before making his ride back to camp. From the
+booth adjoining he had for some time been hearing
+scraps of conversation; now all at once the voices rose
+in protest and in answering explanation, in perplexed
+appeal and earnest assurance.</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s own reflections ceased. His head turned and
+remained fixed to listen, while the cigar grew cold between
+his fingers. For ten minutes or so his attitude of
+concentrated harkening to the two voices, a girl&rsquo;s and
+a man&rsquo;s, remained unchanged. Little by little he was
+piecing out the thread of the confidential dialogue&ndash;&ndash;and
+of the little drama being enacted in the booth.</p>
+<p>His brows became lowering as he gathered its significance,
+his lips drew together in a tight thin line. He
+did not move when he heard the man push back his chair
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span>
+to leave the place, nor alter his position until there
+came the sound of the door closing at the front of the
+restaurant. Then he reached for his hat, stood up and
+went lightly around into the other booth, where he
+pulled the green calico curtain across the opening.</p>
+<p>A girl of about seventeen, of plump clean prettiness,
+still sat at the table, which was littered with dishes.
+The cheap finery of her hat and dress showed a pathetic
+attempt to increase her natural comeliness. At this
+minute her face showed amazement and a hint of apprehension.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you coming in here for?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want to talk to you for a little while,&rdquo; Weir replied,
+seating himself. &ldquo;You will please listen. I&rsquo;ve
+overheard enough of your talk to catch its drift; you
+came here to be married, but now this man wants to
+induce you to go to Los Angeles first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That isn&rsquo;t any of your business,&rdquo; the girl flashed
+back, going white and red by turns.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m making it mine, however. You live up on
+Terry Creek, by what I heard; that&rsquo;s not far from my
+camp. I&rsquo;m manager at the dam and my name&rsquo;s Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this statement the girl shrank back, beginning to
+bite the hem of her handkerchief nervously and gazing
+at him with terrified eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m here to help you, not harm you. You&rsquo;ve run
+away from home to-day to marry this fellow. Did he
+promise to marry you if you came to Bowenville?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now he wants you to go with him to Los
+Angeles first, promising to marry you there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl hesitated, with a wavering look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He gives you excuses, of course. But they don&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span>
+satisfy your mind, do they? They don&rsquo;t satisfy mine,
+at any rate. It&rsquo;s the old trick. Suppose when you
+reached the coast he didn&rsquo;t marry you after all and put
+you off with more promises and after a week or two
+abandoned you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he wouldn&rsquo;t do that!&rdquo; she cried, with a gulp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just what he is planning. He didn&rsquo;t meet
+you here until after dark, I judge. You&rsquo;ll both go to
+the train separately&ndash;&ndash;I overheard that part. Afterwards
+he could return from the coast and deny that
+he had ever had anything to do with you, and it would
+simply be your word against his. And which would
+people hereabouts believe, tell me that, which would
+they believe, yours or his, after you had gone wrong?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl sat frozen. Then suddenly she began to cry,
+softly and with jerks of her shoulders. Weir reached
+out and patted her arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your name?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary&ndash;&ndash;Mary Johnson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary, I&rsquo;m interfering in your affairs only because
+I know what men will do. You must take no chances.
+If this fellow is really anxious to marry you, he&rsquo;ll do
+it here in Bowenville.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a few sobs she wiped her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said he didn&rsquo;t dare get the license in San Mateo,
+or his folks would have stopped our marriage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you should stay here to-night, go to the next
+county seat and be married to-morrow. His parents are
+bound to learn about it once you&rsquo;re married. A few days
+more or less make no difference. And though I should
+return to my work, I&rsquo;ll just stay over a day and take
+you in my car to-morrow to see that you&rsquo;re married
+straight and proper. Why go clear to Los Angeles?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He said it would be our honeymoon&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;and I
+had never been away from here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s his name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She hesitated in uncertainty whether or not she
+should answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed Sorenson,&rdquo; came at last from her lips.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir slowly thrust his head forward, fixing
+her with burning eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Son of the big cattleman?&rdquo; he demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you love him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, oh, yes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir sat back in his seat, lighted a cigarette and
+stared past her head at the opposite partition. The
+evil strain of the father had been continued in the son
+and was working here to seduce this simple, ignorant
+girl, incited by her physical freshness and the expectation
+that she should be easy prey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I doubt if he loves you,&rdquo; he said, presently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He does, he does!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he really does above everything else in the world,
+he&rsquo;ll be willing to marry you openly, no matter what
+his father may say or do. That&rsquo;s the test, Mary. If
+he&rsquo;s in earnest, he&rsquo;ll agree at once to go with us to the
+next county seat to-morrow and be married there by a
+minister. Isn&rsquo;t that true? Answer me that squarely;
+isn&rsquo;t it true?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then by that we&rsquo;ll decide. If he agrees, well and
+good; if he refuses, that will show him up&ndash;&ndash;show he
+never had any intention of marrying you. I&rsquo;m a
+stranger to you, but I&rsquo;m your friend. And you&rsquo;re not
+going to Los Angeles unmarried!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span></div>
+<p>The last words were uttered in a level menacing tone
+that caused Mary Johnson to shiver. To her, reared
+in the humble adobe house on her father&rsquo;s little ranch
+on Terry Creek, a man who could manage the great
+irrigation project seemed a figure out of her ken, a vast
+form working against the sky. His statements were not
+to be disputed, whatever she might think.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; she said, just above a whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. Now we&rsquo;ll wait for him. He was coming
+back for you, wasn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I was to stay at the hotel till train time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this your grip?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir jerked a thumb towards a worn canvas &ldquo;telescope&rdquo;
+fastened with a single shawl strap, resting in
+the corner of the booth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s mine. Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How old is Ed Sorenson,&rdquo; he asked, after a pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About thirty, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How old are you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seventeen next month.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But sixteen yet this month.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He said nothing more. As the minutes passed, her
+timorous gaze continued steadfastly on the stern countenance
+before her. She dully expected something terrible
+to happen when Ed Sorenson appeared, for she
+knew Ed would be angry; but she had been powerless to
+prevent the intrusion of this terrible stranger.</p>
+<p>Fear, in truth, a fear that left her heart cold, was
+her feeling as she contemplated Weir. Yet under that,
+was there not something else? A sense of safety, of
+comforting assurance of protection?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&ndash;&ndash;you won&rsquo;t hurt Ed if he won&rsquo;t go with us?&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span>
+she asked, in a low voice. &ldquo;If he gets mad and won&rsquo;t
+marry me here, I mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s eyes came round to hers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just break him in two, nothing more, Mary,&rdquo; was
+the calm answer.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_III_THE_ENEMYS_SPAWN' id='CHAPTER_III_THE_ENEMYS_SPAWN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<h3>THE ENEMY&rsquo;S SPAWN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The curtain to the booth was flung back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve the train tickets; come along to the hotel&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;
+exclaimed the man who quickly entered. But the words
+died in his mouth at sight of Weir sitting in the place
+he had vacated.</p>
+<p>He was over average height, of strong fleshy build,
+with a small blonde mustache on his upper lip. Under
+his eyes little pouches had already begun to form; his
+mouth was full and sensual; but he still retained an air
+of liveliness, of carelessness and agility, that might at
+first sight seem the spontaneity of youth. He wore a
+brown suit, a gray flannel shirt and Stetson hat&ndash;&ndash;the
+common apparel of the country.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who the devil are you? And what are you butting
+in here for?&rdquo; he exclaimed, with a vicious spark showing
+in his pale blue eyes. At the same time he clapped
+a hand on Weir&rsquo;s shoulder, closing it in a hard grasp.</p>
+<p>Instantly Weir struck the hand off with his fist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep your dirty flippers to yourself,&rdquo; he said, rising.</p>
+<p>The blood faded from the other&rsquo;s countenance, leaving
+it white with rage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get out of this booth, or I&rsquo;ll throw you out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Weir&rsquo;s turn to act. Like a flash he caught
+Sorenson&rsquo;s elbow, jerked him forward, spun him about
+and dropped him upon the chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit there, you cradle-robber, until I&rsquo;m through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span>
+with you,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;And if you don&rsquo;t want
+everybody in this restaurant to know about your business
+with this girl, you&rsquo;ll lower your voice when you
+talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson shot an uneasy glance towards the curtain
+and his wrath became not less furious but better controlled.
+Clearly public attention was the last thing
+he desired in this affair. He leaned back, staring at
+Steele Weir insolently, and produced a cigarette, at
+which he began to puff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary, get ready. We&rsquo;ll be going in a minute,&rdquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, you&rsquo;ll not, Sorenson. I&rsquo;ve taken a hand in your
+game. This girl says you&rsquo;re going to marry her, is that
+right?&rdquo; The other rolled his eyes upward and began
+to whistle a jig tune softly. &ldquo;Well, this is the plan she
+and I&rsquo;ve made. She&rsquo;ll remain at the hotel to-night&ndash;&ndash;as
+will you and I&ndash;&ndash;and to-morrow we&rsquo;ll drive to another
+county seat in my car and you&rsquo;ll secure a licence there.
+Then you&rsquo;ll go to a minister&rsquo;s, where I&rsquo;ll act as a witness,
+and the ceremony will be performed. Afterwards
+the pair of you can proceed to Los Angeles, or elsewhere
+as you please, on your wedding journey.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re quite a little planner, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; the other
+jeered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the arrangement if you agree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t agree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary Johnson, in whose eyes a light of hope had
+dawned during Weir&rsquo;s low-toned statement, began nervously
+to bite her lip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t you do it, Ed?&rdquo; she asked, timidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll do as I planned, or nothing,&rdquo; he stated. Then
+with sudden spite he continued, &ldquo;You&rsquo;re responsible for
+this mixup. What did you let this fellow in here for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span>
+while I was gone? Didn&rsquo;t you have sense enough to
+keep your mouth shut?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele halted him by a gesture.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t begin abusing her; you&rsquo;re not married to her
+yet. I overheard your talk and guessed the low-lived,
+scoundrelly trick you proposed to play on her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You damned eavesdropper&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure, eavesdropper is right,&rdquo; Weir interrupted,
+coolly. &ldquo;So I just stepped in here from my booth next
+door to discuss the situation with her; you can&rsquo;t mislead
+an innocent girl like her with the intention of shaking
+her when you get her into a city, not if I know about
+it and am around. If you sincerely intend to marry
+her, and will do so to-morrow in my presence, then I&rsquo;ll
+withdraw. Afterwards I mean, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson arose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Mary. Stand aside, you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She doesn&rsquo;t go with you,&rdquo; the engineer stated.</p>
+<p>For a moment the men&rsquo;s eyes locked, those of one
+full of blue fire and hatred, those of the other quiet
+as pieces of flint.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And she shall keep with me while I telephone to your
+father that you brought her here under promise of
+marriage, a girl of sixteen, without her own parents&rsquo;
+consent, and now refuse to marry her,&rdquo; Steele added.</p>
+<p>A sneer twisted the other man&rsquo;s mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father happens to be in the east, where he&rsquo;s been
+for a month,&rdquo; he mocked. &ldquo;If he were here, he wouldn&rsquo;t
+believe you; he&rsquo;d know you were a liar. He knows I&rsquo;m
+engaged to marry&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Bite off the words as he tried,
+they had escaped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that&rsquo;s the way of it!&rdquo; Weir remarked with a
+silky smoothness. &ldquo;You expect to marry some other
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span>
+girl&ndash;&ndash;and have no intention whatever of marrying Mary
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To hell with you and your opinions!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;First, you coax her to Bowenville by a promise, then
+you persuade her by more promises to go to Los Angeles,&rdquo;
+the engineer proceeded steadily, &ldquo;and there you
+would betray and abandon her to a life on the streets,
+like the yellow cur you are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson snapped his fingers and moved round to the
+girl&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pay no attention to him,&rdquo; he addressed her. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
+only a crazy fool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But she drew back against the wall, staring at him
+with a strained, searching regard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you marry me to-morrow as he asks?&rdquo; she
+questioned anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I explained the reason why once. Come on;
+let&rsquo;s get away from him. Then I&rsquo;ll make everything
+clear and satisfactory to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment she stood wavering, picking at her
+handkerchief, her face pale and unhappy, questioning
+his countenance. Finally she turned to look at Steele
+Weir, standing silently by.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You never said you were engaged to another girl;
+you told me I was the only one you loved,&rdquo; she muttered
+in a choked voice. &ldquo;But I see now you won&rsquo;t marry me.
+You wish me to go with you&ndash;&ndash;but not to marry. I&rsquo;m
+going away&ndash;&ndash;away anywhere. By myself! Where I&rsquo;ll
+never see any one!&rdquo; Burying her face in her hands, she
+shook with sobs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is what comes from your putting an oar in,&rdquo;
+said Sorenson, lifting his fist in a burst of fury to strike
+Weir.</p>
+<p>The latter at once smote him across the mouth with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span>
+open palm at the vile epithet that followed. Sorenson
+staggered, then lunged forward, tugging at something
+in his hip-pocket, while the table and dishes went over
+in a crash.</p>
+<p>Before he could draw the weapon Steele&rsquo;s fingers shot
+forth and seized his wrist; his other hand closed about
+Sorenson&rsquo;s throat in an iron grasp. Slowly under that
+powerful grip the younger man&rsquo;s struggles ceased, his
+eyes dilated, his knees yielded and gave way. The revolver
+was wrenched from his numbed hold. His eyeballs
+seemed afire; his breast heaved in violent spasms
+for the denied breath; and his heart appeared about to
+burst.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You miserable skunk!&rdquo; Weir said, barely moving
+his mouth. &ldquo;I ought to choke the life out of you.&rdquo;
+Then he released his hold. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll keep this gun&ndash;&ndash;and
+use it if you ever try to pull another on me! Now,
+make tracks. Remember, too, to pay your bill as you
+go out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Sorenson had straightened his coat, giving
+Weir a malignant look during the process, he departed.
+His air of disdainful insolence had quite evaporated, but
+that he considered the action between them only begun
+was plain, though he spoke not a word. Weir, however,
+heard him give a quieting explanation to the waiter hovering
+outside, who had been drawn by the crash of
+dishes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thought a fight was going on,&rdquo; the aproned dispenser
+of food said to Steele when he and the girl
+emerged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just an accident. Nothing broken, I imagine,&rdquo; was
+the response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You couldn&rsquo;t break those dishes with a hammer;
+they&rsquo;re made for rough work.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;If there&rsquo;s any damage, this may cover it.&rdquo; And
+Steele tossed the fellow a dollar.</p>
+<p>Outside the restaurant he slipped his hand inside
+Mary Johnson&rsquo;s arm and led her along the street. With
+him he had brought the old strapped grip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where you taking me?&rdquo; she asked, in a worried
+quaver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Home, Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;m afraid to go home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you afraid of your own father and mother?
+They&rsquo;re the ones to trust first of all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But when father&ndash;&ndash;mother is dead&ndash;&ndash;sees the telescope,
+he&rsquo;ll want to know where I&rsquo;ve been. He doesn&rsquo;t
+know I have it. I told him I might stay with a girl at
+San Mateo over night, and then sneaked it out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The best thing is to tell him all about this occurrence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I can&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I shall. Leave that part to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And though her heart was filled with fresh alarms
+and fears at the prospect, there seemed nothing else to
+do. She longed to flee, to hide in some dark hole, to
+cover her shame from her father and the world, but in
+the hands of this determined man she felt herself powerless.
+What he willed, she dumbly did.</p>
+<p>Terry Creek flowed out of the mountains four miles
+north of San Mateo, an insignificant stream entering the
+Burntwood halfway down to Bowenville. The Johnson
+ranch house was a mile up the canyon, where the rocky
+walls expanded into a grassy park of no great area.
+They reached the girl&rsquo;s home about half-past nine that
+night.</p>
+<p>For two hours Weir remained talking with the father,
+describing the affair at Bowenville, fending off his first
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span>
+bitter anger at the girl and gradually persuading him
+to see that Mary had been deceived, lured away on hollow
+promises and was guiltless of all except failing to
+take him into her confidence. At last peace was made.
+Mary wept for a time, and was patted on the head by
+her rough, bearded father, who exclaimed, &ldquo;There,
+there, don&rsquo;t cry. You&rsquo;re safe back again; we&rsquo;ll just
+forget it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Outside of the house, however, where he had accompanied
+Weir to his car, he said with an oath:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll not forget Ed Sorenson, if I go to hell for
+it. My little girl!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s half a child yet, that&rsquo;s the worse of his offense,&rdquo;
+Steele replied, savagely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary said you choked him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some. Not enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not forget him&ndash;&ndash;or you, Mr. Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele mounted into his machine. He thoughtfully
+studied the rancher&rsquo;s bearded, weather-tanned face, illuminated
+by the moonlight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At present I&rsquo;d say nothing about this matter to
+any one. Later on you may be able to use it in squaring
+accounts,&rdquo; the engineer advised.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope so,&rdquo; was the answer, with a bitter note. &ldquo;But
+talking would only hurt Mary, not Ed Sorenson. Whatever
+the Sorensons do is all right, you know, because
+they&rsquo;re rich. The daughter of a poor man like me
+would get all the black end of the gossip; and I can&rsquo;t
+lift a finger, that&rsquo;s what grinds me, unless I go out and
+shoot him, then hang for it. For the bank&rsquo;s got a
+mortgage on my little bunch of stock, and on my ranch
+here, and Sorenson, of course, is the bank. Gordon and
+Vorse and a few others are in it too, but he&rsquo;s the bull
+of the herd. If I opened my mouth about his son, I&rsquo;d
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span>
+be kicked off of Terry Creek, lock, stock and barrel.
+That&rsquo;s the way Sorenson keeps all of us poor devils,
+white and Mexican, eating out of his hand. I&rsquo;ve just
+been poor since I came here a boy; the gang in San
+Mateo won&rsquo;t let anybody but themselves have a chance.
+And I reckon old man Sorenson wouldn&rsquo;t care much if
+his boy had ruined my girl. Cuss him a little, maybe;
+that would be all. But I won&rsquo;t forget the whelp. Some
+day my chance will come to play even.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Sure; if one just keeps quiet and waits,&rdquo; Steele
+agreed. &ldquo;Well, I must hit the trail. If you want work
+any time, come over to the dam; we can always use a
+man with a team.&rdquo;
+Johnson nodded.
+&ldquo;After haying is done, maybe. And remember, I&rsquo;m
+much obliged to you for looking after my little girl. I
+won&rsquo;t forget that, either.&rdquo;
+He reached up diffidently and shook hands with the
+engineer. Weir&rsquo;s grip was sympathetic and sincere.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IV_A_SECRET_CONFERENCE' id='CHAPTER_IV_A_SECRET_CONFERENCE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<h3>A SECRET CONFERENCE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>On a certain afternoon Felipe Martinez, the lean and
+restless attorney who had acted as the Mexican workmen&rsquo;s
+mouthpiece, observed through the broad plate-glass
+window of the San Mateo Cattle Company&rsquo;s office
+an incident that greatly interested him. For the moment
+he forgot the resentment kindled by Sorenson&rsquo;s
+abrupt refusal and brutal words when he asked for the
+nomination for county attorney. The election was in
+the autumn; the nomination was equivalent to election;
+and Felipe considered that he had too long been kept
+apart from that particular spoil.</p>
+<p>Martinez had once had a slight difference with the
+banker, and now outrageously Sorenson had recalled it.
+He had stated that Martinez should hold no political
+office; he gave offices only to men who did exactly as he
+advised; his exact words were that the Mexican was
+&ldquo;tricky and no good.&rdquo; And picking up his hat Sorenson
+who had that day returned home from the east went
+out of the bank, leaving Martinez to stare out of the
+window and meditatively twist a point of his silky black
+mustache.</p>
+<p>It was before the window that there occurred the meeting
+between Sorenson and the manager of the dam.
+Martinez perceived the two men glance at each other
+and pass, but after a step or two both men halted. As
+if worked by a single wire, they slowly swung about for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span>
+a second look. The Mexican&rsquo;s nimble brain calculated
+that they could not have previously met and in consequence
+their behavior bespoke something out of the
+ordinary.</p>
+<p>The pair stood exactly where they had turned, three
+or four paces apart, he noted. The Mexican&rsquo;s mind
+palpitated with a slight thrill of excitement. The
+manner of each of the men was that of a fighting animal
+looking over another animal of the same sort:
+neither uttering a word, nor stirring a finger, nor yielding
+a particle in his fixed unwinking gaze. Martinez
+could almost feel the exchanged challenge, the cold antagonism,
+the hostile curiosity, the matching of wills,
+the instant hate, between the men.</p>
+<p>Though they had not met before, to be sure, nevertheless
+they were enemies. Was it because of the discharge
+of the workmen? Then Martinez&rsquo; mind flashed back to
+the scene in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon when Gordon had showed such
+sudden emotion at the engineer&rsquo;s name and his enigmatical
+reference to some event in the past. That was it!
+Something which had occurred thirty years ago, probably
+something crooked. Men committed deeds in those
+early days that they would now like to forget. He,
+Martinez, would look into the matter.</p>
+<p>Sorenson passed out of sight, and Weir likewise proceeded
+on his way. Thereupon the lawyer sauntered
+over to the court house, where presently he became engrossed
+in a pile of tomes in the register&rsquo;s office. As examining
+records is a part of a lawyer&rsquo;s regular work,
+it never excites curiosity or arouses suspicion.</p>
+<p>That same evening Martinez perceived Vorse enter
+Sorenson&rsquo;s office. Vorse, he recalled, had been included
+in the engineer&rsquo;s threatening remarks to Gordon. Shortly
+thereafter Gordon himself ambled along the street
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span>
+and passed through the door. Last of all, Burkhardt, a
+short, fleshy, bearded man, went into the building. The
+vultures of San Mateo, as he secretly called them, had
+flocked together for conference. Presently Martinez
+strolled by the office, outwardly displaying no interest
+in the structure but furtively seeking to catch a glimpse
+of the interior through a crack of the drawn shade.
+But in this he was unsuccessful.</p>
+<p>Of one thing he was certain, however. His prolonged
+examination of the county records had revealed an old
+bill of sale of a ranch and several herds of cattle from
+one Joseph Weir to Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon and
+Burkhardt. He had placed his finger on the link connecting
+the engineer with these men, the entire four, as
+this old bill of sale thus recorded showed the intimate
+though unexpressed partnership of the men, which was
+common knowledge over the country; and intuition told
+him also that this private assembly of the quartette
+quickly on Sorenson&rsquo;s return home had its inspiration in
+the new manager of the dam.</p>
+<p>Martinez determined to continue his investigations.
+Events might yet prove that it would have been much
+better for the cattleman to have given him the political
+nomination. Truly, it was possible. In any case, it
+would do no harm to have &ldquo;something on&rdquo; Sorenson and
+the others, these rulers of San Mateo. And there was
+the opposite side of the affair&ndash;&ndash;Weir&rsquo;s side; so it looked
+as if there might be profit either way.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>The four men sitting in the railed-off space in the
+San Mateo Cattle Company&rsquo;s office constituted the
+cattle company. Moreover, they comprised the financial,
+political and general power of this remote section
+of New Mexico. In face, manner, garb, they were dissimilar.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span>
+Vorse, clothed in gray, was hawk-nosed and impassive;
+and though now, like his companions, wealthy
+beyond simple needs he nevertheless continued the operation
+of his saloon that had been a landmark in San
+Mateo for forty years. Burkhardt was rough-featured,
+rough-tongued, choleric, and coatless: typically the
+burly, uncurried, uncouth stock man, whose commonest
+words were oaths or curses and whose way with obstinate
+cattle or men was the way of the club or the fist. Gordon
+was the wily, cautious, unscrupulous politician; he
+had represented San Mateo in the legislature for years,
+both during the Territorial period and since New Mexico
+had become a state, and was not unknown in other
+parts of the southwest; but he was &ldquo;Judge&rdquo; only by
+courtesy, the title most frequently given him, never having
+been admitted to the bar or having practiced, and
+engaged himself ostensibly in the insurance and real
+estate business. Like the others, his share of the large
+cattle, sheep and land holdings of the group made him
+independent. Sorenson, the last of the four and in
+reality the leader because of a greater breadth of vision
+and a natural capacity for business, was dressed in a
+tailored suit of greenish plaid&ndash;&ndash;a man with bushy eyebrows,
+a long fleshy nose, predatory eyes, a heavy cat-fish
+mouth and a great, barrel-like body that reared two or
+three inches over six feet when he stood on his feet. But
+one thing they had in common, in addition to the gray
+hair of age, and that was a joint liability for the past.
+For years they had believed that liability extinguished
+through the operation of time. They had considered
+as closed and sealed the account of early secret, lawless
+acts by which they had acquired wealth and a grip on
+the community. They were now law-observing members
+of society; they controlled even if they sometimes failed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span>
+to possess the goodwill of the county&ndash;&ndash;and they were
+not men to measure position by friendships; their councils
+determined how much or how little other men should
+own and in local politics their fingers moved the puppets
+that served their will.</p>
+<p>With the entrance here of the powerful group of financiers
+who were constructing the irrigation project they
+recognized the threat to their old-time supremacy.
+Cattle and sheep interests would succumb to farming;
+a swarm of new, independent settlers would arrive like
+locusts; and their leadership would eventually be challenged
+if not ended. New towns would spring up. New
+money would flow in to dispute their financial mastery.
+New leaders would arise to assail their political dominion.
+And against the prospect of all this they had initiated
+a secret warfare, endeavoring by stealth to ruin
+the irrigation company at the beginning and nip the
+danger in the bud.</p>
+<p>Now it had been revealed all at once that they had
+not only a general and impersonal enemy in the form
+of the company, but a specific one in the form of a man,
+its manager. Out of nowhere he had emerged, out of
+thirty years&rsquo; silence, a sinister figure who tapped with
+significant finger the book of their secret past while his
+eyes steadfastly demanded a reckoning. Did he know
+all, or nothing? Knowing, did he deliberately leave them
+in doubt in order to shatter their confidence?</p>
+<p>At least one of the four had been badly shaken on
+learning Weir&rsquo;s identity, and all now were uneasy. It
+was as if Fate after a long silence was about to open
+the sealed record.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps you were just imagining things, Judge,&rdquo;
+Sorenson was saying.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span></div>
+<p>Senator Gordon moistened his lips and tugged nervously
+at his gray mustache.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Just ask Vorse. The man
+said his name was Weir and that he was the son of Joe
+Weir. Then&ndash;&ndash;then&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Sorenson demanded, frowning at the other&rsquo;s
+visible trepidation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weir added, &lsquo;And I know what happened thirty
+years ago in this selfsame room.&rsquo; Those were his very
+words. Isn&rsquo;t that true, Vorse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They could mean only one thing,&rdquo; said Gordon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the Judge went out he said to me,&rdquo; Vorse
+stated, &ldquo;&lsquo;That was for you too.&rsquo; I had my hand on my
+gun under the counter as he said it, ready if he made
+a move. He knew what I had there, but it didn&rsquo;t faze
+him. He&rsquo;s a better man than Joe Weir ever was, I want
+to remark, and different; he has nerve and a bad eye.
+He knows something, lay your bets on that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much? How much? If we only knew how
+much!&rdquo; Judge Gordon vouchsafed, testily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How would he know anything? Joe Weir didn&rsquo;t
+know, so how can this fellow know? Don&rsquo;t get scared
+at a shadow.&rdquo; It was the bearded, rough-tongued Burkhardt
+who spoke, concluding his words with a blasphemous
+oath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s the Mexican who saw what happened&ndash;&ndash;and
+that boy who looked in at the back door,&rdquo; Gordon asserted.
+&ldquo;We just caught sight of him and couldn&rsquo;t make
+out his face against the light. Then he had skipped
+when we ran there. We never did learn who he was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think he remembers?&rdquo; Sorenson said, scornfully.
+&ldquo;He may be dead. He may be on the other side
+of the world. Just some kid who happened to drift by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span>
+at the minute and look in, and there&rsquo;s not one chance
+in a million he&rsquo;s anywhere around these parts yet. He
+would have blabbed long ago to some one if he had been;
+don&rsquo;t figure him in, he&rsquo;s lost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saurez isn&rsquo;t, though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this Vorse put in a word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He saw more than one killing in those days when
+he was roustabout for me. It was only one more to
+him. Probably he has forgotten it. Anyway,&rdquo; Vorse
+ended with deadly emphasis, &ldquo;he knows what would
+happen to him even now if he remembered it and talked.
+Leave him out of the calculation too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then that just makes the four of us,&rdquo; said Burkhardt.
+&ldquo;Nobody else. So this fellow Weir doesn&rsquo;t know
+a thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we can&rsquo;t be absolutely sure,&rdquo; Judge Gordon replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he&rsquo;d need proof, wouldn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, to bring legal action. But how do we
+know he hasn&rsquo;t even that? Look all around the question
+as a lawyer does; let us assume the millionth chance,
+for instance. Suppose that he somewhere met and became
+acquainted with that boy. Suppose that he learned
+the latter had been here at the time and saw the shooting;
+and heard his story. Suppose that Weir knows
+this instant where he is and can produce him as a witness
+in court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon in this county his testimony wouldn&rsquo;t count
+for much,&rdquo; Burkhardt, who had been sheriff, stated, with
+a harsh laugh.</p>
+<p>Sorenson, however, was impressed by the Judge&rsquo;s
+reasoning, for he drummed with fingers on the desk
+and sat in brooding silence. So likewise sat Vorse, who
+had heard Weir&rsquo;s utterance and beheld his face.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He knows something,&rdquo; he repeated, in a convinced
+tone. &ldquo;Or he&rsquo;s a damned good bluffer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I passed him here at the door this afternoon,&rdquo; the
+banker remarked. &ldquo;I turned to look at him, guessing
+who he was, and he had stopped and was looking at me.
+Cool about it too. We&rsquo;ll have to watch him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps if we just tip him off to keep his mouth shut
+tight, that will be enough,&rdquo; Burkhardt suggested. &ldquo;If
+he knows the four of us are ready&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Vorse sniffed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think he can be bluffed?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You haven&rsquo;t
+seen him yet; go take a look. We&rsquo;ll not throw any scare
+into him. If he were that kind, he wouldn&rsquo;t have told us
+who he is. He wanted us to know he&rsquo;s after us, that&rsquo;s
+my opinion. He wants to shake our nerve&ndash;&ndash;and he
+shook the Judge&rsquo;s all right that day at my bar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did,&rdquo; Gordon admitted. &ldquo;The thing was so infernally
+unexpected. Almost like Joe Weir himself
+appearing. I didn&rsquo;t sleep a wink that night, what with
+my heart being bad and what with seeing him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose he <i>has</i> proofs?&rdquo; Vorse asked after a pause,
+while his narrowed eyes moved from one to another of
+his companions.</p>
+<p>A considerable silence followed. The question jerked
+into full light the issue that had all the while been lurking
+in the recesses of their minds&ndash;&ndash;an issue full of
+ghastly possibilities. Judge Gordon&rsquo;s fingers trembled
+as he wiped with handkerchief the cold sweat on his
+brow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re all in it,&rdquo; Vorse added.</p>
+<p>Burkhardt brought his fist down on the desk with a
+sudden crash.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he has proofs, then it&rsquo;s him or us,&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span>
+while the blood suffused his face. &ldquo;Him or us&ndash;&ndash;and that
+means him! I&rsquo;ll never go behind bars!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure not. None of us,&rdquo; Vorse said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will mean&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Judge Gordon began in an agitated
+voice, but did not finish.</p>
+<p>Sorenson gave a nod of his head. His bear-trap
+mouth was compressed in a determined evil line.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly. He&rsquo;ll never use his proofs. We&rsquo;re in too
+far to halt now if matters come to the point of his trying
+to use them. He has a grip on us in one way; he
+knows we can&rsquo;t declare his father, Joe Weir, did the
+killing; that would make us&ndash;&ndash;what do you call it,
+Judge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Accomplices after the fact. Besides, it would then
+come out that we had taken over and shared among us
+his stuff, fifty thousand apiece. It&rsquo;s a deplorable situation
+we&rsquo;re in, gentlemen, deplorable. If we were but
+able to start the story Joe Weir believed and fled because
+of, it would cut the ground out from under this man&rsquo;s
+feet at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s him we&rsquo;ll cut, not the ground under him,&rdquo; Burkhardt
+growled, thrusting his hairy chin forward towards
+the lawyer. &ldquo;And cut his damned throat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate to think of our being forced to&ndash;&ndash;to homicide.
+Even justifiable homicide.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Homicide nothing! It&rsquo;s just killing a rattlesnake
+waiting in the brush to strike. That&rsquo;s the way we used
+to do in the old days, and if he&rsquo;s going to bring them
+back that&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;ll do again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson smiled grimly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll wait till we&rsquo;re sure he has the proofs,
+then&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll act quick and sure,&rdquo; Vorse shot out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And quietly,&rdquo; the cattleman added. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span>
+more chances this time. It will be arranged carefully
+beforehand; all four of us will be in it, of course,&ndash;&ndash;equal
+responsibility; and there&rsquo;ll be no witnesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Judge Gordon&rsquo;s face wore a pallid, sickish look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope to God there&rsquo;s some other way out of it,&rdquo; he
+muttered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So do all of us,&rdquo; Burkhardt snarled. &ldquo;But if there
+isn&rsquo;t, it means guns. For you, too, along with the rest
+of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson leaned forward and gazed from under his
+heavy brows, compelling Gordon to meet his fixed look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were keen enough at the time for your share
+of Joe Weir&rsquo;s stuff,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;So you&rsquo;ll play the hand
+out to the end now, the bad cards as well as the good.
+You&rsquo;re no better than the rest of us, and it was you
+who hatched the scheme for cleaning him up and who
+put over the story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, I know. But&ndash;&ndash;but this would be too much
+like cold-blooded murder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Murder!&rdquo; Sorenson grated. &ldquo;Did you look straight
+into this fellow Weir&rsquo;s eyes? Didn&rsquo;t you see something
+there that resembled murder? He&rsquo;d like only the chance
+to kill us one by one with his own hands: I saw that
+much. Just as Burkhardt said, it&rsquo;s him or us. After
+you told me about him, I had only to take one look. If
+he has the goods on us&ndash;&ndash;well, he&rsquo;ll have to die. Make
+up your mind to that. We&rsquo;re back to the time of thirty
+years ago and fighting for our lives. We were not only
+all in on the Weir job, but the Dent killing&ndash;&ndash;all of us.
+Remember that. If the facts become known, we&rsquo;ll be
+run into some other county and court and hanged. And
+every enemy we&rsquo;ve made in these years past will put up
+his head and clamor for our blood. Let that sink into
+your mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span></div>
+<p>The effect of this low fierce utterance was to hammer
+the truth home. The Judge was ashen. Vorse&rsquo;s face
+appeared like an evil mask. Burkhardt glowered savagely.</p>
+<p>At that instant there sounded the faint report of a
+shot in the street. Then as the group sat unmoving,
+rigid, keyed to the highest pitch of expectancy, there
+followed quickly two more shots. Afterwards, silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A gun-play!&rdquo; issued from Vorse&rsquo;s lips, softly.</p>
+<p>They all sprang up to hasten to the door.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_V_A_SHOT_IN_THE_DARK' id='CHAPTER_V_A_SHOT_IN_THE_DARK'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<h3>A SHOT IN THE DARK</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Steele Weir driving his car down the street in the
+dusk had caught sight of Felipe Martinez standing near
+the cattle company&rsquo;s office. He stopped close by, beckoned.
+Martinez would do as well as another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a notary, I suppose?&rdquo; he questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Mr. Weir. Most of us lawyers here are,&rdquo; he
+replied politely, when he had advanced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve some papers I want acknowledged to-night.
+Must get them into the mail going down to Bowenville
+in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only too pleased to facilitate your business, Mr.
+Weir. My office is down a few doors.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jump in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s but a few steps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;ll get out here.&rdquo; And the engineer stopped
+the engine and descended to the ground.</p>
+<p>Along the street open doorways and windows were
+already beginning to make yellow panels of lamplight in
+the thin gloom. The air was still warm, balmy, scented
+by the lingering aroma of the greasewood smoke of
+supper fires in Mexican ovens. Stars were jeweling the
+sky. Few persons moved in the twilight.</p>
+<p>One of these was a man who, standing at the door of
+a native saloon across the street and a little farther up,
+had come diagonally over towards the bank on seeing the
+engineer halt his car. He walked with a slouching haste
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span>
+seldom exhibited by a Mexican and gained the spot as
+Weir stepped out. There he slackened his pace while he
+scanned the American with an intense, slow gaze that
+the engineer, chancing to raise his eyes, squarely met.</p>
+<p>The Mexicans always looked at him and fell silent
+when he passed since he had shown who was master at
+the dam. In the eyes of some was merely stupid curiosity,
+in some a shrinking, and in many a half-veiled hostility.
+That did not trouble Weir. In Mexico he had
+dealt with recalcitrant workmen of more lawless nature
+than these. He usually ignored them altogether now
+as they no longer were in his employ. But this man
+seized his attention.</p>
+<p>It was not yet too dark to mark his face as he lounged
+past, slowly turning his head about as he progressed
+until his chin was on his shoulder, staring back. His
+look the while remained riveted on Weir&ndash;&ndash;a steady, contemplative,
+evil regard. In Chihuahua the engineer had
+once seen a notorious local &ldquo;killer&rdquo; who had that same
+gaze.</p>
+<p>Martinez had also glanced at the fellow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is that man? One of the discharged workmen?&rdquo;
+Weir asked him, when moving forward they in
+turn had passed the Mexican.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I imagine not. At any rate, he doesn&rsquo;t belong in
+San Mateo or anywhere hereabouts. I know everybody
+for fifty miles, for I&rsquo;ve been active in social and political
+affairs. He&rsquo;s unknown to me. A stranger.&rdquo; Then a
+little farther along: &ldquo;Here is my office, Mr. Weir. I&rsquo;ll
+have a light in an instant. Ah, now. Be so good as
+to have a chair and we&rsquo;ll expedite your business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As Martinez filled out the acknowledgment blanks
+on the papers, his eyes furtively skipped over the vital
+portions of the documents. The latter were connected
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span>
+with company business. He had hoped they would be
+personal so that he might learn something more of
+this manager&rsquo;s affairs, possibly more of his secret antagonism
+for Sorenson and his friends. Any intrigue
+appealed to the thin, slippery lawyer&rsquo;s soul, but most of
+all some one&rsquo;s else intrigue into which he might profitably
+put a finger. However, from these papers he was to
+learn nothing.</p>
+<p>He had considered all possibilities of the affair, all
+possible solutions of what long ago might have occurred
+between Joseph Weir, undoubtedly the father of the
+man sitting across the table from him, and the four
+men now conferring in Sorenson&rsquo;s office. This was no
+petty squabble, he divined. There was something going
+on under the surface that was big&ndash;&ndash;big! And very
+dangerous too, for the spirit of that moment in Vorse&rsquo;s
+bar was not to be mistaken; it had been tense, electric.
+Utmost caution on Martinez&rsquo;s part would therefore be
+necessary.</p>
+<p>As between the two parties, his sympathies at present
+inclined towards Weir. The refusal on the latter&rsquo;s part
+to re&euml;mploy the Mexican workmen on their own terms
+was purely a matter of policy, and the lawyer&rsquo;s first
+gusty anger had long been forgotten. But not so Sorenson&rsquo;s
+sneering words of that afternoon. They struck
+to the heart of his vanity, breeding an animosity that
+would last. Had not the banker stated that the lawyer
+should hold no political office whatever? After all his
+services? Had he not definitely shown that Martinez
+might never expect anything there? Well, the lawyer
+wasn&rsquo;t one tamely to yield his rights; he did not propose
+always to remain a scrimping, pettifogging attorney,
+existing on crumbs.</p>
+<p>When with a flourish he had appended his name to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span>
+the acknowledgments and affixed his seal, he sat back
+thoughtfully studying the engineer, who was carefully
+examining the paragraphs for errors. He knew his business,
+did Martinez; the man would find no mistakes.
+Then the lawyer&rsquo;s eyes suddenly glistened. He arose
+and closed the door as Weir thrust the documents into
+a stout linen envelope, addressed and stamped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be pleased to see your letter goes in the mail in
+the morning,&rdquo; he said, returning to his place. &ldquo;The stage
+leaves at eight-thirty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Post-office is closed now, I suppose. Very well. It
+will be an accommodation,&rdquo; the engineer responded.</p>
+<p>Martinez leaned forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you can spare the time, I should like to have a
+little talk with you,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Pardon me if I appear
+presumptuous, but as you&rsquo;re aware, Mr. Weir, I overheard
+your words to Judge Gordon in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon. I
+inferred&ndash;&ndash;check me at any instant if you consider this
+none of my business!&ndash;&ndash;that there exists some unpleasant
+feeling between you two gentlemen and possibly others.
+Judge Gordon has always handled the company&rsquo;s business
+in his private capacity of counselor. As you know,
+he&rsquo;s a silent partner in many enterprises with Sorenson,
+Vorse and a man named Burkhardt. They run this town
+and county. You should also know that they&rsquo;re secretly
+opposed to your irrigation project, whatever they profess.
+They&rsquo;ve misled the people into believing it will
+work an injury to this district, whereas it will of course
+be beneficial. Unfortunately too they lead the people
+by the noses&ndash;&ndash;but not me! I refuse to be subservient.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He paused to note the effect of his words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Mr. Weir, these are facts you can confirm if
+you&rsquo;re not already informed of them, which I imagine
+you are. Because I&rsquo;m independent in my opinions and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span>
+actions, I stand in disfavor with these gentlemen, which
+may or may not be an objection in your view to what
+I have in mind. And this is it. I should be pleased to
+execute any legal work that you care to give me; it
+might be of advantage to your company at times to have
+an attorney other than Judge Gordon, who is aligned
+against you and will serve his own interests first. He&rsquo;s
+in a position to cause you embarrassment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our eastern attorneys draw all documents.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course. But I was thinking of delays more than
+anything else. There are a thousand ways a lawyer
+can push or halt matters at will, and your project will
+never be free of legal red tape until completed&ndash;&ndash;if then!
+I&rsquo;m not unselfish in this, I admit; the business would
+be valuable to me. But aside from that, I&rsquo;ll give you
+this advice anyway:&ndash;&ndash;secure another lawyer in any case,
+one without antagonistic personal interests, if you can
+find another in San Mateo besides me. See, I&rsquo;m frank!
+That may sound egotistical, but really I&rsquo;m the only
+free man of the lawyers here. And I&rsquo;ve paid for my
+liberty!&rdquo; He made a sweeping gesture to indicate his
+shabby office. &ldquo;If I had taken orders, I could have been
+county attorney and probably a judge. But I respect
+myself too much to take orders from Sorenson and his
+bunch. I choose this sort of thing in preference.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir maintained a non-committal silence.
+Again the thin dark-skinned lawyer swiftly weighed the
+man before him, considered the dangers in which he
+might become involved if he went a step farther, recoiled,
+then grew bolder. Sorenson had marked him for
+poverty and nonentity; under the favoring shelter of
+the irrigation company&rsquo;s power he might arise from
+both. For at moments the acute Mexican sensed the
+inevitable victory of the new forces at work; this, one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span>
+of the last strong-holds of old time cattle and sheep interests,
+would break down and yield to the plow and
+fence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, there&rsquo;s something more, though I hesitate to
+mention it,&rdquo; he went on, doubtfully. &ldquo;While Sorenson
+and his crowd run things, it&rsquo;s not because the people&ndash;&ndash;and
+that means us Mexicans chiefly&ndash;&ndash;love them. We&rsquo;re
+indolent by nature; we idle rather than work; borrow
+when we can rather than earn&ndash;&ndash;I speak of our race, but
+we&rsquo;re learning that work proves best in the long run.
+These men have squeezed my people, and robbed them,
+and kept them down. Nothing more would I wish than to
+see these leaders deposed. It&rsquo;s no secret they&rsquo;ve built
+their wealth by questionable methods, but who can prove
+it?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know what I suspect? You have something
+on Sorenson&rsquo;s crowd. That&rsquo;s why they&rsquo;re uneasy; that&rsquo;s
+why the four are sitting over in the cattle company&rsquo;s
+office this minute with their heads together, meeting the
+minute Sorenson arrives home. I saw them go in. Leaving
+aside the question of your own affairs, I&rsquo;d like to
+have matters changed here in this county so that every
+man has a fair chance. Anything that will bring that
+about enlists my interest. When I heard your statement
+to Gordon and saw his face, I knew there was something
+in the past that alarmed him. I recalled a name I had
+once run across when abstracting a title&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was not this ingenious twisting of the truth that
+caused the lawyer to become filled with sudden dismay
+and stop, but the savage hardening of the engineer&rsquo;s
+face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; Weir commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the name was Joseph Weir. I looked it up
+again to be sure, and found the property had been deeded
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span>
+to Sorenson and the others, who still have it. I wondered&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you wonder?&rdquo; came with a devouring look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If&ndash;&ndash;if Joseph Weir received consideration according
+to law.&rdquo; Martinez&rsquo; courage flowed back again. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
+make no attempt to justify my curiosity, sir, except to
+say that more than one man in the southwest was done
+out of property in early days; and the practice has not
+ceased, for that matter. But in these days the means
+is usually legal and Mexicans the victims. Sharp mortgage
+dealings and so forth. Now, if I&rsquo;ve said too much,
+I&rsquo;ll instantly forget all about it. On the other
+hand&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I might be of assistance. If you wish to look into
+that old transaction, that is. If there was anything
+crooked about the deal, and I set it down that there
+was with Sorenson mixed in, and with Vorse and Burkhardt
+the witnesses named in the deed and Judge Gordon
+taking the acknowledgment of Joseph Weir&rsquo;s signature,
+as the record shows, then there should be some
+weak spot that could be attacked. There may be men
+yet alive conversant with the circumstances; they may
+know whether duress or fraud was exercised, supposing
+the sale was not honest. Some of the old Mexicans may
+remember Weir, and could give a clue; they have good
+memories for things of those days. Of course, if the
+transaction was all right, then I&rsquo;m all wrong in my
+suppositions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir arose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can give you some of the company business, perhaps
+considerable of it,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>Martinez sprang up, an expression of gratitude upon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span>
+his face. He had not realized all that he had hoped for,
+but he was nevertheless delighted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m really sincere when I give you a thousand
+thanks, Mr. Weir,&rdquo; said he, spreading his arms wide.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not make promises as to the efficiency of my
+services; let results speak for themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I always do,&rdquo; was the comment. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll tell you
+what I demand in any one associated with me&ndash;&ndash;absolute
+trustworthiness first of all, then loyalty and ability.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which leaves nothing,&rdquo; Martinez smiled.</p>
+<p>He preceded the engineer and swung the door open,
+stepping aside. To the visitor&rsquo;s question regarding
+fees for the acknowledgments taken, he waved a declining
+hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing, nothing. Delighted to render you the
+service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll attend to the letter,&rdquo; the lawyer again assured
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come out to the dam in a day or two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow, if you wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-morrow afternoon will do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir&rsquo;s frame filled the lighted doorway as he
+stepped forth from the office. He paused to accustom
+his eyes to the darkness, for during his colloquy with the
+attorney full night had descended. On the same side of
+the street with himself and perhaps twelve or fifteen
+paces off he saw a girl&rsquo;s figure appear and disappear before
+a window as she moved along.</p>
+<p>Then suddenly a tongue of red flame darted at him
+across the street, where lay a space of unlighted gloom.
+His hat was whipped off his head. The sharp report
+of a shot cracked between the adobe walls. With an
+unbelievably rapid movement Steele Weir drew the revolver
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span>
+in his pocket, and which he had carried ever
+since his encounter with young Sorenson in the restaurant,
+fired twice where he had seen the flame and leaped
+aside into the darkness beside the doorway. There he
+waited, half crouching, for a further attack.</p>
+<p>But none came. Men began to run towards the place.
+Shouts and calls echoed along the street. In two minutes
+a crowd was surging before Martinez&rsquo; door wildly
+asking questions.</p>
+<p>Weir pocketed his pistol and walked back into the
+office, where he found his bullet-pierced hat lying on the
+floor and the attorney standing frozen with astonishment.
+A stream of people followed at his heels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who did this shooting? Do you know, Felipe?&rdquo; a
+tall raw-boned white man who led them asked hastily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This gentleman, Mr. Weir, was fired on, sheriff,&rdquo;
+Martinez burst out volubly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I fired in return,&rdquo; the engineer stated. &ldquo;The
+fellow was across the street in the dark. You might look
+over there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Turning and pushing his way through the packed
+door, the sheriff disappeared. The crowd melted away
+again. Presently as Weir glanced about he saw a new
+figure at the doorway, staring at him. He went towards
+the girl there outlined in the lamplight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that you I saw moving along just before the
+exchange of compliments, Miss Hosmer?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I was coming towards you on my way home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It probably gave you a fright.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It did, indeed. I heard the shot and saw your hat
+knocked off. I just went cold in my tracks. At first I
+believed you killed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very much alive, as you see.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But it was dreadful! Who would fire at you from
+the dark? Some one tried to murder you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It looks like it. Still here I am, ready to move your
+car out of the water next time it&rsquo;s stalled.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She entered the room slowly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who in San Mateo would do such a terrible thing,
+Mr. Martinez?&rdquo; she addressed the lawyer. The pallor
+was still on her face and her eyes were large with horror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Miss Janet, if we but knew! We&rsquo;d lay hands
+on him and send him to the penitentiary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Real emotion struggled in the lawyer&rsquo;s words. With
+the return of his senses he had just begun to realize by
+what a narrow margin the assassin&rsquo;s bullet had missed
+destroying his future client and prospects.</p>
+<p>A growing murmur across the street attracted their
+attention. Then as they continued to chat of the event,
+the sheriff reappeared, directing half a dozen men who
+laid a burden in the light of Martinez&rsquo; doorway.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got him,&rdquo; he said to Weir, with ominous significance.
+&ldquo;One bullet through the head, one through
+his stomach. He&rsquo;s good and dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir walked forward and inspected that outstretched
+figure. It was the man whose gaze had been so malevolently
+fastened upon him as he joined Martinez before
+Sorenson&rsquo;s office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is he?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A strange Mexican. Some of these men say he
+showed up this morning and hung around the saloons,
+not talking much. Haven&rsquo;t you ever seen him, before?&rdquo;
+The question expressed a perplexed curiosity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once. When Martinez and I were coming here to
+transact some business. He was taking a good look at
+me then when he passed us. That wasn&rsquo;t over half an
+hour ago. Never saw him before that.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;He shot at you first?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had just stepped out of this room. Could I see
+him hiding over there? Or know he was there?&rdquo; Then
+he added, &ldquo;I was taken by surprise, but I marked the
+flash of his gun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sheriff, Madden by name, looked at Weir appreciatively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can use a gun yourself,&rdquo; said he, briefly.</p>
+<p>Martinez now repeated the fact of the dead man having
+fired the first shot, which Janet Hosmer confirmed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, is there anything more?&rdquo; Weir questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to-night, I reckon,&rdquo; Madden replied. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll
+have an inquest in the morning; show up then. Where
+will I find your father, Miss Hosmer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At home.&rdquo; Then to the engineer she explained,
+&ldquo;Father acts in the absence of the coroner, who&rsquo;s away
+just now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m very sorry this happened on your account,&rdquo; said
+he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m very glad you were not hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Outside the corpse was being borne away, followed
+by the curious, avid crowd of Mexicans.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re still shaken by the thing,&rdquo; said Steele Weir.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s enough to upset any girl. Let me walk home with
+you, or you may be starting at shadows all the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VI_JANET_HOSMER' id='CHAPTER_VI_JANET_HOSMER'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<h3>JANET HOSMER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A silvery brightness shone in the east as they came
+out of Martinez&rsquo; office, that increased as they went forward
+until all at once the moon arose into view, lighting
+the street, disclosing the flanking lines of squat buildings,
+revealing the tall cottonwoods about the court
+house and elsewhere thrust up in the town.</p>
+<p>Janet Hosmer breathed a sigh of relief. The darkness
+had seemed potent for further evil, but now it was
+as if the latter retreated with the shadows. She felt a
+desire to go on alone, to separate herself from this companion
+with whom chance had brought her in contact
+at a dramatic moment, to get away from the whole
+terrible affair. Involuntarily her spirit shrank at the
+nearness of the man, for though he had struck back in
+self-defense he nevertheless had killed another and the
+act somehow appeared to set him apart from ordinary
+men, isolate him, give him the character of an Ishmael.</p>
+<p>Yet her feelings were confused. Against this inclination
+was an avid curiosity, or rather a wonderment, as
+to what must now be occurring in his soul. Her eyes
+sought his face as he walked beside her. Neither had
+spoken; and his countenance wore the same stern contained
+aspect, calm, forceful, as the first time she had
+ever observed it. But what was below the surface?
+What were the thoughts now revolving in his mind and
+the emotions flowing in his breast? She could read
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span>
+nothing on that composed mask of a face. Was it possible
+for a man to slay another human being, even justifiably,
+without suffering a hurricane of the spirit?</p>
+<p>But perhaps he had killed men before. The fact of
+his carrying a weapon and his swift deadly fire pointed
+ominously to previous experience.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever shoot any one before?&rdquo; popped from
+between her lips. Then she stopped, clapping her hand
+over her mouth in consternation and staring at him
+palely.</p>
+<p>Weir had halted too. He regarded her in silence for
+a little, a slight smile resting on his face. They stood
+before the cattle company&rsquo;s office and his look went past
+her once to embrace the small darkened building.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not a murderer by trade, if that&rsquo;s what you
+mean,&rdquo; said he, at last. &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve killed a man or two
+before, yes.&rdquo; Then at the white anguish of her lips and
+cheeks, his tone softened a degree as he went on. &ldquo;Unfortunately
+since becoming of age I&rsquo;ve had to fight. If
+not men, then the earth. If not the earth, then men.
+Sometimes both together. You saw what happened to-night;
+that fellow was unknown to me. He was not a
+workman who had been discharged and felt he had a
+grievance&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; she interjected. &ldquo;The Mexicans here
+wouldn&rsquo;t attempt to murder you, however angry they
+might feel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure of that,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I am; I know them, I&rsquo;ve lived among them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, let that go. The man tried to kill me, at any
+rate. However, he was merely a tool, hired for the
+business by some one else. Ordinarily I don&rsquo;t discuss my
+affairs with any one, but since you&rsquo;ve raised the matter
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span>
+I&rsquo;ll just say that I&rsquo;ve enemies in San Mateo who are
+anxious to dispose of me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such enemies here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Who would be delighted to see me lie where
+that dead man lies and who are apparently determined
+to effect it.&rdquo; He touched her sleeve warningly. &ldquo;But
+you will speak of this to no one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, oh, no! Not a word!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele gazed at her steadily. He already repented
+disclosing even so little of his private concerns, an impulse
+altogether at variance with his close-mouthed
+habit, but he had, for some vague reason, felt it necessary
+to explain his course, to justify himself to this
+clear-eyed, fine-spirited girl. He could not let her rest
+under a misapprehension that he was a brute who reveled
+in blood-spilling. And as he regarded her a conviction
+that she was absolutely to be trusted settled
+firmly into his mind.</p>
+<p>She would be staunch; oxen and ropes could not drag
+information from her once she had determined not to
+speak. Yes, she would be loyal to her given word&ndash;&ndash;and
+to her friends. Weir&rsquo;s eyes glanced at the diamond on
+her finger. It would be a girl like her with whom he
+would have chosen to mate if fate had not directed his
+feet on a road which seemingly left him no choice but
+incessant and solitary struggle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate it all; I have nothing but crusts and nettles!&rdquo;
+he exclaimed, with sudden fierce passion. And with a
+quick movement of his hand he beckoned her on.</p>
+<p>Submissively she accompanied him, her bosom rising
+and falling with a quickened rhythm. Too much had
+happened, one thing piling on another, for her to sort
+her thoughts or to attempt to understand things yet;
+and in her tossing state of mind she went at his gesture
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span>
+as one follows a guide, or as a simple matter of course.</p>
+<p>In her mental turmoil that last passionate utterance
+of the man played like a lambent flame. Tense, violent,
+spontaneous, it had come from the heart. What
+harsh lot he had lived and sufferings borne she could
+not even guess; but no man spoke with such unconscious
+bitterness who had not undergone pain and travail of
+spirit. His head was now turned a little towards her
+as they walked: she perceived him staring at the moonlit
+street, his lips compressed, his brows knit.</p>
+<p>Then he glanced about at her, his face clearing.
+&ldquo;Pay no attention to what I said,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;I
+shouldn&rsquo;t have let loose that way. Hello, what&rsquo;s on
+now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before them, and in front of the court house, was a
+packed crowd, people who had run forth at the sound
+of shots, augmented by those who had since arrived
+upon the scene. It was motionless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand back, stand back; don&rsquo;t trample the body!&rdquo;
+came Sheriff Madden&rsquo;s voice in an angry order.</p>
+<p>The crowd surged a little apart in the center.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know this dead man fired the first
+shot?&rdquo; asked some one, vehemently.</p>
+<p>The voices went lower so that Steele Weir and Janet
+Hosmer, who had paused at the edge of the throng,
+were able only to catch the tones.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was that who questioned the sheriff?&rdquo; Weir
+whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Burkhardt, I think. Sounded like him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So intent were the Mexicans upon the occurrence in
+their midst that those close by remained with backs
+towards the pair, failing to notice their presence. All
+craned eagerly to miss nothing of the controversy.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know this engineer didn&rsquo;t start it?&rdquo;
+came Burkhardt&rsquo;s voice again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a fool; there were witnesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to talk to those witnesses. I doubt if they
+really saw anything. It looks to me as if there&rsquo;s another
+side to this shooting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, of course you know&ndash;&ndash;you, sitting there in
+Sorenson&rsquo;s office, as you say,&rdquo; was the ironical retort.</p>
+<p>At this juncture another voice interposed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madden, we want no mistake here. This Weir
+doesn&rsquo;t bear a very good reputation for peacefulness,
+from what I&rsquo;ve learned. If this Mexican has simply
+been shot down&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is that?&rdquo; Steele demanded of the girl. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t
+see him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s speech faltered&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;that is
+Mr. Sorenson. Oh, they misunderstand! Let me push
+in there and tell them how it happened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer&rsquo;s hand closed about her arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll do nothing of the kind,&rdquo; he commanded, low.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. Remain quiet and listen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her eyes flew up to his at this extraordinary course,
+so injurious to his own interests. She was anxious to
+press to the front and declare his innocence in the affair
+of everything but defending his life from an assassin.
+She could not understand why he also was not eager to
+spring forward, why he restrained her. Then she saw
+the implacable hatred on his face.</p>
+<p>A thrill quivered through her body. The feeling she
+had at that instant was one of being on the point of
+seeing behind the curtain of a mystery, of making a
+discovery so sinister that she would gasp. Her very
+finger almost rested upon it. Why were Mr. Sorenson
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span>
+and Mr. Burkhardt talking as they were? Trying by
+innuendo to make it seem her companion might have been
+guilty of a crime? Could it be&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; Her blood slowly
+congealed to ice at the horror of where her reasoning
+led.</p>
+<p><i>Could it be they were the enemies he meant!</i></p>
+<p>Such a thing was too dreadful, too absurd. They, the
+respected leaders of the community, could never put a
+pistol in the dead wretch&rsquo;s hand to slay this man beside
+her. Mr. Sorenson! The father of Ed, whom&ndash;&ndash;&ndash; She
+stared blankly at her left hand.</p>
+<p>Yet the banker&rsquo;s heavy, smooth words continued to
+assail her ears steadily. She grasped their import once
+more.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&ndash;&ndash;for the story is too thin. No man could hit
+another across the street in the dark as this engineer
+claims, not only once but twice put a bullet where it
+would kill. Probably the dead man had something on
+this Weir, and the latter knew it. It&rsquo;s not impossible
+he found the fellow in his path, drew and murdered him
+at once, quickly put a hole in his own hat and then
+carried the body across the way, running back to Martinez&rsquo;
+office. The thing could have been done in a
+minute. Martinez&rsquo; himself wouldn&rsquo;t have seen how it was
+worked. I&rsquo;m not saying that was exactly how it was
+done, or that this Weir did actually murder him, but&ndash;&ndash;investigate,
+Madden, investigate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir felt an angry tug at his sleeve. He looked
+around and beheld Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s eyes distended with
+incredulity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come away, come away,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;I should
+never have believed it if I hadn&rsquo;t heard with my own
+ears!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Keeping close to the line of buildings, they skirted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span>
+the crowd, still unnoticed, and left it behind. She
+walked with quick nervous steps; her hand yet unconsciously
+grasped his coat sleeve. All the way to her
+home, which they found dark since a messenger had
+called the doctor to the court house and the Mexican
+girl servant also was gone, she said nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come up on the veranda; I want to talk,&rdquo; she announced
+when he opened the gate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t it be best if you took your mind off the
+whole thing, by a book or something else? I&rsquo;ll go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As if I could take my mind off! There are matters
+in this I must know. You may wonder when I say it,
+Mr. Weir, but this happening concerns me more than
+you dream.&rdquo; Her dark glowing gaze brooded on him
+with a sort of intense determination. Then she went on,
+&ldquo;It&ndash;&ndash;it involves my whole future as well as your own,
+though in a different way. So come inside, if you
+please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir in silence accompanied her upon the dark, broad,
+vine-clad porch. In the half-gloom he found chairs for
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to the point at once,&rdquo; she declared. &ldquo;Why
+did Mr. Sorenson talk in such a fashion?&rdquo; And he
+could feel her bending forward as if hanging on his
+answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the one thing I can&rsquo;t discuss,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must know, I must know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And unhappily I must refuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Weir, if you could but understand what
+this involves for me, you wouldn&rsquo;t hesitate! I was
+shocked at the shooting, but I saw its necessity on your
+part; you&rsquo;re not one to run from a foe, a cowardly foe
+least of all. But what I heard there in the street horrified
+me. I couldn&rsquo;t believe it; I can scarcely credit my
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span>
+ears yet. Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Burkhardt were not
+near when you were attacked; they are not acquainted
+with the circumstances or facts as you, Mr. Martinez
+and I know them; they apparently didn&rsquo;t appear until
+the crowd started away with the dead man. Yet at
+once&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, at once,&rdquo; Steele Weir let slip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At once, immediately, when they had barely heard
+the story, they began to tear it to pieces and suggest
+another, making you out a villain. You&rsquo;re only an acquaintance,
+sir, scarcely more than a stranger, but as
+I listened it outraged all my sense of justice. Mr.
+Sorenson, of all men! My brain was in a whirl. But
+it&rsquo;s steady now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer failed to open his lips at her pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m no fool, Mr. Weir; I think of other things besides
+dressing my hair and using a powder puff. I can
+sometimes put two and two together&ndash;&ndash;when I see the
+&lsquo;twos&rsquo; clearly. Now, tell me why Mr. Sorenson talked
+as he did, for I must have my eyes clear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ask me anything but that, Miss Hosmer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He sat distressed and uneasy at her prolonged muteness.
+Suddenly she questioned quietly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are those two men the enemies you spoke of?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will save me embarrassment if I go,&rdquo; he remarked,
+starting to rise. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want you to hate me, you
+know, and still I can&rsquo;t say anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her grasp pulled him imperatively back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall not go yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I can only continue to decline making answers.
+I frankly say that I regret having uttered a word of
+explanation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t regret it. And I intend to keep questioning
+you, however rude you may think me. I must know,&rdquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span>
+she cried impetuously, &ldquo;and I shall know! Mr. Sorenson
+is one of the men you referred to, or he would never
+seek to direct suspicion at you. I saw the look on your
+face, sir, as he spoke. But why should you two be
+enemies! You come here a stranger to San Mateo, or
+have you been here before sometime? Did you know
+him before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again he could feel her eyes straining at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems mad to think of him and Mr. Burkhardt,
+and perhaps others, hiring some one to shoot you down
+from a dark doorway. It is utterly mad&ndash;&ndash;crazy. But
+why should they want to convict you, in the crowd&rsquo;s
+opinion at least, of murdering the man. It would not
+be just trouble about the dam&ndash;&ndash;oh, no. But I can&rsquo;t see
+through it at all. Why won&rsquo;t you tell me? You can
+trust me&ndash;&ndash;and I want to help you as well as help myself.
+You certainly don&rsquo;t hold against me my silly nonsense
+and unkind words of the day you brought me home from
+the ford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t think them silly; they delighted me,&rdquo; he responded.
+&ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t had anything happen to me so refreshing
+in years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must be friends. Something tells me they&rsquo;re
+going to make you trouble over this shooting, and you&rsquo;ll
+need friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something tells me you&rsquo;re right in both respects,&rdquo;
+he laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And friends must stick together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what they should do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the dusk of the vine-clad, flower-scented place
+where they sat he experienced the subtle power of this
+intimacy. Not a soul stirred in the empty moonlit
+street before the house. No sounds disturbed the warm
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span>
+peace of the night. In this secluded spot only there
+ran the murmur of their voices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could never stand by and see any man unjustly
+accused and defamed if I knew he was innocent, without
+lifting up my word in defense,&rdquo; she proceeded. &ldquo;But
+let me ask if on your side you&rsquo;re treating me fairly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir could have groaned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a noble spirit, Miss Hosmer. You&rsquo;re more
+courageous and kind than any girl I&rsquo;ve ever known.
+Would you have me reveal what my best judgment tells
+me should remain untold?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what of me? Would you keep it to yourself if
+my future happiness might turn on it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The appeal in her words shook Steele&rsquo;s heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How does this business affect your happiness?
+How?&rdquo; he asked, in perplexity.</p>
+<p>Now it was her turn to hesitate. Why should she
+pause, indeed, before telling to this man what every one
+else knew. Yet hesitate she did, from a feeling she could
+but partly analyze. Of her fianc&eacute; she had already had
+disturbing secret doubts that had increased of late:
+doubts of his habits, his character and the genuineness
+of his love; so that it was with a little eddy of dissatisfaction
+and shame that she admitted the relationship.
+More she questioned her own love as an actual thing.
+In a startling way, too, this silent, forceful man, so
+deadly in earnest and so earnestly deadly, so terrible in
+some aspects, seemed at the instant to dwarf the other
+in stature and power as if the latter were a plump manikin.</p>
+<p>Perhaps at the last minute she had a shiver of dread
+at what might issue from the engineer&rsquo;s lips in the way
+of facts if he took her at her word and told her what
+she had demanded to know. Did she want to know?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span>
+Suppose she let the affair rest where it was and went
+forward to the future in the comfortable assurance of
+ignorance.</p>
+<p>In that case, it might be wooing later revelations that
+then could not be escaped, revelations like consuming
+lightnings. She would settle it now once for all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does concern my future and my happiness vitally,&rdquo;
+she declared, earnestly. &ldquo;For this reason&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m engaged to marry Ed Sorenson, son of Mr. Sorenson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir leaped to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good God! That fellow!&rdquo; he exclaimed, astounded.</p>
+<p>Without another word he sprang down the steps and
+strode away. Janet Hosmer, grasping the arms of her
+chair and staring after him, saw him once bring down
+his clenched fist on nothing. Then he passed rapidly
+along the street and out of sight.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VII_IN_THE_COIL' id='CHAPTER_VII_IN_THE_COIL'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<h3>IN THE COIL</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The Spirit of Irony couldn&rsquo;t have devised a more
+intolerable situation. So thought Steele Weir as he
+strode away from the dwelling, still laboring under the
+emotions provoked by the girl&rsquo;s disclosure, wincing at
+his own biting thoughts and writhing at his own helplessness.
+It needed only this revelation to cap the
+whole diabolical evening.</p>
+<p>He could not have remained with her now if his life
+had depended on it. She, engaged to that scoundrel
+Ed Sorenson! How could she have been so blind to the
+lustful beast&rsquo;s nature? She must love him, of course.
+He must have been careful to exhibit to her only such
+qualities as would gain her affection and respect, or
+rather hollow shams of qualities he never had possessed.
+Propinquity, lack of rivals in this little town, no doubt
+were largely responsible for her feeling for the man.
+But it was like standing by and seeing her fair young
+body, her fresh pure life, her high soul, flung to a devouring
+swine.</p>
+<p>And by the rules of the game he couldn&rsquo;t open his
+lips to utter a word of warning! That was the worst
+of it, that was the worst of it. No, not by the rules of
+the game; not, for that matter, by the rules of life; for
+the latter run that only can the person concerned see
+with his or her own eyes what a loved one&rsquo;s character
+is, and must make and abide by her own judgments.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span></div>
+<p>Steele Weir all at once stopped in his tracks. He
+stared straight before him for a time seeing Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s
+face as it appeared when she anxiously gazed at
+him from Martinez&rsquo; door, coming out of the night like
+a pallid moon-flower. At that instant she had feared
+he had been wounded; her heart was fluttering with
+anguish. The tension of his body relaxed and his hands
+slowly unclosed and involuntarily his eyes went up to
+the moon sailing serenely in the sky above the treetops
+and the flat-roofed adobe houses. What vaster blessing
+could life bestow than to have such a look come seeking
+one beloved!</p>
+<p>He went on thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She shall not marry him,&rdquo; he said to himself, with
+a quick resolve.</p>
+<p>What were the rules of any game when an innocent
+girl&rsquo;s happiness was at stake? Did he care for conventions,
+or even the contempt she herself might feel
+for him for apparently belittling her lover? He could
+stand that, so that her eyes were opened and the fellow&rsquo;s
+yellow heart made plain. At the proper time he
+should act, view his part as she might. A snap of his
+fingers for being misunderstood! He would go his own
+way afterwards.</p>
+<p>The thing had its curious features, too. No mistake,
+the shock of hearing Sorenson senior talking to the
+sheriff and the crowd, working up sentiment, had stirred
+her indignation and wonder and uneasiness and alarm.
+She was no fool, as she had said. She had a clear, practical
+mind, give it something to work on. Her intuition
+had immediately grasped the fact that there might
+be cellars under the Sorenson household of which she
+knew nothing and which should be promptly entered with
+a strong light. Whether the momentary desire would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span>
+last, that was the question. To-morrow, or the first time
+she found herself in Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s reassuring presence,
+she might consider that her brain had been upset by
+events of this night, jiggled awry in a sort of moonlight
+madness, and her apprehensions as to happiness unfounded
+shadows.</p>
+<p>Well, Weir would strike later.</p>
+<p>He turned into the main street. Evidently the body
+of the dead Mexican had been carried into the jail behind
+the court house, or somewhere. The throng had
+dispersed, though its elements were every place talking,
+in pairs or in little knots of people. As he came along,
+these fell silent at his passing. They stared at him,
+motionless, expressionless, with the characteristic Mexican
+stolidity that is the heritage of Indian blood. By
+his automobile he found Martinez posted, stroking his
+long black mustache and regarding Sorenson&rsquo;s office,
+which was still lighted though the curtain remained
+drawn over the broad plate-glass window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just wanted to give you a whispered word,&rdquo; he said,
+in Steele Weir&rsquo;s ear, darting a glance towards some of
+the Mexicans who, drawn by insatiable curiosity, were
+lounging nearer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speak,&rdquo; said the engineer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came out of the office after you did and heard the
+talk.&rdquo; He made a covert movement of forefinger
+towards the nearby building. &ldquo;The four of them are in
+there again. I saw you listening to Sorenson here in the
+street; and would you care to have me express my opinion
+as to what the signs indicate, Mr. Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the light of what I suggested during our talk in
+my office, the silly twaddle of Burkhardt and Sorenson
+is understandable. I look right through their scheme.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span>
+They always frame up something against anybody they
+want to dispose of; they do it in business matters regularly,
+and very skillfully. They immediately perceived
+a chance, sir, in this unfortunate encounter of yours
+and laid hands on it; their talk was the first delicate
+maneuver to &lsquo;frame&rsquo; you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; was the unperturbed answer.</p>
+<p>Martinez laid a finger on Weir&rsquo;s lapel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Frankly, feeling hasn&rsquo;t been good towards you because
+of the work controversy at the dam,&rdquo; he went on,
+with another swift glance about. &ldquo;They will use that.
+On the other hand, you have Miss Janet and me as witnesses
+in support of your story. Unfortunately Miss
+Janet is, as you may not be aware, engaged to&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez paused dramatically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To Ed Sorenson,&rdquo; the lawyer half-hissed. &ldquo;Nothing
+could be worse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why? Look at the position she&rsquo;ll be in. Consider the
+pressure they can put on her through that fact&ndash;&ndash;and
+they&rsquo;ll not hesitate to do so, in one way or another.
+Innocent as a dove, she is, Mr. Weir.&rdquo; He thrust his
+head forward, showing his lips drawn apart and shining
+teeth tight set. &ldquo;And she&rsquo;s never heard a rumor of his
+hushed-up affairs with poor, ignorant, Mexican girls
+who knew no better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll simply have to trust to her courage to tell the
+truth on the proper occasion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but they&rsquo;ll trick her some way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez straightened, smiled, twirled his mustache.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I? They aren&rsquo;t quite foxy enough for that, Mr.
+Weir,&rdquo; he boasted, with glistening eyes.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span></div>
+<p>The engineer was almost ready to believe that, but
+cunning was not the only weapon in his enemies&rsquo; arsenal.
+How would this lean lawyer stand up under intimidation,
+bribes, threats?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I trust so, Martinez,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Do you think they
+will try to get me sometime by an out-and-out gun-play?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, no.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think they could if they tried?&rdquo; Weir inquired,
+grimly.</p>
+<p>The attorney paused with finger and thumb on the
+point of his mustache, lifted his eyebrows and smiled
+broadly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll consider twice before they attempt it, after
+your expert exhibition this evening,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;It was
+amazing, your speed, your accuracy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele tapped the man on the breast, who experienced
+a distinct tremor at that significant touch and at the
+veiled menace in the dam manager&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s always one bullet in my gun for the man
+who betrays me, Martinez.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lawyer licked his lips. On general principles he
+disliked statements that committed one to the future.
+But it was necessary to say something.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To be sure. I should feel the same in your circumstances,&rdquo;
+he responded. Then as Weir turned to his
+car, he continued: &ldquo;The inquest to-morrow morning
+should be over early. I&rsquo;ll visit you in the afternoon as
+planned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t forget that letter,&rdquo; Weir called out.</p>
+<p>Martinez marveled. Kill a man, and still remember a
+letter! That magnified his respect immensely. Cool,
+that fellow! Then a slight shiver as if a chill from
+those black peaks west of the town had struck through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span>
+his flesh rippled along his spine; for he had been over
+at the jail with the crowd and had viewed that dead
+body lying there on the stone floor. Not only cool, but
+dangerous and deadly, this engineer. He, Martinez,
+must be discreet; it would not do to risk gaining Weir&rsquo;s
+enmity. That cold-faced man could not be &ldquo;monkeyed
+with.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez gnawed his mustache and eyed the dully illuminated
+office window. He wondered if those four men
+inside had not at last found their match, perhaps their
+master. Any one with half a brain could see there was
+going to be a desperate struggle between the four and
+the one, and he was not exactly sure yet that he wanted
+to venture farther into the affair. But the very danger
+fascinated him with its subtle and obscure features, exactly
+suited to his manipulation.</p>
+<p>A man who had been standing apart sauntered nearer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Se&ntilde;or,&rdquo; he addressed the lawyer in Spanish.</p>
+<p>Martinez whirled about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, it&rsquo;s only you, Naharo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is a bad fighter, eh?&rdquo; And the man, almost white
+because of intermixed blood, moved a hand in the direction
+Weir&rsquo;s car had gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps not bad. Quick with a gun, however,&rdquo; was
+the careful reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With his fists also. I saw, or if I did not see, I very
+nearly did so&ndash;&ndash;it is the same&ndash;&ndash;saw him use them in Bowenville.
+And on that dog of an Ed Sorenson who would
+have seduced my little Dolorosa, as he did Cristobal&rsquo;s
+daughter, if I had not perceived what he was at.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lawyer&rsquo;s ears were instantly pricked up. He
+caught the man by the shirt-sleeve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>Once they were in his office he carefully closed and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span>
+locked the door, drawing the window shades. Literally
+he rubbed his hands one over the other as he bade
+Naharo take a chair. Then the pair of them rolled and
+lighted cigarettes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps I should say no more, Se&ntilde;or Martinez.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will go no farther. And if the engineer and Ed
+Sorenson had a fight, then it must have been for that
+reason the latter&rsquo;s father spoke as he did to-night. You
+heard him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. And I did not understand why. It was not because
+of what happened at Bowenville, unquestionably
+not, for it had to do with another girl&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, a girl! And the engineer mixed in it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen. As I say, he would not have told his father,
+because he keeps such things quiet; it is four years since
+he last had to pay money to settle a matter. Some
+think he now behaves, but it is not true. But he is more
+careful. So his father did not know about this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell it all, Naharo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The other inhaled a puff of smoke and half-closed his
+eyes. Though nearly white, he retained the Mexican&rsquo;s
+high cheek bones, and languor, and unforgiving nature.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was in Bowenville, freighting up flour to the store
+of Smith&rsquo;s. I had loaded by evening, to make an early
+start next day. I had gone into the restaurant for
+supper, taking a seat far down at the end of the counter
+near the kitchen. I was tired and thinking only of my
+food. As I ate, there was a crash in one of the stalls
+and I looked about. There was a fight, of course. But
+it ended at once. Then I observed Ed Sorenson come
+out presently, jerking his collar and tie straight. He
+was mad. He had been whipped, too. For he yet looked
+as if he wanted to kill the other man in there, but he
+went away. Soon the other man came out and with him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span>
+was a young white girl, whom I did not know. The
+man was this engineer and he carried an old piece of
+baggage, not such as he would carry but as the girl
+might, for she looked like a ranch girl who was poor.
+The girl was scared. The man was calm as a priest.
+That scoundrel Ed Sorenson had been beaten. Aha,
+so; it was clear. The engineer had put a spoke in the
+fellow&rsquo;s wheel. Then I walked to the door and saw the
+two get into a car and start on the trail this way. After
+that, I resumed my supper. You perceive, the man had
+taken the girl away from the wolf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez&rsquo; restless eyes wandered about the room as
+he digested this account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you see the dead man?&rdquo; he inquired, casually.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, se&ntilde;or.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Their looks met, held for an instant, dropped. Each
+read the thought of the other: the motive for the attack
+on the engineer was clear. But some convictions
+are better not expressed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should have liked to see Se&ntilde;or Weir do the shooting,&rdquo;
+Naharo stated. &ldquo;Dios, such shooting! Two
+shots, two hits. And in the dark!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez&rsquo; grinned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not please&ndash;&ndash;whoever hired the dead man. He
+was hired for the job, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unquestionably, se&ntilde;or,&rdquo; was the reply.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_VIII_THE_GATHERING_STORM' id='CHAPTER_VIII_THE_GATHERING_STORM'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<h3>THE GATHERING STORM</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At the inquest next morning no outward sign indicated
+what Weir&rsquo;s enemies might be at. Indeed, none
+of them was present. The engineer made a statement;
+the two witnesses, Janet Hosmer and Felipe Martinez,
+were briefly interrogated, and the finding was returned
+that the unknown Mexican had met death from two
+bullet wounds while attempting to kill Steele Weir.</p>
+<p>One spectator there was who took a strong interest
+in proceedings, Ed Sorenson. When, however, Janet
+Hosmer was notified by her father, who was in charge,
+that she could withdraw, the young fellow hastened to
+lead her away, with an audible remark that it was a
+shame she had had to be &ldquo;dragged into this disreputable
+gun-man&rsquo;s bloody show.&rdquo; Meaning Steele Weir, naturally.</p>
+<p>That feeling was being intensified against him was
+only too apparent in the hostile manner of the crowd
+and in the silence with which it received the finding.
+There was his former unpopularity, to begin with; there
+was now added a race resentment, for the slain man,
+stranger though he was, was Mexican; and finally, he
+knew not what distilled poison of lies concerning his
+innocence in the night fray. Nothing more was needed
+to reveal the swelling hate which secret fear of Weir
+but increased than a volley of curses and abuse hurled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span>
+at his head from a native saloon doorway as he passed
+in his car on his way home.</p>
+<p>During the following week the engineer was too occupied
+with dam work to have time for other matters.
+He pushed the concrete construction and inspired his
+men with something of his own indomitable spirit, who
+had learned of the cowardly attack in San Mateo and
+rallied to his standard with a zeal and ardor for which
+the fact of employment alone did not account. He had
+become a leader as well as their &ldquo;boss.&rdquo; From Meyers
+down to the humblest workman the camp had for him a
+new admiration, a new respect and a new loyalty, which
+he could not help but feel; he had proved that he could
+deliver the &ldquo;goods&rdquo;; and if the Mexicans wanted war,
+the Americans here would be glad to oblige them. Nor
+did they wait to let San Mateo know the fact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re wid &lsquo;Cold Steel&rsquo; Weir, our boss, four hundred
+of us, till ye can skate on hell,&rdquo; a huge Irishman, one of
+half a dozen standing at Vorse&rsquo;s bar on Saturday night,
+remarked when the saloon-man uttered a sneer at the
+manager. &ldquo;Say that agin and we&rsquo;ll tear your rotten
+booze joint to pieces and make ye eat it! And if another
+stinkin&rsquo; greaser tries to wing him from the dark,
+we&rsquo;ll come down here and wipe your dirty little town off
+the map! That goes both ways from the jack!&rdquo; He
+snapped his fingers under the other&rsquo;s nose by way of
+added insult.</p>
+<p>A petty series of hostile acts against the company
+developed. Teamsters were stoned by boys, which left
+them raging and murderous to discover the men who
+set them on. Half a carload of cement in sacks was
+ripped open and emptied on the earth at Bowenville.
+After Meyers, Weir&rsquo;s assistant, found his automobile
+tires slashed to bits on coming out of the post-office in
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span>
+San Mateo, it became necessary always to go in pairs,
+one man to remain on watch. Weir himself just avoided
+a serious accident one evening at dusk while a mile from
+the dam when he instinctively ducked in his car as something
+grazed the top of his wind-shield. A wire had been
+stretched across the road from a telephone pole to a
+tree, at just the height to strike him at the throat.</p>
+<p>He halted and removed the deadly contrivance. Men
+on watch of his movements could have prepared it
+against his return; and, indeed, he thought he detected
+a pair of flitting shadows behind a row of willow bushes
+lining a Mexican irrigation ditch, but in the dusk he
+could not be sure. On running thither, he found no
+one.</p>
+<p>The camp was not of a temper, however, to allow the
+attacks to be all on one side. Atkinson, the superintendent,
+came to Weir one morning towards the end of
+the week and informed him workmen were drifting down
+to San Mateo nightly in hope of trouble.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll get a knife put into them,&rdquo; Steele Weir replied,
+with a frown that did not entirely hide his satisfaction
+at this evidence of support.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe; and again maybe not,&rdquo; the superintendent
+stated, grinning. &ldquo;A bunch jumped some of our boys
+last night and I guess when the dust settled there were
+a couple of Mexicans beaten nearly to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Call the men all together this noon,&rdquo; Weir ordered.</p>
+<p>At that hour he gave them a talk for what he called
+their long-eared cussedness, and laid down a little law
+and wound up with a number of reasonable explanations
+for the same. Every man who went out hunting trouble
+was a camp liability, and would be fired. He did not
+propose to give the town authorities a chance to jail
+workmen and impair the dam work, just the thing they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span>
+were waiting to do. The men should keep away from
+San Mateo, or at least avoid disputes and rows. If they
+spent no money there whatever it would sting the town
+where it would hurt the most, in its pocket-book; and
+he himself was transferring the company bank account
+to Bowenville, by way of example. If any man felt
+the need of change from camp, he could have two days
+off at the end of the month to spend at Bowenville. But
+keep away from the Mexicans!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if they come up here huntin&rsquo; us when we show
+up no more?&rdquo; yelled the same big Irishman who had
+paid his respects to Vorse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In that case, tear their heads off,&rdquo; was the reply.
+&ldquo;But put on your gloves first or you&rsquo;ll dirty your
+fingers.&rdquo; Which bit of rough humor caught the crowd&rsquo;s
+fancy and won a roar of laughter.</p>
+<p>Later as the crowd dispersed to eat Atkinson said to
+Meyers, &ldquo;The boss knows how to handle men all right,
+all right; he put sugar on the pill. The gang went off
+grinning. They know they&rsquo;ve got to be good&ndash;&ndash;but only
+up to a limit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meantime Felipe Martinez had not been idle. He
+rode up to engineering headquarters on his pony one
+evening and carried Weir out into the open where their
+words would not be overheard. He reported that he
+was quietly working for information of Weir&rsquo;s father
+among the older Mexicans who would be likely to remember
+him, but proceeding cautiously so that no one
+would suspect his purpose. He represented himself to
+them as undertaking to write a history of San Mateo
+County; he must depend upon them for data of early
+days; it would be a fine book bound in leather, in which
+their names and possibly their pictures would appear;&ndash;&ndash;which
+never failed to flatter the parties with whom
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span>
+he talked. And the lawyer laughed with amusement
+as he related the success of his method.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have already seen some thirty or forty people,
+a few of whom recalled your father, but no more. But
+this afternoon,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;I discovered a woman
+who worked at the Weir ranch house.&rdquo; Martinez perceived
+the engineer&rsquo;s attention quicken. &ldquo;She said the
+Weirs had a little boy of four years of age, perhaps
+five. You, Mr. Weir, of course. They suddenly paid
+and discharged her one day, packed a trunk and drove
+hurriedly off; and the next morning Sorenson took
+possession of the ranch and she went home. They
+drove off in a great haste&ndash;&ndash;there was no railroad anywhere
+near here then&ndash;&ndash;and that was the last she ever
+saw or heard of them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One thing more there was: she said there was a
+story that went around for awhile afterwards that
+Weir and another had lost their ranches and cattle
+gambling. For that reason Weir left the country;
+and for that reason, too, the other man, Dent, by name,
+committed suicide in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon where they had
+gambled. She said Saurez, an old man living with his
+son up a little creek, would know about that, for he used
+to clean out Vorse&rsquo;s bar-room in those days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele Weir grasped Martinez&rsquo;s shoulder in a quick
+grip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did! Get everything he knows out of him,&rdquo;
+he commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave it to me, Mr. Weir. I understand how to
+wheedle facts out of these old fellows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But it was doubtful if the engineer heard his words.
+He had dropped his hand, stood opening and shutting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span>
+his fingers, while on his face grew the hard implacable
+look that always whetted the attorney&rsquo;s curiosity.</p>
+<p>Weir walked up on the hillside when Martinez had
+ridden away and there sat down on a rock. It was a
+rift, though but a faint rift, that this news made in the
+blank dark wall he had to confront; and he wished to
+think. Proof as well as knowledge of what had happened
+in his father&rsquo;s case was what he must have. Acting
+on intuition he had been able to put fear into the
+hearts of the four men responsible for making his father&rsquo;s
+life a hell, but proof of their guilt was necessary
+to make them suffer in a similar fashion, to reveal their
+crime to the world, to destroy them. Now at last, here
+was a possibility. If this former roustabout of the
+saloon knew anything!</p>
+<p>Well, he must be patient&ndash;&ndash;the mill of the gods grinds
+slowly. But when finally he had gained all the strands
+and woven the net! Unconsciously his hands arose before
+his face like talons closing on prey and shut on air,
+until their veins swelled. That was how he would serve
+them, those men. Though they might fall on their
+knees and implore mercy, not one beat of pity should
+move his heart.</p>
+<p>It was almost dark when he arose. Behind him the
+great peaks soared against the last greenish twilight.
+In the shacks the camp lamps were showing at windows.
+At one side and in the canyon the concrete core of the
+dam appeared white in the gloom, like a bank of snow.
+The murmur of voices, an occasional distant laugh,
+came from men&rsquo;s quarters.</p>
+<p>Presently he slanted down the hillside past the camp,
+until he struck into a road leading towards town, where
+he began to walk forward, hatless and without coat,
+through the soft dusk. He was disinclined for work as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span>
+yet, the work always piled on his desk; he desired yet
+for a little to rest his spirit in the evening calm.</p>
+<p>His thoughts had softened and turned to Janet Hosmer.
+He had not seen her since the morning at the
+court house. He had not spoken with her since that
+interview upon her veranda, which had terminated
+with his shocked utterance. That he had thus given
+away to his feeling he had a hundred times repented;
+and that he had so bruskly departed he was profoundly
+chagrined. But what could he have done? No explanation
+was possible. The situation in which he had
+been allowed of but one thing, escape.</p>
+<p>With the rising tide of emotion reflected by memory
+of that moment his steps had quickened. All at once
+he discovered before him the rippling sheen of water.
+He was at Chico Creek, a mile from camp, where he first
+had met Janet Hosmer. Engaged with his tangled problem,
+he had been unaware of the distance covered.</p>
+<p>Pausing but an instant he waded through, smiling to
+himself at thought of that afternoon&rsquo;s spirited encounter
+with the girl. She had not dreamed then, nor he,
+that events would fling them together in a more dramatic
+second meeting at Martinez&rsquo; door.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he perceived a white-clad figure before him,
+standing motionless, leaning forward to peer his way
+as he walked forth from the ford.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s you, Mr. Weir?&rdquo; came in soft inquiry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. How in the world do you happen to be here,
+Janet Hosmer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought I recognized you marching through the
+stream, so I wasn&rsquo;t alarmed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one would think of harming you, I&rsquo;m sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But anyway I should have vanished if you had been
+a stranger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not being one, you remained. I had no idea of
+such luck as this when I set out for a walk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both pleasure and satisfaction sounded in his voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was just taking a little stroll myself,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_IX_AN_UNEXPECTED_ALLY' id='CHAPTER_IX_AN_UNEXPECTED_ALLY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<h3>AN UNEXPECTED ALLY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me take the chance first thing to apologize for
+my behavior the night we talked on your porch,&rdquo; Steele
+Weir exclaimed. &ldquo;Your statement of being engaged
+surprised me into words and conduct that has had me
+in an unhappy state of mind ever since. Mr. Sorenson&rsquo;s
+talk to the crowd stirred my anger. Had I known
+your exact relationship to him and his son, I should
+have made no mistakes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had urged you to speak, had I not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Grant that. But I don&rsquo;t stand excused.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was no questioning the sincerity of your
+last expression that night, in any case,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve not been indignant because of what you exclaimed
+or because you hate the Sorensons. &lsquo;Hate&rsquo;
+isn&rsquo;t too strong a word, is it? I&rsquo;m none the less interested
+however to know what it&rsquo;s all about. You see
+I don&rsquo;t take any stock in the reasons commonly given:
+that you&rsquo;re a &lsquo;bad man,&rsquo; an agent of a rich corporation
+trying to put our people out of business, a public
+menace and all the rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that what they say?&rdquo; Weir asked, with a laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Part of it. Nor does it fool father, for he said
+only yesterday that there&rsquo;s something more at bottom
+of the feeling against you than merely a fight of moneyed
+interests. He knows from what I told him that
+that dead man tried to murder you; yet he hears constant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span>
+talk of your &lsquo;crime,&rsquo; of evidence being gathered
+against you by the county attorney, Mr. Lucerio, and
+of the penalty you shall pay. All absurd, to be sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Martinez tells me the same,&rdquo; Steele responded.
+&ldquo;But he says also that all the people do not believe the
+stories.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s true.&rdquo; And she appeared to reflect upon
+the circumstance.</p>
+<p>To Weir nothing could be stranger than this talk
+on the dark road with the girl who, too, should be naturally
+opposed to him. In fact, here at this very spot
+and at their first meeting she had announced herself as
+a critic and an enemy. He could smile over that now;
+she herself probably did smile at the recollection. Yet
+she was calmly discussing his situation without animus
+or even unfriendliness.</p>
+<p>How could that be possible if she actually loved
+the man whom she expected to marry, Ed Sorenson?
+Why did she not at once spring to arms in defense
+of the Sorenson side? Unless&ndash;&ndash;unless she suspected
+the baseness of her lover and his father, and fear had
+replaced love.</p>
+<p>All at once she spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will put you in jail if they can, and bring
+you to trial, and&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And hang me, that&rsquo;s what you hesitate to say,&rdquo;
+Steele finished for her. &ldquo;Whom do you mean by
+&lsquo;they&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are the people here in this county really &lsquo;they&rsquo;?
+Do the people, that is, the mass of poor ignorant Mexicans,
+have anything to do with public affairs? Both
+you and I know they do not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why deny it!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s generally known
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span>
+that four men, with a few more at their skirts, run
+things. They nominate the men who are to fill office&ndash;&ndash;there&rsquo;s
+only one political party in the county worth
+mentioning&ndash;&ndash;and give them orders and expect them to
+obey. For that reason father would never accept an
+office. He could be coroner; he could be county treasurer;
+he could go to the legislature; or anything else&ndash;&ndash;if
+he would but wear their political livery. But he
+prefers to be a free man. I used to think nothing of it,
+see no wrong in such a state of affairs, for everything
+went along well enough and about the same as ever as
+far as I could see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possibly you didn&rsquo;t see everything that was occurring
+below the surface even then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly what father told me yesterday. We talked
+about everything under the sun, I imagine. And I
+informed him that you walked home with me the night
+of the shooting; I had not spoken of it before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was proper; he should know it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He doesn&rsquo;t share in the feeling against you, Mr.
+Weir, let me assure you of that. Ever since he heard
+my explanation of the shooting and then met you at
+the inquest, he&rsquo;s convinced that you&rsquo;re being done a
+great injustice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele experienced a warm glow of pleasure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I liked your father at first sight,&rdquo; said he, simply.
+&ldquo;But where does all this leave us?&rdquo; He spoke in a
+light tone of amusement that he was far from feeling.
+&ldquo;Our position is&ndash;&ndash;odd.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; she assented so earnestly that he began to
+laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t allow it to disturb you. I&rsquo;m really
+presuming upon your kindness of heart and innocence
+in enjoying your company now. Acquaintance with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span>
+me is a rather serious matter here in San Mateo and
+carries consequences. You don&rsquo;t think for an instant
+that I&rsquo;d allow my personal pleasure&ndash;&ndash;and pleasure it
+is to be with you, needless to say&ndash;&ndash;to bring you into
+ill-favor among your friends and to make you the subject
+of gossip. I appreciate your good spirit towards
+me; and I admire you greatly. But it will be well if I
+admire you at a distance hereafter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see whose business it is except mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To Steele Weir it was like pushing aside the only
+thing that brightened his hard, toilsome existence thus
+to abjure future companionship with her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good heavens, do you fancy that comes easy for
+me to say?&rdquo; he exclaimed, drawing a deep breath. &ldquo;I
+never before knew any one who&ndash;&ndash;well, I&rsquo;ll stop there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who what?&rdquo; she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I nearly overstepped the bounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What imp of perversity was in the girl? Weir
+stared at her for a moment through the gloom.</p>
+<p>And then she remarked that she must be returning
+home, and said she would be glad if he would accompany
+her part way as there was a Mexican&rsquo;s house half
+way to town where a particularly vicious dog always
+rushed out. The dog rushed out exactly as she had
+predicted, barking savagely, so that she slipped her
+arm into the engineer&rsquo;s and held fast until they were
+past.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He does that only after dark; I hadn&rsquo;t expected to
+walk so far and it was still light when I set out,&rdquo; said
+she.</p>
+<p>The touch of her fingers on his sleeve, the light
+swing of her form at his side, the subtle fragrance that
+emanated from her hair and face, this intimate nearness
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span>
+on the dark road, the heavy scent of flowers in
+the bordering fields,&ndash;&ndash;all sent the blood thumping from
+his heart. If he&ndash;&ndash;if he were in Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s place,
+what love he could pour out!</p>
+<p>Ed Sorenson, the double-faced wretch who while engaged
+to her had attempted to entice away for his own
+vile gratification the simple, trustful girl on Terry
+Creek, he was to marry this sweet and charming companion.
+What diabolical tragedies life could mix!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See, the moon is rising,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>Over the edge of the mesa the yellow globe was
+bulging, rayless for the moment, round and full.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re almost at the edge of town, and I&rsquo;ll stop
+here,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;As I said, I&rsquo;d not bring down upon
+your head a single unpleasant word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My head&rsquo;s not so tender,&rdquo; she responded quickly.
+&ldquo;But I think you&rsquo;re right&ndash;&ndash;for the present.&rdquo; A tight
+little smile followed the words. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I propose to stand by you. I told you that
+night I couldn&rsquo;t remain indifferent when I saw an innocent
+man persecuted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You give me a tremendous amount of happiness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I do, I&rsquo;m glad. I don&rsquo;t believe you ever had
+much of it. Do you know what is said? That you
+never smile. But I can swear that isn&rsquo;t true, and I&rsquo;m
+beginning to wonder if you really are&ndash;&ndash;Heavens, what
+was I about to say!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead. It&rsquo;s nothing terrible, I wager.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I won&rsquo;t finish that, but I&rsquo;ll ask a question
+even more impertinent, if I may. Frankly, I&rsquo;m dying
+of curiosity to know.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir turned his head to listen to the approach of a
+horseman. He could see the man galloping towards
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span>
+them for town, having turned into the road from a lane
+a short distance off, his horse&rsquo;s hoofs striking an occasional
+spark from a stone. Then the engineer looked
+smilingly at Janet Hosmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you anything&ndash;&ndash;or almost anything.&rdquo; One
+subject alone was sealed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s that name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Cold Steel.&rsquo; How did you get it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was just pinned on me a few years ago. I&rsquo;m not
+particularly proud of it. I don&rsquo;t even know the rogue
+who gave me the label. And it means nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even your enemies are using it,&ndash;&ndash;and I understand
+what it signifies.&rdquo; She bent her eyes upon him for a
+time. &ldquo;That is, what it signifies to your friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to my enemies?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More gossip. They say it&rsquo;s because you&rsquo;re a gun-man
+and a knife-man. Oh, I wish I didn&rsquo;t have to have
+my ears filled with such vicious slander! But it means
+the same to enemies as to friends if they would but
+admit it. I&rsquo;ll wait until this rider passes, then I must
+go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No thought of friends or foes, both, or of any such
+person as Ed Sorenson in particular, was in Steele&rsquo;s
+mind as he made answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d stand here forever if you didn&rsquo;t go,&rdquo; he said,
+with a low eagerness that caused her breath to flutter
+in spite of herself.</p>
+<p>On her part, her mind was whispering, &ldquo;He means
+it, I believe he really means it.&rdquo; Which caused her to
+lift and lower her eyes hurriedly, and feel a peculiar
+sense of trepidation and excitement. Odd to state, she,
+too, just then had no recollection of any such being as
+Ed Sorenson, which was the extreme of unloverliness.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Before I do go, I&rsquo;ve something to tell you,&rdquo; she
+said hurriedly, dropping her voice. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s this: the dead
+man&rsquo;s name was&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;here her tone went down to a mere
+sibilance&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Pete Ortez.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He leaned forward, once again the hard fierce man
+she had seen in Martinez&rsquo; office the night of the shooting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you learn that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&ndash;&ndash;well, it was let slip inadvertently in my presence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir would not press her further. Nor was there
+need, for the sudden embarrassment on her face and
+indeed the information itself could have but one source,
+the man who knew, Ed Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re the equal of a thousand ordinary friends,&rdquo;
+he declared. &ldquo;I can make use of that item. Step aside,
+please; we&rsquo;re in the middle of the road.&rdquo; And he drew
+her from in front of the horseman advancing upon
+them.</p>
+<p>They said nothing, but waited for the man to pass.
+But he pulled his mount from a gallop to a trot, and
+from a trot to a foot pace, and at last when squarely
+even with them came to a full stop. From under his
+broad hat brim he silently considered the girl in white
+summer dress and the bare-headed engineer.</p>
+<p>Then he began to shake with laughter, which lasted
+but an instant. So insulting, so sinister was that
+noiseless laugh that Janet&rsquo;s hand had flown to Weir&rsquo;s
+arm, which she nervously clutched. As for Weir, his
+limbs stiffened&ndash;&ndash;she felt the tightening of the arm she
+grasped&ndash;&ndash;as a tiger&rsquo;s body grows taut preparatory to
+a spring.</p>
+<p>The short, fleshy, insolent rider sitting there in the
+moonlight was Burkhardt.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed Sorenson better keep an eye on his little turtledove,&rdquo;
+he remarked. And touching heel to his animal
+he swung ahead for town.</p>
+<p>For one dazed minute they stared after him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shoot him!&rdquo; she suddenly said, through shut teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t my gun along, or I&rsquo;d be glad to oblige
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He deserves killing, the wretch!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On more accounts than one,&rdquo; he replied, quietly.</p>
+<p>So quietly and so gravely, in truth, that her gust of
+rage subsided before the low-spoken menace of the
+words. No quick anger was his but a steady and
+deadly purpose. Again she felt the hard-held force,
+the mystery of the man, as if flowing suddenly upward
+from subterranean channels. What wrong had he
+suffered, what undeserved torture at the hands of this
+man and others thus to freeze his soul?</p>
+<p>But he immediately turned to her, asking, &ldquo;Does that
+upset the broth?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A wan smile greeted his words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I expect it will keep the cook busy, anyway,&rdquo; she
+said.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_X_BY_RIGHT_OF_POSSESSION' id='CHAPTER_X_BY_RIGHT_OF_POSSESSION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<h3>BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Janet Hosmer made no effort to guess what her
+fianc&eacute; would say when next he called, or to prepare a
+defense of explanations and excuses. She was not that
+kind. What was necessary to be stated at the proper
+time would arise to her lips. Nevertheless she had a
+heaviness of heart, a natural distress as to the unpleasantness
+in prospect; and had only the slightest hope
+that Ed would ignore or refuse to hear Burkhardt&rsquo;s
+story. The man would tell her lover, of that she might
+rest assured, out of hatred for the engineer if for no
+other reason.</p>
+<p>She knew how passionately Ed was set against Steele
+Weir, for a score of times she had heard his incensed
+opinions, increasing lately to tirades. It had seemed
+strange at first that one could be so bitter over a simple
+difference like that of who should work at the dam.
+But ever since Weir had uttered his hoarse exclamation
+regarding her engagement, words so full of protest
+and amazed indignation, she was aware the cause
+went deeper.</p>
+<p>At that moved ejaculation of her companion that
+night something, too, had settled on her heart like a
+weight&ndash;&ndash;an indefinable foreboding. The anxiety
+aroused about Ed&rsquo;s father and his integrity came to
+include Ed likewise. Loyalty of course required that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span>
+she accept the man she had promised to marry, without
+reservations. As between him and others there
+should be but one choice. But did she really know
+him? Was he simply the open, jolly, generous, upright
+adoring fellow he appeared? Or were there less pleasant,
+more ignoble sides to his character? Was he, as
+well as his father, capable of a mean, unworthy, selfish
+persecution of another?</p>
+<p>The engineer had made no open accusation against
+him&ndash;&ndash;or against any one, for that matter. She had
+done her best to get him to express himself, but he had
+refused. Enemies he might have, but he would not discuss
+the fact beyond admitting it was true. Only at
+moments when his restraint slipped could she measure
+his feelings. Quite different that from Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s
+voluble, heated denunciations of the other. Yet,
+heavens, how appalled this reserved man had been at
+hearing of her engagement! Far more than words, far
+more than any open charge, did his face and incredulity,
+both so patently sincere, bespeak the mistake she
+was making and justify gnawing doubts of her lover.</p>
+<p>As she approached her home Ed Sorenson came
+dashing out to spring into his runabout waiting before
+the gate. At sight of her he pulled up short.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, here you are,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, here I am,&rdquo; was her reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You doubtless know what I&rsquo;ve been told,&rdquo; he stated,
+significantly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I don&rsquo;t. I can only suspect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it true you&rsquo;ve been meeting this man Weir on
+the quiet? Meeting him while engaged to me? You
+know what I think of him, and what every other respectable
+person thinks of him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that Mr. Burkhardt&rsquo;s report? That I am
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span>
+meeting Mr. Weir on the quiet, to use your words?&rdquo;
+she countered.</p>
+<p>Sorenson made an angry gesture at what he considered
+an evasion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Janet, listen. He said he saw you at the edge of
+town, that you were both bare-headed, standing close
+together, arms locked. Good heavens, can&rsquo;t you imagine
+my feelings on hearing what he had to say! He
+stopped me on the street and drew me aside to put me
+on my guard, he said. Burkhardt wouldn&rsquo;t just make
+up a yarn like that against you, and he&rsquo;s a good friend
+of mine. He didn&rsquo;t say half what he suggested.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl turned her face towards the house, shut her
+eyes for an instant. She could picture the rider&rsquo;s
+brutal leering face and unspoken insinuations; and
+her brain also placed in the scene her lover greedily if
+angrily drinking in the tale. Harkening to it instead
+of knocking the man down, that was the worst of it.
+Harkening&ndash;&ndash;and believing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not deign to resent your remark of meeting Mr.
+Weir &lsquo;on the quiet&rsquo;,&rdquo; said she, quietly. &ldquo;I met him on
+the road accidentally.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think I&rsquo;m entitled to know something
+about it?&rdquo; he asked, with an edged tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it you desire to know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nearly an oath of wrath escaped his mouth, but he
+kept his control.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Janet, you know what kind of a man he is,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;You know what I feel against him, and father,
+and all our friends, and the town. And the whole town,
+too, will probably hear of this, with a lot of gossip
+added that isn&rsquo;t true.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I met him accidentally.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t have to chat with him like an old
+friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet Hosmer gave him a slow, meditative look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know how I talked with him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You talked with him. That in itself was too much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t view it in that light,&rdquo; she responded. &ldquo;He
+was perfectly civil. Whatever public opinion may be
+regarding the shooting, I know he killed the man in self-defence.
+So that&rsquo;s nothing against him. You would
+have done the same in his place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ed Sorenson leaned towards her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were mistaken, Janet. I&rsquo;ve said before that I
+feared you were, but the prosecuting attorney has witnesses
+to the gun-play that he&rsquo;s dug up. Martinez saw
+nothing; how could he from inside the office? And
+remember that you&rsquo;re only a girl, Janet; in the darkness
+and with the excitement you were confused. I
+haven&rsquo;t a doubt this scoundrel Weir made you believe
+you saw what never occurred, when you appeared in
+Martinez&rsquo; office. When you&rsquo;ve thought it over, you&rsquo;ll
+realize that yourself. These new witnesses tell just
+the reverse of what you fancied happened. I&rsquo;m going
+to see that you&rsquo;re away from San Mateo when the
+man&rsquo;s tried, as he will be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No reply coming from her, he continued:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He deceived you then and he&rsquo;ll endeavor to poison
+your mind right along. You&rsquo;re too trustful. Now, I
+was angry at first, but if there was anything in this
+meeting to-night that was out of the way, it was his
+doing, I know. If he got familiar with you, as Burkhardt
+hinted&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll kill the dog with my own hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You may rest easy. His conduct was irreproachable,
+Mr. Burkhardt to the contrary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson regarded her in perplexity, divided between
+anger and doubts. Too, a new feeling unaccountably
+sprang into his breast&ndash;&ndash;jealousy. In the
+end apprehension all at once filled his mind, darkening
+his face and bringing down his brows.</p>
+<p>Uneasy as at first he had been after the row in the
+restaurant, he had eventually dismissed the matter from
+his mind, for no rumor of it had reached San Mateo.
+Neither Weir nor Johnson, the girl&rsquo;s father, had
+blabbed of it, so his alarm passed; they didn&rsquo;t want
+to talk of it for the girl&rsquo;s sake, any more than he
+wished it known, was his grinning conclusion. The
+deuce would have been to pay if Janet had got wind of
+the business. But now his fears came winging back a
+hundred-fold as he stared at her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did he say to you?&rdquo; he asked, in a tense
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that tone with me, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson, however, was past observation of her mood
+or temper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told you a lot of lies about me, didn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo; he
+went on, not hiding the sneer. &ldquo;And you believed
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t say much, but what he did say was to
+the point. I don&rsquo;t recall that there were any lies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There were, of course. It would be just his chance
+to give you his made-up story about me and that Johnson
+girl. That was what so interested you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, he didn&rsquo;t say anything about you and any girl
+except me. Then he only said he was sorry he couldn&rsquo;t
+have the pleasure of my friendship&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay-ee,&rdquo; the other grated. His lips worked above
+his teeth.</p>
+<p>A shudder passed over Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s skin at the
+sound and the sight, for she had never seen him like
+this. A cold hand might have been closing about her
+heart: his glare was animal-like and bestial. His nature
+at the instant stood unclothed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he said he would be at pains to avoid even
+chance meetings with me, because it would make talk
+and cause me annoyance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll not meet you another time if I have anything
+to say about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see. But I wanted you to understand that he
+told me no lies, nor repeated any story&ndash;&ndash;about you and
+a Johnson girl, I think you said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A visible breath of relief lifted his breast. He now
+would have been glad for some one to boot him along
+the street for ever mentioning the thing. He almost
+had put his foot in it. Apparently she was not interested
+in seeking further knowledge of the subject that
+he so ill-advisedly had brought up. Lucky for him she
+hadn&rsquo;t the inquisitiveness of some girls.</p>
+<p>The narrow escape restored a trace of his good
+humor, and he was shrewd enough to divert her mind
+before the incident made an impression. He reached
+out and patted her shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t think me a scold, darling,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Burkhardt
+upset me with his news, that was all. He hates
+that gun-man so much that it&rsquo;s no wonder he was angry
+at seeing him hoodwink you. He probably imagined a
+lot. Just don&rsquo;t speak to Weir if he tries to stop you
+again. And pretty soon we&rsquo;ll have him where he won&rsquo;t
+interfere with anybody.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will that be?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The county attorney&rsquo;s still collecting evidence.
+Nothing will be done before the grand jury meets, which
+is in a couple of weeks. You must arrange to go off
+on a visit about that time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you won&rsquo;t have to go through the ordeal of
+appearing in court. There are ways of fixing such
+things.&rdquo; He laughed softly. &ldquo;Especially here in San
+Mateo County. It&rsquo;s too rotten a business for you to
+have to step into, this murder. Come along down to
+the drug store and have some ice cream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to-night. I&rsquo;m feeling a little tired.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then let us rest on your porch. I haven&rsquo;t seen
+you twice in the last week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some other evening, Ed. I promised father to help
+get up his account books.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re not angry with me?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;re
+not, give me a kiss before I go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A sharp smile showed on her lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not angry, but I&rsquo;m going to penalize you to
+that extent. If you must have a cheek to press, go
+kiss&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; She paused, while the conviction darted into
+his mind that she had remembered that Johnson girl
+blunder after all, then said: &ldquo;Mr. Burkhardt&rsquo;s cheek.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again relief swept him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, be kind, Janet,&rdquo; he began. But she was
+already through the gate and skipping up the walk,
+vanishing in the gloom of the veranda. The screen
+door clapped shut. &ldquo;Peeved, all right. I&rsquo;ll have to be
+extra-nice to her for a day or so until she calms down,&rdquo;
+he murmured to himself. &ldquo;Must send her a box of
+chocolates and some magazines to-morrow to show my
+contrite heart; that always gets &rsquo;em. Hang it, it&rsquo;s
+time to fix a day, too. We&rsquo;ve been engaged long
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span>
+enough. She sure has a figure and face&ndash;&ndash;a beaut! I
+guess she didn&rsquo;t smell the booze on my breath. Got to
+be careful about that till we&rsquo;re married.&rdquo; He jumped
+into his car.</p>
+<p>The screen door had clapped shut, but Janet had not
+entered. She had employed the artifice to convey the
+impression it had. She did not wish to go in to her
+work just yet, for calm as she had appeared during the
+interview her emotions were running full tide. Love
+Ed Sorenson? Marry him? She groped for and
+dropped into a wicker chair, her head sinking in shame
+and self-abasement. Never&ndash;&ndash;never!</p>
+<p>And before her mind swam another face, a face with
+the hair ruffled about the brow, clear of eyes and
+strong-lined, as she had beheld it in the moonlight of
+the road.</p>
+<p>All at once she tugged at a finger, fiercely pulling
+off the engagement ring. She rubbed her cheek as well,
+with an angry hand, for the memory of kisses was burning
+her as by fire.</p>
+<p>Then she sat quite motionless for a long time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just ask father,&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;There can&rsquo;t
+be more than a dozen Johnsons around here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Which would have given Ed Sorenson a fresh jolt
+in his breathing apparatus if he had overheard, and
+shriveled the cocky self-assurance with which he sipped
+a high-ball that moment at Vorse&rsquo;s bar.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XI_JANET_AND_MARY' id='CHAPTER_XI_JANET_AND_MARY'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<h3>JANET AND MARY</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In a region as sparsely settled by white people as
+San Mateo and its adjoining counties there were not,
+as Janet put it, more than a dozen Johnson families.
+In fact, there were but two, she learned from her
+father: one at Bowenville, the small railroad town of
+three hundred people, a merchant with a wife and four
+little children; the other a rancher on Terry Creek,
+whose wife was dead and who had one child, a girl of
+sixteen or seventeen years of age.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I may be away at dinner time, so don&rsquo;t wait for
+me,&rdquo; she told her father next morning. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going
+out in the country a few miles&ndash;&ndash;and you know my car!
+If you&rsquo;d just let me squeeze some of these patients who
+never pay, you could have a new car yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mine&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; he smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But mine isn&rsquo;t. Look at it. You gave it to me
+only because you scorned to ride in it any longer yourself.
+It would do for me, you said, but you prance
+around in a bright shiny one yourself. I blush at the
+row mine makes; sounds like a boiler factory; I drive
+only along side streets. If the patients would pay
+what they owe, I could ride like a lady instead of a
+slinking magpie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The doctor leaned back in his chair and laughed
+(they were at breakfast) and remarked that old friends
+were best.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t call my asthmatic tin beast a friend; we&rsquo;re
+bitter enemies,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>It carried her to Terry Creek about noon, however,
+safely enough, whither she went with a firm resolution
+that crushed a certain embarrassment and anxiety.
+Suppose these people resented her inquiries.</p>
+<p>She placed the bearded, tanned rancher at once, when
+she saw him working on a piece of harness before the
+door as she drove up. She had seen him in town at different
+times. She once had stopped here, too, several
+years previous when accompanying her father, who had
+been called to dress the rancher&rsquo;s injured hand. The
+girl could not have been over twelve or thirteen then,
+a shabby, awkward girl wearing a braid who came out
+to gaze shyly at her sitting in the car.</p>
+<p>Johnson arose from the ground and approached as
+she alighted, while the girl&rsquo;s head popped into sight
+at the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Dr. Hosmer&rsquo;s daughter, Janet,&rdquo; she stated, putting
+out her hand and smiling. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to see you
+on a matter. Shall we go into the house?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With curiosity sharing a vague hostility in his bearing
+he led her in, where his daughter was setting the
+table. Janet also told the girl who she was. At once
+dismay and startlement greeted the announcement.
+But she invited Janet to be seated, she herself withdrawing
+to a spot by the stove.</p>
+<p>No need for Janet to beat about the bush with her
+errand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Johnson,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come to you and
+your daughter for a little help if you can give it.&rdquo;
+That seemed the best way to break down their reserve,
+an appeal rather than simply blunt questions&ndash;&ndash;and
+what was it if not an appeal? &ldquo;What I have to say is
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span>
+just among the three of us and I know it will go no
+farther. You&rsquo;re acquainted with my father; he&rsquo;s respected
+by every one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is,&rdquo; Johnson stated, nodding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The situation is this, to speak plainly: last night
+I heard something that has caused me to come to you
+for information; I&rsquo;m engaged to Ed Sorenson, and in
+a moment of anger he denounced Mr. Weir, the engineer
+at the dam, for having told me a false story&ndash;&ndash;lies&ndash;&ndash;about
+him and your daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet perceived the quick, troubled look exchanged
+by man and girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir has never mentioned your daughter&rsquo;s
+name in my hearing; I think him incapable of discussing
+any one maliciously. He&rsquo;s very careful of what
+he says. I consider him a very honorable man. At any
+rate, he said nothing of what Ed Sorenson suggested,
+and if the latter himself hadn&rsquo;t spoken of the thing
+I should have had no inkling that there had been anything
+justifying an inquiry on my part. There may
+not be. But why should he imagine Mr. Weir had told
+me &lsquo;lies&rsquo; linking him and your daughter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know Weir&ndash;&ndash;and I know Ed Sorenson, too,&rdquo; was
+the rancher&rsquo;s grim rejoinder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is a disagreeable subject, I know. But I&rsquo;m
+not here out of mere curiosity, but a desire to learn if
+something has been concealed from me by Ed Sorenson
+that I should be informed of. His manner, his
+words, the whole incident has filled me with doubts.
+See, I&rsquo;m trusting you absolutely.&rdquo; And she extended
+a hand in a gesture bespeaking sincerity.</p>
+<p>Johnson peered at her in silence from under shaggy
+brows.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I ask myself why Mr. Sorenson took it for granted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span>
+that the engineer had been telling me false stories and
+if there was any ground for such fears,&rdquo; she went on.
+&ldquo;He had nothing to be afraid of, no matter what might
+be said, if he had done nothing unworthy. I can&rsquo;t
+imagine Mr. Weir, for instance, being alarmed in that
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re telling plenty of lies about him, for that
+matter, but I guess it doesn&rsquo;t worry him any,&rdquo; Johnson
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What I ask you touches a delicate subject, perhaps,&rdquo;
+Janet continued, reluctantly. &ldquo;You may feel
+that I&rsquo;m pushing in where I&rsquo;m not concerned. But if
+Mr. Sorenson has done anything discreditable&ndash;&ndash;if he
+has acted in a way to make me ashamed when I know,
+then it becomes a matter affecting my happiness too.
+I would never marry a man who had done something
+dishonorable, for if I did so knowingly I should be dishonored
+and dishonorable as well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson suddenly thrust a brown forefinger at her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you want to know what Sorenson did?&rdquo; he demanded,
+wrathfully.</p>
+<p>Janet gripped her hands together. &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll not go spreading it all around the country?
+But I guess you won&rsquo;t as long as it would make you
+out a fool too. I&rsquo;ll not have Mary&rsquo;s name dragged
+about in a lot of gossip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you I shall remain silent, for her sake and
+my own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right, I&rsquo;ll tell you. You&rsquo;re too good a girl&ndash;&ndash;any
+decent girl is&ndash;&ndash;to marry Ed Sorenson. He met
+Mary at a dance last spring in town where she went
+with some friends of ours, and made love to her but
+wouldn&rsquo;t let her tell me or any one. We don&rsquo;t get to
+town so very often; she never knew he was engaged
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span>
+to marry you, there never happening to be any mention
+of it to her. Then he got her to go to Bowenville
+one day awhile ago, under promise to marry her there&ndash;&ndash;Mary
+is only sixteen, a little girl yet. To me, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet felt the working of his love in those simple
+words. Felt it but half-consciously, though, for her
+own soul was stifling at Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s revealed infamy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When he got her there, he told her they would have
+to go away farther to be married&ndash;&ndash;to Los Angeles.&rdquo;
+Again his finger came up, this time to be shaken at her
+like a hammer. &ldquo;He never intended to marry her; he
+planned to get her there, ruin her, and cast her off.
+That&rsquo;s the sort of man you&rsquo;re going to marry!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember he expected to be away for a couple of
+weeks&ndash;&ndash;a business trip, he said. But afterwards he explained
+that it hadn&rsquo;t been necessary to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A business trip! Yes, the dirty kind of business
+he likes. And if it hadn&rsquo;t been that Weir heard him
+explaining to Mary that she must go on and interfered&ndash;&ndash;there
+in the restaurant&ndash;&ndash;Ed Sorenson might have
+succeeded. Mary trusted him, thought he was straight.
+But he&rsquo;s crooked, crooked as his old man. When Weir
+told him to his face what he thought of his tricks, he
+let it out he was engaged to you. Didn&rsquo;t mean to, of
+course. Weir said he would stay right with them and
+see that they got married next day before a minister,
+then Sorenson snapped out he was to marry you. That
+opened Mary&rsquo;s eyes, that and his refusing to go before
+a preacher as the engineer demanded. So Weir brought
+her home to me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that isn&rsquo;t all I know,&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;Mexicans
+and cowboys and others have talked&ndash;&ndash;women don&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span>
+hear these things&ndash;&ndash;how he&rsquo;s had to pay Mexicans hush-money
+for girls of theirs he&rsquo;s wronged. But what do
+people care? He&rsquo;s rich, he&rsquo;s old man Sorenson&rsquo;s boy;
+everything&rsquo;s kept quiet; and he goes around as big as
+life.&rdquo; With a muttered oath he turned away, his lips
+shut hard and his beard sticking out savagely.</p>
+<p>He came back to her again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The young one gets it from the old one,&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+&ldquo;Bad crooked blood in both of them. I
+know. I&rsquo;ve been here ever since I was a boy and remember
+things Sorenson believes every one has forgotten,
+I know how he got his start, how he and the
+rest of his bunch cleaned out Dent of his ranch and
+cattle gambling and then killed him when he discovered
+they had used marked cards, how at the same time they
+robbed another man&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet struggled to her feet. She had covered her
+eyes and bowed her head before the torrent of his vehemence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more, I want to hear no more,&rdquo; she gasped.
+&ldquo;Let me go home. I&rsquo;m sick.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It all makes me sick, too,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;Sick
+and sore, both. But it&rsquo;s the truth. I&rsquo;m sorry if it&rsquo;s
+been a bad pill to swallow, but it&rsquo;s the God&rsquo;s truth,
+girl. I&rsquo;m sorry it couldn&rsquo;t be any other way, but I
+wouldn&rsquo;t see you marry that scoundrel if I lost a hand
+stopping you. Mary felt sick at first, too; she&rsquo;s over
+it now. You&rsquo;ll not feel bad long. Better stay for dinner
+with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t swallow a bite. Thank you for your
+kindness in asking me&ndash;&ndash;and for telling me what I
+wanted to know, too. Father never knew, or he would
+have warned me. People saw I was engaged to Ed
+Sorenson and would say nothing to father, of course.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span>
+I shall always count you as one of my best friends, Mr.
+Johnson. And you too, Mary; you must come down
+and stay with me sometime, for I imagine you get lonely
+here. No, another day I&rsquo;ll remain to dinner&ndash;&ndash;and I
+want to be alone now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They pressed her no further, seeing her wretchedness
+of spirit. But they walked with her to the car and
+shook hands with her when she was in and urged her to
+come again.</p>
+<p>When she had disappeared in the aspens among
+which the trail led, Mary said to her father:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said they killed a man named Dent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They did. I saw the killing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And nothing was ever done about it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. Nobody but me knew of the happening and
+I&rsquo;d of had a bullet through my heart if I&rsquo;d talked. I
+might yet even now, so see that you keep your mouth
+shut.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You told her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was mad, so mad I could say anything. But she
+isn&rsquo;t the kind to repeat the story; I&rsquo;m not afraid on
+that score. She&rsquo;s clean strain all through.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you know the man whom Sorenson and the
+others killed?&rdquo; Mary questioned, in some awe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew of him, but I was only a lad then. I saw it
+all through the back door of Vorse&rsquo;s saloon where it
+happened, but I&rsquo;ve never breathed about it to a soul. I
+didn&rsquo;t want to be murdered some dark night. Those
+four men would see that the job was done quick even
+now, I&rsquo;m saying, if they were on to the fact. I know
+&rsquo;em, if nobody else does.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary&rsquo;s skin crawled with prickles of fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They must be awful bad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were devils then, and I don&rsquo;t think they&rsquo;ve
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span>
+changed to angels to-day, though they try to appear
+decent. I know &rsquo;em; I know what they&rsquo;ll do once they
+start. You can&rsquo;t make sheep out of wolves just by
+giving &rsquo;em a fleece.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said they robbed another man at the same time
+they killed that Dent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; and it only goes to show the hellish crooks
+they are. It was another man in the saloon. He was
+drunk. They made him believe he had killed Dent.
+Then said they&rsquo;d help him to get away if he gave them
+his property. He was a rich fellow who had come out
+from the east and gone to ranching, a tenderfoot.
+They took his stuff and he skipped the country with his
+wife. That was the last of him, and I reckon he believes
+to this day that he&rsquo;s a murderer. And that&rsquo;s how
+they got the start of their wealth, or a big part of it,
+Sorenson and Vorse and the other two. They&rsquo;ve got
+the San Mateo Cattle Company, with fifty thousand
+head of steers, and ten or twenty bands of sheeps and
+ranches, and the bank, and all the rest, and they walk
+around like honest men. But they&rsquo;re thieves and murderers,
+Mary, thieves and murderers! I&rsquo;d rather be
+the man I am, poor and with nothing but this little
+mortgaged piece of ground and my few cattle, than
+them, who robbed Dent and killed him and then robbed
+and drove out Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that the other man&rsquo;s name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s funny. The same as the man who brought
+me home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are lots of Weirs, like the Johnsons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so many, I guess. Maybe they&rsquo;re related. Did
+the man who skipped have any children?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No. None I ever heard of, though I didn&rsquo;t know
+much about him. Just him and his wife, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson had perceived no resemblance between the
+engineer and the vanished man of whom he spoke. As
+for that, however, he had no clear recollection of the
+elder Weir&rsquo;s face; he was but twelve years old at
+the time of the dramatic event, thirty years before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, come along and eat,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And remember!
+Not a word of this to a soul.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Janet Hosmer was driving slowly down
+the canyon, oblivious that opportunity to unlock the
+whole mystery had been hers, never dreaming that she
+had just missed by the slenderest margin what Steele
+Weir would have given the world to know.</p>
+<p>For an instant Fate had placed the key in her hand.
+She knew it not; it was withdrawn again and the door
+remained closed and locked while the threads of Destiny
+continued to be spun.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XII_THE_PLOT' id='CHAPTER_XII_THE_PLOT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<h3>THE PLOT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In Vorse&rsquo;s saloon, where in the past so many evil
+ideas for the acquisition of money or power had
+sprouted, the scheme had its inception. It had been
+of slow growth, with innumerable suggestions considered,
+tested, discarded. The intended arrest and trial
+of Weir had been the first aim; but this had expanded
+until at last the plot had become of really magnificent
+proportions, cunning yet daring, devilish enough even
+to satisfy the hate and greed of its originators, consummate
+in design, absolutely safe and conclusive.</p>
+<p>It was Sorenson who conceived the notion of pulling
+the irrigation project down in ruins at the moment of
+Weir&rsquo;s own fall. Judge Gordon a few days later had
+pieced out the method, which was either to corrupt the
+workmen to wreck dam and camp or to place them in
+the equivocal position of having done so apparently
+though others did it in fact. Vorse and Burkhardt devised
+the details. Weir should be left free until the
+blow had fallen on the camp, whereupon he should be
+immediately clapped into jail on the murder charge,
+which, coming on top of the &ldquo;riot,&rdquo; would paralyze all
+company action and work. From such a crushing
+double-blow no concern could quickly recover, if indeed
+the loss did not result in total cessation of construction.</p>
+<p>Thus shedding their coats of expedient lawfulness,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span>
+they reverted under the menace of Steele Weir&rsquo;s presence
+to the men they were in an earlier age&ndash;&ndash;an age
+when a few white land and cattle &ldquo;barons&rdquo; dominated
+the region, predatory, arrogant, masterful and despotic;
+the age just ceasing when the elder Weir and
+Dent arrived; the age of their youth forty years before,
+the age when railroads and telegraphs and law were
+remote, and chicanery and force were the common
+agents, and &ldquo;guns&rdquo; the final arbiters.</p>
+<p>To them Weir was like a reincarnated spirit of that
+age. He guessed if he did not know their past. He
+had appeared in order to challenge their supremacy,
+end their rule, avenge his father&rsquo;s dispossession at their
+hands. He instinctively and by nature was an enemy;
+he would have been their enemy in any other place and
+under any other circumstances. He was a head-hunter,
+and in turn was to be hunted down. He was the kind
+who neither made compromises nor asked quarter. He
+veiled his purposes in as great secrecy as did they, and
+when he struck it would be suddenly, fiercely, mercilessly&ndash;&ndash;if
+he struck. They were determined he should
+not strike, being himself first surprised and crushed, for
+though in ignorance of what he could bring against
+them their fears were real. Everything, indeed, about
+the man antagonized them, alarmed them, stirred their
+hate and filmed their eyes with blood. He must be
+destroyed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And with him the dam,&rdquo; Sorenson had said. &ldquo;Both
+together.&rdquo; For there was no effort to conceal among
+themselves their savage intention.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll never come to trial,&rdquo; Vorse remarked, with a
+malignant gleam in his blue eyes and a shutting of his
+thin lips. &ldquo;An attempted jail delivery by &lsquo;friends&rsquo;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span>
+will fix that. All they will have to do then is to buy him
+a pine box.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the man had but stayed away!&rdquo; Judge Gordon
+exclaimed. Cunning, not force, was his forte; and the
+measures in prospect at times had oppressed him with
+dreadful forebodings. He was growing old, feeble, and
+here when he was entitled to peace he still had to fight
+for his own.</p>
+<p>In accordance with the scheme Burkhardt vanished
+from San Mateo for a time, ostensibly on business but
+in fact on a journey across the Mexican line, where he
+conducted negotiations with a certain &ldquo;revolu&ccedil;ionista&rdquo;
+of no particular notoriety as yet, of avaricious character,
+unscrupulous nature, and with a small following
+of fellow bandits and a large animosity for Americans.
+His ambition was to emulate the brilliant Villa. But
+pickings had been poor of late, no more than that of
+stealing a few horses from across the border. To
+Burkhardt, who had heard of him and sought him out,
+he listened with interest and bargained with zest. Five
+thousand in gold for fifty men was like pearls from
+Paradise. And whatever this Yankee&rsquo;s own private
+purpose, it was a chance for the chieftain to strike
+secretly and safely at Americans, in addition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will come through in squads after they&rsquo;ve
+slipped across the line,&rdquo; Burkhardt reported. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
+to pose as laborers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When?&rdquo; Sorenson asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Along next week. They&rsquo;re to drop off down along
+the railroad at different towns and I&rsquo;ll run them up
+into the mountains with some grub. Then we&rsquo;ll assemble
+them quietly a couple miles off from the dam,
+where they&rsquo;ll be handy on the chosen night. Afterwards
+we&rsquo;ll slip them back to the railroad, and they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span>
+fade into Mexico. Weir&rsquo;s workmen will be drunk and
+rowing&ndash;&ndash;and will have done the job, eh?&rdquo; Burkhardt
+shook with suppressed, evil laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If they&rsquo;re drunk, they may join in and help,&rdquo; Judge
+Gordon stated, acutely. &ldquo;A mob full of whiskey will
+do anything. If they did take a hand, it would round
+out the case against them perfectly. Very likely next
+day they, too, would fade, as you put it, Burkhardt;
+they would want to get out of this part of country as
+quickly as possible when they realized what had happened.
+I see no flaw in our plan. Fortunately the
+three directors who are coming will be gone by the end
+of next week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that? What directors?&rdquo; Burkhardt asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re to be here on an inspection trip, so they
+wrote, and will be pleased to hear our complaints in
+regard to the question of workmen.&rdquo; Gordon&rsquo;s tone
+was ironical. &ldquo;I wrote them protesting Weir&rsquo;s discharge
+of our people, you remember, but that was some
+time ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the use of paying attention to the fools
+now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must carry out the farce, Burkhardt, for the
+sake of appearances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to blow them up along with their dam!&rdquo; was
+the scowling rejoinder, &ldquo;Well, let &rsquo;em inspect. Next
+time they come back there won&rsquo;t be any.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe we should arrest Weir before the thing&rsquo;s
+pulled off,&rdquo; Gordon said, meditatively. &ldquo;It would be
+surer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson set his heavy jaw.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I want him to see the wreck; I want him to
+know just what&rsquo;s happened before he&rsquo;s haled away; I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span>
+want him feeling good and sick already when he gets
+the next jolt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. It&rsquo;s him or us, as I&rsquo;ve said from the first;
+and I&rsquo;ve always believed in making a clean sweep,&rdquo;
+Vorse remarked. &ldquo;We have the right line this time.
+First, make his men drunk and sore; then smash the
+works; then arrest him quick; and last finish him off
+with a bullet during a pretended jail delivery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There will be elements of danger in the last,&rdquo; Judge
+Gordon stated, cautiously.</p>
+<p>Vorse smiled and Burkhardt grinned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so you&rsquo;ll notice it,&rdquo; said the latter. &ldquo;The town
+won&rsquo;t know anything about it until afterwards. Just a
+few good men at night, masked and working fast, and
+the thing is done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not feel easy till it&rsquo;s over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep up your nerve, Judge,&rdquo; Burkhardt grunted.
+&ldquo;You used to be as lively as anybody when you were
+young.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know, I know. But this Weir isn&rsquo;t going to stand
+idle. If he ever gets a chance with his gun&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t get it,&rdquo; said Vorse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he&rsquo;ll not resist the sheriff when Madden arrests
+him legally,&rdquo; Sorenson added. &ldquo;Nothing could
+be better for us than if he did. He knows that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still I&rsquo;ll be glad when next week is past,&rdquo; the Judge
+replied, with a sigh.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CURRENT_OF_EVENTS' id='CHAPTER_XIII_THE_CURRENT_OF_EVENTS'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<h3>THE CURRENT OF EVENTS</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Though outwardly the world&rsquo;s face was as calm as
+ever, though peace seemed to bask on San Mateo and
+the broad mesa and lofty mountain range, events were
+rapidly shaping themselves to bring a thunder crash
+of contending forces. Not Weir, not even the little
+evil cabal plotting so desperately against him, guessed
+the scope and power of the passions to be released.</p>
+<p>As a vital impulse towards the climax, though an
+unconscious one on her part so far as the general play
+of circumstance was concerned, Janet Hosmer informed
+Ed Sorenson of her determination to break
+their engagement. This was the same evening she returned
+from the Johnson ranch, when he called at her
+telephoned request. He went to her home under the
+impression that his box of candy and bundle of new
+magazines had restored him to favor. He was very
+jaunty, in fact, and bent on persuading her to name
+an early day for their nuptials.</p>
+<p>Imagine his wrath when she explained that she
+wished to say that she could not marry him, at the
+same time handing him his ring and the other trinkets
+he had bestowed upon her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it because of our little spat last night about the
+engineer?&rdquo; he demanded. &ldquo;I apologized, Janet. I&rsquo;m
+sorry still, and I love you above everything else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But I do, Janet. Above everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, not above yourself and your vices. You deceived
+me for a long time, but now I know the truth.
+You aroused my suspicions when you mentioned a Johnson
+girl; there&rsquo;s only one Johnson girl hereabouts, as I
+learned; and this noon I visited her and her father.
+They informed me fully about your conduct towards
+Mary at Bowenville and your promises to marry her&ndash;&ndash;that,
+when you were engaged to me. There are other
+things I heard to-day. Of affairs with Mexican girls
+that are shameful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lies, lies!&rdquo; was the passionate disclaimer. &ldquo;Or if
+I have been flirting a little, and never since my engagement,
+it&rsquo;s no more than any fellow does.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can neither excuse nor justify your words and
+actions towards Mary Johnson not a month ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re liars, I tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you confront them and say that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Taken by surprise Sorenson hesitated, flushed, and
+then made a gesture of disdain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not, because I&rsquo;ll not condescend to answer such
+baseless charges,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;I thought you had sense
+enough not to believe every little thing you hear. Certainly
+I expect you not to believe this, and I know you
+won&rsquo;t on consideration. Then we&rsquo;ll be married. I came
+here to-night to urge you to marry me soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never marry you, and we&rsquo;re no longer engaged.
+You&rsquo;ve acted faithlessly and dishonorably. You&rsquo;re not
+the decent man I thought you were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you still love me, Janet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I don&rsquo;t think I ever loved you; I was loving a
+man who didn&rsquo;t exist, an illusion I imagined to be Ed
+Sorenson, not your real self. If I loved at all, which
+I now doubt! And you never loved me, though you
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span>
+may think you did and still do. But it&rsquo;s not so; for no
+man who really loved a respectable girl could at the
+same time do what you did. Think of it! While pretending
+to love me, you were secretly trying to inveigle
+that poor ignorant girl away from home. You&rsquo;re not
+a man; you&rsquo;re a beast. The shame and disgust and
+humiliation I suffer at the thought of my position during
+that time, your effort to hoodwink both Mary
+Johnson and me, so fills me with anger I can&rsquo;t talk to
+you. Go, go! And please don&rsquo;t even speak to me
+hereafter, on the street or anywhere else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Instead of departing the man grasped her wrist and
+gave her a venomous look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was this sneak of an engineer, after all, who
+told you this lie and turned you against me,&rdquo; he
+snarled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go. Mr. Weir said nothing. It was you
+yourself who betrayed yourself, or I should not have
+known as I do, thank heavens. Stop holding my
+wrist!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For an instant Sorenson wavered between whether
+he should obey her command or strike her as his rage
+prompted. A very devil of passion beating in his
+breast urged him to show her her place, deal with her
+as he would like to do and as she deserved&ndash;&ndash;throw
+her down and drag her by the hair until she crawled
+forward and clasped his knees in subjection. But the
+look in her eyes cooled this half-insane, whiskey-inspired
+desire.</p>
+<p>He took his hand off her wrist, picked up his hat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t throw me down this way,&rdquo; he sneered.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to marry me just the same, whether you
+think so or not. I have a voice in this engagement,
+and you can&rsquo;t break your word and promise to me
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span>
+because it happens to strike your fancy. Not for a
+single minute!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you were a gentleman and a decent man you
+wouldn&rsquo;t say that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not either, by your judgment, so I do say it.
+I say it again: you&rsquo;re going to marry me, willingly or
+unwillingly. Now if after thinking it over, you want
+to forget all this and go on as before, all right. If not,
+our engagement still holds just the same. You may release
+me, but I haven&rsquo;t released you. Remember that.
+And keep away from that engineer if you know what&rsquo;s
+best for you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a scowl he stalked out of the house, leaving a
+very angry, very tremulous and very heart-sick girl.
+The fellow was in truth not a man, she perceived, but a
+creature so conscienceless and loathsome that she
+seemed contaminated through and through by his
+touch, his words, and their previous relations. How
+grossly he had deceived her as to his real character!
+What a horrible future as his wife she had escaped!
+Nor was she yet free, for he promised to make an infinity
+of trouble.</p>
+<p>That day she could do nothing. Her father noting
+her face asked what was the trouble, and she told him
+the whole affair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard rumors of late about him and was worried,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;You did the only thing, of course.
+Pay no attention to his words; I&rsquo;ll see he doesn&rsquo;t annoy
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was three or four days afterwards that she called
+Weir up at the dam in a desire to hear the voice of a
+man she knew to be straight and upright.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve wondered if a girl is allowed to look at your
+dam,&rdquo; she said on impulse, when they had chatted for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span>
+a moment. &ldquo;Father, who was at your camp to attend
+an injured man, says you&rsquo;re making famous progress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d be more than delighted to show you the work.
+But&ndash;&ndash;I wonder&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let what people say disturb you,&rdquo; she replied
+quickly, divining his thought. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve arranged all
+that.&rdquo; A somewhat obscure remark to Weir.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then come any time&ndash;&ndash;and often. I hope to be able
+to conduct you around, the first visit at least. Next
+week I may not be able to do so as a committee of
+directors arrive who&rsquo;ll take my time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, indeed,&rdquo; Janet answered, politely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A manager has to be directed occasionally, or he
+may run wild,&rdquo; she heard, with his laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll come before they do,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>Quite as she had announced she did run up to the
+canyon and go with Weir over the hillsides and dam,
+asking questions and displaying a great interest in the
+men and the operation of the machinery. The concrete
+work was nearing an end. Already tracks were
+laid for the dump trams that were to carry dirt from
+steam-shovels to the dam to form its main body.</p>
+<p>She perceived the immense labor of the project and
+the co&ouml;rdinated effort required. The necessity in itself
+of dragging hither from Bowenville all of the supplies,
+the material, the huge machines, was overwhelming.
+The responsibility of combining scientific knowledge
+and raw industry to an exact result struck her as
+prodigious. The handling of hundreds of subordinate
+workmen and assistants of various grades and skill demanded
+exceptional ability, understanding, will and
+generalship. Yet these things the man at her side,
+Steele Weir, accomplished and supplied; and appeared
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span>
+quite calm and unmoved about it, as if it was all a matter
+of course.</p>
+<p>She glanced at the ground, flushing. The thought
+of Ed Sorenson, making only a pretense of doing anything
+useful and because his father was rich doing
+nothing in reality but waste himself in vicious practices,
+was in her mind. What must have the engineer
+believed of her all this while when he knew Sorenson&rsquo;s
+true nature and infamous record? Did he suppose her
+a light-headed feather, indifferent to everything except
+that her husband should be rich? Very likely. There
+were plenty of girls of that type. He naturally would
+suppose her one.</p>
+<p>And she could say nothing to put herself in a better
+light and to gain his respect&ndash;&ndash;for that she now desired
+greatly. She saw him as he was, a big man, a strong
+man, a man whose respect was to be prized. Beside
+him she felt herself small and ordinary. That was all
+right, but she was determined he should not believe
+her insignificant, shallow, unworthy, mercenary.</p>
+<p>While she could not explain matters openly without
+shaming herself and still lowering herself in his
+estimation, he being only an acquaintance, yet there
+were ways of getting at the end. Janet could act
+adroitly, like most women, when it best served the purpose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know, I just learned from friends of yours
+on Terry Creek that you&rsquo;re a public benefactor as well
+as an engineer,&rdquo; she stated, when they paused on the
+hillside for a last look at the dam.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>His eyes came around and found hers fixed on him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I happened to stop at the Johnson ranch. They
+didn&rsquo;t say so, but I know they would be pleased to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span>
+death if you would go to dinner there some day. They
+have some fine fat chickens, if you like chicken fried
+or baked, and they hesitate to ask you only because
+they&rsquo;re afraid you&rsquo;ll refuse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fried chicken is my weakness. Of course I&rsquo;ll go;
+at the first spare chance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But all the while Steele Weir&rsquo;s mind was eddying
+with wonderment. He had colored at mention of the
+Johnson ranch, as if he had been caught with a hand in
+a jam pot. And it meant only one thing: she knew of
+the Bowenville episode. Involuntarily his eyes flashed
+to her left hand with which she was brushing back the
+hair under her hat brim. There was no diamond solitaire
+on its third finger. Surely, something had happened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I must be returning home. I just thought I&rsquo;d
+give you a tiny hint,&rdquo; said she. An odd smile rested
+on her lips as she spoke, for hints may carry multiple
+suggestions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Jove!&rdquo; Weir said suddenly.</p>
+<p>Man of action though she knew him to be, she never
+anticipated he would or could act so directly. He
+reached out and seized her left hand and scanned it
+significantly. Then he raised his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo; he asked, tapping the finger
+with one of his own. &ldquo;Does this mean&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Janet&rsquo;s turn to become scarlet. She tried
+to smile again, but it was a wavering smile that appeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What does what mean?&rdquo; she fenced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&ndash;&ndash;well, that the ring is off permanently?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that there&rsquo;s now a chance for me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s eyes at that popped open very wide indeed.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span>
+Meanwhile Weir still held to the palm resting in
+his own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You?&rdquo; she breathed, faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Me, yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Presently with a gentle movement she drew her hand
+free. She had been quite dumbfounded, but not so
+dumbfounded that she did not realize that this new situation
+had requirements of its own. He appeared absolutely
+sincere and resolute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I never dreamed of such a thing!&rdquo; she stammered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor I&ndash;&ndash;because until now I hadn&rsquo;t the right. All
+I ask is that you give me your friendship&ndash;&ndash;and a
+chance&ndash;&ndash;and&ndash;&ndash;well, we&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no reason why we shouldn&rsquo;t be friends,&rdquo;
+said she. &ldquo;We are already, aren&rsquo;t we?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;now. I never actually thought so before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things have changed,&rdquo; she stated. And her lips
+closed with a firm pressure as she spoke. &ldquo;Or I
+shouldn&rsquo;t have been here inspecting the dam, should
+I?&rdquo; Again the smile flashed upon her face. &ldquo;You may
+consider this a preliminary inspection to that of your
+high and mighty directors, and I assure you my verdict&ndash;&ndash;is
+that the word?&ndash;&ndash;is favorable. Now I must be
+going to the car. Father likes his meals on time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when shall I see you again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The note of eagerness in his voice set her heart
+moving a bit faster. If he carried on his engineering
+work as he did his friendship, no wonder he got things
+done.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, when you wish to call, Mr. Weir. Both
+father and I shall be pleased to have you come any
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll certainly avail myself of the privilege,&rdquo; said
+he. &ldquo;You must really go now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a feeling of exaltation at this new turn of
+affairs he watched her drive away from camp, a feeling
+that persisted during the succeeding days.</p>
+<p>The three directors arrived. That was Thursday
+evening; and Friday and Saturday were devoted to a
+discussion of construction plans, inspection of the
+works, analysis of costs and so on. Weir found the
+men what he expected: quick to comprehend facts, incisive
+of mind, and though of course not engineers yet
+able to measure results; while they on their part were
+appreciative of the exceptional progress made and of
+his thorough command of the project. They knew
+the first hour that the right manager was in charge
+at last.</p>
+<p>Saturday afternoon Sorenson and Judge Gordon
+called at headquarters, by appointment, to discuss the
+grievance held locally against the company. Weir was
+present at the meeting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As to whether the Mexican workmen who were discharged
+were actually giving a full return in work for
+the wages, as you maintain, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Mr. Pollock,
+one of the directors and a corporation lawyer
+from New York, in reply to the visitors&rsquo; statement,
+&ldquo;that is a question not of opinion but of fact.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fact, yes,&rdquo; Judge Gordon argued. &ldquo;Fact supported
+by the evidence of the three hundred workmen
+against that of a single man, your manager, who
+had just come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are not your three hundred men prejudiced witnesses?&rdquo;
+the New Yorker inquired, a slight smile upon
+his thin face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No more than is Mr. Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But Mr. Weir is the manager and consequently has
+the power of decision in such matters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not to the extent of revoking unfairly your promise,
+given orally, to be sure, but still given, to employ
+local labor.&rdquo; Sorenson was the speaker and his heavy
+face wore an expression of ill-disguised contempt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Agreed. Local labor was to be hired,&rdquo; said Pollock.
+&ldquo;But our company isn&rsquo;t a philanthropic institution;
+it&rsquo;s run on strictly business principles. Any
+agreement we made implied that local workmen should
+give exactly what other workmen would give in work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They did so,&rdquo; Judge Gordon affirmed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was no trouble until this man came,&rdquo; Sorenson
+remarked. &ldquo;I suppose he felt that he had to show
+his authority.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but there was if not trouble at any rate dissatisfaction
+on our part,&rdquo; Pollock stated, tapping a
+finger on the table. &ldquo;Construction wasn&rsquo;t progressing
+as we knew it should, which was the very reason for
+getting a new manager, one who could speed it up.
+But as I said, it all comes down to a question of fact.
+You gentlemen offer your workmen&rsquo;s avowals of industry
+to support your claim; Mr. Weir, on the other
+hand, gives us some definite records to back up his side.
+Here they are for the last week the workmen from San
+Mateo and neighborhood worked&ndash;&ndash;his first week here;
+and for the succeeding weeks under the men shipped in;
+in material used, in cubic yards of concrete construction,
+and in percentage of work finished. Examine
+them if you please. They show daily and weekly results
+to be just a trifle less than double for the corresponding
+time the imported workmen have been here.
+In other words, the new men have, while shortening the
+time of completion, given twice as much work for exactly
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span>
+the same wage paid your Mexicans. In other words,
+too, your local laborers cancelled our agreement by
+their own incompetence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your manager could easily have doctored those records,&rdquo;
+Sorenson stated, coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You scarcely mean that, sir,&rdquo; Pollock instantly replied
+icily, his amiability vanishing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Judge, we may as well go, I think. We&rsquo;re
+appealing to a prejudiced court.&rdquo; And Sorenson
+arose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our decision to view the matter like Mr. Weir is because
+his position is sustained by these facts, not because
+we&rsquo;re prejudiced, as you insinuate. But I may
+add that it would not be strange if we were prejudiced,
+as we&rsquo;ve become convinced that you gentlemen haven&rsquo;t
+been sincere in your attitude towards our company and
+if anything are strongly hostile. Any one may be deceived
+for a time, and we were, but not permanently.
+You would have done much better to have recognized
+that we have a perfect right to build this project on
+land that we bought and with water that we acquired.
+For it will be built in any case and in spite of such
+local opposition as may be made.&rdquo; Pollock flicked the
+ash from his cigar with a careful finger. &ldquo;That is a
+mere piece of information or a declaration of war,
+whichever way you wish to take it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you we were wasting our time coming here,&rdquo;
+the cattleman said to his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good day, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Judge Gordon, politely.</p>
+<p>And the pair went out to Sorenson&rsquo;s machine.</p>
+<p>Shortly after, the two other directors left to catch
+a train at Bowenville, Pollock planning to stay with
+Weir to formulate a report during the next day or two
+for presentation to the entire directorate at its next
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span>
+meeting. Sorenson caught a glimpse of the car whirling
+through town, with Weir at the wheel, who with
+Pollock accompanied the departing men that certain
+unsettled points might be discussed up to the last moment.</p>
+<p>As Weir and Pollock were returning, the latter eyed
+the engineer and laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve evidently brushed these fellows&rsquo;, Sorenson&rsquo;s
+and Gordon&rsquo;s, fur the wrong way to please them. But
+they&rsquo;ll probably leave us alone from now on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll not leave me alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh? How&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I have, as it happens, a little trouble with
+them on my own hook. A private matter antedating
+the building of the dam. They&rsquo;re after me. I had to
+put a piece of lead into a fellow who tried to kill me
+from the dark one night. I speak of it in case you
+should be told and wonder; otherwise I should not have
+mentioned the thing. I&rsquo;m not popular in San Mateo,
+in consequence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, I had heard nothing of that. It interests me.
+You were not touched.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My hat, that was all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very interesting, very interesting, indeed,&rdquo; was
+Pollock&rsquo;s only comment. But if his tone was casual,
+his eyes were busy in sidelong study of the engineer,
+making a new appraisal and drawing fresh conclusions.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile several knots were being tied in the web
+of circumstance. Sorenson took his telephone and conversed
+briefly with Vorse, passing the information that
+he had just seen the three directors leaving for the east.
+So they were out of the way. In reply the saloon-keeper
+stated that he would start the whisky end of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span>
+game that evening. By the morrow, Sunday, when the
+camp was at rest, the workmen would all be &ldquo;celebrating.&rdquo;
+Burkhardt had reported the last load of &ldquo;southern
+cattle&rdquo; shipped in and driven on the range the
+previous evening&ndash;&ndash;a seemingly innocent statement that
+Sorenson understood perfectly. Up in the hills, safely
+hidden in the timber, lay the fifty men brought from
+Mexico to make the assault on the dam the next night,
+men whose instruments of destruction would be fire and
+dynamite. Twenty-four hours more would bring the
+moment of action.</p>
+<p>Ignorant of all this Ed Sorenson had been forming a
+little individual scheme that would promote his own
+affairs, chief of which was to win Janet Hosmer. Drinking
+heavily ever since his rebuff, he had sunk into a condition
+of evil determination and recklessness that made
+him fit for any desperate act. After much meditation
+fed by whisky, he had evolved a plan that would bring
+him success. Thereupon he had loaded his car with a
+quantity of selected stuff and made a mysterious journey
+at night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;ll learn I meant business,&rdquo; was his frequent soliloquy.</p>
+<p>And while these strands were being knit into the skein
+Martinez was producing another. Quietly, carefully,
+persuasively, he had been pursuing his own particular
+course of eliciting history for use in his &ldquo;Chronicle,&rdquo; as
+he named it,&ndash;&ndash;and for another use concerning which he
+was as still as death.</p>
+<p>That he was successful in obtaining what he had been
+after was made known to Weir about dusk that evening
+while he was talking with Pollock in his office. But that
+he had not been so lucky in covering his tracks was likewise
+apparent.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span></div>
+<p>The telephone rang. Steele took down the receiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See Janet Hosmer at once,&rdquo; Felipe Martinez&rsquo; terrified
+voice came over the wire. &ldquo;She&rsquo;ll have it, the paper&ndash;&ndash;the
+one you want. They&rsquo;ve learned I got it; they&rsquo;re
+after me now. Hammering on the door. If you don&rsquo;t
+hurry&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His words ceased abruptly in an anguished quaver.
+At the same time Weir heard carried to him the sound
+of a crash as of a door smashed. Excusing himself hurriedly,
+Steele Weir seized his holster from a nail and
+buckled on the belt. Then snatching his hat, he ran
+outside the building to his car.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, who is he gunning for?&rdquo; Pollock asked himself
+aloud, &ldquo;I rather wish he had invited me along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But neither he nor Weir himself, nor any soul in San
+Mateo, knew that at last the furious torrent of events
+had burst upon the community. Weir sensed something.
+But Sorenson brooding on the morrow thought the moment
+had not yet come. His son was occupied with his
+own treacherous scheme. Even Vorse and Burkhardt
+smashing their way into Martinez&rsquo; office saw nothing
+beyond the immediate necessity. Yet the flood was
+bearing down on all.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIV_OLD_SAUREZ_DEPOSITION' id='CHAPTER_XIV_OLD_SAUREZ_DEPOSITION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<h3>OLD SAUREZ&rsquo; DEPOSITION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In order to understand why Vorse and Burkhardt
+were attacking Martinez&rsquo; office it is necessary to trace the
+lawyer&rsquo;s movements and the incidents which precipitated
+that act. Martinez had, as stated, not been idle. Following
+the clue obtained from the woman who had worked
+in the elder Weir&rsquo;s household, he visited the old Mexican
+named as having been used as roustabout by Vorse in
+early days. This was old Saurez, whom he knew. The
+wrinkled old fellow seldom came to town now, spending
+most of the time sitting against the sunny side of his
+son&rsquo;s house on Pina Creek, twenty miles south, where
+he lived.</p>
+<p>Martinez in the ten days that had elapsed since informing
+Weir he had learned of Saurez&rsquo; possible knowledge
+of the past had proceeded to make himself agreeable
+to the gray-headed old man. He had explained his
+&ldquo;history.&rdquo; He exercised all the arts of graciousness and
+flattery. Beginning at the present he worked back
+through the past to the killing of Jim Dent and the
+flight of Joseph Weir, extracting tales of early fights,
+raids, accidents, big storms, violent deaths and killings,
+making elaborate notes, winning the narrator&rsquo;s confidence
+and gradually drawing forth the facts he really
+sought.</p>
+<p>Out of all the rambling talk and vague accounts of the
+Dent and Weir affair Martinez was able to piece together
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span>
+the fragments in a clear statement. This was
+that Saurez had seen Weir and Dent in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon.
+The pair had gambled for a time with Vorse, Burkhardt
+(at that time sheriff), Sorenson and Judge Gordon.
+After losing for a time Weir refused to continue in the
+poker game, although he was drunk. Dent played on
+notwithstanding Weir&rsquo;s urgence to desist; he had already
+lost all his money and began staking his cattle
+and finally his ranch. At this stage Weir had gone to
+sleep at another table, with his head on his arms. Vorse
+had locked the front door to keep out visitors during
+the big game. But the back door remained open for
+air.</p>
+<p>Saurez had busied himself cleaning the bar. All at
+once he saw the players spring up in their game, Dent
+talking angrily about cheating, marked cards and so
+on. Then the guns came out when he pointed at a card
+that was marked&ndash;&ndash;for it had been marked with pinpricks
+as Saurez saw later on examining the deck, which
+Dent had perceived in spite of the whisky in him. And
+Sorenson and Vorse had both shot him where he stood.
+Yes, shootings were not uncommon. Every one but he,
+Saurez, had likely forgotten all about the matter. That
+was long ago.</p>
+<p>Afterwards Vorse had sent the Mexican away for
+something or other, with an injunction to keep his mouth
+closed. As said, speaking of it now made no difference,
+though he expected Martinez to keep his promise to publish
+none of the stories while he was still alive; that was
+agreed. When the Mexican had left the saloon Weir
+was yet sleeping, having only raised his head at the
+pistol shots to stare drunkenly and then relapse. What
+occurred afterwards Saurez did not know. Weir left
+the country. Dent was buried, the story being told
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span>
+that he had committed suicide. Every one believed it:
+had he not lost his ranch at poker? That was the end
+of the business. Other affairs happened and it was forgotten.</p>
+<p>On this Saturday Martinez had persuaded Saurez to
+accompany him to San Mateo. It would be necessary
+to sign the stories, he explained lightly, to give them
+proper weight and in order that when the book was published
+after Saurez&rsquo; death they would be seen to be true
+accounts, with Saurez&rsquo; picture that a photographer
+would make appearing in the middle. He, Saurez, would
+be famous, and his sons and grandsons would have copies
+of the book in their houses to show visitors and the
+priest. Ah, it would be well to have the priest witness
+Saurez&rsquo; signature, then sceptical people would know indeed
+that the stories were Saurez&rsquo; own accounts. So on
+and so on.</p>
+<p>The matter required infinite precautions, patience,
+skill on the lawyer&rsquo;s part. He had prepared two or
+three dozen depositions of events, as a husk for the real
+kernel. With Saurez in his office at last he telephoned
+the priest to call at once and unostentatiously caught
+on the street four other Mexicans of the better class,
+bringing them in. When the priest arrived he closed
+the door and explained his desire they should act as
+witnesses to Saurez&rsquo; statements. He had already solicited
+the <i>padre&rsquo;s</i> advice as to the history; the others all had
+heard of it; he gave them a number of the most harmless
+depositions to read; and set Saurez to work making
+his mark on the rest of the papers. During the reading
+and the accompanying lively discussion of the witnesses,
+he had them pause to witness Saurez&rsquo; mark with their
+own names in the places provided. About the tenth deposition
+when their attention was confused and flagging
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span>
+he slipped the account concerning Weir and Dent, a
+many-paged attestation, upon the table, so folded that
+nothing but the signing space was visible. It was the
+critical instant for Martinez; his thin body was more
+nervous than ever, his eyes brighter and more restless.
+But at last the ordeal was over.</p>
+<p>Saurez&rsquo; heavy black cross was at the bottom of the
+important deposition, the priest and the other four
+men had appended their names, and all that remained
+to do was for Martinez to fill out the acknowledgment
+and affix his seal. He whisked the document behind his
+back and called attention to a humorous episode in a
+paper one of the men still held, starting a laugh. Then
+he suggested they rest and opened a bottle of wine, over
+which the others congratulated Saurez and Martinez
+and predicted a wonderful fame for the &ldquo;Chronicle.&rdquo;
+Finally the lawyer perceived, as he said, that Saurez
+was weary. Anyway, it was supper-time. The remaining
+papers could be signed another day.</p>
+<p>The witnesses departed, much pleased with the affair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Walk up and down outside for a little time while I
+straighten the sheets, then we&rsquo;ll go eat and afterwards
+I&rsquo;ll drive you home to bed,&rdquo; the attorney said. &ldquo;The
+fresh air will give you an appetite. Behold, you&rsquo;re already
+becoming a famous man! I shall preserve these
+documents safely as they are tremendously important
+to our town, our state, our country!&rdquo; And a grandiloquent
+gesture accompanied the words. &ldquo;Come back in
+a little while, my friend, then we&rsquo;ll see how much food
+you can hide away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Saurez much gratified at these words and at everything
+went out slowly, for he was troubled by rheumatism.
+The instant his back disappeared Martinez sprang
+to the table, swiftly filled out the acknowledgment of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span>
+old man&rsquo;s signature to the Weir document, clapped the
+page under the seal and pressed home the stamp. Then
+pushing the folded statement into an envelope and that
+into his pocket, he leaned back with a sigh of exhaustion.
+The thing was accomplished at last, but the strain had
+been great. Weir&rsquo;s command to secure evidence had
+been obeyed. Only the promise to await Saurez&rsquo; death,
+troubled Martinez, and with a convenient sophistry he
+decided that an agreement not to print the narrative
+in a book did not extend to using it in court. Weir
+would be delighted&ndash;&ndash;it was a famous coup.</p>
+<p>How long Martinez sat reveling in this well-earned
+satisfaction he was unaware, until with a start he glanced
+at his watch. Three-quarters of an hour had passed.
+He went out to look for Saurez. But he was not in sight
+and though several persons had seen him they could
+not say where he had gone. Martinez went again into
+his office. When another half-hour had drifted by he
+decided the old man had encountered friends and either
+caught a ride home or gone with one to supper. So
+Martinez proceeded to his own meal.</p>
+<p>Yet he was pervaded by an unaccountable uneasiness.
+The sun had set in a bank of clouds and night was not
+far off. He made another search for the old Mexican,
+inquiring here and there, until he was informed by one
+that he had seen Saurez in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon talking with
+Vorse and sipping a glass of brandy. That was half
+an hour before. A chill of fear spread over the lawyer&rsquo;s
+skin.</p>
+<p>Determined, however, to learn the worst, he stole to
+the saloon and peered over the slatted door. The Mexican
+bar-keeper was wiping a glass; Vorse was not in
+sight; and&ndash;&ndash;ha! there was Saurez himself drowsing by a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span>
+table. Martinez slipped in and made his way to the
+rear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come; time to go home,&rdquo; he said softly, giving the
+old Mexican&rsquo;s shoulder a shake. This did not arouse
+the sleeper, so he added force to his hand, at which the
+other sagged forward limply.</p>
+<p>Martinez jumped back. Next he stood quite still,
+staring. Then he approached and lifting the drooping
+head, gazed at the wrinkled face and glazed eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miguel, come here!&rdquo; he exclaimed, anxiously.
+&ldquo;Saurez is dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dead!&rdquo; The bar-keeper ran to the spot, eyes large
+with alarm and excitement. &ldquo;Dios, I thought him
+asleep! See, there is the glass in which I gave him
+brandy at Se&ntilde;or Vorse&rsquo;s order. The old one said he
+had come in to pay a little visit to his old employer
+and have a chat. They talked for some time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was Vorse asking him questions?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. I think Saurez was telling him how he happened
+to be in town. I paid little attention to them,
+however. After a while I glanced up and saw Vorse
+standing by him. They were not talking. Then Vorse
+came away and said the old man had fallen asleep, and
+he went out to supper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez again lifted the head and darted glances
+over the dead man&rsquo;s breast. There were no wounds, but
+on the shriveled brown throat he saw what might have
+been a thumb-mark. He could not be sure, yet that was
+his guess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was an old man,&rdquo; Miguel remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. You should notify his son and also the undertaker,
+so the body can be taken care of. I&rsquo;ll telephone
+the latter too when I reach my office.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This Martinez did, informing Saurez&rsquo;s family that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span>
+the old man had died while apparently asleep at Vorse&rsquo;s,
+and expressed his sympathy and sorrow.</p>
+<p>One feature of the case he instantly perceived; he
+was released from any obligation to keep silent regarding
+the old man&rsquo;s declaration. Fortunate was he to
+have obtained it before Vorse had got wind of his purpose.
+At the thought of Vorse he arose and locked
+both front and back doors of the building, pulled down
+the window shades and turned out the light.</p>
+<p>It was almost dark by now. In the darkness he felt
+safer. Any one passing would suppose him away. Perhaps
+he should spend the night elsewhere&ndash;&ndash;at the dam,
+for instance. Again the same shudder shook his frame
+that he had experienced on seeing the mark on Saurez&rsquo;
+throat. Vorse had killed the old Mexican, of that he
+was convinced. With his tongue made garrulous by
+brandy and by the presence of his old employer the old
+man had doubtless related everything that occurred
+between him and Martinez; and the vulture-like, bald-headed
+saloon-keeper, recognizing that he had been unconsciously
+betrayed had immediately acted to close
+this witness&rsquo; lips forever against a second utterance.</p>
+<p>Martinez himself was in danger. The perspiration
+dampened his face as he realized that as far as he was
+concerned the die was cast. He must fling in his fortunes
+with Weir to the utmost. He would first stand in
+defense on his right as a lawyer to secure evidence for
+a client, but if this failed&ndash;&ndash;and what rights would Vorse
+halt for?&ndash;&ndash;he must depend upon the paper. Once they
+had that, they would speedily put him out of the way as
+they had done Saurez. But if they had it not, they
+would at least hesitate to wreak their vengeance until
+they could get it into their possession. He must place
+it in Weir&rsquo;s hands at once, then if questioned refuse to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span>
+inform them of its whereabouts. Perhaps they would
+try to seize it some time this night. He stood up, lighted
+the lamp, saw that all was well in the office and took his
+hat.</p>
+<p>A peremptory knock sounded on the door of the rear
+room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open up there, Martinez,&rdquo; a voice commanded.</p>
+<p>He stole thither, listened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind. Open this door or I&rsquo;ll pull it down,&rdquo;
+came in hoarse tones he recognized as Burkhardt&rsquo;s. The
+man, or men, outside had chosen the rear to force an entrance
+if necessary, where there would be no spectators.
+&ldquo;Jerk it open quick,&rdquo; Burkhardt continued savagely.
+&ldquo;We want you.&rdquo; Then again, &ldquo;We knew you were
+there, though you kept the place dark. Move lively before
+I use this ax.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Never did Martinez&rsquo; mind work more rapidly. Likewise
+his eyes darted everywhere in search of the object
+he needed. Then he glided to a decrepit arm-chair and
+turning it over stuffed the document in a rent in its
+padded seat, out of sight underneath. Next he filled his
+pockets with other papers signed by Saurez. Last, he
+hastily tore open the little telephone book and ran a
+forefinger down the H&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor Hosmer&rsquo;s, hurry,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Number F28.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Blows were already sounding on the rear door, but
+the lock was strong and resisted. Of all the persons he
+knew Janet Hosmer was the only one he could trust to
+keep her word. And he dare not wait until Weir could
+come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this you, Janet? Martinez talking,&rdquo; he said, when
+he heard her answer. &ldquo;Listen. I&rsquo;m at my office; men
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span>
+are trying to break in to get a paper valuable for Mr.
+Weir&rsquo;s defense. They must not get it. He&rsquo;s to be arrested
+and tried for murder of the man he killed. You
+and I know he&rsquo;s innocent. This is a life and death
+matter. The paper is hidden in the old chair. The men
+are breaking down the door. I&rsquo;ll get them away long
+enough for you to come and obtain it. Give it to Weir&ndash;&ndash;at
+once, to-night, immediately. Promise me you will,
+promise! My own life probably hangs on it. Return
+to your house and stay for half an hour and if he hasn&rsquo;t
+arrived by that time, go to the dam. Thank you, thank
+you&ndash;&ndash;from my heart! Start now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words had tumbled out in an agitated stream,
+occupying but a few seconds. The panels were splintering
+in the door now, as the ax smashed a way through.
+Martinez had no need to look up Weir&rsquo;s number; and it
+was in a strain of terror and excitement that he waited
+for the connection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See Janet Hosmer at once,&rdquo; he shot at the engineer,
+followed by the rest of the warning already quoted which
+had so electrifying an effect upon Steele Weir.</p>
+<p>But the words had broken off abruptly. For as the
+door crashed off its hinges Martinez dropped the telephone
+receiver and darted for the front entrance, shooting
+back the bolt and flinging it open. He almost
+plunged into Vorse who was on guard there.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand still,&rdquo; the man ordered. And Martinez kept
+the spot as if congealed, for in the saloon-keeper&rsquo;s hand
+was a revolver with an exceedingly large muzzle.</p>
+<p>Burkhardt burst in, ax still in hand, eyes bloodshot
+with rage. Vorse turned and closed the front door.
+Then he glanced over the lawyer&rsquo;s table and ran a hand
+into his inside coat pocket bulging with documents. He
+glanced through one or two.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;re after,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take him
+to my place where we can quietly settle the matter.&rdquo;
+His eyes rested on the Mexican with ominous meaning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come along, you snake,&rdquo; Burkhardt growled, seizing
+their prisoner&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;Out the back way&ndash;&ndash;and keep
+your mouth shut. Don&rsquo;t try to make a break of any
+kind, if you know what&rsquo;s best for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez&rsquo; yellow skin was almost white.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, gentlemen, what does this all mean?&rdquo; he began,
+endeavoring to pull back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll learn soon enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Step right along,&rdquo; Vorse added. &ldquo;Take him away,
+Burkhardt, then I&rsquo;ll blow out this light.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With no further word Martinez accompanied his captors
+into the gloom of the night. They moved in silence
+through the dark space behind the row of store buildings.
+The lawyer felt that at least the way was clear
+for Janet Hosmer.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XV_THE_MASK_DROPPED' id='CHAPTER_XV_THE_MASK_DROPPED'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+<h3>THE MASK DROPPED</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When Janet Hosmer, startled by Felipe Martinez&rsquo;
+agitated appeal, turned from the telephone, her single
+thought was to carry out on the instant his fervid injunction.
+Something aimed at the engineer and the
+lawyer was in movement, a plot for the former&rsquo;s arrest
+and the destruction of evidence necessary to his defense,
+according to Martinez&rsquo; quick hurried words; and the
+Mexican now sought her aid, as she was the only one
+within reach whom he could trust. That he must call
+to her showed the desperate nature of the exigency&ndash;&ndash;and
+he had said lives were at stake!</p>
+<p>Haste was the imperative need. As her father was
+absent, she summoned the Mexican girl from the kitchen,
+for instinct advised the wisdom of having a companion
+on this errand; and the two of them, bare-headed and
+walking fast, set out for the house. Dusk was just
+thickening to night. No stars were visible. A warm
+moistness in the air forewarned of rain from the blanket
+of clouds that had spread at sunset along the peaks.
+Indeed, a few fine globules of water touched their faces
+as they came into the main street and hurried along.</p>
+<p>Neither girl had observed the automobile, unlighted
+and moving slowly, that approached the Hosmer house
+as they emerged. Apparently the driver perceiving them
+against the lamplight of the doorway and noting their
+departure thought better of bringing the car to a halt,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span>
+for he kept the machine in motion and as quietly as
+possible trailed the pair by glimpses of their figures
+flitting before an occasional illuminated window. When
+Janet and her companion turned into the main street
+where the stores were lighted his task became easier.</p>
+<p>The street was peaceful. Janet saw no evidence of
+the violence or danger indicated by the Mexican lawyer&rsquo;s
+declaration, but she was too sensible to imagine on that
+account that peril did not exist. The town was not
+aware of what had occurred, that was all,&ndash;&ndash;not yet.
+The chief actors in the conspiracy were still moving
+stealthily against their intended victims; they had
+pounced on Martinez and once they had seized the evidence
+they sought they would arrest Weir. Afterwards
+the people, as she guessed the matter, would be aroused
+to create a strong sentiment against the helpless men.
+It was an atrocious business.</p>
+<p>But as yet things were in a lull&ndash;&ndash;and it was during
+this pause, brief, critical, that Martinez expected her
+to act. That much she had grasped from his hurried
+words. She reached his office and halted to listen. No
+gleam came from the building, nor from the low structure
+on either side, and across the way all was dark&ndash;&ndash;dark
+as it had been that night when the assassin&rsquo;s shot
+had been fired at Steele Weir. Repressing a shudder,
+she bade the Mexican girl follow her, groped for the
+door knob, found it and pushed the door open.</p>
+<p>Martinez had spoken of men forcing an entrance, so
+it must have been at the rear. Inside all was pitchy
+black.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Juanita, you have a match in your pocket, haven&rsquo;t
+you?&rdquo; she demanded, anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Miss Janet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Strike it, then.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span></div>
+<p>In the pent stillness of the dark office Janet could
+hear the Mexican girl fumbling in the pocket of her
+gingham dress. There came a scratching sound and a
+tiny flame.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be careful of it,&rdquo; she warned. &ldquo;Now give it to me.
+And close the door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet lighted the smoky lamp resting on the table,
+next took it up in her hand. A few papers had fallen
+upon the floor. The room was still strong with fresh
+cigarette smoke. Martinez could not have been gone
+more than five minutes.</p>
+<p>And in another five minutes&rsquo; time too Martinez&rsquo; captors
+might be back again!</p>
+<p>Holding the lamp aloft she peered about for an old
+chair, her heart beating rapidly, her lips compressed.
+But all the chairs, the three or four in the room, were
+old. Her eyes encountered the Mexican girl staring
+open-mouthed and scared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take the lamp and keep by me,&rdquo; Janet ordered.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t upset it. What are you shaking for, you
+ninny?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t help it&ndash;&ndash;and you&rsquo;re so white,&rdquo; the other
+whimpered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never you mind me; do as I say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet swiftly went from one chair to another, turning
+them about, upside down, all ways. No paper was
+hidden in or under any one of them, or indeed was there
+space capable of holding a document. At last she gave
+up, gazing about in dismay, dread, tears of vexation
+and anxiety almost rising to her lids. Only one conclusion
+was to be drawn: the men who had seized the lawyer
+had found the paper in spite of his precaution.</p>
+<p>She examined the chairs a second time feverishly, for
+time was flying.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t find it, Juanita, the paper he telephoned me
+to come and get,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe it&rsquo;s in there where he sleeps.&rdquo; And the Mexican
+girl pointed at the inner door standing barely ajar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet led the way within. There was Martinez&rsquo; living- and
+sleeping-room. The furnishings comprised a
+bed, an old scratched bureau, a stand with wash-bowl,
+a red and black Navajo blanket on the floor, a trunk,
+a stool and a dilapidated stuffed chair&ndash;&ndash;just such a
+chair as a paper could be hidden in. That into this
+room the lawyer&rsquo;s assailants had burst their way was
+apparent from the splintered door hanging from one
+hinge at the rear.</p>
+<p>Beckoning Juanita to bring the lamp, Janet ran to
+the arm-chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, here it is!&rdquo; she cried, when she had turned the
+piece of furniture over and inserted her hand in the
+rent. &ldquo;It wasn&rsquo;t found, after all! Come away now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Relief and exultation replaced her depression of the
+moment before. She had succeeded; she had helped the
+lawyer outwit his enemies; she must now return home to
+await Steele Weir&rsquo;s arrival, or if he failed in that then
+go to the dam.</p>
+<p>In the outer room she bade the Mexican girl place the
+lamp on the table once more and blow it out. This
+was done. They groped forward to the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Follow me out quietly, Juanita,&rdquo; Janet said. &ldquo;Only
+Mr. Martinez knows we&rsquo;ve been here, and Mr. Weir, the
+engineer. See, I&rsquo;m trusting you. This is a very important
+paper for Mr. Weir, and other men are trying
+to keep it out of his hands. So you must say nothing
+to any one about our being here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Juanita assented in a whisper. Janet thereupon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span>
+opened the door and the pair stepped forth. A faint
+hissing sound directly before them startled both.
+But the American girl immediately recognized it for
+what it was, the faint murmur of an automobile
+engine.</p>
+<p>She quietly closed the office door, caught her companion&rsquo;s
+arm to lead her away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk,&rdquo; she whispered in her ear.</p>
+<p>At the same instant the beam of an electric hand torch
+flashed in their eyes, blinding them. Then as quickly
+the light was extinguished and a heavy blanket was flung
+over Janet&rsquo;s head. Her cry was choked off, but not that
+of the Mexican girl who had been struck by the corner
+of the cloth and who heard her mistress struggling in
+the arms of the man who had seized her. The sound
+of the struggle moved towards the car and then Juanita,
+paralyzed by fright, was stunned by a sudden roar of
+the exhaust, a grind of gears, and a rush in the darkness.
+The automobile had gone, carrying off Janet Hosmer
+a muffled prisoner. Juanita regaining use of her
+legs fled for Doctor Hosmer&rsquo;s unmindful of the mist
+against her face.</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s sensation had been that of strangulation and
+terror. In the thick folds of the blanket, held and lifted
+by strong arms, all she could offer in the way of resistance
+was futile kicks. She had been jammed into the
+automobile seat and firmly kept there by an embrace
+while the car was being started, which did not relax as
+the machine gathered speed. For some minutes this
+lasted, while she strained painfully for breath, and then
+she perceived the car was stopping.</p>
+<p>Her terror increased. What now would happen?
+These men after overpowering Felipe Martinez had abducted
+her in their determination to possess themselves
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span>
+of the paper. Finding it in her hand&ndash;&ndash;for she still
+clutched it&ndash;&ndash;what then? Would they kill her?</p>
+<p>The car was now completely at rest. The arm was
+withdrawn from about her; hands gripped her hands and
+forced them together; a handkerchief was tightly knotted
+about her wrists. Afterwards her ankles were bound by
+a strap. Then the blanket was lifted from her form
+and head and she gasped in again pure night air.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a gag,&rdquo; said the man at her side. &ldquo;Keep
+quiet and I&rsquo;ll not use it; if you open your mouth to make
+a sound, I shall. It&rsquo;s up to you.&rdquo; And with the hoarse
+threat she caught the heavy sickening odor of whiskey
+on the speaker&rsquo;s breath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You, Ed Sorenson! You&rsquo;ve dared to do this!&rdquo; she
+exclaimed, fear vanishing in anger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sweetheart,&rdquo; came with a mocking accent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Untie me this minute and let me out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no. You&rsquo;ve got the wrong line on this little
+game. We&rsquo;re going for a ride, just you and me, as
+lovers should.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet began to think fast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you know I was in Mr. Martinez&rsquo; office?&rdquo;
+she demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I saw you go in, little one. I was just pulling
+up at your door to coax you out when I saw you and
+the Mexican wench appear. So I followed along. Saved
+me the bother of telling you your father had been hurt
+in an accident. He&rsquo;s chasing off somewhere thirty miles
+from town on a &lsquo;false alarm&rsquo; call to attend a dying man.
+Sorry I had to use the blanket; sorry I have to keep
+your naughty little hands and feet tied up. But it&rsquo;s
+the only way. After we&rsquo;re married, you&rsquo;ll forget all
+about it in loving me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So this was the face of the matter. Not the paper
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span>
+she gripped, but she herself was his object. His abduction
+of her had nothing to do with Martinez&rsquo; affair; he
+knew nothing of the larger plot; and for that reason
+she experienced a degree of relief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never marry you, be certain of that,&rdquo; said she,
+recurring to his statement. &ldquo;If anything had been
+needed to settle that point, what you have done now
+would be enough. You shall pay for this atrocious
+treatment. Untie my hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no. We&rsquo;re starting on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your father as well as mine shall know of this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not, dearie. We&rsquo;re going up into the hills
+where I&rsquo;ve a nice little cabin fixed up. And we&rsquo;ll stay
+there awhile. And then when we come back, you&rsquo;ll not
+do any talking. On the contrary, you&rsquo;ll be anxious to
+marry me&ndash;&ndash;you&rsquo;ll be begging me to marry you. Of
+course! People know we&rsquo;re engaged, and they&rsquo;ll know
+you&rsquo;ve been away with me for two or three days. Do
+you think they&rsquo;ll listen to any story about my carrying
+you off against your will? They&rsquo;ll wink when they hear
+it. Yes, you&rsquo;ll be ready to marry me all right, all right,
+when we come back to San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s blood ran cold at this heartless, black plan
+to ensnare her into marriage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed, you would never do a thing like that,&rdquo; she
+pleaded. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re just trying to scare me with a joke.
+Be a good fellow and untie my hands and take me
+home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No joke about this; straight business. I told you
+you should marry me&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re drunk or mad!&rdquo; she burst out, terrified.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Neither; perfectly calm. But I&rsquo;m not the fellow
+to be tossed over at a whim. I&rsquo;m holding you to your
+word, that&rsquo;s all. You&rsquo;ll change your mind back as it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span>
+was by to-morrow; you&rsquo;ll be crazy to have me as a
+husband then. I won&rsquo;t have to tie your hands and feet
+to keep you at my side when we come riding home to go
+to the minister&rsquo;s. Now we&rsquo;ve had our little talk and
+understand each other; and it&rsquo;s beginning to drizzle.
+Time to start for our little cabin. The less fuss you
+make, the pleasanter it will be for both of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He set the gears and the car started forward once
+more. A sensation of being under the paws of a beast,
+odious and fetid, savage and pitiless, overwhelmed her.
+That this was no trick of a moment but a calculated
+scheme to abase and possess her she now realized with
+a sort of dull horror. And on top of all he was, despite
+his denial, partly drunk.</p>
+<p>Through the terror of her situation two thoughts now
+continued to course like fiery threads&ndash;&ndash;one a hope, one
+a purpose. The former rested on Juanita, whom in
+his inflamed ferocity of intention, the man seemed to
+have forgotten&ndash;&ndash;on Juanita and Steele Weir, &ldquo;Cold
+Steel&rdquo; Weir; and this failing, there remained the latter,
+a set idea to kill herself before this brute at her
+side worked his will. Somehow she could and would
+kill herself. Somehow she would find the means to free
+her hands and the instrument to pierce her heart.</p>
+<p>Sorenson had switched on his lights. He drove the
+car through the damp darkness at headlong speed along
+the trail that leaped from the gloom to meet them and
+vanished behind. At the end of a quarter of an hour he
+swung into a canyon; and Janet perceived they were ascending
+Terry Creek. He stopped the car anew.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just take no chances with you,&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+&ldquo;We have to pass your friends, the Johnsons, you know.
+Had to take my stuff up here in the middle of the night&ndash;&ndash;up
+one night and back the next&ndash;&ndash;and mighty still too,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span>
+so that they wouldn&rsquo;t suspicion I was fixing a little bower
+for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He bound a cloth over her mouth and again flung the
+blanket over her head. Janet struggled fiercely for a
+moment, but finally sank back choking and half in a
+faint. She was barely conscious of the car&rsquo;s climbing
+again. Though when passing the ranch house the man
+drove with every care for silence, she was not aware
+of the fact. Her breath, mind, soul, were stifled. She
+seemed transfixed in a hideous nightmare.</p>
+<p>At length her lips and head were released. But her
+hands and feet were numb. Still feeling as if she were
+in some dreadful dream she saw the beam of the headlights
+picking out the winding trail, flashing on trees by
+the wayside, shining on wet rocks, heard the chatter of
+the creek over stones and the labor of the engine.</p>
+<p>The road was less plain, a mere track now, and
+steeper. They were climbing, climbing up the mountain
+side, up into the heavier timber, up into one of the
+&ldquo;parks&rdquo; among the peaks. Johnson&rsquo;s ranch was miles
+behind and far below. Occasionally billows of fog
+swathed them in wet folds that sent a chill to Janet&rsquo;s
+bones.</p>
+<p>Sorenson held his watch down to the driver&rsquo;s light.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ten o&rsquo;clock; we&rsquo;re making good time. Must give the
+engine a drink&ndash;&ndash;and take one myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He descended to the creek with a bucket, bringing
+back water to fill the steaming radiator. Afterwards,
+standing in the light of the car&rsquo;s lamps, he tilted a flask
+to his lips and drank deep.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not far now; three or four miles. But it&rsquo;s slow
+going. Have to make it on &lsquo;low&rsquo;,&rdquo; said he, swinging
+himself up into his place.</p>
+<p>Janet held her face turned away. She was thinking
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span>
+of Juanita and Steele Weir. Had the girl gone home
+again? Or, terrified, had she run to her own home and
+said nothing? Had the engineer come and waited and
+learning nothing at last returned to the dam? Despair
+filled her breast. Even should the Mexican girl have
+apprised him of the kidnapping, how should he know
+where to follow? And in the solitude of the wet dark
+mountains all about her hope died.</p>
+<p>She began desperately to tug against the handkerchief
+binding her wrists.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the going became easier and she felt rather
+than saw that the trees had thinned. A flash of the car
+lamps at a curve in the trail showed a great glistening
+wall of rock towering overhead, then this was passed
+and the way appeared to lead into a grassy open space.
+A dark shape beside the road loomed into view&ndash;&ndash;a cabin
+by a clump of pine trees. Sorenson brought the car to
+a stop a few yards from the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here at last,&rdquo; he announced, springing down.</p>
+<p>He unstrapped her feet, bade her get out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I make a last appeal to your decency and manhood&ndash;&ndash;if
+you have either,&rdquo; she said, sitting motionless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rot,&rdquo; he answered. Half dragging her, half lifting
+her, he removed her from the machine. Slipping a hand
+within her arm he led her inside the log house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sit there,&rdquo; he ordered.</p>
+<p>Janet dropped upon the seat, a rude plank bench
+against the wall farthest from the door. Indeed, fatigue
+and the numbness of her limbs rendered her incapable
+of standing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I&rsquo;ve touched off this fire and set out some
+grub, then I&rsquo;ll untie your hands,&rdquo; he continued. &ldquo;A
+snug little cabin, eh? Just the place for us, what? See
+all the stuff I&rsquo;ve brought up here to make you warm and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span>
+happy and comfortable. Regular nest. Lot of work on
+my part, I want to say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He touched a match to the wood already laid in the
+fireplace, flung off his rain coat and stood to warm his
+hands at the blaze. Lighting a cigarette, he began
+placing from a box of supplies plates and food on the
+table in the middle of the room, but paused to reproduce
+his flask. With a sardonic grin he lifted the bottle,
+bowed to Janet and drank the liquor neat. When he had
+finished, he turned the bottle upside down to show it was
+empty, then tossed it into a corner. Again he fixed his
+drunken, mocking smile upon her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t preach to me about booze here, can you,
+honey?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Ought to take a swallow yourself;
+warm you up. I have plenty. Guess I better untie your
+hands now.&rdquo; He advanced towards her, swaying
+slightly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to love me from this time on,
+ain&rsquo;t you, girlie?&rdquo; He untied the handkerchief and
+dropped it at his feet. &ldquo;No nonsense now about trying
+to get away; I&rsquo;ll rope you for good if you try to start
+anything. Hello, what&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; give it to me!&rdquo; she cried, in alarm as he pulled
+the folded sheets of paper from her stiffened fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Something I ought to see, maybe.&rdquo; Then he added
+harshly, &ldquo;Sit down, if you don&rsquo;t care to have me teach
+you a thing or two. I&rsquo;m master here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stepped to the table and drawing a box beside him
+settled upon it, pulled the candle-stick nearer and began
+to read the document. Janet glanced swiftly about the
+room for a weapon. Escape past him she could not, for
+by a single spring he could bar the way; but could she
+lay hand on a stick of wood she might fight her way out.
+None was nearer than the fire, and again he could interpose.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span></div>
+<p>He read on and on, with a darkening brow and an
+evil glint showing in his eyes. Page by page he perused
+Saurez&rsquo; deposition until he reached the end. Then he
+got to his feet, shaking the paper at her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were in on this,&rdquo; he snarled. &ldquo;This is what you
+were in Martinez&rsquo; office to get. You&rsquo;re wise to this
+cursed scheme to help Weir make my father and Vorse
+and Burkhardt and Judge Gordon out a gang of swindlers.
+So they trimmed <i>his</i> father of something&ndash;&ndash;at least
+I fancy they did, and I hope to God they did, the
+coward! And you were in with them! You&rsquo;re not quite
+the little white angel you&rsquo;d have people believe, are you?
+Not quite so innocent and simple as you&rsquo;ve made me
+think, anyway. Well, I&rsquo;ll square all that. That slippery
+snake, Martinez, I&rsquo;ll twist his neck the minute I get back
+to town. I&rsquo;ll bet a thousand it was framed up to use
+this when Weir was arrested&ndash;&ndash;but he&rsquo;ll never use it
+now!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He glared at the girl with a face distorted by rage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll just burn it here and now,&rdquo; he continued.
+&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll be sure it won&rsquo;t be used.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet gripped her hands tightly, while her lips opened
+to utter a wild protest at this desecration. What the
+document contained she did not yet know, except that
+it was evidence that fixed upon the men named guilt for
+some past deed in which Weir had suffered and which
+would bring them to account. But something more than
+protest was needed, she saw in a flash, to deflect the man
+from his purpose and save the sheets from the flame.</p>
+<p>She shut her lips for an instant to choke the cry, then
+said with an assumption of unconcern:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead. I didn&rsquo;t want your father to see it, in any
+case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The paper had almost reached the candle, but the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span>
+hand that held it paused. Sorenson stared at it, and
+from it to her. At last a malignant curl of his lips
+uncovered his teeth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you didn&rsquo;t want him to see it,&rdquo; he sneered. &ldquo;If
+that&rsquo;s so, I&rsquo;ll just save it. He&rsquo;ll be interested in reading
+what your friends have prepared to destroy his good
+name and reputation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He folded the document and slipped it into his inner
+coat pocket. Then he walked towards her. At the look
+on his face Janet sprang to her feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve changed my mind about the marriage matter,
+just as you did,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I agree with you now; there
+won&rsquo;t be any marriage. But I&rsquo;ll have your arms about
+my neck just the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he seized her wrist.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go, let&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; The words ceased on her lips.</p>
+<p>Her eyes were riveted on the cabin door; she scarcely
+felt the man&rsquo;s loathsome touch on her arm. How had
+the door come unlatched? And was it only the wind that
+slowly moved it open?</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVI_WEIR_TAKES_UP_THE_HUNT' id='CHAPTER_XVI_WEIR_TAKES_UP_THE_HUNT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+<h3>WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>On leaving the construction camp Steele Weir had
+whirled away down the river road for San Mateo with a
+feeling both of satisfaction and of enmity&ndash;&ndash;satisfaction
+at Martinez&rsquo; success in at last having secured the evidence
+ardently desired, as betokened by his words;
+enmity at whoever was laying violent hands on the
+lawyer. Unfortunately when yet half a mile from town
+his car suffered one of the common misadventures of
+automobiles:&ndash;&ndash;ping-g-g! sang a tire in a shrill dying
+whine.</p>
+<p>Weir did not stop to change and inflate the tube, but
+pushed ahead on his mission though at slackened speed.
+He brought his car to rest before Doctor Hosmer&rsquo;s
+house. The windows were lighted, yet at his knock there
+was no response; so brushing conventionalities aside he
+entered and called Janet&rsquo;s name. Only echoes and a
+following silence greeted his call.</p>
+<p>Doubtful whether to remain awaiting the girl&rsquo;s return
+or go at once to Martinez&rsquo; office in the hope of still finding
+her, he finally chose the latter course leaving his car
+where it stood and proceeding on foot, as a result of
+which he passed in the darkness Juanita hurrying home
+in a fright. A bad choice and valuable time lost, he
+afterwards discovered. At Martinez&rsquo; office he stepped
+inside, called the lawyer by name, called Janet Hosmer,
+stood for a little while in the black room harkening and
+thinking, then went forth into the street.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span></div>
+<p>This time chance fell his way. He had but come out
+when he heard footsteps and two men in low-toned talk
+as they approached; and he withdrew further into the
+concealing darkness of the street. The new visitors,
+striking matches at the entrance, walked inside. The
+men were Vorse and Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you had been here, we could have nailed him at
+once as soon as I had Saurez&rsquo; story,&rdquo; the former said.
+&ldquo;Martinez had half an hour and more to get the thing
+into somebody else&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I was looking after those men up in the hills,&rdquo;
+was the growled answer. &ldquo;Had to feed &rsquo;em and have
+&rsquo;em ready for to-morrow night. If we don&rsquo;t find the
+document here, we&rsquo;ll screw its hiding-place out of that
+dirty greaser if we have to use a cord on his head
+Indian-fashion. Anyway it ought to be about this office.
+Martinez didn&rsquo;t know you had learned about it from
+Saurez. He&rsquo;d never let go a paper like that until he
+had to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think you&rsquo;re right there,&rdquo; Vorse said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;d want
+to sell it for all it was worth. Better shut and lock the
+door while we&rsquo;re searching. Don&rsquo;t care to have any of
+his friends sticking in their heads while we&rsquo;re here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Burkhardt, who had lighted the lamp, now closed the
+door, cutting off so far as Steele Weir was concerned
+both a view of the men and their conversation. However
+he had learned if not enough, at least considerable.
+They had not yet gained possession of the paper. They
+knew nothing of Janet&rsquo;s part in the affair. They had
+so far not succeeded in unlocking Martinez&rsquo; lips, but
+undoubtedly they would be able to wring from the lawyer
+when they went about it the real truth regarding the
+document. Very likely Martinez had anticipated that,
+had known his powers were such as not to be greatly able
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span>
+to resist physical torture and had planned to get the
+evidence into the engineer&rsquo;s hands before he should be
+subjected to pains of the flesh. That would be remembered
+to his credit, along with all the rest. Where
+Martinez was being held prisoner was the additional
+information Weir should have liked to glean before the
+door was shut.</p>
+<p>Postponing for the time the hunt along this line, he
+returned to the Hosmer dwelling. In answer to his
+knock and call on this visit the trembling Juanita
+appeared, immediately pouring forth a recital of the
+happenings at the office as affecting her mistress.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve told no one else?&rdquo; he demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, se&ntilde;or. She said I was to say nothing of her
+being there for the paper, and I was waiting for her
+father to come. But she informed me Mr. Martinez and
+you knew she was there, so I&rsquo;ve told you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you saw nothing of this man who cast the
+blanket over her head and seized her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was dark; we had just come out of the office.
+But&ndash;&ndash;but the car sounded like Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s. I&rsquo;ve
+heard it start from here many times with the same loud
+noise. They had quarreled, Se&ntilde;or Weir, and were no
+longer engaged.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know. Which way did he drive off?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;East, down the lower end of the street.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring a lamp out to my car, so I can fix my tire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the girl holding the light by his side the engineer
+worked with concentrated energy in stripping the wheel,
+in inserting a new tube, replacing the tire and pumping
+it up. The thin drizzle glistened on his face, but for all
+that it was none the less determined, stern.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need not be afraid for yourself; no one but us
+knows you were there,&rdquo; he said to her, climbing into his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span>
+machine. &ldquo;Nor for Miss Janet, either. I&rsquo;ll bring her
+home safely. When Dr. Hosmer returns, tell him everything.
+Also ask him to await our coming. Be sure and
+say to him that I&rsquo;ll bring her home unharmed and that
+I advise silence in regard to the matter until I have
+talked with him. You will remain quiet, of course. This
+isn&rsquo;t a thing to be gossiped about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, se&ntilde;or.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Away the automobile shot under the impulsion of the
+gas. Minutes, golden minutes, had been wasted in
+taking up the pursuit because of his going to Martinez&rsquo;
+office and because of the flat tire. Sorenson now would
+be miles away with his prisoner.</p>
+<p>Sweeping out of town with the car&rsquo;s headlights illuminating
+the road, Steele Weir blessed the drizzling mist
+that dampened the dust so as to leave a tire&rsquo;s imprint.
+Almost at once he picked up the track, for not more than
+twenty or twenty-five minutes had elapsed since Sorenson&rsquo;s
+flight and not even a horseman had since been
+over the way.</p>
+<p>Though he knew it not, the interval of time had been
+reduced by the stop made by the first machine, a mile or
+so out of town, when the abductor removed the blanket
+from Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s head to announce his evil scheme.
+From the main road leading to Bowenville Weir saw the
+car&rsquo;s trail turn aside into a mesa track pointing obliquely
+for Terry Creek canyon; and he suspected that Sorenson
+was making a long drive northward, skirting the
+mountain range and working away from the railroad-tapped
+region.</p>
+<p>Once he thought he caught a flash of light far ahead
+of him, but knew this was an illusion. Through this
+rainy darkness no car&rsquo;s beam, however powerful, would
+show half a mile. The mist beat against his face in a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span>
+steady stream as he rushed forward in the night, his
+eyes immovable on the wet twin tire-marks stamped on
+the road, his iron grip on the wheel, his ears filled with
+the steady hum of the engine. If Sorenson had driven
+fast, Steele Weir drove faster.</p>
+<p>At Terry Creek he plunged down the bank, across the
+water and up on the other side without a change of
+gears, rocking and lurching. Once on the smooth trail
+again the car seemed to stretch itself like a greyhound
+for the race northward. But on a sudden he brought
+the automobile to an abrupt halt. The surface of the
+road was undisturbed; nothing had passed here.</p>
+<p>Swinging back again on the way he had come, Weir
+recrossed the creek and slowly retraced his course.
+Then with an exclamation of satisfaction he picked up
+the track where it turned up the canyon trail. But why
+was the man going to the Johnson ranch? Mystified by
+this baffling procedure on Sorenson&rsquo;s part, he nevertheless
+headed up the stream with no lessening of his
+purpose to overtake the other.</p>
+<p>At the ranch house, whose kitchen window was lighted,
+he stopped and leaped out. Johnson and Mary both
+answered his thumping knock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is Janet Hosmer here?&rdquo; he questioned, while his eyes
+darted about the kitchen. Then he made his own reply,
+&ldquo;I see she&rsquo;s not. Ed Sorenson kidnapped her to-night
+and drove to this canyon. Did you hear a car?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary faced her father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remember I thought I heard one!&rdquo; she cried.
+&ldquo;But the sound was so low I wasn&rsquo;t sure, and when I went
+to the window I saw nothing. I didn&rsquo;t hear it again.
+Father said it was just my imagination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where does this road lead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up into the timber and to a &lsquo;park.&rsquo; Used to be an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span>
+old wood road. Sheepmen sometimes use it to take their
+wagons up above; sometimes cattle outfits too while on
+round-ups.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could an auto go ahead on it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I guess so. By hard driving.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he&rsquo;s up there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir ran back to his car, jumped in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go with you,&rdquo; Johnson shouted after him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I can handle the fellow,&rdquo; the engineer answered.
+And again his machine started on. &ldquo;How long ago was
+it that you heard him, Mary?&rdquo; was his parting question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Bout fifteen minutes ago,&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>Fifteen minutes! But the girl&rsquo;s reckoning might be
+vague, and &ldquo;fifteen&rdquo; minutes be half an hour. At any
+rate, with the road ascending among the peaks
+Sorenson&rsquo;s speed would be greatly diminished. The
+incline would be against him, the uneven twisting rain-washed
+trail would require careful driving, the rain
+would hamper his sight. Yet the fellow he pursued
+could not be more than three or four miles ahead at most.</p>
+<p>On and on Weir pressed. The mist thickened; black
+wet tree trunks loomed before him like ghosts and sank
+out of view again; the road wound along the stream
+among rocks and bushes and over hillocks with all the
+difficult sinuosity of a serpent&rsquo;s track; in his ears
+persisted the chuckling talk of the creek, flowing in
+darkness except when lighted by his car&rsquo;s lamps as the
+machine plunged through a ford, as became more and
+more frequent with the ascent and the narrowing of the
+canyon.</p>
+<p>Five miles, ten miles, fifteen miles he must have come
+since leaving the ranch house. His car now was high
+in the mountain range, running on low gear, the engine
+working hard in the thin air and against the steep grade.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span>
+He was not making more than five miles an hour, he
+judged, at this moment. The radiator was boiling and
+steaming like a cauldron. But he might be sure that if
+his travel was slow, Sorenson&rsquo;s was no better; the road
+was the same for the pursued as for the pursuer.</p>
+<p>At the end of another half hour he came around a
+ledge of rock, where the creek flowed some fifty feet below
+and the granite wall allowed just room to pass in a
+hair-pin turn. There a light gleamed before him like a
+beacon, a dim gleam of a window. It was perhaps a
+hundred yards distant. It marked the end of the trail,
+the end of the search.</p>
+<p>Here was Janet Hosmer!</p>
+<p>And he had come in time. They could not have been
+here long, for Sorenson&rsquo;s start had not been sufficient
+for that; the scoundrel had not yet recovered his breath
+from his hard drive, so to speak. He probably would
+imagine himself safe and so be in no haste to consummate
+his vile plan of enjoying his helpless victim.</p>
+<p>Rage that until now had been lying cold and
+implacable in Steele Weir&rsquo;s breast began to flame in his
+veins and brain. He drove his car past the rock and off
+the trail upon an open grassy space, very carefully,
+very quietly. Next he stopped the engine and put out
+the lights, then he got out, felt his gun in its holster and
+gazed ahead for an instant.</p>
+<p>A form had passed and repassed before the window&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson&rsquo;s
+figure, of course. Brute, coward, degenerate
+he was, and to be dealt with as such. Not only as such,
+indeed, but as a wretch who had dared to touch Janet
+Hosmer against her will, to drag her from her home to
+this lonely spot by violence for his own bestial purposes.</p>
+<p>The blood seemed like to burst Steele Weir&rsquo;s heart.
+This sweet, honest, kind-souled, noble girl! Janet
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span>
+Hosmer, so bright-eyed and pure! She, who had suffered
+this man&rsquo;s hate to save Martinez&rsquo; document, who had
+dared peril to help him, Weir! All the hunger of heart
+of years, and all the stifled affection, now went out to
+her. He loved her; the veil was rent from his mind and
+he realized the fact indisputably&ndash;&ndash;he loved Janet
+Hosmer. And the great creature of an Ed Sorenson
+had dared to seize her with brutal hands!</p>
+<p>Weir broke into a run. By instinct he kept the trail,
+though once or twice stumbling and once barely missing
+a collision with a tree. When he reached the cabin, he
+dropped to a walk and crept to the window, which was
+without glass or frame, open to the night. Peering in
+he perceived Sorenson at the table reading a document,
+and as he watched he had no need to be told this was the
+paper that so vitally concerned himself.</p>
+<p>At last Sorenson got to his feet, shaking his hand at
+Janet Hosmer who sat against the cabin wall and
+beginning to speak. Weir listened for a little. Then
+he stole along the log house to find the door.</p>
+<p>At last his finger touched the latch. He lifted it
+soundlessly, as silently pushed the door ajar until there
+was space for him to slip in. This he did. His mouth
+was shut hard, his eyes watchful, his right hand was
+closed about the butt of his revolver still resting in the
+holster.</p>
+<p>Over Sorenson&rsquo;s shoulder he saw Janet Hosmer&rsquo;s face,
+pale and drawn but with a sudden joy flaming there. If
+ever gratitude were written on human countenance, it
+was on hers. Gratitude&ndash;&ndash;and more! Something that
+sent Steele Weir&rsquo;s blood rushing anew through his body,
+with hope, with a song, with he knew not what.</p>
+<p>Janet suddenly jerked herself free and stepped back,
+her head held high and proud.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll never touch me again, you coward. Look
+behind you,&rdquo; she exclaimed.</p>
+<p>Involuntarily Sorenson turned head on shoulder. The
+frown still darkened his liquor-flushed face and the sneer
+yet twisted his lips so that his mustache was drawn back
+from his teeth. Thus he remained as if changed to stone.</p>
+<p>What he saw was the man he most dreaded, with a
+shadow of a smile on his lips, his figure motionless, his
+hand ready, like an avenging Nemesis from out of the
+night. A perceptible shudder shook the fellow. Weir it
+was&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Cold Steel,&rdquo; whose counter-stroke against one
+man already had been swift and deadly, whom nothing
+checked or turned or terrified, who now for a second time
+was plucking away the fruit of Sorenson&rsquo;s efforts, who
+probably on this occasion would shoot him outright.</p>
+<p>For a moment Steele Weir regarded him in silence.
+But at last he spoke:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand away from that lady, you skunk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson moved hastily aside.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVII_EARTHS_RETRIBUTION' id='CHAPTER_XVII_EARTHS_RETRIBUTION'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+<h3>EARTH&rsquo;S RETRIBUTION</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Steele Weir crossed the cabin to Janet&rsquo;s side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are unhurt?&rdquo; he asked, his eyes scanning her
+face anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. And, oh, how glad I am you came!&rdquo; she cried,
+low. &ldquo;I knew you would not fail me if you but learned
+of my plight; but it&rsquo;s wonderful you should be here so
+soon. I prayed every minute of my ride that Juanita
+would find and tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t come half as fast as I wished.&rdquo; His smile
+assured and cheered her. Then as his glance fell on her
+wrists, still red and creased from being bound, he
+exclaimed, &ldquo;What&rsquo;s this? Let me see.&rdquo; And he caught
+and lifted her hands to look.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had you tied?&rdquo; Weir&rsquo;s gaze moved away to
+Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Hands and feet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the way? All the long ride?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes&ndash;&ndash;look out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s words, half a gasp, half a shriek, gave
+warning of Sorenson&rsquo;s movement, though none was
+needed. While apparently neglecting to watch the other,
+Weir had kept the man sharp in the corner of his eye.
+The motion with which his hand darted to his hip and
+up again was a single lightning-like sweep; and his
+weapon covered his enemy before the latter&rsquo;s hand so
+much as got his revolver in grasp.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Drop it; drop it on the floor!&rdquo; the engineer ordered.
+The gun clattered on the rough-hewn logs. &ldquo;Now put
+your hands up and turn your back this way.&rdquo; Sorenson
+obeyed, not without his eyes speaking the disappointed
+wrath and hatred his tongue dared not utter. &ldquo;I should
+have allowed you to make a full draw and then killed
+you,&rdquo; Steele Weir went on. &ldquo;That would have been the
+simplest way to settle your case. Only I don&rsquo;t like to
+kill bunglers, even when they deserve it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He re-sheathed his own gun and strode forward,
+picking up the one on the floor&ndash;&ndash;a black, ugly-looking
+automatic. This he dropped into a coat pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now face about, you cur,&rdquo; he commanded. &ldquo;I want
+a good look at a man&ndash;&ndash;no, I&rsquo;ll not call you a man&ndash;&ndash;at a
+low-lived imitation of a man who is such a sneaking, dirty
+beast that all he can do is to trap and tie up a helpless
+girl. I don&rsquo;t know yet just what I shall do with you,
+but I know what I ought to do&ndash;&ndash;I ought to choke the
+miserable life out of you! You&rsquo;re not fit to live. You
+soil the earth and pollute the air. But you&rsquo;re of the
+same treacherous, underhanded, scoundrelly breed as
+your father, same yellow flesh and blood, same crooked
+mind and heart, same sort of poisonous snake, and since
+you get it all from him I suppose it can&rsquo;t be helped. Nor
+changed, except by killing and burying you. One thing
+is sure, when I&rsquo;m done you won&rsquo;t be trying any more
+deals like this. Bah, you slimy reptile, you belong in a
+cess-pool!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Under Steele Weir&rsquo;s biting speech Sorenson&rsquo;s face
+went red and pale by turns. His lips twitched and
+worked, moving his mustache in little angry lifts, while
+he breathed with short spasmodic intakes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;First, you&rsquo;re after Mexican girls,&rdquo; Weir went on
+mercilessly. &ldquo;Then Mary Johnson, whom I pulled out
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span>
+of your vile fingers. And now it&rsquo;s&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; The engineer&rsquo;s
+fist arose suddenly above the other&rsquo;s head. &ldquo;Why, I
+ought to drop you dead in your tracks for so much as
+looking at Janet Hosmer! Why don&rsquo;t you fight? Why
+don&rsquo;t you give me a chance, you cowardly girl-robber?
+Haven&rsquo;t you a spark of&ndash;&ndash;well, you haven&rsquo;t, I see. I&rsquo;ll
+just tie you up and later figure out some way to make
+you suffer for this night&rsquo;s work.&rdquo; And with a gesture
+of disgust Weir turned away.</p>
+<p>It was the moment Sorenson had been waiting for.
+As the engineer&rsquo;s back came about, exposed in one
+instant of carelessness, the man struck Weir full force on
+the neck, sending him staggering. Then Sorenson leaped
+for the doorway.</p>
+<p>Janet screamed. Weir recovered himself and whirled
+around, whipping forth his revolver and firing two shots.
+But the bullets only buried themselves in the door
+slammed shut after the escaping prisoner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I myself ought to be shot for this,&rdquo; Steele snapped
+out.</p>
+<p>He ran across the cabin, flung the door open, sprang
+out. The uselessness of seeking his enemy in the black
+wet gloom was only too evident, but he would not give up.
+Gun in hand, he stood listening for sound of fleeing
+footsteps.</p>
+<p>A light hand gripped his arm. Janet had followed
+him out, was at his side. Barely audible he heard her
+quick, excited breathing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Must you shoot him?&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why spare him for more deviltry? But I&rsquo;ll not have
+the chance now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t bear to think of even his blood being on our
+hands. Let him go,&rdquo; Janet said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone without our permission, I&rsquo;d say.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it just as well? I&rsquo;m not harmed, and he&rsquo;ll never
+dare show his face in San Mateo again,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll have to stay away; he&rsquo;ll leave for good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not until I see him first. I want that paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, the paper, I forgot it! And it&rsquo;s in his pocket,&rdquo;
+she cried, in despair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Like the fool I was, I forgot it for the moment too,&rdquo;
+Steele said bitterly. &ldquo;When I could have had it at once
+I must go off ranting about his meanness. It was
+thought of what he had done to you that made me overlook
+the paper; that set me boiling. Lost my head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s answer was almost sufficient recompense
+for even such a serious deprivation as that of the document.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never forget that you were angry in my behalf,&rdquo;
+she said, softly. &ldquo;But perhaps you can gain possession
+of the paper yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before he could make a reply the sound of a motor
+engine startled them. Sorenson was in his car, not far
+off. Weir immediately plunged forward through the
+darkness in the direction of the noise, uttering a shout
+for the man to stop or be shot. But after the taste of
+liberty that he already had had Sorenson was prepared
+to take further chances; the engine&rsquo;s roar burst into
+full volume and the car leaped ahead, while its driver
+sent back a derisive curse to the cabin.</p>
+<p>Weir fired again, fired two or three times at the sound.
+Perhaps Sorenson was crouching safely out of range; at
+any rate, the bullets did not reach him, for the automobile
+plunged away. Steele slowly went back to the
+girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can he see without lights?&rdquo; she questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t see, but he&rsquo;d rather risk not seeing the road
+than drawing my fire. There&rsquo;s a bad place there at the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span>
+rock; he&rsquo;d better turn on his lamps if he wants to round
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sensing the danger that threatened Sorenson, both
+remained unmoving, trying to penetrate the darkness,
+harkening to the automobile&rsquo;s retreating murmur. A
+curiosity, a sort of detached suspense, rooted them to
+the spot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, he&rsquo;s snapped them on!&rdquo; Janet said, almost with
+relief.</p>
+<p>The powerful beam of the headlights had suddenly
+blazed forth. Either feeling that he was safe from
+Weir&rsquo;s gun or realizing that he was on the verge of a
+graver danger, Sorenson had chosen to make the light.
+He was going at headlong speed; even where they
+watched, Steele and Janet perceived that,&ndash;&ndash;and only his
+fear of the peril behind which made him heedless of the
+difficulties in front could account for that reckless pace.</p>
+<p>The light leaped out into the night. Something else
+too seemed to spring forth within the circle of the glow,
+dark, sudden, imminent, rushing at the machine. A
+frantic jerk this way and that of the beam showed the
+driver&rsquo;s mad effort to avoid the towering wall of granite.
+Then a scream rang back to the man and girl before
+the cabin. Followed instantly a crash, an extinguishment
+of the light, darkness, silence, and finally a thin
+quivering flame at the base of the ledge, delicate and
+blue, like a dancing chimera.</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s hand reached out and closed in Steele Weir&rsquo;s,
+and he covered it with his other hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, how terrible!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;Did you see? The
+rock seemed to smite him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You remain here and I&rsquo;ll go find out.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span></div>
+<p>He led her into the cabin and to a stool by the table,
+where resting her elbows on the board she pressed her
+hands over her eyes as if to blot out the sight she had
+just witnessed. After all she had suffered, the climax
+of this dreadful spectacle left her unnerved, weak,
+shuddering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t stay long,&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Come back as
+quick as you can. This cabin, this whole spot in the
+mountains, is awful. I can almost feel him hovering
+over me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t permit such thoughts.&rdquo; He gave her
+shoulder an encouraging pat. &ldquo;It will take but a few
+minutes to see if he&rsquo;s still alive and then we&rsquo;ll start home.
+You&rsquo;ve been the bravest girl going and will continue to
+be, I know. Everything is over; nothing can happen
+to you now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir went out. He perceived that the wrecked car
+was fully afire by this time, its flames illuminating the
+granite ledge and the ground about. Evidently the
+machine&rsquo;s fuel tank had been smashed under the impact
+and the gasoline had escaped, preventing an explosion
+but fiercely feeding the blaze. He ran towards the place.</p>
+<p>At first he did not find Sorenson, so that he supposed
+him buried beneath the wreckage, but presently he
+discovered his crumpled form lying jammed between the
+base of the ledge and a boulder. Weir lifted the limp
+figure from its resting place and bore it to open ground,
+where he made an examination of the still form. Clearly
+Sorenson had been pitched free of the car and crushed
+against the rock wall. His cap was missing; his coat
+was ripped up the back and a part of it gone as if caught
+and held by some obstruction in the car when he had
+been shot forth; blood and a great bruise marked one
+cheek; and the way his legs dragged when he was lifted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span>
+up indicated some serious injury to those members. But
+the man still breathed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miracles haven&rsquo;t ceased,&rdquo; Weir muttered, when he
+had made sure of the fact. &ldquo;But his chance is slim at
+best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It would be false to say that the engineer felt
+compassion at the other&rsquo;s sudden catastrophe; he
+experienced none. On the contrary he had a sense of
+justice fittingly executed, as if, escaping bullets and
+man&rsquo;s blows, Sorenson had been felled by a more certain
+power, by the inevitable consequences of his own deeds
+and sins, by a wall of evil he himself had raised as much
+as by a wall of stone.</p>
+<p>He searched the man&rsquo;s breast pocket, then hunted for
+the missing document among the stones and bushes. At
+last he gave up for the time further seeking, with a
+conviction that the vital paper was gone for good,
+destroyed in the fire of the burning car. But for his
+own over-confidence, his belief he had Sorenson a safe
+prisoner back there in the cabin, the sheets might be
+secure in his pocket. Well, it was too late now.</p>
+<p>He again lifted the unconscious man in his arms and
+returned to the log house. Inside he laid him on the
+rude bed which Sorenson himself had spread with sheets
+and blankets.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s alive?&rdquo; Janet asked, awed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alive, but badly hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll leave him here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, while I take you away. We could do nothing
+for him in any case; his injuries are grave and need a
+doctor&rsquo;s help. The best service we can perform in his
+behalf is to start your father or some other physician
+here as quickly as possible. He may live or he may die;
+that isn&rsquo;t in our hands. He&rsquo;s unconscious and not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span>
+suffering, and probably will not feel pain for some hours
+if he does live, so we can go without feeling that we&rsquo;re
+robbing him of any of his chances of recovery. Your
+conscience may rest quite easy on that point. Come,
+we&rsquo;ll start at once. The quicker we reach your father,
+the quicker he will arrive here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When they were in his car he wrapped a robe about
+her against the sharp chill.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am cold; my teeth are chattering,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been under a great strain. Just lie back and
+rest and think of something else than what has happened,
+if you can,&rdquo; he urged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll try to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lamps blazed out at his touch of the switch and
+the car began to move. She closed her eyes. She did
+not wish to see the scene of the smash, with the leaping
+fire and the horrible pile of crushed metal. Indeed, she
+drew the robe before her face, where she kept it for some
+time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are we past the place?&rdquo; she asked, finally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A long way past.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank heaven! Nothing shall ever drag me up this
+road again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will not take us long to reach Johnson&rsquo;s and be off
+this trail altogether, for it&rsquo;s down-hill going all the way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said nothing about the paper? Did you get it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; it wasn&rsquo;t on him. I&rsquo;ll return for another look,
+but it fell in the fire, I think, and burned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know what was in it, Mr. Weir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. But I can guess.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know a little of its contents, from what he said
+before you entered. It was a statement, something
+about his father and others doing dishonest acts, I think.
+He didn&rsquo;t seem to be quite clear what it was about
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span>
+either, but he spoke of your father and declared he hoped
+the others had swindled him, which he inferred had
+happened. I didn&rsquo;t know your father ever had been in
+this country. That&rsquo;s the reason you hate those men,
+Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Vorse and Mr. Burkhardt;
+because of some injury they worked your father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the reason. And that too is why they&rsquo;re
+trying to get rid of me one way or another. But they
+didn&rsquo;t hire the Mexican to attempt to shoot me;
+Ed Sorenson employed him. Martinez, when you told
+me the man&rsquo;s name, telegraphed around the country
+from Bowenville till he got track of the fellow. He also
+secured evidence that a white man resembling Ed
+Sorenson had been seen talking with him at the place he
+came from. So we can draw our conclusions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he hired the man to assassinate you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looks like it. Because I took Mary Johnson away
+from him, and from fear. He was afraid you might
+learn of the matter, I suppose, and decided to get rid of
+me. He&rsquo;s a coward at heart, but none the less a criminal
+by instinct, so he hired another to do what he dared not
+attempt himself. A crook like his father, but with less
+nerve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet was silent while the car wound its way down
+the creek road, through the misty darkness and among
+the invisible peaks. The full danger that she had
+escaped was but now making itself clear to her mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he would go so far as to try to murder you,&rdquo; she
+faltered, &ldquo;I surely could have expected no pity from
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now listen to me,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to give you
+a little scolding: you must forget all this business; it
+just makes you fearful and unhappy. The past is over,
+and he&rsquo;s out of your life for good. Look at it that way.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span>
+Consider the thing as a bad dream, done with and no
+more important. That&rsquo;s &lsquo;the right view to take&rsquo;&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;he
+paused, then added softly&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;Janet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How strong-souled you are!&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+<p>Strong, in truth, he seemed. Ignoring danger he had
+come swift on Sorenson&rsquo;s track and rescued her, saved
+her, kept her clean from her assailant&rsquo;s infamous
+brutishness. The one was a knave and a beast; but he,
+Steele Weir, was a man, clear to see, quick to act, hard
+towards enemies, gentle to friends. Every particle a
+man&ndash;&ndash;sure of himself, and fearless, and true-hearted, and
+firm of soul.</p>
+<p>She pressed her hands tight against her breast. He
+was a man one could love and honor. &ldquo;Cold Steel&rdquo; Weir
+they called him&ndash;&ndash;and, she divined, his love if ever given
+would be as lasting as hoops of steel.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XVIII_IN_THE_NIGHT_WATCHES' id='CHAPTER_XVIII_IN_THE_NIGHT_WATCHES'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+<h3>IN THE NIGHT WATCHES</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A light still burned in the Johnson ranch house, late
+as was the hour, when the car swung round a copse of
+aspens and brought it in view. Johnson himself came
+forth at sound of the automobile, with a sleepy Mary
+following.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t go to bed, of course, knowing you were
+to come back,&rdquo; said he. But his true reason appeared in
+his added words, &ldquo;I was just about ready to saddle a
+horse and head up there myself. Mighty glad to see you
+safe back, Miss Hosmer. Mary has had some coffee on
+the fire ever since Weir went along, knowing you&rsquo;d be
+cold and worn out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just the thing!&rdquo; Steele exclaimed. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re both
+chilled. Come, Janet.&rdquo; And he stepped from the
+machine.</p>
+<p>Without demur the girl placed her hand in the one he
+offered and descended stiffly. Mary ran back into the
+house to attend to the coffee-pot and the visitors presently
+were seated at the kitchen table at places already
+laid, with cups of steaming strong coffee and plates of
+food before them.</p>
+<p>Janet contented herself with the hot, reviving drink,
+but Weir ate heartily as well. Coming and going, forty
+miles of driving a rough mountain road had given him a
+laborer&rsquo;s appetite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s late, one o&rsquo;clock,&rdquo; Mary said to Janet. &ldquo;Why
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span>
+don&rsquo;t you stay with us the rest of the night? I wish
+you would.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet put up an arm and drew down the face of the
+girl at her side and kissed her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a good friend, Mary, to be so thoughtful,&rdquo;
+she answered. &ldquo;But father will be terribly anxious
+every minute I&rsquo;m away. I must reach home as quickly
+as possible to ease his mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of Sorenson nothing had been spoken, though a
+repressed curiosity on the part of the ranchman and his
+daughter had been evident from the instant of Weir&rsquo;s
+and Janet&rsquo;s return.</p>
+<p>At this point Johnson jerked his head in the direction
+of the creek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What did you do to him, Weir?&rdquo; he growled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not as much as I intended at first. But he made up
+for it himself. Ran his car against that granite ledge
+before the cabin while trying to get away, and smashed
+himself up badly. I carried him into the hut and left
+him there; he was alive when we drove off, but he may
+be dead by now. Bad eggs like him are hard to kill,
+however. I&rsquo;ll start a doctor up there when I arrive in
+San Mateo; probably one from Bowenville.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father won&rsquo;t attend him now, so long as there&rsquo;s
+another physician who can, I know,&rdquo; Janet stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say not!&rdquo; Johnson asseverated. &ldquo;If that
+young hound Sorenson had his deserts, we&rsquo;d just leave
+him there and forget all about him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where our civilized notions handicap us,&rdquo;
+Steele Weir said, with a slight smile. &ldquo;But at that, if he
+were the only person concerned, I&rsquo;d do no more than inform
+a doctor where he was and what had happened to
+him, and wash my hands of the affair. There are other
+things, though, to consider. Janet&rsquo;s position, primarily.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span>
+Her case is similar to that of Mary&rsquo;s awhile ago, and we
+must prevent talk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The worst of the doings of a scoundrel like him that
+involve innocent people is the talk. There are always
+some people low enough to ascribe evil to the girl as well
+as the man in such a circumstance as this. I propose to
+see that Janet doesn&rsquo;t suffer that. We avoided it in
+Mary&rsquo;s case and we&rsquo;ll do so in this, though the situation
+is more difficult. I&rsquo;ve been thinking the matter over on
+the way down and have a plan that will work out, I
+believe, but it requires your help, Johnson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon you know you&rsquo;ll not have to ask me twice for
+anything,&rdquo; the rancher remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we may have to shuffle the facts a bit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. I&rsquo;ll do all the lying necessary and never
+bat an eye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t require much decorating, the story. But
+you will have to go up and get him, starting at once.&rdquo;
+Then he concluded, &ldquo;I hate to have to ask you to make
+that drive late at night and in the darkness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind that. Glad to do it, if that&rsquo;s what you
+want.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take your wagon and fill the box with hay and bring
+him down. By coming back slowly he won&rsquo;t be jarred,
+and he has to be brought out anyway. If he&rsquo;s dead,
+well, bring his body just the same. A doctor should be
+easily at your house by the time you arrive; and your
+story is that a sheepherder found him lying by his
+wrecked car, carried him into the cabin and then came
+down and told you of the accident, on which you went
+and brought him in, not knowing, of course, in the dark
+who he was or what he was doing up there or how the
+smash-up had occurred. You might suggest that he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span>
+was camping there by himself to fish, and stop at
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll say just enough and no more,&rdquo; he remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you start at once, you&rsquo;ll be there by daylight if
+not before. That will get you back here by nine or ten
+o&rsquo;clock. I don&rsquo;t want him taken to San Mateo; that
+would stir up a swarm of inquiries and might even send
+some of the curious up to the spot. Let the trail get
+cold, so to speak. People aren&rsquo;t half as curious about a
+thing three or four days after it happens as at the
+moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve noticed that myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And another thing, I don&rsquo;t wish his father to learn of
+the matter just yet. Under other circumstances he
+should be the first to know, but I want the news kept
+from him for a special reason. Besides, it would be
+better if he found out about it from others and through
+roundabout channels. His son up there I don&rsquo;t see
+doing any talking himself for some time if he does
+live. When he is able to talk, I believe he&rsquo;ll decide to
+keep his mouth shut or just accept the explanation given
+that he was fishing or something of that kind. When
+the doctor has looked him over, either he or you will
+carry him to Bowenville. If we could ship him at once
+to Gaston, where there&rsquo;s some sort of a hospital, I
+suppose, or even to Santa F&eacute;, that would be the thing.
+He&rsquo;d be out of the way; there&rsquo;d be no talk; there would
+be no explanations to make except to the doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every doctor round these parts probably knows
+him,&rdquo; Johnson said, &ldquo;and so would insist on taking him
+home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a new one at Bowenville, father says,&rdquo; Janet
+put in. &ldquo;A young man, just starting practice. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span>
+hasn&rsquo;t been there but a few weeks and may not know Ed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s the man for us!&rdquo; Weir declared. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll send
+for him. Now we must be going.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele arose from the table and stretched his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;ll hitch up my team immediately,&rdquo; the rancher
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go with you,&rdquo; Mary exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tut, tut, girl.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can help you, and I want to do something to help
+Mr. Weir and Janet Hosmer, even if it&rsquo;s only a little bit.
+I&rsquo;m strong, I don&rsquo;t care if it is late&ndash;&ndash;anyway, I&rsquo;d just
+have nightmares if I stayed here alone,&ndash;&ndash;and I can help
+you with him. I&rsquo;m going,&rdquo; she ended, obstinately.</p>
+<p>Johnson eyed her for a moment, then yielded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing to be afraid of now,&rdquo; he rejoined, &ldquo;but
+if you would rather go along with your dad, all
+right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Five minutes later Steele and Janet were emerging
+from the canyon upon the mesa. The drizzling rain still
+continued and the unseen mist beat cool upon their
+cheeks as the car swung away from Terry Creek for
+town. Except for the stream of light projected before
+them, they were engulfed in Stygian darkness; and save
+for the slithering sound of the tires on the wet road,
+they moved in profound night silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That business is arranged,&rdquo; Steele said, after a time.
+&ldquo;But we still have the results of the attack on Martinez
+to deal with. I don&rsquo;t know how long he&rsquo;ll hold out
+against the men who dragged him off, probably not long.
+I suppose Burkhardt and perhaps Vorse took him, and
+they&rsquo;ll stop at nothing to get the paper they&rsquo;re after.
+How they learned of it, I don&rsquo;t know, but find out about
+it they did; and they&rsquo;ll force the information they want
+from Martinez if they have to resort to hot irons.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span>
+That&rsquo;s the kind of men they are. The lawyer will stick
+up to a certain point&ndash;&ndash;then he&rsquo;ll tell. That brings you
+into their way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You also,&rdquo; Janet answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been there for some time,&rdquo; was his grim
+response. &ldquo;But in your case it&rsquo;s different. I&rsquo;m worried,
+I tell you frankly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think they would dare try to intimidate me
+in my own home and with father to protect me?&rdquo; she
+cried, incredulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not there, perhaps. But if they could inveigle you
+away, yes. They wouldn&rsquo;t use hot irons in your case, of
+course, and I can&rsquo;t guess just what they would do, but
+they would do&ndash;&ndash;something. Those men think I have the
+&lsquo;goods&rsquo; on them; I repeat, they would stop at nothing to
+save themselves if worst came to worst; their fear will
+make them fiends. One couldn&rsquo;t suppose they would
+dare seize Martinez in all defiance of law&ndash;&ndash;but they did.
+One can&rsquo;t believe they would dream of torturing him for
+information&ndash;&ndash;but I haven&rsquo;t a doubt that&rsquo;s what they&rsquo;ve
+done. So you see why I&rsquo;m worried about you. If
+anything happened, if any harm came to you now,
+Janet&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His voice was unsteady as he spoke her name and
+ceased abruptly. She thrilled to this betrayal of his
+feeling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I could just stick at your side, then I know I
+should be safe,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>And for answer she felt his hand grope and press her
+own for an instant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can count on me being somewhere around.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know that,&rdquo; she said, confidently.</p>
+<p>San Mateo was asleep, buried in gloom when they
+entered it, and quiet except for the barking of a dog
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span>
+or two that their passage stirred to activity. But in
+Dr. Hosmer&rsquo;s cottage a light was burning and as the
+car came to a stop at its gate the door was flung open
+and the doctor himself appeared framed in the doorway.
+He ran hastily down the walk to meet them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Janet!&rdquo; he cried. And the girl flung her arms about
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Juanita told you? Oh, it was dreadful! But Mr.
+Weir has brought me home safe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Hosmer too agitated to speak reached out and
+grasped the engineer&rsquo;s hand, pressing it fervently.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>At about that moment three men sat in the rear of
+Vorse&rsquo;s saloon. The shades were drawn and the front
+part of the long room was dark. Only a dull light
+burned where they sat. They were talking in low tones,
+with long pauses, with worried but determined, savage
+faces&ndash;&ndash;Vorse, Burkhardt, Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where the devil is she, that&rsquo;s what I want to know!&rdquo;
+Burkhardt growled. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been over twice and looked
+through a window. Doc was there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s in bed and asleep, probably,&rdquo; Sorenson said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe it. The old man would be in the sheets
+himself if that were the case. Didn&rsquo;t I call up twice by
+&rsquo;phone too? She was out, they said.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Couldn&rsquo;t do much with her father there, anyway.
+We&rsquo;ve got to get the paper by soft talk,&rdquo; Vorse
+commented. &ldquo;I still half believe Martinez was lying
+when he said it had been in that old chair. She couldn&rsquo;t
+have got to the office and away in the hour or two before
+he told without some one seeing her, and no one did so far
+as we can learn. We locked the door too the second
+time we went back and it hasn&rsquo;t been opened since; and
+we were there ten minutes after our first visit when we
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span>
+learned the papers weren&rsquo;t among those in his pocket. I
+think he&rsquo;s got it cached away somewhere still.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll give him another dose of our medicine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I know anything about men, he told the truth,&rdquo;
+Sorenson said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if the girl has it, we&rsquo;ve got to get it from her if
+I have to wring her neck to do it.&rdquo; It was Burkhardt&rsquo;s
+inflamed utterance.</p>
+<p>A pause followed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorenson, your boy is engaged to her,&rdquo; Vorse stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then it&rsquo;s up to him to get it first thing in the
+morning. Maybe it goes against the grain to let him
+know about this business of the past, but it ain&rsquo;t going to
+knock him over; he&rsquo;s no fool, he&rsquo;s a wise bird, he understands
+that a good many things are done in business that
+aren&rsquo;t advertised. He knows we weren&rsquo;t missionaries in
+the old days. And she&rsquo;ll hand it over for him when she
+might not for any one else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, Sorenson,&rdquo; Burkhardt affirmed, his
+scowling face visibly clearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ed went away somewhere this evening, that&rsquo;s the only
+drawback to your scheme. Said something about
+Bowenville and catching the night train to Santa F&eacute;, and
+that he might be gone maybe a couple of days and maybe
+a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hell!&rdquo; Burkhardt exploded, in consternation.</p>
+<p>Vorse however remained cool.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you must start telegrams to head him off, start
+them the instant you get home. Telephone to Bowenville
+the message you want sent and have the operator
+dispatch it to all trains going both ways since early
+evening, in order to make sure. If you can reach him
+within two or three hours, wherever he is, he can hop off,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span>
+catch a train back and be here by to-morrow evening.
+Make your message urgent. And meanwhile we&rsquo;ll do
+what we can to get hold of that paper. At any rate we
+can keep her from seeing Weir. If we have to watch her
+we&rsquo;ll do it; and if we have to stop her from going to the
+dam we&rsquo;ll do that someway too. You might invite her
+over to-morrow to spend the day at your house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think she&rsquo;ll be likely to come if she reads that
+document?&rdquo; the banker inquired coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not? Tell her right off the bat that the thing
+is a lie and a forgery and that you want to explain about
+how it was made. She might fall for that and carry the
+document to you. She&rsquo;s always had a good opinion of
+you, hasn&rsquo;t she?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why should she change at a mere story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; Sorenson exclaimed with sudden
+energy. &ldquo;The matter described happened so long ago
+that she won&rsquo;t probably attach as much importance to it
+as we&rsquo;ve imagined she would. I&rsquo;ll ask her to bring it to
+me to see&ndash;&ndash;and that will be all that&rsquo;s necessary, once it&rsquo;s
+in my fingers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what about him?&rdquo; Burkhardt asked, striking the
+floor with his heel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just leave him there for the present. To-morrow
+we&rsquo;ll have another talk with him,&rdquo; the cattleman stated.
+&ldquo;Better offer him a couple of thousand to go to another
+state; he&rsquo;ll grab at the chance, I fancy. Money heals
+most wounds. But, Vorse, keep your cellar locked and
+the bartender away from it. We can start Martinez
+away sometime to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t know about that. To-morrow night will be
+our busy night,&rdquo; the ex-sheriff said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We might let Gordon handle him,&rdquo; Vorse suggested.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought perhaps you intended to keep the Judge in
+ignorance of this Martinez matter. He seems to be
+getting sort of feeble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not too feeble to take his share of the unpleasant
+jobs along with the rest of us,&rdquo; Vorse answered, unfeelingly.
+&ldquo;I shall have him in here first thing in the morning
+and tell him what&rsquo;s happened and what we&rsquo;ve done
+and what he has to do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; said Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s agreeable to me,&rdquo; Sorenson stated,
+looking at his watch and rising: &ldquo;Time we were turning
+in, if there&rsquo;s nothing more.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>At the dam camp Meyers, the assistant chief engineer,
+and Atkinson, the superintendent, were still awake,
+smoking and talking in the office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I smelt enough booze on those fellows who came
+stringing in here to fill the reservoir,&rdquo; the latter was
+saying. &ldquo;Some one&rsquo;s feeding it to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody drunk, though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. But who&rsquo;s giving it to them and why? I asked
+one fellow and he said he&rsquo;d been to a birthday party, and
+wouldn&rsquo;t tell where. They were all feeling pretty lush,
+even if they weren&rsquo;t soused. And to-morrow&rsquo;s Sunday!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll all be idle, you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. If there&rsquo;s more liquor, they&rsquo;ll be after it. All
+day to drink in means a big celebration. The whiskey is
+sent up from town, of course, and I reckon sent just at
+this time to get us all in bad while Mr. Pollock&rsquo;s here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll look up the bootlegging nest to-morrow,&rdquo;
+Meyers said, with finality.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can we do if we do locate it? They&rsquo;re not
+selling the stuff, I judge, but giving it away. That
+clears their skirts and forces us to deal with the men
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span>
+themselves if there&rsquo;s any dealing done. Probably they
+hope to start a big row among us that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll await Weir&rsquo;s advice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ve waited all I&rsquo;m going to to-night. Seems
+to me for a steady, quiet, self-respecting, dignified,
+unhooked, unmarried, unmortgaged, unromantic man he&rsquo;s
+skylarking and gallivanting around pretty late.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>On the rocky creek road the ranchman and his
+daughter Mary were driving up among the trees on their
+way to the cabin, a lantern swinging from the end of the
+wagon tongue, the horses straining against the grade.
+On Johnson&rsquo;s beard the moisture formed beads which
+from time to time he brushed away. From the trees
+collected drops of water fell on their hands and knees.
+All about as they proceeded the bushes and rocks
+appeared in shadowy outline, to disappear in the night
+once more, yielding to others.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t this cabin where we&rsquo;re going the one we drove
+to three years ago when you were hunting some cattle?&rdquo;
+Mary asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never thought then that Ed Sorenson would be
+lying up there all mashed to pieces,&rdquo; she said, with awed
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess he didn&rsquo;t either,&rdquo; was the dry response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He ought to be ready to stop chasing girls after
+this,&rdquo; she declared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t if he can walk; his kind never does quit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then his kind ought to be locked up somewhere like
+mad dogs. In a &rsquo;sylum, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess you&rsquo;re right on that, Mary. They&rsquo;re
+dangerous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Funny we didn&rsquo;t know he&rsquo;d been up there, going past
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span>
+our house. He must have been there first before taking
+Janet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sneaked up in the night, probably. He&rsquo;d have to
+have grub and so on if he expected to stay even a day or
+two. Crooks always look after their bellies, be sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon Janet Hosmer will like Mr. Weir a whole lot
+now, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She ought to, if she doesn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A long silence followed while Mary apparently pursued
+the line of thought opened up by this speculation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If she has the good sense I think she has,&rdquo; the rancher
+stated at length, for his mind at least had been following
+out the subject, &ldquo;she&rsquo;ll not only like him a whole
+lot, but she&rsquo;ll lead him to the altar and put her brand on
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He spoke to unhearing ears. For just then Mary
+sagged against him, her head sank on his shoulder. He
+put an arm around her form and let her sleep, thus
+roughly expressing his tenderness and love. Weir had
+not only rescued Janet Hosmer from the clutches of the
+man now lying injured; he also had once saved Johnson&rsquo;s
+own child Mary from the scoundrel&rsquo;s grasp.</p>
+<p>Weir might ask anything of him, even to the laying
+down of his life in his defense.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XIX_A_QUEER_PAPER' id='CHAPTER_XIX_A_QUEER_PAPER'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+<h3>A QUEER PAPER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>When Mary Johnson next opened her eyes it was at
+a little shake by her father. She had slept heavily despite
+the jolting of the wagon; and now looked about
+drowsy-eyed and at a loss to know where she was. Her
+clothes and face were damp, her hands cold. She wasn&rsquo;t
+sure yet but this was still a dream&ndash;&ndash;the team and wagon,
+the cabin before which they stood, the trees and rocks
+scattered about the grassy park-like basin, and the
+soaring mountain peaks on every hand that were just
+touched by the first early sun-rays.</p>
+<p>The rain and mists were gone, leaving the dawn clear,
+gray, sharp, scented with the pungent odor of balsam
+and pine. From a distance came the subdued murmur of
+Terry Creek, which here high in the mountain range had
+its source in springs and brooks flowing from pools. All
+was peaceful.</p>
+<p>Mary&rsquo;s look came to rest on the cabin. Over it reared
+the great pines that grew in a clump behind. Its door
+was ajar, but the log house for any sign of occupancy
+might have been untenanted. Immediately the girl
+glanced back along the road they had come and beheld
+there in the dim shadow at the foot of the lofty granite
+ledge a shapeless black lump. She shivered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You awake?&rdquo; her father asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; And she began to climb down over the wagon
+wheel.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait here. I&rsquo;ll go in first. He might be&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; But
+though the rancher did not complete his sentence the
+words spoken carried their own grave implication.</p>
+<p>He came out again presently. Mary gazed at his
+face to read from it the news it might carry, and it was
+with a breath of relief she perceived that the injured man
+was still alive, for her father himself appeared easier of
+mind. Neither would by choice have a dead man for a
+passenger on the ride home, even Ed Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s breathing, but is still unconscious,&rdquo; Johnson
+declared. &ldquo;Must have got a crack in the head along with
+the rest. Face is covered with dried blood. From the
+stuff inside the house he must have been fixing for quite
+a stay&ndash;&ndash;blankets, grub, whiskey, candles, and so on.
+We&rsquo;ll eat a bite ourselves before starting back; get the
+pail out of the wagon and bring some water and I&rsquo;ll make
+a pot of coffee. There&rsquo;s a fireplace and wood inside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get the water, but I&rsquo;ll stay out while you&rsquo;re boiling
+it,&rdquo; the girl said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want to see him until I have
+to go in and help carry him out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She went off for the water, on her return setting the
+bucket by the door. Then curious to see the place of
+Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s accident, she wandered back along the
+trail to the ledge. There she beheld the crumpled, fire-blackened
+remains of his automobile in a heap near the
+stone wall. Apparently the car had first struck a small
+boulder, which had flung Sorenson out on one side and
+forward, then leaping this hit the ledge full force.</p>
+<p>At the instant he must have been off the road and
+headed wrong, she guessed. The rapid daybreak of the
+mountains had by now dispersed the last dimness and
+indeed the crags far above were bright with sunshine.
+She could plainly see the ruin that the machine was, fire
+having completed what the smash had left undamaged,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span>
+and the part of the rock that was smoked by the flames,
+and was able to smell yet the reek of burnt oil, varnish
+and rubber.</p>
+<p>With the eyes of the curious she stared at the wreck,
+at the ledge, at the ground, absorbed with simple speculations
+and filled with a sense of awe. The machine must
+have made a big sound when it struck. It was a lot of
+money gone quickly, that car. Not enough of it
+left to make it worth hauling away. And so on and so
+on.</p>
+<p>Then all at once her wandering regard detected something
+white in a crevice between two stones. At first she
+thought it the gleam of a bird or a chipmunk. The thing
+was some yards off from the spot where she stood, but
+the flutter persisted. So she approached it to learn its
+nature.</p>
+<p>The thing was a paper. One corner of a sheet stuck
+up from the crack in which it lay and was waved gently
+by the rising dawn breeze. She drew it out and perceived
+it was fastened to other sheets that were folded, all damp
+from the rain though not soaked because the cranny had
+admitted little moisture. It was the last sheet which
+had come partly unfolded, apparently as it fell, so was
+left in sight or she would never have noticed the white
+flutter. This last sheet was blank, but the others, neatly
+folded though wrinkled, were covered with writing she
+saw on spreading them open. However, she could not
+read the pages; the matter was typewritten, but it was
+not English. Some foreign language, maybe.</p>
+<p>If Mary could not read the document, she could at
+least logically deduce how it had happened to be in its
+present resting-place. The paper was here because the
+wrecked automobile was here, so when Ed Sorenson was
+pitched out the folded sheets of paper must have been
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span>
+propelled from his pocket by the same force and at the
+same instant. It hit a rock after flying through the air
+and slid down into the crack.</p>
+<p>Perhaps it was only a business document; it looked
+like one. Again perhaps it told something about his
+crooked private affairs&ndash;&ndash;about his schemes for ruining
+girls, possibly. Very likely, indeed. That seemed to be
+about all he engaged himself at. When she found some
+one who could read it, she would know for certain. She
+would just take it along with her and say nothing about
+her find until she could have somebody who understood
+the writing read it over for her.</p>
+<p>In places the typing had stained from dampness, but
+not seriously. She could dry out the pages over the
+kitchen stove at home. So folding the sheets again, she
+doubled the document, tied it in her handkerchief and
+placed it inside her waist, where it could not be lost.
+Perhaps there were other papers. But a further search
+disclosed none, whereupon as her father was shouting to
+her from the cabin to come she retraced her steps.</p>
+<p>When they had drunk their coffee and eaten some of
+Sorenson&rsquo;s food, making their meal before the door, they
+carried the unconscious man out to the wagon, bearing
+him in the blanket on which he lay. Other blankets they
+spread over him. Johnson also placed at the prostrate
+figure&rsquo;s feet the rest of the eatables in the cabin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No need to leave this stuff to the pack-rats,&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll just consider it a little pay towards fetching him
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He ought to be willing to pay you a whole lot more
+when he learns the trouble you&rsquo;ve been to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t touch his money if he offered me a thousand
+dollars; I&rsquo;d throw it back in his face. I&rsquo;m not
+doing this for pay, or friendship, or charity; I&rsquo;m doing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span>
+it to help Janet Hosmer and because Weir asked me.
+If the Sorensons had all the money on earth, they
+couldn&rsquo;t give me a penny as between man and man. If
+they owed it to me, that would be another matter.
+They&rsquo;d pay it if I had to stick a gun down their throats
+to make them come across.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t need any of their money, I guess,&rdquo; Mary
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nope. We&rsquo;re poor but we&rsquo;re straight. So we&rsquo;re
+better off than they are&ndash;&ndash;richer, if we just look at it
+that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Once during the long drive, as they neared the ranch
+house, a low moan came from the form on the straw in
+the wagonbed. Both Johnson and Mary looked around
+quickly, then regarded each other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beginning to suffer,&rdquo; said the parent. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a wonder
+there&rsquo;s a whole bone in his body. I hope the doctor
+is down below waiting for us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This proved to be the case when about ten o&rsquo;clock
+Johnson drove his worn-out team into his dooryard.
+Weir&rsquo;s car was there and with it the engineer himself
+and a young medical practitioner. Climbing up into the
+wagon, the doctor made a hasty examination of the patient.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hips broken. Slight concussion of the skull, but not
+dangerous,&rdquo; was his opinion. &ldquo;I shall not be able to
+tell the full seriousness of his injuries until I have him
+stripped on a table or bed. Probably there are other
+broken bones,&ndash;&ndash;ribs or something. We must get him
+down to Bowenville as quickly as possible, for his is a
+bad case. But I guess if he has pulled through so far
+he&rsquo;ll recover. If you&rsquo;ll drive your wagon down to the
+mouth of the canyon, we&rsquo;ll transfer him to my car, which
+is double seated, and then you can accompany me to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span>
+town; Mr. Weir says you are willing to go along and
+help. I&rsquo;ll send you back from Bowenville.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;ll go along. Mary will ride down with us and
+bring back the team and wagon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Strange what he was doing up there in the mountains
+with an automobile alone,&rdquo; the doctor remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, he might have wanted a day&rsquo;s fishing, or was
+taking a look at cattle or range, something like that,&rdquo;
+Johnson stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir said a sheepherder found him. Wasn&rsquo;t
+that it, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer turned to the rancher.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wasn&rsquo;t that the way of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Showed up here late and said he had found the
+man and carried him into the cabin. Said his wrecked
+car was still burning, so the accident couldn&rsquo;t have occurred
+very long previous. Said we ought to bring
+him down immediately as he was badly hurt. So I sent
+word to Dr. Hosmer, and my girl and I set off at once,
+the sheepherder going back with us. Said he just happened
+to be looking for a stray sheep or he would never
+have come on this man, as he was heading his band for
+a pass to get over on the west side of the range. S&rsquo;pose
+we&rsquo;ll never see him again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know who this man is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His face seems sort of familiar,&rdquo; Johnson replied,
+scratching his chin. &ldquo;But he looks like a city chap, by
+his clothes, what&rsquo;s left of them. No papers or anything
+on him to tell his name. Might have come over the pass
+himself from the other side; men go everywhere in these
+hill-climbing cars they make nowadays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Somebody will be seeking information soon and then
+we&rsquo;ll know,&rdquo; the physician said. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll probably give
+his name and address himself when he comes round. But
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span>
+if I&rsquo;m not mistaken he&rsquo;ll need another sort of car if he
+does any moving about when he&rsquo;s out of bed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speaking off-hand, I&rsquo;ll say he&rsquo;ll never walk again.
+That&rsquo;s the way broken hips usually turn out; and if his
+spine is injured, as I suspect, he will probably be paralyzed
+from the waist down. Hard luck for a young man
+like him. He&rsquo;ll wish at times he was killed outright.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Unobserved by the speaker Weir and Johnson exchanged
+a meaningful look. In the minds of both moved
+the same thought, that Providence had punished Ed
+Sorenson according to his sins and more adequately than
+could man. Dreadful years were before him. He would,
+in truth, wish a thousand times that he had died at the
+foot of the ledge.</p>
+<p>Half an hour later the visitors had departed, the
+rancher going with the physician and his charge to
+Bowenville, Weir returning to San Mateo. Mary had
+driven the wagon up from the mouth of the canyon, unharnessed
+the horses, watered and fed them, and now
+was seated in the kitchen staring absently out the open
+door. After so much excitement she felt distrait, depressed.</p>
+<p>Finally she produced and dried the papers over the
+stove, in which she had re-kindled a fire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Funny how anybody should want to talk or write
+anything but English,&rdquo; she remarked to herself, gazing
+at the pages.</p>
+<p>She attempted to extract some sense from the strange
+words. At the bottom of the last sheet she deciphered,
+Felipe Martinez&rsquo; name under the notorial acknowledgment.
+All at once in scanning certain lines she came
+on names that were plain enough&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson, Vorse,
+Burkhardt, Gordon. The last must mean Judge Gordon.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span>
+Then presently she found two more names that excited
+her curiosity&ndash;&ndash;James Dent&rsquo;s and Joseph Weir&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Springing to her feet she stared at the sheets in her
+hand. For some reason or other her blood was beating
+with an odd sensation of impending discovery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why&ndash;&ndash;why&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; she stammered. &ldquo;Why, those are
+the men father told about being shot, and him looking on
+as a boy! This is a queer paper! I wish he were here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Possession of it gave her a feeling of uneasiness. Her
+father had warned her never to speak of the matter to
+any one&ndash;&ndash;and here was something about it in writing,
+or so she guessed. He had said Sorenson and the other
+men would kill him at once if they learned he had been
+a witness. That meant they would kill her too if they
+found out that she not only knew about their crime
+but had this paper as well.</p>
+<p>She looked about. Finally she retied the document
+in a tea-towel, tight and secure, and buried it deep in
+the flour barrel. They would not think of looking in
+the flour. But she went to the door just the same and
+gazed anxiously down the canyon as if enemies might
+put their heads in sight that very minute.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XX_ANXIETIES' id='CHAPTER_XX_ANXIETIES'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+<h3>ANXIETIES</h3>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear doctor, your talents are wasted in San
+Mateo. They should be employed in the larger field of
+diplomacy,&rdquo; said Steele Weir, when on his arrival from
+Terry Creek he was apprised of what had occurred
+during his absence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From all indications I shall have full opportunity
+for their use hereafter, whatever they may be, in our own
+bailiwick,&rdquo; Doctor Hosmer replied, smiling. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+more going on in our village, apparently, than in many
+a small kingdom. I merely had Janet use the truth with
+certain limitations, and there&rsquo;s no wiser course when
+part of the facts are known. Sorenson seemed quite
+satisfied with her explanation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The colloquy resulted from a meeting between Janet
+and the cattleman while Weir was guiding the young
+physician, summoned from Bowenville, to Johnson&rsquo;s
+ranch. Sorenson had appeared at the house about ten
+o&rsquo;clock that morning desiring to see the girl. They had
+talked together on the veranda, where the visitor stated
+he had effected a settlement and obtained an acknowledgment
+from Martinez, who was trying to blackmail him
+and others; that a certain paper had been prepared by
+the lawyer for use in the disreputable business; that the
+man had said he had asked Janet to secure it from an
+old chair in his office; and he wished to learn if she had
+done so.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></div>
+<p>Janet had admitted such to be the case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was odd Mr. Martinez should telephone me to go
+get it, wasn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; she had asked. &ldquo;But I went, and
+there it was stuffed in the lining of the chair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have it then?&rdquo; Sorenson stated, with a sigh of
+relief and his eyes kindling with eagerness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I haven&rsquo;t it now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What in heaven&rsquo;s name did you do with it?&rdquo; he
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I was coming out of Mr. Martinez&rsquo; office, there
+at the door was Ed. He had seen me go in and so
+stopped his car before the door; after a time he took
+the paper to see what it was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you didn&rsquo;t see its contents?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I didn&rsquo;t even open it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he has it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He had it the last I saw of the paper. He read it.
+First, he was going to burn it up because it made him
+angry, then he changed his mind, saying he would take
+it to show to you, as he thought you would be interested.
+Is there anything else you wish to know, Mr. Sorenson?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did he go from there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He drove away. From something he said, I judged
+that he planned to be away from home several days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Revolting as it was to Janet to put so fair a face on
+Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s conduct, nevertheless she had braced herself
+to go through with the part and presented to the
+cattleman a clear, natural countenance. The very simplicity
+of her story, its directness, its accord with the
+facts as he knew them, carried conviction. Innocently
+drawn into the affair, she had, in his view, been quickly
+guided out again by Ed&rsquo;s luck and wit.</p>
+<p>Ed had the deadly document. The four men concerned
+might breathe easily once more. Ed himself, in all
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span>
+probability, did not realize the true menace of old
+Saurez&rsquo; deposition, or he would at once have brought
+it to him instead of continuing on his trip: the boy no
+doubt thought it sufficient to keep it until he returned
+or mailed it back from somewhere; he perhaps had taken
+it along for a more careful reading. Good boy, anyway.
+He had got possession of the thing, that was the main
+consideration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told me too that he was leaving last evening for
+a few days&rsquo; jaunt,&rdquo; Sorenson said, rising to go. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
+likely have a whole basketful of letters from him. Finest
+boy going, Ed, even if it&rsquo;s his own father who says it.
+But he&rsquo;s the lucky one, Janet.&rdquo; The girl lowered her
+eyelids, for at this flattery she felt she could no longer
+dissemble her feelings. &ldquo;Sorry to have bothered you
+about the matter,&rdquo; he concluded. &ldquo;Fellows like this
+Martinez are always making us trouble. Run over and
+eat dinner with us soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He went down the walk, large, dominant and still with
+a trace of his early cowman&rsquo;s walk. Both his step and
+his erectness bespoke the buoyant effect of the talk upon
+his spirits, which was not to be wondered at as he had
+splendid news to import to his confr&egrave;res in crime. They
+would get rid of Martinez, destroy the paper when Ed
+delivered it, and their skeleton&ndash;&ndash;this one (of a number)
+which had unexpectedly kicked the door open and started
+to dance in public&ndash;&ndash;would be safely locked up forever.
+For Saurez, the only witness (as they believed) was now
+dead: he would make no more depositions. Certainly
+Sorenson had reason to walk briskly away from Doctor
+Hosmer&rsquo;s dwelling.</p>
+<p>Janet had somberly watched him till he was out of
+sight, then had gone inside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see how I ever imagined him an honorable
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span>
+man,&rdquo; she said to her father. &ldquo;For all his pretended
+politeness he was ready if necessary to bully me. One
+thing he can&rsquo;t ever say is that I didn&rsquo;t tell him exact
+facts; what I omitted was the circumstances giving rise
+to the facts.&rdquo; And her father, who now knew from Weir
+the story of the happening of thirty years before, assured
+her that she need be troubled over no moral hairsplitting.</p>
+<p>The incident, as Steele Weir perceived, diverted both
+suspicion and danger from Janet, at least for a time.
+A big gain that. And he was impressed by the subtle
+sagacity of the maneuver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t just a clever move, it was a flash of genius,&rdquo;
+he told father and daughter. Then after a few
+minutes more of talk he said: &ldquo;Now I must be running
+up to the dam. To-day is Sunday and the works are
+quiet, so if I find everything all right I shall strike back
+immediately for Terry Creek and the cabin up above.
+I want to make a search for that paper by daylight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After your hard night?&rdquo; Janet exclaimed. &ldquo;I
+snatched some sleep when we had done talking last night,
+but father says you and he had none. You can&rsquo;t make
+that terrible ride again without rest!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Missing a night in bed is nothing new,&rdquo; he laughed.
+&ldquo;Once or twice in my life I&rsquo;ve not had my clothes off in
+a week, and only such cat-naps as I could steal meantime.
+But I&rsquo;ll not boast of that; your father probably
+has gone longer periods without sleep, or with only
+broken rest, than ever I did. Most doctors do. Be sure
+and let me know if anything new occurs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But if Weir&rsquo;s mind was put at ease so far as Janet
+was concerned, he had more than enough other cares
+to burden his thoughts. The loss of the deposition,
+chief of all; then the matter of effecting Martinez&rsquo; release,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span>
+wherever he was immured; and finally, as he
+learned from Meyers and Atkinson on reaching camp,
+the insidious promise of trouble in the &ldquo;free whiskey
+party.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps whoever supplied the fire-water underestimated
+this copper-lined crew&rsquo;s capacity and didn&rsquo;t furnish
+enough,&rdquo; Meyers suggested. &ldquo;Nobody was really
+drunk last night and here it is nearly noon, with the
+men all hanging about camp. If there was whiskey yet
+to be had, some of these thirsty, rollicking scrappers
+of ours would be right back at the spigot this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe so,&rdquo; Atkinson admitted. &ldquo;Seems so&ndash;&ndash;and yet
+I ain&rsquo;t easy in my mind. The men don&rsquo;t act right; they
+behave as if they&rsquo;re just waiting; they&rsquo;re restless and
+not a man could I get to open his mouth about where
+they found the stuff. If there wasn&rsquo;t to be any more,
+they would have told and tried to kid me. They appear
+to me as if just biding their time. Some men weren&rsquo;t
+gone, of course, those who don&rsquo;t drink. They stayed in
+the bunk-house and they know nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll go on the supposition then that there will be
+more coming, and act accordingly,&rdquo; Weir stated, at
+once. &ldquo;Watch them close, and put up a warning that
+men who are not at work in the morning, or who bring
+booze into camp, will be fired.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the trouble,&rdquo; the superintendent declared. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t think they brought a drop in except in their skins.
+And as we say, they weren&rsquo;t drunk. There&rsquo;s not a thing
+we can object to and they know it; somebody has put
+&rsquo;em wise how to act. Here they are, sober this morning,
+behaving themselves, and so on. We can&rsquo;t keep men
+from going for a walk if they want to; we can&rsquo;t string
+barb-wire around the camp and hold them in; we can&rsquo;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span>
+even say they can&rsquo;t touch a bottle if a stranger offers
+them one when they&rsquo;re on the outside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we can hold up the consequences if they go on a
+spree,&rdquo; Steele replied. &ldquo;Most of them are satisfied with
+the work and pay and grub; they don&rsquo;t want to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but they like whiskey too, free whiskey in particular.
+They would say they&rsquo;re not getting drunk&ndash;&ndash;no
+man ever really expects to when he starts drinking&ndash;&ndash;and
+talk about their &lsquo;rights.&rsquo; There are two or three fellows
+in camp now who are doing a lot of mouthing about
+labor&rsquo;s rights; I. W. W.&rsquo;s, I&rsquo;d say. Shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised
+if they were the ring-leaders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If more whiskey comes, we must beat them to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my notion,&rdquo; Atkinson said, with a nod. &ldquo;I
+didn&rsquo;t locate the booze fountain last night, but I did
+this morning. Took a horse at daylight and rode along
+the hills; about a mile south in some trees at the foot
+of the mountain, I came across a case of empty bottles
+and a keg half-full of water. That was all, but it
+showed where the &lsquo;birthday party&rsquo; was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the place to watch, then. Better send a
+trusty man there to report to us immediately if he sees
+signs of a supply arriving for to-night. Half a dozen
+of us with axes will soon start a temperance wave in that
+locality.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In accordance with this instruction the superintendent
+dispatched a reliable man to maintain guard at the spot;
+and Weir, feeling that all had been done that was possible
+under the circumstances, gave his attention to other
+matters.</p>
+<p>But he perceived that with this &ldquo;liquor attack&rdquo; in the
+air, for it was but another of his enemies&rsquo; moves against
+him, of course, directed with the purpose of creating
+internal disorder, he must postpone his trip to the headwaters
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span>
+of Terry Creek. Knowing the crafty, persistent,
+conscienceless character of the four men inspiring the
+trick, he was under no delusion that the &ldquo;free whiskey&rdquo;
+would end with a single case of bottles. Among three
+hundred men that would amount to but two or three
+drinks apiece&ndash;&ndash;a mere taste, only a teaser. And because
+it was only a teaser, the men would want more. If he
+could carry them over this idle Sunday sober, they would
+be at work on the morrow and the chief danger be
+passed.</p>
+<p>Unfortunately a manager cannot take his workmen
+into his confidence in such a case and explain the nature
+of such a cunning attack; the thing was too complex,
+and their untutored minds would fail to perceive if
+they did not actually reject the explanation, in jealousy
+for their &ldquo;rights&rdquo; concluding that they were being hoodwinked.
+By very perverseness they would refuse to deny
+themselves a free gift of whiskey.</p>
+<p>With Pollock, however, whose interest as a director
+was vital, he could talk in full expectation of being understood.
+And moreover, owing to the entangled condition
+into which the company&rsquo;s and his own personal
+affairs had come, strict honor required that he inform
+his visitor of the entire situation and offer, if in the
+director&rsquo;s view such action would best serve the company&rsquo;s
+ends, to resign.</p>
+<p>In his office immediately after dinner he gave the
+easterner a complete account of happenings in San
+Mateo since his arrival as manager, with a statement of
+his father&rsquo;s earlier residence here, of the fraud practiced
+by Sorenson and his companions on him and his tragically
+ruined life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This, you see, has resulted not only in bringing the
+animosity of these men against me but in aggravating
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span>
+their hostility to the company,&rdquo; he concluded. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+never been a quitter. It would go sorely against the
+grain with me to quit now while under fire. But my own
+feelings or fortunes should have no weight; the company&rsquo;s
+interests alone are to be considered. I shall
+turn over the management to Meyers and retire if you
+desire; I count my contract not binding upon your board
+under the circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock arose and began to pace the office, gently
+beating the air with his eye-glasses and thoughtfully
+regarding the floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should not do your remarkable story proper justice
+if I did not give it the serious attention it deserves,&rdquo; he
+said, after a time. &ldquo;Certain aspects of the case would
+appear to favor our accepting your resignation, but on
+analysis, Weir, they turn out to be aspects only, not
+real arguments. Assuming the facts are as you relate,
+which I personally don&rsquo;t doubt, these men, if they will
+stop at nothing to injure you, will be no more reluctant
+to injure us. In fact, if you withdrew they would feel
+that they had gained a distinct triumph, forced us to
+yield to their will, and would be inspired to further and
+greater opposition. Personal hatred for you on their
+part is no ground for their fixing their enmity on the
+company. But that enmity, apparently, already existed
+before you came. Therefore if they hate you likewise,
+you and our company have a common bond. And that
+assures us of one thing, or several things: your vigilance,
+care of company property, and loyalty. Last, and
+aside from that, you are, I am confident, possessed of
+the exact qualities essential to the successful solution of
+present difficulties. We prefer as manager an energetic,
+determined, fighting man, however much disliked by envious
+neighbors, to some fellow less firm and more inclined
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span>
+to conciliation. The latter never gained anything
+with out-and-out foes, from what I&rsquo;ve seen. So you perceive,
+Weir, that when my associates and I get into a
+row we&rsquo;re not quitters either. We shall therefore just
+dismiss all talk of your resignation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very good; I wanted you to know the facts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock paced to and fro for a time longer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What really interests me is your own fight,&rdquo; he remarked
+at length. &ldquo;If the paper you spoke of should
+be found, I would be pleased to have it translated for
+you. I should also like to consult with this man Martinez;
+he seems a clever fellow. You expect to settle with
+this quartet who defrauded your father, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly. But the money isn&rsquo;t the main thing. For
+no amount of money would ever pay for the wrong done
+my father. I want to make these men suffer, suffer as
+he suffered. Call it a simple desire for revenge if you
+will; that&rsquo;s what it really is. They robbed him of his
+future as well as of his ranch and cattle. They took
+away hope and implanted in his breast terror and remorse
+wholly undeserved. But for them he might have been a
+happy, prosperous, well-thought of man in this state.
+Yes, revenge is what I want, not money. Revenge that
+will be for them an equivalent of hell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But they should pay the legal penalties of their
+crime as well,&rdquo; the lawyer spoke. &ldquo;Recovery of the
+original amounts gained by fraud from both your
+father and this man Dent, and accumulated interest as
+well as damages, should be had. In all it should make
+a large amount.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose so. Probably enough to clean the four
+men out. But though of course I should enjoy getting
+the property or money that was rightfully my father&rsquo;s
+and now mine, still I&rsquo;d let that go if I could secure the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span>
+satisfaction of making the four men pay in the coin I
+want.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be a fool, Weir. Don&rsquo;t overlook any bets, as
+the saying is. Taking their property away from them
+will but add to their pain and to your pleasure. Now
+we must see if Dent&rsquo;s heirs can be found. I suggest
+that you employ some good attorney to start a hunt
+along that line, for an action by Dent&rsquo;s relatives will
+indirectly strengthen your own case. I&rsquo;m doubtful
+about one thing, however&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your courts here, and the value of this old Mexican&rsquo;s
+deposition. The case could be brought in a Federal
+Court as you&rsquo;re a non-resident, which would solve
+the first point, but how much weight would this Mexican&rsquo;s
+testimony have against white men of standing and
+after a period of thirty years. If you could find another
+witness&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was one, a white boy, so Martinez hinted,&rdquo;
+Weir said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Find him, find him. Search the whole country until
+you find him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a big undertaking, when I don&rsquo;t even know
+his name or whether he&rsquo;s alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begin nevertheless.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I had better find my lost paper or secure another
+statement from old Saurez first. At present I have
+absolutely nothing that a court would look at; I haven&rsquo;t
+as much as I had yesterday. And even Martinez has
+been spirited away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m interested, greatly interested,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+not actively engaged in legal affairs at home and I may
+stay on here awhile longer. Perhaps I can assist you;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span>
+it promises excitement, at any rate. After dry corporation
+matters, it should be a refreshing change&ndash;&ndash;and I
+haven&rsquo;t had a real vacation in years. Possibly this is
+the time to take one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I appreciate your kindness in speaking so, Mr. Pollock.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;m quite selfish; I&rsquo;m seeking entertainment.
+And your peppery affairs promise it. Do you give me
+permission to take a hand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Gladly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then as a beginning I&rsquo;ll go to town. Saurez, you
+say, was the old Mexican&rsquo;s name? And give me the
+facts again as you know them about the affair of your
+father and the man Dent in the saloon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock listened closely as Steele Weir repeated the
+story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all I know, and it&rsquo;s meager at best,&rdquo; the engineer
+concluded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pity you didn&rsquo;t get to read the deposition, which
+would have increased your fund of information. More
+unfortunate it is that you haven&rsquo;t the paper itself. But
+we&rsquo;ll do the best we can without it for the present. Kindly
+have some one drive me in to San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Atkinson, the superintendent, is going there for
+me. I thought he might pick up something of Martinez&rsquo;
+whereabouts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where does Judge Gordon live?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tell you that. But you can easily learn when
+you reach town.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, the Judge used to handle company matters,
+you know.&rdquo; The smile on Pollock&rsquo;s lips was inscrutable.
+&ldquo;I used to have frequent conferences with him when I was
+here at the inception of our project. He is very
+shrewd in certain ways, but he impressed me as being
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span>
+not exactly&ndash;&ndash;what shall I say?&ndash;&ndash;&lsquo;cold steel&rsquo;, for instance.&rdquo;
+And still wearing the thin smile, he went out.</p>
+<p>If Weir had not had so many things to make his
+mind grave, from a missing paper and a missing lawyer
+to mysterious whiskey and fierce enemies, he would have
+leaned back and laughed.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXI_THE_WEAK_LINK' id='CHAPTER_XXI_THE_WEAK_LINK'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+<h3>THE WEAK LINK</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Though the sun was bright that day, unseen forces
+were gathering in the sky above town, mesa and mountains,
+not of weather but of fate, to loose their
+lightnings. Sunday peace seemed to reign, the languid
+summer Sunday peace of tranquil nature. Yet even
+through this there was a faint breath of impending
+events, a quiver or excitement in the air, an increasing
+expectation on the part of men, who sensed but did not
+realize what was to come.</p>
+<p>All day whispers and hints had passed among the
+people in San Mateo and out to isolated farms and up
+nearby creeks, kindling in the ignorant, brown-skinned
+Mexicans a lively interest and an exorbitant curiosity.
+Nothing was said definitely; nothing was promised outright.
+So in consequence speculation ran wild and rumors
+wilder. The hints had to do with the manager of
+the dam who had shot the strange Mexican: something
+was to be done with him, something was to happen to him.
+He had been arrested, or was to be arrested; he had confessed,
+or was about to confess the murder; he was going
+to kill other Mexicans, or had killed other Mexicans; he
+was about to raid San Mateo with his workmen and slay
+the town; he was to be hanged;&ndash;&ndash;and so on eternally.
+Uncertain as was everything else, what was sure apparently
+was that something would happen at San Mateo
+that night.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210' name='page_210'></a>210</span></div>
+<p>Families visiting about in wagons spread the news.
+Horsemen were at pains to ride to outlying Mexican
+ranch houses, for what messenger is so welcome as he
+who brings tales of great doings? He might be sure of
+an audience at once. So it was that the plan craftily put
+in operation by Weir&rsquo;s enemies, to gather and inflame the
+people, under cover of whose pressure and excitement
+when the engineer was arrested he might be slain by a
+pretended rescue or popular demonstration, whichever
+should serve best, produced the expected result. During
+the afternoon wagons and horsemen and men on foot
+began to appear in town, to join already aroused relatives
+or friends at their adobe houses or to loaf along
+the main street in groups.</p>
+<p>Outwardly there were few signs in the aspect of the
+Mexican folk of something extraordinary developing.
+But to the sheriff, Madden, aroused from an afternoon
+nap at his home by a telephoned message from the county
+attorney requesting him to come to the court house, the
+unwonted number in the town was in itself a significant
+fact.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know this was a fiesta, Alvarez. What&rsquo;s up
+with you people?&rdquo; he asked of one he met on the street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The fiesta is to be to-night, eh?&rdquo; the man laughed.
+&ldquo;Have you this engineer locked up yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What engineer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The killer, the gun-man, that Weir. It is said he is
+already arrested and is to be hanged from the big cottonwood
+at dark beside the jail. It is also said he is
+still loose and bringing five hundred workmen to burn
+the town, rob the bank, kill the men and steal the girls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he is to do either, it&rsquo;s news to me,&rdquo; Madden said,
+and proceeded to the office of Lucerio, the county attorney.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></div>
+<p>Madden was a blunt man, who for policy&rsquo;s sake might
+close his eyes to unimportant political influence as exercised
+by the Sorenson crowd. But he was no mere
+compliant tool. This was his first term in office. He had
+never yet crossed swords with the cattleman and the
+others associated with him, because the occasion had
+never arisen. When he had allowed himself to be nominated
+for sheriff, though Sorenson might imagine
+Madden to be at his orders, the latter had accepted the
+office with certain well-defined ideas of his duty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want of me?&rdquo; he asked Lucerio, for
+whom he had little liking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I desire to tell you, Madden, that at eight o&rsquo;clock
+I&rsquo;ll have a warrant for you to serve on the engineer
+Weir. You&rsquo;ll go to the dam and arrest him and bring
+him in to the jail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, apparently the whole country except me knew
+this was to happen. The town&rsquo;s filling up as if it were
+going to be a bull-fight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know nothing of that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right; give me the warrant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At eight o&rsquo;clock. I don&rsquo;t want it served before then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have my reasons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorenson? And Vorse and Burkhardt? They&rsquo;ve
+stirred up this charge against the man.&rdquo; Lucerio making
+an angry answer, he continued. &ldquo;Well, everybody
+knows you jump when they pull the string. I&rsquo;ll have
+to serve the warrant, naturally. But I&rsquo;m going to tell
+you what I think: you&rsquo;ve faked the evidence you&rsquo;ve got;
+we had the truth from Martinez and Janet Hosmer at
+the inquest; you&rsquo;re trying to railroad Weir to the gallows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sorenson shall know what you&rsquo;ve said. As for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span>
+me&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;the Mexican swelled with outraged dignity&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;the
+evidence was placed in my hands. It warrants the
+engineer&rsquo;s arrest and trial. You attend to your department
+and I&rsquo;ll attend to mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All to the good, Mr. County Attorney. I&rsquo;ll arrest
+him; he won&rsquo;t make me any trouble on that score. But
+you won&rsquo;t find it so easy to prove his guilt. And afterwards,
+just look out, for if he doesn&rsquo;t come gunning for
+you and fill your carcass full of lead, I miss my guess.
+You won&rsquo;t be able to hide behind Sorenson, either.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He left the county attorney at that, the latter unable
+despite all his efforts to hide his uneasiness and
+alarm. Madden reaching the street looked at his watch;
+it was half past five, so he started home for supper.</p>
+<p>Some way before him he saw Martinez walking. The
+lawyer did not stop to converse with any of the loiterers
+along the street, but moved steadily along. He had
+come out of Vorse&rsquo;s saloon and was going towards his
+office. Just then the sound of an automobile caused
+Madden to turn his head in time to see Weir speed along
+but stop with a sudden application of brakes as he
+caught sight of the attorney.</p>
+<p>A hail brought Martinez to the car. A few minutes&rsquo;
+rapid speech there followed. Then the lawyer mounted
+beside Weir, the machine went on, turning into a side
+street and vanishing. To Madden there was nothing unusual
+in the circumstance, and he only noted the surprise
+and silence along the street at the engineer&rsquo;s passage.
+The Mexicans would know the man wasn&rsquo;t yet arrested
+at any rate, he thought. But he should like to
+learn what was the purpose in bringing them all to town!
+He would keep an eye open for any lynching nonsense
+if it were attempted.</p>
+<p>Weir and Martinez were hastening to Judge Gordon&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span>
+house, for shortly before the engineer had received an
+unexpected call from Pollock for him to join him there.
+Evidently the eastern lawyer had turned a card of some
+sort; and Weir had gone at once, wondering what the
+meeting might portend. The sight of Martinez, free and
+composed of hearing, walking along the street, further
+amazed him.</p>
+<p>He perceived, however, when the lawyer stepped out
+to the car from Vorse&rsquo;s place that he was pale, his mouth
+tight-drawn and his eyes glittering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got my message?&rdquo; the latter asked, quickly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The telephone message, yes. Janet Hosmer got the
+paper also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They dragged me to Vorse&rsquo;s cellar,&rdquo; Martinez whispered
+fiercely. &ldquo;They beat me with their fists, Vorse and
+Burkhardt. Then they tied me and squeezed my eyeballs
+till I could stand the pain no longer and told. I&rsquo;ve
+been there ever since, bound and without food or water,
+the devils! Sorenson came with them last night, afterwards.
+And now he and Vorse came again&ndash;&ndash;there they
+are back there in the bar yet&ndash;&ndash;and gave me a draft on a
+Chicago bank for a thousand dollars and said to get out
+and stay out of New Mexico and never open my mouth
+about what had happened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get in with me,&rdquo; Weir ordered.</p>
+<p>At Judge Gordon&rsquo;s house the lawyer said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are going in here? He&rsquo;s one of them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it. Come in, however. I may need you.
+You&rsquo;re not going to leave San Mateo, but there&rsquo;s no reason
+why you shouldn&rsquo;t cash the draft. That&rsquo;s only part
+of the damages you&rsquo;ll make them pay for what you underwent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t money I want from them,&rdquo; Martinez replied,
+between his teeth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></div>
+<p>Judge Gordon lived in a rambling adobe house two
+squares from the Hosmer dwelling. It was old but had
+been kept in good repair, and as he had never married
+he had lived comfortably enough with an old Mexican
+pair as servants. One of these, the woman, admitted the
+visitors at their knock and conducted them, as if expected,
+to the Judge&rsquo;s study, a long room lined with
+cases of books, mostly legal, and filled with old-fashioned
+furniture.</p>
+<p>That something had occurred to change the Judge&rsquo;s
+aspect during the hours in which Pollock had been
+closeted with him was at once apparent. He looked
+older, broken, haggard of face, terrified.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I met Mr. Martinez and brought him along,&rdquo; Weir
+said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was that necessary?&rdquo; Judge Gordon asked, heavily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s my attorney, for one thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;ve been a prisoner in Vorse&rsquo;s cellar for twenty-four
+hours for another, and you&rsquo;re one of those responsible
+for my being there and for the torture to which
+I was subjected,&rdquo; Martinez exclaimed, glaring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Martinez, I give you my word of honor that
+I knew nothing of your incarceration until this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That for your word of honor!&rdquo; the lawyer cried,
+snapping his fingers in the air. &ldquo;And in any case, you&rsquo;re
+an accessory after the fact. You let me stay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pollock stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this Mr. Martinez? Glad to meet you, sir. Mr.
+Weir has spoken very favorably of you and of your
+handling of legal matters for the irrigation company, of
+which I am a director. Pollock is my name. Are you a
+notary? Ah, that is good. There will be some papers
+to acknowledge and witness and so on.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></div>
+<p>He pointed at seats, seemingly having direction of
+matters, and the visitors sat down. Judge Gordon had
+sagged down in the padded leather chair in which
+he sat; his face was colorless, his eyes moving aimlessly
+to and fro, his white mustache and hair in disorder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us begin on business at once,&rdquo; Pollock stated, on
+his feet as was usual when entering a discussion and
+removing his eye-glasses. &ldquo;I called on Judge Gordon
+this afternoon after my talk with you, Weir, and disclosed
+the evidence which has been gathered relative to
+the fraud perpetrated on your father and the crime
+against the man Dent. I assumed, and rightly, that to a
+man of the Judge&rsquo;s legal mind the facts we hold would
+prove the futility of resistance, and I set out to convince
+him of the wisdom of sparing himself a long losing
+fight, in which he would be opposing not only the evidence
+which was sure to convict him, and not only you,
+Mr. Weir, but our company which proposed to see the
+fight through. I went so far, Weir, as to promise him
+immunity from your wrath and from public prosecution.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir arose slowly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;no.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, my dear fellow&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. He made my father&rsquo;s life a hell for thirty years.
+Why should I spare him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If granting him freedom from prosecution did actually
+spare him anything, I should say &lsquo;No&rsquo; also, standing
+in your place. But with the facts made public as
+they will be, with Judge Gordon losing his legislative
+office and the esteem in which he had been held, with him
+relinquishing the bulk of his fortune as he agrees, with
+his finding it necessary to go elsewhere to live at his time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span>
+of life, with the thought constantly in his mind of how
+low he has been brought, don&rsquo;t you think he will be suffering
+quite adequately? I should think so. He would
+probably die quicker in prison, but I believe he will suffer
+more outside. See, I don&rsquo;t hesitate to measure the alternatives,
+for the Judge and I have discussed and canvassed
+the whole situation, which was necessary, of course, in
+order to arrive at a clear understanding.&rdquo; And Pollock
+smiled genially.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does he admit my charges?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He hasn&rsquo;t denied them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will he admit them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve outlined exactly what we must have&ndash;&ndash;deeds to
+his property and an acknowledged statement of the
+Joseph Weir and James Dent affair, supplementing the
+Saurez affidavit, which by the way he at first thought
+we did not possess but which an account of what happened
+last night in the mountains and your recovery of
+the same&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;Pollock&rsquo;s eyelid dropped for an instant
+towards Weir&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;convinced him of. This statement is
+not to be produced as evidence against his associates
+except in the last extremity, and if not needed is always
+to be kept secret. We are to give him, when the papers
+are signed, a draft for ten thousand dollars. This will
+permit him to have something to live on. He states that
+he will want to go from San Mateo at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>During this speech Weir&rsquo;s eyes had glanced to and
+fro between the lawyer ticking off his words with his
+glasses and the figure in the leather chair. Old and
+shattered as Judge Gordon had suddenly become,
+wretched as Weir saw him to be, the engineer nevertheless
+felt no pity. The man had been in the conspiracy that
+had ruined his father; he suffered now not because of
+remorse but through fear of public opinion; and was a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span>
+fox turned craven because he found himself enmeshed
+in a net. And to save his own skin he was selling out
+his friends.</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s face went dark, but Pollock quickly stepped
+forward and drew him into a corner of the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep calm, man,&rdquo; was the lawyer&rsquo;s low advice. &ldquo;Do
+you think if we had him tied up as tightly as I&rsquo;ve made
+him believe that I should propose a compromise in his
+case. He&rsquo;s the weak link. Do you think I&rsquo;ve had an
+easy time the last three hours bringing him to the point
+he&rsquo;s at? I had to invent evidence that couldn&rsquo;t possibly
+exist. I had to give him a merciless mental &lsquo;third degree.&rsquo;
+I told him if he refused I was going to Sorenson with
+the same offer, who would jump at the chance. And, my
+dear man, we haven&rsquo;t, in reality, enough proof to convict
+a mouse since you lost that paper. So now, so far as
+he&rsquo;s concerned, you must bend a little, a very little&ndash;&ndash;and
+you&rsquo;ll be able to hang the remaining three.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This incisive reasoning was not to be denied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I yield,&rdquo; said Weir.</p>
+<p>Beaming, Mr. Pollock walked back to the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir consents,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;Mr. Martinez, if
+you will go to your office and bring the necessary forms
+and your seal we can make the transfers and statement
+and wind the matter up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An hour later Judge Gordon had signed the deeds,
+stock certificates from his safe and bills of sale spread
+before him, passing the ownership of lands, cattle and
+shares in companies to Pollock for equitable division
+between Weir and the Dent heirs if found. The old
+Mexican servants were called in and witnessed his shaky
+signatures to the papers.</p>
+<p>At the statement regarding the Dent shooting and
+Weir fraud, which Pollock had dictated to Martinez with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span>
+Gordon&rsquo;s assistance, he staggered to his feet while the
+pen dropped from his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t sign it, I can&rsquo;t sign it; they would kill me!&rdquo; he
+groaned.</p>
+<p>The two aged servants stared at him wonderingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Judge, they&rsquo;ll never know of it until it&rsquo;s
+too late for them to do anything&ndash;&ndash;if they ever know,&rdquo;
+came the easterner&rsquo;s words, in smooth persuasiveness.</p>
+<p>Judge Gordon brushed a hand over his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give me a moment,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>He stood for a time motionless. Then he walked across
+the room and opened a door and entered an inner chamber.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t live a year after this,&rdquo; Pollock whispered
+to his companions.</p>
+<p>The speaker could have shortened the time immensely
+and have still been safe in his prophecy. For when at the
+end of five minutes he sent the woman to request the
+Judge to return, she stumbled out of the bed-chamber
+with affrighted eyes. She said the Judge was asleep on
+his bed and could not be aroused.</p>
+<p>Sleep of the profoundest, the men discovered on going
+in. And in his fingers was an empty vial. So far as
+Judge Gordon was concerned Weir had had his revenge.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXII_AN_OLD_ADOBE_HOUSE' id='CHAPTER_XXII_AN_OLD_ADOBE_HOUSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+<h3>AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Revenge Weir had. But even in death Judge Gordon,
+true to his evasive, contriving character, had tricked
+him; and the irony lay in the fact that in this last act
+the trick was unpremeditated, unconscious, unintentional.
+Instead of the signed confession, necessary above everything
+else, which seemed almost in his fingers, the man
+had left a little poison vial.</p>
+<p>Night had settled over the earth when the three men,
+after directing the Mexican servants to bring the undertaker,
+went out of the house, for considerable time had
+been occupied in the discussion and the preparation of
+papers preceding Judge Gordon&rsquo;s tragic end. With
+him Mr. Pollock carried the documents pertaining to the
+property restitution. These, considered in connection
+with the suicide, would constitute something like a confession,
+he grimly asserted.</p>
+<p>Avoiding the main street of San Mateo they drove out
+of the town for camp. The first part of the ride was
+pursued in silence, for each was busy with his own
+thoughts in consequence of the sudden shocking termination
+of the meeting. When about half way to camp,
+however, their attention was taken from the subject by
+a sight wholly unexpected, a scene of high colors and of
+a spirit that mocked at what had just happened.</p>
+<p>Some way off from the road, at one side, two bonfires
+burned brightly before an adobe house, the flames leaping
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span>
+upward in the darkness and lighting the long low-roofed
+dwelling and the innumerable figures of persons.
+At the distance the place was from the highway, perhaps
+two hundred yards, one could make out only the shadowy
+forms of men&ndash;&ndash;of a considerable number of men, at that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never saw any one at that old tumble-down house
+before, Martinez,&rdquo; Weir remarked, lessening the speed
+of the car. &ldquo;Always supposed it empty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one does live there. The ground belongs to
+Vorse, who leases it for farming to Oterez. Perhaps
+Oterez is giving a party there. They are dancing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir brought the machine to a full stop, with suspicion
+rapidly growing in his mind. The place was
+owned by Vorse, for one thing, and the number about the
+house was too large for an ordinary Mexican family
+merry-making, for another. In view of what had occurred
+the previous night all &ldquo;parties&rdquo; in the neighborhood
+of the dam deserved inquiry, and this house was but
+a mile from camp.</p>
+<p>They could now hear the sound of music, the shrill
+quick scrap of a pair of fiddles and the notes of guitars.
+Against the fire-light too they could distinguish the whirl
+of skirts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just run over there, will you, Martinez, and have a
+look at that dance?&rdquo; Weir said. &ldquo;See how much whiskey
+is there, and who the people are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Mexican jumped down, climbed through the barb-wire
+fence bordering the field and disappeared towards
+the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you about some one giving the men booze last
+night,&rdquo; the engineer addressed his remaining companion.
+&ldquo;We found the place off south along the hills where that
+business happened, and stationed a man there to warn
+us if another attempt was made to use the spot. But I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span>
+shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised if this is the location used for
+to-night; it has all the signs. We suspected that this
+evening would be the real blow-out and if the men are
+going there I shall send down the foremen and engineers
+to break it up. Vorse&rsquo;s owning this house and his being
+the source of the liquor is almost proof. I met Atkinson
+returning to the dam when you sent him back from town
+and he&rsquo;ll know something is up if the workmen have been
+melting away from camp. This is simply another damnably
+treacherous move of the gang against us to interfere
+with our work, starting a big drunk and perhaps a
+row. We&rsquo;ll stop it right at the beginning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are the officials of this county so completely under
+Sorenson and his crowd&rsquo;s thumbs that they won&rsquo;t move
+in a case like this?&rdquo; Pollock questioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we must act on our own initiative, as you say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s our only recourse. Giving whiskey isn&rsquo;t actually
+an illegal act&ndash;&ndash;and they&rsquo;re giving it away, not
+trying to sell it here without a government licence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The thing&rsquo;s illegal if it&rsquo;s part of a conspiracy to disrupt
+our work, and if we can secure proof that such is
+the fact it will but add one more item to the score to be
+settled with these San Mateo outlaws.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are more men going there. See them?&rdquo; Weir
+asked. &ldquo;You hear them on the road ahead of us.
+They&rsquo;re ducking through the fence and crossing to the
+house. Our workmen. The thing&rsquo;s plain now; they had
+word there would be another &lsquo;party&rsquo; to-night, but they
+didn&rsquo;t know just where until they received word this
+evening. I suppose the whole camp except a few men
+will be here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t they turn ugly if you interfere?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t help that. I&rsquo;ll send men down with axes and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span>
+when the booze is poured on the ground it makes no difference
+then; the men will be kept sober. If they are
+stubborn, I&rsquo;ll run a new bunch in and fire these fellows.
+But I don&rsquo;t imagine they will quit work, however surly,
+for they know whiskey&rsquo;s no excuse. Men usually cool
+down after a night&rsquo;s sleep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From where they sat and since Weir had turned out
+his car lamps, they could see the steady string of men
+emerging from the darkness of the field and approaching
+the house, to quickly dissolve in the gathering already
+there. In their lively steps, as well as in the eager
+voices occasionally raised along the dark road, the men&rsquo;s
+desire to join in the debauch was apparent.</p>
+<p>With the swelling of the crowd the scraping of the
+fiddles became louder, the dancing more furious, shouts
+and yells more frequent, while a dense line of men passing
+and jamming in and out of the door pointed only too
+plainly that inside the house liquor flowed. This would
+be no matter of a few drinks per man, but a big drunk
+if not stopped.</p>
+<p>Martinez confirmed this opinion on his return.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are two barrels inside and a couple of fellows
+are dipping it up in tin cups like water,&rdquo; said he.
+&ldquo;They&rsquo;re not even troubling to draw the stuff; the barrels
+have been placed on end and the heads knocked out.
+It will be the biggest spree San Mateo ever saw, with
+plenty of fighting after awhile. Women, you know, always
+start fights during a spree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those surely are not women from town,&rdquo; Weir exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no. I never saw them before. Brought in here
+from somewhere&ndash;&ndash;Santa F&eacute; perhaps, El Paso more
+likely. You know the kind who would mix with that
+crowd&ndash;&ndash;tough girls. They&rsquo;re wearing low necks and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span>
+short skirts, red stockings and all that. You know the
+kind. Out of joints and dives somewhere. There&rsquo;s only
+a dozen, but they keep circulating and dancing with different
+ones. I just put my head through a window to
+look inside, which is lighted by a big kerosene lamp
+hanging from the roof; and I tell you, gentlemen, it made
+me sick the way those two fellows were dipping up whiskey
+and the crowd drinking it down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And more men coming all the time,&rdquo; Weir stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And more coming, yes. It will be very bad there by
+midnight. Vorse and Burkhardt and Sorenson are managing
+the thing, of course.&rdquo; Martinez lighted a cigarette
+and stepped into the car. &ldquo;No mistake about that,
+for Vorse&rsquo;s bartender is one of the men at the barrels.
+And I imagine Judge Gordon knew this thing was coming
+off though he made no mention of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Since we were ignorant of the matter, he naturally
+wouldn&rsquo;t inform us,&rdquo; Pollock remarked, dryly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Time to put a stop to the show before it grows
+bad,&rdquo; Weir stated resolutely. And he started the machine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it can be stopped,&rdquo; Martinez replied.</p>
+<p>That was the question, whether or not now it would
+be possible even to reach and destroy the barrels inside
+the house, what with the numbers who would oppose the
+move and what with the state of intoxication that must
+rapidly prevail at the place.</p>
+<p>For as they drove away they could already detect in
+the mad revel about the old adobe dwelling a faster beat
+in the sharp shrieking music, a wilder abandon in the
+movements of the figures about the flames, a more reckless,
+fiercer note in the cries and oaths.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is deviltry wholesale,&rdquo; Pollock said. &ldquo;On a
+grand scale, one might put it.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></div>
+<p>So thought a horseman who approached and halted
+almost at the same spot where the car had rested. This
+was Madden who with a warrant for Weir&rsquo;s arrest in
+his pocket had arrived opposite the house a moment
+after the automobile&rsquo;s departure. He had secured the
+warrant at eight o&rsquo;clock according to the county attorney&rsquo;s
+request, but he had taken his own time about
+setting off to serve it.</p>
+<p>For a quarter of a mile he had been interested in the
+evidences of unwonted hilarity at the usually untenanted
+structure. Now he sat in his saddle, silent and motionless,
+observing the distant scene. He easily guessed the
+men were from the construction camp and that liquor
+was running.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can almost smell it here, Dick,&rdquo; he addressed his
+horse.</p>
+<p>But two circumstances puzzled him. One was that
+there had been no news in town of such a big affair impending
+for the night; the second, that there were
+women present&ndash;&ndash;for no Mexican, however ignorant,
+would take or allow his women folks to attend such a
+howling show. Coming on top of the crowd in town, he
+wondered if this business might not be linked up with
+Weir&rsquo;s affairs. These were his workmen and this was
+Vorse&rsquo;s farm-house and very likely Vorse&rsquo;s liquor. After
+he had arrested the engineer he would look into the thing.</p>
+<p>Fifteen minutes later, when he had gone on, other
+passers-by paused for a minute on the road to stare at
+the amazing picture across the field. These were Dr.
+Hosmer and Janet, Johnson and his daughter Mary: the
+two men being in the doctor&rsquo;s car, the two girls in Janet&rsquo;s
+runabout.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What on earth is going on there!&rdquo; Janet exclaimed,
+when the two machines had pulled up.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span></div>
+<p>The two fires, fed by fresh fuel, were leaping higher
+than ever, bringing out in strong relief the long squat
+building, the dark, restless, noisy throng, and the space
+of illuminated earth. Against the night the flames and
+building and mob of hundreds of men seemed a crimson
+vision from some inferno to an accompaniment of mad
+music.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The camp&rsquo;s gone on a tear; drive ahead,&rdquo; her father
+said. &ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t a sight for you girls to look at.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with that the two cars sped forward towards
+the dam, where on this night so much was converging.
+For their occupants already had had an experience that
+had started them at once to seek the man around whose
+figure were swirling a hundred passions and dark currents
+of destiny.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIII_WITH_FANGS_BARED' id='CHAPTER_XXIII_WITH_FANGS_BARED'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+<h3>WITH FANGS BARED</h3>
+</div>
+<p>That Sunday afternoon Janet Hosmer had awakened
+about sunset from an after-dinner sleep, rested and refreshed,
+with her mind continuing to be occupied by
+thoughts of Steele Weir about whom had eddied her
+dreams. The man was no longer the mystery he had
+been, since now she knew all the circumstances of his
+life, and on that account was nearer, more human, and
+yet as compelling.</p>
+<p>That on his part his interest went beyond mere friendship
+she had recognized from his voice and eyes when
+they were together. Ah, in truth, how his tones deepened
+and his look betrayed his feelings! At the thought
+Janet&rsquo;s heart beat faster and her cheeks grew warm and
+an indefinable joy seemed to fill her breast. She would
+not deny it: his presence, his touch gave her a greater
+happiness than she had ever known. At a single stride,
+as it were, he had come into the middle of her life and
+dominated her mind and changed her whole outlook.</p>
+<p>How he too had changed and grown in the coming!
+From the avaricious, calculating, heartless manager of
+the construction work, as she seeing through colored
+San Mateo eyes had believed him to be, he now stood
+forth a figure of power, undaunted by difficulties, undismayed
+by enemies however numerous, fearless to a
+fault, stern perhaps&ndash;&ndash;but who would not have been made
+stern in his place?&ndash;&ndash;and determined, cool, resourceful,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span>
+alert, and of an integrity as firm and upright as a
+marble shaft. Yet beneath this exterior his heart was
+quick and tender for those who needed sympathy or
+help, and his hand swift to aid.</p>
+<p>More than once a hot flush burned on Janet&rsquo;s face,
+as sitting there on the vine-hung veranda in the gathering
+dusk, recollection assailed her with memories of
+wasted kindnesses given the infamous Ed Sorenson, of
+trust bestowed and of love plighted. That passage in
+her life seemed to leave her contaminated forever. It
+burned in her soul like a disgrace or a dishonorable act.
+But Steele Weir&ndash;&ndash;and she swam in glorious ether at the
+thought&ndash;&ndash;did not appear to view it in that light.</p>
+<p>Juanita running in the twilight to the house interrupted
+her introspection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came to tell you,&rdquo; the Mexican girl exclaimed
+panting before Janet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me what?&rdquo; For Juanita&rsquo;s reappearance in itself
+was unusual, as Sunday afternoon and evening were her
+own to spend at home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;People are saying Mr. Weir is to be arrested and
+hanged from a tree in the court house yard! Everybody
+has come to town to see. Three uncles and aunts and
+nine cousins of ours have already come to our house
+from where they live four miles down the river. All the
+town is talking about it. But though I said nothing, I
+knew how Mr. Weir had saved you and that he had done
+nothing to be hanged for. If anybody is to be killed it
+ought to be that Ed Sorenson.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure of this, Juanita?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes, Miss Janet. It is so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then this is part of the plot against him; let me
+think. They might arrest him but they would never dare
+try to hang him, unless they could pretend&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span></div>
+<p>What they might pretend Janet never stated, as at
+that instant a motor car dashed up and stopped before
+the gate. Even in the gloom she made out that the
+figure garbed in a gray dust coat was Sorenson&rsquo;s.
+Springing out of the machine, he jerked the gate open
+and strode towards the house, while a premonition of
+a fresh and unpleasant turn of affairs quivered in Janet&rsquo;s
+mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come back again, you see,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Step inside
+where you can hear what I have to say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words were like an order; the man&rsquo;s manner, indeed,
+was overbearing and brutal. But the girl concealing
+her resentment, preceded him into the house and
+bade Juanita light a lamp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now you get out!&rdquo; Sorenson commanded the
+servant in so savage a tone that she fled to the kitchen
+without waiting to consult Janet&rsquo;s eyes. &ldquo;I see your
+father isn&rsquo;t here,&rdquo; he continued, addressing Janet.</p>
+<p>The latter made no reply. To be sure, Dr. Hosmer
+was not in the room but he was in the house, sleeping.
+Let the cattleman think him absent if he wished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So much the better; if he&rsquo;s not about, he won&rsquo;t try
+to interfere,&rdquo; the man went on. &ldquo;Now, my girl, I&rsquo;ve
+learned all about your tricks, and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, you talk like that to me in my own house!&rdquo;
+Janet broke in, with a flash of eyes. &ldquo;You will walk
+out of that door this instant and never set foot here
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will I, you slippery young Jezebel? I&rsquo;ll do nothing
+of the kind until I&rsquo;m ready, which will be when you&rsquo;ve
+handed over that paper. Don&rsquo;t try to deny that you
+have it or Weir has it; I suppose he has now, and I&rsquo;ll
+be forced to go shoot him down as he deserves. But I
+came here first to make sure. It would be just like the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span>
+rest of the schemes of you two to have you keep it, thinking
+I&rsquo;d be fooled. I have half a notion to wring your
+white neck for lying to me to-day&ndash;&ndash;lying, while all the
+time you knew my son was hanging between life and
+death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So savage was his voice, so threatening his visage and
+air that Janet retreated a step. His hands worked as
+if he actually felt her soft throat in his clutch; his huge
+body and big beefy head swayed towards her ominously;
+while his eyes carried a baleful light that revealed in full
+intensity the man&rsquo;s real brutal soul. Hitherto carefully
+coated in an appearance of respectability fitted to a
+station of wealth, influence and prominence, he now stood
+as he truly was, domineering, repellant, lawless. Janet
+could at that minute measure the close kinship of father
+and son.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fortunately a man in Bowenville recognized Ed, or
+I should never have known he had been injured,&rdquo; Sorenson
+went on. &ldquo;So your little scheme to keep me in ignorance
+went wrong. The doctor &rsquo;phoned me about five
+and I took my wife and we rushed there, and I have just
+this instant returned. Do you know what the doctor
+says? Ed will live, but be a life cripple, a useless wreck,
+a bundle of smashed bones, always sitting in a chair, always
+eating out his heart. And all because of you and
+that engineer! Ed was conscious; he told me the real
+story about which you lied,&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not lie,&rdquo; Janet stated, firmly.</p>
+<p>Sorenson made an angry gesture as if to sweep aside
+this declaration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He told me how you promised to slip away with him
+to spend a week in the mountains, and how you warned
+this Weir so that the two of you could trick my son and
+get him out of the way. You, who always pretended to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span>
+be so innocent and virtuous! And then Weir caused the
+accident up there in the hills that has crippled my boy
+for life! Did it to get him out of the path to you, and
+you helped, like the traitress you are; and the two of
+you took the paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s form had stiffened at these insulting speeches.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your son is the liar,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Did he tell you how
+he flung a blanket over my head as Juanita and I were
+coming out of Martinez&rsquo; office? How he tied my hands
+and feet and carried me off like a victim&ndash;&ndash;and victim he
+intended me to be! Yes, Mr. Weir rescued me because
+Juanita met and told him what had happened and he
+followed. Your son was drunk. He tried to commit a
+crime because I had rejected him a week before, on learning
+that during our engagement he had endeavored to
+mislead another girl. A drunkard and a criminal both,
+that&rsquo;s your son. And he alone brought on his accident
+by his drunken, reckless driving. Now I&rsquo;ve told you the
+truth; leave the house!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t put that kind of a story over on me,&rdquo; he
+snarled. &ldquo;I believe what Ed said. Even if he has had
+affairs with other girls, that makes no difference now.
+You tried to double-cross him; you&rsquo;ve wrecked his body
+and life; and you shall pay for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Neither of the pair in their intense excitement had
+heard a wagon drive to a stop before the house. Whether
+in fact they would have heard a peal of thunder might be
+a question. Sorenson, enraged by his son&rsquo;s injury and
+burning for revenge, was oblivious to all else but his
+passion, while Janet Hosmer, divided between contempt
+and fear, had but the single thought of ridding herself
+of the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You cannot injure me,&rdquo; she said, in reply to his savage
+utterance.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll drive you and your father out of this town and
+this state,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;They shall know here in San
+Mateo, and wherever you go if it&rsquo;s in my power to reach
+there, what sort of a pretending, double-faced, disreputable
+wanton&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You coward!&rdquo; Janet burst out.</p>
+<p>Then she turned to flee out of the room to arouse her
+father. But Sorenson was too quick for her; he sprang
+forward and seized one of her wrists.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No you don&rsquo;t, you perfumed wench!&rdquo; he growled.</p>
+<p>A scream formed on Janet&rsquo;s lips. The heavy, rage-crimsoned
+face bent over her as if to kill her by its very
+nearness. Brute the man was, and as a brute he appeared
+determined she should feel his power. She pulled
+back, jerking to free herself, and shrieked.</p>
+<p>Intervention came from an unexpected quarter. Rushing
+into the room came the rancher Johnson, followed by
+his daughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let go of her,&rdquo; the man ordered, harshly.</p>
+<p>Sorenson looked about over his shoulder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep out of this, and get out,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>Johnson leaped forward and struck the other on the
+jaw. The cattleman releasing his hold on Janet staggered
+back, at the same time thrusting a hand under
+his coat.</p>
+<p>But the rancher&rsquo;s pistol was whipped forth first.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d try that game, would you?&rdquo; Johnson said, with
+his ragged beard out-thrust and stiff. &ldquo;Put up your
+hands; I want to see how they look sticking up over
+your head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson though now holding them in sight did not
+at once comply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Johnson, you&rsquo;re butting into something that doesn&rsquo;t
+concern you,&rdquo; he said, endeavoring to speak calmly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve made one mistake in striking me; don&rsquo;t make another
+by keeping that gun pointed at my head. Remember
+I&rsquo;ve a mortgage on your place that you&rsquo;ll wish renewed
+one of these days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The expression of scorn on the rancher&rsquo;s face was
+complete.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trying that line, are you?&rdquo; he sneered. &ldquo;Think you
+can play the money-lender now and scare me? You
+didn&rsquo;t look much like a banker reaching for your gun;
+you just looked like a killer then, a plain bar-room killer&ndash;&ndash;but
+I beat you to the draw. You&rsquo;ve got fat and slow,
+haven&rsquo;t you, since early days when you use to put lead
+into poor devils whose stuff you wanted. And you didn&rsquo;t
+look like a banker to me, either, trying to bulldoze Janet
+when I came in; you looked like the big dirty coward you
+are. Aha, here&rsquo;s the doctor! Now just tell him how it
+comes you can order me out of his house, and why you
+were threatening Janet and making her scream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The physician turned a white, angry countenance to
+Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I heard the scream. Is it true you were abusing my
+daughter?&rdquo; he demanded, stepping in front of the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came here because I learned my son Ed had been
+broken to bits through her trickery and damnable&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words were cut off by the doctor&rsquo;s hand which
+smote the blasphemous lips uttering them.</p>
+<p>Even more than Johnson&rsquo;s blow did this slap upon
+the mouth enrage the cattleman. His face became congested,
+his shoulders heaved, but behind the doctor was
+the revolver still directed at his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve come here uninvited and you&rsquo;ve said too
+much,&rdquo; Doctor Hosmer stated in cold even tones. &ldquo;You
+may be the town magnate, but you&rsquo;re only a ruffian and a
+crook after all. You can&rsquo;t bluff or bully us. More than
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span>
+that, you&rsquo;ve insulted my daughter and me beyond any
+future reparation. As for your son, he got less than he
+deserved.&rdquo; He turned to the rancher. &ldquo;You came just
+in time, it seems. Please see that he leaves the house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Johnson waved with his gun significantly towards the
+door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Move right along lively,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;And I&rsquo;ll go
+along with you to see that you don&rsquo;t hamstring my
+horses, which I don&rsquo;t put past an underhanded cattle-thief
+like you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson seemed striving for words that would adequately
+blast those before him, but they appeared lacking.
+With a last malignant glare he walked out upon
+the veranda and down across the yard, with his guard
+following him.</p>
+<p>When Johnson returned after Sorenson&rsquo;s departure
+in his car, he was grinning sardonically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t want him running among my cattle; he&rsquo;d
+bite &rsquo;em and give &rsquo;em the rabies,&rdquo; he remarked.</p>
+<p>Janet caught and pressed his toil-roughened hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll never know how much I thank you for coming
+in just when you did,&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pshaw, your father would have showed up and
+stopped him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure. Father has no weapon, and that
+man did have one. It was the sight of your pistol that
+made him cower. You couldn&rsquo;t have chosen a more
+lucky minute to arrive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it was a little bit timely, as it turned out.
+Considering too that we were coming to see you anyway,
+it was just as well to walk in when we could do some good.
+Mary has something for you to read, if you read Spanish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234' name='page_234'></a>234</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good. Show &rsquo;em what you have, daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary drew a knotted handkerchief from her bosom and
+undid the knots. Appeared the doubled paper she had
+found. This she passed to Janet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&ndash;&ndash;why, this is the document I had!&rdquo; the latter
+exclaimed, joyfully. &ldquo;Where did you find it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up by the smashed automobile, when father and I
+were at the cabin.&rdquo; She exchanged a guarded look with
+her father. &ldquo;There are names in it that made me think
+it might be valuable. So when father came back from
+Bowenville I showed it to him. But neither of us could
+read it. We thought we&rsquo;d better bring it to you to
+read.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is valuable, very valuable. I had it when I was
+seized by Ed Sorenson and he took it away from me.
+Evidently, then, it fell from his pocket at the time of
+the accident. Yes, indeed, it&rsquo;s important. It means
+everything to certain parties. I&rsquo;ll read it, but you understand
+what it tells is private at present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We understand&ndash;&ndash;and I think I know what it&rsquo;s going
+to say,&rdquo; Johnson remarked, grimly.</p>
+<p>Thereupon while the others listened Janet read a
+translation of the long document. To her and her father
+the facts were not new, for Weir had already related such
+as he knew of the happenings in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon on that
+eventful day thirty years previous. Nor for that matter
+were they strange to Johnson and his daughter, though
+of course neither Janet nor her father were aware of
+the rancher&rsquo;s more intimate knowledge of the subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A pretty good story as far as it goes, but like all
+lawyers&rsquo; papers long-winded,&rdquo; Johnson stated, critically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, far as it goes?&rdquo; Janet asked,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span>
+curiously. &ldquo;Did you know this old Mexican? Did you
+ever hear him tell about the thing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew he was there at the time, but he never told me
+anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here Dr. Hosmer spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saurez died yesterday. It must have been shortly
+after he made this deposition. He died in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon,
+which gives a color of suspicion to his death. In
+addition, Martinez, as you know, was dragged away
+somewhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then Vorse learned old Saurez had blabbed, and
+killed him,&rdquo; Johnson said, in a convinced tone. &ldquo;Vorse
+is a bad bird, I want to say. But so are all of them,
+Sorenson, Burkhardt and Judge Gordon as well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet brought the talk back to the subject.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You make me still wonder, Mr. Johnson,&rdquo; she said.
+&ldquo;You seemed to think there&rsquo;s more to the account than is
+told in this paper.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again the rancher and his daughter glanced at each
+other, hesitatingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell them, father,&rdquo; Mary broke forth all at once.
+&ldquo;They know this much, and you know you can trust
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The man, however, shook his head with a certain
+dogged purpose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If this is just a paper in some trifling lawsuit or
+other, it will be better if I keep my own counsel,&rdquo; he
+stated. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve riled Sorenson considerable as it is now,
+and I don&rsquo;t care particularly about having him gunning
+on my trail active-like. If it really mattered&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does matter; it matters everything,&rdquo; Janet cried,
+&ldquo;if you really know something more!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because it concerns Mr. Weir. The Joseph Weir
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span>
+described and named in this affidavit was his father.
+He believes these men robbed his father; this paper
+proves it, but not absolutely, for Mexican evidence here
+in this country doesn&rsquo;t carry as much weight against
+white men&ndash;&ndash;especially men as rich and strong as these
+named&ndash;&ndash;as it would in other places perhaps. You know
+that. This paper was obtained for Mr. Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oho, so that&rsquo;s the way of it!&rdquo; Johnson said, with a
+long drawn-out tone.</p>
+<p>He regarded the paper in silence for a time, busy with
+his thoughts, absently twisting his beard, until at length
+a look of satisfaction grew on his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, this is fine,&rdquo; he went on presently. &ldquo;I
+never thought I should be able to pay the obligation I
+owe him, and I won&rsquo;t fully at that, but this will help.
+No, that paper doesn&rsquo;t tell all, for I reckon Saurez didn&rsquo;t
+see all.&rdquo; He glanced triumphantly at the doctor and the
+girl. &ldquo;But I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You!&rdquo; both exclaimed.</p>
+<p>But before he could explain, the memory of the cattleman&rsquo;s
+threat recurred to Janet to banish thoughts
+of aught else than Weir&rsquo;s danger from her mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sorenson said he was going up to the dam to
+shoot Mr. Weir,&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;We must give warning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he say he was going himself?&rdquo; Johnson asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To get the paper, yes.&rdquo; Then Janet continued anxiously.
+&ldquo;But the paper isn&rsquo;t all. His son told him
+what occurred in the mountains and I believe the man
+wants to harm Mr. Weir as well as to obtain the paper.
+Perhaps he plans on gaining the document first, then
+killing him. In any case, we must put Mr. Weir on
+guard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just drive up there and tell the engineer,&rdquo; Johnson
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span>
+stated. &ldquo;Shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised if I got a chance
+yet to use my gun. You girls can stay here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet gazed at him with a flushing face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The man could go to the dam and kill Mr. Weir and
+get safely home while you&rsquo;re starting with your team,&rdquo;
+said she. &ldquo;No, we must drive there in a car. Father,
+you take Mr. Johnson in yours, and I&rsquo;ll carry Mary in
+mine. We&rsquo;ll go along of course, for we&rsquo;ll not remain
+here in the cottage alone with such terrible things happening
+in San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And to this there was no dissent.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIV_THE_ALARM' id='CHAPTER_XXIV_THE_ALARM'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+<h3>THE ALARM</h3>
+</div>
+<p>At the dam Weir found Meyers and Atkinson anxiously
+waiting his return. The sudden concerted melting
+away of workmen from camp had been warning to his
+subordinates that the danger of a general spree had
+taken definite form, which the report of a pair of young
+engineers confirmed when they followed a group of laborers
+to the old adobe house and beheld the beginning
+of the debauch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get out all the staff, Meyers, and you, Atkinson, all
+the foremen and sober men left, then go down the road
+and put that joint out of business, taking axes and whatever
+is necessary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if they fight?&rdquo; Meyers asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Try first to placate them. If that fails, some of you
+draw them off in order to permit the others to enter the
+house and destroy the whiskey. It&rsquo;s a tough job, but
+you may succeed. If the crowd turns ugly as it may,
+being drunk, come back. No need to take the risk of
+broken heads or being beaten up. See, however, if you
+can&rsquo;t outwit the outfit. Possibly you could push that
+mud house over from the rear by means of a beam; that
+would do the business. I leave it to you to decide what&rsquo;s
+best to do, men, after you&rsquo;ve examined the situation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The camp will be unguarded except for you and the
+two men with you,&rdquo; Weir&rsquo;s assistant suggested. &ldquo;If
+the crowd drinking down at that place should take the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span>
+notion to come here and tear things up, there would be
+nothing to hinder them. A few should stay, anyway,
+I imagine&ndash;&ndash;half a dozen, who can use guns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, pick out six to remain,&rdquo; the other agreed.</p>
+<p>For Meyers&rsquo; suggestion had raised a disagreeable possibility.
+It was never safe to ignore precautions when a
+gang of two or three hundred rough, active laborers,
+however loyal when sober, were made irresponsible and
+crazy by liquor; and one stage of drunkenness in such
+men was usually manifested in a wild desire for violence.
+The scheme of Weir&rsquo;s enemies might comprise using this
+very act for wrecking the camp.</p>
+<p>Six men, to be sure, would offer little resistance to
+stemming the movement once it was started, but the sight
+of steel in the guards&rsquo; hands might cause even a reckless
+mob to pause long enough for an appeal. If the men
+should be brought to listen, they could probably be diverted
+from their purpose, as impassioned crowds are
+easily swayed by men of force.</p>
+<p>In any case the camp and dam should be defended to
+the last. That went without saying.</p>
+<p>Meyers and Atkinson had little more than departed
+with their muster of engineers, foremen and sober workmen,
+some fifty in all, when the two cars driven by Dr.
+Hosmer and Janet arrived at headquarters. To the occupants
+of both machines the camp appeared singularly
+dark and silent, the office building and the commissary
+shack alone showing lights.</p>
+<p>The four visitors entered the main room in the former
+building, where they found Mr. Pollock and Martinez.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir stepped out for a moment to make a round
+of the camp and the horse corrals,&rdquo; the easterner replied
+in answer to an inquiry from the doctor. &ldquo;Will you be
+seated?&rdquo; And he politely placed chairs for Janet and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span>
+Mary, while his look scrutinized the party with discreet
+interest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Mr. Martinez, you&rsquo;ve escaped!&rdquo; Janet exclaimed,
+after a surprised stare at the lawyer.</p>
+<p>The Mexican smiled, bowed and drew one point of his
+black mustache through his fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have indeed, Miss Janet,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Not without
+an unpleasant experience, however. I understand you
+secured the paper concerning which I telephoned you,
+and though I understand it has since been lost&ndash;&ndash;through
+no fault of yours&ndash;&ndash;I desire to express my thanks for
+your excellent assistance in the matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it has been found again; we have it with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Martinez gave a start, none the less sincere for being
+dramatic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What! Saurez&rsquo; deposition? Weir thought it
+burned. Why, this is the most wonderful luck in the
+world! It gives us the whip-hand again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mary Johnson here found it in a crack in the rocks
+when she and her father went up to the cabin to bring
+Ed Sorenson down. Father has it. That&rsquo;s one reason
+we&rsquo;re here. But there&rsquo;s another; Mr. Sorenson has
+learned of his son&rsquo;s accident, has seen him, talked with
+him, been told lies and now is in a dreadful rage, threatening
+every one concerned. He was at our house and
+made a scene. He&rsquo;s coming here, or so he said, to kill
+Mr. Weir and obtain the document. So we hurried to
+the dam to give warning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this juncture Mr. Pollock stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Sorenson hasn&rsquo;t yet appeared, and I assure you
+he will be prevented from harming any one if he comes.
+You are Miss Janet Hosmer, I judge, of whom I&rsquo;ve
+heard so much that is praiseworthy. Will you allow
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span>
+me to introduce myself? I&rsquo;m Mr. Pollock, a company
+director, and to a degree in Mr. Weir&rsquo;s confidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet expressed her pleasure at his acquaintance and
+in turn introduced her father and the Johnsons.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir spoke of you to us, but we weren&rsquo;t aware
+he had informed you of the paper.&rdquo; Then she added,
+&ldquo;But he would wish to, naturally.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s voice, without, in conversation with some one
+caused them all to look towards the door. In the panel
+of light falling on the darkness before the house they
+perceived the engineer&rsquo;s tall figure by a horse, from
+which the rider was dismounting. Letting the reins drag
+and leaving the horse to stand, the latter walked with
+Weir into the room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, this is a delightful surprise!&rdquo; the engineer exclaimed
+on beholding the four who had come while he was
+out. &ldquo;And unexpected.&rdquo; His eyes rapidly interrogated
+the different faces. &ldquo;I suppose it&rsquo;s business, not pleasure,
+that brings you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s so,&rdquo; said Johnson, the rancher, nodding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Madden is here on business, too, it seems.&rdquo;
+He glanced at Mr. Pollock. &ldquo;Mr. Madden is our sheriff
+and he has a warrant for my arrest.&rdquo; He turned back
+to the officer. &ldquo;You come at a bad time for my affairs.
+You saw that big show at the old house half way down
+the road? That crowd is made up of my workmen, who
+are being entertained with free whiskey, and there&rsquo;s no
+telling but what they may come here to tear things up.
+The whiskey is furnished by Vorse, I suspect, and is being
+served at Vorse&rsquo;s place. Your warrant is inspired
+by Vorse and others, isn&rsquo;t it? The two circumstances
+coming at the same moment, the free drunk and my arrest,
+look fishy to me. What do you think? I&rsquo;m in
+charge of a property here representing a good deal of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span>
+money and I should hate to be absent if the men took
+the idea into their heads to turn the camp upside down,
+especially if the idea was inspired by Vorse and his
+friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t served the warrant yet,&rdquo; Madden replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you know that I&rsquo;m not going to skip the country
+at the prospect of your serving it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. There&rsquo;s no hurry; I&rsquo;ll just sit around for
+a while. And understand, Weir, this arrest is none of
+my doings, except officially. I take no stock in the
+yarn about your having attacked the greaser you killed.
+Martinez&rsquo; and Miss Janet&rsquo;s testimony at the inquest
+satisfied me in that respect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Pollock now drew Weir aside for a whispered conference.
+When they rejoined the others the engineer
+made the lawyer acquainted with the sheriff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Weir has agreed to my suggestion to take you
+into our confidence, Mr. Madden,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;There
+may be other warrants for you to serve soon, and I&rsquo;m
+sure you will respect what we reveal. All of us here except
+you know the facts I&rsquo;m about to relate; indeed,
+have shared in them to an extent; and in addition to our
+word we&rsquo;ll present proof. You know Dr. Hosmer and
+his daughter certainly, you probably know Mr. Johnson
+and the young lady with him, and are aware whether
+their statements are to be relied on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are,&rdquo; Madden answered, without hesitation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re already convinced of the truth of Weir&rsquo;s innocence
+in the charge of murder now being preferred
+against him. Well, now, a friend at court is worth something;
+and we propose to make you that friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not against him like most of the town, anyway,&rdquo;
+was the sheriff&rsquo;s answer.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Go ahead with your explanation,&rdquo; Pollock said to the
+engineer.</p>
+<p>Thereupon Weir briefly sketched out events for the officer
+as they had occurred and as showing the motives
+which had inspired his enemies in seeking to destroy him:&ndash;&ndash;the
+original plot against his father, his determination
+to uncover the four conspirators, the episode at the restaurant
+in Bowenville, the discovery of Ed Sorenson as
+the hirer of the dead Mexican assassin, the obtaining of
+Saurez&rsquo; deposition and Martinez&rsquo; imprisonment in
+Vorse&rsquo;s saloon cellar, Janet&rsquo;s abduction and rescue and
+the loss of the paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the paper isn&rsquo;t lost,&rdquo; Dr. Hosmer interrupted.
+&ldquo;Mary Johnson found it and here it is.&rdquo; With which
+he drew the crumpled document from his breast pocket
+and laid it on the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have it again!&rdquo; Weir exclaimed. &ldquo;You found it,
+Mary!&rdquo; He stepped forward and took the girl&rsquo;s hand in
+his for a moment. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re a friend indeed to bring
+this back to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I owed you more than that,&rdquo; she said, coloring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Mr. Sorenson has learned about his son and the
+paper and everything that happened, except Ed Sorenson
+told him lies instead of the truth,&rdquo; Janet put in.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s terribly angry at all of us. He said he would
+kill you for crippling Ed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorenson is welcome to try,&rdquo; Weir responded, with a
+quick blaze in his eyes.</p>
+<p>At this point Mr. Pollock interposed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t finish your story, Weir. Relate for Mr.
+Madden&rsquo;s benefit what occurred at Judge Gordon&rsquo;s
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This tragic conclusion to the afternoon&rsquo;s happenings
+the engineer told, though remarking that the company
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span>
+director should be the true narrator. At his announcement
+that Judge Gordon had taken his own life by poison
+his listeners remained dumbfounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s dead, then?&rdquo; Madden asked, at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. And the transfer of property made to Mr.
+Pollock amounts to an acknowledgment of his guilt.
+Now, I should like to have Martinez read this deposition,
+for I&rsquo;ve never heard its contents myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This the Mexican did, translating the Spanish paragraphs
+into English with fluent ease, ending by reading
+the list of witnesses. Martinez gave the paper a slap of
+his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And old Saurez was found dead in Vorse&rsquo;s saloon by
+me an hour after he had signed this,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Draw
+your own conclusions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden shifted on his seat. He glanced at the document
+and at the others and then gazed out the door at
+the darkness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looks like a clear case; I always imagined if these
+men&rsquo;s past was dug into there would be a lot of crooked
+business turned up. But granting that everything is as
+shown, with Lucerio the county attorney under Sorenson&rsquo;s
+thumb and the community as it is there&rsquo;s a question
+if Saurez&rsquo; statement even will be enough to convict
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that Janet jumped up, her eyes gleaming.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not all the proof, not all by any means!&rdquo;
+she cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What more is there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Johnson&rsquo;s evidence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Johnson&rsquo;s!&rdquo; came in surprised tones from all four
+of the men uninformed of the rancher&rsquo;s story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he saw the man Dent killed and the plotters make
+your father, Mr. Weir, believe he had done the killing.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span></div>
+<p>Steele stared at Johnson dumbfounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just that; I saw the whole dirty trick worked, looking
+through the back door of the saloon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you were the boy!&rdquo; Weir gasped. &ldquo;The boy
+who looked in! After thirty years I supposed that boy
+gone, lost, vanished beyond finding.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I stayed right here,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;Of course I
+kept my mouth shut about what I had seen. I worked
+on ranches and rode range and at last got the little
+place on Terry Creek and married. Nothing strange in
+my remaining in the country where I grew up, especially
+as I only knew the cattle business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir swung about to Madden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a live witness,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;With the other
+proof his evidence should be final.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whenever you say, I&rsquo;ll arrest the men. As for this
+warrant I have, I&rsquo;ll just continue to carry it in my
+pocket,&rdquo; the sheriff stated. &ldquo;I must remark that I
+never heard of a more villainous plot, taking it all
+around, than you&rsquo;ve brought to light.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the charges must cover everything,&rdquo; Pollock said
+sternly. &ldquo;From Dent&rsquo;s murder to the conspiracy
+against the irrigation company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stay here in case you need me to stop any trouble
+with your workmen,&rdquo; Madden remarked.</p>
+<p>But trouble though imminent was coming from another
+direction, as was suddenly shown when a man,
+dust-covered and hatless, rushed into the office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re on the way,&rdquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who? The workmen?&rdquo; Weir demanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I don&rsquo;t know anything about the workmen, but
+a bunch of Mexicans, fifty or more, are headed this way
+to blow up the dam. I saw and heard them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;At the spring a mile south. I was watching down
+there, where Atkinson had sent me after supper, relieving
+the man who kept lookout during the afternoon.
+That was where the booze was dealt out last night, you
+remember. I was sitting there when I heard a crowd
+coming. At first I thought it was our men, but when
+they stopped to drink and smoke, I saw by their talk
+they were Mexicans. But there was one white man with
+them, a leader. He and a Mexican talked in English.
+They&rsquo;re to raid the camp, crawling up the canyon, to
+dynamite the dam first, then fire the buildings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then they&rsquo;re on the road here now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; The speaker licked his lips. &ldquo;I cut along
+the hillside until I got ahead of them, but it was slow
+going in the dark and stumbling through the sage. They
+must be close at hand by this time, though I came faster
+than they did. The white man said to the Mexican that
+they wanted to reach the dam just at moonrise, and that
+will be pretty quick now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go to the bunk-house and call the men waiting there,
+and get a gun yourself,&rdquo; Weir ordered. &ldquo;The storekeeper
+will give you one.&rdquo; When the messenger had
+darted out, he looked at the others. &ldquo;You must take
+these girls away from here, doctor, at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t go,&rdquo; Johnson snapped forth, drawing his
+revolver and giving the cylinder a spin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never could hit anything, and haven&rsquo;t had a firearm
+in my hand for years, but I can try,&rdquo; Pollock stated.
+&ldquo;This promises to be interesting, very interesting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very,&rdquo; said Weir.</p>
+<p>For a little he stood in thought, while the others gazed
+at him without speaking. His straight body seemed to
+gather strength and power before their eyes, his clean-cut
+features to become hard and masterful.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Up the canyon he said they were coming, didn&rsquo;t
+he?&rdquo; he remarked at last, more to himself than to them.
+&ldquo;Very well, so much the better. Johnson, you and Madden
+take charge of the men when they come and line
+them along the hillside this side of the dam. Put out
+all lights.&rdquo; With which he strode out of the building.</p>
+<p>They looked after him in uncertainty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not going; you may be hurt, and need me,&rdquo;
+Mary stated, with a stubborn note in her voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then keep out of reach&ndash;&ndash;and run for town if the
+ruffians get into camp,&rdquo; was her father&rsquo;s answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I stay too,&rdquo; Janet exclaimed, resolutely.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXV_NO_QUARTER' id='CHAPTER_XXV_NO_QUARTER'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+<h3>NO QUARTER</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The peril threatening the unfinished dam now alone
+engaged Steele Weir&rsquo;s mind. Personal considerations
+did not enter into his calculations, least of all thought
+of personal danger; for when he placed himself in an
+undertaking whatever rested under his hand, as in this
+case the irrigation company&rsquo;s property, became for him
+a trust to attend, to direct, to guard. Even more than
+if it had been his own property did he feel the obligation,
+for the interests concerned were not his. But the matter
+went deeper than a prospective money loss; it struck
+down to principles and rights&ndash;&ndash;the principles of order
+and industry as against viciousness and havoc; the rights
+of law-abiding men who create as against the wantonness
+of lawless men who would destroy.</p>
+<p>Were it his own workmen who, inflamed by drink and
+incited by a spirit of recklessness, were coming to wreck
+the camp in a moment of mad intoxication, he would have
+made allowances for the cause. Before resorting to extreme
+measures in defending his charge, he first would
+have sought to bring them to their senses. Drunken
+men are men unbalanced, irrational.</p>
+<p>But here was another case: an attack by a secret,
+sober, malevolent band, who in cold blood approached to
+demolish the company works. Not liquor moved them on
+their mission, but money&ndash;&ndash;money paid by his arch enemies.
+The men were simply hired tools, brazenly indifferent
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span>
+no doubt to crimes, desperate in character certainly,
+for a handful of coins ready to wipe out a million
+dollars&rsquo; worth of property and effort. Such deserved
+no consideration or quarter.</p>
+<p>Weir proposed to give none. With enemies of this
+kind he had but one policy, strike first and strike with
+deadly force. One does not seek to dissuade a rattlesnake;
+one promptly stamps it under heel. One cannot
+compromise with ravenous wolves; one shoots them down.
+One does not wait to see how far a treacherous foe will
+go; one forestalls and crushes him before he begins.
+Moreover, if wise, one does it in such fashion that the
+enemy will not arise from the blow.</p>
+<p>With the information given him by the guard posted
+at the spring Weir immediately grasped the true nature
+of the plot. The &ldquo;whiskey party&rdquo; was but a means of
+withdrawing the workmen from the scene, of weakening
+the camp, while a picked company of ruffians wrecked
+the property. It was an assault intended to wipe out
+the works and end construction, coincident with his arrest.
+Both the company and he were to pay the penalty
+for resisting the powers that rule San Mateo. And if
+the tale were spread that the destruction had been
+wrought by his workmen while drunk, who would doubt
+it?</p>
+<p>Like shadows the band of Mexican desperadoes would
+come, dynamite the dam, fire the buildings, stampede the
+horses, and like shadows vanish again. In the unexpectedness
+of the raid, in the confusion, in the dim light, no
+one would with certainty be able to say who the assailants
+were. A scheme ferocious in its conception and
+diabolical in its cunning! But there was one flaw&ndash;&ndash;the
+element of chance. Chance had given Weir warning.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span></div>
+<p>A strong man warned is a strong man armed.</p>
+<p>As the engineer stood in the office, swiftly measuring
+the imminent menace of which he had just been told,
+calculating the meager instruments of defense at hand,
+his mind sweeping up all the salient aspects, features,
+advantages and disadvantages of the situation, he seized
+on the one weak spot in the attacking party&rsquo;s plan. At
+that spot he would strike.</p>
+<p>So giving Johnson and Madden the order to take
+charge of the little handful of guards, he had plunged
+out into the night.</p>
+<p>The men from the bunk-house were already running toward
+the office, before the door of which the rancher
+gathered them together to make sure of their arms and
+ammunition. All told, when Martinez and Pollock presently
+came from the store with guns, the little party numbered
+eleven.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is this all there are of us?&rdquo; Dr. Hosmer asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are worth all that crowd that&rsquo;s coming,&rdquo; Johnson
+exclaimed, taking a spare gun Martinez had brought
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did Weir send the rest of the engineers down to that
+house? I understood so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where they are, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Hosmer considered for a minute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can be there in five minutes in my car. The road
+is on the north side of the stream, as is this camp:
+the gang that&rsquo;s heading here to blow things up is coming
+up from the south, so it will not block the way.
+Men could be here in twenty minutes from down yonder
+by running.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A good suggestion, doctor,&rdquo; Pollock said. &ldquo;It may
+take you a bit longer to find and tell them what&rsquo;s occurring,
+but even so they may return in time. Fifty, or
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span>
+even twenty, might give us enough assistance to beat off
+the attack.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There comes the moon,&rdquo; said the man who had been at
+the spring. &ldquo;They must be near now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Far in the east the moon was stealing above the horizon.
+Under its light the mesa took form out of the
+darkness&ndash;&ndash;the level sagebrush plain criss-crossed by willow-lined
+ditches and checkered by small Mexican fields,
+the winding shimmering Burntwood River with its border
+of cottonwoods, the narrow road, the distant town of
+San Mateo, a vague blot of shadow picked out by tiny
+specks of light.</p>
+<p>The mountains too now reared in view, silent, silvered,
+majestic, towering about the camp on the lower base.
+One could see, as the moon swam higher, the low long
+buildings of the camp clustered on the hillside above the
+canyon, in the bottom of which was the dashing stream
+and the bone-white core of the dam.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look down yonder on the other side!&rdquo; Martinez exclaimed
+suddenly, pointing a long thin forefinger at the
+mouth of the canyon where a group of black dots were
+moving up the river.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s them,&rdquo; said the man who had given the warning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And they&rsquo;re armed,&rdquo; said another. &ldquo;You can see the
+moon shine on their gun-barrels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the opposite side of the stream, some two hundred
+yards below the dam and three or four hundred feet
+lower in elevation than the camp, advancing up the
+canyon in a string, the men looked like a line of insects.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m off for help,&rdquo; the doctor said, springing into his
+car. &ldquo;Janet, you and Mary go higher up among the
+rocks and hide if these buildings are attacked.&rdquo; Away
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span>
+he went, buzzing down the hillside to the long stretch of
+road.</p>
+<p>Weir now came into sight, walking quickly towards the
+group. That he saw the Mexicans down in the canyon
+was evident from his swift appraising glances thither.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Johnson, move your men down halfway to the dam
+and have them scatter there behind bowlders. I shall go
+still lower down,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You will hold your fire until
+I signal with my hat from the dam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to the dam?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to go with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t need you. You&rsquo;ll be more effective hidden
+above. You&rsquo;ll have plenty of light as the moon is shining
+squarely in the gorge. And await my signal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right; you&rsquo;re the general.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But take no extreme risks, Weir. The company
+doesn&rsquo;t ask you to sacrifice yourself,&rdquo; Pollock stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sacrifice will be down among those fellows,&rdquo;
+Steele replied, with set jaw. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t worry about me.
+Now, start, men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stood for a little watching the rate of progress of
+the line of Mexicans ascending the stream, which was
+not rapid owing to the broken rocks lining the bank.
+Then he swung about to the two girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every one here now is under my orders,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;You two will take your car and go at once. This is
+no place for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Janet began.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m taking no chances that you shall fall into the
+hands of those scoundrels,&rdquo; he declared, sternly. &ldquo;They
+may succeed in reaching this spot. You must not be
+here; you must go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Taking each by an arm he piloted them to the car.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry, but it has to be,&rdquo; he added. &ldquo;This is work
+for men, and men alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet and Mary climbed up into the seat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&ndash;&ndash;you will take care of yourself,&rdquo; Janet said,
+tremulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I expect to. Still, this isn&rsquo;t going to be a croquet
+party; anything may happen. Good-by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With that he swung about and breaking into a run
+made for a small building half-buried in the hillside and
+apart from the camp. There he stooped and picked up
+under each arm what looked like a cylinder of some size
+and went down towards the dam. For a time they could
+see him, but all at once he slipped behind an outcrop of
+rock and they saw him no more.</p>
+<p>Janet turned to eye her companion. Once more her
+face was pale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; she inquired of Mary.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I reckon we&rsquo;d better do as he says. He&rsquo;d be awful
+mad if we didn&rsquo;t. Did you see his eyes when he talked
+to us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if he&ndash;&ndash;he and others are wounded?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Uneasily Mary gazed at the older girl and then down
+at the canyon. On the hillside the men led by her
+father were no longer in sight, somewhere concealed
+among the stones that dotted the earth. But down by
+the stream and now scarcely fifty yards from the white
+stretch of concrete barring the river bed through a tunnel
+in which the water foamed and escaped, the Mexicans
+were clearly visible, their hats bobbing about, their
+guns flinging upward an occasional gleam.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It doesn&rsquo;t seem as if anything was going to happen,&rdquo;
+Mary went on in awed tones. &ldquo;Things are so quiet and
+peaceful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still Janet delayed starting the car, divided in feelings
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span>
+between a wish to respect Steele Weir&rsquo;s insistent
+command and a growing fear for his safety. She could
+see nothing of him. Into the shadow of a rock he had
+disappeared and thither she gazed with straining eyes,
+hoping to see again his straight strong figure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, look down there at the dam,&rdquo; Mary said, whose
+eyes had been wandering from, point to point of the
+scene. &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t that him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet&rsquo;s heart gave a quicker beat, then seemed to sink
+in her breast as staring downward she recognized the engineer.
+He had come out all at once from the shade
+cast by a wooden framework. He had with him the burdens
+he had lifted from the ground before the little detached
+stone house at the edge of the camp, and these,
+the cylinders, he placed on the surface of the concrete
+core at the spot where he stood. Then he knelt down,
+struck a match, lighted a cigar&ndash;&ndash;as if any man in his
+senses would stop to smoke in such a situation!&ndash;&ndash;and
+busied himself at some task over the cylinders.</p>
+<p>Only for an instant had he stood erect on the flat top
+of the dam. Apparently he had been unseen by the
+attackers, engaged in picking their footing: and now in
+his crouching position, retired from the upper edge of
+the dam&rsquo;s front as he was, it was very likely that he
+was wholly out of view of the band.</p>
+<p>At last Weir moved his cylinders forward towards this
+edge. Afterwards he straightened up and standing
+hands on hips, smoking his cigar, the tiny crimson glow
+of which rose and fell, he watched the party nearing
+the foot of the white gleaming wall, fifty feet below
+him.</p>
+<p>For Janet the sight was too much. His indifference
+to risk froze her; he appeared to be courting death; and
+she strove to open her lips to send down to him an imploring
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span>
+cry to draw back, but succeeded in uttering only
+a tremulous wail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll shoot him,&rdquo; Mary was saying, &ldquo;oh, they&rsquo;ll
+kill him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A surge of terror swept Janet. Next thing she knew
+she was out of the car and running down the hillside
+among the stones and the stalks of sagebrush, frantic to
+reach him, to pull him out of view of the men beneath.
+Only a single one of them had to cast a glance upward
+and to raise his gun and fire, then he would die. He
+should not die! She should fling herself as a protection
+before him rather than that he should be slain!</p>
+<p>On a sudden a hand reached up from a rock and seized
+her arm, stopping her with a jerk. Then she was
+roughly pulled down beside it. The man was Madden,
+the sheriff.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What in hell are you doing?&rdquo; he demanded harshly.
+&ldquo;Have you gone crazy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His grip was not relinquished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But see him! Aren&rsquo;t you men going to help him?
+Are you going to let him be killed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden forced her to her knees, so that she was sheltered
+by the outcrop of stone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any man who can smoke a cigar like that at such
+a time as this knows just what he&rsquo;s doing,&rdquo; was the
+answer. &ldquo;Keep quiet and watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t want to see,&rdquo; she said. But she continued
+to look with fascinated eyes at the lone, calm
+figure on the dam.</p>
+<p>Presently Madden pushed his gun forward over the
+rock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve caught sight of him,&rdquo; he stated.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_THUNDERBOLT' id='CHAPTER_XXVI_THE_THUNDERBOLT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+<h3>THE THUNDERBOLT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The greater part of the number of bandits had
+stopped in a group a few yards from the base of the
+white dam core, though a few stragglers were some way
+behind. Among these Steele Weir made out the figure
+of one whom he recognized as a white man; he whom
+the guard from the spring had mentioned as directing
+the company; and when at a number of exclamations
+from Mexicans who perceived the engineer the man lifted
+his face, Weir saw he was Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>No more than this was needed to show whose the hand
+behind this treacherous conspiracy. Clear, too, it was
+that Burkhardt, determined that no mistake or abandonment
+of the operation should occur, had come to see it
+through in person. Weir could ask nothing better; he
+had one of the plotters caught in the act.</p>
+<p>Apparently orders had been to carry through the first
+part of the diabolical plan of destruction in silence, that
+of gaining control of the dam, for when two or three
+Mexicans flung up rifles to shoot at Weir a sharp word
+from another Mexican, seemingly their leader, had
+checked the volley and shouted to Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>The latter had stopped; he stared for a few seconds
+at the man on the white wall above and finally signaled
+with a wave of his arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come down here,&rdquo; he ordered.</p>
+<p>But Weir made no move to obey. He continued to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span>
+stand motionless, coolly regarding the party beneath.
+His eyes particularly considered two men who carried
+wooden boxes, square and stout, on their shoulders. At
+last he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come down, then you&rsquo;ll learn,&rdquo; Burkhardt shouted
+up, making no effort to hide the enmity in his voice.</p>
+<p>Weir puffed at his cigar, removed it from his lips to
+glance at its glowing end, while the Mexicans stared up
+at him in silence, puzzled by this lone guard who carried
+no rifle, who did not flee away to spread an alarm and
+seek aid, and who so unexpectedly had appeared as if
+anticipating their visit.</p>
+<p>Murmurs broke out. Why were they not allowed to
+shoot him at once in the approved Mexican bandit fashion
+and proceed to their work? If he were not shot at
+once, he yet could escape for aid. The party had to
+ascend the hillside in order to mount to the top of the
+concrete work. Time would be required to place and
+fire their charges of dynamite&ndash;&ndash;and they were eager to
+get at the loot in the buildings above.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kill him,&rdquo; Burkhardt roared suddenly, jerking forth
+his revolver and blazing at the engineer.</p>
+<p>The bullet sang past Weir&rsquo;s head. He did not duck;
+indeed, kept his place calmly while the Mexicans were
+raising their guns, as if to show his supreme contempt
+for their power. But at the instant Burkhardt fired
+again and a dozen rifles blazed he sprang back and
+dropped flat, leaving the deadly missiles to speed harmlessly
+above the dam.</p>
+<p>Raising himself cautiously he seized the end of a fuse
+projecting from one of the canisters and held the crimson
+end of his cigar against it until a sputter of sparks
+showed that it had caught. From this fuse he turned
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span>
+to the one in the second can and repeated the operation.</p>
+<p>This was the essence of his plan of defense. With
+guns the defenders on the hillside would be outnumbered
+and probably killed in an attack. The information that
+the assailants were to steal up the canyon, however,
+was the key that would unlock a desperate situation, and
+his mind had grasped the mode and means of defeating
+the enemy.</p>
+<p>With the first shots quiet had returned. The night
+seemed for Weir as peaceful as ever, the earth bathed
+in moonlight, the camp at rest. Only before him there
+was the sputter of the two fuses, one at the right, one at
+the left, as the trains of fire burned towards the holes
+in the canisters. He watched these calculatingly. His
+cigar no longer of service had been cast aside.</p>
+<p>All at once he rose erect again. A few men were starting
+along the wall to climb the hillside, but the greater
+number were gathered about Burkhardt and the Mexican
+leader. Now Weir glanced at them and now at the
+fuses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I warn you to leave this dam and camp, Burkhardt,&rdquo;
+he shouted, when a few seconds had passed. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say
+I didn&rsquo;t give you warning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Every head jerked upward at this surprising reappearance
+and voice. They had supposed him fled, the
+men down there, and were having a last hasty conference,
+doubtless as to the wisdom of now first attacking
+the camp. A grim smile came on the engineer&rsquo;s face.
+Their astonishment was comic&ndash;&ndash;or would have been at a
+moment less perilous and fraught with less grave consequences.</p>
+<p>An oath ripped from Burkhardt&rsquo;s lips. An angry
+curse it might have been at Madden that he had failed
+to arrest and hold the engineer according to plan. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span>
+gestured right and left, yelling something to the men
+around him. He himself began to run towards one end
+of the dam.</p>
+<p>Weir stooped, picked up one of the canisters, blew on
+the fuse now burned so near the hole. Some men perhaps
+at this instant would have quailed for their own
+safety and at the prospect of hurling death among others.
+For death this tin cylinder meant for those below.
+But there was no tremor in Steele Weir&rsquo;s arm or heart.</p>
+<p>He was the man of metal who had won the name &ldquo;Cold
+Steel&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;calm, implacable, of steel-like purpose. With
+such enemies he could hold no other communion than that
+which gave death. For such there was no mercy. By
+the same sort of law that they would execute let them
+suffer&ndash;&ndash;the law of lawlessness and force. Destruction
+they would give, destruction let them gain.</p>
+<p>He straightened. He took a last look at the snapping,
+sparkling, smoldering fuse, then flung his burden full
+down upon the spot where the Mexicans were again pointing
+their guns at him. Swiftly picking up the second
+canister, while bullets whined by, he cast it down after the
+first. A glimpse of startled faces he had, of men attempting
+to scatter from before the huge missiles, then
+he flung himself full length upon the dam.</p>
+<p>Interminably time seemed to stretch itself out as lying
+there he listened, waited, sought to brace himself for
+the impending shock. A quick doubt assailed his mind.
+Had the charges failed.</p>
+<p>All at once the earth seemed rent by a roar that shook
+the very dam. Followed instantly a second volume of
+sound more terrific, more blasting in its quality, more
+dreadful in its power, deafening, stunning, as if the world
+had erupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their dynamite!&rdquo; Weir breathed to himself.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span></div>
+<p>His ear-drums appeared to be broken. His hat was
+gone. His body ached from the tremendous dispersion
+of air. But that he could still hear he discovered when
+through his shocked auditory nerves he distinguished, as
+if far off, faint booming echoes from the hills.</p>
+<p>He got to his knees, finally to his feet. Pressing his
+hands to his head he gazed slowly about. Stones and a
+rain of earth were still falling, as if from a meteoric
+bombardment. About him he perceived sections of woodwork
+shaken to pieces, collapsed.</p>
+<p>Stepping to the edge of the dam he peered downward.
+A vast hole showed in the earth before the wall though
+the wall itself was uninjured and only smeared with a
+layer of soil. Huge rocks lay where there had been none
+before, uprooted and flung aside by the explosion, dispersed
+by the gigantic blast. On the hillside half a dozen
+men were picking themselves up and struggling wildly to
+flee. Nearer, a few other forms lay in the moonlight
+mangled and still, or mangled, and writhing in pain. Of
+all the rest&ndash;&ndash;nothing.</p>
+<p>Almost completely Burkhardt&rsquo;s predatory band had
+been blotted out. Weir&rsquo;s thunderbolt had struck down
+into its very heart, and it had vanished.</p>
+<p>As he turned and walked towards the end of the dam,
+he staggered a little. The sight had shaken even his
+iron nerve.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVII_WEIR_STRIKES_WHILE_THE_IRON_IS_HOT' id='CHAPTER_XXVII_WEIR_STRIKES_WHILE_THE_IRON_IS_HOT'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+<h3>WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT</h3>
+</div>
+<p>In his runabout, with Sheriff Madden at his side, and
+followed by Atkinson and half a dozen men for guards
+in two other machines, Weir sped along the road to San
+Mateo. They carried with them Burkhardt, who had
+been found stunned and slightly injured, and two Mexican
+bandits who had been captured. Those of the party
+of attackers yet alive but seriously hurt were being
+treated at camp by Dr. Hosmer, while the young engineers,
+armed and eager, were scouring the mountain
+side for the few Mexicans who had got away.</p>
+<p>It seemed a miracle that Burkhardt had escaped death,
+but the explanation was found no doubt in the fact he
+had started from the spot where the canisters fell and
+so at the moment of explosion was outside the area
+of its full destruction. To Weir the matter went deeper
+than that. Providence appeared to have saved him for
+punishment, for the long term of imprisonment he deserved
+for his crimes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d much rather have him alive than dead,&rdquo; Steele
+had remarked to Madden, when the man was brought up
+from the canyon a prisoner.</p>
+<p>The tremendous thunder-clap of sound from the camp
+had quickened the return of the superintendent and his
+men, already reached and warned by the doctor. More,
+it had startled even the drunken workmen so that when
+some one shouted that the dam had been blown up the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span>
+debauch came to an immediate end, the house was deserted
+and the throng, incited by curiosity and wonder,
+went staggering and running for camp.</p>
+<p>The first of these had arrived and the rest were tailing
+behind for half a mile when Weir and his companions
+set out for town, the blinding headlights of the machines
+scattering on either side of the road the approaching
+workmen. It was not likely many would go
+back to the house when they were told at headquarters
+how narrowly destruction of the works had been averted
+and how their spree had been a move in the plot. Between
+shame at being-duped and drowsiness resulting
+from drink they would, after a look at the hole blown
+in the earth at the base of the dam, want to seek their
+bunk-houses.</p>
+<p>As they sped towards town Weir and Madden rapidly
+made their plans, for the sheriff having witnessed with
+his own eyes the enormity of the plotters&rsquo; guilt was all
+for quick action.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These engineers of yours with us and the other men
+Meyers will bring down can be thrown as a guard around
+the jail,&rdquo; he stated. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll swear them all in as deputies.
+With Sorenson and Vorse locked up along with Burkhardt&ndash;&ndash;and
+I&rsquo;ll throw Lucerio, the county attorney, in
+with them on the off chance he&rsquo;s an accomplice&ndash;&ndash;there
+will be high feeling running in San Mateo. As quick as
+I can make arrangements, we&rsquo;ll take them to safe quarters
+elsewhere&ndash;&ndash;to-night if possible, to-morrow at the
+latest, in fast machines. These men have friends, remember.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve Burkhardt handcuffed; it might be well to
+gag him, too, for fear the crowd might make trouble if
+he yelled for help,&rdquo; Weir replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, we&rsquo;ll do that, though I think we can rush him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span>
+into the jail before anyone knows what&rsquo;s happening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the outskirts of town therefore the cars stopped.
+When Burkhardt, who had recovered his senses and with
+them a knowledge of his plight, perceived the sheriff&rsquo;s
+intention his rage burst all bounds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You fool, you muddle-headed blunderer!&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+with a string of oaths. &ldquo;Take these cuffs off!
+You&rsquo;ll lose your job for this trick. When I see Sorenson&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When you see him, you&rsquo;ll see him; and that will be
+inside a cell,&rdquo; was the cool rejoinder. &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know
+you were a dynamiter and would-be murderer until to-night,
+but I watched you at work and saw you shoot
+twice at Weir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll unlock these, I say, here and now!&rdquo; And the
+raging voice went off in a further stream of biting curses.
+&ldquo;Look at me; I&rsquo;m Burkhardt. You&rsquo;re crazy to talk of
+throwing me in jail, with my influence and&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your influence be damned,&rdquo; was the imperturbable
+answer. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have a long time in a penitentiary to
+see how much influence you have, if you don&rsquo;t swing
+first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Burkhardt struggled fiercely for a moment against
+the steel bands about his wrists and the men who held
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No crook like this Weir shall ever send me behind
+bars, or any other man put me there. Wait till Sorenson
+and Vorse and Judge Gordon learn what you&rsquo;re trying!
+Wait till they find out you&rsquo;ve double-crossed us
+for this engineer! Wait till Gordon turns me loose with
+a <i>habeas corpus</i>, you&rsquo;ll sweat blood for this night&rsquo;s work,
+Madden!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sheriff shook out the red handkerchief with which
+he expected to bind the prisoner&rsquo;s mouth.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll wait for a long time if I wait for Gordon to issue
+the writ,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;Seeing that he&rsquo;s dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dead! You&rsquo;re a liar, you sneaking cur; you can&rsquo;t
+bluff me. And when I&rsquo;m loose, if I don&rsquo;t fill you full
+of lead it will be because&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Burkhardt&rsquo;s explanation was never finished on
+that point, for Madden whipped the rolled handkerchief
+over his mouth and quickly knotted it behind, shutting
+off the flow of seething vituperative speech. If looks
+could slay, those he received from the prisoner&rsquo;s bloodshot
+maddened eyes would have dropped the sheriff in his
+tracks; as it was, they fell harmless against the law officer&rsquo;s
+person.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things have changed sort of sudden, haven&rsquo;t they,
+Burkhardt?&rdquo; Madden stated, sardonically. &ldquo;Never can
+tell what&rsquo;s going to happen between supper and breakfast.
+Here I go out to serve a warrant on Weir, and
+instead I&rsquo;m bringing you in for trying a low I.W.W.
+trick. Surprising cards a fellow sometimes gets on the
+draw.&rdquo; With which he went back to the other car.</p>
+<p>Counting on quickness for the safe delivery of his
+men in jail, Madden did not attempt to approach the
+court house by a side street. On the contrary he drove
+fast down the main way, with the other two cars following
+close, passing without pause through the crowd
+of Mexicans drawn forth in wonder at the booming report
+of the explosion that had sounded from the dam.</p>
+<p>One could see that excitement was at a high pitch.
+With the rumors that all day had been in circulation,
+with later vague tales of the great debauch proceeding
+at the old &rsquo;dobe house half way up the road to camp,
+with the thunder-clap that had burst from the base of
+the mountains coming on top of all, every man, woman
+and child had run to the main street, where those in the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span>
+automobiles could see by wagging tongues and gesticulating
+hands that speculation was rife and curiosity
+afire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The talk this evening when I set out for your camp
+was that I expected to bring you in and hang you,&rdquo;
+Madden said dryly, to the engineer. &ldquo;Quite a crowd had
+come to town. Plain to see now that Burkhardt and his
+bunch had started the talk. I shouldn&rsquo;t be surprised
+if there had been trouble had I arrested and locked you
+up. There are a few bad Mexicans around these parts
+that would do anything for money, and it&rsquo;s evident from
+what&rsquo;s happened that Sorenson&rsquo;s gang was ready to go
+the limit. What I&rsquo;m trying to figure out is where these
+fellows Burkhardt had with him up yonder came from.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can tell you. From across the line. I&rsquo;ve seen
+plenty just like them down there,&rdquo; Weir affirmed. &ldquo;Look
+at their hats and clothes&ndash;&ndash;but you&rsquo;ll be able to make
+them talk after a while. However, you won&rsquo;t find any
+of them speaking English. Offer one of them some
+money and a trip home and he&rsquo;ll give you the story quick
+enough, especially after you&rsquo;ve thrown a scare into him.
+We can afford to let one go to get the facts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You better keep out of sight after we have the men
+in the jail. Slip behind the jail to the rear of the yard,
+and when I&rsquo;ve locked them up and told Atkinson what
+to do about keeping the people away from the building,
+I&rsquo;ll join you there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; Weir stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we can slip off and grab Vorse if he&rsquo;s in his
+saloon and then Sorenson before any one knows what&rsquo;s
+happening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right; don&rsquo;t want the game spoiled now. Here
+we are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The cars had arrived at the gate before the courthouse.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span>
+Here, too, however, the crowd was densest, having
+gathered at the spot as if the roar of powder from
+the camp was an overture to Weir&rsquo;s arrest and appearance.
+It had proved a prelude to his appearance, at any
+rate. The crowd perceived him with Madden and it believed
+him a prisoner even if not handcuffed and marched
+with a pistol at his head.</p>
+<p>A profound silence at first greeted the party as it
+alighted. Madden, assisting Burkhardt to alight, pulled
+the man&rsquo;s broad-brimmed hat low over his eyes to conceal
+his face from the revealing moonlight. A short
+struggle again ensued, but Burkhardt finally yielded to
+the pressure exerted by his companion guards.</p>
+<p>A murmur of astonishment ran over the surrounding
+throng, each instant being augmented by the voices of
+others running to the place. Not only did it appear
+that the engineer was under arrest, but likewise others,&ndash;&ndash;a
+handcuffed, gagged man and two sullen Mexicans,
+strangers to the community. Yet a number of the onlookers,
+possibly men with Vorse&rsquo;s or Sorenson&rsquo;s money
+in their pockets, shouted as the new-comers moved
+through the press:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Killer, murderer! Hang him, shoot him!&rdquo; And
+more voices began to join in the cry.</p>
+<p>Clearly the intent was to stir up feeling in the crowd
+to a point where action against Weir would seem a
+spontaneous outbreak. Even women joined in the cry;
+curses followed; fists were shaken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open up the way,&rdquo; Madden ordered, as a surge of
+the crowd threatened to surround him and his party.
+In his hand, as if to emphasize his command, a six-shooter
+swung into view, sweeping to and fro and menacing
+the press of people.</p>
+<p>The frightened men directly before the party struggled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span>
+to get out of line of the weapon, yielding suddenly
+a clear passage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick! Around the courthouse and back to the
+jail,&rdquo; Madden exclaimed to those with him.</p>
+<p>Pushing forward from the moonlight into the shade
+cast by the cottonwoods, they dragged their prisoners
+past the first building towards the low stout stone structure
+at the rear, half-illuminated and half-concealed
+by the patches of light and shade falling from the
+trees.</p>
+<p>A minute later Madden whipped out his keys.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two men remain here at the door and don&rsquo;t be afraid
+to show your rifles to that bunch,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;In with
+you, Burkhardt; there&rsquo;s a nice soft stone floor to sleep
+on. Keep those Mexican camp-burners covered, Atkinson,
+till I get the cells open. You, Weir, slip on back
+there in the shadow and wait for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The engineer had taken but three steps into the gloom
+along the outside jail wall, glancing about to avoid any
+curious straggler of the crowd already hurrying around
+the court house towards the jail, when he heard a call.
+In the advance was a slim well-dressed Mexican, full in
+the moonlight and very important of bearing. The call
+was directed not at Weir but at Madden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You got him all right, sheriff?&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. He came in with me,&rdquo; was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But who are these others?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Step inside and I&rsquo;ll tell you, Lucerio.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The county attorney joined the sheriff, peered inside
+the doorway and hesitated. It was dark within; no light
+showed except a patch of moonlight at the far side of
+the building that fell through a barred window.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go right in,&rdquo; Madden exclaimed. And laying hand
+on the other&rsquo;s shoulder he forced him ahead. The door
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span>
+closed after the pair. Before the doorway there remained,
+however, the pair of young engineers, rifle in
+hand, whose threatening bearing and glistening gun-barrels
+were apparent even in the patchy light dropping
+through the boughs. At a distance of about ten feet off
+the crowd of people halted, staring eagerly at the jail
+building, showing their white teeth as they carried on
+low talk in Spanish and awaiting with impatience the return
+of Madden and Lucerio that they might flood them
+with questions.</p>
+<p>Weir remained to see no more, for the increasing crowd
+pushed out further and further on the flanks, a circumstance
+that would eventually result in his discovery. So
+slipping to the rear of the jail and keeping well in the
+shadows he gained the fence. This he leaped and, lighting
+a cigarette, examined his pistol, then proceeded to
+smoke calmly until Madden arrived.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hurry; slip away,&rdquo; the latter said. &ldquo;They wondered
+what the devil I dodged back here for and are coming,
+curious as cats.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two men glided away, keeping well in shadows
+until they gained the side street and thence passed to
+the main thoroughfare.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What if Sorenson and Vorse are somewhere in that
+crowd?&rdquo; Madden asked. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re likely to be, expecting
+your arrest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll have to wait till they leave it. But I
+don&rsquo;t believe they&rsquo;re there. They won&rsquo;t want to show
+their hand even by being on the scene.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Probably they&rsquo;ve found out Gordon is dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Probably. But on the other side, they suppose now
+that the dam has been destroyed and that I&rsquo;m locked
+up,&rdquo; Weir said. &ldquo;Still, I&rsquo;ll guess that if they&rsquo;ve learned
+Pollock and Martinez and I were at Gordon&rsquo;s all the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span>
+afternoon, and he committed suicide, they&rsquo;ll be worrying
+some just the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden glanced at his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe we&rsquo;ll bring Vorse in&ndash;&ndash;alive,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the way I want him, and Sorenson, too. I
+want to see them go up for life, but if not that then
+hanged. But a life term for both, along with Burkhardt,
+is my choice. I want them to suffer as my father
+suffered. Only worse. Dying&rsquo;s too easy for them. Let
+them have hell here for awhile before they get it on the
+other side. Let the iron bars and stone walls kill them.
+I hope they live for twenty years to gnaw out their
+hearts every day and every night behind steel doors.
+That wouldn&rsquo;t half pay what they owe. But if they
+finish in prison, knowing there&rsquo;s no hope, knowing I&rsquo;ve
+put them there for what they did to my father and Jim
+Dent, knowing that all the money and cattle they stole
+had slipped through their fingers, that they&rsquo;ve lost all
+they gained and more, that their curses and crimes are
+crushing their own heads, why, that will help. And
+Sorenson&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson there every day knowing his son lies
+a helpless cripple, without the money that has been piled
+up for him! I couldn&rsquo;t invent a worse hell for him.
+And that&rsquo;s the hell he&rsquo;s going to have!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though a man not easy to move, Madden at Weir&rsquo;s
+cold implacable expression of hatred shivered slightly.
+Sorenson and his accomplices would be lucky indeed if
+they died by the rope.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXVIII_VORSE' id='CHAPTER_XXVIII_VORSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+<h3>VORSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Across the main street the two men walked, wearing
+their hats low and making no answer to shouted questions
+of those hurrying to the courthouse yard. Already
+the grounds about the court house and the street
+in front were jammed with eager, excited Mexicans,
+thrilled with an expectation of something to happen,
+though they knew not exactly what. The murderer, the
+killer, they have taken the killer, was the constant statement
+tossed from mouth to mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But not the killer they think,&rdquo; Madden said, in a low
+aside to Weir as they moved ahead on their errand.</p>
+<p>The pair were now advancing toward the saloon, along
+the opposite side of the street where a slight shadow afforded
+them concealment. By the time they came opposite
+the building they had escaped altogether from the
+crowd, though looking thither over shoulder they could
+see the black press of people in the moonlight at the public
+building; and here the street was empty except for a
+few belated women and children running toward the
+assemblage.</p>
+<p>Madden&rsquo;s hand suddenly gripped the engineer&rsquo;s arm as
+they were about to step forth from the shadow to cross
+the street to the saloon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There he is,&rdquo; the sheriff whispered.</p>
+<p>Vorse had pushed open the slatted door of his place
+and stepped outside. In the moonlight his figure and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span>
+face were clearly visible: his thin whip-cord body and
+predatory face, and bald head as shiny and hard as a
+fish-scale. He wore no coat, while his vest hung unbuttoned
+and open as usual. About his waist was an
+ammunition belt carrying a holster, as if he were prepared
+for action.</p>
+<p>Thus he stood for a time, hands on hips, motionless,
+his cruel hatchet-like face directed towards the scene
+further along the street. Presently a man came running
+to him, Miguel, his bartender, who had been one
+of the two men serving out whiskey to the workmen at
+the old adobe house and who at the break-up of the
+spree had hastened back to town to report to his employer.
+Now, it seemed, he had fresher news to give.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, it is the engineer, for a certainty,&rdquo; he exclaimed
+panting, as he stopped before Vorse. &ldquo;The sheriff arrested
+him and he now lies in jail there. It is said he
+fought and tried to shoot Madden, but that the sheriff
+was too quick and shot the gun out of his hand. It is
+said also that the dam is blown into a million little
+stones, but men are riding there on horses to see for
+themselves. They will soon return. Anyway a fight
+there was up there undoubtedly, for Madden brought in
+not only the engineer but three other men, bound and
+handcuffed and struggling furiously, trying to strike and
+bite the crowd like mad dogs. From time to time the
+sheriff had to beat them on the heads with his pistol,
+especially the engineer, who is the worst. I did not see
+them, but those who did said their faces were streaming
+with blood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. Go find Jos&eacute; Molina and &lsquo;Silver&rsquo;
+Leon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are they not up in the hills with their bands of
+sheep?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No. They are here. Look around till you find
+them; then send them to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That means something lively to happen, eh?&rdquo; Miguel
+said with a laugh.</p>
+<p>He did not wait, however, for an answer, but set off
+at once for the court house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope Meyers shows up soon with more men,&rdquo; Madden
+said to Weir. &ldquo;Those two sheepherders of Vorse&rsquo;s
+are a pair of snakes; he always hires that kind; and they
+probably have some fellows with them like themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Meyers is on the way with twenty men or so by this
+time. They had to come in wagons, as we had the cars.
+Atkinson ought to be able to stand off the crowd
+with the half dozen boys he has until the others arrive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While they had conducted this brief exchange of
+opinions they had kept their gaze on the saloon-keeper,
+who continued to stand before his door. The cold and
+merciless character of the man was never more revealed
+than now as he waited for his hired assassins to come
+to receive orders. Possessing already a full knowledge
+of the plot, Weir and Madden were able to guess what
+culmination was now contemplated and measure the true
+depth of the conspirators&rsquo; infamy. The sheriff especially
+boiled with inward wrath that they should expect
+to make him not only a dupe but a tool in their
+crime.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s clear they never intended you should come to trial
+when arrested,&rdquo; he said to his companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly not. That isn&rsquo;t the way they play the
+game. And I suppose Vorse there imagines the cards
+are all falling his way at this moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s going in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good. Now then!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span></div>
+<p>Weir struck off across the street, striding forward at
+a pace Madden found it difficult to keep. As they neared
+the door, Weir loosened the gun in his holster.</p>
+<p>In this action the sheriff imitated him and then changing
+his mind drew the weapon itself. Plain man that he
+was, he was an instinctive judge of character; he had
+encountered men of Vorse&rsquo;s type before, less shrewd but
+equally savage; their nature was to fight, not surrender;
+their way was to kill or be killed in the final issue. He
+anticipated no arrest.</p>
+<p>He felt no necessity, however, to express this view to
+the engineer, who had proved himself in the time he had
+been at San Mateo wholly competent to deal with any
+situation that arose. Moreover, while Vorse had had a
+reputation of being a quick shot in the past, he was
+confident Weir was his master.</p>
+<p>With a quiet movement the engineer pushed open the
+door and stepped into the saloon. Madden following
+him had allowed the slatted door to swing shut again and
+the sound of its hinges caused Vorse, who was just starting
+away from the bar, to turn about. In his hand was
+a tray holding a bottle of whiskey, a bottle of mineral
+water and glasses, which apparently he had just lifted
+up.</p>
+<p>For a space of ten seconds or so he remained unmoving,
+the tray in his hand and his eyes regarding the
+visitors fixedly. Behind him in the rear of the saloon
+a second man had sprung up from the table where he
+sat, but after that first startled action he, too, had not
+stirred. The man was Sorenson.</p>
+<p>With Madden at his side and with a grim smile on his
+lips Weir walked slowly towards Vorse. In his tread
+there was something of the quality of a tiger&rsquo;s, the light,
+deliberate, poised advance, the easy and dangerous movement
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span>
+of body, the effortless glide of a powerful animal
+ready to spring and strike. His hands swung idly at
+his sides, but that did not mean they would not be swift
+once they responded to the call of the brain that controlled
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You gentlemen were just about to celebrate my downfall,
+I perceive, by pouring a libation,&rdquo; Weir said.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let me interrupt. Only I must request you to
+conduct the proceedings there where you&rsquo;re standing,
+Vorse, instead of at the rear of the room: Madden and
+I wish a good view of the ceremony. If Mr. Sorenson
+will be so agreeable as to step forward, you may go
+ahead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson did not join Vorse, but instead he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why haven&rsquo;t you locked up your prisoner, Madden?&rdquo;
+he demanded harshly. &ldquo;And you&rsquo;re letting him keep his
+gun. Don&rsquo;t you know enough to disarm a murderer and
+throw him into jail when you arrest him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t arrested him yet,&rdquo; was the sheriff&rsquo;s answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, do it then. You have the warrant for the
+scoundrel. Perhaps you haven&rsquo;t heard he almost killed
+my boy Ed last night&ndash;&ndash;and you&rsquo;re allowing him to walk
+around with you as if he were a bosom friend. Do your
+duty, or we&rsquo;ll get a sheriff who will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;m here, to do my duty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You didn&rsquo;t have to bring this man here to do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I decided to bring him, however.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From Vorse had come not a word. Only his gleaming
+evil eyes continued to rest on the two men without wink
+or change. For him explanations were unnecessary; he
+had divined instantly that somewhere, somehow the plotters&rsquo;
+plans had gone awry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you know that Gordon is dead?&rdquo; Weir asked, all
+at once.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span></div>
+<p>Vorse lowered the tray to the bar and ran the tip of
+his tongue over his lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we didn&rsquo;t know it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He deeded his property over this evening and then
+swallowed poison,&rdquo; the engineer stated. &ldquo;He saw the
+game was up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t make me believe your lies,&rdquo; came sneering
+from Sorenson. &ldquo;And you shall pay, you and that girl,
+for every broken bone in my boy&rsquo;s body. I&rsquo;ll spend my
+last dollar for that if necessary. Madden, do your duty
+and lock him up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sheriff said nothing, but lifted his gun a little.
+Vorse by a slight movement of his body had edged from
+the bar as if to gain freedom for action.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The game&rsquo;s up for you men too,&rdquo; Weir said.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve murdered and robbed and swindled in this country
+long enough; I&rsquo;ve got the proof and I&rsquo;m going to remove
+you from this community. It&rsquo;s not I who will be
+arrested. You killed Jim Dent after cleaning him out
+at cards and then made my father believe he was guilty
+of the crime. All I fear is that the court will hang you
+instead of sending you up for life; that would be too good
+for you. I want your crooked souls to die a thousand
+deaths within stone walls before you die in body. The
+game&rsquo;s up, I say. I&rsquo;ve Saurez&rsquo; deposition and I&rsquo;ve the
+man who was the boy looking in the back door there
+that day thirty years ago and saw you shoot Dent, and
+he&rsquo;ll go on the stand against you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A stillness so profound that one could hear the tiny
+insects hovering about the lamps succeeded this statement.
+If words had not been enough, Weir&rsquo;s cold, harsh
+face would have removed the men&rsquo;s last hope, for on it
+was not a single trace of relenting. A stone could have
+been no flintier.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; Vorse inquired softly.</p>
+<p>His arched bony nose appeared thinner and more
+hawk-like. His lips were compressed in a white scornful
+smile, while his eyelids now drooped until but slits
+of light showed from the orbs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you may be interested to know Burkhardt and
+some of the Mexicans he hired are now locked up in
+jail; the rest, or nearly all, are dead,&rdquo; Weir continued,
+with slow distinctness. &ldquo;Your little scheme to blow up
+the dam and burn the camp failed. We caught Burkhardt
+at the spot leading the gang. Your plot to make
+the workmen drunk and leave the dam unprotected
+worked well enough so far as that part was concerned,
+but a keg of powder dropped on your bunch of imported
+bandits ended that part of the show. And we have
+Burkhardt! You gentlemen are going to join him in the
+jail, where we shall give you all the care and attention
+you deserve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Vorse turned his head about towards Sorenson.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you hear?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madden, you&rsquo;ve too much sense to believe all this
+trumped-up libel!&rdquo; Sorenson exclaimed furiously.
+&ldquo;About us, respected leaders of this town! Arrest the
+blackguard!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even facing assured proof of his complicity and guilt,
+the cattleman still believed in the power of his wealth
+and influence, in his ability to browbeat opponents, to
+command the man he had elected to office, to dominate
+and ruthlessly crush by sheer will power all resistance,
+as he had done for years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I take no orders from you,&rdquo; the sheriff replied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I suppose I can empty the till and lock the safe
+before going?&rdquo; Vorse questioned.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No. Keep in front of the bar where you are,&rdquo; the
+sheriff commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And have everything stolen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your bar-keeper will be back presently. He will
+look after things for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say Burkhardt is locked up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That will hurt his pride,&rdquo; Vorse laughed. &ldquo;He always
+swore that no one should put him behind bars. He
+wouldn&rsquo;t have minded so much finishing in a gun-fight,
+but to serve a term in prison would surely go against the
+grain with Burk. Though I think with Sorenson&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s eyes had never left the speaker. Through the
+other&rsquo;s inconsequential talk and apparently careless acceptance
+of the fact of arrest the engineer had noted the
+tense gathering of the man&rsquo;s body.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Put your hands up,&rdquo; he interrupted at this point.</p>
+<p>Vorse had uttered no following word after speaking
+Sorenson&rsquo;s name; his voice terminated abruptly. At the
+same instant his right hand flew to his holster and
+whipped out his gun. It was the advantageous time for
+which he had waited, for Madden&rsquo;s look which had been
+moving back and forth from Vorse to Sorenson so as to
+cover both had passed to the latter. And Weir&rsquo;s weapon
+was undrawn.</p>
+<p>But if Vorse drew fast, the engineer&rsquo;s motion was like
+a flash of light. His weapon leaped on a level with the
+other&rsquo;s breast. The report sounded a second before that
+of Vorse&rsquo;s and three before Madden&rsquo;s, who also had
+fired.</p>
+<p>Then, if ever, Steele Weir had displayed his amazing
+speed in beating an enemy to his gun, for Vorse had indeed
+been quick, keyed by a knowledge that for him this
+meant imprisonment or freedom, a slow death or liberty.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span></div>
+<p>For a minute he stood half crouching as he had been
+at the instant of shooting, his eyes glaring balefully at
+his enemy and the thin cruel smile on his lips, while the
+two men in front stood warily waiting with weapons extended.
+Then Vorse clutched at his breast, muttered
+thickly and toppled over full length on the floor.</p>
+<p>The sharp pungent smell of powder smoke mingled
+with the reek of liquor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s dead,&rdquo; Madden said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you hit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. His bullet went past my hip; he never got his
+gun up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden glanced about towards the rear of the room.
+A command for Sorenson to stop broke from his lips.
+Next he fired. And Weir swinging his look that way
+saw Sorenson&rsquo;s form, untouched by the bullet, vanishing
+through the rear door into the night. Using the minute
+that the two men&rsquo;s surveillance had been lifted he had
+escaped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hard luck when we had him,&rdquo; Weir growled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He can&rsquo;t get away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure. And he&rsquo;s armed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll strike for home to get his car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Or to the office for money,&rdquo; Weir exclaimed.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXIX_THE_FOURTH_MAN' id='CHAPTER_XXIX_THE_FOURTH_MAN'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+<h3>THE FOURTH MAN</h3>
+</div>
+<p>A last look Steele Weir had at the dead man on the
+floor before he turned to go in search of Sorenson. Not
+so astute or crafty as Judge Gordon, nor so intelligent
+as Sorenson, nor so belligerent as Burkhardt, he had
+been as rapacious and infinitely more cool-minded than
+any of the three. If anything, he was the one of them all
+to proceed to a crime, whether fraud or murder, in sheer
+cold blood and by natural craving. No uneasy conscience
+would have ever disturbed his rest: no remorse or
+pity ever stirred in his breast. He was the human counterpart
+of a bird of prey.</p>
+<p>Well, he was dead now. Three of the quartette who
+had been joined by avarice and lawless actions were taken
+care of&ndash;&ndash;Burkhardt a prisoner, Gordon dead by self-administered
+poison, Vorse by bullets. Almost did Steele
+Weir feel himself an embodiment of Fate, clipping the
+strands of these men&rsquo;s power and lives as with shears.
+Sorenson alone remained to be dealt with and his freedom
+should be short.</p>
+<p>Beckoning Madden, he went swiftly through the door
+where the cattleman had leaped into the shadows. Where
+the gloom ceased and the space behind the row of store
+buildings was clear in the moonlight, nothing was to be
+seen. Naturally the man had kept within black shade
+in his flight.</p>
+<p>When they reached the rear of the cattle company&rsquo;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span>
+office building, they peered in through its barred back
+windows, but all was dark inside the structure so far as
+they could determine. To all appearance Sorenson had
+not stopped here: it was quiet, gloomy, untenanted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have to try his home now,&rdquo; the sheriff stated.
+&ldquo;If we don&rsquo;t find him there, we&rsquo;ll set the telephones going
+to warn all the ranches and towns around to be on
+the lookout and either to stop or report him if he shows
+up. He hasn&rsquo;t start enough to get away now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They hastened on along the line of buildings until they
+reached a side street. But when they had proceeded a
+short way, Weir stopped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not satisfied about the office,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Suppose
+you go on to his house and I&rsquo;ll return for a look inside
+from the front. If you fail to find him join me at Martinez&rsquo;
+office, where no one is likely to be around and we
+can then lay further plans.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That suits,&rdquo; Madden responded, and set off alone.</p>
+<p>Weir&rsquo;s alert brain had been turning over the possibilities
+of Sorenson&rsquo;s course. Rather by pursuing what
+would be the man&rsquo;s line of reasoning than by depending
+on chance, he had come to the quick decision to turn
+back once again to the office. Sorenson would so act as
+would best serve his immediate escape and that of the future.</p>
+<p>Would he expect the sheriff and the engineer to look
+for him to flee by the speediest means, an automobile,
+and to the natural avenue of escape, the railroad? Yes.
+Therefore on that expectation he would adopt another
+way to throw off pursuit. And perilous as a delay would
+be in getting away from San Mateo, yet he must risk the
+few minutes necessary to get money. For to fly with
+pockets empty meant eventual, certain capture. Money
+a fugitive from justice must possess above everything
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span>
+in order to possess wings; and no one would know that
+better than Sorenson.</p>
+<p>Though Madden and he had seen no light in the office
+building, the cattleman nevertheless might have been
+within. If he had been in the vault, he could safely have
+lighted a candle without their perceiving its beams; and
+though the safe was modern it probably had no time lock.
+Sorenson could unlock it with a few twirls of the combination,
+stuff his pockets with currency and negotiable
+paper to the amount of thousands and then slip away.</p>
+<p>Fortunately the moonlight was to Weir&rsquo;s advantage.
+He quickened his steps, passed round the corner into
+the main street and moved towards the building. For
+him the crowd at the court house at that moment had
+no interest; one person, and one person alone, commanded
+his thoughts.</p>
+<p>How correct had been his logic&ndash;&ndash;logic not unmixed
+with intuition, perhaps&ndash;&ndash;appeared when he was yet some
+fifty yards away from the door he sought. A tall bulky
+figure suddenly stepped forth from the building and instantly
+ran across the street and lost itself in the shifting,
+jostling crowd that was half-disclosed, half-concealed
+by the broken shadows of the moonlit trees.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir proceeded to a spot near the office and
+halted. His first impulse to rush after Sorenson had
+been promptly suppressed, as cooler judgment ruled. To
+seek his quarry in that throng would be labor wasted,
+while to reveal his identity would be to court a disastrous
+interference with the business at hand. From where he
+stood he should much better be able to see Sorenson when
+he did emerge, unless he chose to remain in the crowd or
+steal away at the rear of the court house yard, a chance
+Weir must take.</p>
+<p>Five minutes passed. The restless, talkative Mexicans
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span>
+continued to swarm and buzz with excitement, ceaselessly
+moving about, forming and reforming in groups, agitatedly
+repeating newer and wilder rumors concerning
+events. Despite Weir&rsquo;s intent watch for Sorenson, the
+engineer could not but observe the mob&rsquo;s manifestations,
+observe them with sardonic humor. For their ebullition
+of the present would be nothing to what it would be if
+they learned he stood across the street, uncaged, unfettered,
+free and armed, a &ldquo;gun-man&rdquo; loose instead of
+a &ldquo;gun-man&rdquo; in jail.</p>
+<p>All at once Weir noted out of the tail of his eye a
+slight stir among a number of horses standing with reins
+a-trail before a store a little way down the street. The
+horses were partly in the light, partly in the shadow,
+so that all he could see was that one or two of them
+had jerked aside quickly, then resumed their listless postures.</p>
+<p>He was about to withdraw his eyes when he saw a man
+swing upon the back of one of them and start off at
+an easy canter. Weir sprang towards the spot at a run.
+That big figure could only be Sorenson&rsquo;s, for no Mexican
+he had ever seen in San Mateo could match it. And the
+plan of escape showed the other&rsquo;s craft in an emergency;
+gradually working his way through the crowd he had at
+last gained the protective shadow of the building on that
+side of the street and slipped along in it until he reached
+the horses.</p>
+<p>Doubtless the man had conceived the plan at the instant
+he had stepped from his office, sweeping the street
+by one gauging look. With the whole town assembled
+at the court house, his departure was little likely to be
+noted by the Mexicans, while Madden and Weir would
+never suspect him of riding off on a horse, or suspect too
+late. Indeed, he rode at first as if in no great haste,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span>
+but as he turned his mount into a narrow by-way, more
+a lane than a street that disappeared between two mud
+walls, Weir saw him strike his heels into the pony&rsquo;s
+flanks.</p>
+<p>But for the startled movement of the nearby horses
+when Sorenson took stirrup, Weir would not have looked
+that way. He might possibly have seen the horseman
+start off, but that is not certain. He unquestionably
+would have supposed him an ordinary rider if he had not
+noticed the man until he reached the mouth of the lane.</p>
+<p>Meantime the engineer had made his best speed to the
+line of waiting horses. Slowing to a walk so as not to
+scare them, though as he discovered on examination most
+of them looked too bony and spiritless for that, he approached
+and carefully inspected the bunch. He took
+his time in the selection: the more haste in choosing a
+mount might prove less speed in the end. He tightened
+the saddle-girths and ran a finger along the head straps
+of the bridle of the horse picked to judge their fit, receiving
+a snap from the pony&rsquo;s teeth, which gave him
+satisfaction. Not only was this animal a wiry, tough-looking
+little beast, but he had life.</p>
+<p>Up into the saddle Weir went, followed Sorenson&rsquo;s
+line to the lane, down which he swung. Coming out into
+the next street, he pursued it to an intersecting street,
+and there galloped for the edge of town without trying
+to guess the way taken by his enemy. Once he reached
+the open fields he would quickly get sight of the man racing
+away somewhere on the mesa.</p>
+<p>Evidently the quarry he pursued had not taken so
+direct a course as Weir, for when the latter at length
+came forth where he could have a wide view he perceived
+the horseman a quarter of a mile off and further east,
+galloping south. The engineer at once raced thither to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span>
+gain the same road and turning into it made for Sorenson.</p>
+<p>Thus the two men sped away from San Mateo. The
+wire fences and the adobe houses of Mexicans owning
+little farms adjoining soon ceased. The wide mesa lay
+on either side. Though a quarter of a mile had separated
+the men when Weir first observed the other, the distance
+between had been increased while the engineer was
+gaining the road, until now the interval was almost twice
+as great.</p>
+<p>Weir guessed the fleeing man&rsquo;s plan. Instead of seeking
+the railroad for the present, he would disappear in
+the mountains, where with the assistance of some loyal
+employee, cowman or sheepherder, he would lie hid until
+the first fury of the hunt had subsided. Possibly his
+bold brain even conceived the idea of again returning to
+San Mateo some dark night soon and further looting the
+office, vigilance being relaxed.</p>
+<p>In any case, he would expect to remain safe from pursuit
+in a mountain fastness until either on horseback or
+by automobile he could work his way out of the country.
+With what he had unquestionably carried off he would
+not be a poor man. In some spot far away he could
+assume a new name, start in business and later be joined
+by his wife and crippled son.</p>
+<p>Alas, for those plans, arising like mushrooms on the
+ruins of his life! Behind him followed the same inexorable
+antagonist who so swiftly had brought everything
+crashing about his head. Possibly Sorenson once out of
+the town had failed to look back; possibly looking back
+he had been unable to distinguish against the blur of
+houses and trees the horseman galloping in the moonlight
+along the same road.</p>
+<p>But all at once when they were two miles away from
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span>
+San Mateo he discovered Weir, who had been gradually
+cutting down the space between until now again he was
+within a quarter of a mile of his quarry. Sorenson had
+been riding rapidly but not hard; he now beat his horse
+to a furious gallop,&ndash;&ndash;a good pony, too, from its speed,
+showing that the banker as well as Weir had picked his
+mount with care.</p>
+<p>Weir did not urge his horse to a similar pace, only
+maintaining a fast steady gallop that kept the other in
+sight though the space between again widened. Apparently
+Sorenson realized the folly of attempting to outrun,
+his pursuer at once, for he soon dropped back into
+a regular, mile-eating gallop. Gradually in turn Weir
+crept up to his old position.</p>
+<p>To each the only sound was that of drumming hoof-beats.
+In front rode the fleeing man&ndash;&ndash;dethroned leader
+and criminal and murderer. Behind relentlessly came
+his Nemesis, the son of the man whom he had deceived
+and damned to mental suffering. All about them as they
+flew along was the silent, moonlit, sage-covered mesa.
+At their right towered the misty, unchanging peaks, as if
+watching unmoved this strange race of two human beings.
+A strange race, in truth,&ndash;&ndash;a race where vengeance rode.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXX_THE_VICTOR' id='CHAPTER_XXX_THE_VICTOR'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+<h3>THE VICTOR</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Ten miles the two men had gone when Sorenson&rsquo;s horse
+began to fail. The rider&rsquo;s weight was proving too much
+for the sturdy little animal and though he strove to maintain
+his speed the strain told on lungs and legs. Weir
+had reduced the distance first to three hundred yards,
+then to two hundred, and at last but a hundred separated
+him from the man and horse ahead.</p>
+<p>The hard chase indeed was beginning to tell on his
+own mount. Flecks of foam flew from its lips; its neck
+was wet with sweat; the whistle of its breath was audible
+to the engineer at every stride. For as both men had
+realized that now the end could not be far off, they had
+pushed their horses to faster and faster galloping.</p>
+<p>On a sudden Sorenson swung his animal into a dim
+trail leading from the main road skirting the mountain
+range to the base of the mountains themselves. The first
+slopes were but a mile away, covered with a scattering
+growth of pinyon pines. Just in front, too, for which
+the trail seemed pointing, was a dark ravine filled with
+brush that rose to the denser timber above. This was
+the fugitive&rsquo;s goal. Once he could fling himself from
+the saddle and plunge into the undergrowth he would
+be safe from his pursuer.</p>
+<p>The two ponies struggled on with exhausted leaps.
+Weir had reduced the interval to seventy-five yards by
+the time half the distance was covered and to fifty as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span>
+they drew near the mouth of the ravine. He measured
+his gain and the remaining two hundred yards or so with
+savage eyes, then drew his revolver. He desired to take
+Sorenson unharmed. But rather than that the man
+should escape he would kill him.</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s horse stumbled, but a jerk of the reins
+saved him and kept him moving on. The engineer struck
+his own pony fiercely on the flank, which produced a tremendous
+effort in the striving beast that brought it
+within thirty paces or so of Sorenson. That, however,
+was the best it could do, labor as it would. Its knees
+were trembling at every stride, its head swinging heavily.</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s horse suddenly went to its knees. But the
+man leaping clear took the ground on his feet and instantly
+set off at a run for the line of brush in the draw
+some seventy or eighty paces away. A last spurt Weir&rsquo;s
+pony made, bringing his rider to within thirty yards of
+the cattleman, who glancing over his shoulder halted,
+swung about, fired a shot and again started to run.</p>
+<p>The pony under Weir came to an abrupt stop, shaking.
+He was done, whether from exhaustion or the bullet
+the engineer did not wait to see. Flinging himself out
+the saddle he raced after his man, taking the rough trail
+leading up the slope in swift strides. On foot Sorenson
+was no match for him. But the latter had the start; he
+was now almost within reach of the thick screen of
+bushes; and he bent every energy to make the ambuscade.</p>
+<p>Still running, Weir flung up his gun and fired. Close
+the shot must have gone to Sorenson, so close as to
+inject into the man&rsquo;s mind recollection of his pursuer&rsquo;s
+accuracy and a fear of a bullet in his back, for when
+within twenty feet of the bushes he dropped behind a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span>
+small bowlder, whence he fired twice at Weir but without
+striking his mark.</p>
+<p>Neither man after the furious ride and the concluding
+run on foot was fit for sure marksmanship. This Weir
+realized, so stopped where he was some forty feet off
+from Sorenson&rsquo;s stone in order to regain his breath and
+calm his nerves. Of the cattleman he could see nothing;
+the man crouched low out of sight, perhaps reloading his
+weapon, perhaps steeling himself for a dash across that
+small moonlit space that separated him from safety, or
+perhaps preparing for a quick upward spring and a
+fresh volley directed at his foe.</p>
+<p>It may be questioned if in his heart Sorenson was not
+almost disposed to fight the matter out. He was no
+coward; his original hatred for the engineer had by
+recent events been swelled to a diabolical desire to kill;
+and now even if he, Sorenson, succeeded in slipping away,
+his whereabouts would be known unless he destroyed the
+man. Safety demanded that he not only escape but
+escape without this witness.</p>
+<p>Weir had not sought cover. He stood upright, his
+revolver ready, trusting to have an advantage in his
+speed when it came to an exchange of shots. Then he
+began an advance, a slow noiseless circling advance that
+at the same time of taking him closer to his enemy
+brought him round on his flank.</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s hand and pistol appeared and half his face
+while three shots rattled from his gun, two at the spot
+where Weir had been and one at him in his new position,
+which the hiding man had immediately located. The last
+shot ticked the engineer&rsquo;s sleeve. In return Weir fired
+twice, the first bullet striking the rock and ricocheting
+off with a loud whine, while the second struck the pistol
+from Sorenson&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span></div>
+<p>Instantly Weir sprang forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Show yourself,&rdquo; he ordered. And the kneeling fugitive,
+disarmed, gripping his bleeding hand, sullenly arose
+to his feet. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve led me a chase, but I have you at
+last,&rdquo; the engineer continued. &ldquo;Now you&rsquo;re going back
+to San Mateo and jail. Walk towards the horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson cast one bitter glance at the thicket in the
+ravine; by only the little matter of a few yards he had
+failed to gain liberty. For Weir his visage when he
+looked around again was never more hard, hostile, full
+of undying hatred. Though balked, he was not submissive,
+and was the kind who kept his animosity to the end.
+Then he started off towards the horses, his own which
+had staggered to its feet again and Weir&rsquo;s, both standing
+with hanging heads and heaving, quivering sides.</p>
+<p>All at once the cattleman halted and faced about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Most men have a price, and I suppose you have
+yours,&rdquo; he said, with forced calmness. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m ready to
+pay it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re going to pay it,&rdquo; was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much will you ask to let me go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you offered me ten million, which you haven&rsquo;t got,
+I wouldn&rsquo;t accept it,&rdquo; Weir said, harshly. &ldquo;There isn&rsquo;t
+enough money in the world to buy your liberty. You&rsquo;re
+going back to San Mateo, and from there to the penitentiary
+or to the gallows, one or the other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will be neither,&rdquo; Sorenson stated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re mistaken, but I shall not argue the matter
+with you. Keep walking towards the horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sorenson&rsquo;s lips became compressed. He glanced down
+at his bleeding hand, shook the blood from his fingers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I stay here,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>Weir went a step nearer and thrust his face forward,
+jaw set, eyes smoldering.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on, I say,&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>But the other did not retreat before him or indeed
+move at all. A sneer lifted his gray mustache.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have a gun; you&rsquo;re a killer; here I am unarmed
+and in your power,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You intend to take me
+in; I propose to stay here. If I go to San Mateo, it
+will be as a dead man. I&rsquo;ll see whether you have the
+nerve to shoot me down where I now stand. If you have,
+go to it. You can then take my body to town, but I&rsquo;ll
+not have paid the price you name and I&rsquo;ll have the
+satisfaction of knowing I beat you at the last&ndash;&ndash;in that,
+at least. Your bragging will be empty. Start your
+shooting any time you please.&rdquo; The tone spoke complete
+contempt.</p>
+<p>Weir said nothing. The defiance, the supreme audacity
+of this assertion, coming so unexpectedly, surprised
+him and left him at a loss. He would not kill an unresisting
+man, even Sorenson, his worst enemy. Sorenson
+in his place probably would not have hesitated to do
+so, for he had no fine scruples in such matters; but for
+Steele Weir the thing was no more possible than striking
+a woman or a child.</p>
+<p>It was not a question of nerve, as the other had stated.
+It was a test of brutality and consciencelessness. To
+shoot a man while escaping is one thing; to kill him
+while a prisoner, however contemptuous and brazen, was
+another. But there are means other than bullets for
+handling obstinate prisoners.</p>
+<p>Weir shifted his weapon so as to grasp the barrel and
+have the butt free.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll leave your execution to the proper officials, if
+an execution is what you want,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Now will
+you go?&rdquo; he demanded, threateningly.</p>
+<p>His foe gazed at the clubbed pistol and turned as if
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span>
+to yield. Next instant he whirled, lunging at Weir and
+flinging his arms about his captor. An exultant exclamation
+slipped from his lips; his hot breath fell on the
+engineer&rsquo;s cheek; his eyes glared into those of the man
+his arms encircled. He had tricked Weir by his pretense
+of obstinacy, led him to weaken his guard and
+had him in his grasp.</p>
+<p>Weir braced himself to resist the man&rsquo;s effort to force
+him down. Strong arms the other had, now doubly
+strengthened by hate and a belief in victory. All the
+power of Sorenson&rsquo;s great body was exerted to lift him
+off his feet, crush him in a terrific bear-hug, put him on
+his back and render him helpless; and Weir in his turn
+was tensing his muscles and arching his frame with every
+ounce of his lean, iron-like frame.</p>
+<p>Thus they swayed and struggled in the moonlight,
+without witnesses. A sinister silent fight, marked only
+by their fierce breathing and fiercer heart-beats. The
+pistol had dropped from Steele Weir&rsquo;s hand; instead of
+attempting to break the other&rsquo;s hold he had yielded to
+it and pushing his own arms forward had clasped his
+hands behind Sorenson&rsquo;s back in the wrestler&rsquo;s true defense
+to such an attack.</p>
+<p>Once Sorenson almost had him on his knees, but by a
+quick powerful upthrust of his legs he regained his upright
+position. However, it had been a close shave for
+Weir, for he well knew that his opponent would use any
+tactics, fair or foul, to kill him if he once lay on his back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You hound from hell!&rdquo; Sorenson snarled. &ldquo;You
+crippled my boy, and you shall die for that. You&rsquo;ve
+ruined me in San Mateo, and you shall die for that. You
+jailed Burkhardt and poisoned Gordon and shot Vorse,
+and you shall die for that. I&rsquo;m going to choke the life
+out of you, and grind your dead head into the dust, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span>
+then spit on you. That&rsquo;s how I treat snakes. Say your
+prayers, if you know any, for you&rsquo;ll never get another
+chance. Your friends won&rsquo;t recognize your remains
+when I&rsquo;m done with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Venomous and impassioned, all the hate in the man&rsquo;s
+heart flowed forth in a fuming stream. For hate and
+murderous desire was all that was left him in the wreck
+of life caused by the engineer. If he could no longer
+rule, he could at least destroy.</p>
+<p>Weir had made no response to the fierce imprecations.
+He was working his hands upward, straining his arms
+so as to reach Sorenson&rsquo;s head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the coyotes are gnawing your skull,&rdquo; Sorenson
+went on, raging, &ldquo;when the worms are feeding on
+you&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words died in a gurgle of pain. Weir&rsquo;s hands had
+closed about his temples, a finger sunk in each eye, forcing
+his head back. Sorenson shook himself frantically
+to break the torturing hold. His head went farther and
+farther back as if it seemed his neck would snap; his
+mouth opened to gasp, &ldquo;Oh, God!&rdquo; and all at once his
+hug slipped apart.</p>
+<p>Instantly Weir tripped him, falling on top. Reaching
+out like a flash he seized his pistol lying on the
+ground and brought it down on the head of his enemy,
+who momentarily blinded and suffering could not resist.
+Sorenson went limp. From the savage beast of a minute
+before he had been changed to a huge, motionless, sprawling
+figure, with face upturned to the moon.</p>
+<p>And on that face the victor of the life and death
+struggle could still behold, through the contorted lines
+stamped by pain, the man&rsquo;s brutal passion and fixed malevolence.</p>
+<p>Weir arose.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;You felt the hound of hell&rsquo;s teeth,&rdquo; he muttered.</p>
+<p>With thongs from one of the saddles he bound Sorenson&rsquo;s
+hands, pulling the knots tight and hard. The prostrate
+man moaned, opened his eyes. Weir jerked him
+dazed and staggering to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up into the saddle with you if you don&rsquo;t want another
+rap on the head,&rdquo; Steele ordered, bruskly. &ldquo;And
+go straight this time. From now on I&rsquo;ll take you at your
+word and put a hole through your black heart if you
+try any more tricks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When his prisoner was mounted, he fastened his ankles
+together by another thong under the belly of the pony.
+Weir was taking no chances. Up into his own saddle
+then he swung himself.</p>
+<p>No exultant curses now came from his captive&rsquo;s lips.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXXI_A_FINAL_CHALLENGE' id='CHAPTER_XXXI_A_FINAL_CHALLENGE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+<h3>A FINAL CHALLENGE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>The hour was drawing near midnight when Weir and
+his prisoner entered the town. Most of the women and
+children of the crowd of Mexicans had gone to their
+homes, but men yet remained before the court house and
+in the street, discussing and arguing the exciting events
+of the night.</p>
+<p>In some mysterious manner knowledge that Burkhardt
+and not Weir was the prisoner in the jail, together with
+news of Judge Gordon&rsquo;s suicide and Vorse&rsquo;s death, had
+spread from mouth to mouth. Amazement and incredulity
+had been followed by an aroused feeling of anger,
+for to the Mexicans it appeared that the crushing blow
+dealt the leaders of the town was the arbitrary act of
+the man they believed a lawless gun-man. Were not
+Weir&rsquo;s foremen and engineers guarding the jail? Men
+who were strangers, not even citizens of the county?</p>
+<p>But though an undercurrent of feeling ran among the
+talking groups, gradually increasing as the time passed,
+yet was there no active desire on the part of all or a
+concerted movement to drive away the seeming invaders
+of the law. For any such attempt a strong leader was
+necessary. There was none: Madden frowned upon
+them, only saying as he moved about that he was executing
+the law; Sorenson, the dominating figure of the
+town, and Burkhardt&rsquo;s, Vorse&rsquo;s and Gordon&rsquo;s friend, was
+strangely absent.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span></div>
+<p>The determined guard about the jail was in itself a
+deterrent to mob action. Meyers had brought twenty
+or more men from camp, armed and alert, who with those
+already about the building constituted a force to make
+any crowd of Mexicans, however angry, think twice
+before seeking to rescue prisoners. But the wish and
+the spirit were not lacking. Employees of the plotters,
+men who had received favors from Sorenson or Vorse or
+Burkhardt, Mexicans of a naturally vicious and unruly
+temper, were all for rushing the jail. The great number
+of the people, however, peaceful and indolent, preferred
+to content themselves with satisfying their curiosity
+by talk instead of seeking a taste of blood. And so as
+a result of this divided opinion the hostility for Weir had
+not expressed itself in an effort to assail the keepers of
+the jail.</p>
+<p>When he was discovered to have returned to town,
+this angry feeling assumed a menacing form. He approached
+the court house by the side street, Sorenson
+riding at his side, for it was his plan to lodge his prisoner
+in the Jail with as much secrecy as possible. Nevertheless
+in this he was disappointed; men saw him arrive,
+assist his prisoner to alight and climb the board fence
+about the yard; and drawn by the expectation of new
+events the nearer groups hastened forward.</p>
+<p>Weir impelled his man towards the jail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand back,&rdquo; he commanded the Mexicans.</p>
+<p>The latter at first stared in astonishment at beholding
+the pair, one of whom was San Mateo&rsquo;s foremost citizen,
+now sullenly advancing with wrists bound. Exclamations
+burst from their lips.</p>
+<p>At that a flash of hope filled Sorenson&rsquo;s breast.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To my rescue, friends!&rdquo; he cried, beginning to
+struggle.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span></div>
+<p>Weir jerked him ahead fiercely and cast fiercer looks
+at the Mexicans.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This man is under arrest. And remember I can still
+shoot straight,&rdquo; he warned.</p>
+<p>Towards him came Madden running, who in Weir&rsquo;s
+disappearance earlier in the night he had guessed a pursuit
+of the cattleman and had therefore returned to the
+jail. He placed himself at Sorenson&rsquo;s right.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoever tries to take Sorenson from the hands of
+the law does so at his own peril,&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>A few mocking shouts resulted. These were gradually
+increased until the Mexicans, now being joined by scores
+of others from the street, became a howling, cursing, hysterical
+mob, crying Sorenson and Burkhardt&rsquo;s innocence,
+calling down imprecations on the heads of the sheriff
+and the engineer, stirred by certain lawless spirits to
+wilder and wilder passion.</p>
+<p>Weir and Madden had not been standing still, for the
+crowd was not yet numerous enough at first or bold
+enough to attack. Moreover the two men held their
+pistols well in view. Forcing Sorenson ahead, driving
+apart those who blocked their way, they pushed across
+the yard until but a few paces from the jail.</p>
+<p>One Mexican, a ranch hand from one of Vorse&rsquo;s
+ranches, wearing a great high-peaked felt hat and chaps,
+insolently thrust himself before the trio, spitting at
+Weir&rsquo;s face and in Spanish begging companions to help
+him release Sorenson. His right hand was resting on his
+holster as if but awaiting an excuse to use his gun.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get to one side,&rdquo; was Weir&rsquo;s harsh order.</p>
+<p>The man&rsquo;s answer was a string of foul curses. Like
+a panther the engineer leaped forward and struck the
+fellow on the side of his head with revolver barrel,
+dropping him where he stood.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span></div>
+<p>As the crowd remained suddenly mute, unmoving, their
+howls checked by this swift reprisal, Weir spoke to
+Madden:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick! To the door!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Each with an arm in Sorenson&rsquo;s, they made a run for
+the jail, passed through the line of armed guards and
+for the moment were safe. The sheriff lost no time in
+dragging the prisoner inside and when presently he
+stepped forth again, locking the door after him, he
+showed a relieved face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I put irons on him, hands and feet,&rdquo; he informed
+Weir. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s out of the way at any rate if we&rsquo;re in for
+a row.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was exactly what appeared in prospect. Only
+the rifles in the grip of the two dozen men about the
+jail kept the now thoroughly aroused mob from
+rushing forward. From yelling it had changed to low
+fierce murmurs that bespoke a more desperate
+mood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to move the men somewhere else,&rdquo; Steele
+Weir stated. &ldquo;Pretty soon they&rsquo;ll go for arms and then
+we&rsquo;ll have real trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I arranged while you were gone to transfer them to
+the county seat in the next county,&rdquo; Madden said.
+&ldquo;Telephoned the sheriff; he&rsquo;s expecting them. To-morrow
+we can take them to Santa F&eacute;, out of this part of
+the country till time for their trial. I placed the automobile
+your man brought Burkhardt in from the dam
+and another machine back in the alley; they are there
+now in the shadow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good. The quicker you take them, the better. They
+ought to be gagged when brought out. Get them here to
+the door; the men who are to drive should have the cars
+ready, engines going&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s fixed. Your superintendent will drive one
+car and one of the engineers the other; they can slip
+back there at once. Six more of the guards are to go
+with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right. You know whom you want. Station them
+here at the door to rush the prisoners back the instant
+you&rsquo;re ready. Have them go round to the rear on the
+dark side of the jail; they should gain a good start
+before they&rsquo;re discovered.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madden called from the line Atkinson and the men
+whom he had chosen to accompany him on the night ride.
+A brief parley followed. Then he and two of the engineers
+went inside the jail, while the superintendent and
+one young fellow stole away in the shadows towards the
+spot where stood the cars.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the throng had grown until it filled all the
+space about the rear of the court house and formed a
+mass of human bodies on which the checkered moonlight
+played reaching to within half a dozen paces of the jail.
+A shot rang out and a bullet struck the jail. It was
+like a match lighted near powder, that if allowed to burn
+would set off an explosion. One shot would lead to others
+from reckless spirits, to a volley and in the end to an
+onslaught.</p>
+<p>Perhaps that was the reasoning and the purpose of
+the man who had fired. In any case, it must not be repeated.</p>
+<p>Weir strode forward towards the crowd.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If that man, or any of you, want to shoot this out
+with me, let him show himself,&rdquo; he said, threateningly
+and swinging the muzzle of his weapon along the line
+of faces.</p>
+<p>A quick retreat on the part of those nearest marked
+the respect with which it was considered. Frantically
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span>
+they strove to push further back into the mob, clawing
+and elbowing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you try any more shots,&rdquo; he continued, speaking
+in Spanish as before, &ldquo;those rifles will open fire.&rdquo; He
+paused to allow this information to have full effect.
+&ldquo;Finally, if you attempt wrecking this jail, the three
+hundred workmen from the dam will march down to San
+Mateo and teach you proper observance of the law. If
+you&rsquo;re really looking for trouble, those three hundred
+men will give this town trouble that will be remembered
+for twenty years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Standing there in the moonlight between the two
+parties, between the thin line of sentinels about the jail
+and the dense mob in front, Steele Weir&rsquo;s action seemed
+the height of rashness. A rush of the Mexicans and he
+would be overwhelmed, a cowardly shot from somewhere
+in the rear and he might be killed. It was like inviting
+disaster.</p>
+<p>If, however, he recognized his danger, he gave no sign
+of it. By the power of his gun and sheer boldness he
+faced them, calm, fearless, masterful. His unexpected
+advance had surprised the Mexicans, left them confused
+and uncertain. Wild and sinister tales concerning his
+prowess magnified him in their eyes notwithstanding their
+animosity. Now they seemed to feel his iron will beating
+against their faces.</p>
+<p>During the pause that ensued Weir heard the jail door
+open. Madden was preparing to take his prisoners out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not seeking trouble, but I&rsquo;m not avoiding it,&rdquo; the
+engineer proceeded, for this was the critical minute, and
+he sought to have all eyes focused upon him instead of
+upon the activity at his back. &ldquo;The sheriff represents
+the law here in San Mateo, and I give you plain warning
+that every man who attempts violence to-night will be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300' name='page_300'></a>300</span>
+called upon to pay the account. By to-morrow the Governor
+may have soldiers stationed in your houses and in
+your streets, for the prisoners are now the prisoners of
+the state, arrested for stealing cattle&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was a happy inspiration. Had Weir stated the
+whole category of Sorenson&rsquo;s and Burkhardt&rsquo;s crimes,
+including murder and dynamiting, he could not have
+struck so shrewdly as in naming the sin of cattle-stealing.
+For this was a cattle country and even the most
+ignorant Mexican grasped the significance of this charge.</p>
+<p>A visible stir answered the statement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For stealing cattle from other men&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;he did not
+trouble to mention the fact the crime had occurred thirty
+years previous&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;and for that and other things Sheriff
+Madden has arrested them. Because they are rich, their
+guilt is all the worse. Perhaps they have taken cattle
+belonging to you, who knows? That may come out in
+their trial; if they have taken them, you shall have them
+back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From the rear of the grounds came the low sounds of
+automobile engines being started. Weir dared not look
+about to learn if Madden and his party were safely on
+their way thither. As for the Mexicans, the speaker&rsquo;s
+words had created a sensation. For men were there
+who owned small herds now feeding on the range, and
+from anger their minds yielded to sudden anxiety; each
+saw himself a possible sufferer from cattle depredations;
+and in the minds of these, at least, thought of loss supplanted
+thought of Sorenson and Burkhardt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I helped Sheriff Madden arrest these men because
+they stole cattle, possibly some of your steers among
+them. Is that why you would like to lynch me, as I&rsquo;ve
+heard you wanted to do?&rdquo; he demanded, savagely. &ldquo;Because
+I save your animals? Or is it because I shot that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301' name='page_301'></a>301</span>
+renegade Mexican whom Ed Sorenson hired to try and
+kill me? Ed Sorenson, yes. Sheriff Madden has the
+knowledge of it. Not only would Sorenson the father like
+to see me die because I know about his cattle-stealing,
+but Ed Sorenson, the son, hired that strange Mexican
+to shoot me from the dark because I stopped him from
+trying to steal a girl. Has Ed Sorenson left your daughters
+alone? I would save your daughters from his evil
+hands, as I would your cattle from his father&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A man all at once pushed forth from the crowd, wrathfully
+elbowing his way among neighbors. He was
+Naharo, the Mexican who had chatted once with Martinez
+in the latter&rsquo;s office.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; he shouted, facing his countrymen. &ldquo;I,
+Naharo, vow it the truth. For I saw this engineer take
+a young girl away from Ed Sorenson in the restaurant
+at Bowenville that the scoundrel intended to seduce. It
+is so, the truth; the engineer saved her. And are there
+not men among you&rdquo;&ndash;&ndash;his voice gained a savage, rasping
+note&ndash;&ndash;&ldquo;whose girls have been betrayed by the cattle-stealing
+Sorenson&rsquo;s son?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is he&ndash;&ndash;where is he now?&rdquo; some one shouted,
+angrily. It might have been a father who stood in
+Naharo&rsquo;s case.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He lies crippled,&rdquo; Weir stated. &ldquo;Last night he tried
+to steal yet another girl from San Mateo, and fleeing
+when overtaken was pitched from his car and crushed
+against a rock. He will steal no more daughters of
+San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sensation on sensation. The crowd fairly hummed
+with new excitement resulting from these disclosures.
+Ed Sorenson&rsquo;s ways were known to most and the revelations
+seemed true to his character; and from believing
+the statements of the son to accepting those concerning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302' name='page_302'></a>302</span>
+the father was but a step. Cattle&ndash;&ndash;girls! It began to
+look as if this engineer was in the right.</p>
+<p>With half of his attention Weir was harkening for the
+sound of starting automobiles. He had heard the scuffle
+of feet when the party slipped away from the jail door
+into the shadows. He had almost measured their passage
+to the alley. Ah, and now! There was a quick grind of
+gears, the pop of exhausts, then a dying of the sounds
+as the cars left the grounds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You wished to kill me when you came here, but I had
+not then and have not now any intention of dying,&rdquo; he
+stated. &ldquo;For I have work to do&ndash;&ndash;and work for you if
+you want it. Instead of stealing your cattle and daughters
+as the Sorensons did, I&rsquo;ll give you jobs. We are
+about to begin digging canals and ditches on the mesa;
+I want men and teams&ndash;&ndash;you and yours at good pay for
+a good day&rsquo;s work. Our quarrel of the past need not
+be remembered. I have never been your enemy, only the
+enemy of the four men who deceived and oppressed you.
+And now they are gone, two dead and two off to be tried
+for their crimes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Weir stood for a moment silent, while they as silently
+stared at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, bueno, we shall work!&rdquo; Naharo exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We shall work and build your ditches, se&ntilde;or,&rdquo; cried
+a score of voices.</p>
+<p>Then the cry swelled to a noisy chorus. The crowd
+began to stir and disintegrate and break into groups,
+gesticulating, talking, discussing all the astonishing
+items of news given by the engineer, from the particulars
+of the Sorensons&rsquo; depravity to announcement of renewed
+hire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Se&ntilde;or, we hold you in greatest respect,&rdquo; said a man to
+Weir, smiling in friendly fashion.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303' name='page_303'></a>303</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And also your pistol,&rdquo; said a companion, laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one will need to wear pistols here in San Mateo
+from now on,&rdquo; was the answer. And he politely bade
+them good-night.</p>
+<p>His belief was sincere. San Mateo had gained an end
+of violence, and henceforth his weapon would gather
+dust. He had triumphed. Not only had he subdued his
+enemies, but he had won the good will of the people.</p>
+<p>One thing more alone remained to be won to bring
+him utter happiness.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304' name='page_304'></a>304</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXXII_THE_RECLUSE' id='CHAPTER_XXXII_THE_RECLUSE'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+<h3>THE RECLUSE</h3>
+</div>
+<p>As Weir drove his car homeward through the moonlight,
+he knew that at last the dark shadow upon his life
+had passed forever. Memories poignant and sad, memories
+bitter and stern, returned again and again to his
+mind; but these henceforth with time would soften and
+change. Of these his last visit to his father was most
+vivid, that day in spring that had proved their last
+together....</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<p>He had been there with his father for a week, and
+now must go. He was chopping wood that morning, with
+his father looking on. Steele had cast a measuring
+glance at the pile of wood cut, then wiped the fine dew
+of perspiration from his brow, buried the ax blade in the
+chopping-log and seated himself upon a sawn block. A
+smile shaped itself upon his lips. Though he never
+chopped wood now except on these rare visits to his recluse
+father&rsquo;s cabin here on the forested mountain side,
+his tall lean figure was as tough and wiry as ever, his
+arm as tireless, his eye as true to cut the exact line.
+There was yet no softening of his fibers or fat on his
+ribs, and there would be neither if he had anything to
+say about it.</p>
+<p>From the little Idaho town in the valley below, which
+he viewed through the clearing before the cabin, his gaze
+came around to his father seated on the doorstep. Taciturn
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305' name='page_305'></a>305</span>
+and brooding the latter had always been, but the
+pity and sorrow struck at the son&rsquo;s heart as he perceived
+what a mere shell of a man now sat there, gray-haired,
+bent, fleshless, consumed body and soul by the destroying
+acid of some dark secret. Even when a lad Steele Weir
+had sensed the mystery clouding his father&rsquo;s life. Like
+an evil spell it had condemned them to solitude here in
+the mountains, until Steele&rsquo;s youth at last rebelled and
+he had departed, hungry for schooling, for human society
+and for a wider field of action.</p>
+<p>What that secret might be he had for years not allowed
+himself to speculate. Unbidden at times the memory
+of certain revealing looks or acts of his father&rsquo;s
+floated into his mind:&ndash;&ndash;a dread if not terror that on occasion
+dilated the elder man&rsquo;s eyes, and a steadfast driving
+of himself at work as if to obliterate painful and
+despairing thoughts, and an uneasy, furtive vigilance
+when forced to visit town. Once when a stranger, a
+short heavy-set bearded man, had unexpectedly appeared
+at the door, his father had leaped for the revolver hanging
+in its holster on the wall.</p>
+<p>On catching a second view of the chance visitor he had
+exclaimed, &ldquo;Not Burkhardt after all!&rdquo; With which he
+burst into a wild laugh, the shrill mirthless laugh of a
+man suddenly freed of a terrible fear. However, as he
+returned the gun-belt to its place, his hand shook so
+that he pawed all around the nail on which it was accustomed
+to hang.</p>
+<p>Steele Weir would never forget that moment of panic,
+his father&rsquo;s spring to the wall and following laugh&ndash;&ndash;the
+only laugh he had heard from those lips; and though but
+twelve years old at the time he could not misread the
+episode. On another occasion he found his father kneeling
+at the grave under the giant pine beyond the cabin&ndash;&ndash;the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306' name='page_306'></a>306</span>
+grave of the gentle mother of whom Steele had but
+dim recollections&ndash;&ndash;and his father&rsquo;s hands were clasped,
+his head bowed. With an infinite yearning he had longed
+to creep forward and comfort him by his presence, by
+a clasp of the hand, but the recollection of his father&rsquo;s
+habitual chill reserve daunted him and he stole away.</p>
+<p>On his own life the mystery had left its gloomy impress.
+A solitary and joyless boyhood, overhung by
+he knew not what danger, haunted by a parent&rsquo;s lurking
+fear and anguish, had made him a silent, cold, ever watchful
+man, never entirely free from the expectation that
+his father&rsquo;s sealed past at some instant would open and
+confront him with the terrible facts. For that reason
+he felt that the success he had gained as an engineer,
+a success won by relentless toil and solid ability, rested
+on a quicksand. For that cause he had welcomed engineering
+projects full of danger and by his indifference
+to that danger gained his name &ldquo;Cold Steel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now on this day with his father he once again put
+the question he always asked on his visits, and with no
+more hope of a consenting reply than before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must be going to-morrow. Won&rsquo;t you come along
+with me this time, father? I want you to live with me,
+so that I can look after you and be with you. We can
+fix up a good cabin at the engineering camp. You&rsquo;re
+not so strong as you were; you could fall sick here and
+die and never a person know it. I doubt if you spend,
+making yourself comfortable, one dollar in ten of the
+money I send you. You would be interested in the building
+of this big irrigation project I&rsquo;m to direct.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His father appeared to shudder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve lived here and I&rsquo;ll die
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m afraid of,&rdquo; Steele responded.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307' name='page_307'></a>307</span>
+&ldquo;Afraid you may become sick and die for lack of care.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I&rsquo;ll remain, my son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was conclusive. It was the answer of not only
+thirty years of living at the spot, but of his secret dread.
+Steele saw once more the stark fear in his eyes, the fear
+of contact with men, of venturing out into the world, of
+precipitating fate.</p>
+<p>For a time his father plucked his white unkempt beard
+with unsteady hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s the place you&rsquo;re going this time?&rdquo; he presently
+inquired, without real interest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;New Mexico.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the elder&rsquo;s face appeared suddenly a gray shadow
+as if the blood were ebbing from his heart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where in New Mexico?&rdquo; he whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The town of San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His father struggled to his feet. With one hand he
+clutched the doorframe for support. The skin of his
+cheeks had gone a sickly white.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;San Mateo!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Not there,
+not there, Steele! Keep away, keep away, keep away!
+My God, not San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He swayed as if about to fall full length, gesturing
+blindly before his face as if to sweep away the thought,
+while his son ran towards him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father, you&rsquo;re sick,&rdquo; Steele exclaimed, putting an
+arm about the other. And, in truth, the elder man
+seemed fainting, ready to collapse. &ldquo;Come, let me help
+you in so you can lie down. I must bring a doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele almost carried him to the bed. On it his father
+sank, remaining with closed eyes and scarcely breathing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doctor; bring no doctor,&rdquo; he said painfully, at
+last. &ldquo;I feel&ndash;&ndash;I feel as if dying.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308' name='page_308'></a>308</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;I must bring a doctor. And I have a flask of whiskey;
+let me pour you a little to revive your heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The change the words wrought from passivity to
+action was startling. The elder Weir arose suddenly on
+elbow, glaring fiercely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whiskey, never! It brought me to this, it damned
+my life. If it had not been for whiskey&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo; Without
+finishing the words he fell back on the bed.</p>
+<p>The loathing, the hatred, the utter horror of his exclamation,
+banished from his son&rsquo;s mind further thought
+of using this stimulant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the doctor?&rdquo; he inquired, gently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No use, Steele. I&rsquo;ve been the same as a dead man
+for days. Just ashes. I want to die; I want to lie by
+your mother there under the big pine. And maybe I&rsquo;ll
+have peace&ndash;&ndash;peace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele took in his own the wasted hand hanging from
+the bed. He held it tight, with a feeling of infinite
+tragedy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be yourself again soon,&rdquo; he said comfortingly,
+though without faith in the assurance.</p>
+<p>His father&rsquo;s lips moved in a whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; my time is here at last,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;But don&rsquo;t go
+to San Mateo, Steele,&ndash;&ndash;don&rsquo;t go, don&rsquo;t go. Oh, my God,
+spare me that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you have me break my word? I never have
+to any man, father. I accepted this offer and signed a
+contract. I&rsquo;m morally bound; these men are depending
+on me. Were you ever at San Mateo? Was it something
+that happened there that makes you fearful to have me
+go? San Mateo is a thousand miles from here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The face before him became like the face of a corpse.
+For an instant Steele&rsquo;s heart went cold in the belief that
+his father had died under the effect of his declaration.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309' name='page_309'></a>309</span>
+But at last the eyelids raised, the eyes gazed at him.
+And all at once the features of the harsh visage seemed
+softened, changed, lightened by a dim illumination.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see you now as you are, a man, stronger than I
+ever was,&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;I lived in fear, but my fear
+was not for myself. Had I been alone, nothing would
+have mattered after your mother died. But my fear
+was for you&ndash;&ndash;and of you. I was afraid your life would
+be blasted; I was in terror lest you should hate and
+despise me when you learned the truth. So I sought to
+conceal it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You had no need to fear that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see it now. Tell me everything or nothing as you
+wish about your going to San Mateo to work; it will
+frighten me no longer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steele briefly spoke of his new work there, of the
+magnitude of the project and the desire he had had that
+his father might be with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m proud of you,&rdquo; his father said. &ldquo;God knows I
+have not been the parent I would or should have been.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s enough for me if your heart&rsquo;s easy now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I feel as if I were gaining peace at last and&ndash;&ndash;and
+I must speak. In San Mateo&ndash;&ndash;ah, Steele, you will hear
+of me there,&ndash;&ndash;you may have to fight the damning influence
+of my name and past, but I know now you&rsquo;ll come
+through it. And all I pray for is that you can retain a
+little love for me despite everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whatever it is I shall hear of my father, I should
+rather hear it from his lips than from strangers&rsquo;.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The hand in his closed spasmodically. For a long
+time nothing was said, and the only sound in the room
+was the ticking of the tin clock on the shelf busily
+measuring off the seconds of the old man&rsquo;s failing span.
+To Steele it was as if his father was slowly summoning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310' name='page_310'></a>310</span>
+the few remaining shreds of his fortitude to reveal the
+cancer of his past.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a branded murderer,&rdquo; he said at last, gasping.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you never killed a man out of mere wanton desire
+to slay,&rdquo; Steele responded firmly. &ldquo;I too have
+killed men in fights in Mexico. That fact doesn&rsquo;t weight
+my mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the line of your duty, in the line of your duty.
+But I was drunk. He was a friend. When I became
+sober, I saw him with a bullet hole in his head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you remember nothing of shooting him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing, nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know you killed him?&rdquo; his son demanded
+with inexorable logic. &ldquo;What is the proof?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A low groan escaped his father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Men said I had killed him. But my own mind was
+blank.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who were the men? Were they present at the time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were four&ndash;&ndash;Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon, Burkhardt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were you arrested and tried?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. They helped me to escape. Because of your
+mother, they said, and because they said they were my
+friends. But I never felt they were really friends. For
+they were always against new-comers and wanted to keep
+things in their own hands. You were only three or four
+years old at that time, Steele, so you wouldn&rsquo;t remember
+anything about matters there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What were you doing at San Mateo, father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now that the hideous past at last stood uncovered the
+son was able to turn upon it his incisive mind; he would
+drag out and scrutinize every bone of the skeleton which
+had terrorized his father and shadowed his own life
+Facts faced are never so dreadful as fears unmaterialized.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311' name='page_311'></a>311</span>
+And more, he sought with all the love of a son for circumstances
+that would mitigate, excuse, or even justify
+his father&rsquo;s act.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was ranching,&rdquo; was the low answer. &ldquo;I had come
+to San Mateo two years before from the east, bringing
+you and your mother and considerable money. I bought
+a ranch and stocked it with cattle; I was doing well, in
+spite of the fact I was new to the country and the business.
+Also I was making friends, and I had been nominated
+for the legislature of the Territory to run against
+Gordon. But I had taken to drinking with the men I
+met, other cattlemen, because I fancied no harm in it.
+And then while in a drunken stupor I killed Jim Dent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had you quarreled with him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never, never&ndash;&ndash;till that moment I killed Jim. They
+said I quarreled with him then. But I remember nothing.
+Jim was my best friend; I would have trusted him with
+my life. Even now I can&rsquo;t make it seem real I shot him,
+though it must be true by those four witnesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What of your ranch? Your political nomination?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I withdrew from the latter; that was one of the terms
+made by Gordon on which they were to help me escape
+instead of turning me over for prosecution. And my
+ranch and cattle, I had to deed them over to the four
+men too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then their friendship wasn&rsquo;t disinterested,&rdquo; Steele
+said quickly, with suspicion dawning on his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They weren&rsquo;t really friends, I knew that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How were they to arrange your escape?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The senior Weir seemed to shudder at the question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By bribing the sheriff and county attorney. I was
+then to leave the country at once, never showing my face
+again, or I should be arrested. I was still half dazed
+by whiskey and terror; I took your mother and you and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312' name='page_312'></a>312</span>
+fled this far, when my money gave out. So here I&rsquo;ve remained
+ever since, for here I could hide and here was her
+grave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the last thing you remember of the circumstance
+previous to learning Dent was dead?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, though I had been drinking I can remember
+clearly up to the time I stopped playing poker with Jim
+and the four men, for we were losing and I felt they
+were working a crooked deal on us somehow. I asked
+Jim to quit also, for though I hadn&rsquo;t lost much he was
+losing fast and playing recklessly. But he wouldn&rsquo;t drop
+out of the game, and when Vorse and Sorenson cursed
+me and said for me to mind my own business I went back
+to a table near the rear door and laid my head on my
+arms and went to sleep. When I was awake again, Vorse
+and Gordon were holding me up by their table and Jim
+was dead on the floor. I had come forward, they said,
+begun a big row with Dent and finally shot him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then the only witnesses were these four men who
+were gambling with him, who cursed you when you attempted
+to persuade him to drop his cards,&rdquo; Steele proceeded,
+&ldquo;one of whom was your political adversary, men
+who were old-timers and opposed to new-comers, who
+pretended to be your friends but took your ranch and
+cattle. It begins to look to me as if they not only killed
+your friend Dent but double-crossed you in the bargain.
+Did you look in your gun afterwards?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. I was sick with the horror of the accusation, I
+tell you, Steele. I had no way to deny it; it seemed indeed
+as if I must have killed him. And from that day
+until this I&rsquo;ve never had the courage of soul to reload
+my pistol, or even clean it. It hangs there on the wall
+with the very shells, two empty, the rest unfired, that it
+carried that day in San Mateo.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313' name='page_313'></a>313</span></div>
+<p>Weir sprang up and crossed to the nail where hung
+the weapon. The latter he drew from the holster and
+broke open, so that the cartridges were ejected into his
+hand. For an instant he stared at them, but at length
+walked to the bed before which he extended his palm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look&ndash;&ndash;look for yourself!&rdquo; he exclaimed hoarsely.
+&ldquo;You never killed Jim Dent; drunk or sober, you never
+killed any one. You&rsquo;re not a murderer. You&rsquo;re the innocent
+victim of those four infamous scoundrels; they
+deceived you, they ruined your life; and their damnable
+fraud not only killed my mother in her youth, as I guess,
+by grief and despair, but has brought you now to your
+death too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His father had raised himself on an arm to gaze
+incredulously at the six unfired cartridges lying in
+Weir&rsquo;s palm. Then all at once his bearded lips trembled
+and a great light of joy flashed upon his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Innocent&ndash;&ndash;innocent!&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Steele, my son,&ndash;&ndash;Helen,
+my wife! No stain on my soul!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he sank back Steele&rsquo;s arms caught him. He did
+not speak again, but his eyes rested radiantly on his
+boy&rsquo;s before they glazed in death. Fear had passed
+from them, forever.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314' name='page_314'></a>314</span>
+<a name='CHAPTER_XXXIII_UNDER_THE_MOON' id='CHAPTER_XXXIII_UNDER_THE_MOON'></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+<h3>UNDER THE MOON</h3>
+</div>
+<p>Lights still were burning at headquarters when Steele
+Weir slowly drove his runabout up the hillside slope to
+the dam camp. The men who had acted as guards about
+the jail, except those who went with Madden, were somewhere
+on the road behind him, returning home in the
+wagons. A reaction of mind and body had set in for
+Weir; after the previous night&rsquo;s loss of sleep and prolonged
+exertions, after the swift succession of dramatic
+events, after the tremendous call that had been made
+upon his brain power, nervous force and will, he experienced
+a strange unrest of spirit. His triumph
+seemed yet incomplete, somehow unsatisfying.</p>
+<p>It was as he approached the camp that he saw a
+slender girlish figure sitting on a rock in the moonlight.
+He swung his car off the road beside the spot where
+Janet Hosmer sat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, you are still awake?&rdquo; he asked, with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could I sleep while not knowing what was happening
+or what danger you might be in?&rdquo; she returned. &ldquo;Mr.
+Pollock said we must not think of returning home until
+quiet was restored in San Mateo. One of the engineer&rsquo;s
+houses was given to us by Mr. Meyers before he left,
+where Mary and I could sleep. But I could not close
+my eyes. So much had happened, so much was yet going
+on! So I came out here to be alone and to think and
+watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315' name='page_315'></a>315</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And your father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s attending the wounded Mexicans in the store.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Steel alighted and tossing his hat upon the car seat
+gazed out over the mesa, misty in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There will be no more trouble,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Sorenson
+and Burkhardt are Madden&rsquo;s prisoners, and on their way
+to a place of safe-keeping in another county. Vorse is
+dead. The people in town have a fairly good understanding
+of matters now, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How in the world did such a change of opinion occur?&rdquo;
+Janet exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had a little talk with the crowd and made explanations.
+The feeling for me was almost friendly when I
+left; what enmity remains will soon die out, I&rsquo;m
+sure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though unaware from Steele Weir&rsquo;s laconic statement
+of what had actually occurred, the girl divined that his
+words concealed vastly more than their surface purport.
+With the general hostility against the engineer that had
+existed, for him to swing the community to his side meant
+a dramatic moment and a remarkable moral conquest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your friends have always known you would win,&rdquo; she
+said, smiling up at him.</p>
+<p>He seated himself on the rock beside her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s but a short time ago, Janet, that I had no
+friends, or so few they could be counted on the fingers
+of one hand. Business acquaintances, yes. Professional
+companions, yes. Men who perhaps respected my ability
+as an engineer, yes. But real friends, scarcely one.
+And now I think I have gained some, which is the greatest
+satisfaction I have from all that has happened. After
+years the pendulum has swung to my side. Do you know
+the hour my luck changed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet shook her head wonderingly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316' name='page_316'></a>316</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I can&rsquo;t even guess,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it was that afternoon, and that moment, I
+found you sitting in your stalled car in the creek down
+there. That was the beginning. From that time things
+began to run in my favor and they haven&rsquo;t ceased to do
+so for a moment since, I now see looking back over
+events. You brought good luck to me that day in your
+car.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What an extraordinary idea! Then at bottom you&rsquo;re
+superstitious,&rdquo; Janet replied. &ldquo;I shall have to give
+you a new name; I must no longer call you &lsquo;Cold
+Steel.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I really never liked that name,&rdquo; Weir said quickly.
+&ldquo;Perhaps I was cold steel once, but I have changed along
+with everything else. And you&rsquo;re responsible for that
+too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet leaned forward and looked into his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were never truly harsh to any one except those
+who deserved it,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I know! You would never
+have been so quick to help Mary Johnson or me, or
+others who needed help, if your heart was not always
+generous and sympathetic. Only against evil were you
+as steel, and in moments requiring supreme courage and
+sacrifice. And that&rsquo;s how you gained the name before
+you ever came here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anyway I&rsquo;ve changed,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m out from under
+the cloud which I felt always hung above me. As I say,
+you brought me good luck that day&ndash;&ndash;and I see clearly
+that I shall continue to be superstitious.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, all occasion for that is past now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Steele Weir. &ldquo;No, less than ever. For
+I&rsquo;m certain you hold my good fortune in your hand yet,
+and will continue to hold it. And that means&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He paused, regarding her so intensely that the blood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317' name='page_317'></a>317</span>
+beat up into her face. There was no mistaking that
+look and it thrilled her to the soul.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; she managed to say.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It means my happiness, now and for all time to
+come,&rdquo; he went on. &ldquo;See, I shall have accomplished
+what I set out to do and what in justice had to be done,
+bringing these men to punishment&ndash;&ndash;to punishment in one
+form or another. I shall have given my employer, the
+company, service worthy of the hire. I shall have rid
+you and San Mateo of an unscrupulous parasite in the
+person of Ed Sorenson, though my persecution of him
+now shall stop and I shall leave him enough out of the
+property recovered from his father to live in comfort
+somewhere with his mother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Pollock states I shall have no trouble in getting
+legal title and possession of most of the wealth of these
+four men,&ndash;&ndash;I and any relatives of the dead Jim Dent who
+can be found. For thirty years&rsquo; accumulated interest
+charges owing me will swallow up all the men&rsquo;s properties.
+That, however, is only a material victory. I shall
+have relieved Johnson of fear of financial constraint;
+and saved his daughter from a serious mistake. I shall
+have started Martinez on the road to success&ndash;&ndash;and I
+should not be surprised if he prospered, became the
+leading attorney in this county, was elected judge and
+so on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a way, too, I shall have helped to remove the
+oppressive weight of these men, Sorenson, Burkhardt,
+Judge Gordon and Vorse, with their sinister influence,
+from this community and region. They have always
+held the natives in more or less open subjection, financial,
+political, and moral. There should be a freer air
+in San Mateo henceforth. The people will have a chance
+to grow. They no longer will feel the threat of brutal
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318' name='page_318'></a>318</span>
+masters always over them; and with the completion of
+the irrigation project and the infusion of new settlers
+they will become better citizens.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see all this,&rdquo; he concluded. &ldquo;It pleases me; it gives
+me cause for satisfaction. But it doesn&rsquo;t give me the
+happiness I want, or the love. That is alone in your
+hands to bestow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet felt herself trembling; she could not speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I felt the stirring of love from the moment I
+saw you there at the ford,&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;Last night
+when I knew that wretch had carried you off to the
+mountains, I could have torn him limb from limb. That
+was my love speaking, Janet. If I should have to go
+through life without you&ndash;&ndash;oh, the thought is too bitter
+to dwell on!&ndash;&ndash;then I should think life not worth living.
+But I have imagined that you might have for me a
+little&ndash;&ndash;&ndash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Janet swiftly clasped his hand with her own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I love you,&rdquo; she cried softly. &ldquo;I was sitting here
+when you came because I loved you. If I am necessary
+to your happiness, you also are necessary to mine. I
+honor you for what you have done and love you for what
+you are, a strong true heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Janet, you give me the greatest joy in
+the world,&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Love&ndash;&ndash;that is more than
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His arms drew her to his breast. Her lips went to
+his in consecration of that love. Their hearts beat the
+rapture of that love.</p>
+<p>Over the silent peaceful mountains the moon spread
+its effulgent light. Over the mesa that was no more to
+know the fierce sound of strife. Over the town, at last
+free of its avaricious masters, free of the savage spirit
+of an outlaw time. Over the Burntwood River flowing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319' name='page_319'></a>319</span>
+in a shimmering band to the horizon. Over the camp
+where centered so many men&rsquo;s plans and labors. And
+over the lovers, chief of all, that light fell as in a silvery
+halo.</p>
+<p style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;margin-bottom:1em'>THE END</p>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.14 -->
+<!-- timestamp: Sat Sep 19 18:37:51 -0600 2009 -->
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: In the Shadow of the Hills
+
+Author: George C. Shedd
+
+Release Date: September 20, 2009 [EBook #30037]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR
+
+THE PRINCESS OF FORGE
+
+THE ISLE OF STRIFE
+
+THE INCORRIGIBLE DUKANE
+
+THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE
+
+THE INVISIBLE ENEMY
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+BY
+
+GEORGE C. SHEDD
+
+AUTHOR OF
+
+"THE LADY OF MYSTERY HOUSE," ETC.
+
+NEW YORK
+
+THE MACAULAY COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+Copyright, 1919, By THE MACAULAY COMPANY
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE FRANK A. MUNSEY CO.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY 11
+ II A COMEDY--AND SOMETHING ELSE 23
+ III THE ENEMY'S SPAWN 34
+ IV A SECRET CONFERENCE 42
+ V A SHOT IN THE DARK 53
+ VI JANET HOSMER 64
+ VII IN THE COIL 75
+ VIII THE GATHERING STORM 83
+ IX AN UNEXPECTED ALLY 91
+ X BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION 99
+ XI JANET AND MARY 107
+ XII THE PLOT 116
+ XIII THE CURRENT OF EVENTS 121
+ XIV OLD SAUREZ' DEPOSITION 135
+ XV THE MASK DROPPED 145
+ XVI WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT 158
+ XVII EARTH'S RETRIBUTION 167
+ XVIII IN THE NIGHT WATCHES 177
+ XIX A QUEER PAPER 189
+ XX ANXIETIES 197
+ XXI THE WEAK LINK 209
+ XXII AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE 219
+ XXIII WITH FANGS BARED 226
+ XXIV THE ALARM 238
+ XXV NO QUARTER 248
+ XXVI THE THUNDERBOLT 256
+ XXVII WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT 261
+ XXVIII VORSE 270
+ XXIX THE FOURTH MAN 279
+ XXX THE VICTOR 286
+ XXXI A FINAL CHALLENGE 294
+ XXXII THE RECLUSE 304
+ XXXIII UNDER THE MOON 314
+
+
+
+
+IN THE SHADOW OF THE HILLS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+IN A HOSTILE COUNTRY
+
+
+Eastward out of the Torquilla Range the Burntwood River emerged from a
+gorge, flowing swift and turbulent during the spring months, shallow
+and murmurous the rest of the year, to pass through a basin formed by
+low mountains and break forth at last from a canyon and wind away over
+the mesa. In the canyon was being erected the huge reservoir dam which
+was in the future to store water for irrigating the broad acres
+spreading from its base.
+
+The construction camp rested on one of the hillsides above the dam.
+And here one summer afternoon a man stepped forth from the long low
+tar-papered shack that served as headquarters, directing his gaze down
+the road across the mesa at a departing automobile. He was Steele
+Weir, the new chief, a tall, strong, tanned man of thirty-five, with
+lean smooth-shaven face, a straight heavy nose, mouth that by habit
+was set in grim lines, and heavy brows under which ruled cold, level,
+insistent, gray eyes. He had come suddenly, unexpectedly, returning
+with Magney, the engineer in charge, when the latter had been summoned
+east for a conference with the company's directors. He had replaced
+Magney, who was now whirling away to the nearest railway point,
+Bowenville, thirty-five miles distant.
+
+He thoughtfully watched the car, a black spot in a haze of dust,
+speeding towards the New Mexican town of San Mateo, on the Burntwood
+River two miles below camp, its cluster of brown adobe houses showing
+indistinctly through the cottonwoods that embowered the place. For
+Magney he felt a certain amount of sympathy, for the engineer was
+leaving with a recognition of defeat; he was a likeable man, as Steele
+Weir had discovered during their brief acquaintance, a good
+theoretical engineer, but lacking in the prime quality of a successful
+chief--fighting spirit and an indomitable will.
+
+Under Magney the work of construction had been inaugurated the
+previous summer, but progress had not been as rapid as desired; there
+had been delays, labor difficulties, local opposition during the
+months since; and Weir had been chosen to succeed Magney. In his
+profession Weir had a reputation, built on relentless toil and sound
+ideas and daring achievements--a reputation enhanced by a character of
+mystery, for the man was unmarried, reserved, without intimates or
+even friends, locking his lips about his life, and welcoming and
+executing with grim indifference to risk engineering commissions of
+extreme hazard, on which account he had acquired the soubriquet of
+"Cold Steel" Weir.
+
+Who first bestowed upon Weir that name is not known. But it was not
+misapplied. Cold steel he had proved himself to be a score of times in
+critical moments when other men would have broken: in pushing bridges
+over mountain chasms, in mine disasters, in strikes, in almost
+hopeless fights against bandits in Mexico. And it was this ability to
+handle difficulties that had brought about the decision of the
+directors of the company to put him in charge, as the man best
+qualified, at San Mateo, where the situation was unsatisfactory,
+costly, baffling.
+
+Since his arrival a week before he had been consulting with Magney,
+studying maps and blue-prints, examining the work and analyzing
+general conditions. What had been accomplished had been well done; he
+had no criticism to offer on that score. It was the delay; the work
+was considerably behind schedule, which of course meant excessive
+cost; and this had undermined the spirit of the enterprise. In a dozen
+places, in a dozen ways, Magney, his predecessor, had been hampered,
+checked, defeated--and the main contributing cause was poor workmen,
+inefficient work. On that sore Weir's skillful finger fell at once.
+
+Standing there before the low office building he watched Magney
+depart. He, Steele Weir, had now taken over full charge of the camp
+and assumed full responsibility for the project's failure or success.
+His eye passed beyond the distant automobile to the town of San
+Mateo--a new town for him, but a town like many he had seen in the
+southwest and in Mexico. And aside from its connection with the
+construction work, it held a fascinating interest, a profound interest
+for the man, the interest that any spot would which has at a distance
+cast a black and sinister shadow over one's life. San Mateo--the name
+lay like a smoldering coal in his breast!
+
+At length he turned and strode down the hillside to the dam site in
+the canyon. The time had come to shut his hand about the work and let
+his hold be felt. He located the superintendent directing the pouring
+of concrete in the frames of the dam core, Atkinson, a man of fifty
+with a stubby gray mustache, a wind-bitten face and a tall angular
+frame. When Weir joined him he was observing with speculative eyes the
+indolent movements of a group of Mexican laborers.
+
+"Those _hombres_ don't appear to be breaking any speed records, I
+see," Weir remarked, quietly.
+
+"Humph," Atkinson grunted.
+
+"What do they think this is? A rest cure?"
+
+The superintendent's silence suddenly gave way.
+
+"I ought to land on 'em with an ax-handle and put the fear of God in
+their lazy souls," he exclaimed, bitterly.
+
+"Well, do it."
+
+"What!"
+
+"Do it."
+
+"Say, am I hearing right?" Atkinson swung fully about to stare at the
+new chief. Then he went on, "They'd quit to a man if made to do a
+man's work; I supposed that Magney had told you that. A dozen times
+I've been ready to throw up my job from self-respect; I'm ashamed to
+boss work where men can loaf and I must keep my tongue between my
+teeth. I was considering just now the matter of leaving."
+
+"No need, Atkinson. From this time these men will work or get their
+dismissal."
+
+The other pushed his hat atilt and rubbed his head in surprise.
+
+"What about that 'company policy' of hiring nothing but local labor to
+keep the community friendly which Magney was always kicking about?" he
+asked. "That was what made him sorer than anything else, and beat him.
+He said the directors had tied his hands by promising that no workmen
+should be imported. If they promised that, they sure bunkoed
+themselves. Friendly, huh."
+
+"The people haven't been friendly, eh?" Weir said.
+
+"Does it look like it when these Mexicans won't work enough to earn
+their salt? They openly boast that we dare neither make them work
+nor fire them. They say Sorenson and his bunch will pull every man off
+the works if we lift a finger; and they all know about that fool
+promise of the directors. Friendly? Just about as friendly as a
+bunch of wildcats. This whole section, white men and Mexicans, are
+putting a knife into this project whenever they can. Do you think they
+want all that mesa fenced up and farmed? This is a range country;
+they propose to keep it range; they don't want any more people
+coming here--farmers, store-keepers, and white people generally."
+
+"That's always the case in a range country before it's opened up,"
+Weir said. "But they have to swallow the pill."
+
+"Let me tell you something; they don't intend to swallow it here. They
+figure on keeping this county just as it is, for only themselves and
+their cattle and woolies, and everybody else keep out. The few big
+sheep and cattle men, white and Mex, have their minds made up to that,
+and they're the only ones who count; all the rest are poor Mexicans
+with nothing but fleas, children, goats and votes to keep Sorenson and
+his gang in control. They've set out to bust this company, or tire it
+out till it throws up the sponge. They've spiked Magney, and they'll
+try to spike you next, and every manager who comes. That's plain talk
+I'm giving you, Mr. Weir, but it's fact; and if it doesn't sound nice
+to your ears, you can have my resignation any minute."
+
+"I've been hoping to hear it. From now on drive this crowd of
+coffee-colored loafers. Put the lash on their backs."
+
+A gleam of unholy joy shone in Atkinson's eyes as he heard Weir's
+words.
+
+"All right; that goes," he said. "But I'm warning you that they'll
+quit. You'll see 'em stringing out of camp for home to-night, and
+those who hang out till to-morrow will leave then for sure. By
+to-morrow night the dam will be as quiet as a church week-days.
+They'll not show up again, either, until you send word for them to
+come back--and then they'll know you've surrendered. Magney tried it
+once, just once. And that's why you found me chewing tobacco so
+lamb-like and saying nothing."
+
+"Turn your gat loose," Weir said. And turning on his heel, he went
+back to headquarters.
+
+Before Atkinson fired a volley at the unsuspecting workmen he crossed
+the canyon to where a cub engineer was peering through a transit. The
+superintendent had overheard a scrap of gossip among the staff one
+evening before Weir's arrival when they were discussing the advent of
+the new chief.
+
+"What was that name you fellows were saying Weir was called by?" he
+asked.
+
+The boy straightened up.
+
+"'Cold Steel'--'Cold Steel' Weir. Anyway that's what Fergueson says,"
+was the answer. "I never heard it before myself. His first name's
+Steele, you know, and he looks cold enough to be ice when he's asking
+questions about things, boring into a fellow with his eyes. But he's
+up against a hard game here."
+
+"Maybe. But a man doesn't get a name like that for just parting his
+hair nice," Atkinson remarked. "He told me to stretch 'em"--a horny
+thumb jerked towards the workmen--"and you'll see some real work
+hereabouts for the rest of the afternoon."
+
+"And to-morrow will be Sunday three days ahead of time."
+
+"Sure."
+
+"What then?"
+
+"You know as much about that as I do. Make your own guess." With which
+the speaker started off.
+
+The morrow was "Sunday" with a vengeance. The majority of the laborers
+demanded their pay checks the minute work ceased at the end of the
+afternoon; Atkinson tightened orders, and by noon next day the last of
+the Mexicans had quit. The fires in the stationary engines were
+banked; the concrete mixers did not revolve; the conveyers were still;
+the dam site wore an air of abandonment. In headquarters the engineers
+worked over tracings or notes; and in the commissary store the
+half-dozen white foremen gathered to smoke and yarn. That was the
+extent of the activity.
+
+Two days passed. After dinner Weir held a terse long-distance
+telephone conversation, the only incident of the second day; and it
+was overheard by no one. On the fourth day this was repeated. At dawn
+of the fifth he despatched all of the foremen, enginemen and engineers
+with wagons to Bowenville; and about the middle of the afternoon,
+accompanied by his assistant, Meyers, and Atkinson, he sped in the
+manager's car down the river for San Mateo, two miles below the camp.
+
+Of the town Steele Weir had had but a glimpse as he flashed through on
+his way to the dam the morning of his arrival twelve days earlier. It
+had but a single main street, from which littered side streets and
+alleys ran off between mud walls of houses. The county court house sat
+among cottonwood trees in an open space. A few pretentious dwellings,
+homes of white men and the well-to-do Mexicans, arose among long low
+adobe structures that were as brown and characterless as the sun-dried
+bricks of which they were built. That was San Mateo.
+
+Before doors and everywhere along the street workmen from the dam were
+idling. As Meyers brought the automobile to a stop before the court
+house, news of Weir's visit spread miraculously and Mexicans began to
+saunter forward to hear the engineer's words of surrender, couched in
+the form of a suave invitation to return to work. While the crowd
+gathered the three Americans sat quietly in the car. Then Steele Weir
+stood up.
+
+"Who can speak for these men?" he demanded.
+
+A lean Mexican with a long shiny black mustache and a thin neck
+protruding from a soiled linen collar elbowed a way to the front.
+
+"I'm authorized to speak for them," he announced, disclosing his white
+teeth in an engaging smile.
+
+"Are you one of the workmen?"
+
+"No. I'm a lawyer and represent them in this controversy. By your
+favor therefore let us proceed. You've come to persuade them to resume
+work, and that is well. But there are conditions to be agreed upon
+before they return, which with your permission I shall state--first,
+no harsh driving of the workmen by foremen; second, full wages for the
+days they have been idle; third, no Sunday work."
+
+The engineer regarded the speaker without change of countenance.
+
+"Have you finished?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. There are minor matters, but they can be adjusted later. These
+are the important points."
+
+"Very well, this is my reply: I, not the workmen, make the terms for
+work on this job--I, not these men, name the conditions on which they
+may return. And they are as follows: no pay for the idle days; if the
+workmen return they agree to work as ordered by superintendent and
+foremen; and last, they must start for the dam within an hour or not
+at all."
+
+Incredulity, amazement rested on the Mexican spokesman's face as he
+listened to this curt rejoinder.
+
+"Preposterous, impossible, absurd!" he exclaimed. Then revolving on
+his heels so as to face the crowd he swiftly repeated in Spanish what
+Weir had said.
+
+An angry stir followed, murmurs, sullen looks, a number of oaths and
+jeers. The lawyer turned again to the engineer, spreading his hands in
+a wide gesture and lifting his brows with exaggerated significance.
+
+"You see, Mr. Weir, your position is hopeless," he remarked.
+
+"Ask them if they definitely refuse."
+
+The lawyer put the question to the crowd. A chorus of shouts
+vehemently gave affirmation--a refusal immediate, disdainful,
+unanimous.
+
+"We'll now discuss the men's terms," the lawyer remarked politely and
+with an air of satisfaction.
+
+"There's nothing more to discuss. The matter is settled. They have
+refused; they need not seek work at the dam again. Start the car,
+Meyers."
+
+The roar of the machine drowned the indignant lawyer's protest, the
+crowd hastened to give an opening and the conference was at an end.
+
+"Drive to Vorse's saloon; I want a look at Vorse," said Weir. "I see
+the place a short way ahead."
+
+When they entered the long low adobe building an anemic-appearing
+Mexican standing at the far end of the bar languidly started forward
+to serve them, but a bald-headed, hawk-nosed man seated at a desk
+behind the cigar-case laid aside his newspaper, arose and checked the
+other by a sidewise jerk of his head.
+
+He received their orders for beer and lifted three dripping bottles
+from a tub of water at his feet. His eyes passed casually over Steele
+Weir's face, glanced away, then came back for a swift unblinking
+scrutiny. The eyes his own met were as hard, stony and inscrutable as
+his own. Finally Vorse, the saloon-keeper, turned his gaze towards the
+window and extracting a quill tooth-pick from a vest pocket began
+thoughtfully to pick his teeth.
+
+"You're the new manager at the dam?" he asked presently, still
+considering the street through the window.
+
+"I am."
+
+"And your name is Weir?"
+
+"You've got it right."
+
+The questions ended there. The three men from camp slowly consumed
+their beer and exchanged indifferent remarks. At the end of five
+minutes the Mexican lawyer, clutching the arm of an elderly,
+gray-mustached man, entered the saloon.
+
+They lined up at the bar nearby the others. The older of the pair
+regarded the trio shrewdly, laid a calf-bound book that he carried
+under his arm upon the counter and ordered "a little bourbon." When he
+had swallowed this, he addressed the men from the engineering camp.
+
+"Which of you is Mr. Weir?"
+
+"I am he," Steele replied.
+
+"Mr. Martinez here has solicited me, Mr. Weir, to use my offices in
+explaining to you the workmen's point of view in the controversy that
+exists relative to the work. I'm Senator Gordon, a member of the state
+legislature, and I have no interest in the matter beyond seeing an
+amicable and just arrangement effected."
+
+Steele Weir fixed his eyes on the speaker with an intentness, a cold
+penetration, that seemed to bore to the very recesses of his mind. In
+that look there was something questioning and something menacing.
+
+"There's no controversy and hence no need of your services. The men
+stopped work, refused to return, and now the case is closed."
+
+"My dear sir, let us talk it over," said the Senator, bringing forth a
+pair of spectacles and setting the bow upon his nose.
+
+The engineer's visage failed to relax at this pacific proposal.
+
+"I gave them their chance and they declined; they'll have no other,"
+he stated. "Those men have browbeaten the company long enough. They
+refused, and as I anticipated that refusal I made preparations
+accordingly; a hundred and fifty white workmen arrived at Bowenville
+from Denver this morning and a hundred and fifty more will come
+to-morrow. They will do the work."
+
+The Senator's lips quivered and the upper one lifted in a movement
+like a snarl, showing tobacco-stained teeth.
+
+"The matter isn't closed, understand that," he snapped out. "We have
+the directors' promise no outside labor shall be brought in here for
+this job, and the promise shall be kept."
+
+"The new men go to work in the morning," Weir said.
+
+"You'll repent of this action, young man, you'll repent of it." The
+Senator seized the whisky bottle and angrily poured himself a second
+drink. "You'll repent of it as sure as your name is--is--whatever it
+is."
+
+The engineer took a step nearer the older man. His face now was as
+hard as granite.
+
+"Weir is my name," he said. "Did you ever hear it before?"
+
+"Weir--Weir?" came in a questioning mutter.
+
+"Yes, Weir."
+
+The speaker's eyes held the Senator's in savage leash, and a slight
+tremble presently began to shake the old man. Atkinson and Meyers and
+even the volatile Mexican lawyer, Martinez, remained unstirring, for
+in the situation they suddenly sensed something beyond their ken, some
+current of deep unknown forces, some play of fierce, obscure and
+fateful passion.
+
+A shadow of gray stole over Gordon's lineaments.
+
+"You are--are the son of----" came gasping forth.
+
+"I am. His son."
+
+"And--and----"
+
+"And I know what happened thirty years ago in this selfsame room!"
+
+The whisky that the Senator had poured into his glass suddenly slopped
+over his fingers; his figure all at once appeared more aged, hollow,
+bent. Without further word, with his hand still shaking, he set the
+glass on the bar, mechanically picked up the law book and walked
+feebly towards the door.
+
+Steele Weir turned his gaze on the saloon-keeper, Vorse. The man's
+right hand was under the bar and he seemed to be awaiting the
+engineer's next move, taut, tight-lipped, malignant.
+
+"That was for you too, Vorse," was flung at him. "One Weir went out of
+here, but another has returned."
+
+And he led his companions away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+A COMEDY--AND SOMETHING ELSE
+
+
+Towards noon one day a week later Steele Weir, headed for Bowenville
+in his car, had gained Chico Creek, half way between camp and San
+Mateo, when he perceived that another machine blocked the ford. About
+the wheels of the stalled car the shallow water rippled briskly, four
+or five inches deep; entirely deep enough, by all appearances, to keep
+marooned in the runabout the girl sitting disconsolately at the
+wheel.
+
+She was a very attractive-looking girl, Steele noted casually as he
+brought his own car to a halt and sprang out to join her, wading the
+water with his laced boots. As he approached he perceived that she had
+a slender well-rounded figure, fine-spun brown hair under her hat
+brim, clear brown eyes and the pink of peach blossoms in her soft
+smooth cheeks.
+
+But her look of relief vanished when she distinguished his face and
+her shoulders squared themselves.
+
+"Has your engine stopped?" he inquired.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'll look into the hood."
+
+"I prefer that you would not."
+
+For an instant surprise marked his countenance.
+
+"You mean that you desire to remain here?" he asked.
+
+"I don't wish to remain here, but I choose that in preference to your
+aid."
+
+The man, who had bent forward to lift one cover of the engine,
+straightened up at that. He considered her intently and in silence
+for a time, marking her heightened color, the haughty poise of her
+head, the firm set of her lips.
+
+"To my knowledge, I never saw you before in my life," he remarked at
+last. "What, may I ask, is your particular reason for declining my
+services?"
+
+She was dumb for a little, while she tucked back a stray tendril of
+hair. The act was performed with the left hand; and Weir's eyes, which
+seldom missed anything, observed a diamond flash on the third finger.
+
+"Well, I'd choose not to explain," said she, afterwards, "but if you
+insist----"
+
+"I don't insist, I merely request ... your highness."
+
+A flash of anger shot from her eyes at this irony.
+
+"Don't think I'm afraid to tell you!" she cried. "It's because you're
+the manager of the construction camp; and if you've never seen me
+before, I've at least had you pointed out to me. I wish no assistance
+from the man who turns off his poor workmen without excuse or warning,
+and brings want and trouble upon the community. It was like striking
+them in the face. And then you break your promise not to bring in
+other workmen!"
+
+As she had said, she did not lack courage. Her words gushed forth in a
+torrent, as if an expression of pent up and outraged justice,
+disclosing a fervent sympathy and a fine zeal--and, likewise, a fine
+ignorance of the facts.
+
+"Well, why don't you say something?" she added, when he gave no
+indication of replying.
+
+Steele could have smiled at this feminine view of the matter that
+violent assertions required affirmations or denials.
+
+"What am I supposed to say?" he asked.
+
+Apparently that exhausted her patience.
+
+"You'll please molest me no longer," she stated, icily.
+
+"Very well."
+
+He raised the hood and inspected the engine. During his attempts to
+start it, she sat nonchalantly humming an air and gazing at the
+mountains as if her mind were a thousand miles away--which it was
+not.
+
+"Something wrong; it will have to be hauled in," said he finally.
+
+No reply. Steele returned to his own car and descending into the creek
+bed worked his way around her. When he was on the far bank, he
+rejoined her again, carrying a coil of rope. One end of this he
+fastened securely to the rear axle of her runabout.
+
+"What are you going to do, sir?" she demanded, whirling about on her
+seat and glaring angrily.
+
+"Drag you out."
+
+"You'll do nothing of the kind!"
+
+"Oh, yes," was his calm response.
+
+"Against my wishes, sir?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+"This is abominable!"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+"I'll put on the brakes." And put them on she did, with a savage
+jerk.
+
+But nevertheless Weir's powerful machine drew her car slowly up out of
+the creek upon the road, where he forced it about until it pointed
+towards San Mateo. Then he retied the rope on the front axle.
+
+"Now for town," said he.
+
+"Why did you haul me out of there, I demand to know?"
+
+"Why? Because you were a public obstruction blocking traffic. If you
+had remained there long enough you would have become a public
+nuisance; and it's the duty of every citizen to abate nuisances. No
+one would call you a nuisance, of course,--not to your face, at any
+rate. But travelers might have felt some annoyance if compelled to
+drive around you; they might even have had you arrested when they
+learned you were acting out of willful stubbornness."
+
+In a sort of incredulous wonder, of charmed horror, the girl heard
+herself thus unfeelingly described.
+
+"You--you barbarian!" she cried.
+
+"Ready? We're off for town now."
+
+"I'll run my car in the ditch and wreck it if you so much as pull it
+another inch!"
+
+"I don't like to be frustrated in my generous acts; they are so few,
+according to common report. Well, we'll leave the car, but it must be
+drawn off the road."
+
+When this was accomplished, Weir replaced the rope in his machine.
+Then he returned to her.
+
+"What now? Do you intend to sit here in the hot sunshine, to say
+nothing of missing your dinner?"
+
+"That doesn't concern you."
+
+Weir shook his head gravely.
+
+"You must be saved from your own folly," said he.
+
+Before she had realized what was happening, he had opened the door of
+the runabout, swung her out upon the ground and was marching her
+towards his own machine. Stupefaction at this quick, atrocious deed
+left her an automaton; and before she had fully regained her control
+they were speeding towards San Mateo, she at his side.
+
+"This is outrageous!" she gasped.
+
+Steele Weir did not speak until they entered town.
+
+"Where is your home?" he asked.
+
+"Turn to the right at the end of the street."
+
+It was before a house of modern structure, banked with a bewildering
+number of flowers and shaded by trees, that he halted the car. He
+alighted, bared his head, assisted her to descend, bowed and then
+without a word drove away, leaving her to stare after him with a
+baffling mixture of feelings and the single indignant statement, "And
+he didn't even wait long enough for me to thank him!" Nor did her
+perplexity lessen when her car was left before the door during the
+afternoon by one of the camp mechanics to whom Weir had telephoned
+from San Mateo and who had put it in running order.
+
+Weir himself proceeded to Bowenville, where matters regarding
+shipments and the unloading of machinery engaged him the rest of the
+day. Into his mind, however, there floated at moments the image of the
+girl's face, banish it as he would. He had learned her name by asking
+who was the owner of the house where she had alighted, information
+necessary to direct the mechanic as to the delivery of the stalled
+car. Hosmer it was; and the residence was that of Dr. Hosmer.
+Presumably she was his daughter. And what a vivid, charming,
+never-surrender enemy! Lucky the chap who had won this high-spirited
+girl.
+
+The memory of her eyes and her personality was still with him when
+he ate his supper that evening in a restaurant in Bowenville. His own
+past in relation to the other sex had been starred by no love
+affair, not even by episodes of a sentimental nature; the character of
+his work had for long periods kept him away from women's society,
+but further than this there was the shadow upon his life, the shadow
+of mystery that obliged him to follow a solitary course. He
+considered himself unfree to seek friendships or favors among women.
+By every demand of honor he was bound to solicit no girl's trust or
+affection until that mystery was cleared and his father's innocence
+established. It was for this reason that he seemed even to himself to
+grow more hard, more harsh, more silent and aloof, until at last he
+had come to believe that no fair face had the power to arouse his
+interest or to quicken his pulse.
+
+But now, this girl he had met at the ford!
+
+Long-stifled emotions struggled in his breast. Sleeping desires awoke.
+His spirit swelled like a caged thing within the shell of years of
+indurated habit. A strange restlessness pervaded him. He had a fierce
+passion somehow to rip in pieces the gray drab pattern of his
+commonplace life.
+
+Perhaps it was this revolt against the fetters of fate that caused him
+to welcome the chance for action that presently was offered. The
+restaurant was of an ordinary type, with a lunch counter at one side,
+a row of tables down the middle and half a dozen booths along the wall
+offering some degree of privacy. In one of these Steele Weir was
+smoking a cigar and finishing his coffee before making his ride back
+to camp. From the booth adjoining he had for some time been hearing
+scraps of conversation; now all at once the voices rose in protest and
+in answering explanation, in perplexed appeal and earnest assurance.
+
+Weir's own reflections ceased. His head turned and remained fixed to
+listen, while the cigar grew cold between his fingers. For ten minutes
+or so his attitude of concentrated harkening to the two voices, a
+girl's and a man's, remained unchanged. Little by little he was
+piecing out the thread of the confidential dialogue--and of the little
+drama being enacted in the booth.
+
+His brows became lowering as he gathered its significance, his lips
+drew together in a tight thin line. He did not move when he heard the
+man push back his chair to leave the place, nor alter his position
+until there came the sound of the door closing at the front of the
+restaurant. Then he reached for his hat, stood up and went lightly
+around into the other booth, where he pulled the green calico curtain
+across the opening.
+
+A girl of about seventeen, of plump clean prettiness, still sat at the
+table, which was littered with dishes. The cheap finery of her hat and
+dress showed a pathetic attempt to increase her natural comeliness. At
+this minute her face showed amazement and a hint of apprehension.
+
+"What are you coming in here for?" she demanded.
+
+"I want to talk to you for a little while," Weir replied, seating
+himself. "You will please listen. I've overheard enough of your talk
+to catch its drift; you came here to be married, but now this man
+wants to induce you to go to Los Angeles first."
+
+"That isn't any of your business," the girl flashed back, going white
+and red by turns.
+
+"I'm making it mine, however. You live up on Terry Creek, by what I
+heard; that's not far from my camp. I'm manager at the dam and my
+name's Weir."
+
+At this statement the girl shrank back, beginning to bite the hem of
+her handkerchief nervously and gazing at him with terrified eyes.
+
+"I'm here to help you, not harm you. You've run away from home to-day
+to marry this fellow. Did he promise to marry you if you came to
+Bowenville?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And now he wants you to go with him to Los Angeles first, promising
+to marry you there?"
+
+The girl hesitated, with a wavering look.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He gives you excuses, of course. But they don't satisfy your mind,
+do they? They don't satisfy mine, at any rate. It's the old trick.
+Suppose when you reached the coast he didn't marry you after all and
+put you off with more promises and after a week or two abandoned
+you?"
+
+"Oh, he wouldn't do that!" she cried, with a gulp.
+
+"That's just what he is planning. He didn't meet you here until after
+dark, I judge. You'll both go to the train separately--I overheard
+that part. Afterwards he could return from the coast and deny that he
+had ever had anything to do with you, and it would simply be your word
+against his. And which would people hereabouts believe, tell me that,
+which would they believe, yours or his, after you had gone wrong?"
+
+The girl sat frozen. Then suddenly she began to cry, softly and with
+jerks of her shoulders. Weir reached out and patted her arm.
+
+"What's your name?" he asked.
+
+"Mary--Mary Johnson."
+
+"Mary, I'm interfering in your affairs only because I know what men
+will do. You must take no chances. If this fellow is really anxious to
+marry you, he'll do it here in Bowenville."
+
+After a few sobs she wiped her eyes.
+
+"He said he didn't dare get the license in San Mateo, or his folks
+would have stopped our marriage."
+
+"Then you should stay here to-night, go to the next county seat and be
+married to-morrow. His parents are bound to learn about it once you're
+married. A few days more or less make no difference. And though I
+should return to my work, I'll just stay over a day and take you in my
+car to-morrow to see that you're married straight and proper. Why go
+clear to Los Angeles?"
+
+"He said it would be our honeymoon--and--and I had never been away
+from here."
+
+"What's his name?"
+
+She hesitated in uncertainty whether or not she should answer.
+
+"Ed Sorenson," came at last from her lips.
+
+Steele Weir slowly thrust his head forward, fixing her with burning
+eyes.
+
+"Son of the big cattleman?" he demanded.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"And you love him?"
+
+"Yes, oh, yes!"
+
+Weir sat back in his seat, lighted a cigarette and stared past her
+head at the opposite partition. The evil strain of the father had been
+continued in the son and was working here to seduce this simple,
+ignorant girl, incited by her physical freshness and the expectation
+that she should be easy prey.
+
+"Well, I doubt if he loves you," he said, presently.
+
+"He does, he does!"
+
+"If he really does above everything else in the world, he'll be
+willing to marry you openly, no matter what his father may say or do.
+That's the test, Mary. If he's in earnest, he'll agree at once to go
+with us to the next county seat to-morrow and be married there by a
+minister. Isn't that true? Answer me that squarely; isn't it true?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then by that we'll decide. If he agrees, well and good; if he
+refuses, that will show him up--show he never had any intention of
+marrying you. I'm a stranger to you, but I'm your friend. And you're
+not going to Los Angeles unmarried!"
+
+The last words were uttered in a level menacing tone that caused Mary
+Johnson to shiver. To her, reared in the humble adobe house on her
+father's little ranch on Terry Creek, a man who could manage the great
+irrigation project seemed a figure out of her ken, a vast form working
+against the sky. His statements were not to be disputed, whatever she
+might think.
+
+"Yes, sir," she said, just above a whisper.
+
+"All right. Now we'll wait for him. He was coming back for you, wasn't
+he?"
+
+"Yes. I was to stay at the hotel till train time."
+
+"Is this your grip?"
+
+Weir jerked a thumb towards a worn canvas "telescope" fastened with a
+single shawl strap, resting in the corner of the booth.
+
+"It's mine. Yes, sir."
+
+"How old is Ed Sorenson," he asked, after a pause.
+
+"About thirty, maybe."
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Seventeen next month."
+
+"But sixteen yet this month."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+He said nothing more. As the minutes passed, her timorous gaze
+continued steadfastly on the stern countenance before her. She dully
+expected something terrible to happen when Ed Sorenson appeared, for
+she knew Ed would be angry; but she had been powerless to prevent the
+intrusion of this terrible stranger.
+
+Fear, in truth, a fear that left her heart cold, was her feeling as
+she contemplated Weir. Yet under that, was there not something else? A
+sense of safety, of comforting assurance of protection?
+
+"You--you won't hurt Ed if he won't go with us?" she asked, in a low
+voice. "If he gets mad and won't marry me here, I mean?"
+
+The man's eyes came round to hers.
+
+"I'll just break him in two, nothing more, Mary," was the calm
+answer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE ENEMY'S SPAWN
+
+
+The curtain to the booth was flung back.
+
+"I've the train tickets; come along to the hotel----" exclaimed the
+man who quickly entered. But the words died in his mouth at sight of
+Weir sitting in the place he had vacated.
+
+He was over average height, of strong fleshy build, with a small
+blonde mustache on his upper lip. Under his eyes little pouches had
+already begun to form; his mouth was full and sensual; but he still
+retained an air of liveliness, of carelessness and agility, that might
+at first sight seem the spontaneity of youth. He wore a brown suit, a
+gray flannel shirt and Stetson hat--the common apparel of the
+country.
+
+"Who the devil are you? And what are you butting in here for?" he
+exclaimed, with a vicious spark showing in his pale blue eyes. At the
+same time he clapped a hand on Weir's shoulder, closing it in a hard
+grasp.
+
+Instantly Weir struck the hand off with his fist.
+
+"Keep your dirty flippers to yourself," he said, rising.
+
+The blood faded from the other's countenance, leaving it white with
+rage.
+
+"Get out of this booth, or I'll throw you out."
+
+It was Weir's turn to act. Like a flash he caught Sorenson's elbow,
+jerked him forward, spun him about and dropped him upon the chair.
+
+"Sit there, you cradle-robber, until I'm through with you," he
+commanded. "And if you don't want everybody in this restaurant to know
+about your business with this girl, you'll lower your voice when you
+talk."
+
+Sorenson shot an uneasy glance towards the curtain and his wrath
+became not less furious but better controlled. Clearly public
+attention was the last thing he desired in this affair. He leaned
+back, staring at Steele Weir insolently, and produced a cigarette, at
+which he began to puff.
+
+"Mary, get ready. We'll be going in a minute," said he.
+
+"No, you'll not, Sorenson. I've taken a hand in your game. This girl
+says you're going to marry her, is that right?" The other rolled his
+eyes upward and began to whistle a jig tune softly. "Well, this is the
+plan she and I've made. She'll remain at the hotel to-night--as will
+you and I--and to-morrow we'll drive to another county seat in my car
+and you'll secure a licence there. Then you'll go to a minister's,
+where I'll act as a witness, and the ceremony will be performed.
+Afterwards the pair of you can proceed to Los Angeles, or elsewhere as
+you please, on your wedding journey."
+
+"You're quite a little planner, aren't you?" the other jeered.
+
+"That's the arrangement if you agree."
+
+"I don't agree."
+
+Mary Johnson, in whose eyes a light of hope had dawned during Weir's
+low-toned statement, began nervously to bite her lip.
+
+"Won't you do it, Ed?" she asked, timidly.
+
+"We'll do as I planned, or nothing," he stated. Then with sudden spite
+he continued, "You're responsible for this mixup. What did you let
+this fellow in here for while I was gone? Didn't you have sense
+enough to keep your mouth shut?"
+
+Steele halted him by a gesture.
+
+"Don't begin abusing her; you're not married to her yet. I overheard
+your talk and guessed the low-lived, scoundrelly trick you proposed to
+play on her."
+
+"You damned eavesdropper----"
+
+"Sure, eavesdropper is right," Weir interrupted, coolly. "So I just
+stepped in here from my booth next door to discuss the situation with
+her; you can't mislead an innocent girl like her with the intention of
+shaking her when you get her into a city, not if I know about it and
+am around. If you sincerely intend to marry her, and will do so
+to-morrow in my presence, then I'll withdraw. Afterwards I mean, of
+course."
+
+Sorenson arose.
+
+"Come, Mary. Stand aside, you!"
+
+"She doesn't go with you," the engineer stated.
+
+For a moment the men's eyes locked, those of one full of blue fire and
+hatred, those of the other quiet as pieces of flint.
+
+"And she shall keep with me while I telephone to your father that you
+brought her here under promise of marriage, a girl of sixteen, without
+her own parents' consent, and now refuse to marry her," Steele added.
+
+A sneer twisted the other man's mouth.
+
+"My father happens to be in the east, where he's been for a month," he
+mocked. "If he were here, he wouldn't believe you; he'd know you were
+a liar. He knows I'm engaged to marry----" Bite off the words as he
+tried, they had escaped.
+
+"Ah, that's the way of it!" Weir remarked with a silky smoothness.
+"You expect to marry some other girl--and have no intention whatever
+of marrying Mary here."
+
+"To hell with you and your opinions!"
+
+"First, you coax her to Bowenville by a promise, then you persuade her
+by more promises to go to Los Angeles," the engineer proceeded
+steadily, "and there you would betray and abandon her to a life on the
+streets, like the yellow cur you are."
+
+Sorenson snapped his fingers and moved round to the girl's side.
+
+"Pay no attention to him," he addressed her. "He's only a crazy
+fool."
+
+But she drew back against the wall, staring at him with a strained,
+searching regard.
+
+"Will you marry me to-morrow as he asks?" she questioned anxiously.
+
+"No. I explained the reason why once. Come on; let's get away from
+him. Then I'll make everything clear and satisfactory to you."
+
+For a moment she stood wavering, picking at her handkerchief, her face
+pale and unhappy, questioning his countenance. Finally she turned to
+look at Steele Weir, standing silently by.
+
+"You never said you were engaged to another girl; you told me I was
+the only one you loved," she muttered in a choked voice. "But I see
+now you won't marry me. You wish me to go with you--but not to marry.
+I'm going away--away anywhere. By myself! Where I'll never see any
+one!" Burying her face in her hands, she shook with sobs.
+
+"This is what comes from your putting an oar in," said Sorenson,
+lifting his fist in a burst of fury to strike Weir.
+
+The latter at once smote him across the mouth with open palm at the
+vile epithet that followed. Sorenson staggered, then lunged forward,
+tugging at something in his hip-pocket, while the table and dishes
+went over in a crash.
+
+Before he could draw the weapon Steele's fingers shot forth and seized
+his wrist; his other hand closed about Sorenson's throat in an iron
+grasp. Slowly under that powerful grip the younger man's struggles
+ceased, his eyes dilated, his knees yielded and gave way. The revolver
+was wrenched from his numbed hold. His eyeballs seemed afire; his
+breast heaved in violent spasms for the denied breath; and his heart
+appeared about to burst.
+
+"You miserable skunk!" Weir said, barely moving his mouth. "I ought to
+choke the life out of you." Then he released his hold. "I'll keep this
+gun--and use it if you ever try to pull another on me! Now, make
+tracks. Remember, too, to pay your bill as you go out."
+
+When Sorenson had straightened his coat, giving Weir a malignant look
+during the process, he departed. His air of disdainful insolence had
+quite evaporated, but that he considered the action between them only
+begun was plain, though he spoke not a word. Weir, however, heard him
+give a quieting explanation to the waiter hovering outside, who had
+been drawn by the crash of dishes.
+
+"Thought a fight was going on," the aproned dispenser of food said to
+Steele when he and the girl emerged.
+
+"Just an accident. Nothing broken, I imagine," was the response.
+
+"You couldn't break those dishes with a hammer; they're made for rough
+work."
+
+"If there's any damage, this may cover it." And Steele tossed the
+fellow a dollar.
+
+Outside the restaurant he slipped his hand inside Mary Johnson's arm
+and led her along the street. With him he had brought the old strapped
+grip.
+
+"Where you taking me?" she asked, in a worried quaver.
+
+"Home, Mary."
+
+"Oh, I'm afraid to go home."
+
+"Are you afraid of your own father and mother? They're the ones to
+trust first of all."
+
+"But when father--mother is dead--sees the telescope, he'll want to
+know where I've been. He doesn't know I have it. I told him I might
+stay with a girl at San Mateo over night, and then sneaked it out."
+
+"The best thing is to tell him all about this occurrence."
+
+"Oh, I can't."
+
+"Then I shall. Leave that part to me."
+
+And though her heart was filled with fresh alarms and fears at the
+prospect, there seemed nothing else to do. She longed to flee, to hide
+in some dark hole, to cover her shame from her father and the world,
+but in the hands of this determined man she felt herself powerless.
+What he willed, she dumbly did.
+
+Terry Creek flowed out of the mountains four miles north of San Mateo,
+an insignificant stream entering the Burntwood halfway down to
+Bowenville. The Johnson ranch house was a mile up the canyon, where
+the rocky walls expanded into a grassy park of no great area. They
+reached the girl's home about half-past nine that night.
+
+For two hours Weir remained talking with the father, describing the
+affair at Bowenville, fending off his first bitter anger at the girl
+and gradually persuading him to see that Mary had been deceived, lured
+away on hollow promises and was guiltless of all except failing to
+take him into her confidence. At last peace was made. Mary wept for a
+time, and was patted on the head by her rough, bearded father, who
+exclaimed, "There, there, don't cry. You're safe back again; we'll
+just forget it."
+
+Outside of the house, however, where he had accompanied Weir to his
+car, he said with an oath:
+
+"But I'll not forget Ed Sorenson, if I go to hell for it. My little
+girl!"
+
+"She's half a child yet, that's the worse of his offense," Steele
+replied, savagely.
+
+"Mary said you choked him."
+
+"Some. Not enough."
+
+"I'll not forget him--or you, Mr. Weir."
+
+Steele mounted into his machine. He thoughtfully studied the rancher's
+bearded, weather-tanned face, illuminated by the moonlight.
+
+"At present I'd say nothing about this matter to any one. Later on you
+may be able to use it in squaring accounts," the engineer advised.
+
+"I hope so," was the answer, with a bitter note. "But talking would
+only hurt Mary, not Ed Sorenson. Whatever the Sorensons do is all
+right, you know, because they're rich. The daughter of a poor man like
+me would get all the black end of the gossip; and I can't lift a
+finger, that's what grinds me, unless I go out and shoot him, then
+hang for it. For the bank's got a mortgage on my little bunch of
+stock, and on my ranch here, and Sorenson, of course, is the bank.
+Gordon and Vorse and a few others are in it too, but he's the bull of
+the herd. If I opened my mouth about his son, I'd be kicked off of
+Terry Creek, lock, stock and barrel. That's the way Sorenson keeps all
+of us poor devils, white and Mexican, eating out of his hand. I've
+just been poor since I came here a boy; the gang in San Mateo won't
+let anybody but themselves have a chance. And I reckon old man
+Sorenson wouldn't care much if his boy had ruined my girl. Cuss him a
+little, maybe; that would be all. But I won't forget the whelp. Some
+day my chance will come to play even." "Sure; if one just keeps quiet
+and waits," Steele agreed. "Well, I must hit the trail. If you want
+work any time, come over to the dam; we can always use a man with a
+team." Johnson nodded. "After haying is done, maybe. And remember, I'm
+much obliged to you for looking after my little girl. I won't forget
+that, either." He reached up diffidently and shook hands with the
+engineer. Weir's grip was sympathetic and sincere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A SECRET CONFERENCE
+
+
+On a certain afternoon Felipe Martinez, the lean and restless attorney
+who had acted as the Mexican workmen's mouthpiece, observed through
+the broad plate-glass window of the San Mateo Cattle Company's office
+an incident that greatly interested him. For the moment he forgot the
+resentment kindled by Sorenson's abrupt refusal and brutal words when
+he asked for the nomination for county attorney. The election was in
+the autumn; the nomination was equivalent to election; and Felipe
+considered that he had too long been kept apart from that particular
+spoil.
+
+Martinez had once had a slight difference with the banker, and now
+outrageously Sorenson had recalled it. He had stated that Martinez
+should hold no political office; he gave offices only to men who did
+exactly as he advised; his exact words were that the Mexican was
+"tricky and no good." And picking up his hat Sorenson who had that day
+returned home from the east went out of the bank, leaving Martinez to
+stare out of the window and meditatively twist a point of his silky
+black mustache.
+
+It was before the window that there occurred the meeting between
+Sorenson and the manager of the dam. Martinez perceived the two men
+glance at each other and pass, but after a step or two both men
+halted. As if worked by a single wire, they slowly swung about for a
+second look. The Mexican's nimble brain calculated that they could not
+have previously met and in consequence their behavior bespoke
+something out of the ordinary.
+
+The pair stood exactly where they had turned, three or four paces
+apart, he noted. The Mexican's mind palpitated with a slight thrill of
+excitement. The manner of each of the men was that of a fighting
+animal looking over another animal of the same sort: neither uttering
+a word, nor stirring a finger, nor yielding a particle in his fixed
+unwinking gaze. Martinez could almost feel the exchanged challenge,
+the cold antagonism, the hostile curiosity, the matching of wills, the
+instant hate, between the men.
+
+Though they had not met before, to be sure, nevertheless they were
+enemies. Was it because of the discharge of the workmen? Then
+Martinez' mind flashed back to the scene in Vorse's saloon when Gordon
+had showed such sudden emotion at the engineer's name and his
+enigmatical reference to some event in the past. That was it!
+Something which had occurred thirty years ago, probably something
+crooked. Men committed deeds in those early days that they would now
+like to forget. He, Martinez, would look into the matter.
+
+Sorenson passed out of sight, and Weir likewise proceeded on his way.
+Thereupon the lawyer sauntered over to the court house, where
+presently he became engrossed in a pile of tomes in the register's
+office. As examining records is a part of a lawyer's regular work, it
+never excites curiosity or arouses suspicion.
+
+That same evening Martinez perceived Vorse enter Sorenson's office.
+Vorse, he recalled, had been included in the engineer's threatening
+remarks to Gordon. Shortly thereafter Gordon himself ambled along the
+street and passed through the door. Last of all, Burkhardt, a short,
+fleshy, bearded man, went into the building. The vultures of San
+Mateo, as he secretly called them, had flocked together for
+conference. Presently Martinez strolled by the office, outwardly
+displaying no interest in the structure but furtively seeking to catch
+a glimpse of the interior through a crack of the drawn shade. But in
+this he was unsuccessful.
+
+Of one thing he was certain, however. His prolonged examination of the
+county records had revealed an old bill of sale of a ranch and several
+herds of cattle from one Joseph Weir to Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon and
+Burkhardt. He had placed his finger on the link connecting the
+engineer with these men, the entire four, as this old bill of sale
+thus recorded showed the intimate though unexpressed partnership of
+the men, which was common knowledge over the country; and intuition
+told him also that this private assembly of the quartette quickly on
+Sorenson's return home had its inspiration in the new manager of the
+dam.
+
+Martinez determined to continue his investigations. Events might yet
+prove that it would have been much better for the cattleman to have
+given him the political nomination. Truly, it was possible. In any
+case, it would do no harm to have "something on" Sorenson and the
+others, these rulers of San Mateo. And there was the opposite side of
+the affair--Weir's side; so it looked as if there might be profit
+either way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The four men sitting in the railed-off space in the San Mateo Cattle
+Company's office constituted the cattle company. Moreover, they
+comprised the financial, political and general power of this remote
+section of New Mexico. In face, manner, garb, they were dissimilar.
+Vorse, clothed in gray, was hawk-nosed and impassive; and though now,
+like his companions, wealthy beyond simple needs he nevertheless
+continued the operation of his saloon that had been a landmark in San
+Mateo for forty years. Burkhardt was rough-featured, rough-tongued,
+choleric, and coatless: typically the burly, uncurried, uncouth
+stock man, whose commonest words were oaths or curses and whose way
+with obstinate cattle or men was the way of the club or the fist.
+Gordon was the wily, cautious, unscrupulous politician; he had
+represented San Mateo in the legislature for years, both during
+the Territorial period and since New Mexico had become a state, and
+was not unknown in other parts of the southwest; but he was "Judge"
+only by courtesy, the title most frequently given him, never having
+been admitted to the bar or having practiced, and engaged himself
+ostensibly in the insurance and real estate business. Like the
+others, his share of the large cattle, sheep and land holdings of
+the group made him independent. Sorenson, the last of the four and
+in reality the leader because of a greater breadth of vision and a
+natural capacity for business, was dressed in a tailored suit of
+greenish plaid--a man with bushy eyebrows, a long fleshy nose,
+predatory eyes, a heavy cat-fish mouth and a great, barrel-like body
+that reared two or three inches over six feet when he stood on his
+feet. But one thing they had in common, in addition to the gray hair
+of age, and that was a joint liability for the past. For years they
+had believed that liability extinguished through the operation of
+time. They had considered as closed and sealed the account of early
+secret, lawless acts by which they had acquired wealth and a grip on
+the community. They were now law-observing members of society; they
+controlled even if they sometimes failed to possess the goodwill
+of the county--and they were not men to measure position by
+friendships; their councils determined how much or how little other
+men should own and in local politics their fingers moved the puppets
+that served their will.
+
+With the entrance here of the powerful group of financiers who were
+constructing the irrigation project they recognized the threat to
+their old-time supremacy. Cattle and sheep interests would succumb to
+farming; a swarm of new, independent settlers would arrive like
+locusts; and their leadership would eventually be challenged if not
+ended. New towns would spring up. New money would flow in to dispute
+their financial mastery. New leaders would arise to assail their
+political dominion. And against the prospect of all this they had
+initiated a secret warfare, endeavoring by stealth to ruin the
+irrigation company at the beginning and nip the danger in the bud.
+
+Now it had been revealed all at once that they had not only a
+general and impersonal enemy in the form of the company, but a
+specific one in the form of a man, its manager. Out of nowhere he
+had emerged, out of thirty years' silence, a sinister figure who
+tapped with significant finger the book of their secret past while
+his eyes steadfastly demanded a reckoning. Did he know all, or
+nothing? Knowing, did he deliberately leave them in doubt in order
+to shatter their confidence?
+
+At least one of the four had been badly shaken on learning Weir's
+identity, and all now were uneasy. It was as if Fate after a long
+silence was about to open the sealed record.
+
+"Perhaps you were just imagining things, Judge," Sorenson was saying.
+
+Senator Gordon moistened his lips and tugged nervously at his gray
+mustache.
+
+"No, no," he exclaimed. "Just ask Vorse. The man said his name was
+Weir and that he was the son of Joe Weir. Then--then----"
+
+"Well?" Sorenson demanded, frowning at the other's visible trepidation.
+
+"Weir added, 'And I know what happened thirty years ago in this
+selfsame room.' Those were his very words. Isn't that true, Vorse?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"They could mean only one thing," said Gordon.
+
+"When the Judge went out he said to me," Vorse stated, "'That was for
+you too.' I had my hand on my gun under the counter as he said it,
+ready if he made a move. He knew what I had there, but it didn't faze
+him. He's a better man than Joe Weir ever was, I want to remark, and
+different; he has nerve and a bad eye. He knows something, lay your
+bets on that."
+
+"How much? How much? If we only knew how much!" Judge Gordon
+vouchsafed, testily.
+
+"How would he know anything? Joe Weir didn't know, so how can this
+fellow know? Don't get scared at a shadow." It was the bearded,
+rough-tongued Burkhardt who spoke, concluding his words with a
+blasphemous oath.
+
+"There's the Mexican who saw what happened--and that boy who looked in
+at the back door," Gordon asserted. "We just caught sight of him and
+couldn't make out his face against the light. Then he had skipped when
+we ran there. We never did learn who he was."
+
+"Do you think he remembers?" Sorenson said, scornfully. "He may be
+dead. He may be on the other side of the world. Just some kid who
+happened to drift by at the minute and look in, and there's not one
+chance in a million he's anywhere around these parts yet. He would
+have blabbed long ago to some one if he had been; don't figure him in,
+he's lost."
+
+"Saurez isn't, though."
+
+At this Vorse put in a word.
+
+"He saw more than one killing in those days when he was roustabout for
+me. It was only one more to him. Probably he has forgotten it.
+Anyway," Vorse ended with deadly emphasis, "he knows what would happen
+to him even now if he remembered it and talked. Leave him out of the
+calculation too."
+
+"Then that just makes the four of us," said Burkhardt. "Nobody else.
+So this fellow Weir doesn't know a thing."
+
+"But we can't be absolutely sure," Judge Gordon replied.
+
+"Well, he'd need proof, wouldn't he?"
+
+"Certainly, to bring legal action. But how do we know he hasn't even
+that? Look all around the question as a lawyer does; let us assume the
+millionth chance, for instance. Suppose that he somewhere met and
+became acquainted with that boy. Suppose that he learned the latter
+had been here at the time and saw the shooting; and heard his story.
+Suppose that Weir knows this instant where he is and can produce him
+as a witness in court."
+
+"I reckon in this county his testimony wouldn't count for much,"
+Burkhardt, who had been sheriff, stated, with a harsh laugh.
+
+Sorenson, however, was impressed by the Judge's reasoning, for he
+drummed with fingers on the desk and sat in brooding silence. So
+likewise sat Vorse, who had heard Weir's utterance and beheld his
+face.
+
+"He knows something," he repeated, in a convinced tone. "Or he's a
+damned good bluffer."
+
+"I passed him here at the door this afternoon," the banker remarked.
+"I turned to look at him, guessing who he was, and he had stopped and
+was looking at me. Cool about it too. We'll have to watch him."
+
+"Perhaps if we just tip him off to keep his mouth shut tight, that
+will be enough," Burkhardt suggested. "If he knows the four of us are
+ready----"
+
+Vorse sniffed.
+
+"You think he can be bluffed?" he said. "You haven't seen him yet; go
+take a look. We'll not throw any scare into him. If he were that kind,
+he wouldn't have told us who he is. He wanted us to know he's after
+us, that's my opinion. He wants to shake our nerve--and he shook the
+Judge's all right that day at my bar."
+
+"He did," Gordon admitted. "The thing was so infernally unexpected.
+Almost like Joe Weir himself appearing. I didn't sleep a wink that
+night, what with my heart being bad and what with seeing him."
+
+"Suppose he _has_ proofs?" Vorse asked after a pause, while his
+narrowed eyes moved from one to another of his companions.
+
+A considerable silence followed. The question jerked into full light
+the issue that had all the while been lurking in the recesses of their
+minds--an issue full of ghastly possibilities. Judge Gordon's fingers
+trembled as he wiped with handkerchief the cold sweat on his brow.
+
+"We're all in it," Vorse added.
+
+Burkhardt brought his fist down on the desk with a sudden crash.
+
+"If he has proofs, then it's him or us," he exclaimed, while the
+blood suffused his face. "Him or us--and that means him! I'll never go
+behind bars!"
+
+"Sure not. None of us," Vorse said.
+
+"It will mean----" Judge Gordon began in an agitated voice, but did
+not finish.
+
+Sorenson gave a nod of his head. His bear-trap mouth was compressed in
+a determined evil line.
+
+"Exactly. He'll never use his proofs. We're in too far to halt now if
+matters come to the point of his trying to use them. He has a grip on
+us in one way; he knows we can't declare his father, Joe Weir, did the
+killing; that would make us--what do you call it, Judge?"
+
+"Accomplices after the fact. Besides, it would then come out that we
+had taken over and shared among us his stuff, fifty thousand apiece.
+It's a deplorable situation we're in, gentlemen, deplorable. If we
+were but able to start the story Joe Weir believed and fled because
+of, it would cut the ground out from under this man's feet at once."
+
+"It's him we'll cut, not the ground under him," Burkhardt growled,
+thrusting his hairy chin forward towards the lawyer. "And cut his
+damned throat."
+
+"I hate to think of our being forced to--to homicide. Even justifiable
+homicide."
+
+"Homicide nothing! It's just killing a rattlesnake waiting in the
+brush to strike. That's the way we used to do in the old days, and if
+he's going to bring them back that's what we'll do again."
+
+Sorenson smiled grimly.
+
+"We'll wait till we're sure he has the proofs, then----"
+
+"Then we'll act quick and sure," Vorse shot out.
+
+"And quietly," the cattleman added. "We'll take no more chances this
+time. It will be arranged carefully beforehand; all four of us will be
+in it, of course,--equal responsibility; and there'll be no
+witnesses."
+
+Judge Gordon's face wore a pallid, sickish look.
+
+"I hope to God there's some other way out of it," he muttered.
+
+"So do all of us," Burkhardt snarled. "But if there isn't, it means
+guns. For you, too, along with the rest of us."
+
+Sorenson leaned forward and gazed from under his heavy brows,
+compelling Gordon to meet his fixed look.
+
+"You were keen enough at the time for your share of Joe Weir's stuff,"
+he said. "So you'll play the hand out to the end now, the bad cards as
+well as the good. You're no better than the rest of us, and it was you
+who hatched the scheme for cleaning him up and who put over the
+story."
+
+"I know, I know. But--but this would be too much like cold-blooded
+murder."
+
+"Murder!" Sorenson grated. "Did you look straight into this fellow
+Weir's eyes? Didn't you see something there that resembled murder?
+He'd like only the chance to kill us one by one with his own hands: I
+saw that much. Just as Burkhardt said, it's him or us. After you told
+me about him, I had only to take one look. If he has the goods on
+us--well, he'll have to die. Make up your mind to that. We're back to
+the time of thirty years ago and fighting for our lives. We were not
+only all in on the Weir job, but the Dent killing--all of us. Remember
+that. If the facts become known, we'll be run into some other county
+and court and hanged. And every enemy we've made in these years past
+will put up his head and clamor for our blood. Let that sink into your
+mind."
+
+The effect of this low fierce utterance was to hammer the truth home.
+The Judge was ashen. Vorse's face appeared like an evil mask.
+Burkhardt glowered savagely.
+
+At that instant there sounded the faint report of a shot in the
+street. Then as the group sat unmoving, rigid, keyed to the highest
+pitch of expectancy, there followed quickly two more shots.
+Afterwards, silence.
+
+"A gun-play!" issued from Vorse's lips, softly.
+
+They all sprang up to hasten to the door.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A SHOT IN THE DARK
+
+
+Steele Weir driving his car down the street in the dusk had caught
+sight of Felipe Martinez standing near the cattle company's office. He
+stopped close by, beckoned. Martinez would do as well as another.
+
+"You're a notary, I suppose?" he questioned.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Weir. Most of us lawyers here are," he replied politely,
+when he had advanced.
+
+"I've some papers I want acknowledged to-night. Must get them into the
+mail going down to Bowenville in the morning."
+
+"Only too pleased to facilitate your business, Mr. Weir. My office is
+down a few doors."
+
+"Jump in."
+
+"It's but a few steps."
+
+"Then I'll get out here." And the engineer stopped the engine and
+descended to the ground.
+
+Along the street open doorways and windows were already beginning to
+make yellow panels of lamplight in the thin gloom. The air was still
+warm, balmy, scented by the lingering aroma of the greasewood smoke of
+supper fires in Mexican ovens. Stars were jeweling the sky. Few
+persons moved in the twilight.
+
+One of these was a man who, standing at the door of a native saloon
+across the street and a little farther up, had come diagonally over
+towards the bank on seeing the engineer halt his car. He walked with a
+slouching haste seldom exhibited by a Mexican and gained the spot as
+Weir stepped out. There he slackened his pace while he scanned the
+American with an intense, slow gaze that the engineer, chancing to
+raise his eyes, squarely met.
+
+The Mexicans always looked at him and fell silent when he passed since
+he had shown who was master at the dam. In the eyes of some was merely
+stupid curiosity, in some a shrinking, and in many a half-veiled
+hostility. That did not trouble Weir. In Mexico he had dealt with
+recalcitrant workmen of more lawless nature than these. He usually
+ignored them altogether now as they no longer were in his employ. But
+this man seized his attention.
+
+It was not yet too dark to mark his face as he lounged past, slowly
+turning his head about as he progressed until his chin was on his
+shoulder, staring back. His look the while remained riveted on Weir--a
+steady, contemplative, evil regard. In Chihuahua the engineer had once
+seen a notorious local "killer" who had that same gaze.
+
+Martinez had also glanced at the fellow.
+
+"Who is that man? One of the discharged workmen?" Weir asked him, when
+moving forward they in turn had passed the Mexican.
+
+"No, I imagine not. At any rate, he doesn't belong in San Mateo or
+anywhere hereabouts. I know everybody for fifty miles, for I've been
+active in social and political affairs. He's unknown to me. A
+stranger." Then a little farther along: "Here is my office, Mr. Weir.
+I'll have a light in an instant. Ah, now. Be so good as to have a
+chair and we'll expedite your business."
+
+As Martinez filled out the acknowledgment blanks on the papers, his
+eyes furtively skipped over the vital portions of the documents. The
+latter were connected with company business. He had hoped they would
+be personal so that he might learn something more of this manager's
+affairs, possibly more of his secret antagonism for Sorenson and his
+friends. Any intrigue appealed to the thin, slippery lawyer's soul,
+but most of all some one's else intrigue into which he might
+profitably put a finger. However, from these papers he was to learn
+nothing.
+
+He had considered all possibilities of the affair, all possible
+solutions of what long ago might have occurred between Joseph Weir,
+undoubtedly the father of the man sitting across the table from him,
+and the four men now conferring in Sorenson's office. This was no
+petty squabble, he divined. There was something going on under the
+surface that was big--big! And very dangerous too, for the spirit of
+that moment in Vorse's bar was not to be mistaken; it had been tense,
+electric. Utmost caution on Martinez's part would therefore be
+necessary.
+
+As between the two parties, his sympathies at present inclined towards
+Weir. The refusal on the latter's part to reemploy the Mexican workmen
+on their own terms was purely a matter of policy, and the lawyer's
+first gusty anger had long been forgotten. But not so Sorenson's
+sneering words of that afternoon. They struck to the heart of his
+vanity, breeding an animosity that would last. Had not the banker
+stated that the lawyer should hold no political office whatever? After
+all his services? Had he not definitely shown that Martinez might
+never expect anything there? Well, the lawyer wasn't one tamely to
+yield his rights; he did not propose always to remain a scrimping,
+pettifogging attorney, existing on crumbs.
+
+When with a flourish he had appended his name to the acknowledgments
+and affixed his seal, he sat back thoughtfully studying the engineer,
+who was carefully examining the paragraphs for errors. He knew his
+business, did Martinez; the man would find no mistakes. Then the
+lawyer's eyes suddenly glistened. He arose and closed the door as Weir
+thrust the documents into a stout linen envelope, addressed and
+stamped.
+
+"I'll be pleased to see your letter goes in the mail in the morning,"
+he said, returning to his place. "The stage leaves at eight-thirty."
+
+"Post-office is closed now, I suppose. Very well. It will be an
+accommodation," the engineer responded.
+
+Martinez leaned forward.
+
+"If you can spare the time, I should like to have a little talk with
+you," said he. "Pardon me if I appear presumptuous, but as you're
+aware, Mr. Weir, I overheard your words to Judge Gordon in Vorse's
+saloon. I inferred--check me at any instant if you consider this none
+of my business!--that there exists some unpleasant feeling between you
+two gentlemen and possibly others. Judge Gordon has always handled the
+company's business in his private capacity of counselor. As you know,
+he's a silent partner in many enterprises with Sorenson, Vorse and a
+man named Burkhardt. They run this town and county. You should also
+know that they're secretly opposed to your irrigation project,
+whatever they profess. They've misled the people into believing it
+will work an injury to this district, whereas it will of course be
+beneficial. Unfortunately too they lead the people by the noses--but
+not me! I refuse to be subservient."
+
+He paused to note the effect of his words.
+
+"Now, Mr. Weir, these are facts you can confirm if you're not already
+informed of them, which I imagine you are. Because I'm independent in
+my opinions and actions, I stand in disfavor with these gentlemen,
+which may or may not be an objection in your view to what I have in
+mind. And this is it. I should be pleased to execute any legal work
+that you care to give me; it might be of advantage to your company at
+times to have an attorney other than Judge Gordon, who is aligned
+against you and will serve his own interests first. He's in a position
+to cause you embarrassment."
+
+"Our eastern attorneys draw all documents."
+
+"Of course. But I was thinking of delays more than anything else.
+There are a thousand ways a lawyer can push or halt matters at will,
+and your project will never be free of legal red tape until
+completed--if then! I'm not unselfish in this, I admit; the business
+would be valuable to me. But aside from that, I'll give you this
+advice anyway:--secure another lawyer in any case, one without
+antagonistic personal interests, if you can find another in San Mateo
+besides me. See, I'm frank! That may sound egotistical, but really I'm
+the only free man of the lawyers here. And I've paid for my liberty!"
+He made a sweeping gesture to indicate his shabby office. "If I had
+taken orders, I could have been county attorney and probably a judge.
+But I respect myself too much to take orders from Sorenson and his
+bunch. I choose this sort of thing in preference."
+
+Steele Weir maintained a non-committal silence. Again the thin
+dark-skinned lawyer swiftly weighed the man before him, considered the
+dangers in which he might become involved if he went a step farther,
+recoiled, then grew bolder. Sorenson had marked him for poverty and
+nonentity; under the favoring shelter of the irrigation company's
+power he might arise from both. For at moments the acute Mexican
+sensed the inevitable victory of the new forces at work; this, one of
+the last strong-holds of old time cattle and sheep interests, would
+break down and yield to the plow and fence.
+
+"Now, there's something more, though I hesitate to mention it," he
+went on, doubtfully. "While Sorenson and his crowd run things, it's
+not because the people--and that means us Mexicans chiefly--love them.
+We're indolent by nature; we idle rather than work; borrow when we can
+rather than earn--I speak of our race, but we're learning that work
+proves best in the long run. These men have squeezed my people, and
+robbed them, and kept them down. Nothing more would I wish than to see
+these leaders deposed. It's no secret they've built their wealth by
+questionable methods, but who can prove it?
+
+"Do you know what I suspect? You have something on Sorenson's crowd.
+That's why they're uneasy; that's why the four are sitting over in the
+cattle company's office this minute with their heads together, meeting
+the minute Sorenson arrives home. I saw them go in. Leaving aside the
+question of your own affairs, I'd like to have matters changed here in
+this county so that every man has a fair chance. Anything that will
+bring that about enlists my interest. When I heard your statement to
+Gordon and saw his face, I knew there was something in the past that
+alarmed him. I recalled a name I had once run across when abstracting
+a title----"
+
+It was not this ingenious twisting of the truth that caused the lawyer
+to become filled with sudden dismay and stop, but the savage hardening
+of the engineer's face.
+
+"Go on," Weir commanded.
+
+"Well, the name was Joseph Weir. I looked it up again to be sure, and
+found the property had been deeded to Sorenson and the others, who
+still have it. I wondered----"
+
+"What did you wonder?" came with a devouring look.
+
+"If--if Joseph Weir received consideration according to law."
+Martinez' courage flowed back again. "I'll make no attempt to justify
+my curiosity, sir, except to say that more than one man in the
+southwest was done out of property in early days; and the practice has
+not ceased, for that matter. But in these days the means is usually
+legal and Mexicans the victims. Sharp mortgage dealings and so forth.
+Now, if I've said too much, I'll instantly forget all about it. On the
+other hand----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I might be of assistance. If you wish to look into that old
+transaction, that is. If there was anything crooked about the deal,
+and I set it down that there was with Sorenson mixed in, and with
+Vorse and Burkhardt the witnesses named in the deed and Judge Gordon
+taking the acknowledgment of Joseph Weir's signature, as the record
+shows, then there should be some weak spot that could be attacked.
+There may be men yet alive conversant with the circumstances; they
+may know whether duress or fraud was exercised, supposing the sale
+was not honest. Some of the old Mexicans may remember Weir, and could
+give a clue; they have good memories for things of those days. Of
+course, if the transaction was all right, then I'm all wrong in my
+suppositions."
+
+Weir arose.
+
+"I can give you some of the company business, perhaps considerable of
+it," he said.
+
+Martinez sprang up, an expression of gratitude upon his face. He had
+not realized all that he had hoped for, but he was nevertheless
+delighted.
+
+"I'm really sincere when I give you a thousand thanks, Mr. Weir," said
+he, spreading his arms wide. "I'll not make promises as to the
+efficiency of my services; let results speak for themselves."
+
+"I always do," was the comment. "But I'll tell you what I demand in
+any one associated with me--absolute trustworthiness first of all,
+then loyalty and ability."
+
+"Which leaves nothing," Martinez smiled.
+
+He preceded the engineer and swung the door open, stepping aside. To
+the visitor's question regarding fees for the acknowledgments taken,
+he waved a declining hand.
+
+"Nothing, nothing. Delighted to render you the service."
+
+"Very well."
+
+"I'll attend to the letter," the lawyer again assured him.
+
+"Come out to the dam in a day or two."
+
+"To-morrow, if you wish."
+
+"To-morrow afternoon will do."
+
+Steele Weir's frame filled the lighted doorway as he stepped forth
+from the office. He paused to accustom his eyes to the darkness, for
+during his colloquy with the attorney full night had descended. On the
+same side of the street with himself and perhaps twelve or fifteen
+paces off he saw a girl's figure appear and disappear before a window
+as she moved along.
+
+Then suddenly a tongue of red flame darted at him across the street,
+where lay a space of unlighted gloom. His hat was whipped off his
+head. The sharp report of a shot cracked between the adobe walls. With
+an unbelievably rapid movement Steele Weir drew the revolver in his
+pocket, and which he had carried ever since his encounter with young
+Sorenson in the restaurant, fired twice where he had seen the flame
+and leaped aside into the darkness beside the doorway. There he
+waited, half crouching, for a further attack.
+
+But none came. Men began to run towards the place. Shouts and calls
+echoed along the street. In two minutes a crowd was surging before
+Martinez' door wildly asking questions.
+
+Weir pocketed his pistol and walked back into the office, where he
+found his bullet-pierced hat lying on the floor and the attorney
+standing frozen with astonishment. A stream of people followed at his
+heels.
+
+"Who did this shooting? Do you know, Felipe?" a tall raw-boned white
+man who led them asked hastily.
+
+"This gentleman, Mr. Weir, was fired on, sheriff," Martinez burst out
+volubly.
+
+"And I fired in return," the engineer stated. "The fellow was across
+the street in the dark. You might look over there."
+
+Turning and pushing his way through the packed door, the sheriff
+disappeared. The crowd melted away again. Presently as Weir glanced
+about he saw a new figure at the doorway, staring at him. He went
+towards the girl there outlined in the lamplight.
+
+"Was that you I saw moving along just before the exchange of
+compliments, Miss Hosmer?" he asked.
+
+"Yes. I was coming towards you on my way home."
+
+"It probably gave you a fright."
+
+"It did, indeed. I heard the shot and saw your hat knocked off. I just
+went cold in my tracks. At first I believed you killed."
+
+"I'm very much alive, as you see."
+
+"But it was dreadful! Who would fire at you from the dark? Some one
+tried to murder you!"
+
+"It looks like it. Still here I am, ready to move your car out of the
+water next time it's stalled."
+
+She entered the room slowly.
+
+"Who in San Mateo would do such a terrible thing, Mr. Martinez?" she
+addressed the lawyer. The pallor was still on her face and her eyes
+were large with horror.
+
+"Ah, Miss Janet, if we but knew! We'd lay hands on him and send him to
+the penitentiary."
+
+Real emotion struggled in the lawyer's words. With the return of his
+senses he had just begun to realize by what a narrow margin the
+assassin's bullet had missed destroying his future client and
+prospects.
+
+A growing murmur across the street attracted their attention. Then as
+they continued to chat of the event, the sheriff reappeared, directing
+half a dozen men who laid a burden in the light of Martinez' doorway.
+
+"You got him," he said to Weir, with ominous significance. "One bullet
+through the head, one through his stomach. He's good and dead."
+
+Weir walked forward and inspected that outstretched figure. It was the
+man whose gaze had been so malevolently fastened upon him as he joined
+Martinez before Sorenson's office.
+
+"Who is he?" he asked.
+
+"A strange Mexican. Some of these men say he showed up this morning
+and hung around the saloons, not talking much. Haven't you ever seen
+him, before?" The question expressed a perplexed curiosity.
+
+"Once. When Martinez and I were coming here to transact some business.
+He was taking a good look at me then when he passed us. That wasn't
+over half an hour ago. Never saw him before that."
+
+"He shot at you first?"
+
+"I had just stepped out of this room. Could I see him hiding over
+there? Or know he was there?" Then he added, "I was taken by surprise,
+but I marked the flash of his gun."
+
+The sheriff, Madden by name, looked at Weir appreciatively.
+
+"You can use a gun yourself," said he, briefly.
+
+Martinez now repeated the fact of the dead man having fired the first
+shot, which Janet Hosmer confirmed.
+
+"Well, is there anything more?" Weir questioned.
+
+"Not to-night, I reckon," Madden replied. "We'll have an inquest in
+the morning; show up then. Where will I find your father, Miss
+Hosmer?"
+
+"At home." Then to the engineer she explained, "Father acts in the
+absence of the coroner, who's away just now."
+
+"I'm very sorry this happened on your account," said he.
+
+"And I'm very glad you were not hurt."
+
+Outside the corpse was being borne away, followed by the curious, avid
+crowd of Mexicans.
+
+"You're still shaken by the thing," said Steele Weir. "It's enough to
+upset any girl. Let me walk home with you, or you may be starting at
+shadows all the way."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+JANET HOSMER
+
+
+A silvery brightness shone in the east as they came out of Martinez'
+office, that increased as they went forward until all at once the moon
+arose into view, lighting the street, disclosing the flanking lines of
+squat buildings, revealing the tall cottonwoods about the court house
+and elsewhere thrust up in the town.
+
+Janet Hosmer breathed a sigh of relief. The darkness had seemed potent
+for further evil, but now it was as if the latter retreated with the
+shadows. She felt a desire to go on alone, to separate herself from
+this companion with whom chance had brought her in contact at a
+dramatic moment, to get away from the whole terrible affair.
+Involuntarily her spirit shrank at the nearness of the man, for though
+he had struck back in self-defense he nevertheless had killed another
+and the act somehow appeared to set him apart from ordinary men,
+isolate him, give him the character of an Ishmael.
+
+Yet her feelings were confused. Against this inclination was an avid
+curiosity, or rather a wonderment, as to what must now be occurring in
+his soul. Her eyes sought his face as he walked beside her. Neither
+had spoken; and his countenance wore the same stern contained aspect,
+calm, forceful, as the first time she had ever observed it. But what
+was below the surface? What were the thoughts now revolving in his
+mind and the emotions flowing in his breast? She could read nothing
+on that composed mask of a face. Was it possible for a man to slay
+another human being, even justifiably, without suffering a hurricane
+of the spirit?
+
+But perhaps he had killed men before. The fact of his carrying a
+weapon and his swift deadly fire pointed ominously to previous
+experience.
+
+"Did you ever shoot any one before?" popped from between her lips.
+Then she stopped, clapping her hand over her mouth in consternation
+and staring at him palely.
+
+Weir had halted too. He regarded her in silence for a little, a slight
+smile resting on his face. They stood before the cattle company's
+office and his look went past her once to embrace the small darkened
+building.
+
+"I'm not a murderer by trade, if that's what you mean," said he, at
+last. "But I've killed a man or two before, yes." Then at the white
+anguish of her lips and cheeks, his tone softened a degree as he went
+on. "Unfortunately since becoming of age I've had to fight. If not
+men, then the earth. If not the earth, then men. Sometimes both
+together. You saw what happened to-night; that fellow was unknown to
+me. He was not a workman who had been discharged and felt he had a
+grievance----"
+
+"Oh, no!" she interjected. "The Mexicans here wouldn't attempt to
+murder you, however angry they might feel."
+
+"I'm not so sure of that," he answered.
+
+"But I am; I know them, I've lived among them!"
+
+"Well, let that go. The man tried to kill me, at any rate. However, he
+was merely a tool, hired for the business by some one else. Ordinarily
+I don't discuss my affairs with any one, but since you've raised the
+matter I'll just say that I've enemies in San Mateo who are anxious
+to dispose of me."
+
+"Such enemies here!"
+
+"Yes. Who would be delighted to see me lie where that dead man lies
+and who are apparently determined to effect it." He touched her sleeve
+warningly. "But you will speak of this to no one."
+
+"No, oh, no! Not a word!"
+
+Steele gazed at her steadily. He already repented disclosing even so
+little of his private concerns, an impulse altogether at variance with
+his close-mouthed habit, but he had, for some vague reason, felt it
+necessary to explain his course, to justify himself to this
+clear-eyed, fine-spirited girl. He could not let her rest under a
+misapprehension that he was a brute who reveled in blood-spilling. And
+as he regarded her a conviction that she was absolutely to be trusted
+settled firmly into his mind.
+
+She would be staunch; oxen and ropes could not drag information from
+her once she had determined not to speak. Yes, she would be loyal to
+her given word--and to her friends. Weir's eyes glanced at the diamond
+on her finger. It would be a girl like her with whom he would have
+chosen to mate if fate had not directed his feet on a road which
+seemingly left him no choice but incessant and solitary struggle.
+
+"I hate it all; I have nothing but crusts and nettles!" he exclaimed,
+with sudden fierce passion. And with a quick movement of his hand he
+beckoned her on.
+
+Submissively she accompanied him, her bosom rising and falling with a
+quickened rhythm. Too much had happened, one thing piling on another,
+for her to sort her thoughts or to attempt to understand things yet;
+and in her tossing state of mind she went at his gesture as one
+follows a guide, or as a simple matter of course.
+
+In her mental turmoil that last passionate utterance of the man played
+like a lambent flame. Tense, violent, spontaneous, it had come from
+the heart. What harsh lot he had lived and sufferings borne she could
+not even guess; but no man spoke with such unconscious bitterness who
+had not undergone pain and travail of spirit. His head was now turned
+a little towards her as they walked: she perceived him staring at the
+moonlit street, his lips compressed, his brows knit.
+
+Then he glanced about at her, his face clearing. "Pay no attention to
+what I said," he remarked. "I shouldn't have let loose that way.
+Hello, what's on now?"
+
+Before them, and in front of the court house, was a packed crowd,
+people who had run forth at the sound of shots, augmented by those who
+had since arrived upon the scene. It was motionless.
+
+"Stand back, stand back; don't trample the body!" came Sheriff
+Madden's voice in an angry order.
+
+The crowd surged a little apart in the center.
+
+"How do you know this dead man fired the first shot?" asked some one,
+vehemently.
+
+The voices went lower so that Steele Weir and Janet Hosmer, who had
+paused at the edge of the throng, were able only to catch the tones.
+
+"Who was that who questioned the sheriff?" Weir whispered.
+
+"Mr. Burkhardt, I think. Sounded like him."
+
+So intent were the Mexicans upon the occurrence in their midst that
+those close by remained with backs towards the pair, failing to
+notice their presence. All craned eagerly to miss nothing of the
+controversy.
+
+"How do you know this engineer didn't start it?" came Burkhardt's
+voice again.
+
+"Don't be a fool; there were witnesses."
+
+"I'd like to talk to those witnesses. I doubt if they really saw
+anything. It looks to me as if there's another side to this
+shooting."
+
+"Well, of course you know--you, sitting there in Sorenson's office, as
+you say," was the ironical retort.
+
+At this juncture another voice interposed.
+
+"Madden, we want no mistake here. This Weir doesn't bear a very good
+reputation for peacefulness, from what I've learned. If this Mexican
+has simply been shot down----"
+
+"Who is that?" Steele demanded of the girl. "I can't see him."
+
+"That"--Janet Hosmer's speech faltered--"that is Mr. Sorenson. Oh,
+they misunderstand! Let me push in there and tell them how it
+happened."
+
+The engineer's hand closed about her arm.
+
+"You'll do nothing of the kind," he commanded, low.
+
+"But----"
+
+"No. Remain quiet and listen."
+
+Her eyes flew up to his at this extraordinary course, so injurious to
+his own interests. She was anxious to press to the front and declare
+his innocence in the affair of everything but defending his life from
+an assassin. She could not understand why he also was not eager to
+spring forward, why he restrained her. Then she saw the implacable
+hatred on his face.
+
+A thrill quivered through her body. The feeling she had at that
+instant was one of being on the point of seeing behind the curtain of
+a mystery, of making a discovery so sinister that she would gasp. Her
+very finger almost rested upon it. Why were Mr. Sorenson and Mr.
+Burkhardt talking as they were? Trying by innuendo to make it seem her
+companion might have been guilty of a crime? Could it be---- Her blood
+slowly congealed to ice at the horror of where her reasoning led.
+
+_Could it be they were the enemies he meant!_
+
+Such a thing was too dreadful, too absurd. They, the respected leaders
+of the community, could never put a pistol in the dead wretch's hand
+to slay this man beside her. Mr. Sorenson! The father of Ed, whom----
+She stared blankly at her left hand.
+
+Yet the banker's heavy, smooth words continued to assail her ears
+steadily. She grasped their import once more.
+
+"--for the story is too thin. No man could hit another across the
+street in the dark as this engineer claims, not only once but twice
+put a bullet where it would kill. Probably the dead man had something
+on this Weir, and the latter knew it. It's not impossible he found the
+fellow in his path, drew and murdered him at once, quickly put a hole
+in his own hat and then carried the body across the way, running back
+to Martinez' office. The thing could have been done in a minute.
+Martinez' himself wouldn't have seen how it was worked. I'm not saying
+that was exactly how it was done, or that this Weir did actually
+murder him, but--investigate, Madden, investigate."
+
+Steele Weir felt an angry tug at his sleeve. He looked around and
+beheld Janet Hosmer's eyes distended with incredulity.
+
+"Come away, come away," she whispered. "I should never have believed
+it if I hadn't heard with my own ears!"
+
+Keeping close to the line of buildings, they skirted the crowd, still
+unnoticed, and left it behind. She walked with quick nervous steps;
+her hand yet unconsciously grasped his coat sleeve. All the way to her
+home, which they found dark since a messenger had called the doctor to
+the court house and the Mexican girl servant also was gone, she said
+nothing.
+
+"Come up on the veranda; I want to talk," she announced when he opened
+the gate.
+
+"Wouldn't it be best if you took your mind off the whole thing, by a
+book or something else? I'll go."
+
+"As if I could take my mind off! There are matters in this I must
+know. You may wonder when I say it, Mr. Weir, but this happening
+concerns me more than you dream." Her dark glowing gaze brooded on him
+with a sort of intense determination. Then she went on, "It--it
+involves my whole future as well as your own, though in a different
+way. So come inside, if you please."
+
+Weir in silence accompanied her upon the dark, broad, vine-clad porch.
+In the half-gloom he found chairs for them.
+
+"I'm going to the point at once," she declared. "Why did Mr. Sorenson
+talk in such a fashion?" And he could feel her bending forward as if
+hanging on his answer.
+
+"That's the one thing I can't discuss," said he.
+
+"I must know, I must know."
+
+"And unhappily I must refuse."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Weir, if you could but understand what this involves for me,
+you wouldn't hesitate! I was shocked at the shooting, but I saw its
+necessity on your part; you're not one to run from a foe, a cowardly
+foe least of all. But what I heard there in the street horrified me. I
+couldn't believe it; I can scarcely credit my ears yet. Mr. Sorenson
+and Mr. Burkhardt were not near when you were attacked; they are not
+acquainted with the circumstances or facts as you, Mr. Martinez and I
+know them; they apparently didn't appear until the crowd started away
+with the dead man. Yet at once----"
+
+"Ay, at once," Steele Weir let slip.
+
+"At once, immediately, when they had barely heard the story, they
+began to tear it to pieces and suggest another, making you out a
+villain. You're only an acquaintance, sir, scarcely more than a
+stranger, but as I listened it outraged all my sense of justice. Mr.
+Sorenson, of all men! My brain was in a whirl. But it's steady now."
+
+The engineer failed to open his lips at her pause.
+
+"I'm no fool, Mr. Weir; I think of other things besides dressing my
+hair and using a powder puff. I can sometimes put two and two
+together--when I see the 'twos' clearly. Now, tell me why Mr. Sorenson
+talked as he did, for I must have my eyes clear."
+
+"Ask me anything but that, Miss Hosmer."
+
+He sat distressed and uneasy at her prolonged muteness. Suddenly she
+questioned quietly:
+
+"Are those two men the enemies you spoke of?"
+
+"It will save me embarrassment if I go," he remarked, starting to
+rise. "I don't want you to hate me, you know, and still I can't say
+anything."
+
+Her grasp pulled him imperatively back.
+
+"You shall not go yet."
+
+"Then I can only continue to decline making answers. I frankly say
+that I regret having uttered a word of explanation."
+
+"I don't regret it. And I intend to keep questioning you, however rude
+you may think me. I must know," she cried impetuously, "and I shall
+know! Mr. Sorenson is one of the men you referred to, or he would
+never seek to direct suspicion at you. I saw the look on your face,
+sir, as he spoke. But why should you two be enemies! You come here a
+stranger to San Mateo, or have you been here before sometime? Did you
+know him before?"
+
+Again he could feel her eyes straining at him.
+
+"It seems mad to think of him and Mr. Burkhardt, and perhaps others,
+hiring some one to shoot you down from a dark doorway. It is utterly
+mad--crazy. But why should they want to convict you, in the crowd's
+opinion at least, of murdering the man. It would not be just trouble
+about the dam--oh, no. But I can't see through it at all. Why won't
+you tell me? You can trust me--and I want to help you as well as help
+myself. You certainly don't hold against me my silly nonsense and
+unkind words of the day you brought me home from the ford."
+
+"I didn't think them silly; they delighted me," he responded. "I
+hadn't had anything happen to me so refreshing in years."
+
+"We must be friends. Something tells me they're going to make you
+trouble over this shooting, and you'll need friends."
+
+"Something tells me you're right in both respects," he laughed.
+
+"And friends must stick together."
+
+"That's what they should do."
+
+In the dusk of the vine-clad, flower-scented place where they sat he
+experienced the subtle power of this intimacy. Not a soul stirred in
+the empty moonlit street before the house. No sounds disturbed the
+warm peace of the night. In this secluded spot only there ran the
+murmur of their voices.
+
+"I could never stand by and see any man unjustly accused and defamed
+if I knew he was innocent, without lifting up my word in defense," she
+proceeded. "But let me ask if on your side you're treating me
+fairly?"
+
+Weir could have groaned.
+
+"You have a noble spirit, Miss Hosmer. You're more courageous and kind
+than any girl I've ever known. Would you have me reveal what my best
+judgment tells me should remain untold?"
+
+"But what of me? Would you keep it to yourself if my future happiness
+might turn on it?"
+
+The appeal in her words shook Steele's heart.
+
+"How does this business affect your happiness? How?" he asked, in
+perplexity.
+
+Now it was her turn to hesitate. Why should she pause, indeed, before
+telling to this man what every one else knew. Yet hesitate she did,
+from a feeling she could but partly analyze. Of her fiance she had
+already had disturbing secret doubts that had increased of late:
+doubts of his habits, his character and the genuineness of his love;
+so that it was with a little eddy of dissatisfaction and shame that
+she admitted the relationship. More she questioned her own love as an
+actual thing. In a startling way, too, this silent, forceful man, so
+deadly in earnest and so earnestly deadly, so terrible in some
+aspects, seemed at the instant to dwarf the other in stature and power
+as if the latter were a plump manikin.
+
+Perhaps at the last minute she had a shiver of dread at what might
+issue from the engineer's lips in the way of facts if he took her at
+her word and told her what she had demanded to know. Did she want to
+know? Suppose she let the affair rest where it was and went forward
+to the future in the comfortable assurance of ignorance.
+
+In that case, it might be wooing later revelations that then could not
+be escaped, revelations like consuming lightnings. She would settle it
+now once for all.
+
+"It does concern my future and my happiness vitally," she declared,
+earnestly. "For this reason----"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"I'm engaged to marry Ed Sorenson, son of Mr. Sorenson."
+
+Weir leaped to his feet.
+
+"Good God! That fellow!" he exclaimed, astounded.
+
+Without another word he sprang down the steps and strode away. Janet
+Hosmer, grasping the arms of her chair and staring after him, saw him
+once bring down his clenched fist on nothing. Then he passed rapidly
+along the street and out of sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+IN THE COIL
+
+
+The Spirit of Irony couldn't have devised a more intolerable
+situation. So thought Steele Weir as he strode away from the
+dwelling, still laboring under the emotions provoked by the girl's
+disclosure, wincing at his own biting thoughts and writhing at his
+own helplessness. It needed only this revelation to cap the whole
+diabolical evening.
+
+He could not have remained with her now if his life had depended on
+it. She, engaged to that scoundrel Ed Sorenson! How could she have
+been so blind to the lustful beast's nature? She must love him, of
+course. He must have been careful to exhibit to her only such
+qualities as would gain her affection and respect, or rather hollow
+shams of qualities he never had possessed. Propinquity, lack of rivals
+in this little town, no doubt were largely responsible for her feeling
+for the man. But it was like standing by and seeing her fair young
+body, her fresh pure life, her high soul, flung to a devouring swine.
+
+And by the rules of the game he couldn't open his lips to utter a word
+of warning! That was the worst of it, that was the worst of it. No,
+not by the rules of the game; not, for that matter, by the rules of
+life; for the latter run that only can the person concerned see with
+his or her own eyes what a loved one's character is, and must make and
+abide by her own judgments.
+
+Steele Weir all at once stopped in his tracks. He stared straight
+before him for a time seeing Janet Hosmer's face as it appeared when
+she anxiously gazed at him from Martinez' door, coming out of the
+night like a pallid moon-flower. At that instant she had feared he had
+been wounded; her heart was fluttering with anguish. The tension of
+his body relaxed and his hands slowly unclosed and involuntarily his
+eyes went up to the moon sailing serenely in the sky above the
+treetops and the flat-roofed adobe houses. What vaster blessing could
+life bestow than to have such a look come seeking one beloved!
+
+He went on thoughtfully.
+
+"She shall not marry him," he said to himself, with a quick resolve.
+
+What were the rules of any game when an innocent girl's happiness was
+at stake? Did he care for conventions, or even the contempt she
+herself might feel for him for apparently belittling her lover? He
+could stand that, so that her eyes were opened and the fellow's yellow
+heart made plain. At the proper time he should act, view his part as
+she might. A snap of his fingers for being misunderstood! He would go
+his own way afterwards.
+
+The thing had its curious features, too. No mistake, the shock of
+hearing Sorenson senior talking to the sheriff and the crowd, working
+up sentiment, had stirred her indignation and wonder and uneasiness
+and alarm. She was no fool, as she had said. She had a clear,
+practical mind, give it something to work on. Her intuition had
+immediately grasped the fact that there might be cellars under the
+Sorenson household of which she knew nothing and which should be
+promptly entered with a strong light. Whether the momentary desire
+would last, that was the question. To-morrow, or the first time she
+found herself in Ed Sorenson's reassuring presence, she might consider
+that her brain had been upset by events of this night, jiggled awry in
+a sort of moonlight madness, and her apprehensions as to happiness
+unfounded shadows.
+
+Well, Weir would strike later.
+
+He turned into the main street. Evidently the body of the dead Mexican
+had been carried into the jail behind the court house, or somewhere.
+The throng had dispersed, though its elements were every place
+talking, in pairs or in little knots of people. As he came along,
+these fell silent at his passing. They stared at him, motionless,
+expressionless, with the characteristic Mexican stolidity that is the
+heritage of Indian blood. By his automobile he found Martinez posted,
+stroking his long black mustache and regarding Sorenson's office,
+which was still lighted though the curtain remained drawn over the
+broad plate-glass window.
+
+"Just wanted to give you a whispered word," he said, in Steele Weir's
+ear, darting a glance towards some of the Mexicans who, drawn by
+insatiable curiosity, were lounging nearer.
+
+"Speak," said the engineer.
+
+"I came out of the office after you did and heard the talk." He made a
+covert movement of forefinger towards the nearby building. "The four
+of them are in there again. I saw you listening to Sorenson here in
+the street; and would you care to have me express my opinion as to
+what the signs indicate, Mr. Weir?"
+
+"Go ahead."
+
+"In the light of what I suggested during our talk in my office, the
+silly twaddle of Burkhardt and Sorenson is understandable. I look
+right through their scheme. They always frame up something against
+anybody they want to dispose of; they do it in business matters
+regularly, and very skillfully. They immediately perceived a chance,
+sir, in this unfortunate encounter of yours and laid hands on it;
+their talk was the first delicate maneuver to 'frame' you."
+
+"Sure," was the unperturbed answer.
+
+Martinez laid a finger on Weir's lapel.
+
+"Frankly, feeling hasn't been good towards you because of the work
+controversy at the dam," he went on, with another swift glance about.
+"They will use that. On the other hand, you have Miss Janet and me as
+witnesses in support of your story. Unfortunately Miss Janet is, as
+you may not be aware, engaged to----"
+
+Martinez paused dramatically.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"To Ed Sorenson," the lawyer half-hissed. "Nothing could be worse."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Why? Look at the position she'll be in. Consider the pressure they
+can put on her through that fact--and they'll not hesitate to do so,
+in one way or another. Innocent as a dove, she is, Mr. Weir." He
+thrust his head forward, showing his lips drawn apart and shining
+teeth tight set. "And she's never heard a rumor of his hushed-up
+affairs with poor, ignorant, Mexican girls who knew no better."
+
+"We'll simply have to trust to her courage to tell the truth on the
+proper occasion."
+
+"Ah, but they'll trick her some way."
+
+"And you?"
+
+Martinez straightened, smiled, twirled his mustache.
+
+"I? They aren't quite foxy enough for that, Mr. Weir," he boasted,
+with glistening eyes.
+
+The engineer was almost ready to believe that, but cunning was not the
+only weapon in his enemies' arsenal. How would this lean lawyer stand
+up under intimidation, bribes, threats?
+
+"I trust so, Martinez," said he. "Do you think they will try to get me
+sometime by an out-and-out gun-play?"
+
+"No, no, no."
+
+"Do you think they could if they tried?" Weir inquired, grimly.
+
+The attorney paused with finger and thumb on the point of his
+mustache, lifted his eyebrows and smiled broadly.
+
+"They'll consider twice before they attempt it, after your expert
+exhibition this evening," said he. "It was amazing, your speed, your
+accuracy."
+
+Steele tapped the man on the breast, who experienced a distinct tremor
+at that significant touch and at the veiled menace in the dam
+manager's eyes.
+
+"There's always one bullet in my gun for the man who betrays me,
+Martinez."
+
+The lawyer licked his lips. On general principles he disliked
+statements that committed one to the future. But it was necessary to
+say something.
+
+"To be sure. I should feel the same in your circumstances," he
+responded. Then as Weir turned to his car, he continued: "The inquest
+to-morrow morning should be over early. I'll visit you in the
+afternoon as planned."
+
+"Don't forget that letter," Weir called out.
+
+Martinez marveled. Kill a man, and still remember a letter! That
+magnified his respect immensely. Cool, that fellow! Then a slight
+shiver as if a chill from those black peaks west of the town had
+struck through his flesh rippled along his spine; for he had been
+over at the jail with the crowd and had viewed that dead body lying
+there on the stone floor. Not only cool, but dangerous and deadly,
+this engineer. He, Martinez, must be discreet; it would not do to risk
+gaining Weir's enmity. That cold-faced man could not be "monkeyed
+with."
+
+Martinez gnawed his mustache and eyed the dully illuminated office
+window. He wondered if those four men inside had not at last found
+their match, perhaps their master. Any one with half a brain could see
+there was going to be a desperate struggle between the four and the
+one, and he was not exactly sure yet that he wanted to venture farther
+into the affair. But the very danger fascinated him with its subtle
+and obscure features, exactly suited to his manipulation.
+
+A man who had been standing apart sauntered nearer.
+
+"Senor," he addressed the lawyer in Spanish.
+
+Martinez whirled about.
+
+"Ah, it's only you, Naharo."
+
+"He is a bad fighter, eh?" And the man, almost white because of
+intermixed blood, moved a hand in the direction Weir's car had gone.
+
+"Perhaps not bad. Quick with a gun, however," was the careful reply.
+
+"With his fists also. I saw, or if I did not see, I very nearly did
+so--it is the same--saw him use them in Bowenville. And on that dog of
+an Ed Sorenson who would have seduced my little Dolorosa, as he did
+Cristobal's daughter, if I had not perceived what he was at."
+
+The lawyer's ears were instantly pricked up. He caught the man by the
+shirt-sleeve.
+
+"Come with me," he said.
+
+Once they were in his office he carefully closed and locked the door,
+drawing the window shades. Literally he rubbed his hands one over the
+other as he bade Naharo take a chair. Then the pair of them rolled and
+lighted cigarettes.
+
+"Perhaps I should say no more, Senor Martinez."
+
+"It will go no farther. And if the engineer and Ed Sorenson had a
+fight, then it must have been for that reason the latter's father
+spoke as he did to-night. You heard him."
+
+"Yes. And I did not understand why. It was not because of what
+happened at Bowenville, unquestionably not, for it had to do with
+another girl----"
+
+"Ha, a girl! And the engineer mixed in it?"
+
+"Listen. As I say, he would not have told his father, because he keeps
+such things quiet; it is four years since he last had to pay money to
+settle a matter. Some think he now behaves, but it is not true. But he
+is more careful. So his father did not know about this."
+
+"Tell it all, Naharo."
+
+The other inhaled a puff of smoke and half-closed his eyes. Though
+nearly white, he retained the Mexican's high cheek bones, and languor,
+and unforgiving nature.
+
+"I was in Bowenville, freighting up flour to the store of Smith's. I
+had loaded by evening, to make an early start next day. I had gone
+into the restaurant for supper, taking a seat far down at the end of
+the counter near the kitchen. I was tired and thinking only of my
+food. As I ate, there was a crash in one of the stalls and I looked
+about. There was a fight, of course. But it ended at once. Then I
+observed Ed Sorenson come out presently, jerking his collar and tie
+straight. He was mad. He had been whipped, too. For he yet looked as
+if he wanted to kill the other man in there, but he went away. Soon
+the other man came out and with him was a young white girl, whom I
+did not know. The man was this engineer and he carried an old piece of
+baggage, not such as he would carry but as the girl might, for she
+looked like a ranch girl who was poor. The girl was scared. The man
+was calm as a priest. That scoundrel Ed Sorenson had been beaten. Aha,
+so; it was clear. The engineer had put a spoke in the fellow's wheel.
+Then I walked to the door and saw the two get into a car and start on
+the trail this way. After that, I resumed my supper. You perceive, the
+man had taken the girl away from the wolf."
+
+Martinez' restless eyes wandered about the room as he digested this
+account.
+
+"Did you see the dead man?" he inquired, casually.
+
+"Yes, senor."
+
+Their looks met, held for an instant, dropped. Each read the thought
+of the other: the motive for the attack on the engineer was clear. But
+some convictions are better not expressed.
+
+"I should have liked to see Senor Weir do the shooting," Naharo
+stated. "Dios, such shooting! Two shots, two hits. And in the dark!"
+
+Martinez' grinned.
+
+"It will not please--whoever hired the dead man. He was hired for the
+job, of course."
+
+"Unquestionably, senor," was the reply.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE GATHERING STORM
+
+
+At the inquest next morning no outward sign indicated what Weir's
+enemies might be at. Indeed, none of them was present. The engineer
+made a statement; the two witnesses, Janet Hosmer and Felipe Martinez,
+were briefly interrogated, and the finding was returned that the
+unknown Mexican had met death from two bullet wounds while attempting
+to kill Steele Weir.
+
+One spectator there was who took a strong interest in proceedings, Ed
+Sorenson. When, however, Janet Hosmer was notified by her father, who
+was in charge, that she could withdraw, the young fellow hastened to
+lead her away, with an audible remark that it was a shame she had had
+to be "dragged into this disreputable gun-man's bloody show." Meaning
+Steele Weir, naturally.
+
+That feeling was being intensified against him was only too apparent
+in the hostile manner of the crowd and in the silence with which it
+received the finding. There was his former unpopularity, to begin
+with; there was now added a race resentment, for the slain man,
+stranger though he was, was Mexican; and finally, he knew not what
+distilled poison of lies concerning his innocence in the night fray.
+Nothing more was needed to reveal the swelling hate which secret fear
+of Weir but increased than a volley of curses and abuse hurled at his
+head from a native saloon doorway as he passed in his car on his way
+home.
+
+During the following week the engineer was too occupied with dam work
+to have time for other matters. He pushed the concrete construction
+and inspired his men with something of his own indomitable spirit, who
+had learned of the cowardly attack in San Mateo and rallied to his
+standard with a zeal and ardor for which the fact of employment alone
+did not account. He had become a leader as well as their "boss." From
+Meyers down to the humblest workman the camp had for him a new
+admiration, a new respect and a new loyalty, which he could not help
+but feel; he had proved that he could deliver the "goods"; and if the
+Mexicans wanted war, the Americans here would be glad to oblige them.
+Nor did they wait to let San Mateo know the fact.
+
+"We're wid 'Cold Steel' Weir, our boss, four hundred of us, till ye
+can skate on hell," a huge Irishman, one of half a dozen standing at
+Vorse's bar on Saturday night, remarked when the saloon-man uttered a
+sneer at the manager. "Say that agin and we'll tear your rotten booze
+joint to pieces and make ye eat it! And if another stinkin' greaser
+tries to wing him from the dark, we'll come down here and wipe your
+dirty little town off the map! That goes both ways from the jack!" He
+snapped his fingers under the other's nose by way of added insult.
+
+A petty series of hostile acts against the company developed.
+Teamsters were stoned by boys, which left them raging and murderous to
+discover the men who set them on. Half a carload of cement in sacks
+was ripped open and emptied on the earth at Bowenville. After Meyers,
+Weir's assistant, found his automobile tires slashed to bits on coming
+out of the post-office in San Mateo, it became necessary always to go
+in pairs, one man to remain on watch. Weir himself just avoided a
+serious accident one evening at dusk while a mile from the dam when he
+instinctively ducked in his car as something grazed the top of his
+wind-shield. A wire had been stretched across the road from a
+telephone pole to a tree, at just the height to strike him at the
+throat.
+
+He halted and removed the deadly contrivance. Men on watch of his
+movements could have prepared it against his return; and, indeed, he
+thought he detected a pair of flitting shadows behind a row of willow
+bushes lining a Mexican irrigation ditch, but in the dusk he could not
+be sure. On running thither, he found no one.
+
+The camp was not of a temper, however, to allow the attacks to be all
+on one side. Atkinson, the superintendent, came to Weir one morning
+towards the end of the week and informed him workmen were drifting
+down to San Mateo nightly in hope of trouble.
+
+"They'll get a knife put into them," Steele Weir replied, with a frown
+that did not entirely hide his satisfaction at this evidence of
+support.
+
+"Maybe; and again maybe not," the superintendent stated, grinning. "A
+bunch jumped some of our boys last night and I guess when the dust
+settled there were a couple of Mexicans beaten nearly to death."
+
+"Call the men all together this noon," Weir ordered.
+
+At that hour he gave them a talk for what he called their long-eared
+cussedness, and laid down a little law and wound up with a number of
+reasonable explanations for the same. Every man who went out hunting
+trouble was a camp liability, and would be fired. He did not propose
+to give the town authorities a chance to jail workmen and impair the
+dam work, just the thing they were waiting to do. The men should keep
+away from San Mateo, or at least avoid disputes and rows. If they
+spent no money there whatever it would sting the town where it would
+hurt the most, in its pocket-book; and he himself was transferring the
+company bank account to Bowenville, by way of example. If any man felt
+the need of change from camp, he could have two days off at the end of
+the month to spend at Bowenville. But keep away from the Mexicans!
+
+"And if they come up here huntin' us when we show up no more?" yelled
+the same big Irishman who had paid his respects to Vorse.
+
+"In that case, tear their heads off," was the reply. "But put on your
+gloves first or you'll dirty your fingers." Which bit of rough humor
+caught the crowd's fancy and won a roar of laughter.
+
+Later as the crowd dispersed to eat Atkinson said to Meyers, "The boss
+knows how to handle men all right, all right; he put sugar on the
+pill. The gang went off grinning. They know they've got to be
+good--but only up to a limit."
+
+Meantime Felipe Martinez had not been idle. He rode up to engineering
+headquarters on his pony one evening and carried Weir out into the
+open where their words would not be overheard. He reported that he was
+quietly working for information of Weir's father among the older
+Mexicans who would be likely to remember him, but proceeding
+cautiously so that no one would suspect his purpose. He represented
+himself to them as undertaking to write a history of San Mateo County;
+he must depend upon them for data of early days; it would be a fine
+book bound in leather, in which their names and possibly their
+pictures would appear;--which never failed to flatter the parties with
+whom he talked. And the lawyer laughed with amusement as he related
+the success of his method.
+
+"I have already seen some thirty or forty people, a few of whom
+recalled your father, but no more. But this afternoon," he continued,
+"I discovered a woman who worked at the Weir ranch house." Martinez
+perceived the engineer's attention quicken. "She said the Weirs had a
+little boy of four years of age, perhaps five. You, Mr. Weir, of
+course. They suddenly paid and discharged her one day, packed a trunk
+and drove hurriedly off; and the next morning Sorenson took possession
+of the ranch and she went home. They drove off in a great haste--there
+was no railroad anywhere near here then--and that was the last she
+ever saw or heard of them."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"One thing more there was: she said there was a story that went around
+for awhile afterwards that Weir and another had lost their ranches and
+cattle gambling. For that reason Weir left the country; and for that
+reason, too, the other man, Dent, by name, committed suicide in
+Vorse's saloon where they had gambled. She said Saurez, an old man
+living with his son up a little creek, would know about that, for he
+used to clean out Vorse's bar-room in those days."
+
+Steele Weir grasped Martinez's shoulder in a quick grip.
+
+"He did! Get everything he knows out of him," he commanded.
+
+"Leave it to me, Mr. Weir. I understand how to wheedle facts out of
+these old fellows."
+
+But it was doubtful if the engineer heard his words. He had dropped
+his hand, stood opening and shutting his fingers, while on his face
+grew the hard implacable look that always whetted the attorney's
+curiosity.
+
+Weir walked up on the hillside when Martinez had ridden away and there
+sat down on a rock. It was a rift, though but a faint rift, that this
+news made in the blank dark wall he had to confront; and he wished to
+think. Proof as well as knowledge of what had happened in his father's
+case was what he must have. Acting on intuition he had been able to
+put fear into the hearts of the four men responsible for making his
+father's life a hell, but proof of their guilt was necessary to make
+them suffer in a similar fashion, to reveal their crime to the world,
+to destroy them. Now at last, here was a possibility. If this former
+roustabout of the saloon knew anything!
+
+Well, he must be patient--the mill of the gods grinds slowly. But when
+finally he had gained all the strands and woven the net! Unconsciously
+his hands arose before his face like talons closing on prey and shut
+on air, until their veins swelled. That was how he would serve them,
+those men. Though they might fall on their knees and implore mercy,
+not one beat of pity should move his heart.
+
+It was almost dark when he arose. Behind him the great peaks soared
+against the last greenish twilight. In the shacks the camp lamps were
+showing at windows. At one side and in the canyon the concrete core of
+the dam appeared white in the gloom, like a bank of snow. The murmur
+of voices, an occasional distant laugh, came from men's quarters.
+
+Presently he slanted down the hillside past the camp, until he struck
+into a road leading towards town, where he began to walk forward,
+hatless and without coat, through the soft dusk. He was disinclined
+for work as yet, the work always piled on his desk; he desired yet
+for a little to rest his spirit in the evening calm.
+
+His thoughts had softened and turned to Janet Hosmer. He had not seen
+her since the morning at the court house. He had not spoken with her
+since that interview upon her veranda, which had terminated with his
+shocked utterance. That he had thus given away to his feeling he had a
+hundred times repented; and that he had so bruskly departed he was
+profoundly chagrined. But what could he have done? No explanation was
+possible. The situation in which he had been allowed of but one thing,
+escape.
+
+With the rising tide of emotion reflected by memory of that moment his
+steps had quickened. All at once he discovered before him the rippling
+sheen of water. He was at Chico Creek, a mile from camp, where he
+first had met Janet Hosmer. Engaged with his tangled problem, he had
+been unaware of the distance covered.
+
+Pausing but an instant he waded through, smiling to himself at thought
+of that afternoon's spirited encounter with the girl. She had not
+dreamed then, nor he, that events would fling them together in a more
+dramatic second meeting at Martinez' door.
+
+Suddenly he perceived a white-clad figure before him, standing
+motionless, leaning forward to peer his way as he walked forth from
+the ford.
+
+"It's you, Mr. Weir?" came in soft inquiry.
+
+"Yes. How in the world do you happen to be here, Janet Hosmer?"
+
+She laughed.
+
+"I thought I recognized you marching through the stream, so I wasn't
+alarmed."
+
+"No one would think of harming you, I'm sure."
+
+"But anyway I should have vanished if you had been a stranger."
+
+"Not being one, you remained. I had no idea of such luck as this when
+I set out for a walk."
+
+Both pleasure and satisfaction sounded in his voice.
+
+"I was just taking a little stroll myself," said she.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+AN UNEXPECTED ALLY
+
+
+"Let me take the chance first thing to apologize for my behavior the
+night we talked on your porch," Steele Weir exclaimed. "Your statement
+of being engaged surprised me into words and conduct that has had me
+in an unhappy state of mind ever since. Mr. Sorenson's talk to the
+crowd stirred my anger. Had I known your exact relationship to him and
+his son, I should have made no mistakes."
+
+"I had urged you to speak, had I not?"
+
+"Grant that. But I don't stand excused."
+
+"There was no questioning the sincerity of your last expression that
+night, in any case," she said. "But I've not been indignant because of
+what you exclaimed or because you hate the Sorensons. 'Hate' isn't too
+strong a word, is it? I'm none the less interested however to know
+what it's all about. You see I don't take any stock in the reasons
+commonly given: that you're a 'bad man,' an agent of a rich
+corporation trying to put our people out of business, a public menace
+and all the rest."
+
+"Is that what they say?" Weir asked, with a laugh.
+
+"Part of it. Nor does it fool father, for he said only yesterday that
+there's something more at bottom of the feeling against you than
+merely a fight of moneyed interests. He knows from what I told him
+that that dead man tried to murder you; yet he hears constant talk of
+your 'crime,' of evidence being gathered against you by the county
+attorney, Mr. Lucerio, and of the penalty you shall pay. All absurd,
+to be sure."
+
+"Mr. Martinez tells me the same," Steele responded. "But he says also
+that all the people do not believe the stories."
+
+"That's true." And she appeared to reflect upon the circumstance.
+
+To Weir nothing could be stranger than this talk on the dark road with
+the girl who, too, should be naturally opposed to him. In fact, here
+at this very spot and at their first meeting she had announced herself
+as a critic and an enemy. He could smile over that now; she herself
+probably did smile at the recollection. Yet she was calmly discussing
+his situation without animus or even unfriendliness.
+
+How could that be possible if she actually loved the man whom she
+expected to marry, Ed Sorenson? Why did she not at once spring to arms
+in defense of the Sorenson side? Unless--unless she suspected the
+baseness of her lover and his father, and fear had replaced love.
+
+All at once she spoke.
+
+"They will put you in jail if they can, and bring you to trial,
+and--and----"
+
+"And hang me, that's what you hesitate to say," Steele finished for
+her. "Whom do you mean by 'they'?"
+
+"The people."
+
+"Are the people here in this county really 'they'? Do the people, that
+is, the mass of poor ignorant Mexicans, have anything to do with
+public affairs? Both you and I know they do not."
+
+"Why deny it!" she sighed. "It's generally known that four men, with
+a few more at their skirts, run things. They nominate the men who are
+to fill office--there's only one political party in the county worth
+mentioning--and give them orders and expect them to obey. For that
+reason father would never accept an office. He could be coroner; he
+could be county treasurer; he could go to the legislature; or anything
+else--if he would but wear their political livery. But he prefers to
+be a free man. I used to think nothing of it, see no wrong in such a
+state of affairs, for everything went along well enough and about the
+same as ever as far as I could see."
+
+"Possibly you didn't see everything that was occurring below the
+surface even then."
+
+"Exactly what father told me yesterday. We talked about everything
+under the sun, I imagine. And I informed him that you walked home with
+me the night of the shooting; I had not spoken of it before."
+
+"That was proper; he should know it."
+
+"He doesn't share in the feeling against you, Mr. Weir, let me assure
+you of that. Ever since he heard my explanation of the shooting and
+then met you at the inquest, he's convinced that you're being done a
+great injustice."
+
+Steele experienced a warm glow of pleasure.
+
+"I liked your father at first sight," said he, simply. "But where does
+all this leave us?" He spoke in a light tone of amusement that he was
+far from feeling. "Our position is--odd."
+
+"It is," she assented so earnestly that he began to laugh.
+
+"You mustn't allow it to disturb you. I'm really presuming upon your
+kindness of heart and innocence in enjoying your company now.
+Acquaintance with me is a rather serious matter here in San Mateo and
+carries consequences. You don't think for an instant that I'd allow my
+personal pleasure--and pleasure it is to be with you, needless to
+say--to bring you into ill-favor among your friends and to make you
+the subject of gossip. I appreciate your good spirit towards me; and I
+admire you greatly. But it will be well if I admire you at a distance
+hereafter."
+
+"I don't see whose business it is except mine."
+
+To Steele Weir it was like pushing aside the only thing that
+brightened his hard, toilsome existence thus to abjure future
+companionship with her.
+
+"Good heavens, do you fancy that comes easy for me to say?" he
+exclaimed, drawing a deep breath. "I never before knew any one
+who--well, I'll stop there."
+
+"Who what?" she demanded.
+
+"I nearly overstepped the bounds."
+
+"Oh, that's it."
+
+What imp of perversity was in the girl? Weir stared at her for a
+moment through the gloom.
+
+And then she remarked that she must be returning home, and said she
+would be glad if he would accompany her part way as there was a
+Mexican's house half way to town where a particularly vicious dog
+always rushed out. The dog rushed out exactly as she had predicted,
+barking savagely, so that she slipped her arm into the engineer's and
+held fast until they were past.
+
+"He does that only after dark; I hadn't expected to walk so far and it
+was still light when I set out," said she.
+
+The touch of her fingers on his sleeve, the light swing of her form at
+his side, the subtle fragrance that emanated from her hair and face,
+this intimate nearness on the dark road, the heavy scent of flowers
+in the bordering fields,--all sent the blood thumping from his heart.
+If he--if he were in Ed Sorenson's place, what love he could pour
+out!
+
+Ed Sorenson, the double-faced wretch who while engaged to her had
+attempted to entice away for his own vile gratification the simple,
+trustful girl on Terry Creek, he was to marry this sweet and charming
+companion. What diabolical tragedies life could mix!
+
+"See, the moon is rising," she said.
+
+Over the edge of the mesa the yellow globe was bulging, rayless for
+the moment, round and full.
+
+"We're almost at the edge of town, and I'll stop here," he replied.
+"As I said, I'd not bring down upon your head a single unpleasant
+word."
+
+"My head's not so tender," she responded quickly. "But I think you're
+right--for the present." A tight little smile followed the words.
+"We'll see."
+
+"That's best."
+
+"But I propose to stand by you. I told you that night I couldn't
+remain indifferent when I saw an innocent man persecuted."
+
+"You give me a tremendous amount of happiness."
+
+"If I do, I'm glad. I don't believe you ever had much of it. Do you
+know what is said? That you never smile. But I can swear that isn't
+true, and I'm beginning to wonder if you really are--Heavens, what was
+I about to say!"
+
+"Go ahead. It's nothing terrible, I wager."
+
+"Well, I won't finish that, but I'll ask a question even more
+impertinent, if I may. Frankly, I'm dying of curiosity to know."
+
+Weir turned his head to listen to the approach of a horseman. He could
+see the man galloping towards them for town, having turned into the
+road from a lane a short distance off, his horse's hoofs striking an
+occasional spark from a stone. Then the engineer looked smilingly at
+Janet Hosmer.
+
+"I'll tell you anything--or almost anything." One subject alone was
+sealed.
+
+"It's that name."
+
+"Name?"
+
+"'Cold Steel.' How did you get it?"
+
+"It was just pinned on me a few years ago. I'm not particularly proud
+of it. I don't even know the rogue who gave me the label. And it means
+nothing."
+
+"Even your enemies are using it,--and I understand what it signifies."
+She bent her eyes upon him for a time. "That is, what it signifies to
+your friends."
+
+"And to my enemies?"
+
+"More gossip. They say it's because you're a gun-man and a knife-man.
+Oh, I wish I didn't have to have my ears filled with such vicious
+slander! But it means the same to enemies as to friends if they would
+but admit it. I'll wait until this rider passes, then I must go."
+
+No thought of friends or foes, both, or of any such person as Ed
+Sorenson in particular, was in Steele's mind as he made answer.
+
+"I'd stand here forever if you didn't go," he said, with a low
+eagerness that caused her breath to flutter in spite of herself.
+
+On her part, her mind was whispering, "He means it, I believe he
+really means it." Which caused her to lift and lower her eyes
+hurriedly, and feel a peculiar sense of trepidation and excitement.
+Odd to state, she, too, just then had no recollection of any such
+being as Ed Sorenson, which was the extreme of unloverliness.
+
+"Before I do go, I've something to tell you," she said hurriedly,
+dropping her voice. "It's this: the dead man's name was"--here her
+tone went down to a mere sibilance--"Pete Ortez."
+
+He leaned forward, once again the hard fierce man she had seen in
+Martinez' office the night of the shooting.
+
+"How did you learn that?"
+
+"It--well, it was let slip inadvertently in my presence."
+
+Weir would not press her further. Nor was there need, for the sudden
+embarrassment on her face and indeed the information itself could have
+but one source, the man who knew, Ed Sorenson.
+
+"You're the equal of a thousand ordinary friends," he declared. "I can
+make use of that item. Step aside, please; we're in the middle of the
+road." And he drew her from in front of the horseman advancing upon
+them.
+
+They said nothing, but waited for the man to pass. But he pulled his
+mount from a gallop to a trot, and from a trot to a foot pace, and at
+last when squarely even with them came to a full stop. From under his
+broad hat brim he silently considered the girl in white summer dress
+and the bare-headed engineer.
+
+Then he began to shake with laughter, which lasted but an instant. So
+insulting, so sinister was that noiseless laugh that Janet's hand had
+flown to Weir's arm, which she nervously clutched. As for Weir, his
+limbs stiffened--she felt the tightening of the arm she grasped--as a
+tiger's body grows taut preparatory to a spring.
+
+The short, fleshy, insolent rider sitting there in the moonlight was
+Burkhardt.
+
+"Ed Sorenson better keep an eye on his little turtledove," he
+remarked. And touching heel to his animal he swung ahead for town.
+
+For one dazed minute they stared after him.
+
+"Shoot him!" she suddenly said, through shut teeth.
+
+"I haven't my gun along, or I'd be glad to oblige you."
+
+"He deserves killing, the wretch!"
+
+"On more accounts than one," he replied, quietly.
+
+So quietly and so gravely, in truth, that her gust of rage subsided
+before the low-spoken menace of the words. No quick anger was his but
+a steady and deadly purpose. Again she felt the hard-held force, the
+mystery of the man, as if flowing suddenly upward from subterranean
+channels. What wrong had he suffered, what undeserved torture at the
+hands of this man and others thus to freeze his soul?
+
+But he immediately turned to her, asking, "Does that upset the
+broth?"
+
+A wan smile greeted his words.
+
+"I expect it will keep the cook busy, anyway," she said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+BY RIGHT OF POSSESSION
+
+
+Janet Hosmer made no effort to guess what her fiance would say when
+next he called, or to prepare a defense of explanations and excuses.
+She was not that kind. What was necessary to be stated at the proper
+time would arise to her lips. Nevertheless she had a heaviness of
+heart, a natural distress as to the unpleasantness in prospect; and
+had only the slightest hope that Ed would ignore or refuse to hear
+Burkhardt's story. The man would tell her lover, of that she might
+rest assured, out of hatred for the engineer if for no other reason.
+
+She knew how passionately Ed was set against Steele Weir, for a score
+of times she had heard his incensed opinions, increasing lately to
+tirades. It had seemed strange at first that one could be so bitter
+over a simple difference like that of who should work at the dam. But
+ever since Weir had uttered his hoarse exclamation regarding her
+engagement, words so full of protest and amazed indignation, she was
+aware the cause went deeper.
+
+At that moved ejaculation of her companion that night something, too,
+had settled on her heart like a weight--an indefinable foreboding. The
+anxiety aroused about Ed's father and his integrity came to include Ed
+likewise. Loyalty of course required that she accept the man she had
+promised to marry, without reservations. As between him and others
+there should be but one choice. But did she really know him? Was he
+simply the open, jolly, generous, upright adoring fellow he appeared?
+Or were there less pleasant, more ignoble sides to his character? Was
+he, as well as his father, capable of a mean, unworthy, selfish
+persecution of another?
+
+The engineer had made no open accusation against him--or against any
+one, for that matter. She had done her best to get him to express
+himself, but he had refused. Enemies he might have, but he would not
+discuss the fact beyond admitting it was true. Only at moments when
+his restraint slipped could she measure his feelings. Quite different
+that from Ed Sorenson's voluble, heated denunciations of the other.
+Yet, heavens, how appalled this reserved man had been at hearing of
+her engagement! Far more than words, far more than any open charge,
+did his face and incredulity, both so patently sincere, bespeak the
+mistake she was making and justify gnawing doubts of her lover.
+
+As she approached her home Ed Sorenson came dashing out to spring into
+his runabout waiting before the gate. At sight of her he pulled up
+short.
+
+"Ah, here you are," he said.
+
+"Yes, here I am," was her reply.
+
+"You doubtless know what I've been told," he stated, significantly.
+
+"No, I don't. I can only suspect."
+
+"Is it true you've been meeting this man Weir on the quiet? Meeting
+him while engaged to me? You know what I think of him, and what every
+other respectable person thinks of him."
+
+"Was that Mr. Burkhardt's report? That I am meeting Mr. Weir on the
+quiet, to use your words?" she countered.
+
+Sorenson made an angry gesture at what he considered an evasion.
+
+"Janet, listen. He said he saw you at the edge of town, that you
+were both bare-headed, standing close together, arms locked. Good
+heavens, can't you imagine my feelings on hearing what he had to
+say! He stopped me on the street and drew me aside to put me on my
+guard, he said. Burkhardt wouldn't just make up a yarn like that
+against you, and he's a good friend of mine. He didn't say half
+what he suggested."
+
+The girl turned her face towards the house, shut her eyes for an
+instant. She could picture the rider's brutal leering face and
+unspoken insinuations; and her brain also placed in the scene her
+lover greedily if angrily drinking in the tale. Harkening to it
+instead of knocking the man down, that was the worst of it.
+Harkening--and believing.
+
+"I'll not deign to resent your remark of meeting Mr. Weir 'on the
+quiet'," said she, quietly. "I met him on the road accidentally."
+
+"Don't you think I'm entitled to know something about it?" he asked,
+with an edged tone.
+
+"What is it you desire to know?"
+
+Nearly an oath of wrath escaped his mouth, but he kept his control.
+
+"Janet, you know what kind of a man he is," he said. "You know what I
+feel against him, and father, and all our friends, and the town. And
+the whole town, too, will probably hear of this, with a lot of gossip
+added that isn't true."
+
+"But I met him accidentally."
+
+"You didn't have to chat with him like an old friend."
+
+Janet Hosmer gave him a slow, meditative look.
+
+"How do you know how I talked with him?"
+
+"You talked with him. That in itself was too much."
+
+"I don't view it in that light," she responded. "He was perfectly
+civil. Whatever public opinion may be regarding the shooting, I know
+he killed the man in self-defence. So that's nothing against him. You
+would have done the same in his place."
+
+Ed Sorenson leaned towards her.
+
+"You were mistaken, Janet. I've said before that I feared you were,
+but the prosecuting attorney has witnesses to the gun-play that he's
+dug up. Martinez saw nothing; how could he from inside the office? And
+remember that you're only a girl, Janet; in the darkness and with the
+excitement you were confused. I haven't a doubt this scoundrel Weir
+made you believe you saw what never occurred, when you appeared in
+Martinez' office. When you've thought it over, you'll realize that
+yourself. These new witnesses tell just the reverse of what you
+fancied happened. I'm going to see that you're away from San Mateo
+when the man's tried, as he will be."
+
+No reply coming from her, he continued:
+
+"He deceived you then and he'll endeavor to poison your mind right
+along. You're too trustful. Now, I was angry at first, but if there
+was anything in this meeting to-night that was out of the way, it was
+his doing, I know. If he got familiar with you, as Burkhardt
+hinted----"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I'll kill the dog with my own hands!"
+
+"You may rest easy. His conduct was irreproachable, Mr. Burkhardt to
+the contrary."
+
+Sorenson regarded her in perplexity, divided between anger and doubts.
+Too, a new feeling unaccountably sprang into his breast--jealousy. In
+the end apprehension all at once filled his mind, darkening his face
+and bringing down his brows.
+
+Uneasy as at first he had been after the row in the restaurant, he had
+eventually dismissed the matter from his mind, for no rumor of it had
+reached San Mateo. Neither Weir nor Johnson, the girl's father, had
+blabbed of it, so his alarm passed; they didn't want to talk of it for
+the girl's sake, any more than he wished it known, was his grinning
+conclusion. The deuce would have been to pay if Janet had got wind of
+the business. But now his fears came winging back a hundred-fold as he
+stared at her.
+
+"What did he say to you?" he asked, in a tense voice.
+
+"Not that tone with me, if you please."
+
+Sorenson, however, was past observation of her mood or temper.
+
+"He told you a lot of lies about me, didn't he?" he went on, not
+hiding the sneer. "And you believed them."
+
+"He didn't say much, but what he did say was to the point. I don't
+recall that there were any lies."
+
+"There were, of course. It would be just his chance to give you his
+made-up story about me and that Johnson girl. That was what so
+interested you."
+
+"No, he didn't say anything about you and any girl except me. Then
+he only said he was sorry he couldn't have the pleasure of my
+friendship----"
+
+"Ay-ee," the other grated. His lips worked above his teeth.
+
+A shudder passed over Janet Hosmer's skin at the sound and the sight,
+for she had never seen him like this. A cold hand might have been
+closing about her heart: his glare was animal-like and bestial. His
+nature at the instant stood unclothed.
+
+"And he said he would be at pains to avoid even chance meetings with
+me, because it would make talk and cause me annoyance."
+
+"He'll not meet you another time if I have anything to say about it."
+
+"I see. But I wanted you to understand that he told me no lies, nor
+repeated any story--about you and a Johnson girl, I think you said."
+
+A visible breath of relief lifted his breast. He now would have
+been glad for some one to boot him along the street for ever
+mentioning the thing. He almost had put his foot in it. Apparently
+she was not interested in seeking further knowledge of the subject
+that he so ill-advisedly had brought up. Lucky for him she hadn't the
+inquisitiveness of some girls.
+
+The narrow escape restored a trace of his good humor, and he was
+shrewd enough to divert her mind before the incident made an
+impression. He reached out and patted her shoulder.
+
+"Don't think me a scold, darling," said he. "Burkhardt upset me with
+his news, that was all. He hates that gun-man so much that it's no
+wonder he was angry at seeing him hoodwink you. He probably imagined a
+lot. Just don't speak to Weir if he tries to stop you again. And
+pretty soon we'll have him where he won't interfere with anybody."
+
+"When will that be?"
+
+"The county attorney's still collecting evidence. Nothing will be done
+before the grand jury meets, which is in a couple of weeks. You must
+arrange to go off on a visit about that time."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So you won't have to go through the ordeal of appearing in court.
+There are ways of fixing such things." He laughed softly. "Especially
+here in San Mateo County. It's too rotten a business for you to have
+to step into, this murder. Come along down to the drug store and have
+some ice cream."
+
+"Not to-night. I'm feeling a little tired."
+
+"Then let us rest on your porch. I haven't seen you twice in the last
+week."
+
+"Some other evening, Ed. I promised father to help get up his account
+books."
+
+"You're not angry with me?" he asked. "If you're not, give me a kiss
+before I go."
+
+A sharp smile showed on her lips.
+
+"I'm not angry, but I'm going to penalize you to that extent. If you
+must have a cheek to press, go kiss----" She paused, while the
+conviction darted into his mind that she had remembered that Johnson
+girl blunder after all, then said: "Mr. Burkhardt's cheek."
+
+Again relief swept him.
+
+"Come, be kind, Janet," he began. But she was already through the gate
+and skipping up the walk, vanishing in the gloom of the veranda. The
+screen door clapped shut. "Peeved, all right. I'll have to be
+extra-nice to her for a day or so until she calms down," he murmured
+to himself. "Must send her a box of chocolates and some magazines
+to-morrow to show my contrite heart; that always gets 'em. Hang it,
+it's time to fix a day, too. We've been engaged long enough. She sure
+has a figure and face--a beaut! I guess she didn't smell the booze on
+my breath. Got to be careful about that till we're married." He jumped
+into his car.
+
+The screen door had clapped shut, but Janet had not entered. She had
+employed the artifice to convey the impression it had. She did not
+wish to go in to her work just yet, for calm as she had appeared
+during the interview her emotions were running full tide. Love Ed
+Sorenson? Marry him? She groped for and dropped into a wicker chair,
+her head sinking in shame and self-abasement. Never--never!
+
+And before her mind swam another face, a face with the hair ruffled
+about the brow, clear of eyes and strong-lined, as she had beheld it
+in the moonlight of the road.
+
+All at once she tugged at a finger, fiercely pulling off the
+engagement ring. She rubbed her cheek as well, with an angry hand, for
+the memory of kisses was burning her as by fire.
+
+Then she sat quite motionless for a long time.
+
+"I'll just ask father," she exclaimed. "There can't be more than a
+dozen Johnsons around here."
+
+Which would have given Ed Sorenson a fresh jolt in his breathing
+apparatus if he had overheard, and shriveled the cocky self-assurance
+with which he sipped a high-ball that moment at Vorse's bar.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+JANET AND MARY
+
+
+In a region as sparsely settled by white people as San Mateo and its
+adjoining counties there were not, as Janet put it, more than a dozen
+Johnson families. In fact, there were but two, she learned from her
+father: one at Bowenville, the small railroad town of three hundred
+people, a merchant with a wife and four little children; the other a
+rancher on Terry Creek, whose wife was dead and who had one child, a
+girl of sixteen or seventeen years of age.
+
+"I may be away at dinner time, so don't wait for me," she told her
+father next morning. "I'm going out in the country a few miles--and
+you know my car! If you'd just let me squeeze some of these patients
+who never pay, you could have a new car yourself."
+
+"Mine's all right," he smiled.
+
+"But mine isn't. Look at it. You gave it to me only because you
+scorned to ride in it any longer yourself. It would do for me, you
+said, but you prance around in a bright shiny one yourself. I blush at
+the row mine makes; sounds like a boiler factory; I drive only along
+side streets. If the patients would pay what they owe, I could ride
+like a lady instead of a slinking magpie."
+
+The doctor leaned back in his chair and laughed (they were at
+breakfast) and remarked that old friends were best.
+
+"Don't call my asthmatic tin beast a friend; we're bitter enemies,"
+said she.
+
+It carried her to Terry Creek about noon, however, safely enough,
+whither she went with a firm resolution that crushed a certain
+embarrassment and anxiety. Suppose these people resented her
+inquiries.
+
+She placed the bearded, tanned rancher at once, when she saw him
+working on a piece of harness before the door as she drove up. She had
+seen him in town at different times. She once had stopped here, too,
+several years previous when accompanying her father, who had been
+called to dress the rancher's injured hand. The girl could not have
+been over twelve or thirteen then, a shabby, awkward girl wearing a
+braid who came out to gaze shyly at her sitting in the car.
+
+Johnson arose from the ground and approached as she alighted, while
+the girl's head popped into sight at the door.
+
+"I'm Dr. Hosmer's daughter, Janet," she stated, putting out her hand
+and smiling. "I've come to see you on a matter. Shall we go into the
+house?"
+
+With curiosity sharing a vague hostility in his bearing he led her in,
+where his daughter was setting the table. Janet also told the girl who
+she was. At once dismay and startlement greeted the announcement. But
+she invited Janet to be seated, she herself withdrawing to a spot by
+the stove.
+
+No need for Janet to beat about the bush with her errand.
+
+"Mr. Johnson," she said, "I've come to you and your daughter for a
+little help if you can give it." That seemed the best way to break
+down their reserve, an appeal rather than simply blunt questions--and
+what was it if not an appeal? "What I have to say is just among the
+three of us and I know it will go no farther. You're acquainted with
+my father; he's respected by every one."
+
+"He is," Johnson stated, nodding.
+
+"The situation is this, to speak plainly: last night I heard something
+that has caused me to come to you for information; I'm engaged to Ed
+Sorenson, and in a moment of anger he denounced Mr. Weir, the engineer
+at the dam, for having told me a false story--lies--about him and your
+daughter."
+
+Janet perceived the quick, troubled look exchanged by man and girl.
+
+"Mr. Weir has never mentioned your daughter's name in my hearing; I
+think him incapable of discussing any one maliciously. He's very
+careful of what he says. I consider him a very honorable man. At any
+rate, he said nothing of what Ed Sorenson suggested, and if the latter
+himself hadn't spoken of the thing I should have had no inkling that
+there had been anything justifying an inquiry on my part. There may
+not be. But why should he imagine Mr. Weir had told me 'lies' linking
+him and your daughter?"
+
+"I know Weir--and I know Ed Sorenson, too," was the rancher's grim
+rejoinder.
+
+"This is a disagreeable subject, I know. But I'm not here out of mere
+curiosity, but a desire to learn if something has been concealed from
+me by Ed Sorenson that I should be informed of. His manner, his words,
+the whole incident has filled me with doubts. See, I'm trusting you
+absolutely." And she extended a hand in a gesture bespeaking
+sincerity.
+
+Johnson peered at her in silence from under shaggy brows.
+
+"I ask myself why Mr. Sorenson took it for granted that the engineer
+had been telling me false stories and if there was any ground for such
+fears," she went on. "He had nothing to be afraid of, no matter what
+might be said, if he had done nothing unworthy. I can't imagine Mr.
+Weir, for instance, being alarmed in that way."
+
+"They're telling plenty of lies about him, for that matter, but I
+guess it doesn't worry him any," Johnson said.
+
+"What I ask you touches a delicate subject, perhaps," Janet continued,
+reluctantly. "You may feel that I'm pushing in where I'm not
+concerned. But if Mr. Sorenson has done anything discreditable--if he
+has acted in a way to make me ashamed when I know, then it becomes a
+matter affecting my happiness too. I would never marry a man who had
+done something dishonorable, for if I did so knowingly I should be
+dishonored and dishonorable as well."
+
+Johnson suddenly thrust a brown forefinger at her.
+
+"Do you want to know what Sorenson did?" he demanded, wrathfully.
+
+Janet gripped her hands together. "Yes."
+
+"You'll not go spreading it all around the country? But I guess you
+won't as long as it would make you out a fool too. I'll not have
+Mary's name dragged about in a lot of gossip."
+
+"I assure you I shall remain silent, for her sake and my own."
+
+"All right, I'll tell you. You're too good a girl--any decent girl
+is--to marry Ed Sorenson. He met Mary at a dance last spring in town
+where she went with some friends of ours, and made love to her but
+wouldn't let her tell me or any one. We don't get to town so very
+often; she never knew he was engaged to marry you, there never
+happening to be any mention of it to her. Then he got her to go to
+Bowenville one day awhile ago, under promise to marry her there--Mary
+is only sixteen, a little girl yet. To me, anyway."
+
+Janet felt the working of his love in those simple words. Felt it but
+half-consciously, though, for her own soul was stifling at Ed
+Sorenson's revealed infamy.
+
+"When he got her there, he told her they would have to go away farther
+to be married--to Los Angeles." Again his finger came up, this time to
+be shaken at her like a hammer. "He never intended to marry her; he
+planned to get her there, ruin her, and cast her off. That's the sort
+of man you're going to marry!"
+
+"I remember he expected to be away for a couple of weeks--a business
+trip, he said. But afterwards he explained that it hadn't been
+necessary to go."
+
+"A business trip! Yes, the dirty kind of business he likes. And if it
+hadn't been that Weir heard him explaining to Mary that she must go on
+and interfered--there in the restaurant--Ed Sorenson might have
+succeeded. Mary trusted him, thought he was straight. But he's
+crooked, crooked as his old man. When Weir told him to his face what
+he thought of his tricks, he let it out he was engaged to you. Didn't
+mean to, of course. Weir said he would stay right with them and see
+that they got married next day before a minister, then Sorenson
+snapped out he was to marry you. That opened Mary's eyes, that and his
+refusing to go before a preacher as the engineer demanded. So Weir
+brought her home to me.
+
+"And that isn't all I know," he snarled. "Mexicans and cowboys and
+others have talked--women don't hear these things--how he's had to
+pay Mexicans hush-money for girls of theirs he's wronged. But what do
+people care? He's rich, he's old man Sorenson's boy; everything's kept
+quiet; and he goes around as big as life." With a muttered oath he
+turned away, his lips shut hard and his beard sticking out savagely.
+
+He came back to her again.
+
+"The young one gets it from the old one," he exclaimed. "Bad crooked
+blood in both of them. I know. I've been here ever since I was a boy
+and remember things Sorenson believes every one has forgotten, I know
+how he got his start, how he and the rest of his bunch cleaned out
+Dent of his ranch and cattle gambling and then killed him when he
+discovered they had used marked cards, how at the same time they
+robbed another man----"
+
+Janet struggled to her feet. She had covered her eyes and bowed her
+head before the torrent of his vehemence.
+
+"No more, I want to hear no more," she gasped. "Let me go home. I'm
+sick."
+
+"It all makes me sick, too," he answered. "Sick and sore, both. But
+it's the truth. I'm sorry if it's been a bad pill to swallow, but it's
+the God's truth, girl. I'm sorry it couldn't be any other way, but I
+wouldn't see you marry that scoundrel if I lost a hand stopping you.
+Mary felt sick at first, too; she's over it now. You'll not feel bad
+long. Better stay for dinner with us."
+
+"I couldn't swallow a bite. Thank you for your kindness in asking
+me--and for telling me what I wanted to know, too. Father never knew,
+or he would have warned me. People saw I was engaged to Ed Sorenson
+and would say nothing to father, of course. I shall always count you
+as one of my best friends, Mr. Johnson. And you too, Mary; you must
+come down and stay with me sometime, for I imagine you get lonely
+here. No, another day I'll remain to dinner--and I want to be alone
+now."
+
+They pressed her no further, seeing her wretchedness of spirit. But
+they walked with her to the car and shook hands with her when she was
+in and urged her to come again.
+
+When she had disappeared in the aspens among which the trail led, Mary
+said to her father:
+
+"You said they killed a man named Dent."
+
+"They did. I saw the killing."
+
+"And nothing was ever done about it?"
+
+"No. Nobody but me knew of the happening and I'd of had a bullet
+through my heart if I'd talked. I might yet even now, so see that you
+keep your mouth shut."
+
+"You told her."
+
+"I was mad, so mad I could say anything. But she isn't the kind to
+repeat the story; I'm not afraid on that score. She's clean strain all
+through."
+
+"Did you know the man whom Sorenson and the others killed?" Mary
+questioned, in some awe.
+
+"I knew of him, but I was only a lad then. I saw it all through the
+back door of Vorse's saloon where it happened, but I've never breathed
+about it to a soul. I didn't want to be murdered some dark night.
+Those four men would see that the job was done quick even now, I'm
+saying, if they were on to the fact. I know 'em, if nobody else
+does."
+
+Mary's skin crawled with prickles of fear.
+
+"They must be awful bad."
+
+"They were devils then, and I don't think they've changed to angels
+to-day, though they try to appear decent. I know 'em; I know what
+they'll do once they start. You can't make sheep out of wolves just by
+giving 'em a fleece."
+
+"You said they robbed another man at the same time they killed that
+Dent."
+
+"Yes; and it only goes to show the hellish crooks they are. It was
+another man in the saloon. He was drunk. They made him believe he had
+killed Dent. Then said they'd help him to get away if he gave them his
+property. He was a rich fellow who had come out from the east and gone
+to ranching, a tenderfoot. They took his stuff and he skipped the
+country with his wife. That was the last of him, and I reckon he
+believes to this day that he's a murderer. And that's how they got the
+start of their wealth, or a big part of it, Sorenson and Vorse and the
+other two. They've got the San Mateo Cattle Company, with fifty
+thousand head of steers, and ten or twenty bands of sheeps and
+ranches, and the bank, and all the rest, and they walk around like
+honest men. But they're thieves and murderers, Mary, thieves and
+murderers! I'd rather be the man I am, poor and with nothing but this
+little mortgaged piece of ground and my few cattle, than them, who
+robbed Dent and killed him and then robbed and drove out Weir."
+
+"Was that the other man's name?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That's funny. The same as the man who brought me home."
+
+"There are lots of Weirs, like the Johnsons."
+
+"Not so many, I guess. Maybe they're related. Did the man who skipped
+have any children?"
+
+"No. None I ever heard of, though I didn't know much about him. Just
+him and his wife, I think."
+
+Johnson had perceived no resemblance between the engineer and the
+vanished man of whom he spoke. As for that, however, he had no clear
+recollection of the elder Weir's face; he was but twelve years old at
+the time of the dramatic event, thirty years before.
+
+"Now, come along and eat," he said. "And remember! Not a word of this
+to a soul."
+
+Meanwhile Janet Hosmer was driving slowly down the canyon, oblivious
+that opportunity to unlock the whole mystery had been hers, never
+dreaming that she had just missed by the slenderest margin what Steele
+Weir would have given the world to know.
+
+For an instant Fate had placed the key in her hand. She knew it not;
+it was withdrawn again and the door remained closed and locked while
+the threads of Destiny continued to be spun.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+THE PLOT
+
+
+In Vorse's saloon, where in the past so many evil ideas for the
+acquisition of money or power had sprouted, the scheme had its
+inception. It had been of slow growth, with innumerable suggestions
+considered, tested, discarded. The intended arrest and trial of Weir
+had been the first aim; but this had expanded until at last the plot
+had become of really magnificent proportions, cunning yet daring,
+devilish enough even to satisfy the hate and greed of its originators,
+consummate in design, absolutely safe and conclusive.
+
+It was Sorenson who conceived the notion of pulling the irrigation
+project down in ruins at the moment of Weir's own fall. Judge Gordon a
+few days later had pieced out the method, which was either to corrupt
+the workmen to wreck dam and camp or to place them in the equivocal
+position of having done so apparently though others did it in fact.
+Vorse and Burkhardt devised the details. Weir should be left free
+until the blow had fallen on the camp, whereupon he should be
+immediately clapped into jail on the murder charge, which, coming on
+top of the "riot," would paralyze all company action and work. From
+such a crushing double-blow no concern could quickly recover, if
+indeed the loss did not result in total cessation of construction.
+
+Thus shedding their coats of expedient lawfulness, they reverted
+under the menace of Steele Weir's presence to the men they were in an
+earlier age--an age when a few white land and cattle "barons"
+dominated the region, predatory, arrogant, masterful and despotic; the
+age just ceasing when the elder Weir and Dent arrived; the age of
+their youth forty years before, the age when railroads and telegraphs
+and law were remote, and chicanery and force were the common agents,
+and "guns" the final arbiters.
+
+To them Weir was like a reincarnated spirit of that age. He guessed if
+he did not know their past. He had appeared in order to challenge
+their supremacy, end their rule, avenge his father's dispossession at
+their hands. He instinctively and by nature was an enemy; he would
+have been their enemy in any other place and under any other
+circumstances. He was a head-hunter, and in turn was to be hunted
+down. He was the kind who neither made compromises nor asked quarter.
+He veiled his purposes in as great secrecy as did they, and when he
+struck it would be suddenly, fiercely, mercilessly--if he struck. They
+were determined he should not strike, being himself first surprised
+and crushed, for though in ignorance of what he could bring against
+them their fears were real. Everything, indeed, about the man
+antagonized them, alarmed them, stirred their hate and filmed their
+eyes with blood. He must be destroyed.
+
+"And with him the dam," Sorenson had said. "Both together." For there
+was no effort to conceal among themselves their savage intention.
+
+"He'll never come to trial," Vorse remarked, with a malignant gleam in
+his blue eyes and a shutting of his thin lips. "An attempted jail
+delivery by 'friends' will fix that. All they will have to do then is
+to buy him a pine box."
+
+"If the man had but stayed away!" Judge Gordon exclaimed. Cunning, not
+force, was his forte; and the measures in prospect at times had
+oppressed him with dreadful forebodings. He was growing old, feeble,
+and here when he was entitled to peace he still had to fight for his
+own.
+
+In accordance with the scheme Burkhardt vanished from San Mateo for a
+time, ostensibly on business but in fact on a journey across the
+Mexican line, where he conducted negotiations with a certain
+"revolucionista" of no particular notoriety as yet, of avaricious
+character, unscrupulous nature, and with a small following of fellow
+bandits and a large animosity for Americans. His ambition was to
+emulate the brilliant Villa. But pickings had been poor of late, no
+more than that of stealing a few horses from across the border. To
+Burkhardt, who had heard of him and sought him out, he listened with
+interest and bargained with zest. Five thousand in gold for fifty men
+was like pearls from Paradise. And whatever this Yankee's own private
+purpose, it was a chance for the chieftain to strike secretly and
+safely at Americans, in addition.
+
+"They will come through in squads after they've slipped across the
+line," Burkhardt reported. "They're to pose as laborers."
+
+"When?" Sorenson asked.
+
+"Along next week. They're to drop off down along the railroad at
+different towns and I'll run them up into the mountains with some
+grub. Then we'll assemble them quietly a couple miles off from the
+dam, where they'll be handy on the chosen night. Afterwards we'll slip
+them back to the railroad, and they fade into Mexico. Weir's workmen
+will be drunk and rowing--and will have done the job, eh?" Burkhardt
+shook with suppressed, evil laughter.
+
+"If they're drunk, they may join in and help," Judge Gordon stated,
+acutely. "A mob full of whiskey will do anything. If they did take a
+hand, it would round out the case against them perfectly. Very likely
+next day they, too, would fade, as you put it, Burkhardt; they would
+want to get out of this part of country as quickly as possible when
+they realized what had happened. I see no flaw in our plan.
+Fortunately the three directors who are coming will be gone by the end
+of next week."
+
+"What's that? What directors?" Burkhardt asked.
+
+"They're to be here on an inspection trip, so they wrote, and will be
+pleased to hear our complaints in regard to the question of workmen."
+Gordon's tone was ironical. "I wrote them protesting Weir's discharge
+of our people, you remember, but that was some time ago."
+
+"What's the use of paying attention to the fools now?"
+
+"We must carry out the farce, Burkhardt, for the sake of appearances."
+
+"I'd like to blow them up along with their dam!" was the scowling
+rejoinder, "Well, let 'em inspect. Next time they come back there
+won't be any."
+
+"I believe we should arrest Weir before the thing's pulled off,"
+Gordon said, meditatively. "It would be surer."
+
+Sorenson set his heavy jaw.
+
+"No. I want him to see the wreck; I want him to know just what's
+happened before he's haled away; I want him feeling good and sick
+already when he gets the next jolt."
+
+"Sure. It's him or us, as I've said from the first; and I've always
+believed in making a clean sweep," Vorse remarked. "We have the right
+line this time. First, make his men drunk and sore; then smash the
+works; then arrest him quick; and last finish him off with a bullet
+during a pretended jail delivery."
+
+"There will be elements of danger in the last," Judge Gordon stated,
+cautiously.
+
+Vorse smiled and Burkhardt grinned.
+
+"Not so you'll notice it," said the latter. "The town won't know
+anything about it until afterwards. Just a few good men at night,
+masked and working fast, and the thing is done."
+
+"I'll not feel easy till it's over."
+
+"Keep up your nerve, Judge," Burkhardt grunted. "You used to be as
+lively as anybody when you were young."
+
+"I know, I know. But this Weir isn't going to stand idle. If he ever
+gets a chance with his gun----"
+
+"He won't get it," said Vorse.
+
+"And he'll not resist the sheriff when Madden arrests him legally,"
+Sorenson added. "Nothing could be better for us than if he did. He
+knows that."
+
+"Still I'll be glad when next week is past," the Judge replied, with a
+sigh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+THE CURRENT OF EVENTS
+
+
+Though outwardly the world's face was as calm as ever, though peace
+seemed to bask on San Mateo and the broad mesa and lofty mountain
+range, events were rapidly shaping themselves to bring a thunder crash
+of contending forces. Not Weir, not even the little evil cabal
+plotting so desperately against him, guessed the scope and power of
+the passions to be released.
+
+As a vital impulse towards the climax, though an unconscious one on
+her part so far as the general play of circumstance was concerned,
+Janet Hosmer informed Ed Sorenson of her determination to break their
+engagement. This was the same evening she returned from the Johnson
+ranch, when he called at her telephoned request. He went to her home
+under the impression that his box of candy and bundle of new magazines
+had restored him to favor. He was very jaunty, in fact, and bent on
+persuading her to name an early day for their nuptials.
+
+Imagine his wrath when she explained that she wished to say that she
+could not marry him, at the same time handing him his ring and the
+other trinkets he had bestowed upon her.
+
+"Is it because of our little spat last night about the engineer?" he
+demanded. "I apologized, Janet. I'm sorry still, and I love you above
+everything else."
+
+"I think not," said she.
+
+"But I do, Janet. Above everything."
+
+"No, not above yourself and your vices. You deceived me for a long
+time, but now I know the truth. You aroused my suspicions when you
+mentioned a Johnson girl; there's only one Johnson girl hereabouts, as
+I learned; and this noon I visited her and her father. They informed
+me fully about your conduct towards Mary at Bowenville and your
+promises to marry her--that, when you were engaged to me. There are
+other things I heard to-day. Of affairs with Mexican girls that are
+shameful."
+
+"Lies, lies!" was the passionate disclaimer. "Or if I have been
+flirting a little, and never since my engagement, it's no more than
+any fellow does."
+
+"You can neither excuse nor justify your words and actions towards
+Mary Johnson not a month ago."
+
+"They're liars, I tell you."
+
+"Will you confront them and say that?"
+
+Taken by surprise Sorenson hesitated, flushed, and then made a gesture
+of disdain.
+
+"I'll not, because I'll not condescend to answer such baseless
+charges," he stated. "I thought you had sense enough not to believe
+every little thing you hear. Certainly I expect you not to believe
+this, and I know you won't on consideration. Then we'll be married. I
+came here to-night to urge you to marry me soon."
+
+"I'll never marry you, and we're no longer engaged. You've acted
+faithlessly and dishonorably. You're not the decent man I thought you
+were."
+
+"Don't you still love me, Janet?"
+
+"No. I don't think I ever loved you; I was loving a man who didn't
+exist, an illusion I imagined to be Ed Sorenson, not your real self.
+If I loved at all, which I now doubt! And you never loved me, though
+you may think you did and still do. But it's not so; for no man who
+really loved a respectable girl could at the same time do what you
+did. Think of it! While pretending to love me, you were secretly
+trying to inveigle that poor ignorant girl away from home. You're not
+a man; you're a beast. The shame and disgust and humiliation I suffer
+at the thought of my position during that time, your effort to
+hoodwink both Mary Johnson and me, so fills me with anger I can't talk
+to you. Go, go! And please don't even speak to me hereafter, on the
+street or anywhere else."
+
+Instead of departing the man grasped her wrist and gave her a venomous
+look.
+
+"It was this sneak of an engineer, after all, who told you this lie
+and turned you against me," he snarled.
+
+"Let me go. Mr. Weir said nothing. It was you yourself who betrayed
+yourself, or I should not have known as I do, thank heavens. Stop
+holding my wrist!"
+
+For an instant Sorenson wavered between whether he should obey her
+command or strike her as his rage prompted. A very devil of passion
+beating in his breast urged him to show her her place, deal with her
+as he would like to do and as she deserved--throw her down and drag
+her by the hair until she crawled forward and clasped his knees in
+subjection. But the look in her eyes cooled this half-insane,
+whiskey-inspired desire.
+
+He took his hand off her wrist, picked up his hat.
+
+"You can't throw me down this way," he sneered. "You're going to marry
+me just the same, whether you think so or not. I have a voice in this
+engagement, and you can't break your word and promise to me because
+it happens to strike your fancy. Not for a single minute!"
+
+"If you were a gentleman and a decent man you wouldn't say that."
+
+"I'm not either, by your judgment, so I do say it. I say it again:
+you're going to marry me, willingly or unwillingly. Now if after
+thinking it over, you want to forget all this and go on as before, all
+right. If not, our engagement still holds just the same. You may
+release me, but I haven't released you. Remember that. And keep away
+from that engineer if you know what's best for you!"
+
+With a scowl he stalked out of the house, leaving a very angry, very
+tremulous and very heart-sick girl. The fellow was in truth not a man,
+she perceived, but a creature so conscienceless and loathsome that she
+seemed contaminated through and through by his touch, his words, and
+their previous relations. How grossly he had deceived her as to his
+real character! What a horrible future as his wife she had escaped!
+Nor was she yet free, for he promised to make an infinity of trouble.
+
+That day she could do nothing. Her father noting her face asked what
+was the trouble, and she told him the whole affair.
+
+"I've heard rumors of late about him and was worried," he said. "You
+did the only thing, of course. Pay no attention to his words; I'll see
+he doesn't annoy you."
+
+It was three or four days afterwards that she called Weir up at the
+dam in a desire to hear the voice of a man she knew to be straight and
+upright.
+
+"I've wondered if a girl is allowed to look at your dam," she said on
+impulse, when they had chatted for a moment. "Father, who was at your
+camp to attend an injured man, says you're making famous progress."
+
+"I'd be more than delighted to show you the work. But--I wonder----"
+
+"Don't let what people say disturb you," she replied quickly, divining
+his thought. "I've arranged all that." A somewhat obscure remark to
+Weir.
+
+"Then come any time--and often. I hope to be able to conduct you
+around, the first visit at least. Next week I may not be able to do so
+as a committee of directors arrive who'll take my time."
+
+"Oh, indeed," Janet answered, politely.
+
+"A manager has to be directed occasionally, or he may run wild," she
+heard, with his laugh.
+
+"I'll come before they do," she said.
+
+Quite as she had announced she did run up to the canyon and go with
+Weir over the hillsides and dam, asking questions and displaying a
+great interest in the men and the operation of the machinery. The
+concrete work was nearing an end. Already tracks were laid for the
+dump trams that were to carry dirt from steam-shovels to the dam to
+form its main body.
+
+She perceived the immense labor of the project and the coordinated
+effort required. The necessity in itself of dragging hither from
+Bowenville all of the supplies, the material, the huge machines, was
+overwhelming. The responsibility of combining scientific knowledge and
+raw industry to an exact result struck her as prodigious. The handling
+of hundreds of subordinate workmen and assistants of various grades
+and skill demanded exceptional ability, understanding, will and
+generalship. Yet these things the man at her side, Steele Weir,
+accomplished and supplied; and appeared quite calm and unmoved about
+it, as if it was all a matter of course.
+
+She glanced at the ground, flushing. The thought of Ed Sorenson,
+making only a pretense of doing anything useful and because his father
+was rich doing nothing in reality but waste himself in vicious
+practices, was in her mind. What must have the engineer believed of
+her all this while when he knew Sorenson's true nature and infamous
+record? Did he suppose her a light-headed feather, indifferent to
+everything except that her husband should be rich? Very likely. There
+were plenty of girls of that type. He naturally would suppose her
+one.
+
+And she could say nothing to put herself in a better light and to gain
+his respect--for that she now desired greatly. She saw him as he was,
+a big man, a strong man, a man whose respect was to be prized. Beside
+him she felt herself small and ordinary. That was all right, but she
+was determined he should not believe her insignificant, shallow,
+unworthy, mercenary.
+
+While she could not explain matters openly without shaming herself
+and still lowering herself in his estimation, he being only an
+acquaintance, yet there were ways of getting at the end. Janet could
+act adroitly, like most women, when it best served the purpose.
+
+"Do you know, I just learned from friends of yours on Terry Creek that
+you're a public benefactor as well as an engineer," she stated, when
+they paused on the hillside for a last look at the dam.
+
+"I?" he exclaimed.
+
+His eyes came around and found hers fixed on him.
+
+"I happened to stop at the Johnson ranch. They didn't say so, but I
+know they would be pleased to death if you would go to dinner there
+some day. They have some fine fat chickens, if you like chicken fried
+or baked, and they hesitate to ask you only because they're afraid
+you'll refuse."
+
+"Fried chicken is my weakness. Of course I'll go; at the first spare
+chance."
+
+But all the while Steele Weir's mind was eddying with wonderment. He
+had colored at mention of the Johnson ranch, as if he had been caught
+with a hand in a jam pot. And it meant only one thing: she knew of the
+Bowenville episode. Involuntarily his eyes flashed to her left hand
+with which she was brushing back the hair under her hat brim. There
+was no diamond solitaire on its third finger. Surely, something had
+happened.
+
+"Well, I must be returning home. I just thought I'd give you a tiny
+hint," said she. An odd smile rested on her lips as she spoke, for
+hints may carry multiple suggestions.
+
+"By Jove!" Weir said suddenly.
+
+Man of action though she knew him to be, she never anticipated he
+would or could act so directly. He reached out and seized her left
+hand and scanned it significantly. Then he raised his eyes.
+
+"What does this mean?" he asked, tapping the finger with one of his
+own. "Does this mean----"
+
+It was Janet's turn to become scarlet. She tried to smile again, but
+it was a wavering smile that appeared.
+
+"What does what mean?" she fenced.
+
+"That--well, that the ring is off permanently?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"And that there's now a chance for me?"
+
+Janet's eyes at that popped open very wide indeed. Meanwhile Weir
+still held to the palm resting in his own.
+
+"You?" she breathed, faintly.
+
+"Me, yes."
+
+Presently with a gentle movement she drew her hand free. She had been
+quite dumbfounded, but not so dumbfounded that she did not realize
+that this new situation had requirements of its own. He appeared
+absolutely sincere and resolute.
+
+"But I never dreamed of such a thing!" she stammered.
+
+"Nor I--because until now I hadn't the right. All I ask is that you
+give me your friendship--and a chance--and--well, we'll see."
+
+"There's no reason why we shouldn't be friends," said she. "We are
+already, aren't we?"
+
+"Yes--now. I never actually thought so before."
+
+"Things have changed," she stated. And her lips closed with a firm
+pressure as she spoke. "Or I shouldn't have been here inspecting the
+dam, should I?" Again the smile flashed upon her face. "You may
+consider this a preliminary inspection to that of your high and mighty
+directors, and I assure you my verdict--is that the word?--is
+favorable. Now I must be going to the car. Father likes his meals on
+time."
+
+"And when shall I see you again?"
+
+The note of eagerness in his voice set her heart moving a bit faster.
+If he carried on his engineering work as he did his friendship, no
+wonder he got things done.
+
+"Why, when you wish to call, Mr. Weir. Both father and I shall be
+pleased to have you come any time."
+
+"I'll certainly avail myself of the privilege," said he. "You must
+really go now?"
+
+With a feeling of exaltation at this new turn of affairs he watched
+her drive away from camp, a feeling that persisted during the
+succeeding days.
+
+The three directors arrived. That was Thursday evening; and Friday and
+Saturday were devoted to a discussion of construction plans,
+inspection of the works, analysis of costs and so on. Weir found the
+men what he expected: quick to comprehend facts, incisive of mind, and
+though of course not engineers yet able to measure results; while they
+on their part were appreciative of the exceptional progress made and
+of his thorough command of the project. They knew the first hour that
+the right manager was in charge at last.
+
+Saturday afternoon Sorenson and Judge Gordon called at headquarters,
+by appointment, to discuss the grievance held locally against the
+company. Weir was present at the meeting.
+
+"As to whether the Mexican workmen who were discharged were actually
+giving a full return in work for the wages, as you maintain,
+gentlemen," said Mr. Pollock, one of the directors and a corporation
+lawyer from New York, in reply to the visitors' statement, "that is a
+question not of opinion but of fact."
+
+"Fact, yes," Judge Gordon argued. "Fact supported by the evidence of
+the three hundred workmen against that of a single man, your manager,
+who had just come."
+
+"Are not your three hundred men prejudiced witnesses?" the New Yorker
+inquired, a slight smile upon his thin face.
+
+"No more than is Mr. Weir."
+
+"But Mr. Weir is the manager and consequently has the power of
+decision in such matters."
+
+"Not to the extent of revoking unfairly your promise, given orally, to
+be sure, but still given, to employ local labor." Sorenson was the
+speaker and his heavy face wore an expression of ill-disguised
+contempt.
+
+"Agreed. Local labor was to be hired," said Pollock. "But our company
+isn't a philanthropic institution; it's run on strictly business
+principles. Any agreement we made implied that local workmen should
+give exactly what other workmen would give in work."
+
+"They did so," Judge Gordon affirmed.
+
+"There was no trouble until this man came," Sorenson remarked. "I
+suppose he felt that he had to show his authority."
+
+"Ah, but there was if not trouble at any rate dissatisfaction on our
+part," Pollock stated, tapping a finger on the table. "Construction
+wasn't progressing as we knew it should, which was the very reason for
+getting a new manager, one who could speed it up. But as I said, it
+all comes down to a question of fact. You gentlemen offer your
+workmen's avowals of industry to support your claim; Mr. Weir, on the
+other hand, gives us some definite records to back up his side. Here
+they are for the last week the workmen from San Mateo and neighborhood
+worked--his first week here; and for the succeeding weeks under the
+men shipped in; in material used, in cubic yards of concrete
+construction, and in percentage of work finished. Examine them if you
+please. They show daily and weekly results to be just a trifle less
+than double for the corresponding time the imported workmen have been
+here. In other words, the new men have, while shortening the time of
+completion, given twice as much work for exactly the same wage paid
+your Mexicans. In other words, too, your local laborers cancelled our
+agreement by their own incompetence."
+
+"Your manager could easily have doctored those records," Sorenson
+stated, coldly.
+
+"You scarcely mean that, sir," Pollock instantly replied icily, his
+amiability vanishing.
+
+"Come, Judge, we may as well go, I think. We're appealing to a
+prejudiced court." And Sorenson arose.
+
+"Our decision to view the matter like Mr. Weir is because his position
+is sustained by these facts, not because we're prejudiced, as you
+insinuate. But I may add that it would not be strange if we were
+prejudiced, as we've become convinced that you gentlemen haven't been
+sincere in your attitude towards our company and if anything are
+strongly hostile. Any one may be deceived for a time, and we were, but
+not permanently. You would have done much better to have recognized
+that we have a perfect right to build this project on land that we
+bought and with water that we acquired. For it will be built in any
+case and in spite of such local opposition as may be made." Pollock
+flicked the ash from his cigar with a careful finger. "That is a mere
+piece of information or a declaration of war, whichever way you wish
+to take it."
+
+"I told you we were wasting our time coming here," the cattleman said
+to his companion.
+
+"Good day, gentlemen," said Judge Gordon, politely.
+
+And the pair went out to Sorenson's machine.
+
+Shortly after, the two other directors left to catch a train at
+Bowenville, Pollock planning to stay with Weir to formulate a report
+during the next day or two for presentation to the entire directorate
+at its next meeting. Sorenson caught a glimpse of the car whirling
+through town, with Weir at the wheel, who with Pollock accompanied the
+departing men that certain unsettled points might be discussed up to
+the last moment.
+
+As Weir and Pollock were returning, the latter eyed the engineer and
+laughed.
+
+"You've evidently brushed these fellows', Sorenson's and Gordon's, fur
+the wrong way to please them. But they'll probably leave us alone from
+now on."
+
+"They'll not leave me alone."
+
+"Eh? How's that?"
+
+"Well, I have, as it happens, a little trouble with them on my own
+hook. A private matter antedating the building of the dam. They're
+after me. I had to put a piece of lead into a fellow who tried to kill
+me from the dark one night. I speak of it in case you should be told
+and wonder; otherwise I should not have mentioned the thing. I'm not
+popular in San Mateo, in consequence."
+
+"Ah, I had heard nothing of that. It interests me. You were not
+touched."
+
+"My hat, that was all."
+
+"Very interesting, very interesting, indeed," was Pollock's only
+comment. But if his tone was casual, his eyes were busy in sidelong
+study of the engineer, making a new appraisal and drawing fresh
+conclusions.
+
+Meanwhile several knots were being tied in the web of circumstance.
+Sorenson took his telephone and conversed briefly with Vorse, passing
+the information that he had just seen the three directors leaving for
+the east. So they were out of the way. In reply the saloon-keeper
+stated that he would start the whisky end of the game that evening.
+By the morrow, Sunday, when the camp was at rest, the workmen would
+all be "celebrating." Burkhardt had reported the last load of
+"southern cattle" shipped in and driven on the range the previous
+evening--a seemingly innocent statement that Sorenson understood
+perfectly. Up in the hills, safely hidden in the timber, lay the fifty
+men brought from Mexico to make the assault on the dam the next night,
+men whose instruments of destruction would be fire and dynamite.
+Twenty-four hours more would bring the moment of action.
+
+Ignorant of all this Ed Sorenson had been forming a little individual
+scheme that would promote his own affairs, chief of which was to win
+Janet Hosmer. Drinking heavily ever since his rebuff, he had sunk into
+a condition of evil determination and recklessness that made him fit
+for any desperate act. After much meditation fed by whisky, he had
+evolved a plan that would bring him success. Thereupon he had loaded
+his car with a quantity of selected stuff and made a mysterious
+journey at night.
+
+"She'll learn I meant business," was his frequent soliloquy.
+
+And while these strands were being knit into the skein Martinez was
+producing another. Quietly, carefully, persuasively, he had been
+pursuing his own particular course of eliciting history for use in his
+"Chronicle," as he named it,--and for another use concerning which he
+was as still as death.
+
+That he was successful in obtaining what he had been after was made
+known to Weir about dusk that evening while he was talking with
+Pollock in his office. But that he had not been so lucky in covering
+his tracks was likewise apparent.
+
+The telephone rang. Steele took down the receiver.
+
+"See Janet Hosmer at once," Felipe Martinez' terrified voice came over
+the wire. "She'll have it, the paper--the one you want. They've
+learned I got it; they're after me now. Hammering on the door. If you
+don't hurry----"
+
+His words ceased abruptly in an anguished quaver. At the same time
+Weir heard carried to him the sound of a crash as of a door smashed.
+Excusing himself hurriedly, Steele Weir seized his holster from a nail
+and buckled on the belt. Then snatching his hat, he ran outside the
+building to his car.
+
+"Now, who is he gunning for?" Pollock asked himself aloud, "I rather
+wish he had invited me along."
+
+But neither he nor Weir himself, nor any soul in San Mateo, knew that
+at last the furious torrent of events had burst upon the community.
+Weir sensed something. But Sorenson brooding on the morrow thought the
+moment had not yet come. His son was occupied with his own treacherous
+scheme. Even Vorse and Burkhardt smashing their way into Martinez'
+office saw nothing beyond the immediate necessity. Yet the flood was
+bearing down on all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+OLD SAUREZ' DEPOSITION
+
+
+In order to understand why Vorse and Burkhardt were attacking
+Martinez' office it is necessary to trace the lawyer's movements and
+the incidents which precipitated that act. Martinez had, as stated,
+not been idle. Following the clue obtained from the woman who had
+worked in the elder Weir's household, he visited the old Mexican named
+as having been used as roustabout by Vorse in early days. This was old
+Saurez, whom he knew. The wrinkled old fellow seldom came to town now,
+spending most of the time sitting against the sunny side of his son's
+house on Pina Creek, twenty miles south, where he lived.
+
+Martinez in the ten days that had elapsed since informing Weir he had
+learned of Saurez' possible knowledge of the past had proceeded to
+make himself agreeable to the gray-headed old man. He had explained
+his "history." He exercised all the arts of graciousness and flattery.
+Beginning at the present he worked back through the past to the
+killing of Jim Dent and the flight of Joseph Weir, extracting tales of
+early fights, raids, accidents, big storms, violent deaths and
+killings, making elaborate notes, winning the narrator's confidence
+and gradually drawing forth the facts he really sought.
+
+Out of all the rambling talk and vague accounts of the Dent and Weir
+affair Martinez was able to piece together the fragments in a clear
+statement. This was that Saurez had seen Weir and Dent in Vorse's
+saloon. The pair had gambled for a time with Vorse, Burkhardt (at that
+time sheriff), Sorenson and Judge Gordon. After losing for a time Weir
+refused to continue in the poker game, although he was drunk. Dent
+played on notwithstanding Weir's urgence to desist; he had already
+lost all his money and began staking his cattle and finally his ranch.
+At this stage Weir had gone to sleep at another table, with his head
+on his arms. Vorse had locked the front door to keep out visitors
+during the big game. But the back door remained open for air.
+
+Saurez had busied himself cleaning the bar. All at once he saw the
+players spring up in their game, Dent talking angrily about cheating,
+marked cards and so on. Then the guns came out when he pointed at a
+card that was marked--for it had been marked with pinpricks as Saurez
+saw later on examining the deck, which Dent had perceived in spite of
+the whisky in him. And Sorenson and Vorse had both shot him where he
+stood. Yes, shootings were not uncommon. Every one but he, Saurez, had
+likely forgotten all about the matter. That was long ago.
+
+Afterwards Vorse had sent the Mexican away for something or other,
+with an injunction to keep his mouth closed. As said, speaking of it
+now made no difference, though he expected Martinez to keep his
+promise to publish none of the stories while he was still alive; that
+was agreed. When the Mexican had left the saloon Weir was yet
+sleeping, having only raised his head at the pistol shots to stare
+drunkenly and then relapse. What occurred afterwards Saurez did not
+know. Weir left the country. Dent was buried, the story being told
+that he had committed suicide. Every one believed it: had he not lost
+his ranch at poker? That was the end of the business. Other affairs
+happened and it was forgotten.
+
+On this Saturday Martinez had persuaded Saurez to accompany him to San
+Mateo. It would be necessary to sign the stories, he explained
+lightly, to give them proper weight and in order that when the book
+was published after Saurez' death they would be seen to be true
+accounts, with Saurez' picture that a photographer would make
+appearing in the middle. He, Saurez, would be famous, and his sons and
+grandsons would have copies of the book in their houses to show
+visitors and the priest. Ah, it would be well to have the priest
+witness Saurez' signature, then sceptical people would know indeed
+that the stories were Saurez' own accounts. So on and so on.
+
+The matter required infinite precautions, patience, skill on the
+lawyer's part. He had prepared two or three dozen depositions of
+events, as a husk for the real kernel. With Saurez in his office at
+last he telephoned the priest to call at once and unostentatiously
+caught on the street four other Mexicans of the better class, bringing
+them in. When the priest arrived he closed the door and explained his
+desire they should act as witnesses to Saurez' statements. He had
+already solicited the _padre's_ advice as to the history; the others
+all had heard of it; he gave them a number of the most harmless
+depositions to read; and set Saurez to work making his mark on the
+rest of the papers. During the reading and the accompanying lively
+discussion of the witnesses, he had them pause to witness Saurez' mark
+with their own names in the places provided. About the tenth
+deposition when their attention was confused and flagging he slipped
+the account concerning Weir and Dent, a many-paged attestation, upon
+the table, so folded that nothing but the signing space was visible.
+It was the critical instant for Martinez; his thin body was more
+nervous than ever, his eyes brighter and more restless. But at last
+the ordeal was over.
+
+Saurez' heavy black cross was at the bottom of the important
+deposition, the priest and the other four men had appended their
+names, and all that remained to do was for Martinez to fill out the
+acknowledgment and affix his seal. He whisked the document behind his
+back and called attention to a humorous episode in a paper one of the
+men still held, starting a laugh. Then he suggested they rest and
+opened a bottle of wine, over which the others congratulated Saurez
+and Martinez and predicted a wonderful fame for the "Chronicle."
+Finally the lawyer perceived, as he said, that Saurez was weary.
+Anyway, it was supper-time. The remaining papers could be signed
+another day.
+
+The witnesses departed, much pleased with the affair.
+
+"Walk up and down outside for a little time while I straighten the
+sheets, then we'll go eat and afterwards I'll drive you home to bed,"
+the attorney said. "The fresh air will give you an appetite. Behold,
+you're already becoming a famous man! I shall preserve these documents
+safely as they are tremendously important to our town, our state, our
+country!" And a grandiloquent gesture accompanied the words. "Come
+back in a little while, my friend, then we'll see how much food you
+can hide away."
+
+Saurez much gratified at these words and at everything went out
+slowly, for he was troubled by rheumatism. The instant his back
+disappeared Martinez sprang to the table, swiftly filled out the
+acknowledgment of the old man's signature to the Weir document,
+clapped the page under the seal and pressed home the stamp. Then
+pushing the folded statement into an envelope and that into his
+pocket, he leaned back with a sigh of exhaustion. The thing was
+accomplished at last, but the strain had been great. Weir's command to
+secure evidence had been obeyed. Only the promise to await Saurez'
+death, troubled Martinez, and with a convenient sophistry he decided
+that an agreement not to print the narrative in a book did not extend
+to using it in court. Weir would be delighted--it was a famous coup.
+
+How long Martinez sat reveling in this well-earned satisfaction he was
+unaware, until with a start he glanced at his watch. Three-quarters of
+an hour had passed. He went out to look for Saurez. But he was not in
+sight and though several persons had seen him they could not say where
+he had gone. Martinez went again into his office. When another
+half-hour had drifted by he decided the old man had encountered
+friends and either caught a ride home or gone with one to supper. So
+Martinez proceeded to his own meal.
+
+Yet he was pervaded by an unaccountable uneasiness. The sun had set in
+a bank of clouds and night was not far off. He made another search for
+the old Mexican, inquiring here and there, until he was informed by
+one that he had seen Saurez in Vorse's saloon talking with Vorse and
+sipping a glass of brandy. That was half an hour before. A chill of
+fear spread over the lawyer's skin.
+
+Determined, however, to learn the worst, he stole to the saloon and
+peered over the slatted door. The Mexican bar-keeper was wiping a
+glass; Vorse was not in sight; and--ha! there was Saurez himself
+drowsing by a table. Martinez slipped in and made his way to the
+rear.
+
+"Come; time to go home," he said softly, giving the old Mexican's
+shoulder a shake. This did not arouse the sleeper, so he added force
+to his hand, at which the other sagged forward limply.
+
+Martinez jumped back. Next he stood quite still, staring. Then he
+approached and lifting the drooping head, gazed at the wrinkled face
+and glazed eyes.
+
+"Miguel, come here!" he exclaimed, anxiously. "Saurez is dead."
+
+"Dead!" The bar-keeper ran to the spot, eyes large with alarm and
+excitement. "Dios, I thought him asleep! See, there is the glass in
+which I gave him brandy at Senor Vorse's order. The old one said he
+had come in to pay a little visit to his old employer and have a chat.
+They talked for some time."
+
+"Was Vorse asking him questions?"
+
+"Yes. I think Saurez was telling him how he happened to be in town. I
+paid little attention to them, however. After a while I glanced up and
+saw Vorse standing by him. They were not talking. Then Vorse came away
+and said the old man had fallen asleep, and he went out to supper."
+
+Martinez again lifted the head and darted glances over the dead man's
+breast. There were no wounds, but on the shriveled brown throat he saw
+what might have been a thumb-mark. He could not be sure, yet that was
+his guess.
+
+"He was an old man," Miguel remarked.
+
+"Yes. You should notify his son and also the undertaker, so the body
+can be taken care of. I'll telephone the latter too when I reach my
+office."
+
+This Martinez did, informing Saurez's family that the old man had
+died while apparently asleep at Vorse's, and expressed his sympathy
+and sorrow.
+
+One feature of the case he instantly perceived; he was released from
+any obligation to keep silent regarding the old man's declaration.
+Fortunate was he to have obtained it before Vorse had got wind of his
+purpose. At the thought of Vorse he arose and locked both front and
+back doors of the building, pulled down the window shades and turned
+out the light.
+
+It was almost dark by now. In the darkness he felt safer. Any one
+passing would suppose him away. Perhaps he should spend the night
+elsewhere--at the dam, for instance. Again the same shudder shook his
+frame that he had experienced on seeing the mark on Saurez' throat.
+Vorse had killed the old Mexican, of that he was convinced. With his
+tongue made garrulous by brandy and by the presence of his old
+employer the old man had doubtless related everything that occurred
+between him and Martinez; and the vulture-like, bald-headed
+saloon-keeper, recognizing that he had been unconsciously betrayed had
+immediately acted to close this witness' lips forever against a second
+utterance.
+
+Martinez himself was in danger. The perspiration dampened his face as
+he realized that as far as he was concerned the die was cast. He must
+fling in his fortunes with Weir to the utmost. He would first stand in
+defense on his right as a lawyer to secure evidence for a client, but
+if this failed--and what rights would Vorse halt for?--he must depend
+upon the paper. Once they had that, they would speedily put him out of
+the way as they had done Saurez. But if they had it not, they would at
+least hesitate to wreak their vengeance until they could get it into
+their possession. He must place it in Weir's hands at once, then if
+questioned refuse to inform them of its whereabouts. Perhaps they
+would try to seize it some time this night. He stood up, lighted the
+lamp, saw that all was well in the office and took his hat.
+
+A peremptory knock sounded on the door of the rear room.
+
+"Open up there, Martinez," a voice commanded.
+
+He stole thither, listened.
+
+"Who is it?" he asked.
+
+"Never mind. Open this door or I'll pull it down," came in hoarse
+tones he recognized as Burkhardt's. The man, or men, outside had
+chosen the rear to force an entrance if necessary, where there would
+be no spectators. "Jerk it open quick," Burkhardt continued savagely.
+"We want you." Then again, "We knew you were there, though you kept
+the place dark. Move lively before I use this ax."
+
+Never did Martinez' mind work more rapidly. Likewise his eyes darted
+everywhere in search of the object he needed. Then he glided to a
+decrepit arm-chair and turning it over stuffed the document in a rent
+in its padded seat, out of sight underneath. Next he filled his
+pockets with other papers signed by Saurez. Last, he hastily tore open
+the little telephone book and ran a forefinger down the H's.
+
+"Doctor Hosmer's, hurry," he exclaimed. "Number F28."
+
+Blows were already sounding on the rear door, but the lock was strong
+and resisted. Of all the persons he knew Janet Hosmer was the only one
+he could trust to keep her word. And he dare not wait until Weir could
+come.
+
+"Is this you, Janet? Martinez talking," he said, when he heard her
+answer. "Listen. I'm at my office; men are trying to break in to get
+a paper valuable for Mr. Weir's defense. They must not get it. He's to
+be arrested and tried for murder of the man he killed. You and I know
+he's innocent. This is a life and death matter. The paper is hidden in
+the old chair. The men are breaking down the door. I'll get them away
+long enough for you to come and obtain it. Give it to Weir--at once,
+to-night, immediately. Promise me you will, promise! My own life
+probably hangs on it. Return to your house and stay for half an hour
+and if he hasn't arrived by that time, go to the dam. Thank you, thank
+you--from my heart! Start now."
+
+The words had tumbled out in an agitated stream, occupying but a few
+seconds. The panels were splintering in the door now, as the ax
+smashed a way through. Martinez had no need to look up Weir's number;
+and it was in a strain of terror and excitement that he waited for the
+connection.
+
+"See Janet Hosmer at once," he shot at the engineer, followed by the
+rest of the warning already quoted which had so electrifying an effect
+upon Steele Weir.
+
+But the words had broken off abruptly. For as the door crashed off its
+hinges Martinez dropped the telephone receiver and darted for the
+front entrance, shooting back the bolt and flinging it open. He almost
+plunged into Vorse who was on guard there.
+
+"Stand still," the man ordered. And Martinez kept the spot as if
+congealed, for in the saloon-keeper's hand was a revolver with an
+exceedingly large muzzle.
+
+Burkhardt burst in, ax still in hand, eyes bloodshot with rage. Vorse
+turned and closed the front door. Then he glanced over the lawyer's
+table and ran a hand into his inside coat pocket bulging with
+documents. He glanced through one or two.
+
+"Here's what we're after," said he. "We'll take him to my place where
+we can quietly settle the matter." His eyes rested on the Mexican with
+ominous meaning.
+
+"Come along, you snake," Burkhardt growled, seizing their prisoner's
+arm. "Out the back way--and keep your mouth shut. Don't try to make a
+break of any kind, if you know what's best for you."
+
+Martinez' yellow skin was almost white.
+
+"But, gentlemen, what does this all mean?" he began, endeavoring to
+pull back.
+
+"You'll learn soon enough."
+
+"Step right along," Vorse added. "Take him away, Burkhardt, then I'll
+blow out this light."
+
+With no further word Martinez accompanied his captors into the gloom
+of the night. They moved in silence through the dark space behind the
+row of store buildings. The lawyer felt that at least the way was
+clear for Janet Hosmer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE MASK DROPPED
+
+
+When Janet Hosmer, startled by Felipe Martinez' agitated appeal,
+turned from the telephone, her single thought was to carry out on the
+instant his fervid injunction. Something aimed at the engineer and the
+lawyer was in movement, a plot for the former's arrest and the
+destruction of evidence necessary to his defense, according to
+Martinez' quick hurried words; and the Mexican now sought her aid, as
+she was the only one within reach whom he could trust. That he must
+call to her showed the desperate nature of the exigency--and he had
+said lives were at stake!
+
+Haste was the imperative need. As her father was absent, she summoned
+the Mexican girl from the kitchen, for instinct advised the wisdom of
+having a companion on this errand; and the two of them, bare-headed
+and walking fast, set out for the house. Dusk was just thickening to
+night. No stars were visible. A warm moistness in the air forewarned
+of rain from the blanket of clouds that had spread at sunset along the
+peaks. Indeed, a few fine globules of water touched their faces as
+they came into the main street and hurried along.
+
+Neither girl had observed the automobile, unlighted and moving slowly,
+that approached the Hosmer house as they emerged. Apparently the
+driver perceiving them against the lamplight of the doorway and noting
+their departure thought better of bringing the car to a halt, for he
+kept the machine in motion and as quietly as possible trailed the pair
+by glimpses of their figures flitting before an occasional illuminated
+window. When Janet and her companion turned into the main street where
+the stores were lighted his task became easier.
+
+The street was peaceful. Janet saw no evidence of the violence or
+danger indicated by the Mexican lawyer's declaration, but she was too
+sensible to imagine on that account that peril did not exist. The town
+was not aware of what had occurred, that was all,--not yet. The chief
+actors in the conspiracy were still moving stealthily against their
+intended victims; they had pounced on Martinez and once they had
+seized the evidence they sought they would arrest Weir. Afterwards the
+people, as she guessed the matter, would be aroused to create a strong
+sentiment against the helpless men. It was an atrocious business.
+
+But as yet things were in a lull--and it was during this pause, brief,
+critical, that Martinez expected her to act. That much she had grasped
+from his hurried words. She reached his office and halted to listen.
+No gleam came from the building, nor from the low structure on either
+side, and across the way all was dark--dark as it had been that night
+when the assassin's shot had been fired at Steele Weir. Repressing a
+shudder, she bade the Mexican girl follow her, groped for the door
+knob, found it and pushed the door open.
+
+Martinez had spoken of men forcing an entrance, so it must have been
+at the rear. Inside all was pitchy black.
+
+"Juanita, you have a match in your pocket, haven't you?" she demanded,
+anxiously.
+
+"Yes, Miss Janet."
+
+"Strike it, then."
+
+In the pent stillness of the dark office Janet could hear the Mexican
+girl fumbling in the pocket of her gingham dress. There came a
+scratching sound and a tiny flame.
+
+"Be careful of it," she warned. "Now give it to me. And close the
+door."
+
+Janet lighted the smoky lamp resting on the table, next took it up in
+her hand. A few papers had fallen upon the floor. The room was still
+strong with fresh cigarette smoke. Martinez could not have been gone
+more than five minutes.
+
+And in another five minutes' time too Martinez' captors might be back
+again!
+
+Holding the lamp aloft she peered about for an old chair, her heart
+beating rapidly, her lips compressed. But all the chairs, the three or
+four in the room, were old. Her eyes encountered the Mexican girl
+staring open-mouthed and scared.
+
+"Take the lamp and keep by me," Janet ordered. "Don't upset it. What
+are you shaking for, you ninny?"
+
+"I can't help it--and you're so white," the other whimpered.
+
+"Never you mind me; do as I say."
+
+Janet swiftly went from one chair to another, turning them about,
+upside down, all ways. No paper was hidden in or under any one of
+them, or indeed was there space capable of holding a document. At last
+she gave up, gazing about in dismay, dread, tears of vexation and
+anxiety almost rising to her lids. Only one conclusion was to be
+drawn: the men who had seized the lawyer had found the paper in spite
+of his precaution.
+
+She examined the chairs a second time feverishly, for time was
+flying.
+
+"I can't find it, Juanita, the paper he telephoned me to come and
+get," she exclaimed.
+
+"Maybe it's in there where he sleeps." And the Mexican girl pointed at
+the inner door standing barely ajar.
+
+"We'll see."
+
+Janet led the way within. There was Martinez' living- and sleeping-room.
+The furnishings comprised a bed, an old scratched bureau, a stand
+with wash-bowl, a red and black Navajo blanket on the floor, a trunk,
+a stool and a dilapidated stuffed chair--just such a chair as a paper
+could be hidden in. That into this room the lawyer's assailants had
+burst their way was apparent from the splintered door hanging from one
+hinge at the rear.
+
+Beckoning Juanita to bring the lamp, Janet ran to the arm-chair.
+
+"Ah, here it is!" she cried, when she had turned the piece of
+furniture over and inserted her hand in the rent. "It wasn't found,
+after all! Come away now."
+
+Relief and exultation replaced her depression of the moment before.
+She had succeeded; she had helped the lawyer outwit his enemies; she
+must now return home to await Steele Weir's arrival, or if he failed
+in that then go to the dam.
+
+In the outer room she bade the Mexican girl place the lamp on the
+table once more and blow it out. This was done. They groped forward to
+the door.
+
+"Follow me out quietly, Juanita," Janet said. "Only Mr. Martinez knows
+we've been here, and Mr. Weir, the engineer. See, I'm trusting you.
+This is a very important paper for Mr. Weir, and other men are trying
+to keep it out of his hands. So you must say nothing to any one about
+our being here."
+
+Juanita assented in a whisper. Janet thereupon opened the door and
+the pair stepped forth. A faint hissing sound directly before them
+startled both. But the American girl immediately recognized it for
+what it was, the faint murmur of an automobile engine.
+
+She quietly closed the office door, caught her companion's arm to lead
+her away.
+
+"Don't talk," she whispered in her ear.
+
+At the same instant the beam of an electric hand torch flashed in
+their eyes, blinding them. Then as quickly the light was extinguished
+and a heavy blanket was flung over Janet's head. Her cry was choked
+off, but not that of the Mexican girl who had been struck by the
+corner of the cloth and who heard her mistress struggling in the arms
+of the man who had seized her. The sound of the struggle moved towards
+the car and then Juanita, paralyzed by fright, was stunned by a sudden
+roar of the exhaust, a grind of gears, and a rush in the darkness. The
+automobile had gone, carrying off Janet Hosmer a muffled prisoner.
+Juanita regaining use of her legs fled for Doctor Hosmer's unmindful
+of the mist against her face.
+
+Janet's sensation had been that of strangulation and terror. In the
+thick folds of the blanket, held and lifted by strong arms, all she
+could offer in the way of resistance was futile kicks. She had been
+jammed into the automobile seat and firmly kept there by an embrace
+while the car was being started, which did not relax as the machine
+gathered speed. For some minutes this lasted, while she strained
+painfully for breath, and then she perceived the car was stopping.
+
+Her terror increased. What now would happen? These men after
+overpowering Felipe Martinez had abducted her in their determination
+to possess themselves of the paper. Finding it in her hand--for she
+still clutched it--what then? Would they kill her?
+
+The car was now completely at rest. The arm was withdrawn from about
+her; hands gripped her hands and forced them together; a handkerchief
+was tightly knotted about her wrists. Afterwards her ankles were bound
+by a strap. Then the blanket was lifted from her form and head and she
+gasped in again pure night air.
+
+"Here's a gag," said the man at her side. "Keep quiet and I'll not use
+it; if you open your mouth to make a sound, I shall. It's up to you."
+And with the hoarse threat she caught the heavy sickening odor of
+whiskey on the speaker's breath.
+
+"You, Ed Sorenson! You've dared to do this!" she exclaimed, fear
+vanishing in anger.
+
+"Yes, sweetheart," came with a mocking accent.
+
+"Untie me this minute and let me out!"
+
+"Oh, no. You've got the wrong line on this little game. We're going
+for a ride, just you and me, as lovers should."
+
+Janet began to think fast.
+
+"How did you know I was in Mr. Martinez' office?" she demanded.
+
+"Because I saw you go in, little one. I was just pulling up at your
+door to coax you out when I saw you and the Mexican wench appear. So I
+followed along. Saved me the bother of telling you your father had
+been hurt in an accident. He's chasing off somewhere thirty miles from
+town on a 'false alarm' call to attend a dying man. Sorry I had to use
+the blanket; sorry I have to keep your naughty little hands and feet
+tied up. But it's the only way. After we're married, you'll forget all
+about it in loving me."
+
+So this was the face of the matter. Not the paper she gripped, but
+she herself was his object. His abduction of her had nothing to do
+with Martinez' affair; he knew nothing of the larger plot; and for
+that reason she experienced a degree of relief.
+
+"I'll never marry you, be certain of that," said she, recurring to his
+statement. "If anything had been needed to settle that point, what you
+have done now would be enough. You shall pay for this atrocious
+treatment. Untie my hands."
+
+"Oh, no. We're starting on."
+
+"Your father as well as mine shall know of this."
+
+"I think not, dearie. We're going up into the hills where I've a nice
+little cabin fixed up. And we'll stay there awhile. And then when we
+come back, you'll not do any talking. On the contrary, you'll be
+anxious to marry me--you'll be begging me to marry you. Of course!
+People know we're engaged, and they'll know you've been away with me
+for two or three days. Do you think they'll listen to any story about
+my carrying you off against your will? They'll wink when they hear it.
+Yes, you'll be ready to marry me all right, all right, when we come
+back to San Mateo."
+
+Janet's blood ran cold at this heartless, black plan to ensnare her
+into marriage.
+
+"Ed, you would never do a thing like that," she pleaded. "You're just
+trying to scare me with a joke. Be a good fellow and untie my hands
+and take me home."
+
+"No joke about this; straight business. I told you you should marry
+me----"
+
+"You're drunk or mad!" she burst out, terrified.
+
+"Neither; perfectly calm. But I'm not the fellow to be tossed over at
+a whim. I'm holding you to your word, that's all. You'll change your
+mind back as it was by to-morrow; you'll be crazy to have me as a
+husband then. I won't have to tie your hands and feet to keep you at
+my side when we come riding home to go to the minister's. Now we've
+had our little talk and understand each other; and it's beginning to
+drizzle. Time to start for our little cabin. The less fuss you make,
+the pleasanter it will be for both of us."
+
+He set the gears and the car started forward once more. A sensation of
+being under the paws of a beast, odious and fetid, savage and
+pitiless, overwhelmed her. That this was no trick of a moment but a
+calculated scheme to abase and possess her she now realized with a
+sort of dull horror. And on top of all he was, despite his denial,
+partly drunk.
+
+Through the terror of her situation two thoughts now continued to
+course like fiery threads--one a hope, one a purpose. The former
+rested on Juanita, whom in his inflamed ferocity of intention, the man
+seemed to have forgotten--on Juanita and Steele Weir, "Cold Steel"
+Weir; and this failing, there remained the latter, a set idea to kill
+herself before this brute at her side worked his will. Somehow she
+could and would kill herself. Somehow she would find the means to free
+her hands and the instrument to pierce her heart.
+
+Sorenson had switched on his lights. He drove the car through the damp
+darkness at headlong speed along the trail that leaped from the gloom
+to meet them and vanished behind. At the end of a quarter of an hour
+he swung into a canyon; and Janet perceived they were ascending Terry
+Creek. He stopped the car anew.
+
+"I'll just take no chances with you," he exclaimed. "We have to pass
+your friends, the Johnsons, you know. Had to take my stuff up here in
+the middle of the night--up one night and back the next--and mighty
+still too, so that they wouldn't suspicion I was fixing a little
+bower for you."
+
+He bound a cloth over her mouth and again flung the blanket over her
+head. Janet struggled fiercely for a moment, but finally sank back
+choking and half in a faint. She was barely conscious of the car's
+climbing again. Though when passing the ranch house the man drove with
+every care for silence, she was not aware of the fact. Her breath,
+mind, soul, were stifled. She seemed transfixed in a hideous
+nightmare.
+
+At length her lips and head were released. But her hands and feet were
+numb. Still feeling as if she were in some dreadful dream she saw the
+beam of the headlights picking out the winding trail, flashing on
+trees by the wayside, shining on wet rocks, heard the chatter of the
+creek over stones and the labor of the engine.
+
+The road was less plain, a mere track now, and steeper. They were
+climbing, climbing up the mountain side, up into the heavier timber,
+up into one of the "parks" among the peaks. Johnson's ranch was miles
+behind and far below. Occasionally billows of fog swathed them in wet
+folds that sent a chill to Janet's bones.
+
+Sorenson held his watch down to the driver's light.
+
+"Ten o'clock; we're making good time. Must give the engine a
+drink--and take one myself."
+
+He descended to the creek with a bucket, bringing back water to fill
+the steaming radiator. Afterwards, standing in the light of the car's
+lamps, he tilted a flask to his lips and drank deep.
+
+"Not far now; three or four miles. But it's slow going. Have to make
+it on 'low'," said he, swinging himself up into his place.
+
+Janet held her face turned away. She was thinking of Juanita and
+Steele Weir. Had the girl gone home again? Or, terrified, had she run
+to her own home and said nothing? Had the engineer come and waited and
+learning nothing at last returned to the dam? Despair filled her
+breast. Even should the Mexican girl have apprised him of the
+kidnapping, how should he know where to follow? And in the solitude of
+the wet dark mountains all about her hope died.
+
+She began desperately to tug against the handkerchief binding her
+wrists.
+
+Suddenly the going became easier and she felt rather than saw that the
+trees had thinned. A flash of the car lamps at a curve in the trail
+showed a great glistening wall of rock towering overhead, then this
+was passed and the way appeared to lead into a grassy open space. A
+dark shape beside the road loomed into view--a cabin by a clump of
+pine trees. Sorenson brought the car to a stop a few yards from the
+house.
+
+"Here at last," he announced, springing down.
+
+He unstrapped her feet, bade her get out.
+
+"I make a last appeal to your decency and manhood--if you have
+either," she said, sitting motionless.
+
+"Rot," he answered. Half dragging her, half lifting her, he removed
+her from the machine. Slipping a hand within her arm he led her inside
+the log house.
+
+"Sit there," he ordered.
+
+Janet dropped upon the seat, a rude plank bench against the wall
+farthest from the door. Indeed, fatigue and the numbness of her limbs
+rendered her incapable of standing.
+
+"When I've touched off this fire and set out some grub, then I'll
+untie your hands," he continued. "A snug little cabin, eh? Just the
+place for us, what? See all the stuff I've brought up here to make you
+warm and happy and comfortable. Regular nest. Lot of work on my part,
+I want to say."
+
+He touched a match to the wood already laid in the fireplace, flung
+off his rain coat and stood to warm his hands at the blaze. Lighting a
+cigarette, he began placing from a box of supplies plates and food on
+the table in the middle of the room, but paused to reproduce his
+flask. With a sardonic grin he lifted the bottle, bowed to Janet and
+drank the liquor neat. When he had finished, he turned the bottle
+upside down to show it was empty, then tossed it into a corner. Again
+he fixed his drunken, mocking smile upon her.
+
+"Can't preach to me about booze here, can you, honey?" he said. "Ought
+to take a swallow yourself; warm you up. I have plenty. Guess I better
+untie your hands now." He advanced towards her, swaying slightly.
+"You're going to love me from this time on, ain't you, girlie?" He
+untied the handkerchief and dropped it at his feet. "No nonsense now
+about trying to get away; I'll rope you for good if you try to start
+anything. Hello, what's that?"
+
+"No; give it to me!" she cried, in alarm as he pulled the folded
+sheets of paper from her stiffened fingers.
+
+"Something I ought to see, maybe." Then he added harshly, "Sit down,
+if you don't care to have me teach you a thing or two. I'm master
+here."
+
+He stepped to the table and drawing a box beside him settled upon it,
+pulled the candle-stick nearer and began to read the document. Janet
+glanced swiftly about the room for a weapon. Escape past him she could
+not, for by a single spring he could bar the way; but could she lay
+hand on a stick of wood she might fight her way out. None was nearer
+than the fire, and again he could interpose.
+
+He read on and on, with a darkening brow and an evil glint showing in
+his eyes. Page by page he perused Saurez' deposition until he reached
+the end. Then he got to his feet, shaking the paper at her head.
+
+"You were in on this," he snarled. "This is what you were in Martinez'
+office to get. You're wise to this cursed scheme to help Weir make my
+father and Vorse and Burkhardt and Judge Gordon out a gang of
+swindlers. So they trimmed _his_ father of something--at least I fancy
+they did, and I hope to God they did, the coward! And you were in with
+them! You're not quite the little white angel you'd have people
+believe, are you? Not quite so innocent and simple as you've made me
+think, anyway. Well, I'll square all that. That slippery snake,
+Martinez, I'll twist his neck the minute I get back to town. I'll bet
+a thousand it was framed up to use this when Weir was arrested--but
+he'll never use it now!"
+
+He glared at the girl with a face distorted by rage.
+
+"We'll just burn it here and now," he continued. "Then we'll be sure
+it won't be used."
+
+Janet gripped her hands tightly, while her lips opened to utter a wild
+protest at this desecration. What the document contained she did not
+yet know, except that it was evidence that fixed upon the men named
+guilt for some past deed in which Weir had suffered and which would
+bring them to account. But something more than protest was needed, she
+saw in a flash, to deflect the man from his purpose and save the
+sheets from the flame.
+
+She shut her lips for an instant to choke the cry, then said with an
+assumption of unconcern:
+
+"Go ahead. I didn't want your father to see it, in any case."
+
+The paper had almost reached the candle, but the hand that held it
+paused. Sorenson stared at it, and from it to her. At last a malignant
+curl of his lips uncovered his teeth.
+
+"Oh, you didn't want him to see it," he sneered. "If that's so, I'll
+just save it. He'll be interested in reading what your friends have
+prepared to destroy his good name and reputation."
+
+He folded the document and slipped it into his inner coat pocket. Then
+he walked towards her. At the look on his face Janet sprang to her
+feet.
+
+"I've changed my mind about the marriage matter, just as you did," he
+said. "I agree with you now; there won't be any marriage. But I'll
+have your arms about my neck just the same."
+
+And he seized her wrist.
+
+"Let me go, let----" The words ceased on her lips.
+
+Her eyes were riveted on the cabin door; she scarcely felt the man's
+loathsome touch on her arm. How had the door come unlatched? And was
+it only the wind that slowly moved it open?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+WEIR TAKES UP THE HUNT
+
+
+On leaving the construction camp Steele Weir had whirled away down the
+river road for San Mateo with a feeling both of satisfaction and of
+enmity--satisfaction at Martinez' success in at last having secured
+the evidence ardently desired, as betokened by his words; enmity at
+whoever was laying violent hands on the lawyer. Unfortunately when yet
+half a mile from town his car suffered one of the common misadventures
+of automobiles:--ping-g-g! sang a tire in a shrill dying whine.
+
+Weir did not stop to change and inflate the tube, but pushed ahead on
+his mission though at slackened speed. He brought his car to rest
+before Doctor Hosmer's house. The windows were lighted, yet at his
+knock there was no response; so brushing conventionalities aside he
+entered and called Janet's name. Only echoes and a following silence
+greeted his call.
+
+Doubtful whether to remain awaiting the girl's return or go at once to
+Martinez' office in the hope of still finding her, he finally chose
+the latter course leaving his car where it stood and proceeding on
+foot, as a result of which he passed in the darkness Juanita hurrying
+home in a fright. A bad choice and valuable time lost, he afterwards
+discovered. At Martinez' office he stepped inside, called the lawyer
+by name, called Janet Hosmer, stood for a little while in the black
+room harkening and thinking, then went forth into the street.
+
+This time chance fell his way. He had but come out when he heard
+footsteps and two men in low-toned talk as they approached; and he
+withdrew further into the concealing darkness of the street. The new
+visitors, striking matches at the entrance, walked inside. The men
+were Vorse and Burkhardt.
+
+"If you had been here, we could have nailed him at once as soon as I
+had Saurez' story," the former said. "Martinez had half an hour and
+more to get the thing into somebody else's hands."
+
+"Well, I was looking after those men up in the hills," was the growled
+answer. "Had to feed 'em and have 'em ready for to-morrow night. If we
+don't find the document here, we'll screw its hiding-place out of that
+dirty greaser if we have to use a cord on his head Indian-fashion.
+Anyway it ought to be about this office. Martinez didn't know you had
+learned about it from Saurez. He'd never let go a paper like that
+until he had to."
+
+"I think you're right there," Vorse said. "He'd want to sell it for
+all it was worth. Better shut and lock the door while we're searching.
+Don't care to have any of his friends sticking in their heads while
+we're here."
+
+Burkhardt, who had lighted the lamp, now closed the door, cutting off
+so far as Steele Weir was concerned both a view of the men and their
+conversation. However he had learned if not enough, at least
+considerable. They had not yet gained possession of the paper. They
+knew nothing of Janet's part in the affair. They had so far not
+succeeded in unlocking Martinez' lips, but undoubtedly they would be
+able to wring from the lawyer when they went about it the real truth
+regarding the document. Very likely Martinez had anticipated that, had
+known his powers were such as not to be greatly able to resist
+physical torture and had planned to get the evidence into the
+engineer's hands before he should be subjected to pains of the flesh.
+That would be remembered to his credit, along with all the rest. Where
+Martinez was being held prisoner was the additional information Weir
+should have liked to glean before the door was shut.
+
+Postponing for the time the hunt along this line, he returned to the
+Hosmer dwelling. In answer to his knock and call on this visit the
+trembling Juanita appeared, immediately pouring forth a recital of the
+happenings at the office as affecting her mistress.
+
+"You've told no one else?" he demanded.
+
+"No, senor. She said I was to say nothing of her being there for the
+paper, and I was waiting for her father to come. But she informed me
+Mr. Martinez and you knew she was there, so I've told you."
+
+"And you saw nothing of this man who cast the blanket over her head
+and seized her?"
+
+"It was dark; we had just come out of the office. But--but the car
+sounded like Ed Sorenson's. I've heard it start from here many times
+with the same loud noise. They had quarreled, Senor Weir, and were no
+longer engaged."
+
+"I know. Which way did he drive off?"
+
+"East, down the lower end of the street."
+
+"Bring a lamp out to my car, so I can fix my tire."
+
+With the girl holding the light by his side the engineer worked with
+concentrated energy in stripping the wheel, in inserting a new tube,
+replacing the tire and pumping it up. The thin drizzle glistened on
+his face, but for all that it was none the less determined, stern.
+
+"You need not be afraid for yourself; no one but us knows you were
+there," he said to her, climbing into his machine. "Nor for Miss
+Janet, either. I'll bring her home safely. When Dr. Hosmer returns,
+tell him everything. Also ask him to await our coming. Be sure and say
+to him that I'll bring her home unharmed and that I advise silence in
+regard to the matter until I have talked with him. You will remain
+quiet, of course. This isn't a thing to be gossiped about."
+
+"No, senor."
+
+Away the automobile shot under the impulsion of the gas. Minutes,
+golden minutes, had been wasted in taking up the pursuit because of
+his going to Martinez' office and because of the flat tire. Sorenson
+now would be miles away with his prisoner.
+
+Sweeping out of town with the car's headlights illuminating the road,
+Steele Weir blessed the drizzling mist that dampened the dust so as to
+leave a tire's imprint. Almost at once he picked up the track, for not
+more than twenty or twenty-five minutes had elapsed since Sorenson's
+flight and not even a horseman had since been over the way.
+
+Though he knew it not, the interval of time had been reduced by the
+stop made by the first machine, a mile or so out of town, when the
+abductor removed the blanket from Janet Hosmer's head to announce his
+evil scheme. From the main road leading to Bowenville Weir saw the
+car's trail turn aside into a mesa track pointing obliquely for Terry
+Creek canyon; and he suspected that Sorenson was making a long drive
+northward, skirting the mountain range and working away from the
+railroad-tapped region.
+
+Once he thought he caught a flash of light far ahead of him, but knew
+this was an illusion. Through this rainy darkness no car's beam,
+however powerful, would show half a mile. The mist beat against his
+face in a steady stream as he rushed forward in the night, his eyes
+immovable on the wet twin tire-marks stamped on the road, his iron
+grip on the wheel, his ears filled with the steady hum of the engine.
+If Sorenson had driven fast, Steele Weir drove faster.
+
+At Terry Creek he plunged down the bank, across the water and up on
+the other side without a change of gears, rocking and lurching. Once
+on the smooth trail again the car seemed to stretch itself like a
+greyhound for the race northward. But on a sudden he brought the
+automobile to an abrupt halt. The surface of the road was undisturbed;
+nothing had passed here.
+
+Swinging back again on the way he had come, Weir recrossed the creek
+and slowly retraced his course. Then with an exclamation of
+satisfaction he picked up the track where it turned up the canyon
+trail. But why was the man going to the Johnson ranch? Mystified by
+this baffling procedure on Sorenson's part, he nevertheless headed up
+the stream with no lessening of his purpose to overtake the other.
+
+At the ranch house, whose kitchen window was lighted, he stopped and
+leaped out. Johnson and Mary both answered his thumping knock.
+
+"Is Janet Hosmer here?" he questioned, while his eyes darted about the
+kitchen. Then he made his own reply, "I see she's not. Ed Sorenson
+kidnapped her to-night and drove to this canyon. Did you hear a car?"
+
+Mary faced her father.
+
+"You remember I thought I heard one!" she cried. "But the sound was so
+low I wasn't sure, and when I went to the window I saw nothing. I
+didn't hear it again. Father said it was just my imagination."
+
+"Where does this road lead?"
+
+"Up into the timber and to a 'park.' Used to be an old wood road.
+Sheepmen sometimes use it to take their wagons up above; sometimes
+cattle outfits too while on round-ups."
+
+"Could an auto go ahead on it?"
+
+"Yes, I guess so. By hard driving."
+
+"Then he's up there."
+
+Weir ran back to his car, jumped in.
+
+"Let me go with you," Johnson shouted after him.
+
+"No, I can handle the fellow," the engineer answered. And again his
+machine started on. "How long ago was it that you heard him, Mary?"
+was his parting question.
+
+"'Bout fifteen minutes ago," she cried.
+
+Fifteen minutes! But the girl's reckoning might be vague, and
+"fifteen" minutes be half an hour. At any rate, with the road
+ascending among the peaks Sorenson's speed would be greatly
+diminished. The incline would be against him, the uneven twisting
+rain-washed trail would require careful driving, the rain would hamper
+his sight. Yet the fellow he pursued could not be more than three or
+four miles ahead at most.
+
+On and on Weir pressed. The mist thickened; black wet tree trunks
+loomed before him like ghosts and sank out of view again; the road
+wound along the stream among rocks and bushes and over hillocks with
+all the difficult sinuosity of a serpent's track; in his ears
+persisted the chuckling talk of the creek, flowing in darkness except
+when lighted by his car's lamps as the machine plunged through a ford,
+as became more and more frequent with the ascent and the narrowing of
+the canyon.
+
+Five miles, ten miles, fifteen miles he must have come since leaving
+the ranch house. His car now was high in the mountain range, running
+on low gear, the engine working hard in the thin air and against the
+steep grade. He was not making more than five miles an hour, he
+judged, at this moment. The radiator was boiling and steaming like a
+cauldron. But he might be sure that if his travel was slow, Sorenson's
+was no better; the road was the same for the pursued as for the
+pursuer.
+
+At the end of another half hour he came around a ledge of rock, where
+the creek flowed some fifty feet below and the granite wall allowed
+just room to pass in a hair-pin turn. There a light gleamed before him
+like a beacon, a dim gleam of a window. It was perhaps a hundred yards
+distant. It marked the end of the trail, the end of the search.
+
+Here was Janet Hosmer!
+
+And he had come in time. They could not have been here long, for
+Sorenson's start had not been sufficient for that; the scoundrel had
+not yet recovered his breath from his hard drive, so to speak. He
+probably would imagine himself safe and so be in no haste to
+consummate his vile plan of enjoying his helpless victim.
+
+Rage that until now had been lying cold and implacable in Steele
+Weir's breast began to flame in his veins and brain. He drove his car
+past the rock and off the trail upon an open grassy space, very
+carefully, very quietly. Next he stopped the engine and put out the
+lights, then he got out, felt his gun in its holster and gazed ahead
+for an instant.
+
+A form had passed and repassed before the window--Sorenson's figure,
+of course. Brute, coward, degenerate he was, and to be dealt with as
+such. Not only as such, indeed, but as a wretch who had dared to touch
+Janet Hosmer against her will, to drag her from her home to this
+lonely spot by violence for his own bestial purposes.
+
+The blood seemed like to burst Steele Weir's heart. This sweet,
+honest, kind-souled, noble girl! Janet Hosmer, so bright-eyed and
+pure! She, who had suffered this man's hate to save Martinez'
+document, who had dared peril to help him, Weir! All the hunger of
+heart of years, and all the stifled affection, now went out to her. He
+loved her; the veil was rent from his mind and he realized the fact
+indisputably--he loved Janet Hosmer. And the great creature of an Ed
+Sorenson had dared to seize her with brutal hands!
+
+Weir broke into a run. By instinct he kept the trail, though once or
+twice stumbling and once barely missing a collision with a tree. When
+he reached the cabin, he dropped to a walk and crept to the window,
+which was without glass or frame, open to the night. Peering in he
+perceived Sorenson at the table reading a document, and as he watched
+he had no need to be told this was the paper that so vitally concerned
+himself.
+
+At last Sorenson got to his feet, shaking his hand at Janet Hosmer who
+sat against the cabin wall and beginning to speak. Weir listened for a
+little. Then he stole along the log house to find the door.
+
+At last his finger touched the latch. He lifted it soundlessly, as
+silently pushed the door ajar until there was space for him to slip
+in. This he did. His mouth was shut hard, his eyes watchful, his right
+hand was closed about the butt of his revolver still resting in the
+holster.
+
+Over Sorenson's shoulder he saw Janet Hosmer's face, pale and drawn
+but with a sudden joy flaming there. If ever gratitude were written on
+human countenance, it was on hers. Gratitude--and more! Something that
+sent Steele Weir's blood rushing anew through his body, with hope,
+with a song, with he knew not what.
+
+Janet suddenly jerked herself free and stepped back, her head held
+high and proud.
+
+"You'll never touch me again, you coward. Look behind you," she
+exclaimed.
+
+Involuntarily Sorenson turned head on shoulder. The frown still
+darkened his liquor-flushed face and the sneer yet twisted his lips so
+that his mustache was drawn back from his teeth. Thus he remained as
+if changed to stone.
+
+What he saw was the man he most dreaded, with a shadow of a smile on
+his lips, his figure motionless, his hand ready, like an avenging
+Nemesis from out of the night. A perceptible shudder shook the fellow.
+Weir it was--"Cold Steel," whose counter-stroke against one man
+already had been swift and deadly, whom nothing checked or turned or
+terrified, who now for a second time was plucking away the fruit of
+Sorenson's efforts, who probably on this occasion would shoot him
+outright.
+
+For a moment Steele Weir regarded him in silence. But at last he
+spoke:
+
+"Stand away from that lady, you skunk!"
+
+Sorenson moved hastily aside.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+EARTH'S RETRIBUTION
+
+
+Steele Weir crossed the cabin to Janet's side.
+
+"You are unhurt?" he asked, his eyes scanning her face anxiously.
+
+"Yes. And, oh, how glad I am you came!" she cried, low. "I knew you
+would not fail me if you but learned of my plight; but it's wonderful
+you should be here so soon. I prayed every minute of my ride that
+Juanita would find and tell you."
+
+"I couldn't come half as fast as I wished." His smile assured and
+cheered her. Then as his glance fell on her wrists, still red and
+creased from being bound, he exclaimed, "What's this? Let me see." And
+he caught and lifted her hands to look.
+
+"He had you tied?" Weir's gaze moved away to Sorenson.
+
+"Yes. Hands and feet."
+
+"All the way? All the long ride?"
+
+"Yes--look out!"
+
+Janet's words, half a gasp, half a shriek, gave warning of Sorenson's
+movement, though none was needed. While apparently neglecting to watch
+the other, Weir had kept the man sharp in the corner of his eye. The
+motion with which his hand darted to his hip and up again was a single
+lightning-like sweep; and his weapon covered his enemy before the
+latter's hand so much as got his revolver in grasp.
+
+"Drop it; drop it on the floor!" the engineer ordered. The gun
+clattered on the rough-hewn logs. "Now put your hands up and turn your
+back this way." Sorenson obeyed, not without his eyes speaking the
+disappointed wrath and hatred his tongue dared not utter. "I should
+have allowed you to make a full draw and then killed you," Steele Weir
+went on. "That would have been the simplest way to settle your case.
+Only I don't like to kill bunglers, even when they deserve it."
+
+He re-sheathed his own gun and strode forward, picking up the one on
+the floor--a black, ugly-looking automatic. This he dropped into a
+coat pocket.
+
+"Now face about, you cur," he commanded. "I want a good look at a
+man--no, I'll not call you a man--at a low-lived imitation of a man
+who is such a sneaking, dirty beast that all he can do is to trap and
+tie up a helpless girl. I don't know yet just what I shall do with
+you, but I know what I ought to do--I ought to choke the miserable
+life out of you! You're not fit to live. You soil the earth and
+pollute the air. But you're of the same treacherous, underhanded,
+scoundrelly breed as your father, same yellow flesh and blood, same
+crooked mind and heart, same sort of poisonous snake, and since you
+get it all from him I suppose it can't be helped. Nor changed, except
+by killing and burying you. One thing is sure, when I'm done you won't
+be trying any more deals like this. Bah, you slimy reptile, you belong
+in a cess-pool!"
+
+Under Steele Weir's biting speech Sorenson's face went red and pale by
+turns. His lips twitched and worked, moving his mustache in little
+angry lifts, while he breathed with short spasmodic intakes.
+
+"First, you're after Mexican girls," Weir went on mercilessly. "Then
+Mary Johnson, whom I pulled out of your vile fingers. And now it's--"
+The engineer's fist arose suddenly above the other's head. "Why, I
+ought to drop you dead in your tracks for so much as looking at Janet
+Hosmer! Why don't you fight? Why don't you give me a chance, you
+cowardly girl-robber? Haven't you a spark of--well, you haven't, I
+see. I'll just tie you up and later figure out some way to make you
+suffer for this night's work." And with a gesture of disgust Weir
+turned away.
+
+It was the moment Sorenson had been waiting for. As the engineer's
+back came about, exposed in one instant of carelessness, the man
+struck Weir full force on the neck, sending him staggering. Then
+Sorenson leaped for the doorway.
+
+Janet screamed. Weir recovered himself and whirled around, whipping
+forth his revolver and firing two shots. But the bullets only buried
+themselves in the door slammed shut after the escaping prisoner.
+
+"I myself ought to be shot for this," Steele snapped out.
+
+He ran across the cabin, flung the door open, sprang out. The
+uselessness of seeking his enemy in the black wet gloom was only too
+evident, but he would not give up. Gun in hand, he stood listening for
+sound of fleeing footsteps.
+
+A light hand gripped his arm. Janet had followed him out, was at his
+side. Barely audible he heard her quick, excited breathing.
+
+"Must you shoot him?" she whispered.
+
+"Why spare him for more deviltry? But I'll not have the chance now."
+
+"I can't bear to think of even his blood being on our hands. Let him
+go," Janet said.
+
+"He's gone without our permission, I'd say."
+
+"Isn't it just as well? I'm not harmed, and he'll never dare show his
+face in San Mateo again," she said. "He'll have to stay away; he'll
+leave for good."
+
+"Not until I see him first. I want that paper."
+
+"Oh, the paper, I forgot it! And it's in his pocket," she cried, in
+despair.
+
+"Like the fool I was, I forgot it for the moment too," Steele said
+bitterly. "When I could have had it at once I must go off ranting
+about his meanness. It was thought of what he had done to you that
+made me overlook the paper; that set me boiling. Lost my head."
+
+Janet's answer was almost sufficient recompense for even such a
+serious deprivation as that of the document.
+
+"I'll never forget that you were angry in my behalf," she said,
+softly. "But perhaps you can gain possession of the paper yet."
+
+Before he could make a reply the sound of a motor engine startled
+them. Sorenson was in his car, not far off. Weir immediately plunged
+forward through the darkness in the direction of the noise, uttering a
+shout for the man to stop or be shot. But after the taste of liberty
+that he already had had Sorenson was prepared to take further chances;
+the engine's roar burst into full volume and the car leaped ahead,
+while its driver sent back a derisive curse to the cabin.
+
+Weir fired again, fired two or three times at the sound. Perhaps
+Sorenson was crouching safely out of range; at any rate, the bullets
+did not reach him, for the automobile plunged away. Steele slowly went
+back to the girl.
+
+"How can he see without lights?" she questioned.
+
+"He can't see, but he'd rather risk not seeing the road than drawing
+my fire. There's a bad place there at the rock; he'd better turn on
+his lamps if he wants to round that."
+
+Sensing the danger that threatened Sorenson, both remained unmoving,
+trying to penetrate the darkness, harkening to the automobile's
+retreating murmur. A curiosity, a sort of detached suspense, rooted
+them to the spot.
+
+"Ah, he's snapped them on!" Janet said, almost with relief.
+
+The powerful beam of the headlights had suddenly blazed forth. Either
+feeling that he was safe from Weir's gun or realizing that he was on
+the verge of a graver danger, Sorenson had chosen to make the light.
+He was going at headlong speed; even where they watched, Steele and
+Janet perceived that,--and only his fear of the peril behind which
+made him heedless of the difficulties in front could account for that
+reckless pace.
+
+The light leaped out into the night. Something else too seemed to
+spring forth within the circle of the glow, dark, sudden, imminent,
+rushing at the machine. A frantic jerk this way and that of the beam
+showed the driver's mad effort to avoid the towering wall of granite.
+Then a scream rang back to the man and girl before the cabin. Followed
+instantly a crash, an extinguishment of the light, darkness, silence,
+and finally a thin quivering flame at the base of the ledge, delicate
+and blue, like a dancing chimera.
+
+Janet's hand reached out and closed in Steele Weir's, and he covered
+it with his other hand.
+
+"Oh, how terrible!" she gasped. "Did you see? The rock seemed to smite
+him!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"He must be dead."
+
+"You remain here and I'll go find out."
+
+He led her into the cabin and to a stool by the table, where resting
+her elbows on the board she pressed her hands over her eyes as if to
+blot out the sight she had just witnessed. After all she had suffered,
+the climax of this dreadful spectacle left her unnerved, weak,
+shuddering.
+
+"Don't stay long," she whispered. "Come back as quick as you can. This
+cabin, this whole spot in the mountains, is awful. I can almost feel
+him hovering over me."
+
+"You mustn't permit such thoughts." He gave her shoulder an
+encouraging pat. "It will take but a few minutes to see if he's still
+alive and then we'll start home. You've been the bravest girl going
+and will continue to be, I know. Everything is over; nothing can
+happen to you now."
+
+Weir went out. He perceived that the wrecked car was fully afire by
+this time, its flames illuminating the granite ledge and the ground
+about. Evidently the machine's fuel tank had been smashed under the
+impact and the gasoline had escaped, preventing an explosion but
+fiercely feeding the blaze. He ran towards the place.
+
+At first he did not find Sorenson, so that he supposed him buried
+beneath the wreckage, but presently he discovered his crumpled form
+lying jammed between the base of the ledge and a boulder. Weir lifted
+the limp figure from its resting place and bore it to open ground,
+where he made an examination of the still form. Clearly Sorenson had
+been pitched free of the car and crushed against the rock wall. His
+cap was missing; his coat was ripped up the back and a part of it gone
+as if caught and held by some obstruction in the car when he had been
+shot forth; blood and a great bruise marked one cheek; and the way his
+legs dragged when he was lifted up indicated some serious injury to
+those members. But the man still breathed.
+
+"Miracles haven't ceased," Weir muttered, when he had made sure of the
+fact. "But his chance is slim at best."
+
+It would be false to say that the engineer felt compassion at the
+other's sudden catastrophe; he experienced none. On the contrary he
+had a sense of justice fittingly executed, as if, escaping bullets and
+man's blows, Sorenson had been felled by a more certain power, by the
+inevitable consequences of his own deeds and sins, by a wall of evil
+he himself had raised as much as by a wall of stone.
+
+He searched the man's breast pocket, then hunted for the missing
+document among the stones and bushes. At last he gave up for the time
+further seeking, with a conviction that the vital paper was gone for
+good, destroyed in the fire of the burning car. But for his own
+over-confidence, his belief he had Sorenson a safe prisoner back there
+in the cabin, the sheets might be secure in his pocket. Well, it was
+too late now.
+
+He again lifted the unconscious man in his arms and returned to the
+log house. Inside he laid him on the rude bed which Sorenson himself
+had spread with sheets and blankets.
+
+"He's alive?" Janet asked, awed.
+
+"Alive, but badly hurt."
+
+"You'll leave him here?"
+
+"Yes, while I take you away. We could do nothing for him in any case;
+his injuries are grave and need a doctor's help. The best service we
+can perform in his behalf is to start your father or some other
+physician here as quickly as possible. He may live or he may die; that
+isn't in our hands. He's unconscious and not suffering, and probably
+will not feel pain for some hours if he does live, so we can go
+without feeling that we're robbing him of any of his chances of
+recovery. Your conscience may rest quite easy on that point. Come,
+we'll start at once. The quicker we reach your father, the quicker he
+will arrive here."
+
+When they were in his car he wrapped a robe about her against the
+sharp chill.
+
+"I am cold; my teeth are chattering," she said.
+
+"You've been under a great strain. Just lie back and rest and think of
+something else than what has happened, if you can," he urged.
+
+"I'll try to."
+
+The lamps blazed out at his touch of the switch and the car began to
+move. She closed her eyes. She did not wish to see the scene of the
+smash, with the leaping fire and the horrible pile of crushed metal.
+Indeed, she drew the robe before her face, where she kept it for some
+time.
+
+"Are we past the place?" she asked, finally.
+
+"A long way past."
+
+"Thank heaven! Nothing shall ever drag me up this road again!"
+
+"It will not take us long to reach Johnson's and be off this trail
+altogether, for it's down-hill going all the way."
+
+"You said nothing about the paper? Did you get it?"
+
+"No; it wasn't on him. I'll return for another look, but it fell in
+the fire, I think, and burned."
+
+"Do you know what was in it, Mr. Weir?"
+
+"No. But I can guess."
+
+"I know a little of its contents, from what he said before you
+entered. It was a statement, something about his father and others
+doing dishonest acts, I think. He didn't seem to be quite clear what
+it was about either, but he spoke of your father and declared he
+hoped the others had swindled him, which he inferred had happened. I
+didn't know your father ever had been in this country. That's the
+reason you hate those men, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Vorse and Mr.
+Burkhardt; because of some injury they worked your father."
+
+"That's the reason. And that too is why they're trying to get rid of
+me one way or another. But they didn't hire the Mexican to attempt to
+shoot me; Ed Sorenson employed him. Martinez, when you told me the
+man's name, telegraphed around the country from Bowenville till he got
+track of the fellow. He also secured evidence that a white man
+resembling Ed Sorenson had been seen talking with him at the place he
+came from. So we can draw our conclusions."
+
+"Then he hired the man to assassinate you!"
+
+"Looks like it. Because I took Mary Johnson away from him, and from
+fear. He was afraid you might learn of the matter, I suppose, and
+decided to get rid of me. He's a coward at heart, but none the less a
+criminal by instinct, so he hired another to do what he dared not
+attempt himself. A crook like his father, but with less nerve."
+
+Janet was silent while the car wound its way down the creek road,
+through the misty darkness and among the invisible peaks. The full
+danger that she had escaped was but now making itself clear to her
+mind.
+
+"If he would go so far as to try to murder you," she faltered, "I
+surely could have expected no pity from him."
+
+"Now listen to me," he said. "I'm going to give you a little scolding:
+you must forget all this business; it just makes you fearful and
+unhappy. The past is over, and he's out of your life for good. Look at
+it that way. Consider the thing as a bad dream, done with and no more
+important. That's 'the right view to take'"--he paused, then added
+softly--"Janet."
+
+"How strong-souled you are!" she whispered.
+
+Strong, in truth, he seemed. Ignoring danger he had come swift on
+Sorenson's track and rescued her, saved her, kept her clean from her
+assailant's infamous brutishness. The one was a knave and a beast; but
+he, Steele Weir, was a man, clear to see, quick to act, hard towards
+enemies, gentle to friends. Every particle a man--sure of himself, and
+fearless, and true-hearted, and firm of soul.
+
+She pressed her hands tight against her breast. He was a man one could
+love and honor. "Cold Steel" Weir they called him--and, she divined,
+his love if ever given would be as lasting as hoops of steel.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+IN THE NIGHT WATCHES
+
+
+A light still burned in the Johnson ranch house, late as was the hour,
+when the car swung round a copse of aspens and brought it in view.
+Johnson himself came forth at sound of the automobile, with a sleepy
+Mary following.
+
+"I wouldn't go to bed, of course, knowing you were to come back," said
+he. But his true reason appeared in his added words, "I was just about
+ready to saddle a horse and head up there myself. Mighty glad to see
+you safe back, Miss Hosmer. Mary has had some coffee on the fire ever
+since Weir went along, knowing you'd be cold and worn out."
+
+"Just the thing!" Steele exclaimed. "We're both chilled. Come, Janet."
+And he stepped from the machine.
+
+Without demur the girl placed her hand in the one he offered and
+descended stiffly. Mary ran back into the house to attend to the
+coffee-pot and the visitors presently were seated at the kitchen table
+at places already laid, with cups of steaming strong coffee and plates
+of food before them.
+
+Janet contented herself with the hot, reviving drink, but Weir ate
+heartily as well. Coming and going, forty miles of driving a rough
+mountain road had given him a laborer's appetite.
+
+"It's late, one o'clock," Mary said to Janet. "Why don't you stay
+with us the rest of the night? I wish you would."
+
+Janet put up an arm and drew down the face of the girl at her side and
+kissed her.
+
+"You're a good friend, Mary, to be so thoughtful," she answered. "But
+father will be terribly anxious every minute I'm away. I must reach
+home as quickly as possible to ease his mind."
+
+Of Sorenson nothing had been spoken, though a repressed curiosity on
+the part of the ranchman and his daughter had been evident from the
+instant of Weir's and Janet's return.
+
+At this point Johnson jerked his head in the direction of the creek.
+
+"What did you do to him, Weir?" he growled.
+
+"Not as much as I intended at first. But he made up for it himself.
+Ran his car against that granite ledge before the cabin while trying
+to get away, and smashed himself up badly. I carried him into the hut
+and left him there; he was alive when we drove off, but he may be dead
+by now. Bad eggs like him are hard to kill, however. I'll start a
+doctor up there when I arrive in San Mateo; probably one from
+Bowenville."
+
+"Father won't attend him now, so long as there's another physician who
+can, I know," Janet stated.
+
+"I should say not!" Johnson asseverated. "If that young hound Sorenson
+had his deserts, we'd just leave him there and forget all about him."
+
+"That's where our civilized notions handicap us," Steele Weir said,
+with a slight smile. "But at that, if he were the only person
+concerned, I'd do no more than inform a doctor where he was and what
+had happened to him, and wash my hands of the affair. There are other
+things, though, to consider. Janet's position, primarily. Her case is
+similar to that of Mary's awhile ago, and we must prevent talk."
+
+"Yes, of course."
+
+"The worst of the doings of a scoundrel like him that involve innocent
+people is the talk. There are always some people low enough to ascribe
+evil to the girl as well as the man in such a circumstance as this. I
+propose to see that Janet doesn't suffer that. We avoided it in Mary's
+case and we'll do so in this, though the situation is more difficult.
+I've been thinking the matter over on the way down and have a plan
+that will work out, I believe, but it requires your help, Johnson."
+
+"I reckon you know you'll not have to ask me twice for anything," the
+rancher remarked.
+
+"And we may have to shuffle the facts a bit."
+
+"All right. I'll do all the lying necessary and never bat an eye."
+
+"It won't require much decorating, the story. But you will have to go
+up and get him, starting at once." Then he concluded, "I hate to have
+to ask you to make that drive late at night and in the darkness."
+
+"Never mind that. Glad to do it, if that's what you want."
+
+"Take your wagon and fill the box with hay and bring him down. By
+coming back slowly he won't be jarred, and he has to be brought out
+anyway. If he's dead, well, bring his body just the same. A doctor
+should be easily at your house by the time you arrive; and your story
+is that a sheepherder found him lying by his wrecked car, carried him
+into the cabin and then came down and told you of the accident, on
+which you went and brought him in, not knowing, of course, in the dark
+who he was or what he was doing up there or how the smash-up had
+occurred. You might suggest that he was camping there by himself to
+fish, and stop at that."
+
+Johnson nodded.
+
+"I'll say just enough and no more," he remarked.
+
+"If you start at once, you'll be there by daylight if not before. That
+will get you back here by nine or ten o'clock. I don't want him taken
+to San Mateo; that would stir up a swarm of inquiries and might even
+send some of the curious up to the spot. Let the trail get cold, so to
+speak. People aren't half as curious about a thing three or four days
+after it happens as at the moment."
+
+"I've noticed that myself."
+
+"And another thing, I don't wish his father to learn of the matter
+just yet. Under other circumstances he should be the first to know,
+but I want the news kept from him for a special reason. Besides, it
+would be better if he found out about it from others and through
+roundabout channels. His son up there I don't see doing any talking
+himself for some time if he does live. When he is able to talk, I
+believe he'll decide to keep his mouth shut or just accept the
+explanation given that he was fishing or something of that kind. When
+the doctor has looked him over, either he or you will carry him to
+Bowenville. If we could ship him at once to Gaston, where there's some
+sort of a hospital, I suppose, or even to Santa Fe, that would be the
+thing. He'd be out of the way; there'd be no talk; there would be no
+explanations to make except to the doctor."
+
+"Every doctor round these parts probably knows him," Johnson said,
+"and so would insist on taking him home."
+
+"There's a new one at Bowenville, father says," Janet put in. "A young
+man, just starting practice. He hasn't been there but a few weeks and
+may not know Ed."
+
+"He's the man for us!" Weir declared. "We'll send for him. Now we must
+be going."
+
+Steele arose from the table and stretched his shoulders.
+
+"And I'll hitch up my team immediately," the rancher said.
+
+"I'll go with you," Mary exclaimed.
+
+"Tut, tut, girl."
+
+"I can help you, and I want to do something to help Mr. Weir and Janet
+Hosmer, even if it's only a little bit. I'm strong, I don't care if it
+is late--anyway, I'd just have nightmares if I stayed here alone,--and
+I can help you with him. I'm going," she ended, obstinately.
+
+Johnson eyed her for a moment, then yielded.
+
+"Nothing to be afraid of now," he rejoined, "but if you would rather
+go along with your dad, all right."
+
+Five minutes later Steele and Janet were emerging from the canyon upon
+the mesa. The drizzling rain still continued and the unseen mist beat
+cool upon their cheeks as the car swung away from Terry Creek for
+town. Except for the stream of light projected before them, they were
+engulfed in Stygian darkness; and save for the slithering sound of the
+tires on the wet road, they moved in profound night silence.
+
+"That business is arranged," Steele said, after a time. "But we still
+have the results of the attack on Martinez to deal with. I don't know
+how long he'll hold out against the men who dragged him off, probably
+not long. I suppose Burkhardt and perhaps Vorse took him, and they'll
+stop at nothing to get the paper they're after. How they learned of
+it, I don't know, but find out about it they did; and they'll force
+the information they want from Martinez if they have to resort to hot
+irons. That's the kind of men they are. The lawyer will stick up to a
+certain point--then he'll tell. That brings you into their way."
+
+"You also," Janet answered.
+
+"I've been there for some time," was his grim response. "But in your
+case it's different. I'm worried, I tell you frankly."
+
+"Do you think they would dare try to intimidate me in my own home and
+with father to protect me?" she cried, incredulously.
+
+"Not there, perhaps. But if they could inveigle you away, yes. They
+wouldn't use hot irons in your case, of course, and I can't guess just
+what they would do, but they would do--something. Those men think I
+have the 'goods' on them; I repeat, they would stop at nothing to save
+themselves if worst came to worst; their fear will make them fiends.
+One couldn't suppose they would dare seize Martinez in all defiance of
+law--but they did. One can't believe they would dream of torturing him
+for information--but I haven't a doubt that's what they've done. So
+you see why I'm worried about you. If anything happened, if any harm
+came to you now, Janet--"
+
+His voice was unsteady as he spoke her name and ceased abruptly. She
+thrilled to this betrayal of his feeling.
+
+"I wish I could just stick at your side, then I know I should be
+safe," she said.
+
+And for answer she felt his hand grope and press her own for an
+instant.
+
+"You can count on me being somewhere around."
+
+"I know that," she said, confidently.
+
+San Mateo was asleep, buried in gloom when they entered it, and quiet
+except for the barking of a dog or two that their passage stirred to
+activity. But in Dr. Hosmer's cottage a light was burning and as the
+car came to a stop at its gate the door was flung open and the doctor
+himself appeared framed in the doorway. He ran hastily down the walk
+to meet them.
+
+"Janet!" he cried. And the girl flung her arms about him.
+
+"Juanita told you? Oh, it was dreadful! But Mr. Weir has brought me
+home safe."
+
+Dr. Hosmer too agitated to speak reached out and grasped the
+engineer's hand, pressing it fervently.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At about that moment three men sat in the rear of Vorse's saloon. The
+shades were drawn and the front part of the long room was dark. Only a
+dull light burned where they sat. They were talking in low tones, with
+long pauses, with worried but determined, savage faces--Vorse,
+Burkhardt, Sorenson.
+
+"Where the devil is she, that's what I want to know!" Burkhardt
+growled. "I've been over twice and looked through a window. Doc was
+there."
+
+"She's in bed and asleep, probably," Sorenson said.
+
+"I don't believe it. The old man would be in the sheets himself if
+that were the case. Didn't I call up twice by 'phone too? She was out,
+they said."
+
+"Couldn't do much with her father there, anyway. We've got to get the
+paper by soft talk," Vorse commented. "I still half believe Martinez
+was lying when he said it had been in that old chair. She couldn't
+have got to the office and away in the hour or two before he told
+without some one seeing her, and no one did so far as we can learn. We
+locked the door too the second time we went back and it hasn't been
+opened since; and we were there ten minutes after our first visit when
+we learned the papers weren't among those in his pocket. I think he's
+got it cached away somewhere still."
+
+"Then we'll give him another dose of our medicine."
+
+"If I know anything about men, he told the truth," Sorenson said.
+
+"Well, if the girl has it, we've got to get it from her if I have to
+wring her neck to do it." It was Burkhardt's inflamed utterance.
+
+A pause followed.
+
+"Sorenson, your boy is engaged to her," Vorse stated.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then it's up to him to get it first thing in the morning. Maybe it
+goes against the grain to let him know about this business of the
+past, but it ain't going to knock him over; he's no fool, he's a wise
+bird, he understands that a good many things are done in business that
+aren't advertised. He knows we weren't missionaries in the old days.
+And she'll hand it over for him when she might not for any one else."
+
+"That's right, Sorenson," Burkhardt affirmed, his scowling face
+visibly clearing.
+
+"Ed went away somewhere this evening, that's the only drawback to your
+scheme. Said something about Bowenville and catching the night train
+to Santa Fe, and that he might be gone maybe a couple of days and
+maybe a week."
+
+"Hell!" Burkhardt exploded, in consternation.
+
+Vorse however remained cool.
+
+"Then you must start telegrams to head him off, start them the instant
+you get home. Telephone to Bowenville the message you want sent and
+have the operator dispatch it to all trains going both ways since
+early evening, in order to make sure. If you can reach him within two
+or three hours, wherever he is, he can hop off, catch a train back
+and be here by to-morrow evening. Make your message urgent. And
+meanwhile we'll do what we can to get hold of that paper. At any rate
+we can keep her from seeing Weir. If we have to watch her we'll do it;
+and if we have to stop her from going to the dam we'll do that someway
+too. You might invite her over to-morrow to spend the day at your
+house."
+
+"Do you think she'll be likely to come if she reads that document?"
+the banker inquired coldly.
+
+"Why not? Tell her right off the bat that the thing is a lie and a
+forgery and that you want to explain about how it was made. She might
+fall for that and carry the document to you. She's always had a good
+opinion of you, hasn't she?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then why should she change at a mere story."
+
+"You're right," Sorenson exclaimed with sudden energy. "The matter
+described happened so long ago that she won't probably attach as much
+importance to it as we've imagined she would. I'll ask her to bring it
+to me to see--and that will be all that's necessary, once it's in my
+fingers."
+
+"And what about him?" Burkhardt asked, striking the floor with his
+heel.
+
+"Just leave him there for the present. To-morrow we'll have another
+talk with him," the cattleman stated. "Better offer him a couple of
+thousand to go to another state; he'll grab at the chance, I fancy.
+Money heals most wounds. But, Vorse, keep your cellar locked and the
+bartender away from it. We can start Martinez away sometime
+to-morrow."
+
+"Don't know about that. To-morrow night will be our busy night," the
+ex-sheriff said.
+
+"We might let Gordon handle him," Vorse suggested.
+
+"I thought perhaps you intended to keep the Judge in ignorance of this
+Martinez matter. He seems to be getting sort of feeble."
+
+"He's not too feeble to take his share of the unpleasant jobs along
+with the rest of us," Vorse answered, unfeelingly. "I shall have him
+in here first thing in the morning and tell him what's happened and
+what we've done and what he has to do."
+
+"Sure," said Burkhardt.
+
+"Well, that's agreeable to me," Sorenson stated, looking at his watch
+and rising: "Time we were turning in, if there's nothing more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the dam camp Meyers, the assistant chief engineer, and Atkinson,
+the superintendent, were still awake, smoking and talking in the
+office.
+
+"I smelt enough booze on those fellows who came stringing in here to
+fill the reservoir," the latter was saying. "Some one's feeding it to
+them."
+
+"Nobody drunk, though."
+
+"No. But who's giving it to them and why? I asked one fellow and he
+said he'd been to a birthday party, and wouldn't tell where. They were
+all feeling pretty lush, even if they weren't soused. And to-morrow's
+Sunday!"
+
+"They'll all be idle, you mean?"
+
+"Sure. If there's more liquor, they'll be after it. All day to drink
+in means a big celebration. The whiskey is sent up from town, of
+course, and I reckon sent just at this time to get us all in bad while
+Mr. Pollock's here."
+
+"We'll look up the bootlegging nest to-morrow," Meyers said, with
+finality.
+
+"What can we do if we do locate it? They're not selling the stuff, I
+judge, but giving it away. That clears their skirts and forces us to
+deal with the men themselves if there's any dealing done. Probably
+they hope to start a big row among us that way."
+
+"We'll await Weir's advice."
+
+"Well, I've waited all I'm going to to-night. Seems to me for a
+steady, quiet, self-respecting, dignified, unhooked, unmarried,
+unmortgaged, unromantic man he's skylarking and gallivanting around
+pretty late."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the rocky creek road the ranchman and his daughter Mary were
+driving up among the trees on their way to the cabin, a lantern
+swinging from the end of the wagon tongue, the horses straining
+against the grade. On Johnson's beard the moisture formed beads which
+from time to time he brushed away. From the trees collected drops of
+water fell on their hands and knees. All about as they proceeded the
+bushes and rocks appeared in shadowy outline, to disappear in the
+night once more, yielding to others.
+
+"Isn't this cabin where we're going the one we drove to three years
+ago when you were hunting some cattle?" Mary asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I never thought then that Ed Sorenson would be lying up there all
+mashed to pieces," she said, with awed voice.
+
+"I guess he didn't either," was the dry response.
+
+"He ought to be ready to stop chasing girls after this," she
+declared.
+
+"He won't if he can walk; his kind never does quit."
+
+"Then his kind ought to be locked up somewhere like mad dogs. In a
+'sylum, maybe."
+
+"I guess you're right on that, Mary. They're dangerous."
+
+"Funny we didn't know he'd been up there, going past our house. He
+must have been there first before taking Janet."
+
+"Sneaked up in the night, probably. He'd have to have grub and so on
+if he expected to stay even a day or two. Crooks always look after
+their bellies, be sure."
+
+"I reckon Janet Hosmer will like Mr. Weir a whole lot now, don't
+you?"
+
+"She ought to, if she doesn't."
+
+A long silence followed while Mary apparently pursued the line of
+thought opened up by this speculation.
+
+"If she has the good sense I think she has," the rancher stated at
+length, for his mind at least had been following out the subject,
+"she'll not only like him a whole lot, but she'll lead him to the
+altar and put her brand on him."
+
+He spoke to unhearing ears. For just then Mary sagged against him, her
+head sank on his shoulder. He put an arm around her form and let her
+sleep, thus roughly expressing his tenderness and love. Weir had not
+only rescued Janet Hosmer from the clutches of the man now lying
+injured; he also had once saved Johnson's own child Mary from the
+scoundrel's grasp.
+
+Weir might ask anything of him, even to the laying down of his life in
+his defense.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+A QUEER PAPER
+
+
+When Mary Johnson next opened her eyes it was at a little shake by her
+father. She had slept heavily despite the jolting of the wagon; and
+now looked about drowsy-eyed and at a loss to know where she was. Her
+clothes and face were damp, her hands cold. She wasn't sure yet but
+this was still a dream--the team and wagon, the cabin before which
+they stood, the trees and rocks scattered about the grassy park-like
+basin, and the soaring mountain peaks on every hand that were just
+touched by the first early sun-rays.
+
+The rain and mists were gone, leaving the dawn clear, gray, sharp,
+scented with the pungent odor of balsam and pine. From a distance came
+the subdued murmur of Terry Creek, which here high in the mountain
+range had its source in springs and brooks flowing from pools. All was
+peaceful.
+
+Mary's look came to rest on the cabin. Over it reared the great pines
+that grew in a clump behind. Its door was ajar, but the log house for
+any sign of occupancy might have been untenanted. Immediately the girl
+glanced back along the road they had come and beheld there in the dim
+shadow at the foot of the lofty granite ledge a shapeless black lump.
+She shivered.
+
+"You awake?" her father asked.
+
+"Yes." And she began to climb down over the wagon wheel.
+
+"Wait here. I'll go in first. He might be----" But though the rancher
+did not complete his sentence the words spoken carried their own grave
+implication.
+
+He came out again presently. Mary gazed at his face to read from it
+the news it might carry, and it was with a breath of relief she
+perceived that the injured man was still alive, for her father himself
+appeared easier of mind. Neither would by choice have a dead man for a
+passenger on the ride home, even Ed Sorenson.
+
+"He's breathing, but is still unconscious," Johnson declared. "Must
+have got a crack in the head along with the rest. Face is covered with
+dried blood. From the stuff inside the house he must have been fixing
+for quite a stay--blankets, grub, whiskey, candles, and so on. We'll
+eat a bite ourselves before starting back; get the pail out of the
+wagon and bring some water and I'll make a pot of coffee. There's a
+fireplace and wood inside."
+
+"I'll get the water, but I'll stay out while you're boiling it," the
+girl said. "I don't want to see him until I have to go in and help
+carry him out."
+
+She went off for the water, on her return setting the bucket by the
+door. Then curious to see the place of Ed Sorenson's accident, she
+wandered back along the trail to the ledge. There she beheld the
+crumpled, fire-blackened remains of his automobile in a heap near the
+stone wall. Apparently the car had first struck a small boulder, which
+had flung Sorenson out on one side and forward, then leaping this hit
+the ledge full force.
+
+At the instant he must have been off the road and headed wrong, she
+guessed. The rapid daybreak of the mountains had by now dispersed the
+last dimness and indeed the crags far above were bright with sunshine.
+She could plainly see the ruin that the machine was, fire having
+completed what the smash had left undamaged, and the part of the rock
+that was smoked by the flames, and was able to smell yet the reek of
+burnt oil, varnish and rubber.
+
+With the eyes of the curious she stared at the wreck, at the ledge, at
+the ground, absorbed with simple speculations and filled with a sense
+of awe. The machine must have made a big sound when it struck. It was
+a lot of money gone quickly, that car. Not enough of it left to make
+it worth hauling away. And so on and so on.
+
+Then all at once her wandering regard detected something white in a
+crevice between two stones. At first she thought it the gleam of a
+bird or a chipmunk. The thing was some yards off from the spot where
+she stood, but the flutter persisted. So she approached it to learn
+its nature.
+
+The thing was a paper. One corner of a sheet stuck up from the crack
+in which it lay and was waved gently by the rising dawn breeze. She
+drew it out and perceived it was fastened to other sheets that were
+folded, all damp from the rain though not soaked because the cranny
+had admitted little moisture. It was the last sheet which had come
+partly unfolded, apparently as it fell, so was left in sight or she
+would never have noticed the white flutter. This last sheet was blank,
+but the others, neatly folded though wrinkled, were covered with
+writing she saw on spreading them open. However, she could not read
+the pages; the matter was typewritten, but it was not English. Some
+foreign language, maybe.
+
+If Mary could not read the document, she could at least logically
+deduce how it had happened to be in its present resting-place. The
+paper was here because the wrecked automobile was here, so when Ed
+Sorenson was pitched out the folded sheets of paper must have been
+propelled from his pocket by the same force and at the same instant.
+It hit a rock after flying through the air and slid down into the
+crack.
+
+Perhaps it was only a business document; it looked like one. Again
+perhaps it told something about his crooked private affairs--about his
+schemes for ruining girls, possibly. Very likely, indeed. That seemed
+to be about all he engaged himself at. When she found some one who
+could read it, she would know for certain. She would just take it
+along with her and say nothing about her find until she could have
+somebody who understood the writing read it over for her.
+
+In places the typing had stained from dampness, but not seriously. She
+could dry out the pages over the kitchen stove at home. So folding the
+sheets again, she doubled the document, tied it in her handkerchief
+and placed it inside her waist, where it could not be lost. Perhaps
+there were other papers. But a further search disclosed none,
+whereupon as her father was shouting to her from the cabin to come she
+retraced her steps.
+
+When they had drunk their coffee and eaten some of Sorenson's food,
+making their meal before the door, they carried the unconscious man
+out to the wagon, bearing him in the blanket on which he lay. Other
+blankets they spread over him. Johnson also placed at the prostrate
+figure's feet the rest of the eatables in the cabin.
+
+"No need to leave this stuff to the pack-rats," said he. "We'll just
+consider it a little pay towards fetching him out."
+
+"He ought to be willing to pay you a whole lot more when he learns the
+trouble you've been to."
+
+"I wouldn't touch his money if he offered me a thousand dollars; I'd
+throw it back in his face. I'm not doing this for pay, or friendship,
+or charity; I'm doing it to help Janet Hosmer and because Weir asked
+me. If the Sorensons had all the money on earth, they couldn't give me
+a penny as between man and man. If they owed it to me, that would be
+another matter. They'd pay it if I had to stick a gun down their
+throats to make them come across."
+
+"We don't need any of their money, I guess," Mary said.
+
+"Nope. We're poor but we're straight. So we're better off than they
+are--richer, if we just look at it that way."
+
+Once during the long drive, as they neared the ranch house, a low moan
+came from the form on the straw in the wagonbed. Both Johnson and Mary
+looked around quickly, then regarded each other.
+
+"Beginning to suffer," said the parent. "It's a wonder there's a whole
+bone in his body. I hope the doctor is down below waiting for us."
+
+This proved to be the case when about ten o'clock Johnson drove his
+worn-out team into his dooryard. Weir's car was there and with it the
+engineer himself and a young medical practitioner. Climbing up into
+the wagon, the doctor made a hasty examination of the patient.
+
+"Hips broken. Slight concussion of the skull, but not dangerous," was
+his opinion. "I shall not be able to tell the full seriousness of his
+injuries until I have him stripped on a table or bed. Probably there
+are other broken bones,--ribs or something. We must get him down to
+Bowenville as quickly as possible, for his is a bad case. But I guess
+if he has pulled through so far he'll recover. If you'll drive your
+wagon down to the mouth of the canyon, we'll transfer him to my car,
+which is double seated, and then you can accompany me to town; Mr.
+Weir says you are willing to go along and help. I'll send you back
+from Bowenville."
+
+"Yes, I'll go along. Mary will ride down with us and bring back the
+team and wagon."
+
+"Strange what he was doing up there in the mountains with an
+automobile alone," the doctor remarked.
+
+"Oh, he might have wanted a day's fishing, or was taking a look at
+cattle or range, something like that," Johnson stated.
+
+"Mr. Weir said a sheepherder found him. Wasn't that it, sir?"
+
+The engineer turned to the rancher.
+
+"Wasn't that the way of it?"
+
+"Yes. Showed up here late and said he had found the man and carried
+him into the cabin. Said his wrecked car was still burning, so the
+accident couldn't have occurred very long previous. Said we ought to
+bring him down immediately as he was badly hurt. So I sent word to Dr.
+Hosmer, and my girl and I set off at once, the sheepherder going back
+with us. Said he just happened to be looking for a stray sheep or he
+would never have come on this man, as he was heading his band for a
+pass to get over on the west side of the range. S'pose we'll never see
+him again."
+
+"Do you know who this man is?"
+
+"His face seems sort of familiar," Johnson replied, scratching his
+chin. "But he looks like a city chap, by his clothes, what's left of
+them. No papers or anything on him to tell his name. Might have come
+over the pass himself from the other side; men go everywhere in these
+hill-climbing cars they make nowadays."
+
+"Somebody will be seeking information soon and then we'll know," the
+physician said. "He'll probably give his name and address himself when
+he comes round. But if I'm not mistaken he'll need another sort of
+car if he does any moving about when he's out of bed."
+
+"Why's that?"
+
+"Speaking off-hand, I'll say he'll never walk again. That's the way
+broken hips usually turn out; and if his spine is injured, as I
+suspect, he will probably be paralyzed from the waist down. Hard luck
+for a young man like him. He'll wish at times he was killed
+outright."
+
+Unobserved by the speaker Weir and Johnson exchanged a meaningful
+look. In the minds of both moved the same thought, that Providence had
+punished Ed Sorenson according to his sins and more adequately than
+could man. Dreadful years were before him. He would, in truth, wish a
+thousand times that he had died at the foot of the ledge.
+
+Half an hour later the visitors had departed, the rancher going with
+the physician and his charge to Bowenville, Weir returning to San
+Mateo. Mary had driven the wagon up from the mouth of the canyon,
+unharnessed the horses, watered and fed them, and now was seated in
+the kitchen staring absently out the open door. After so much
+excitement she felt distrait, depressed.
+
+Finally she produced and dried the papers over the stove, in which she
+had re-kindled a fire.
+
+"Funny how anybody should want to talk or write anything but English,"
+she remarked to herself, gazing at the pages.
+
+She attempted to extract some sense from the strange words. At the
+bottom of the last sheet she deciphered, Felipe Martinez' name under
+the notorial acknowledgment. All at once in scanning certain lines she
+came on names that were plain enough--Sorenson, Vorse, Burkhardt,
+Gordon. The last must mean Judge Gordon. Then presently she found two
+more names that excited her curiosity--James Dent's and Joseph
+Weir's.
+
+Springing to her feet she stared at the sheets in her hand. For some
+reason or other her blood was beating with an odd sensation of
+impending discovery.
+
+"Why--why----" she stammered. "Why, those are the men father told
+about being shot, and him looking on as a boy! This is a queer paper!
+I wish he were here."
+
+Possession of it gave her a feeling of uneasiness. Her father had
+warned her never to speak of the matter to any one--and here was
+something about it in writing, or so she guessed. He had said Sorenson
+and the other men would kill him at once if they learned he had been a
+witness. That meant they would kill her too if they found out that she
+not only knew about their crime but had this paper as well.
+
+She looked about. Finally she retied the document in a tea-towel,
+tight and secure, and buried it deep in the flour barrel. They would
+not think of looking in the flour. But she went to the door just the
+same and gazed anxiously down the canyon as if enemies might put their
+heads in sight that very minute.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+ANXIETIES
+
+
+"My dear doctor, your talents are wasted in San Mateo. They should be
+employed in the larger field of diplomacy," said Steele Weir, when on
+his arrival from Terry Creek he was apprised of what had occurred
+during his absence.
+
+"From all indications I shall have full opportunity for their use
+hereafter, whatever they may be, in our own bailiwick," Doctor
+Hosmer replied, smiling. "There's more going on in our village,
+apparently, than in many a small kingdom. I merely had Janet use the
+truth with certain limitations, and there's no wiser course when
+part of the facts are known. Sorenson seemed quite satisfied with her
+explanation."
+
+The colloquy resulted from a meeting between Janet and the cattleman
+while Weir was guiding the young physician, summoned from Bowenville,
+to Johnson's ranch. Sorenson had appeared at the house about ten
+o'clock that morning desiring to see the girl. They had talked
+together on the veranda, where the visitor stated he had effected a
+settlement and obtained an acknowledgment from Martinez, who was
+trying to blackmail him and others; that a certain paper had been
+prepared by the lawyer for use in the disreputable business; that the
+man had said he had asked Janet to secure it from an old chair in his
+office; and he wished to learn if she had done so.
+
+Janet had admitted such to be the case.
+
+"It was odd Mr. Martinez should telephone me to go get it, wasn't it?"
+she had asked. "But I went, and there it was stuffed in the lining of
+the chair."
+
+"You have it then?" Sorenson stated, with a sigh of relief and his
+eyes kindling with eagerness.
+
+"No, I haven't it now."
+
+"What in heaven's name did you do with it?" he asked.
+
+"As I was coming out of Mr. Martinez' office, there at the door was
+Ed. He had seen me go in and so stopped his car before the door; after
+a time he took the paper to see what it was."
+
+"Then you didn't see its contents?"
+
+"No; I didn't even open it."
+
+"And he has it?"
+
+"He had it the last I saw of the paper. He read it. First, he was
+going to burn it up because it made him angry, then he changed his
+mind, saying he would take it to show to you, as he thought you would
+be interested. Is there anything else you wish to know, Mr.
+Sorenson?"
+
+"Where did he go from there?"
+
+"He drove away. From something he said, I judged that he planned to be
+away from home several days."
+
+Revolting as it was to Janet to put so fair a face on Ed Sorenson's
+conduct, nevertheless she had braced herself to go through with the
+part and presented to the cattleman a clear, natural countenance. The
+very simplicity of her story, its directness, its accord with the
+facts as he knew them, carried conviction. Innocently drawn into the
+affair, she had, in his view, been quickly guided out again by Ed's
+luck and wit.
+
+Ed had the deadly document. The four men concerned might breathe
+easily once more. Ed himself, in all probability, did not realize the
+true menace of old Saurez' deposition, or he would at once have
+brought it to him instead of continuing on his trip: the boy no doubt
+thought it sufficient to keep it until he returned or mailed it back
+from somewhere; he perhaps had taken it along for a more careful
+reading. Good boy, anyway. He had got possession of the thing, that
+was the main consideration.
+
+"He told me too that he was leaving last evening for a few days'
+jaunt," Sorenson said, rising to go. "You'll likely have a whole
+basketful of letters from him. Finest boy going, Ed, even if it's his
+own father who says it. But he's the lucky one, Janet." The girl
+lowered her eyelids, for at this flattery she felt she could no longer
+dissemble her feelings. "Sorry to have bothered you about the matter,"
+he concluded. "Fellows like this Martinez are always making us
+trouble. Run over and eat dinner with us soon."
+
+He went down the walk, large, dominant and still with a trace of
+his early cowman's walk. Both his step and his erectness bespoke
+the buoyant effect of the talk upon his spirits, which was not to
+be wondered at as he had splendid news to import to his confreres
+in crime. They would get rid of Martinez, destroy the paper when
+Ed delivered it, and their skeleton--this one (of a number) which
+had unexpectedly kicked the door open and started to dance in
+public--would be safely locked up forever. For Saurez, the only
+witness (as they believed) was now dead: he would make no more
+depositions. Certainly Sorenson had reason to walk briskly away
+from Doctor Hosmer's dwelling.
+
+Janet had somberly watched him till he was out of sight, then had gone
+inside.
+
+"I don't see how I ever imagined him an honorable man," she said to
+her father. "For all his pretended politeness he was ready if
+necessary to bully me. One thing he can't ever say is that I didn't
+tell him exact facts; what I omitted was the circumstances giving rise
+to the facts." And her father, who now knew from Weir the story of the
+happening of thirty years before, assured her that she need be
+troubled over no moral hairsplitting.
+
+The incident, as Steele Weir perceived, diverted both suspicion and
+danger from Janet, at least for a time. A big gain that. And he was
+impressed by the subtle sagacity of the maneuver.
+
+"That wasn't just a clever move, it was a flash of genius," he told
+father and daughter. Then after a few minutes more of talk he said:
+"Now I must be running up to the dam. To-day is Sunday and the works
+are quiet, so if I find everything all right I shall strike back
+immediately for Terry Creek and the cabin up above. I want to make a
+search for that paper by daylight."
+
+"After your hard night?" Janet exclaimed. "I snatched some sleep when
+we had done talking last night, but father says you and he had none.
+You can't make that terrible ride again without rest!"
+
+"Missing a night in bed is nothing new," he laughed. "Once or twice in
+my life I've not had my clothes off in a week, and only such cat-naps
+as I could steal meantime. But I'll not boast of that; your father
+probably has gone longer periods without sleep, or with only broken
+rest, than ever I did. Most doctors do. Be sure and let me know if
+anything new occurs."
+
+But if Weir's mind was put at ease so far as Janet was concerned, he
+had more than enough other cares to burden his thoughts. The loss of
+the deposition, chief of all; then the matter of effecting Martinez'
+release, wherever he was immured; and finally, as he learned from
+Meyers and Atkinson on reaching camp, the insidious promise of trouble
+in the "free whiskey party."
+
+"Perhaps whoever supplied the fire-water underestimated this
+copper-lined crew's capacity and didn't furnish enough," Meyers
+suggested. "Nobody was really drunk last night and here it is nearly
+noon, with the men all hanging about camp. If there was whiskey yet to
+be had, some of these thirsty, rollicking scrappers of ours would be
+right back at the spigot this morning."
+
+"Maybe so," Atkinson admitted. "Seems so--and yet I ain't easy in my
+mind. The men don't act right; they behave as if they're just waiting;
+they're restless and not a man could I get to open his mouth about
+where they found the stuff. If there wasn't to be any more, they would
+have told and tried to kid me. They appear to me as if just biding
+their time. Some men weren't gone, of course, those who don't drink.
+They stayed in the bunk-house and they know nothing."
+
+"We'll go on the supposition then that there will be more coming, and
+act accordingly," Weir stated, at once. "Watch them close, and put up
+a warning that men who are not at work in the morning, or who bring
+booze into camp, will be fired."
+
+"That's the trouble," the superintendent declared. "I don't think they
+brought a drop in except in their skins. And as we say, they weren't
+drunk. There's not a thing we can object to and they know it; somebody
+has put 'em wise how to act. Here they are, sober this morning,
+behaving themselves, and so on. We can't keep men from going for a
+walk if they want to; we can't string barb-wire around the camp and
+hold them in; we can't even say they can't touch a bottle if a
+stranger offers them one when they're on the outside."
+
+"But we can hold up the consequences if they go on a spree," Steele
+replied. "Most of them are satisfied with the work and pay and grub;
+they don't want to go."
+
+"No, but they like whiskey too, free whiskey in particular. They would
+say they're not getting drunk--no man ever really expects to when he
+starts drinking--and talk about their 'rights.' There are two or three
+fellows in camp now who are doing a lot of mouthing about labor's
+rights; I. W. W.'s, I'd say. Shouldn't be surprised if they were the
+ring-leaders."
+
+"If more whiskey comes, we must beat them to it."
+
+"That's my notion," Atkinson said, with a nod. "I didn't locate the
+booze fountain last night, but I did this morning. Took a horse at
+daylight and rode along the hills; about a mile south in some trees at
+the foot of the mountain, I came across a case of empty bottles and a
+keg half-full of water. That was all, but it showed where the
+'birthday party' was."
+
+"That's the place to watch, then. Better send a trusty man there to
+report to us immediately if he sees signs of a supply arriving for
+to-night. Half a dozen of us with axes will soon start a temperance
+wave in that locality."
+
+In accordance with this instruction the superintendent dispatched a
+reliable man to maintain guard at the spot; and Weir, feeling that all
+had been done that was possible under the circumstances, gave his
+attention to other matters.
+
+But he perceived that with this "liquor attack" in the air, for it was
+but another of his enemies' moves against him, of course, directed
+with the purpose of creating internal disorder, he must postpone his
+trip to the headwaters of Terry Creek. Knowing the crafty,
+persistent, conscienceless character of the four men inspiring the
+trick, he was under no delusion that the "free whiskey" would end with
+a single case of bottles. Among three hundred men that would amount to
+but two or three drinks apiece--a mere taste, only a teaser. And
+because it was only a teaser, the men would want more. If he could
+carry them over this idle Sunday sober, they would be at work on the
+morrow and the chief danger be passed.
+
+Unfortunately a manager cannot take his workmen into his confidence in
+such a case and explain the nature of such a cunning attack; the thing
+was too complex, and their untutored minds would fail to perceive if
+they did not actually reject the explanation, in jealousy for their
+"rights" concluding that they were being hoodwinked. By very
+perverseness they would refuse to deny themselves a free gift of
+whiskey.
+
+With Pollock, however, whose interest as a director was vital, he
+could talk in full expectation of being understood. And moreover,
+owing to the entangled condition into which the company's and his own
+personal affairs had come, strict honor required that he inform his
+visitor of the entire situation and offer, if in the director's view
+such action would best serve the company's ends, to resign.
+
+In his office immediately after dinner he gave the easterner a
+complete account of happenings in San Mateo since his arrival as
+manager, with a statement of his father's earlier residence here, of
+the fraud practiced by Sorenson and his companions on him and his
+tragically ruined life.
+
+"This, you see, has resulted not only in bringing the animosity of
+these men against me but in aggravating their hostility to the
+company," he concluded. "I've never been a quitter. It would go sorely
+against the grain with me to quit now while under fire. But my own
+feelings or fortunes should have no weight; the company's interests
+alone are to be considered. I shall turn over the management to Meyers
+and retire if you desire; I count my contract not binding upon your
+board under the circumstances."
+
+Pollock arose and began to pace the office, gently beating the air
+with his eye-glasses and thoughtfully regarding the floor.
+
+"I should not do your remarkable story proper justice if I did not
+give it the serious attention it deserves," he said, after a time.
+"Certain aspects of the case would appear to favor our accepting
+your resignation, but on analysis, Weir, they turn out to be aspects
+only, not real arguments. Assuming the facts are as you relate, which
+I personally don't doubt, these men, if they will stop at nothing
+to injure you, will be no more reluctant to injure us. In fact, if
+you withdrew they would feel that they had gained a distinct
+triumph, forced us to yield to their will, and would be inspired to
+further and greater opposition. Personal hatred for you on their
+part is no ground for their fixing their enmity on the company. But
+that enmity, apparently, already existed before you came. Therefore if
+they hate you likewise, you and our company have a common bond. And
+that assures us of one thing, or several things: your vigilance,
+care of company property, and loyalty. Last, and aside from that,
+you are, I am confident, possessed of the exact qualities essential to
+the successful solution of present difficulties. We prefer as manager
+an energetic, determined, fighting man, however much disliked by
+envious neighbors, to some fellow less firm and more inclined to
+conciliation. The latter never gained anything with out-and-out
+foes, from what I've seen. So you perceive, Weir, that when my
+associates and I get into a row we're not quitters either. We shall
+therefore just dismiss all talk of your resignation."
+
+"Very good; I wanted you to know the facts."
+
+Pollock paced to and fro for a time longer.
+
+"What really interests me is your own fight," he remarked at length.
+"If the paper you spoke of should be found, I would be pleased to have
+it translated for you. I should also like to consult with this man
+Martinez; he seems a clever fellow. You expect to settle with this
+quartet who defrauded your father, of course."
+
+"Certainly. But the money isn't the main thing. For no amount of money
+would ever pay for the wrong done my father. I want to make these men
+suffer, suffer as he suffered. Call it a simple desire for revenge if
+you will; that's what it really is. They robbed him of his future as
+well as of his ranch and cattle. They took away hope and implanted in
+his breast terror and remorse wholly undeserved. But for them he might
+have been a happy, prosperous, well-thought of man in this state. Yes,
+revenge is what I want, not money. Revenge that will be for them an
+equivalent of hell."
+
+"But they should pay the legal penalties of their crime as well," the
+lawyer spoke. "Recovery of the original amounts gained by fraud from
+both your father and this man Dent, and accumulated interest as well
+as damages, should be had. In all it should make a large amount."
+
+"I suppose so. Probably enough to clean the four men out. But though
+of course I should enjoy getting the property or money that was
+rightfully my father's and now mine, still I'd let that go if I could
+secure the satisfaction of making the four men pay in the coin I
+want."
+
+"Don't be a fool, Weir. Don't overlook any bets, as the saying is.
+Taking their property away from them will but add to their pain and to
+your pleasure. Now we must see if Dent's heirs can be found. I suggest
+that you employ some good attorney to start a hunt along that line,
+for an action by Dent's relatives will indirectly strengthen your own
+case. I'm doubtful about one thing, however----"
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"Your courts here, and the value of this old Mexican's deposition. The
+case could be brought in a Federal Court as you're a non-resident,
+which would solve the first point, but how much weight would this
+Mexican's testimony have against white men of standing and after a
+period of thirty years. If you could find another witness----"
+
+"There was one, a white boy, so Martinez hinted," Weir said.
+
+"Find him, find him. Search the whole country until you find him!"
+
+"That's a big undertaking, when I don't even know his name or whether
+he's alive."
+
+"Begin nevertheless."
+
+"Well, I had better find my lost paper or secure another statement
+from old Saurez first. At present I have absolutely nothing that a
+court would look at; I haven't as much as I had yesterday. And even
+Martinez has been spirited away."
+
+Pollock smiled.
+
+"I'm interested, greatly interested," he said. "I'm not actively
+engaged in legal affairs at home and I may stay on here awhile longer.
+Perhaps I can assist you; it promises excitement, at any rate. After
+dry corporation matters, it should be a refreshing change--and I
+haven't had a real vacation in years. Possibly this is the time to
+take one."
+
+"I appreciate your kindness in speaking so, Mr. Pollock."
+
+"But I'm quite selfish; I'm seeking entertainment. And your peppery
+affairs promise it. Do you give me permission to take a hand?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+"Then as a beginning I'll go to town. Saurez, you say, was the old
+Mexican's name? And give me the facts again as you know them about the
+affair of your father and the man Dent in the saloon."
+
+Pollock listened closely as Steele Weir repeated the story.
+
+"That's all I know, and it's meager at best," the engineer concluded.
+
+"Pity you didn't get to read the deposition, which would have
+increased your fund of information. More unfortunate it is that you
+haven't the paper itself. But we'll do the best we can without it for
+the present. Kindly have some one drive me in to San Mateo."
+
+"Atkinson, the superintendent, is going there for me. I thought he
+might pick up something of Martinez' whereabouts."
+
+"Where does Judge Gordon live?"
+
+"I can't tell you that. But you can easily learn when you reach
+town."
+
+"Well, the Judge used to handle company matters, you know." The smile
+on Pollock's lips was inscrutable. "I used to have frequent
+conferences with him when I was here at the inception of our project.
+He is very shrewd in certain ways, but he impressed me as being not
+exactly--what shall I say?--'cold steel', for instance." And still
+wearing the thin smile, he went out.
+
+If Weir had not had so many things to make his mind grave, from a
+missing paper and a missing lawyer to mysterious whiskey and fierce
+enemies, he would have leaned back and laughed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE WEAK LINK
+
+
+Though the sun was bright that day, unseen forces were gathering in
+the sky above town, mesa and mountains, not of weather but of fate, to
+loose their lightnings. Sunday peace seemed to reign, the languid
+summer Sunday peace of tranquil nature. Yet even through this there
+was a faint breath of impending events, a quiver or excitement in the
+air, an increasing expectation on the part of men, who sensed but did
+not realize what was to come.
+
+All day whispers and hints had passed among the people in San Mateo
+and out to isolated farms and up nearby creeks, kindling in the
+ignorant, brown-skinned Mexicans a lively interest and an exorbitant
+curiosity. Nothing was said definitely; nothing was promised outright.
+So in consequence speculation ran wild and rumors wilder. The hints
+had to do with the manager of the dam who had shot the strange
+Mexican: something was to be done with him, something was to happen to
+him. He had been arrested, or was to be arrested; he had confessed, or
+was about to confess the murder; he was going to kill other Mexicans,
+or had killed other Mexicans; he was about to raid San Mateo with his
+workmen and slay the town; he was to be hanged;--and so on eternally.
+Uncertain as was everything else, what was sure apparently was that
+something would happen at San Mateo that night.
+
+Families visiting about in wagons spread the news. Horsemen were at
+pains to ride to outlying Mexican ranch houses, for what messenger is
+so welcome as he who brings tales of great doings? He might be sure of
+an audience at once. So it was that the plan craftily put in operation
+by Weir's enemies, to gather and inflame the people, under cover of
+whose pressure and excitement when the engineer was arrested he might
+be slain by a pretended rescue or popular demonstration, whichever
+should serve best, produced the expected result. During the afternoon
+wagons and horsemen and men on foot began to appear in town, to join
+already aroused relatives or friends at their adobe houses or to loaf
+along the main street in groups.
+
+Outwardly there were few signs in the aspect of the Mexican folk of
+something extraordinary developing. But to the sheriff, Madden,
+aroused from an afternoon nap at his home by a telephoned message from
+the county attorney requesting him to come to the court house, the
+unwonted number in the town was in itself a significant fact.
+
+"I didn't know this was a fiesta, Alvarez. What's up with you people?"
+he asked of one he met on the street.
+
+"The fiesta is to be to-night, eh?" the man laughed. "Have you this
+engineer locked up yet?"
+
+"What engineer?"
+
+"The killer, the gun-man, that Weir. It is said he is already arrested
+and is to be hanged from the big cottonwood at dark beside the jail.
+It is also said he is still loose and bringing five hundred workmen to
+burn the town, rob the bank, kill the men and steal the girls."
+
+"If he is to do either, it's news to me," Madden said, and proceeded
+to the office of Lucerio, the county attorney.
+
+Madden was a blunt man, who for policy's sake might close his eyes to
+unimportant political influence as exercised by the Sorenson crowd.
+But he was no mere compliant tool. This was his first term in office.
+He had never yet crossed swords with the cattleman and the others
+associated with him, because the occasion had never arisen. When he
+had allowed himself to be nominated for sheriff, though Sorenson might
+imagine Madden to be at his orders, the latter had accepted the office
+with certain well-defined ideas of his duty.
+
+"What do you want of me?" he asked Lucerio, for whom he had little
+liking.
+
+"I desire to tell you, Madden, that at eight o'clock I'll have a
+warrant for you to serve on the engineer Weir. You'll go to the dam
+and arrest him and bring him in to the jail."
+
+"Well, apparently the whole country except me knew this was to happen.
+The town's filling up as if it were going to be a bull-fight."
+
+"I know nothing of that."
+
+"All right; give me the warrant."
+
+"At eight o'clock. I don't want it served before then."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I have my reasons."
+
+"Sorenson? And Vorse and Burkhardt? They've stirred up this charge
+against the man." Lucerio making an angry answer, he continued. "Well,
+everybody knows you jump when they pull the string. I'll have to serve
+the warrant, naturally. But I'm going to tell you what I think: you've
+faked the evidence you've got; we had the truth from Martinez and
+Janet Hosmer at the inquest; you're trying to railroad Weir to the
+gallows."
+
+"Mr. Sorenson shall know what you've said. As for me"--the Mexican
+swelled with outraged dignity--"the evidence was placed in my hands.
+It warrants the engineer's arrest and trial. You attend to your
+department and I'll attend to mine."
+
+"All to the good, Mr. County Attorney. I'll arrest him; he won't make
+me any trouble on that score. But you won't find it so easy to prove
+his guilt. And afterwards, just look out, for if he doesn't come
+gunning for you and fill your carcass full of lead, I miss my guess.
+You won't be able to hide behind Sorenson, either."
+
+He left the county attorney at that, the latter unable despite all his
+efforts to hide his uneasiness and alarm. Madden reaching the street
+looked at his watch; it was half past five, so he started home for
+supper.
+
+Some way before him he saw Martinez walking. The lawyer did not stop
+to converse with any of the loiterers along the street, but moved
+steadily along. He had come out of Vorse's saloon and was going
+towards his office. Just then the sound of an automobile caused Madden
+to turn his head in time to see Weir speed along but stop with a
+sudden application of brakes as he caught sight of the attorney.
+
+A hail brought Martinez to the car. A few minutes' rapid speech there
+followed. Then the lawyer mounted beside Weir, the machine went on,
+turning into a side street and vanishing. To Madden there was nothing
+unusual in the circumstance, and he only noted the surprise and
+silence along the street at the engineer's passage. The Mexicans would
+know the man wasn't yet arrested at any rate, he thought. But he
+should like to learn what was the purpose in bringing them all to
+town! He would keep an eye open for any lynching nonsense if it were
+attempted.
+
+Weir and Martinez were hastening to Judge Gordon's house, for shortly
+before the engineer had received an unexpected call from Pollock for
+him to join him there. Evidently the eastern lawyer had turned a card
+of some sort; and Weir had gone at once, wondering what the meeting
+might portend. The sight of Martinez, free and composed of hearing,
+walking along the street, further amazed him.
+
+He perceived, however, when the lawyer stepped out to the car from
+Vorse's place that he was pale, his mouth tight-drawn and his eyes
+glittering.
+
+"You got my message?" the latter asked, quickly.
+
+"The telephone message, yes. Janet Hosmer got the paper also."
+
+"They dragged me to Vorse's cellar," Martinez whispered fiercely.
+"They beat me with their fists, Vorse and Burkhardt. Then they tied me
+and squeezed my eyeballs till I could stand the pain no longer and
+told. I've been there ever since, bound and without food or water, the
+devils! Sorenson came with them last night, afterwards. And now he and
+Vorse came again--there they are back there in the bar yet--and gave
+me a draft on a Chicago bank for a thousand dollars and said to get
+out and stay out of New Mexico and never open my mouth about what had
+happened."
+
+"Get in with me," Weir ordered.
+
+At Judge Gordon's house the lawyer said:
+
+"You are going in here? He's one of them."
+
+"I know it. Come in, however. I may need you. You're not going to
+leave San Mateo, but there's no reason why you shouldn't cash the
+draft. That's only part of the damages you'll make them pay for what
+you underwent."
+
+"It isn't money I want from them," Martinez replied, between his
+teeth.
+
+Judge Gordon lived in a rambling adobe house two squares from the
+Hosmer dwelling. It was old but had been kept in good repair, and as
+he had never married he had lived comfortably enough with an old
+Mexican pair as servants. One of these, the woman, admitted the
+visitors at their knock and conducted them, as if expected, to the
+Judge's study, a long room lined with cases of books, mostly legal,
+and filled with old-fashioned furniture.
+
+That something had occurred to change the Judge's aspect during the
+hours in which Pollock had been closeted with him was at once
+apparent. He looked older, broken, haggard of face, terrified.
+
+"I met Mr. Martinez and brought him along," Weir said.
+
+"Was that necessary?" Judge Gordon asked, heavily.
+
+"He's my attorney, for one thing."
+
+"And I've been a prisoner in Vorse's cellar for twenty-four hours for
+another, and you're one of those responsible for my being there and
+for the torture to which I was subjected," Martinez exclaimed,
+glaring.
+
+"Mr. Martinez, I give you my word of honor that I knew nothing of your
+incarceration until this morning."
+
+"That for your word of honor!" the lawyer cried, snapping his fingers
+in the air. "And in any case, you're an accessory after the fact. You
+let me stay."
+
+Pollock stepped forward.
+
+"Is this Mr. Martinez? Glad to meet you, sir. Mr. Weir has spoken very
+favorably of you and of your handling of legal matters for the
+irrigation company, of which I am a director. Pollock is my name. Are
+you a notary? Ah, that is good. There will be some papers to
+acknowledge and witness and so on."
+
+He pointed at seats, seemingly having direction of matters, and the
+visitors sat down. Judge Gordon had sagged down in the padded leather
+chair in which he sat; his face was colorless, his eyes moving
+aimlessly to and fro, his white mustache and hair in disorder.
+
+"Let us begin on business at once," Pollock stated, on his feet as was
+usual when entering a discussion and removing his eye-glasses. "I
+called on Judge Gordon this afternoon after my talk with you, Weir,
+and disclosed the evidence which has been gathered relative to the
+fraud perpetrated on your father and the crime against the man Dent. I
+assumed, and rightly, that to a man of the Judge's legal mind the
+facts we hold would prove the futility of resistance, and I set out to
+convince him of the wisdom of sparing himself a long losing fight, in
+which he would be opposing not only the evidence which was sure to
+convict him, and not only you, Mr. Weir, but our company which
+proposed to see the fight through. I went so far, Weir, as to promise
+him immunity from your wrath and from public prosecution."
+
+Weir arose slowly.
+
+"No," said he, "no."
+
+"But, my dear fellow----"
+
+"No. He made my father's life a hell for thirty years. Why should I
+spare him?"
+
+"If granting him freedom from prosecution did actually spare him
+anything, I should say 'No' also, standing in your place. But with the
+facts made public as they will be, with Judge Gordon losing his
+legislative office and the esteem in which he had been held, with him
+relinquishing the bulk of his fortune as he agrees, with his finding
+it necessary to go elsewhere to live at his time of life, with the
+thought constantly in his mind of how low he has been brought, don't
+you think he will be suffering quite adequately? I should think so. He
+would probably die quicker in prison, but I believe he will suffer
+more outside. See, I don't hesitate to measure the alternatives, for
+the Judge and I have discussed and canvassed the whole situation,
+which was necessary, of course, in order to arrive at a clear
+understanding." And Pollock smiled genially.
+
+"Does he admit my charges?"
+
+"He hasn't denied them."
+
+"Will he admit them?"
+
+"I've outlined exactly what we must have--deeds to his property and an
+acknowledged statement of the Joseph Weir and James Dent affair,
+supplementing the Saurez affidavit, which by the way he at first
+thought we did not possess but which an account of what happened last
+night in the mountains and your recovery of the same"--Pollock's
+eyelid dropped for an instant towards Weir--"convinced him of. This
+statement is not to be produced as evidence against his associates
+except in the last extremity, and if not needed is always to be kept
+secret. We are to give him, when the papers are signed, a draft for
+ten thousand dollars. This will permit him to have something to live
+on. He states that he will want to go from San Mateo at once."
+
+During this speech Weir's eyes had glanced to and fro between the
+lawyer ticking off his words with his glasses and the figure in the
+leather chair. Old and shattered as Judge Gordon had suddenly become,
+wretched as Weir saw him to be, the engineer nevertheless felt no
+pity. The man had been in the conspiracy that had ruined his father;
+he suffered now not because of remorse but through fear of public
+opinion; and was a fox turned craven because he found himself
+enmeshed in a net. And to save his own skin he was selling out his
+friends.
+
+Weir's face went dark, but Pollock quickly stepped forward and drew
+him into a corner of the room.
+
+"Keep calm, man," was the lawyer's low advice. "Do you think if we had
+him tied up as tightly as I've made him believe that I should propose
+a compromise in his case. He's the weak link. Do you think I've had an
+easy time the last three hours bringing him to the point he's at? I
+had to invent evidence that couldn't possibly exist. I had to give him
+a merciless mental 'third degree.' I told him if he refused I was
+going to Sorenson with the same offer, who would jump at the chance.
+And, my dear man, we haven't, in reality, enough proof to convict a
+mouse since you lost that paper. So now, so far as he's concerned, you
+must bend a little, a very little--and you'll be able to hang the
+remaining three."
+
+This incisive reasoning was not to be denied.
+
+"I yield," said Weir.
+
+Beaming, Mr. Pollock walked back to the table.
+
+"Mr. Weir consents," he stated. "Mr. Martinez, if you will go to your
+office and bring the necessary forms and your seal we can make the
+transfers and statement and wind the matter up."
+
+An hour later Judge Gordon had signed the deeds, stock certificates
+from his safe and bills of sale spread before him, passing the
+ownership of lands, cattle and shares in companies to Pollock for
+equitable division between Weir and the Dent heirs if found. The old
+Mexican servants were called in and witnessed his shaky signatures to
+the papers.
+
+At the statement regarding the Dent shooting and Weir fraud, which
+Pollock had dictated to Martinez with Gordon's assistance, he
+staggered to his feet while the pen dropped from his hand.
+
+"I can't sign it, I can't sign it; they would kill me!" he groaned.
+
+The two aged servants stared at him wonderingly.
+
+"My dear Judge, they'll never know of it until it's too late for them
+to do anything--if they ever know," came the easterner's words, in
+smooth persuasiveness.
+
+Judge Gordon brushed a hand over his eyes.
+
+"Give me a moment," he muttered.
+
+He stood for a time motionless. Then he walked across the room and
+opened a door and entered an inner chamber.
+
+"He won't live a year after this," Pollock whispered to his
+companions.
+
+The speaker could have shortened the time immensely and have still
+been safe in his prophecy. For when at the end of five minutes he sent
+the woman to request the Judge to return, she stumbled out of the
+bed-chamber with affrighted eyes. She said the Judge was asleep on his
+bed and could not be aroused.
+
+Sleep of the profoundest, the men discovered on going in. And in his
+fingers was an empty vial. So far as Judge Gordon was concerned Weir
+had had his revenge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+AN OLD ADOBE HOUSE
+
+
+Revenge Weir had. But even in death Judge Gordon, true to his evasive,
+contriving character, had tricked him; and the irony lay in the fact
+that in this last act the trick was unpremeditated, unconscious,
+unintentional. Instead of the signed confession, necessary above
+everything else, which seemed almost in his fingers, the man had left
+a little poison vial.
+
+Night had settled over the earth when the three men, after directing
+the Mexican servants to bring the undertaker, went out of the house,
+for considerable time had been occupied in the discussion and the
+preparation of papers preceding Judge Gordon's tragic end. With him
+Mr. Pollock carried the documents pertaining to the property
+restitution. These, considered in connection with the suicide, would
+constitute something like a confession, he grimly asserted.
+
+Avoiding the main street of San Mateo they drove out of the town for
+camp. The first part of the ride was pursued in silence, for each was
+busy with his own thoughts in consequence of the sudden shocking
+termination of the meeting. When about half way to camp, however,
+their attention was taken from the subject by a sight wholly
+unexpected, a scene of high colors and of a spirit that mocked at what
+had just happened.
+
+Some way off from the road, at one side, two bonfires burned brightly
+before an adobe house, the flames leaping upward in the darkness and
+lighting the long low-roofed dwelling and the innumerable figures of
+persons. At the distance the place was from the highway, perhaps two
+hundred yards, one could make out only the shadowy forms of men--of a
+considerable number of men, at that.
+
+"I never saw any one at that old tumble-down house before, Martinez,"
+Weir remarked, lessening the speed of the car. "Always supposed it
+empty."
+
+"No one does live there. The ground belongs to Vorse, who leases it
+for farming to Oterez. Perhaps Oterez is giving a party there. They
+are dancing."
+
+Weir brought the machine to a full stop, with suspicion rapidly
+growing in his mind. The place was owned by Vorse, for one thing, and
+the number about the house was too large for an ordinary Mexican
+family merry-making, for another. In view of what had occurred the
+previous night all "parties" in the neighborhood of the dam deserved
+inquiry, and this house was but a mile from camp.
+
+They could now hear the sound of music, the shrill quick scrap of a
+pair of fiddles and the notes of guitars. Against the fire-light too
+they could distinguish the whirl of skirts.
+
+"Just run over there, will you, Martinez, and have a look at that
+dance?" Weir said. "See how much whiskey is there, and who the people
+are."
+
+The Mexican jumped down, climbed through the barb-wire fence bordering
+the field and disappeared towards the house.
+
+"I told you about some one giving the men booze last night," the
+engineer addressed his remaining companion. "We found the place off
+south along the hills where that business happened, and stationed a
+man there to warn us if another attempt was made to use the spot. But
+I shouldn't be surprised if this is the location used for to-night;
+it has all the signs. We suspected that this evening would be the real
+blow-out and if the men are going there I shall send down the foremen
+and engineers to break it up. Vorse's owning this house and his being
+the source of the liquor is almost proof. I met Atkinson returning to
+the dam when you sent him back from town and he'll know something is
+up if the workmen have been melting away from camp. This is simply
+another damnably treacherous move of the gang against us to interfere
+with our work, starting a big drunk and perhaps a row. We'll stop it
+right at the beginning."
+
+"Are the officials of this county so completely under Sorenson and his
+crowd's thumbs that they won't move in a case like this?" Pollock
+questioned.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then we must act on our own initiative, as you say."
+
+"That's our only recourse. Giving whiskey isn't actually an illegal
+act--and they're giving it away, not trying to sell it here without a
+government licence."
+
+"The thing's illegal if it's part of a conspiracy to disrupt our work,
+and if we can secure proof that such is the fact it will but add one
+more item to the score to be settled with these San Mateo outlaws."
+
+"There are more men going there. See them?" Weir asked. "You hear them
+on the road ahead of us. They're ducking through the fence and
+crossing to the house. Our workmen. The thing's plain now; they had
+word there would be another 'party' to-night, but they didn't know
+just where until they received word this evening. I suppose the whole
+camp except a few men will be here."
+
+"Won't they turn ugly if you interfere?"
+
+"Can't help that. I'll send men down with axes and when the booze is
+poured on the ground it makes no difference then; the men will be kept
+sober. If they are stubborn, I'll run a new bunch in and fire these
+fellows. But I don't imagine they will quit work, however surly, for
+they know whiskey's no excuse. Men usually cool down after a night's
+sleep."
+
+From where they sat and since Weir had turned out his car lamps, they
+could see the steady string of men emerging from the darkness of the
+field and approaching the house, to quickly dissolve in the gathering
+already there. In their lively steps, as well as in the eager voices
+occasionally raised along the dark road, the men's desire to join in
+the debauch was apparent.
+
+With the swelling of the crowd the scraping of the fiddles became
+louder, the dancing more furious, shouts and yells more frequent,
+while a dense line of men passing and jamming in and out of the door
+pointed only too plainly that inside the house liquor flowed. This
+would be no matter of a few drinks per man, but a big drunk if not
+stopped.
+
+Martinez confirmed this opinion on his return.
+
+"There are two barrels inside and a couple of fellows are dipping it
+up in tin cups like water," said he. "They're not even troubling to
+draw the stuff; the barrels have been placed on end and the heads
+knocked out. It will be the biggest spree San Mateo ever saw, with
+plenty of fighting after awhile. Women, you know, always start fights
+during a spree."
+
+"Those surely are not women from town," Weir exclaimed.
+
+"Oh, no. I never saw them before. Brought in here from somewhere--Santa
+Fe perhaps, El Paso more likely. You know the kind who would mix with
+that crowd--tough girls. They're wearing low necks and short skirts,
+red stockings and all that. You know the kind. Out of joints and dives
+somewhere. There's only a dozen, but they keep circulating and dancing
+with different ones. I just put my head through a window to look inside,
+which is lighted by a big kerosene lamp hanging from the roof; and I
+tell you, gentlemen, it made me sick the way those two fellows were
+dipping up whiskey and the crowd drinking it down."
+
+"And more men coming all the time," Weir stated.
+
+"And more coming, yes. It will be very bad there by midnight. Vorse
+and Burkhardt and Sorenson are managing the thing, of course."
+Martinez lighted a cigarette and stepped into the car. "No mistake
+about that, for Vorse's bartender is one of the men at the barrels.
+And I imagine Judge Gordon knew this thing was coming off though he
+made no mention of it."
+
+"Since we were ignorant of the matter, he naturally wouldn't inform
+us," Pollock remarked, dryly.
+
+"Time to put a stop to the show before it grows bad," Weir stated
+resolutely. And he started the machine.
+
+"If it can be stopped," Martinez replied.
+
+That was the question, whether or not now it would be possible even to
+reach and destroy the barrels inside the house, what with the numbers
+who would oppose the move and what with the state of intoxication that
+must rapidly prevail at the place.
+
+For as they drove away they could already detect in the mad revel
+about the old adobe dwelling a faster beat in the sharp shrieking
+music, a wilder abandon in the movements of the figures about the
+flames, a more reckless, fiercer note in the cries and oaths.
+
+"This is deviltry wholesale," Pollock said. "On a grand scale, one
+might put it."
+
+So thought a horseman who approached and halted almost at the same
+spot where the car had rested. This was Madden who with a warrant for
+Weir's arrest in his pocket had arrived opposite the house a moment
+after the automobile's departure. He had secured the warrant at eight
+o'clock according to the county attorney's request, but he had taken
+his own time about setting off to serve it.
+
+For a quarter of a mile he had been interested in the evidences of
+unwonted hilarity at the usually untenanted structure. Now he sat in
+his saddle, silent and motionless, observing the distant scene. He
+easily guessed the men were from the construction camp and that liquor
+was running.
+
+"I can almost smell it here, Dick," he addressed his horse.
+
+But two circumstances puzzled him. One was that there had been no news
+in town of such a big affair impending for the night; the second, that
+there were women present--for no Mexican, however ignorant, would take
+or allow his women folks to attend such a howling show. Coming on top
+of the crowd in town, he wondered if this business might not be linked
+up with Weir's affairs. These were his workmen and this was Vorse's
+farm-house and very likely Vorse's liquor. After he had arrested the
+engineer he would look into the thing.
+
+Fifteen minutes later, when he had gone on, other passers-by paused
+for a minute on the road to stare at the amazing picture across the
+field. These were Dr. Hosmer and Janet, Johnson and his daughter Mary:
+the two men being in the doctor's car, the two girls in Janet's
+runabout.
+
+"What on earth is going on there!" Janet exclaimed, when the two
+machines had pulled up.
+
+The two fires, fed by fresh fuel, were leaping higher than ever,
+bringing out in strong relief the long squat building, the dark,
+restless, noisy throng, and the space of illuminated earth. Against
+the night the flames and building and mob of hundreds of men seemed a
+crimson vision from some inferno to an accompaniment of mad music.
+
+"The camp's gone on a tear; drive ahead," her father said. "This isn't
+a sight for you girls to look at."
+
+And with that the two cars sped forward towards the dam, where on this
+night so much was converging. For their occupants already had had an
+experience that had started them at once to seek the man around whose
+figure were swirling a hundred passions and dark currents of destiny.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+WITH FANGS BARED
+
+
+That Sunday afternoon Janet Hosmer had awakened about sunset from an
+after-dinner sleep, rested and refreshed, with her mind continuing to
+be occupied by thoughts of Steele Weir about whom had eddied her
+dreams. The man was no longer the mystery he had been, since now she
+knew all the circumstances of his life, and on that account was
+nearer, more human, and yet as compelling.
+
+That on his part his interest went beyond mere friendship she had
+recognized from his voice and eyes when they were together. Ah, in
+truth, how his tones deepened and his look betrayed his feelings! At
+the thought Janet's heart beat faster and her cheeks grew warm and an
+indefinable joy seemed to fill her breast. She would not deny it: his
+presence, his touch gave her a greater happiness than she had ever
+known. At a single stride, as it were, he had come into the middle of
+her life and dominated her mind and changed her whole outlook.
+
+How he too had changed and grown in the coming! From the avaricious,
+calculating, heartless manager of the construction work, as she seeing
+through colored San Mateo eyes had believed him to be, he now stood
+forth a figure of power, undaunted by difficulties, undismayed by
+enemies however numerous, fearless to a fault, stern perhaps--but who
+would not have been made stern in his place?--and determined, cool,
+resourceful, alert, and of an integrity as firm and upright as a
+marble shaft. Yet beneath this exterior his heart was quick and tender
+for those who needed sympathy or help, and his hand swift to aid.
+
+More than once a hot flush burned on Janet's face, as sitting there on
+the vine-hung veranda in the gathering dusk, recollection assailed her
+with memories of wasted kindnesses given the infamous Ed Sorenson, of
+trust bestowed and of love plighted. That passage in her life seemed
+to leave her contaminated forever. It burned in her soul like a
+disgrace or a dishonorable act. But Steele Weir--and she swam in
+glorious ether at the thought--did not appear to view it in that
+light.
+
+Juanita running in the twilight to the house interrupted her
+introspection.
+
+"I came to tell you," the Mexican girl exclaimed panting before
+Janet.
+
+"Tell me what?" For Juanita's reappearance in itself was unusual, as
+Sunday afternoon and evening were her own to spend at home.
+
+"People are saying Mr. Weir is to be arrested and hanged from a tree
+in the court house yard! Everybody has come to town to see. Three
+uncles and aunts and nine cousins of ours have already come to our
+house from where they live four miles down the river. All the town is
+talking about it. But though I said nothing, I knew how Mr. Weir had
+saved you and that he had done nothing to be hanged for. If anybody is
+to be killed it ought to be that Ed Sorenson."
+
+"Are you sure of this, Juanita?"
+
+"Yes, yes, Miss Janet. It is so."
+
+"Then this is part of the plot against him; let me think. They might
+arrest him but they would never dare try to hang him, unless they
+could pretend----"
+
+What they might pretend Janet never stated, as at that instant a motor
+car dashed up and stopped before the gate. Even in the gloom she made
+out that the figure garbed in a gray dust coat was Sorenson's.
+Springing out of the machine, he jerked the gate open and strode
+towards the house, while a premonition of a fresh and unpleasant turn
+of affairs quivered in Janet's mind.
+
+"I've come back again, you see," he said. "Step inside where you can
+hear what I have to say."
+
+The words were like an order; the man's manner, indeed, was
+overbearing and brutal. But the girl concealing her resentment,
+preceded him into the house and bade Juanita light a lamp.
+
+"And now you get out!" Sorenson commanded the servant in so savage a
+tone that she fled to the kitchen without waiting to consult Janet's
+eyes. "I see your father isn't here," he continued, addressing Janet.
+
+The latter made no reply. To be sure, Dr. Hosmer was not in the room
+but he was in the house, sleeping. Let the cattleman think him absent
+if he wished.
+
+"So much the better; if he's not about, he won't try to interfere,"
+the man went on. "Now, my girl, I've learned all about your tricks,
+and----"
+
+"Sir, you talk like that to me in my own house!" Janet broke in, with
+a flash of eyes. "You will walk out of that door this instant and
+never set foot here again."
+
+"Will I, you slippery young Jezebel? I'll do nothing of the kind until
+I'm ready, which will be when you've handed over that paper. Don't try
+to deny that you have it or Weir has it; I suppose he has now, and
+I'll be forced to go shoot him down as he deserves. But I came here
+first to make sure. It would be just like the rest of the schemes of
+you two to have you keep it, thinking I'd be fooled. I have half a
+notion to wring your white neck for lying to me to-day--lying, while
+all the time you knew my son was hanging between life and death."
+
+So savage was his voice, so threatening his visage and air that Janet
+retreated a step. His hands worked as if he actually felt her soft
+throat in his clutch; his huge body and big beefy head swayed towards
+her ominously; while his eyes carried a baleful light that revealed in
+full intensity the man's real brutal soul. Hitherto carefully coated
+in an appearance of respectability fitted to a station of wealth,
+influence and prominence, he now stood as he truly was, domineering,
+repellant, lawless. Janet could at that minute measure the close
+kinship of father and son.
+
+"Fortunately a man in Bowenville recognized Ed, or I should never have
+known he had been injured," Sorenson went on. "So your little scheme
+to keep me in ignorance went wrong. The doctor 'phoned me about five
+and I took my wife and we rushed there, and I have just this instant
+returned. Do you know what the doctor says? Ed will live, but be a
+life cripple, a useless wreck, a bundle of smashed bones, always
+sitting in a chair, always eating out his heart. And all because of
+you and that engineer! Ed was conscious; he told me the real story
+about which you lied,----"
+
+"I did not lie," Janet stated, firmly.
+
+Sorenson made an angry gesture as if to sweep aside this declaration.
+
+"He told me how you promised to slip away with him to spend a week in
+the mountains, and how you warned this Weir so that the two of you
+could trick my son and get him out of the way. You, who always
+pretended to be so innocent and virtuous! And then Weir caused the
+accident up there in the hills that has crippled my boy for life! Did
+it to get him out of the path to you, and you helped, like the
+traitress you are; and the two of you took the paper."
+
+Janet's form had stiffened at these insulting speeches.
+
+"Your son is the liar," said she. "Did he tell you how he flung a
+blanket over my head as Juanita and I were coming out of Martinez'
+office? How he tied my hands and feet and carried me off like a
+victim--and victim he intended me to be! Yes, Mr. Weir rescued me
+because Juanita met and told him what had happened and he followed.
+Your son was drunk. He tried to commit a crime because I had rejected
+him a week before, on learning that during our engagement he had
+endeavored to mislead another girl. A drunkard and a criminal both,
+that's your son. And he alone brought on his accident by his drunken,
+reckless driving. Now I've told you the truth; leave the house!"
+
+"You can't put that kind of a story over on me," he snarled. "I
+believe what Ed said. Even if he has had affairs with other girls,
+that makes no difference now. You tried to double-cross him; you've
+wrecked his body and life; and you shall pay for it."
+
+Neither of the pair in their intense excitement had heard a wagon
+drive to a stop before the house. Whether in fact they would have
+heard a peal of thunder might be a question. Sorenson, enraged by his
+son's injury and burning for revenge, was oblivious to all else but
+his passion, while Janet Hosmer, divided between contempt and fear,
+had but the single thought of ridding herself of the man.
+
+"You cannot injure me," she said, in reply to his savage utterance.
+
+"I'll drive you and your father out of this town and this state," he
+exclaimed. "They shall know here in San Mateo, and wherever you go if
+it's in my power to reach there, what sort of a pretending,
+double-faced, disreputable wanton----"
+
+"You coward!" Janet burst out.
+
+Then she turned to flee out of the room to arouse her father. But
+Sorenson was too quick for her; he sprang forward and seized one of
+her wrists.
+
+"No you don't, you perfumed wench!" he growled.
+
+A scream formed on Janet's lips. The heavy, rage-crimsoned face bent
+over her as if to kill her by its very nearness. Brute the man was,
+and as a brute he appeared determined she should feel his power. She
+pulled back, jerking to free herself, and shrieked.
+
+Intervention came from an unexpected quarter. Rushing into the room
+came the rancher Johnson, followed by his daughter.
+
+"Let go of her," the man ordered, harshly.
+
+Sorenson looked about over his shoulder.
+
+"Keep out of this, and get out," he answered.
+
+Johnson leaped forward and struck the other on the jaw. The cattleman
+releasing his hold on Janet staggered back, at the same time thrusting
+a hand under his coat.
+
+But the rancher's pistol was whipped forth first.
+
+"You'd try that game, would you?" Johnson said, with his ragged beard
+out-thrust and stiff. "Put up your hands; I want to see how they look
+sticking up over your head."
+
+Sorenson though now holding them in sight did not at once comply.
+
+"Johnson, you're butting into something that doesn't concern you," he
+said, endeavoring to speak calmly.
+
+"You've made one mistake in striking me; don't make another by keeping
+that gun pointed at my head. Remember I've a mortgage on your place
+that you'll wish renewed one of these days."
+
+The expression of scorn on the rancher's face was complete.
+
+"Trying that line, are you?" he sneered. "Think you can play the
+money-lender now and scare me? You didn't look much like a banker
+reaching for your gun; you just looked like a killer then, a plain
+bar-room killer--but I beat you to the draw. You've got fat and slow,
+haven't you, since early days when you use to put lead into poor
+devils whose stuff you wanted. And you didn't look like a banker to
+me, either, trying to bulldoze Janet when I came in; you looked like
+the big dirty coward you are. Aha, here's the doctor! Now just tell
+him how it comes you can order me out of his house, and why you were
+threatening Janet and making her scream."
+
+The physician turned a white, angry countenance to Sorenson.
+
+"I heard the scream. Is it true you were abusing my daughter?" he
+demanded, stepping in front of the man.
+
+"I came here because I learned my son Ed had been broken to bits
+through her trickery and damnable----"
+
+The words were cut off by the doctor's hand which smote the
+blasphemous lips uttering them.
+
+Even more than Johnson's blow did this slap upon the mouth enrage the
+cattleman. His face became congested, his shoulders heaved, but behind
+the doctor was the revolver still directed at his head.
+
+"You've come here uninvited and you've said too much," Doctor Hosmer
+stated in cold even tones. "You may be the town magnate, but you're
+only a ruffian and a crook after all. You can't bluff or bully us.
+More than that, you've insulted my daughter and me beyond any future
+reparation. As for your son, he got less than he deserved." He turned
+to the rancher. "You came just in time, it seems. Please see that he
+leaves the house."
+
+Johnson waved with his gun significantly towards the door.
+
+"Move right along lively," he added. "And I'll go along with you to
+see that you don't hamstring my horses, which I don't put past an
+underhanded cattle-thief like you."
+
+Sorenson seemed striving for words that would adequately blast those
+before him, but they appeared lacking. With a last malignant glare he
+walked out upon the veranda and down across the yard, with his guard
+following him.
+
+When Johnson returned after Sorenson's departure in his car, he was
+grinning sardonically.
+
+"I shouldn't want him running among my cattle; he'd bite 'em and give
+'em the rabies," he remarked.
+
+Janet caught and pressed his toil-roughened hand.
+
+"You'll never know how much I thank you for coming in just when you
+did," she cried.
+
+"Pshaw, your father would have showed up and stopped him."
+
+"I'm not so sure. Father has no weapon, and that man did have one. It
+was the sight of your pistol that made him cower. You couldn't have
+chosen a more lucky minute to arrive."
+
+"Well, it was a little bit timely, as it turned out. Considering too
+that we were coming to see you anyway, it was just as well to walk in
+when we could do some good. Mary has something for you to read, if you
+read Spanish."
+
+"Yes, I do."
+
+"That's good. Show 'em what you have, daughter."
+
+Mary drew a knotted handkerchief from her bosom and undid the knots.
+Appeared the doubled paper she had found. This she passed to Janet.
+
+"Why,--why, this is the document I had!" the latter exclaimed,
+joyfully. "Where did you find it?"
+
+"Up by the smashed automobile, when father and I were at the cabin."
+She exchanged a guarded look with her father. "There are names in it
+that made me think it might be valuable. So when father came back from
+Bowenville I showed it to him. But neither of us could read it. We
+thought we'd better bring it to you to read."
+
+"It is valuable, very valuable. I had it when I was seized by Ed
+Sorenson and he took it away from me. Evidently, then, it fell from
+his pocket at the time of the accident. Yes, indeed, it's important.
+It means everything to certain parties. I'll read it, but you
+understand what it tells is private at present."
+
+"We understand--and I think I know what it's going to say," Johnson
+remarked, grimly.
+
+Thereupon while the others listened Janet read a translation of the
+long document. To her and her father the facts were not new, for Weir
+had already related such as he knew of the happenings in Vorse's
+saloon on that eventful day thirty years previous. Nor for that matter
+were they strange to Johnson and his daughter, though of course
+neither Janet nor her father were aware of the rancher's more intimate
+knowledge of the subject.
+
+"A pretty good story as far as it goes, but like all lawyers' papers
+long-winded," Johnson stated, critically.
+
+"What do you mean, far as it goes?" Janet asked, curiously. "Did you
+know this old Mexican? Did you ever hear him tell about the thing?"
+
+"I knew he was there at the time, but he never told me anything."
+
+Here Dr. Hosmer spoke.
+
+"Saurez died yesterday. It must have been shortly after he made this
+deposition. He died in Vorse's saloon, which gives a color of
+suspicion to his death. In addition, Martinez, as you know, was
+dragged away somewhere."
+
+"Then Vorse learned old Saurez had blabbed, and killed him," Johnson
+said, in a convinced tone. "Vorse is a bad bird, I want to say. But so
+are all of them, Sorenson, Burkhardt and Judge Gordon as well."
+
+Janet brought the talk back to the subject.
+
+"You make me still wonder, Mr. Johnson," she said. "You seemed to
+think there's more to the account than is told in this paper."
+
+Again the rancher and his daughter glanced at each other, hesitatingly.
+
+"Tell them, father," Mary broke forth all at once. "They know this
+much, and you know you can trust them."
+
+The man, however, shook his head with a certain dogged purpose.
+
+"If this is just a paper in some trifling lawsuit or other, it will be
+better if I keep my own counsel," he stated. "I've riled Sorenson
+considerable as it is now, and I don't care particularly about having
+him gunning on my trail active-like. If it really mattered----"
+
+"It does matter; it matters everything," Janet cried, "if you really
+know something more!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because it concerns Mr. Weir. The Joseph Weir described and named in
+this affidavit was his father. He believes these men robbed his
+father; this paper proves it, but not absolutely, for Mexican evidence
+here in this country doesn't carry as much weight against white
+men--especially men as rich and strong as these named--as it would in
+other places perhaps. You know that. This paper was obtained for Mr.
+Weir."
+
+"Oho, so that's the way of it!" Johnson said, with a long drawn-out
+tone.
+
+He regarded the paper in silence for a time, busy with his thoughts,
+absently twisting his beard, until at length a look of satisfaction
+grew on his face.
+
+"Well, well, this is fine," he went on presently. "I never thought I
+should be able to pay the obligation I owe him, and I won't fully at
+that, but this will help. No, that paper doesn't tell all, for I
+reckon Saurez didn't see all." He glanced triumphantly at the doctor
+and the girl. "But I did."
+
+"You!" both exclaimed.
+
+But before he could explain, the memory of the cattleman's threat
+recurred to Janet to banish thoughts of aught else than Weir's danger
+from her mind.
+
+"Mr. Sorenson said he was going up to the dam to shoot Mr. Weir," she
+exclaimed. "We must give warning."
+
+"Did he say he was going himself?" Johnson asked.
+
+"To get the paper, yes." Then Janet continued anxiously. "But the
+paper isn't all. His son told him what occurred in the mountains and I
+believe the man wants to harm Mr. Weir as well as to obtain the paper.
+Perhaps he plans on gaining the document first, then killing him. In
+any case, we must put Mr. Weir on guard."
+
+"I'll just drive up there and tell the engineer," Johnson stated.
+"Shouldn't be surprised if I got a chance yet to use my gun. You girls
+can stay here."
+
+Janet gazed at him with a flushing face.
+
+"The man could go to the dam and kill Mr. Weir and get safely home
+while you're starting with your team," said she. "No, we must drive
+there in a car. Father, you take Mr. Johnson in yours, and I'll carry
+Mary in mine. We'll go along of course, for we'll not remain here in
+the cottage alone with such terrible things happening in San Mateo."
+
+And to this there was no dissent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+THE ALARM
+
+
+At the dam Weir found Meyers and Atkinson anxiously waiting his
+return. The sudden concerted melting away of workmen from camp had
+been warning to his subordinates that the danger of a general spree
+had taken definite form, which the report of a pair of young engineers
+confirmed when they followed a group of laborers to the old adobe
+house and beheld the beginning of the debauch.
+
+"Get out all the staff, Meyers, and you, Atkinson, all the foremen and
+sober men left, then go down the road and put that joint out of
+business, taking axes and whatever is necessary."
+
+"And if they fight?" Meyers asked.
+
+"Try first to placate them. If that fails, some of you draw them off
+in order to permit the others to enter the house and destroy the
+whiskey. It's a tough job, but you may succeed. If the crowd turns
+ugly as it may, being drunk, come back. No need to take the risk of
+broken heads or being beaten up. See, however, if you can't outwit the
+outfit. Possibly you could push that mud house over from the rear by
+means of a beam; that would do the business. I leave it to you to
+decide what's best to do, men, after you've examined the situation."
+
+"The camp will be unguarded except for you and the two men with you,"
+Weir's assistant suggested. "If the crowd drinking down at that place
+should take the notion to come here and tear things up, there would
+be nothing to hinder them. A few should stay, anyway, I imagine--half
+a dozen, who can use guns."
+
+"Well, pick out six to remain," the other agreed.
+
+For Meyers' suggestion had raised a disagreeable possibility. It was
+never safe to ignore precautions when a gang of two or three hundred
+rough, active laborers, however loyal when sober, were made
+irresponsible and crazy by liquor; and one stage of drunkenness in
+such men was usually manifested in a wild desire for violence. The
+scheme of Weir's enemies might comprise using this very act for
+wrecking the camp.
+
+Six men, to be sure, would offer little resistance to stemming the
+movement once it was started, but the sight of steel in the guards'
+hands might cause even a reckless mob to pause long enough for an
+appeal. If the men should be brought to listen, they could probably be
+diverted from their purpose, as impassioned crowds are easily swayed
+by men of force.
+
+In any case the camp and dam should be defended to the last. That went
+without saying.
+
+Meyers and Atkinson had little more than departed with their muster of
+engineers, foremen and sober workmen, some fifty in all, when the two
+cars driven by Dr. Hosmer and Janet arrived at headquarters. To the
+occupants of both machines the camp appeared singularly dark and
+silent, the office building and the commissary shack alone showing
+lights.
+
+The four visitors entered the main room in the former building, where
+they found Mr. Pollock and Martinez.
+
+"Mr. Weir stepped out for a moment to make a round of the camp and the
+horse corrals," the easterner replied in answer to an inquiry from the
+doctor. "Will you be seated?" And he politely placed chairs for Janet
+and Mary, while his look scrutinized the party with discreet
+interest.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Martinez, you've escaped!" Janet exclaimed, after a surprised
+stare at the lawyer.
+
+The Mexican smiled, bowed and drew one point of his black mustache
+through his fingers.
+
+"I have indeed, Miss Janet," said he. "Not without an unpleasant
+experience, however. I understand you secured the paper concerning
+which I telephoned you, and though I understand it has since been
+lost--through no fault of yours--I desire to express my thanks for
+your excellent assistance in the matter."
+
+"But it has been found again; we have it with us."
+
+Martinez gave a start, none the less sincere for being dramatic.
+
+"What! Saurez' deposition? Weir thought it burned. Why, this is the
+most wonderful luck in the world! It gives us the whip-hand again."
+
+Janet nodded.
+
+"Mary Johnson here found it in a crack in the rocks when she and her
+father went up to the cabin to bring Ed Sorenson down. Father has it.
+That's one reason we're here. But there's another; Mr. Sorenson has
+learned of his son's accident, has seen him, talked with him, been
+told lies and now is in a dreadful rage, threatening every one
+concerned. He was at our house and made a scene. He's coming here, or
+so he said, to kill Mr. Weir and obtain the document. So we hurried to
+the dam to give warning."
+
+At this juncture Mr. Pollock stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. Sorenson hasn't yet appeared, and I assure you he will be
+prevented from harming any one if he comes. You are Miss Janet Hosmer,
+I judge, of whom I've heard so much that is praiseworthy. Will you
+allow me to introduce myself? I'm Mr. Pollock, a company director,
+and to a degree in Mr. Weir's confidence."
+
+Janet expressed her pleasure at his acquaintance and in turn
+introduced her father and the Johnsons.
+
+"Mr. Weir spoke of you to us, but we weren't aware he had informed you
+of the paper." Then she added, "But he would wish to, naturally."
+
+Weir's voice, without, in conversation with some one caused them all
+to look towards the door. In the panel of light falling on the
+darkness before the house they perceived the engineer's tall figure by
+a horse, from which the rider was dismounting. Letting the reins drag
+and leaving the horse to stand, the latter walked with Weir into the
+room.
+
+"Why, this is a delightful surprise!" the engineer exclaimed on
+beholding the four who had come while he was out. "And unexpected."
+His eyes rapidly interrogated the different faces. "I suppose it's
+business, not pleasure, that brings you."
+
+"That's so," said Johnson, the rancher, nodding.
+
+"Well, Madden is here on business, too, it seems." He glanced at Mr.
+Pollock. "Mr. Madden is our sheriff and he has a warrant for my
+arrest." He turned back to the officer. "You come at a bad time for my
+affairs. You saw that big show at the old house half way down the
+road? That crowd is made up of my workmen, who are being entertained
+with free whiskey, and there's no telling but what they may come here
+to tear things up. The whiskey is furnished by Vorse, I suspect, and
+is being served at Vorse's place. Your warrant is inspired by Vorse
+and others, isn't it? The two circumstances coming at the same moment,
+the free drunk and my arrest, look fishy to me. What do you think? I'm
+in charge of a property here representing a good deal of money and I
+should hate to be absent if the men took the idea into their heads to
+turn the camp upside down, especially if the idea was inspired by
+Vorse and his friends."
+
+"I haven't served the warrant yet," Madden replied.
+
+"And you know that I'm not going to skip the country at the prospect
+of your serving it?"
+
+"No. There's no hurry; I'll just sit around for a while. And
+understand, Weir, this arrest is none of my doings, except officially.
+I take no stock in the yarn about your having attacked the greaser you
+killed. Martinez' and Miss Janet's testimony at the inquest satisfied
+me in that respect."
+
+Mr. Pollock now drew Weir aside for a whispered conference. When they
+rejoined the others the engineer made the lawyer acquainted with the
+sheriff.
+
+"Mr. Weir has agreed to my suggestion to take you into our confidence,
+Mr. Madden," he stated. "There may be other warrants for you to serve
+soon, and I'm sure you will respect what we reveal. All of us here
+except you know the facts I'm about to relate; indeed, have shared in
+them to an extent; and in addition to our word we'll present proof.
+You know Dr. Hosmer and his daughter certainly, you probably know Mr.
+Johnson and the young lady with him, and are aware whether their
+statements are to be relied on."
+
+"They are," Madden answered, without hesitation.
+
+"You're already convinced of the truth of Weir's innocence in the
+charge of murder now being preferred against him. Well, now, a friend
+at court is worth something; and we propose to make you that friend."
+
+"I'm not against him like most of the town, anyway," was the sheriff's
+answer.
+
+"Go ahead with your explanation," Pollock said to the engineer.
+
+Thereupon Weir briefly sketched out events for the officer as they had
+occurred and as showing the motives which had inspired his enemies in
+seeking to destroy him:--the original plot against his father, his
+determination to uncover the four conspirators, the episode at the
+restaurant in Bowenville, the discovery of Ed Sorenson as the hirer of
+the dead Mexican assassin, the obtaining of Saurez' deposition and
+Martinez' imprisonment in Vorse's saloon cellar, Janet's abduction and
+rescue and the loss of the paper.
+
+"But the paper isn't lost," Dr. Hosmer interrupted. "Mary Johnson
+found it and here it is." With which he drew the crumpled document
+from his breast pocket and laid it on the table.
+
+"You have it again!" Weir exclaimed. "You found it, Mary!" He stepped
+forward and took the girl's hand in his for a moment. "You're a friend
+indeed to bring this back to me."
+
+"I owed you more than that," she said, coloring.
+
+"But Mr. Sorenson has learned about his son and the paper and
+everything that happened, except Ed Sorenson told him lies instead of
+the truth," Janet put in. "He's terribly angry at all of us. He said
+he would kill you for crippling Ed."
+
+"Sorenson is welcome to try," Weir responded, with a quick blaze in
+his eyes.
+
+At this point Mr. Pollock interposed.
+
+"You didn't finish your story, Weir. Relate for Mr. Madden's benefit
+what occurred at Judge Gordon's house."
+
+This tragic conclusion to the afternoon's happenings the engineer
+told, though remarking that the company director should be the true
+narrator. At his announcement that Judge Gordon had taken his own life
+by poison his listeners remained dumbfounded.
+
+"He's dead, then?" Madden asked, at last.
+
+"Yes. And the transfer of property made to Mr. Pollock amounts to an
+acknowledgment of his guilt. Now, I should like to have Martinez read
+this deposition, for I've never heard its contents myself."
+
+This the Mexican did, translating the Spanish paragraphs into English
+with fluent ease, ending by reading the list of witnesses. Martinez
+gave the paper a slap of his hand.
+
+"And old Saurez was found dead in Vorse's saloon by me an hour after
+he had signed this," he said. "Draw your own conclusions."
+
+Madden shifted on his seat. He glanced at the document and at the
+others and then gazed out the door at the darkness.
+
+"Looks like a clear case; I always imagined if these men's past was
+dug into there would be a lot of crooked business turned up. But
+granting that everything is as shown, with Lucerio the county attorney
+under Sorenson's thumb and the community as it is there's a question
+if Saurez' statement even will be enough to convict them."
+
+At that Janet jumped up, her eyes gleaming.
+
+"That is not all the proof, not all by any means!" she cried.
+
+"What more is there?"
+
+"Mr. Johnson's evidence."
+
+"Johnson's!" came in surprised tones from all four of the men
+uninformed of the rancher's story.
+
+"Yes, he saw the man Dent killed and the plotters make your father,
+Mr. Weir, believe he had done the killing."
+
+Steele stared at Johnson dumbfounded.
+
+"Just that; I saw the whole dirty trick worked, looking through the
+back door of the saloon."
+
+"Then you were the boy!" Weir gasped. "The boy who looked in! After
+thirty years I supposed that boy gone, lost, vanished beyond
+finding."
+
+"I stayed right here," was the reply. "Of course I kept my mouth shut
+about what I had seen. I worked on ranches and rode range and at last
+got the little place on Terry Creek and married. Nothing strange in my
+remaining in the country where I grew up, especially as I only knew
+the cattle business."
+
+Weir swung about to Madden.
+
+"Here's a live witness," said he. "With the other proof his evidence
+should be final."
+
+"Whenever you say, I'll arrest the men. As for this warrant I have,
+I'll just continue to carry it in my pocket," the sheriff stated. "I
+must remark that I never heard of a more villainous plot, taking it
+all around, than you've brought to light."
+
+"And the charges must cover everything," Pollock said sternly. "From
+Dent's murder to the conspiracy against the irrigation company."
+
+"I'll stay here in case you need me to stop any trouble with your
+workmen," Madden remarked.
+
+But trouble though imminent was coming from another direction, as was
+suddenly shown when a man, dust-covered and hatless, rushed into the
+office.
+
+"They're on the way," he cried.
+
+"Who? The workmen?" Weir demanded.
+
+"No. I don't know anything about the workmen, but a bunch of Mexicans,
+fifty or more, are headed this way to blow up the dam. I saw and heard
+them."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"At the spring a mile south. I was watching down there, where Atkinson
+had sent me after supper, relieving the man who kept lookout during
+the afternoon. That was where the booze was dealt out last night, you
+remember. I was sitting there when I heard a crowd coming. At first I
+thought it was our men, but when they stopped to drink and smoke, I
+saw by their talk they were Mexicans. But there was one white man with
+them, a leader. He and a Mexican talked in English. They're to raid
+the camp, crawling up the canyon, to dynamite the dam first, then fire
+the buildings."
+
+"Then they're on the road here now?"
+
+"Yes." The speaker licked his lips. "I cut along the hillside until I
+got ahead of them, but it was slow going in the dark and stumbling
+through the sage. They must be close at hand by this time, though I
+came faster than they did. The white man said to the Mexican that they
+wanted to reach the dam just at moonrise, and that will be pretty
+quick now."
+
+"Go to the bunk-house and call the men waiting there, and get a gun
+yourself," Weir ordered. "The storekeeper will give you one." When the
+messenger had darted out, he looked at the others. "You must take
+these girls away from here, doctor, at once."
+
+"But I don't go," Johnson snapped forth, drawing his revolver and
+giving the cylinder a spin.
+
+"I never could hit anything, and haven't had a firearm in my hand for
+years, but I can try," Pollock stated. "This promises to be
+interesting, very interesting."
+
+"Very," said Weir.
+
+For a little he stood in thought, while the others gazed at him
+without speaking. His straight body seemed to gather strength and
+power before their eyes, his clean-cut features to become hard and
+masterful.
+
+"Up the canyon he said they were coming, didn't he?" he remarked at
+last, more to himself than to them. "Very well, so much the better.
+Johnson, you and Madden take charge of the men when they come and line
+them along the hillside this side of the dam. Put out all lights."
+With which he strode out of the building.
+
+They looked after him in uncertainty.
+
+"I'm not going; you may be hurt, and need me," Mary stated, with a
+stubborn note in her voice.
+
+"Then keep out of reach--and run for town if the ruffians get into
+camp," was her father's answer.
+
+"I stay too," Janet exclaimed, resolutely.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+NO QUARTER
+
+
+The peril threatening the unfinished dam now alone engaged Steele
+Weir's mind. Personal considerations did not enter into his
+calculations, least of all thought of personal danger; for when he
+placed himself in an undertaking whatever rested under his hand, as in
+this case the irrigation company's property, became for him a trust to
+attend, to direct, to guard. Even more than if it had been his own
+property did he feel the obligation, for the interests concerned were
+not his. But the matter went deeper than a prospective money loss; it
+struck down to principles and rights--the principles of order and
+industry as against viciousness and havoc; the rights of law-abiding
+men who create as against the wantonness of lawless men who would
+destroy.
+
+Were it his own workmen who, inflamed by drink and incited by a spirit
+of recklessness, were coming to wreck the camp in a moment of mad
+intoxication, he would have made allowances for the cause. Before
+resorting to extreme measures in defending his charge, he first would
+have sought to bring them to their senses. Drunken men are men
+unbalanced, irrational.
+
+But here was another case: an attack by a secret, sober, malevolent
+band, who in cold blood approached to demolish the company works. Not
+liquor moved them on their mission, but money--money paid by his arch
+enemies. The men were simply hired tools, brazenly indifferent no
+doubt to crimes, desperate in character certainly, for a handful of
+coins ready to wipe out a million dollars' worth of property and
+effort. Such deserved no consideration or quarter.
+
+Weir proposed to give none. With enemies of this kind he had but one
+policy, strike first and strike with deadly force. One does not seek
+to dissuade a rattlesnake; one promptly stamps it under heel. One
+cannot compromise with ravenous wolves; one shoots them down. One does
+not wait to see how far a treacherous foe will go; one forestalls and
+crushes him before he begins. Moreover, if wise, one does it in such
+fashion that the enemy will not arise from the blow.
+
+With the information given him by the guard posted at the spring Weir
+immediately grasped the true nature of the plot. The "whiskey party"
+was but a means of withdrawing the workmen from the scene, of
+weakening the camp, while a picked company of ruffians wrecked the
+property. It was an assault intended to wipe out the works and end
+construction, coincident with his arrest. Both the company and he were
+to pay the penalty for resisting the powers that rule San Mateo. And
+if the tale were spread that the destruction had been wrought by his
+workmen while drunk, who would doubt it?
+
+Like shadows the band of Mexican desperadoes would come, dynamite the
+dam, fire the buildings, stampede the horses, and like shadows vanish
+again. In the unexpectedness of the raid, in the confusion, in the dim
+light, no one would with certainty be able to say who the assailants
+were. A scheme ferocious in its conception and diabolical in its
+cunning! But there was one flaw--the element of chance. Chance had
+given Weir warning.
+
+A strong man warned is a strong man armed.
+
+As the engineer stood in the office, swiftly measuring the imminent
+menace of which he had just been told, calculating the meager
+instruments of defense at hand, his mind sweeping up all the salient
+aspects, features, advantages and disadvantages of the situation, he
+seized on the one weak spot in the attacking party's plan. At that
+spot he would strike.
+
+So giving Johnson and Madden the order to take charge of the little
+handful of guards, he had plunged out into the night.
+
+The men from the bunk-house were already running toward the office,
+before the door of which the rancher gathered them together to make
+sure of their arms and ammunition. All told, when Martinez and Pollock
+presently came from the store with guns, the little party numbered
+eleven.
+
+"Is this all there are of us?" Dr. Hosmer asked.
+
+"We are worth all that crowd that's coming," Johnson exclaimed, taking
+a spare gun Martinez had brought him.
+
+"Did Weir send the rest of the engineers down to that house? I
+understood so."
+
+"That's where they are, I reckon."
+
+Dr. Hosmer considered for a minute.
+
+"I can be there in five minutes in my car. The road is on the north
+side of the stream, as is this camp: the gang that's heading here to
+blow things up is coming up from the south, so it will not block the
+way. Men could be here in twenty minutes from down yonder by
+running."
+
+"A good suggestion, doctor," Pollock said. "It may take you a bit
+longer to find and tell them what's occurring, but even so they may
+return in time. Fifty, or even twenty, might give us enough
+assistance to beat off the attack."
+
+"There comes the moon," said the man who had been at the spring. "They
+must be near now."
+
+Far in the east the moon was stealing above the horizon. Under its
+light the mesa took form out of the darkness--the level sagebrush
+plain criss-crossed by willow-lined ditches and checkered by small
+Mexican fields, the winding shimmering Burntwood River with its border
+of cottonwoods, the narrow road, the distant town of San Mateo, a
+vague blot of shadow picked out by tiny specks of light.
+
+The mountains too now reared in view, silent, silvered, majestic,
+towering about the camp on the lower base. One could see, as the moon
+swam higher, the low long buildings of the camp clustered on the
+hillside above the canyon, in the bottom of which was the dashing
+stream and the bone-white core of the dam.
+
+"Look down yonder on the other side!" Martinez exclaimed suddenly,
+pointing a long thin forefinger at the mouth of the canyon where a
+group of black dots were moving up the river.
+
+"That's them," said the man who had given the warning.
+
+"And they're armed," said another. "You can see the moon shine on
+their gun-barrels."
+
+On the opposite side of the stream, some two hundred yards below the
+dam and three or four hundred feet lower in elevation than the camp,
+advancing up the canyon in a string, the men looked like a line of
+insects.
+
+"I'm off for help," the doctor said, springing into his car. "Janet,
+you and Mary go higher up among the rocks and hide if these buildings
+are attacked." Away he went, buzzing down the hillside to the long
+stretch of road.
+
+Weir now came into sight, walking quickly towards the group. That he
+saw the Mexicans down in the canyon was evident from his swift
+appraising glances thither.
+
+"Johnson, move your men down halfway to the dam and have them scatter
+there behind bowlders. I shall go still lower down," he said. "You
+will hold your fire until I signal with my hat from the dam."
+
+"You're going to the dam?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We ought to go with you."
+
+"I don't need you. You'll be more effective hidden above. You'll have
+plenty of light as the moon is shining squarely in the gorge. And
+await my signal."
+
+"All right; you're the general."
+
+"But take no extreme risks, Weir. The company doesn't ask you to
+sacrifice yourself," Pollock stated.
+
+"The sacrifice will be down among those fellows," Steele replied, with
+set jaw. "Don't worry about me. Now, start, men."
+
+He stood for a little watching the rate of progress of the line of
+Mexicans ascending the stream, which was not rapid owing to the broken
+rocks lining the bank. Then he swung about to the two girls.
+
+"Every one here now is under my orders," he said. "You two will take
+your car and go at once. This is no place for you."
+
+"But----" Janet began.
+
+"I'm taking no chances that you shall fall into the hands of those
+scoundrels," he declared, sternly. "They may succeed in reaching this
+spot. You must not be here; you must go."
+
+Taking each by an arm he piloted them to the car.
+
+"Sorry, but it has to be," he added. "This is work for men, and men
+alone."
+
+Janet and Mary climbed up into the seat.
+
+"You--you will take care of yourself," Janet said, tremulously.
+
+"I expect to. Still, this isn't going to be a croquet party; anything
+may happen. Good-by."
+
+With that he swung about and breaking into a run made for a small
+building half-buried in the hillside and apart from the camp. There he
+stooped and picked up under each arm what looked like a cylinder of
+some size and went down towards the dam. For a time they could see
+him, but all at once he slipped behind an outcrop of rock and they saw
+him no more.
+
+Janet turned to eye her companion. Once more her face was pale.
+
+"Well?" she inquired of Mary.
+
+"I reckon we'd better do as he says. He'd be awful mad if we didn't.
+Did you see his eyes when he talked to us?"
+
+"But if he--he and others are wounded?"
+
+Uneasily Mary gazed at the older girl and then down at the canyon. On
+the hillside the men led by her father were no longer in sight,
+somewhere concealed among the stones that dotted the earth. But down
+by the stream and now scarcely fifty yards from the white stretch of
+concrete barring the river bed through a tunnel in which the water
+foamed and escaped, the Mexicans were clearly visible, their hats
+bobbing about, their guns flinging upward an occasional gleam.
+
+"It doesn't seem as if anything was going to happen," Mary went on in
+awed tones. "Things are so quiet and peaceful."
+
+Still Janet delayed starting the car, divided in feelings between a
+wish to respect Steele Weir's insistent command and a growing fear for
+his safety. She could see nothing of him. Into the shadow of a rock he
+had disappeared and thither she gazed with straining eyes, hoping to
+see again his straight strong figure.
+
+"Why, look down there at the dam," Mary said, whose eyes had been
+wandering from, point to point of the scene. "Isn't that him?"
+
+Janet's heart gave a quicker beat, then seemed to sink in her breast
+as staring downward she recognized the engineer. He had come out all
+at once from the shade cast by a wooden framework. He had with him the
+burdens he had lifted from the ground before the little detached stone
+house at the edge of the camp, and these, the cylinders, he placed on
+the surface of the concrete core at the spot where he stood. Then he
+knelt down, struck a match, lighted a cigar--as if any man in his
+senses would stop to smoke in such a situation!--and busied himself at
+some task over the cylinders.
+
+Only for an instant had he stood erect on the flat top of the dam.
+Apparently he had been unseen by the attackers, engaged in picking
+their footing: and now in his crouching position, retired from the
+upper edge of the dam's front as he was, it was very likely that he
+was wholly out of view of the band.
+
+At last Weir moved his cylinders forward towards this edge. Afterwards
+he straightened up and standing hands on hips, smoking his cigar, the
+tiny crimson glow of which rose and fell, he watched the party nearing
+the foot of the white gleaming wall, fifty feet below him.
+
+For Janet the sight was too much. His indifference to risk froze her;
+he appeared to be courting death; and she strove to open her lips to
+send down to him an imploring cry to draw back, but succeeded in
+uttering only a tremulous wail.
+
+"They'll shoot him," Mary was saying, "oh, they'll kill him!"
+
+A surge of terror swept Janet. Next thing she knew she was out of the
+car and running down the hillside among the stones and the stalks of
+sagebrush, frantic to reach him, to pull him out of view of the men
+beneath. Only a single one of them had to cast a glance upward and to
+raise his gun and fire, then he would die. He should not die! She
+should fling herself as a protection before him rather than that he
+should be slain!
+
+On a sudden a hand reached up from a rock and seized her arm, stopping
+her with a jerk. Then she was roughly pulled down beside it. The man
+was Madden, the sheriff.
+
+"What in hell are you doing?" he demanded harshly. "Have you gone
+crazy?"
+
+His grip was not relinquished.
+
+"But see him! Aren't you men going to help him? Are you going to let
+him be killed?"
+
+Madden forced her to her knees, so that she was sheltered by the
+outcrop of stone.
+
+"Any man who can smoke a cigar like that at such a time as this knows
+just what he's doing," was the answer. "Keep quiet and watch."
+
+"Oh, I don't want to see," she said. But she continued to look with
+fascinated eyes at the lone, calm figure on the dam.
+
+Presently Madden pushed his gun forward over the rock.
+
+"They've caught sight of him," he stated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE THUNDERBOLT
+
+
+The greater part of the number of bandits had stopped in a group a few
+yards from the base of the white dam core, though a few stragglers
+were some way behind. Among these Steele Weir made out the figure of
+one whom he recognized as a white man; he whom the guard from the
+spring had mentioned as directing the company; and when at a number of
+exclamations from Mexicans who perceived the engineer the man lifted
+his face, Weir saw he was Burkhardt.
+
+No more than this was needed to show whose the hand behind this
+treacherous conspiracy. Clear, too, it was that Burkhardt, determined
+that no mistake or abandonment of the operation should occur, had come
+to see it through in person. Weir could ask nothing better; he had one
+of the plotters caught in the act.
+
+Apparently orders had been to carry through the first part of the
+diabolical plan of destruction in silence, that of gaining control of
+the dam, for when two or three Mexicans flung up rifles to shoot at
+Weir a sharp word from another Mexican, seemingly their leader, had
+checked the volley and shouted to Burkhardt.
+
+The latter had stopped; he stared for a few seconds at the man on the
+white wall above and finally signaled with a wave of his arm.
+
+"Come down here," he ordered.
+
+But Weir made no move to obey. He continued to stand motionless,
+coolly regarding the party beneath. His eyes particularly considered
+two men who carried wooden boxes, square and stout, on their
+shoulders. At last he spoke.
+
+"What do you want here?"
+
+"Come down, then you'll learn," Burkhardt shouted up, making no effort
+to hide the enmity in his voice.
+
+Weir puffed at his cigar, removed it from his lips to glance at its
+glowing end, while the Mexicans stared up at him in silence, puzzled
+by this lone guard who carried no rifle, who did not flee away to
+spread an alarm and seek aid, and who so unexpectedly had appeared as
+if anticipating their visit.
+
+Murmurs broke out. Why were they not allowed to shoot him at once in
+the approved Mexican bandit fashion and proceed to their work? If
+he were not shot at once, he yet could escape for aid. The party
+had to ascend the hillside in order to mount to the top of the
+concrete work. Time would be required to place and fire their charges
+of dynamite--and they were eager to get at the loot in the buildings
+above.
+
+"Kill him," Burkhardt roared suddenly, jerking forth his revolver and
+blazing at the engineer.
+
+The bullet sang past Weir's head. He did not duck; indeed, kept his
+place calmly while the Mexicans were raising their guns, as if to show
+his supreme contempt for their power. But at the instant Burkhardt
+fired again and a dozen rifles blazed he sprang back and dropped flat,
+leaving the deadly missiles to speed harmlessly above the dam.
+
+Raising himself cautiously he seized the end of a fuse projecting from
+one of the canisters and held the crimson end of his cigar against it
+until a sputter of sparks showed that it had caught. From this fuse he
+turned to the one in the second can and repeated the operation.
+
+This was the essence of his plan of defense. With guns the defenders
+on the hillside would be outnumbered and probably killed in an attack.
+The information that the assailants were to steal up the canyon,
+however, was the key that would unlock a desperate situation, and his
+mind had grasped the mode and means of defeating the enemy.
+
+With the first shots quiet had returned. The night seemed for Weir as
+peaceful as ever, the earth bathed in moonlight, the camp at rest.
+Only before him there was the sputter of the two fuses, one at the
+right, one at the left, as the trains of fire burned towards the holes
+in the canisters. He watched these calculatingly. His cigar no longer
+of service had been cast aside.
+
+All at once he rose erect again. A few men were starting along the
+wall to climb the hillside, but the greater number were gathered about
+Burkhardt and the Mexican leader. Now Weir glanced at them and now at
+the fuses.
+
+"I warn you to leave this dam and camp, Burkhardt," he shouted, when a
+few seconds had passed. "Don't say I didn't give you warning."
+
+Every head jerked upward at this surprising reappearance and voice.
+They had supposed him fled, the men down there, and were having a last
+hasty conference, doubtless as to the wisdom of now first attacking
+the camp. A grim smile came on the engineer's face. Their astonishment
+was comic--or would have been at a moment less perilous and fraught
+with less grave consequences.
+
+An oath ripped from Burkhardt's lips. An angry curse it might have
+been at Madden that he had failed to arrest and hold the engineer
+according to plan. He gestured right and left, yelling something to
+the men around him. He himself began to run towards one end of the
+dam.
+
+Weir stooped, picked up one of the canisters, blew on the fuse now
+burned so near the hole. Some men perhaps at this instant would have
+quailed for their own safety and at the prospect of hurling death
+among others. For death this tin cylinder meant for those below. But
+there was no tremor in Steele Weir's arm or heart.
+
+He was the man of metal who had won the name "Cold Steel"--calm,
+implacable, of steel-like purpose. With such enemies he could hold no
+other communion than that which gave death. For such there was no
+mercy. By the same sort of law that they would execute let them
+suffer--the law of lawlessness and force. Destruction they would give,
+destruction let them gain.
+
+He straightened. He took a last look at the snapping, sparkling,
+smoldering fuse, then flung his burden full down upon the spot where
+the Mexicans were again pointing their guns at him. Swiftly picking up
+the second canister, while bullets whined by, he cast it down after
+the first. A glimpse of startled faces he had, of men attempting to
+scatter from before the huge missiles, then he flung himself full
+length upon the dam.
+
+Interminably time seemed to stretch itself out as lying there he
+listened, waited, sought to brace himself for the impending shock. A
+quick doubt assailed his mind. Had the charges failed.
+
+All at once the earth seemed rent by a roar that shook the very dam.
+Followed instantly a second volume of sound more terrific, more
+blasting in its quality, more dreadful in its power, deafening,
+stunning, as if the world had erupted.
+
+"Their dynamite!" Weir breathed to himself.
+
+His ear-drums appeared to be broken. His hat was gone. His body ached
+from the tremendous dispersion of air. But that he could still hear he
+discovered when through his shocked auditory nerves he distinguished,
+as if far off, faint booming echoes from the hills.
+
+He got to his knees, finally to his feet. Pressing his hands to his
+head he gazed slowly about. Stones and a rain of earth were still
+falling, as if from a meteoric bombardment. About him he perceived
+sections of woodwork shaken to pieces, collapsed.
+
+Stepping to the edge of the dam he peered downward. A vast hole showed
+in the earth before the wall though the wall itself was uninjured and
+only smeared with a layer of soil. Huge rocks lay where there had been
+none before, uprooted and flung aside by the explosion, dispersed by
+the gigantic blast. On the hillside half a dozen men were picking
+themselves up and struggling wildly to flee. Nearer, a few other forms
+lay in the moonlight mangled and still, or mangled, and writhing in
+pain. Of all the rest--nothing.
+
+Almost completely Burkhardt's predatory band had been blotted out.
+Weir's thunderbolt had struck down into its very heart, and it had
+vanished.
+
+As he turned and walked towards the end of the dam, he staggered a
+little. The sight had shaken even his iron nerve.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+WEIR STRIKES WHILE THE IRON IS HOT
+
+
+In his runabout, with Sheriff Madden at his side, and followed by
+Atkinson and half a dozen men for guards in two other machines, Weir
+sped along the road to San Mateo. They carried with them Burkhardt,
+who had been found stunned and slightly injured, and two Mexican
+bandits who had been captured. Those of the party of attackers yet
+alive but seriously hurt were being treated at camp by Dr. Hosmer,
+while the young engineers, armed and eager, were scouring the mountain
+side for the few Mexicans who had got away.
+
+It seemed a miracle that Burkhardt had escaped death, but the
+explanation was found no doubt in the fact he had started from the
+spot where the canisters fell and so at the moment of explosion was
+outside the area of its full destruction. To Weir the matter went
+deeper than that. Providence appeared to have saved him for
+punishment, for the long term of imprisonment he deserved for his
+crimes.
+
+"I'd much rather have him alive than dead," Steele had remarked to
+Madden, when the man was brought up from the canyon a prisoner.
+
+The tremendous thunder-clap of sound from the camp had quickened the
+return of the superintendent and his men, already reached and warned
+by the doctor. More, it had startled even the drunken workmen so that
+when some one shouted that the dam had been blown up the debauch came
+to an immediate end, the house was deserted and the throng, incited by
+curiosity and wonder, went staggering and running for camp.
+
+The first of these had arrived and the rest were tailing behind for
+half a mile when Weir and his companions set out for town, the
+blinding headlights of the machines scattering on either side of the
+road the approaching workmen. It was not likely many would go back to
+the house when they were told at headquarters how narrowly destruction
+of the works had been averted and how their spree had been a move in
+the plot. Between shame at being-duped and drowsiness resulting from
+drink they would, after a look at the hole blown in the earth at the
+base of the dam, want to seek their bunk-houses.
+
+As they sped towards town Weir and Madden rapidly made their plans,
+for the sheriff having witnessed with his own eyes the enormity of the
+plotters' guilt was all for quick action.
+
+"These engineers of yours with us and the other men Meyers will bring
+down can be thrown as a guard around the jail," he stated. "I'll swear
+them all in as deputies. With Sorenson and Vorse locked up along with
+Burkhardt--and I'll throw Lucerio, the county attorney, in with them
+on the off chance he's an accomplice--there will be high feeling
+running in San Mateo. As quick as I can make arrangements, we'll take
+them to safe quarters elsewhere--to-night if possible, to-morrow at
+the latest, in fast machines. These men have friends, remember."
+
+"You've Burkhardt handcuffed; it might be well to gag him, too, for
+fear the crowd might make trouble if he yelled for help," Weir
+replied.
+
+"Yes, we'll do that, though I think we can rush him into the jail
+before anyone knows what's happening."
+
+On the outskirts of town therefore the cars stopped. When Burkhardt,
+who had recovered his senses and with them a knowledge of his plight,
+perceived the sheriff's intention his rage burst all bounds.
+
+"You fool, you muddle-headed blunderer!" he exclaimed, with a string
+of oaths. "Take these cuffs off! You'll lose your job for this trick.
+When I see Sorenson----"
+
+"When you see him, you'll see him; and that will be inside a cell,"
+was the cool rejoinder. "I didn't know you were a dynamiter and
+would-be murderer until to-night, but I watched you at work and saw
+you shoot twice at Weir."
+
+"You'll unlock these, I say, here and now!" And the raging voice went
+off in a further stream of biting curses. "Look at me; I'm Burkhardt.
+You're crazy to talk of throwing me in jail, with my influence
+and----"
+
+"Your influence be damned," was the imperturbable answer. "You'll have
+a long time in a penitentiary to see how much influence you have, if
+you don't swing first."
+
+Burkhardt struggled fiercely for a moment against the steel bands
+about his wrists and the men who held him.
+
+"No crook like this Weir shall ever send me behind bars, or any other
+man put me there. Wait till Sorenson and Vorse and Judge Gordon learn
+what you're trying! Wait till they find out you've double-crossed us
+for this engineer! Wait till Gordon turns me loose with a _habeas
+corpus_, you'll sweat blood for this night's work, Madden!"
+
+The sheriff shook out the red handkerchief with which he expected to
+bind the prisoner's mouth.
+
+"I'll wait for a long time if I wait for Gordon to issue the writ," he
+remarked. "Seeing that he's dead."
+
+"Dead! You're a liar, you sneaking cur; you can't bluff me. And when
+I'm loose, if I don't fill you full of lead it will be because----"
+
+But Burkhardt's explanation was never finished on that point, for
+Madden whipped the rolled handkerchief over his mouth and quickly
+knotted it behind, shutting off the flow of seething vituperative
+speech. If looks could slay, those he received from the prisoner's
+bloodshot maddened eyes would have dropped the sheriff in his tracks;
+as it was, they fell harmless against the law officer's person.
+
+"Things have changed sort of sudden, haven't they, Burkhardt?" Madden
+stated, sardonically. "Never can tell what's going to happen between
+supper and breakfast. Here I go out to serve a warrant on Weir, and
+instead I'm bringing you in for trying a low I.W.W. trick. Surprising
+cards a fellow sometimes gets on the draw." With which he went back to
+the other car.
+
+Counting on quickness for the safe delivery of his men in jail, Madden
+did not attempt to approach the court house by a side street. On the
+contrary he drove fast down the main way, with the other two cars
+following close, passing without pause through the crowd of Mexicans
+drawn forth in wonder at the booming report of the explosion that had
+sounded from the dam.
+
+One could see that excitement was at a high pitch. With the rumors
+that all day had been in circulation, with later vague tales of the
+great debauch proceeding at the old 'dobe house half way up the road
+to camp, with the thunder-clap that had burst from the base of the
+mountains coming on top of all, every man, woman and child had run to
+the main street, where those in the automobiles could see by wagging
+tongues and gesticulating hands that speculation was rife and
+curiosity afire.
+
+"The talk this evening when I set out for your camp was that I
+expected to bring you in and hang you," Madden said dryly, to the
+engineer. "Quite a crowd had come to town. Plain to see now that
+Burkhardt and his bunch had started the talk. I shouldn't be surprised
+if there had been trouble had I arrested and locked you up. There are
+a few bad Mexicans around these parts that would do anything for
+money, and it's evident from what's happened that Sorenson's gang was
+ready to go the limit. What I'm trying to figure out is where these
+fellows Burkhardt had with him up yonder came from."
+
+"I can tell you. From across the line. I've seen plenty just like them
+down there," Weir affirmed. "Look at their hats and clothes--but
+you'll be able to make them talk after a while. However, you won't
+find any of them speaking English. Offer one of them some money and a
+trip home and he'll give you the story quick enough, especially after
+you've thrown a scare into him. We can afford to let one go to get the
+facts."
+
+"You better keep out of sight after we have the men in the jail. Slip
+behind the jail to the rear of the yard, and when I've locked them up
+and told Atkinson what to do about keeping the people away from the
+building, I'll join you there."
+
+"I understand," Weir stated.
+
+"And we can slip off and grab Vorse if he's in his saloon and then
+Sorenson before any one knows what's happening."
+
+"That's right; don't want the game spoiled now. Here we are."
+
+The cars had arrived at the gate before the courthouse. Here, too,
+however, the crowd was densest, having gathered at the spot as if the
+roar of powder from the camp was an overture to Weir's arrest and
+appearance. It had proved a prelude to his appearance, at any rate.
+The crowd perceived him with Madden and it believed him a prisoner
+even if not handcuffed and marched with a pistol at his head.
+
+A profound silence at first greeted the party as it alighted. Madden,
+assisting Burkhardt to alight, pulled the man's broad-brimmed hat low
+over his eyes to conceal his face from the revealing moonlight. A
+short struggle again ensued, but Burkhardt finally yielded to the
+pressure exerted by his companion guards.
+
+A murmur of astonishment ran over the surrounding throng, each instant
+being augmented by the voices of others running to the place. Not only
+did it appear that the engineer was under arrest, but likewise
+others,--a handcuffed, gagged man and two sullen Mexicans, strangers
+to the community. Yet a number of the onlookers, possibly men with
+Vorse's or Sorenson's money in their pockets, shouted as the
+new-comers moved through the press:
+
+"Killer, murderer! Hang him, shoot him!" And more voices began to join
+in the cry.
+
+Clearly the intent was to stir up feeling in the crowd to a point
+where action against Weir would seem a spontaneous outbreak. Even
+women joined in the cry; curses followed; fists were shaken.
+
+"Open up the way," Madden ordered, as a surge of the crowd threatened
+to surround him and his party. In his hand, as if to emphasize his
+command, a six-shooter swung into view, sweeping to and fro and
+menacing the press of people.
+
+The frightened men directly before the party struggled to get out of
+line of the weapon, yielding suddenly a clear passage.
+
+"Quick! Around the courthouse and back to the jail," Madden exclaimed
+to those with him.
+
+Pushing forward from the moonlight into the shade cast by the
+cottonwoods, they dragged their prisoners past the first building
+towards the low stout stone structure at the rear, half-illuminated
+and half-concealed by the patches of light and shade falling from the
+trees.
+
+A minute later Madden whipped out his keys.
+
+"Two men remain here at the door and don't be afraid to show your
+rifles to that bunch," he said. "In with you, Burkhardt; there's a
+nice soft stone floor to sleep on. Keep those Mexican camp-burners
+covered, Atkinson, till I get the cells open. You, Weir, slip on back
+there in the shadow and wait for me."
+
+The engineer had taken but three steps into the gloom along the
+outside jail wall, glancing about to avoid any curious straggler of
+the crowd already hurrying around the court house towards the jail,
+when he heard a call. In the advance was a slim well-dressed Mexican,
+full in the moonlight and very important of bearing. The call was
+directed not at Weir but at Madden.
+
+"You got him all right, sheriff?" he said.
+
+"Yes. He came in with me," was the answer.
+
+"But who are these others?"
+
+"Step inside and I'll tell you, Lucerio."
+
+The county attorney joined the sheriff, peered inside the doorway and
+hesitated. It was dark within; no light showed except a patch of
+moonlight at the far side of the building that fell through a barred
+window.
+
+"Go right in," Madden exclaimed. And laying hand on the other's
+shoulder he forced him ahead. The door closed after the pair. Before
+the doorway there remained, however, the pair of young engineers,
+rifle in hand, whose threatening bearing and glistening gun-barrels
+were apparent even in the patchy light dropping through the boughs. At
+a distance of about ten feet off the crowd of people halted, staring
+eagerly at the jail building, showing their white teeth as they
+carried on low talk in Spanish and awaiting with impatience the return
+of Madden and Lucerio that they might flood them with questions.
+
+Weir remained to see no more, for the increasing crowd pushed out
+further and further on the flanks, a circumstance that would
+eventually result in his discovery. So slipping to the rear of the
+jail and keeping well in the shadows he gained the fence. This he
+leaped and, lighting a cigarette, examined his pistol, then proceeded
+to smoke calmly until Madden arrived.
+
+"Hurry; slip away," the latter said. "They wondered what the devil I
+dodged back here for and are coming, curious as cats."
+
+The two men glided away, keeping well in shadows until they gained the
+side street and thence passed to the main thoroughfare.
+
+"What if Sorenson and Vorse are somewhere in that crowd?" Madden
+asked. "They're likely to be, expecting your arrest."
+
+"Then we'll have to wait till they leave it. But I don't believe
+they're there. They won't want to show their hand even by being on the
+scene."
+
+"Probably they've found out Gordon is dead."
+
+"Probably. But on the other side, they suppose now that the dam has
+been destroyed and that I'm locked up," Weir said. "Still, I'll guess
+that if they've learned Pollock and Martinez and I were at Gordon's
+all the afternoon, and he committed suicide, they'll be worrying some
+just the same."
+
+Madden glanced at his companion.
+
+"I don't believe we'll bring Vorse in--alive," he said.
+
+"That's the way I want him, and Sorenson, too. I want to see them go
+up for life, but if not that then hanged. But a life term for both,
+along with Burkhardt, is my choice. I want them to suffer as my father
+suffered. Only worse. Dying's too easy for them. Let them have hell
+here for awhile before they get it on the other side. Let the iron
+bars and stone walls kill them. I hope they live for twenty years to
+gnaw out their hearts every day and every night behind steel doors.
+That wouldn't half pay what they owe. But if they finish in prison,
+knowing there's no hope, knowing I've put them there for what they did
+to my father and Jim Dent, knowing that all the money and cattle they
+stole had slipped through their fingers, that they've lost all they
+gained and more, that their curses and crimes are crushing their own
+heads, why, that will help. And Sorenson--Sorenson there every day
+knowing his son lies a helpless cripple, without the money that has
+been piled up for him! I couldn't invent a worse hell for him. And
+that's the hell he's going to have!"
+
+Though a man not easy to move, Madden at Weir's cold implacable
+expression of hatred shivered slightly. Sorenson and his accomplices
+would be lucky indeed if they died by the rope.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+VORSE
+
+
+Across the main street the two men walked, wearing their hats low and
+making no answer to shouted questions of those hurrying to the
+courthouse yard. Already the grounds about the court house and the
+street in front were jammed with eager, excited Mexicans, thrilled
+with an expectation of something to happen, though they knew not
+exactly what. The murderer, the killer, they have taken the killer,
+was the constant statement tossed from mouth to mouth.
+
+"But not the killer they think," Madden said, in a low aside to Weir
+as they moved ahead on their errand.
+
+The pair were now advancing toward the saloon, along the opposite side
+of the street where a slight shadow afforded them concealment. By the
+time they came opposite the building they had escaped altogether from
+the crowd, though looking thither over shoulder they could see the
+black press of people in the moonlight at the public building; and
+here the street was empty except for a few belated women and children
+running toward the assemblage.
+
+Madden's hand suddenly gripped the engineer's arm as they were about
+to step forth from the shadow to cross the street to the saloon.
+
+"There he is," the sheriff whispered.
+
+Vorse had pushed open the slatted door of his place and stepped
+outside. In the moonlight his figure and face were clearly visible:
+his thin whip-cord body and predatory face, and bald head as shiny and
+hard as a fish-scale. He wore no coat, while his vest hung unbuttoned
+and open as usual. About his waist was an ammunition belt carrying a
+holster, as if he were prepared for action.
+
+Thus he stood for a time, hands on hips, motionless, his cruel
+hatchet-like face directed towards the scene further along the street.
+Presently a man came running to him, Miguel, his bartender, who had
+been one of the two men serving out whiskey to the workmen at the old
+adobe house and who at the break-up of the spree had hastened back to
+town to report to his employer. Now, it seemed, he had fresher news to
+give.
+
+"Yes, it is the engineer, for a certainty," he exclaimed panting, as
+he stopped before Vorse. "The sheriff arrested him and he now lies in
+jail there. It is said he fought and tried to shoot Madden, but that
+the sheriff was too quick and shot the gun out of his hand. It is said
+also that the dam is blown into a million little stones, but men are
+riding there on horses to see for themselves. They will soon return.
+Anyway a fight there was up there undoubtedly, for Madden brought in
+not only the engineer but three other men, bound and handcuffed and
+struggling furiously, trying to strike and bite the crowd like mad
+dogs. From time to time the sheriff had to beat them on the heads with
+his pistol, especially the engineer, who is the worst. I did not see
+them, but those who did said their faces were streaming with blood."
+
+"All right. Go find Jose Molina and 'Silver' Leon."
+
+"Are they not up in the hills with their bands of sheep?"
+
+"No. They are here. Look around till you find them; then send them to
+me."
+
+"That means something lively to happen, eh?" Miguel said with a
+laugh.
+
+He did not wait, however, for an answer, but set off at once for the
+court house.
+
+"I hope Meyers shows up soon with more men," Madden said to Weir.
+"Those two sheepherders of Vorse's are a pair of snakes; he always
+hires that kind; and they probably have some fellows with them like
+themselves."
+
+"Meyers is on the way with twenty men or so by this time. They had to
+come in wagons, as we had the cars. Atkinson ought to be able to stand
+off the crowd with the half dozen boys he has until the others
+arrive."
+
+While they had conducted this brief exchange of opinions they had kept
+their gaze on the saloon-keeper, who continued to stand before his
+door. The cold and merciless character of the man was never more
+revealed than now as he waited for his hired assassins to come to
+receive orders. Possessing already a full knowledge of the plot, Weir
+and Madden were able to guess what culmination was now contemplated
+and measure the true depth of the conspirators' infamy. The sheriff
+especially boiled with inward wrath that they should expect to make
+him not only a dupe but a tool in their crime.
+
+"It's clear they never intended you should come to trial when
+arrested," he said to his companion.
+
+"Certainly not. That isn't the way they play the game. And I suppose
+Vorse there imagines the cards are all falling his way at this
+moment."
+
+"He's going in."
+
+"Good. Now then!"
+
+Weir struck off across the street, striding forward at a pace Madden
+found it difficult to keep. As they neared the door, Weir loosened the
+gun in his holster.
+
+In this action the sheriff imitated him and then changing his mind
+drew the weapon itself. Plain man that he was, he was an instinctive
+judge of character; he had encountered men of Vorse's type before,
+less shrewd but equally savage; their nature was to fight, not
+surrender; their way was to kill or be killed in the final issue. He
+anticipated no arrest.
+
+He felt no necessity, however, to express this view to the engineer,
+who had proved himself in the time he had been at San Mateo wholly
+competent to deal with any situation that arose. Moreover, while Vorse
+had had a reputation of being a quick shot in the past, he was
+confident Weir was his master.
+
+With a quiet movement the engineer pushed open the door and stepped
+into the saloon. Madden following him had allowed the slatted door to
+swing shut again and the sound of its hinges caused Vorse, who was
+just starting away from the bar, to turn about. In his hand was a tray
+holding a bottle of whiskey, a bottle of mineral water and glasses,
+which apparently he had just lifted up.
+
+For a space of ten seconds or so he remained unmoving, the tray in his
+hand and his eyes regarding the visitors fixedly. Behind him in the
+rear of the saloon a second man had sprung up from the table where he
+sat, but after that first startled action he, too, had not stirred.
+The man was Sorenson.
+
+With Madden at his side and with a grim smile on his lips Weir walked
+slowly towards Vorse. In his tread there was something of the quality
+of a tiger's, the light, deliberate, poised advance, the easy and
+dangerous movement of body, the effortless glide of a powerful animal
+ready to spring and strike. His hands swung idly at his sides, but
+that did not mean they would not be swift once they responded to the
+call of the brain that controlled them.
+
+"You gentlemen were just about to celebrate my downfall, I perceive,
+by pouring a libation," Weir said. "Don't let me interrupt. Only I
+must request you to conduct the proceedings there where you're
+standing, Vorse, instead of at the rear of the room: Madden and I wish
+a good view of the ceremony. If Mr. Sorenson will be so agreeable as
+to step forward, you may go ahead."
+
+Sorenson did not join Vorse, but instead he spoke.
+
+"Why haven't you locked up your prisoner, Madden?" he demanded
+harshly. "And you're letting him keep his gun. Don't you know enough
+to disarm a murderer and throw him into jail when you arrest him?"
+
+"I haven't arrested him yet," was the sheriff's answer.
+
+"Well, do it then. You have the warrant for the scoundrel. Perhaps you
+haven't heard he almost killed my boy Ed last night--and you're
+allowing him to walk around with you as if he were a bosom friend. Do
+your duty, or we'll get a sheriff who will."
+
+"That's why I'm here, to do my duty."
+
+"You didn't have to bring this man here to do it."
+
+"I decided to bring him, however."
+
+From Vorse had come not a word. Only his gleaming evil eyes continued
+to rest on the two men without wink or change. For him explanations
+were unnecessary; he had divined instantly that somewhere, somehow the
+plotters' plans had gone awry.
+
+"Did you know that Gordon is dead?" Weir asked, all at once.
+
+Vorse lowered the tray to the bar and ran the tip of his tongue over
+his lips.
+
+"No," said he, "we didn't know it."
+
+"He deeded his property over this evening and then swallowed poison,"
+the engineer stated. "He saw the game was up."
+
+"You can't make me believe your lies," came sneering from Sorenson.
+"And you shall pay, you and that girl, for every broken bone in my
+boy's body. I'll spend my last dollar for that if necessary. Madden,
+do your duty and lock him up."
+
+The sheriff said nothing, but lifted his gun a little. Vorse by a
+slight movement of his body had edged from the bar as if to gain
+freedom for action.
+
+"The game's up for you men too," Weir said. "You've murdered and
+robbed and swindled in this country long enough; I've got the proof
+and I'm going to remove you from this community. It's not I who will
+be arrested. You killed Jim Dent after cleaning him out at cards and
+then made my father believe he was guilty of the crime. All I fear is
+that the court will hang you instead of sending you up for life; that
+would be too good for you. I want your crooked souls to die a thousand
+deaths within stone walls before you die in body. The game's up, I
+say. I've Saurez' deposition and I've the man who was the boy looking
+in the back door there that day thirty years ago and saw you shoot
+Dent, and he'll go on the stand against you."
+
+A stillness so profound that one could hear the tiny insects hovering
+about the lamps succeeded this statement. If words had not been
+enough, Weir's cold, harsh face would have removed the men's last
+hope, for on it was not a single trace of relenting. A stone could
+have been no flintier.
+
+"Well?" Vorse inquired softly.
+
+His arched bony nose appeared thinner and more hawk-like. His lips
+were compressed in a white scornful smile, while his eyelids now
+drooped until but slits of light showed from the orbs.
+
+"And you may be interested to know Burkhardt and some of the Mexicans
+he hired are now locked up in jail; the rest, or nearly all, are
+dead," Weir continued, with slow distinctness. "Your little scheme to
+blow up the dam and burn the camp failed. We caught Burkhardt at the
+spot leading the gang. Your plot to make the workmen drunk and leave
+the dam unprotected worked well enough so far as that part was
+concerned, but a keg of powder dropped on your bunch of imported
+bandits ended that part of the show. And we have Burkhardt! You
+gentlemen are going to join him in the jail, where we shall give you
+all the care and attention you deserve."
+
+Vorse turned his head about towards Sorenson.
+
+"Do you hear?" he asked.
+
+"Madden, you've too much sense to believe all this trumped-up libel!"
+Sorenson exclaimed furiously. "About us, respected leaders of this
+town! Arrest the blackguard!"
+
+Even facing assured proof of his complicity and guilt, the cattleman
+still believed in the power of his wealth and influence, in his
+ability to browbeat opponents, to command the man he had elected to
+office, to dominate and ruthlessly crush by sheer will power all
+resistance, as he had done for years.
+
+"I take no orders from you," the sheriff replied.
+
+"Well, I suppose I can empty the till and lock the safe before going?"
+Vorse questioned.
+
+"No. Keep in front of the bar where you are," the sheriff commanded.
+
+"And have everything stolen."
+
+"Your bar-keeper will be back presently. He will look after things for
+you."
+
+"You say Burkhardt is locked up?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"That will hurt his pride," Vorse laughed. "He always swore that no
+one should put him behind bars. He wouldn't have minded so much
+finishing in a gun-fight, but to serve a term in prison would surely
+go against the grain with Burk. Though I think with Sorenson----"
+
+Weir's eyes had never left the speaker. Through the other's
+inconsequential talk and apparently careless acceptance of the fact of
+arrest the engineer had noted the tense gathering of the man's body.
+
+"Put your hands up," he interrupted at this point.
+
+Vorse had uttered no following word after speaking Sorenson's name;
+his voice terminated abruptly. At the same instant his right hand flew
+to his holster and whipped out his gun. It was the advantageous time
+for which he had waited, for Madden's look which had been moving back
+and forth from Vorse to Sorenson so as to cover both had passed to the
+latter. And Weir's weapon was undrawn.
+
+But if Vorse drew fast, the engineer's motion was like a flash of
+light. His weapon leaped on a level with the other's breast. The
+report sounded a second before that of Vorse's and three before
+Madden's, who also had fired.
+
+Then, if ever, Steele Weir had displayed his amazing speed in beating
+an enemy to his gun, for Vorse had indeed been quick, keyed by a
+knowledge that for him this meant imprisonment or freedom, a slow
+death or liberty.
+
+For a minute he stood half crouching as he had been at the instant of
+shooting, his eyes glaring balefully at his enemy and the thin cruel
+smile on his lips, while the two men in front stood warily waiting
+with weapons extended. Then Vorse clutched at his breast, muttered
+thickly and toppled over full length on the floor.
+
+The sharp pungent smell of powder smoke mingled with the reek of
+liquor.
+
+"He's dead," Madden said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you hit?"
+
+"No. His bullet went past my hip; he never got his gun up."
+
+Madden glanced about towards the rear of the room. A command for
+Sorenson to stop broke from his lips. Next he fired. And Weir swinging
+his look that way saw Sorenson's form, untouched by the bullet,
+vanishing through the rear door into the night. Using the minute that
+the two men's surveillance had been lifted he had escaped.
+
+"Hard luck when we had him," Weir growled.
+
+"He can't get away."
+
+"I'm not so sure. And he's armed."
+
+"He'll strike for home to get his car."
+
+"Or to the office for money," Weir exclaimed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+THE FOURTH MAN
+
+
+A last look Steele Weir had at the dead man on the floor before he
+turned to go in search of Sorenson. Not so astute or crafty as Judge
+Gordon, nor so intelligent as Sorenson, nor so belligerent as
+Burkhardt, he had been as rapacious and infinitely more cool-minded
+than any of the three. If anything, he was the one of them all to
+proceed to a crime, whether fraud or murder, in sheer cold blood and
+by natural craving. No uneasy conscience would have ever disturbed his
+rest: no remorse or pity ever stirred in his breast. He was the human
+counterpart of a bird of prey.
+
+Well, he was dead now. Three of the quartette who had been joined by
+avarice and lawless actions were taken care of--Burkhardt a prisoner,
+Gordon dead by self-administered poison, Vorse by bullets. Almost did
+Steele Weir feel himself an embodiment of Fate, clipping the strands
+of these men's power and lives as with shears. Sorenson alone remained
+to be dealt with and his freedom should be short.
+
+Beckoning Madden, he went swiftly through the door where the cattleman
+had leaped into the shadows. Where the gloom ceased and the space
+behind the row of store buildings was clear in the moonlight, nothing
+was to be seen. Naturally the man had kept within black shade in his
+flight.
+
+When they reached the rear of the cattle company's office building,
+they peered in through its barred back windows, but all was dark
+inside the structure so far as they could determine. To all appearance
+Sorenson had not stopped here: it was quiet, gloomy, untenanted.
+
+"We'll have to try his home now," the sheriff stated. "If we don't
+find him there, we'll set the telephones going to warn all the ranches
+and towns around to be on the lookout and either to stop or report him
+if he shows up. He hasn't start enough to get away now."
+
+They hastened on along the line of buildings until they reached a side
+street. But when they had proceeded a short way, Weir stopped.
+
+"I'm not satisfied about the office," said he. "Suppose you go on to
+his house and I'll return for a look inside from the front. If you
+fail to find him join me at Martinez' office, where no one is likely
+to be around and we can then lay further plans."
+
+"That suits," Madden responded, and set off alone.
+
+Weir's alert brain had been turning over the possibilities of
+Sorenson's course. Rather by pursuing what would be the man's line of
+reasoning than by depending on chance, he had come to the quick
+decision to turn back once again to the office. Sorenson would so act
+as would best serve his immediate escape and that of the future.
+
+Would he expect the sheriff and the engineer to look for him to flee
+by the speediest means, an automobile, and to the natural avenue of
+escape, the railroad? Yes. Therefore on that expectation he would
+adopt another way to throw off pursuit. And perilous as a delay would
+be in getting away from San Mateo, yet he must risk the few minutes
+necessary to get money. For to fly with pockets empty meant eventual,
+certain capture. Money a fugitive from justice must possess above
+everything in order to possess wings; and no one would know that
+better than Sorenson.
+
+Though Madden and he had seen no light in the office building, the
+cattleman nevertheless might have been within. If he had been in the
+vault, he could safely have lighted a candle without their perceiving
+its beams; and though the safe was modern it probably had no time
+lock. Sorenson could unlock it with a few twirls of the combination,
+stuff his pockets with currency and negotiable paper to the amount of
+thousands and then slip away.
+
+Fortunately the moonlight was to Weir's advantage. He quickened his
+steps, passed round the corner into the main street and moved towards
+the building. For him the crowd at the court house at that moment had
+no interest; one person, and one person alone, commanded his
+thoughts.
+
+How correct had been his logic--logic not unmixed with intuition,
+perhaps--appeared when he was yet some fifty yards away from the door
+he sought. A tall bulky figure suddenly stepped forth from the
+building and instantly ran across the street and lost itself in the
+shifting, jostling crowd that was half-disclosed, half-concealed by
+the broken shadows of the moonlit trees.
+
+Steele Weir proceeded to a spot near the office and halted. His first
+impulse to rush after Sorenson had been promptly suppressed, as cooler
+judgment ruled. To seek his quarry in that throng would be labor
+wasted, while to reveal his identity would be to court a disastrous
+interference with the business at hand. From where he stood he should
+much better be able to see Sorenson when he did emerge, unless he
+chose to remain in the crowd or steal away at the rear of the court
+house yard, a chance Weir must take.
+
+Five minutes passed. The restless, talkative Mexicans continued to
+swarm and buzz with excitement, ceaselessly moving about, forming and
+reforming in groups, agitatedly repeating newer and wilder rumors
+concerning events. Despite Weir's intent watch for Sorenson, the
+engineer could not but observe the mob's manifestations, observe them
+with sardonic humor. For their ebullition of the present would be
+nothing to what it would be if they learned he stood across the
+street, uncaged, unfettered, free and armed, a "gun-man" loose instead
+of a "gun-man" in jail.
+
+All at once Weir noted out of the tail of his eye a slight stir among
+a number of horses standing with reins a-trail before a store a little
+way down the street. The horses were partly in the light, partly in
+the shadow, so that all he could see was that one or two of them had
+jerked aside quickly, then resumed their listless postures.
+
+He was about to withdraw his eyes when he saw a man swing upon the
+back of one of them and start off at an easy canter. Weir sprang
+towards the spot at a run. That big figure could only be Sorenson's,
+for no Mexican he had ever seen in San Mateo could match it. And the
+plan of escape showed the other's craft in an emergency; gradually
+working his way through the crowd he had at last gained the protective
+shadow of the building on that side of the street and slipped along in
+it until he reached the horses.
+
+Doubtless the man had conceived the plan at the instant he had stepped
+from his office, sweeping the street by one gauging look. With the
+whole town assembled at the court house, his departure was little
+likely to be noted by the Mexicans, while Madden and Weir would never
+suspect him of riding off on a horse, or suspect too late. Indeed, he
+rode at first as if in no great haste, but as he turned his mount
+into a narrow by-way, more a lane than a street that disappeared
+between two mud walls, Weir saw him strike his heels into the pony's
+flanks.
+
+But for the startled movement of the nearby horses when Sorenson
+took stirrup, Weir would not have looked that way. He might
+possibly have seen the horseman start off, but that is not certain.
+He unquestionably would have supposed him an ordinary rider if he
+had not noticed the man until he reached the mouth of the lane.
+
+Meantime the engineer had made his best speed to the line of waiting
+horses. Slowing to a walk so as not to scare them, though as he
+discovered on examination most of them looked too bony and spiritless
+for that, he approached and carefully inspected the bunch. He took his
+time in the selection: the more haste in choosing a mount might prove
+less speed in the end. He tightened the saddle-girths and ran a finger
+along the head straps of the bridle of the horse picked to judge their
+fit, receiving a snap from the pony's teeth, which gave him
+satisfaction. Not only was this animal a wiry, tough-looking little
+beast, but he had life.
+
+Up into the saddle Weir went, followed Sorenson's line to the lane,
+down which he swung. Coming out into the next street, he pursued it to
+an intersecting street, and there galloped for the edge of town
+without trying to guess the way taken by his enemy. Once he reached
+the open fields he would quickly get sight of the man racing away
+somewhere on the mesa.
+
+Evidently the quarry he pursued had not taken so direct a course as
+Weir, for when the latter at length came forth where he could have a
+wide view he perceived the horseman a quarter of a mile off and
+further east, galloping south. The engineer at once raced thither to
+gain the same road and turning into it made for Sorenson.
+
+Thus the two men sped away from San Mateo. The wire fences and the
+adobe houses of Mexicans owning little farms adjoining soon ceased.
+The wide mesa lay on either side. Though a quarter of a mile had
+separated the men when Weir first observed the other, the distance
+between had been increased while the engineer was gaining the road,
+until now the interval was almost twice as great.
+
+Weir guessed the fleeing man's plan. Instead of seeking the railroad
+for the present, he would disappear in the mountains, where with the
+assistance of some loyal employee, cowman or sheepherder, he would lie
+hid until the first fury of the hunt had subsided. Possibly his bold
+brain even conceived the idea of again returning to San Mateo some
+dark night soon and further looting the office, vigilance being
+relaxed.
+
+In any case, he would expect to remain safe from pursuit in a mountain
+fastness until either on horseback or by automobile he could work his
+way out of the country. With what he had unquestionably carried off he
+would not be a poor man. In some spot far away he could assume a new
+name, start in business and later be joined by his wife and crippled
+son.
+
+Alas, for those plans, arising like mushrooms on the ruins of his
+life! Behind him followed the same inexorable antagonist who so
+swiftly had brought everything crashing about his head. Possibly
+Sorenson once out of the town had failed to look back; possibly
+looking back he had been unable to distinguish against the blur of
+houses and trees the horseman galloping in the moonlight along the
+same road.
+
+But all at once when they were two miles away from San Mateo he
+discovered Weir, who had been gradually cutting down the space between
+until now again he was within a quarter of a mile of his quarry.
+Sorenson had been riding rapidly but not hard; he now beat his horse
+to a furious gallop,--a good pony, too, from its speed, showing that
+the banker as well as Weir had picked his mount with care.
+
+Weir did not urge his horse to a similar pace, only maintaining a fast
+steady gallop that kept the other in sight though the space between
+again widened. Apparently Sorenson realized the folly of attempting to
+outrun, his pursuer at once, for he soon dropped back into a regular,
+mile-eating gallop. Gradually in turn Weir crept up to his old
+position.
+
+To each the only sound was that of drumming hoof-beats. In front rode
+the fleeing man--dethroned leader and criminal and murderer. Behind
+relentlessly came his Nemesis, the son of the man whom he had deceived
+and damned to mental suffering. All about them as they flew along was
+the silent, moonlit, sage-covered mesa. At their right towered the
+misty, unchanging peaks, as if watching unmoved this strange race of
+two human beings. A strange race, in truth,--a race where vengeance
+rode.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE VICTOR
+
+
+Ten miles the two men had gone when Sorenson's horse began to fail.
+The rider's weight was proving too much for the sturdy little animal
+and though he strove to maintain his speed the strain told on lungs
+and legs. Weir had reduced the distance first to three hundred yards,
+then to two hundred, and at last but a hundred separated him from the
+man and horse ahead.
+
+The hard chase indeed was beginning to tell on his own mount. Flecks
+of foam flew from its lips; its neck was wet with sweat; the whistle
+of its breath was audible to the engineer at every stride. For as both
+men had realized that now the end could not be far off, they had
+pushed their horses to faster and faster galloping.
+
+On a sudden Sorenson swung his animal into a dim trail leading from
+the main road skirting the mountain range to the base of the mountains
+themselves. The first slopes were but a mile away, covered with a
+scattering growth of pinyon pines. Just in front, too, for which the
+trail seemed pointing, was a dark ravine filled with brush that rose
+to the denser timber above. This was the fugitive's goal. Once he
+could fling himself from the saddle and plunge into the undergrowth he
+would be safe from his pursuer.
+
+The two ponies struggled on with exhausted leaps. Weir had reduced the
+interval to seventy-five yards by the time half the distance was
+covered and to fifty as they drew near the mouth of the ravine. He
+measured his gain and the remaining two hundred yards or so with
+savage eyes, then drew his revolver. He desired to take Sorenson
+unharmed. But rather than that the man should escape he would kill
+him.
+
+Sorenson's horse stumbled, but a jerk of the reins saved him and kept
+him moving on. The engineer struck his own pony fiercely on the flank,
+which produced a tremendous effort in the striving beast that brought
+it within thirty paces or so of Sorenson. That, however, was the best
+it could do, labor as it would. Its knees were trembling at every
+stride, its head swinging heavily.
+
+Sorenson's horse suddenly went to its knees. But the man leaping clear
+took the ground on his feet and instantly set off at a run for the
+line of brush in the draw some seventy or eighty paces away. A last
+spurt Weir's pony made, bringing his rider to within thirty yards of
+the cattleman, who glancing over his shoulder halted, swung about,
+fired a shot and again started to run.
+
+The pony under Weir came to an abrupt stop, shaking. He was done,
+whether from exhaustion or the bullet the engineer did not wait to
+see. Flinging himself out the saddle he raced after his man, taking
+the rough trail leading up the slope in swift strides. On foot
+Sorenson was no match for him. But the latter had the start; he was
+now almost within reach of the thick screen of bushes; and he bent
+every energy to make the ambuscade.
+
+Still running, Weir flung up his gun and fired. Close the shot must
+have gone to Sorenson, so close as to inject into the man's mind
+recollection of his pursuer's accuracy and a fear of a bullet in his
+back, for when within twenty feet of the bushes he dropped behind a
+small bowlder, whence he fired twice at Weir but without striking his
+mark.
+
+Neither man after the furious ride and the concluding run on foot was
+fit for sure marksmanship. This Weir realized, so stopped where he was
+some forty feet off from Sorenson's stone in order to regain his
+breath and calm his nerves. Of the cattleman he could see nothing; the
+man crouched low out of sight, perhaps reloading his weapon, perhaps
+steeling himself for a dash across that small moonlit space that
+separated him from safety, or perhaps preparing for a quick upward
+spring and a fresh volley directed at his foe.
+
+It may be questioned if in his heart Sorenson was not almost disposed
+to fight the matter out. He was no coward; his original hatred for the
+engineer had by recent events been swelled to a diabolical desire to
+kill; and now even if he, Sorenson, succeeded in slipping away, his
+whereabouts would be known unless he destroyed the man. Safety
+demanded that he not only escape but escape without this witness.
+
+Weir had not sought cover. He stood upright, his revolver ready,
+trusting to have an advantage in his speed when it came to an exchange
+of shots. Then he began an advance, a slow noiseless circling advance
+that at the same time of taking him closer to his enemy brought him
+round on his flank.
+
+Sorenson's hand and pistol appeared and half his face while three
+shots rattled from his gun, two at the spot where Weir had been and
+one at him in his new position, which the hiding man had immediately
+located. The last shot ticked the engineer's sleeve. In return Weir
+fired twice, the first bullet striking the rock and ricocheting off
+with a loud whine, while the second struck the pistol from Sorenson's
+hand.
+
+Instantly Weir sprang forward.
+
+"Show yourself," he ordered. And the kneeling fugitive, disarmed,
+gripping his bleeding hand, sullenly arose to his feet. "You've led me
+a chase, but I have you at last," the engineer continued. "Now you're
+going back to San Mateo and jail. Walk towards the horses."
+
+Sorenson cast one bitter glance at the thicket in the ravine; by only
+the little matter of a few yards he had failed to gain liberty. For
+Weir his visage when he looked around again was never more hard,
+hostile, full of undying hatred. Though balked, he was not submissive,
+and was the kind who kept his animosity to the end. Then he started
+off towards the horses, his own which had staggered to its feet again
+and Weir's, both standing with hanging heads and heaving, quivering
+sides.
+
+All at once the cattleman halted and faced about.
+
+"Most men have a price, and I suppose you have yours," he said, with
+forced calmness. "I'm ready to pay it."
+
+"You're going to pay it," was the answer.
+
+"How much will you ask to let me go?"
+
+"If you offered me ten million, which you haven't got, I wouldn't
+accept it," Weir said, harshly. "There isn't enough money in the world
+to buy your liberty. You're going back to San Mateo, and from there to
+the penitentiary or to the gallows, one or the other."
+
+"It will be neither," Sorenson stated.
+
+"You're mistaken, but I shall not argue the matter with you. Keep
+walking towards the horses."
+
+Sorenson's lips became compressed. He glanced down at his bleeding
+hand, shook the blood from his fingers.
+
+"I stay here," said he.
+
+Weir went a step nearer and thrust his face forward, jaw set, eyes
+smoldering.
+
+"Go on, I say," he exclaimed.
+
+But the other did not retreat before him or indeed move at all. A
+sneer lifted his gray mustache.
+
+"You have a gun; you're a killer; here I am unarmed and in your
+power," he said. "You intend to take me in; I propose to stay here. If
+I go to San Mateo, it will be as a dead man. I'll see whether you have
+the nerve to shoot me down where I now stand. If you have, go to it.
+You can then take my body to town, but I'll not have paid the price
+you name and I'll have the satisfaction of knowing I beat you at the
+last--in that, at least. Your bragging will be empty. Start your
+shooting any time you please." The tone spoke complete contempt.
+
+Weir said nothing. The defiance, the supreme audacity of this
+assertion, coming so unexpectedly, surprised him and left him at a
+loss. He would not kill an unresisting man, even Sorenson, his worst
+enemy. Sorenson in his place probably would not have hesitated to do
+so, for he had no fine scruples in such matters; but for Steele Weir
+the thing was no more possible than striking a woman or a child.
+
+It was not a question of nerve, as the other had stated. It was a test
+of brutality and consciencelessness. To shoot a man while escaping is
+one thing; to kill him while a prisoner, however contemptuous and
+brazen, was another. But there are means other than bullets for
+handling obstinate prisoners.
+
+Weir shifted his weapon so as to grasp the barrel and have the butt
+free.
+
+"I'll leave your execution to the proper officials, if an execution
+is what you want," he said. "Now will you go?" he demanded,
+threateningly.
+
+His foe gazed at the clubbed pistol and turned as if to yield. Next
+instant he whirled, lunging at Weir and flinging his arms about his
+captor. An exultant exclamation slipped from his lips; his hot breath
+fell on the engineer's cheek; his eyes glared into those of the man
+his arms encircled. He had tricked Weir by his pretense of obstinacy,
+led him to weaken his guard and had him in his grasp.
+
+Weir braced himself to resist the man's effort to force him down.
+Strong arms the other had, now doubly strengthened by hate and a
+belief in victory. All the power of Sorenson's great body was exerted
+to lift him off his feet, crush him in a terrific bear-hug, put him on
+his back and render him helpless; and Weir in his turn was tensing his
+muscles and arching his frame with every ounce of his lean, iron-like
+frame.
+
+Thus they swayed and struggled in the moonlight, without witnesses. A
+sinister silent fight, marked only by their fierce breathing and
+fiercer heart-beats. The pistol had dropped from Steele Weir's hand;
+instead of attempting to break the other's hold he had yielded to it
+and pushing his own arms forward had clasped his hands behind
+Sorenson's back in the wrestler's true defense to such an attack.
+
+Once Sorenson almost had him on his knees, but by a quick powerful
+upthrust of his legs he regained his upright position. However, it had
+been a close shave for Weir, for he well knew that his opponent would
+use any tactics, fair or foul, to kill him if he once lay on his
+back.
+
+"You hound from hell!" Sorenson snarled. "You crippled my boy, and you
+shall die for that. You've ruined me in San Mateo, and you shall die
+for that. You jailed Burkhardt and poisoned Gordon and shot Vorse, and
+you shall die for that. I'm going to choke the life out of you, and
+grind your dead head into the dust, and then spit on you. That's how
+I treat snakes. Say your prayers, if you know any, for you'll never
+get another chance. Your friends won't recognize your remains when I'm
+done with you."
+
+Venomous and impassioned, all the hate in the man's heart flowed forth
+in a fuming stream. For hate and murderous desire was all that was
+left him in the wreck of life caused by the engineer. If he could no
+longer rule, he could at least destroy.
+
+Weir had made no response to the fierce imprecations. He was working
+his hands upward, straining his arms so as to reach Sorenson's head.
+
+"When the coyotes are gnawing your skull," Sorenson went on, raging,
+"when the worms are feeding on you----"
+
+The words died in a gurgle of pain. Weir's hands had closed about his
+temples, a finger sunk in each eye, forcing his head back. Sorenson
+shook himself frantically to break the torturing hold. His head went
+farther and farther back as if it seemed his neck would snap; his
+mouth opened to gasp, "Oh, God!" and all at once his hug slipped
+apart.
+
+Instantly Weir tripped him, falling on top. Reaching out like a flash
+he seized his pistol lying on the ground and brought it down on the
+head of his enemy, who momentarily blinded and suffering could not
+resist. Sorenson went limp. From the savage beast of a minute before
+he had been changed to a huge, motionless, sprawling figure, with face
+upturned to the moon.
+
+And on that face the victor of the life and death struggle could still
+behold, through the contorted lines stamped by pain, the man's brutal
+passion and fixed malevolence.
+
+Weir arose.
+
+"You felt the hound of hell's teeth," he muttered.
+
+With thongs from one of the saddles he bound Sorenson's hands, pulling
+the knots tight and hard. The prostrate man moaned, opened his eyes.
+Weir jerked him dazed and staggering to his feet.
+
+"Up into the saddle with you if you don't want another rap on the
+head," Steele ordered, bruskly. "And go straight this time. From now
+on I'll take you at your word and put a hole through your black heart
+if you try any more tricks."
+
+When his prisoner was mounted, he fastened his ankles together by
+another thong under the belly of the pony. Weir was taking no chances.
+Up into his own saddle then he swung himself.
+
+No exultant curses now came from his captive's lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+A FINAL CHALLENGE
+
+
+The hour was drawing near midnight when Weir and his prisoner entered
+the town. Most of the women and children of the crowd of Mexicans had
+gone to their homes, but men yet remained before the court house and
+in the street, discussing and arguing the exciting events of the
+night.
+
+In some mysterious manner knowledge that Burkhardt and not Weir was
+the prisoner in the jail, together with news of Judge Gordon's suicide
+and Vorse's death, had spread from mouth to mouth. Amazement and
+incredulity had been followed by an aroused feeling of anger, for to
+the Mexicans it appeared that the crushing blow dealt the leaders of
+the town was the arbitrary act of the man they believed a lawless
+gun-man. Were not Weir's foremen and engineers guarding the jail? Men
+who were strangers, not even citizens of the county?
+
+But though an undercurrent of feeling ran among the talking groups,
+gradually increasing as the time passed, yet was there no active
+desire on the part of all or a concerted movement to drive away the
+seeming invaders of the law. For any such attempt a strong leader was
+necessary. There was none: Madden frowned upon them, only saying as he
+moved about that he was executing the law; Sorenson, the dominating
+figure of the town, and Burkhardt's, Vorse's and Gordon's friend, was
+strangely absent.
+
+The determined guard about the jail was in itself a deterrent to mob
+action. Meyers had brought twenty or more men from camp, armed and
+alert, who with those already about the building constituted a force
+to make any crowd of Mexicans, however angry, think twice before
+seeking to rescue prisoners. But the wish and the spirit were not
+lacking. Employees of the plotters, men who had received favors from
+Sorenson or Vorse or Burkhardt, Mexicans of a naturally vicious and
+unruly temper, were all for rushing the jail. The great number of the
+people, however, peaceful and indolent, preferred to content
+themselves with satisfying their curiosity by talk instead of seeking
+a taste of blood. And so as a result of this divided opinion the
+hostility for Weir had not expressed itself in an effort to assail the
+keepers of the jail.
+
+When he was discovered to have returned to town, this angry feeling
+assumed a menacing form. He approached the court house by the side
+street, Sorenson riding at his side, for it was his plan to lodge his
+prisoner in the Jail with as much secrecy as possible. Nevertheless in
+this he was disappointed; men saw him arrive, assist his prisoner to
+alight and climb the board fence about the yard; and drawn by the
+expectation of new events the nearer groups hastened forward.
+
+Weir impelled his man towards the jail.
+
+"Stand back," he commanded the Mexicans.
+
+The latter at first stared in astonishment at beholding the pair, one
+of whom was San Mateo's foremost citizen, now sullenly advancing with
+wrists bound. Exclamations burst from their lips.
+
+At that a flash of hope filled Sorenson's breast.
+
+"To my rescue, friends!" he cried, beginning to struggle.
+
+Weir jerked him ahead fiercely and cast fiercer looks at the
+Mexicans.
+
+"This man is under arrest. And remember I can still shoot straight,"
+he warned.
+
+Towards him came Madden running, who in Weir's disappearance earlier
+in the night he had guessed a pursuit of the cattleman and had
+therefore returned to the jail. He placed himself at Sorenson's
+right.
+
+"Whoever tries to take Sorenson from the hands of the law does so at
+his own peril," he exclaimed.
+
+A few mocking shouts resulted. These were gradually increased until
+the Mexicans, now being joined by scores of others from the street,
+became a howling, cursing, hysterical mob, crying Sorenson and
+Burkhardt's innocence, calling down imprecations on the heads of the
+sheriff and the engineer, stirred by certain lawless spirits to wilder
+and wilder passion.
+
+Weir and Madden had not been standing still, for the crowd was not yet
+numerous enough at first or bold enough to attack. Moreover the two
+men held their pistols well in view. Forcing Sorenson ahead, driving
+apart those who blocked their way, they pushed across the yard until
+but a few paces from the jail.
+
+One Mexican, a ranch hand from one of Vorse's ranches, wearing a great
+high-peaked felt hat and chaps, insolently thrust himself before the
+trio, spitting at Weir's face and in Spanish begging companions to
+help him release Sorenson. His right hand was resting on his holster
+as if but awaiting an excuse to use his gun.
+
+"Get to one side," was Weir's harsh order.
+
+The man's answer was a string of foul curses. Like a panther the
+engineer leaped forward and struck the fellow on the side of his head
+with revolver barrel, dropping him where he stood.
+
+As the crowd remained suddenly mute, unmoving, their howls checked by
+this swift reprisal, Weir spoke to Madden:
+
+"Quick! To the door!"
+
+Each with an arm in Sorenson's, they made a run for the jail, passed
+through the line of armed guards and for the moment were safe. The
+sheriff lost no time in dragging the prisoner inside and when
+presently he stepped forth again, locking the door after him, he
+showed a relieved face.
+
+"I put irons on him, hands and feet," he informed Weir. "He's out of
+the way at any rate if we're in for a row."
+
+That was exactly what appeared in prospect. Only the rifles in the
+grip of the two dozen men about the jail kept the now thoroughly
+aroused mob from rushing forward. From yelling it had changed to low
+fierce murmurs that bespoke a more desperate mood.
+
+"We ought to move the men somewhere else," Steele Weir stated. "Pretty
+soon they'll go for arms and then we'll have real trouble."
+
+"I arranged while you were gone to transfer them to the county seat in
+the next county," Madden said. "Telephoned the sheriff; he's expecting
+them. To-morrow we can take them to Santa Fe, out of this part of the
+country till time for their trial. I placed the automobile your man
+brought Burkhardt in from the dam and another machine back in the
+alley; they are there now in the shadow."
+
+"Good. The quicker you take them, the better. They ought to be gagged
+when brought out. Get them here to the door; the men who are to drive
+should have the cars ready, engines going----"
+
+"That's fixed. Your superintendent will drive one car and one of the
+engineers the other; they can slip back there at once. Six more of the
+guards are to go with us."
+
+"All right. You know whom you want. Station them here at the door to
+rush the prisoners back the instant you're ready. Have them go round
+to the rear on the dark side of the jail; they should gain a good
+start before they're discovered."
+
+Madden called from the line Atkinson and the men whom he had chosen to
+accompany him on the night ride. A brief parley followed. Then he and
+two of the engineers went inside the jail, while the superintendent
+and one young fellow stole away in the shadows towards the spot where
+stood the cars.
+
+Meanwhile the throng had grown until it filled all the space about the
+rear of the court house and formed a mass of human bodies on which the
+checkered moonlight played reaching to within half a dozen paces of
+the jail. A shot rang out and a bullet struck the jail. It was like a
+match lighted near powder, that if allowed to burn would set off an
+explosion. One shot would lead to others from reckless spirits, to a
+volley and in the end to an onslaught.
+
+Perhaps that was the reasoning and the purpose of the man who had
+fired. In any case, it must not be repeated.
+
+Weir strode forward towards the crowd.
+
+"If that man, or any of you, want to shoot this out with me, let him
+show himself," he said, threateningly and swinging the muzzle of his
+weapon along the line of faces.
+
+A quick retreat on the part of those nearest marked the respect with
+which it was considered. Frantically they strove to push further back
+into the mob, clawing and elbowing.
+
+"If you try any more shots," he continued, speaking in Spanish as
+before, "those rifles will open fire." He paused to allow this
+information to have full effect. "Finally, if you attempt wrecking
+this jail, the three hundred workmen from the dam will march down to
+San Mateo and teach you proper observance of the law. If you're really
+looking for trouble, those three hundred men will give this town
+trouble that will be remembered for twenty years."
+
+Standing there in the moonlight between the two parties, between the
+thin line of sentinels about the jail and the dense mob in front,
+Steele Weir's action seemed the height of rashness. A rush of the
+Mexicans and he would be overwhelmed, a cowardly shot from somewhere
+in the rear and he might be killed. It was like inviting disaster.
+
+If, however, he recognized his danger, he gave no sign of it. By the
+power of his gun and sheer boldness he faced them, calm, fearless,
+masterful. His unexpected advance had surprised the Mexicans, left
+them confused and uncertain. Wild and sinister tales concerning his
+prowess magnified him in their eyes notwithstanding their animosity.
+Now they seemed to feel his iron will beating against their faces.
+
+During the pause that ensued Weir heard the jail door open. Madden was
+preparing to take his prisoners out.
+
+"I'm not seeking trouble, but I'm not avoiding it," the engineer
+proceeded, for this was the critical minute, and he sought to have all
+eyes focused upon him instead of upon the activity at his back. "The
+sheriff represents the law here in San Mateo, and I give you plain
+warning that every man who attempts violence to-night will be called
+upon to pay the account. By to-morrow the Governor may have soldiers
+stationed in your houses and in your streets, for the prisoners are
+now the prisoners of the state, arrested for stealing cattle----"
+
+That was a happy inspiration. Had Weir stated the whole category of
+Sorenson's and Burkhardt's crimes, including murder and dynamiting,
+he could not have struck so shrewdly as in naming the sin of
+cattle-stealing. For this was a cattle country and even the most
+ignorant Mexican grasped the significance of this charge.
+
+A visible stir answered the statement.
+
+"For stealing cattle from other men"--he did not trouble to mention
+the fact the crime had occurred thirty years previous--"and for that
+and other things Sheriff Madden has arrested them. Because they are
+rich, their guilt is all the worse. Perhaps they have taken cattle
+belonging to you, who knows? That may come out in their trial; if they
+have taken them, you shall have them back."
+
+From the rear of the grounds came the low sounds of automobile engines
+being started. Weir dared not look about to learn if Madden and his
+party were safely on their way thither. As for the Mexicans, the
+speaker's words had created a sensation. For men were there who owned
+small herds now feeding on the range, and from anger their minds
+yielded to sudden anxiety; each saw himself a possible sufferer from
+cattle depredations; and in the minds of these, at least, thought of
+loss supplanted thought of Sorenson and Burkhardt.
+
+"I helped Sheriff Madden arrest these men because they stole cattle,
+possibly some of your steers among them. Is that why you would like to
+lynch me, as I've heard you wanted to do?" he demanded, savagely.
+"Because I save your animals? Or is it because I shot that renegade
+Mexican whom Ed Sorenson hired to try and kill me? Ed Sorenson, yes.
+Sheriff Madden has the knowledge of it. Not only would Sorenson the
+father like to see me die because I know about his cattle-stealing,
+but Ed Sorenson, the son, hired that strange Mexican to shoot me from
+the dark because I stopped him from trying to steal a girl. Has Ed
+Sorenson left your daughters alone? I would save your daughters from
+his evil hands, as I would your cattle from his father's."
+
+A man all at once pushed forth from the crowd, wrathfully elbowing his
+way among neighbors. He was Naharo, the Mexican who had chatted once
+with Martinez in the latter's office.
+
+"It is true," he shouted, facing his countrymen. "I, Naharo, vow it
+the truth. For I saw this engineer take a young girl away from Ed
+Sorenson in the restaurant at Bowenville that the scoundrel intended
+to seduce. It is so, the truth; the engineer saved her. And are there
+not men among you"--his voice gained a savage, rasping note--"whose
+girls have been betrayed by the cattle-stealing Sorenson's son?"
+
+"Where is he--where is he now?" some one shouted, angrily. It might
+have been a father who stood in Naharo's case.
+
+"He lies crippled," Weir stated. "Last night he tried to steal yet
+another girl from San Mateo, and fleeing when overtaken was pitched
+from his car and crushed against a rock. He will steal no more
+daughters of San Mateo."
+
+Sensation on sensation. The crowd fairly hummed with new excitement
+resulting from these disclosures. Ed Sorenson's ways were known to
+most and the revelations seemed true to his character; and from
+believing the statements of the son to accepting those concerning the
+father was but a step. Cattle--girls! It began to look as if this
+engineer was in the right.
+
+With half of his attention Weir was harkening for the sound of
+starting automobiles. He had heard the scuffle of feet when the party
+slipped away from the jail door into the shadows. He had almost
+measured their passage to the alley. Ah, and now! There was a quick
+grind of gears, the pop of exhausts, then a dying of the sounds as the
+cars left the grounds.
+
+"You wished to kill me when you came here, but I had not then and have
+not now any intention of dying," he stated. "For I have work to
+do--and work for you if you want it. Instead of stealing your cattle
+and daughters as the Sorensons did, I'll give you jobs. We are about
+to begin digging canals and ditches on the mesa; I want men and
+teams--you and yours at good pay for a good day's work. Our quarrel of
+the past need not be remembered. I have never been your enemy, only
+the enemy of the four men who deceived and oppressed you. And now they
+are gone, two dead and two off to be tried for their crimes."
+
+Weir stood for a moment silent, while they as silently stared at him.
+
+"Ha, bueno, we shall work!" Naharo exclaimed.
+
+"We shall work and build your ditches, senor," cried a score of
+voices.
+
+Then the cry swelled to a noisy chorus. The crowd began to stir and
+disintegrate and break into groups, gesticulating, talking, discussing
+all the astonishing items of news given by the engineer, from the
+particulars of the Sorensons' depravity to announcement of renewed
+hire.
+
+"Senor, we hold you in greatest respect," said a man to Weir, smiling
+in friendly fashion.
+
+"And also your pistol," said a companion, laughing.
+
+"No one will need to wear pistols here in San Mateo from now on," was
+the answer. And he politely bade them good-night.
+
+His belief was sincere. San Mateo had gained an end of violence, and
+henceforth his weapon would gather dust. He had triumphed. Not only
+had he subdued his enemies, but he had won the good will of the
+people.
+
+One thing more alone remained to be won to bring him utter happiness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+THE RECLUSE
+
+
+As Weir drove his car homeward through the moonlight, he knew that at
+last the dark shadow upon his life had passed forever. Memories
+poignant and sad, memories bitter and stern, returned again and again
+to his mind; but these henceforth with time would soften and change.
+Of these his last visit to his father was most vivid, that day in
+spring that had proved their last together....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had been there with his father for a week, and now must go. He was
+chopping wood that morning, with his father looking on. Steele had
+cast a measuring glance at the pile of wood cut, then wiped the fine
+dew of perspiration from his brow, buried the ax blade in the
+chopping-log and seated himself upon a sawn block. A smile shaped
+itself upon his lips. Though he never chopped wood now except on these
+rare visits to his recluse father's cabin here on the forested
+mountain side, his tall lean figure was as tough and wiry as ever, his
+arm as tireless, his eye as true to cut the exact line. There was yet
+no softening of his fibers or fat on his ribs, and there would be
+neither if he had anything to say about it.
+
+From the little Idaho town in the valley below, which he viewed
+through the clearing before the cabin, his gaze came around to his
+father seated on the doorstep. Taciturn and brooding the latter had
+always been, but the pity and sorrow struck at the son's heart as he
+perceived what a mere shell of a man now sat there, gray-haired, bent,
+fleshless, consumed body and soul by the destroying acid of some dark
+secret. Even when a lad Steele Weir had sensed the mystery clouding
+his father's life. Like an evil spell it had condemned them to
+solitude here in the mountains, until Steele's youth at last rebelled
+and he had departed, hungry for schooling, for human society and for a
+wider field of action.
+
+What that secret might be he had for years not allowed himself to
+speculate. Unbidden at times the memory of certain revealing looks or
+acts of his father's floated into his mind:--a dread if not terror
+that on occasion dilated the elder man's eyes, and a steadfast driving
+of himself at work as if to obliterate painful and despairing
+thoughts, and an uneasy, furtive vigilance when forced to visit town.
+Once when a stranger, a short heavy-set bearded man, had unexpectedly
+appeared at the door, his father had leaped for the revolver hanging
+in its holster on the wall.
+
+On catching a second view of the chance visitor he had exclaimed, "Not
+Burkhardt after all!" With which he burst into a wild laugh, the
+shrill mirthless laugh of a man suddenly freed of a terrible fear.
+However, as he returned the gun-belt to its place, his hand shook so
+that he pawed all around the nail on which it was accustomed to hang.
+
+Steele Weir would never forget that moment of panic, his father's
+spring to the wall and following laugh--the only laugh he had
+heard from those lips; and though but twelve years old at the time
+he could not misread the episode. On another occasion he found his
+father kneeling at the grave under the giant pine beyond the
+cabin--the grave of the gentle mother of whom Steele had but dim
+recollections--and his father's hands were clasped, his head bowed.
+With an infinite yearning he had longed to creep forward and
+comfort him by his presence, by a clasp of the hand, but the
+recollection of his father's habitual chill reserve daunted him and
+he stole away.
+
+On his own life the mystery had left its gloomy impress. A solitary
+and joyless boyhood, overhung by he knew not what danger, haunted by a
+parent's lurking fear and anguish, had made him a silent, cold, ever
+watchful man, never entirely free from the expectation that his
+father's sealed past at some instant would open and confront him with
+the terrible facts. For that reason he felt that the success he had
+gained as an engineer, a success won by relentless toil and solid
+ability, rested on a quicksand. For that cause he had welcomed
+engineering projects full of danger and by his indifference to that
+danger gained his name "Cold Steel."
+
+Now on this day with his father he once again put the question he
+always asked on his visits, and with no more hope of a consenting
+reply than before.
+
+"I must be going to-morrow. Won't you come along with me this time,
+father? I want you to live with me, so that I can look after you and
+be with you. We can fix up a good cabin at the engineering camp.
+You're not so strong as you were; you could fall sick here and die and
+never a person know it. I doubt if you spend, making yourself
+comfortable, one dollar in ten of the money I send you. You would be
+interested in the building of this big irrigation project I'm to
+direct."
+
+His father appeared to shudder.
+
+"No, no," he muttered. "I've lived here and I'll die here."
+
+"That's what I'm afraid of," Steele responded. "Afraid you may become
+sick and die for lack of care."
+
+"No. I'll remain, my son."
+
+That was conclusive. It was the answer of not only thirty years of
+living at the spot, but of his secret dread. Steele saw once more the
+stark fear in his eyes, the fear of contact with men, of venturing out
+into the world, of precipitating fate.
+
+For a time his father plucked his white unkempt beard with unsteady
+hand.
+
+"Where's the place you're going this time?" he presently inquired,
+without real interest.
+
+"New Mexico."
+
+On the elder's face appeared suddenly a gray shadow as if the blood
+were ebbing from his heart.
+
+"Where in New Mexico?" he whispered.
+
+"The town of San Mateo."
+
+His father struggled to his feet. With one hand he clutched the
+doorframe for support. The skin of his cheeks had gone a sickly
+white.
+
+"San Mateo--San Mateo!" he gasped. "Not there, not there, Steele! Keep
+away, keep away, keep away! My God, not San Mateo--you!"
+
+He swayed as if about to fall full length, gesturing blindly before
+his face as if to sweep away the thought, while his son ran towards
+him.
+
+"Father, you're sick," Steele exclaimed, putting an arm about the
+other. And, in truth, the elder man seemed fainting, ready to
+collapse. "Come, let me help you in so you can lie down. I must bring
+a doctor."
+
+Steele almost carried him to the bed. On it his father sank, remaining
+with closed eyes and scarcely breathing.
+
+"No doctor; bring no doctor," he said painfully, at last. "I feel--I
+feel as if dying."
+
+"I must bring a doctor. And I have a flask of whiskey; let me pour you
+a little to revive your heart."
+
+The change the words wrought from passivity to action was startling.
+The elder Weir arose suddenly on elbow, glaring fiercely.
+
+"Whiskey, never! It brought me to this, it damned my life. If it had
+not been for whiskey----" Without finishing the words he fell back on
+the bed.
+
+The loathing, the hatred, the utter horror of his exclamation,
+banished from his son's mind further thought of using this stimulant.
+
+"But the doctor?" he inquired, gently.
+
+"No use, Steele. I've been the same as a dead man for days. Just
+ashes. I want to die; I want to lie by your mother there under the big
+pine. And maybe I'll have peace--peace."
+
+Steele took in his own the wasted hand hanging from the bed. He held
+it tight, with a feeling of infinite tragedy.
+
+"You'll be yourself again soon," he said comfortingly, though without
+faith in the assurance.
+
+His father's lips moved in a whisper.
+
+"No; my time is here at last," said he. "But don't go to San Mateo,
+Steele,--don't go, don't go. Oh, my God, spare me that!"
+
+"Would you have me break my word? I never have to any man, father. I
+accepted this offer and signed a contract. I'm morally bound; these
+men are depending on me. Were you ever at San Mateo? Was it something
+that happened there that makes you fearful to have me go? San Mateo is
+a thousand miles from here."
+
+The face before him became like the face of a corpse. For an instant
+Steele's heart went cold in the belief that his father had died under
+the effect of his declaration. But at last the eyelids raised, the
+eyes gazed at him. And all at once the features of the harsh visage
+seemed softened, changed, lightened by a dim illumination.
+
+"I see you now as you are, a man, stronger than I ever was," he
+murmured. "I lived in fear, but my fear was not for myself. Had I been
+alone, nothing would have mattered after your mother died. But my fear
+was for you--and of you. I was afraid your life would be blasted; I
+was in terror lest you should hate and despise me when you learned the
+truth. So I sought to conceal it."
+
+"You had no need to fear that."
+
+"I see it now. Tell me everything or nothing as you wish about your
+going to San Mateo to work; it will frighten me no longer."
+
+Steele briefly spoke of his new work there, of the magnitude of the
+project and the desire he had had that his father might be with him.
+
+"I'm proud of you," his father said. "God knows I have not been the
+parent I would or should have been."
+
+"It's enough for me if your heart's easy now."
+
+"I feel as if I were gaining peace at last and--and I must speak. In
+San Mateo--ah, Steele, you will hear of me there,--you may have to
+fight the damning influence of my name and past, but I know now you'll
+come through it. And all I pray for is that you can retain a little
+love for me despite everything."
+
+"Whatever it is I shall hear of my father, I should rather hear it
+from his lips than from strangers'."
+
+The hand in his closed spasmodically. For a long time nothing was
+said, and the only sound in the room was the ticking of the tin clock
+on the shelf busily measuring off the seconds of the old man's failing
+span. To Steele it was as if his father was slowly summoning the few
+remaining shreds of his fortitude to reveal the cancer of his past.
+
+"I'm a branded murderer," he said at last, gasping.
+
+"But you never killed a man out of mere wanton desire to slay," Steele
+responded firmly. "I too have killed men in fights in Mexico. That
+fact doesn't weight my mind."
+
+"In the line of your duty, in the line of your duty. But I was drunk.
+He was a friend. When I became sober, I saw him with a bullet hole in
+his head."
+
+"Do you remember nothing of shooting him?"
+
+"Nothing, nothing."
+
+"How do you know you killed him?" his son demanded with inexorable
+logic. "What is the proof?"
+
+A low groan escaped his father.
+
+"Men said I had killed him. But my own mind was blank."
+
+"Who were the men? Were they present at the time?"
+
+"They were four--Sorenson, Vorse, Gordon, Burkhardt."
+
+"Were you arrested and tried?"
+
+"No. They helped me to escape. Because of your mother, they said, and
+because they said they were my friends. But I never felt they were
+really friends. For they were always against new-comers and wanted to
+keep things in their own hands. You were only three or four years old
+at that time, Steele, so you wouldn't remember anything about matters
+there."
+
+"What were you doing at San Mateo, father?"
+
+Now that the hideous past at last stood uncovered the son was able to
+turn upon it his incisive mind; he would drag out and scrutinize every
+bone of the skeleton which had terrorized his father and shadowed his
+own life Facts faced are never so dreadful as fears unmaterialized.
+And more, he sought with all the love of a son for circumstances that
+would mitigate, excuse, or even justify his father's act.
+
+"I was ranching," was the low answer. "I had come to San Mateo two
+years before from the east, bringing you and your mother and
+considerable money. I bought a ranch and stocked it with cattle; I was
+doing well, in spite of the fact I was new to the country and the
+business. Also I was making friends, and I had been nominated for the
+legislature of the Territory to run against Gordon. But I had taken to
+drinking with the men I met, other cattlemen, because I fancied no
+harm in it. And then while in a drunken stupor I killed Jim Dent."
+
+"Had you quarreled with him?"
+
+"Never, never--till that moment I killed Jim. They said I quarreled
+with him then. But I remember nothing. Jim was my best friend; I would
+have trusted him with my life. Even now I can't make it seem real I
+shot him, though it must be true by those four witnesses."
+
+"What of your ranch? Your political nomination?"
+
+"I withdrew from the latter; that was one of the terms made by Gordon
+on which they were to help me escape instead of turning me over for
+prosecution. And my ranch and cattle, I had to deed them over to the
+four men too."
+
+"Then their friendship wasn't disinterested," Steele said quickly,
+with suspicion dawning on his face.
+
+"They weren't really friends, I knew that."
+
+"How were they to arrange your escape?"
+
+The senior Weir seemed to shudder at the question.
+
+"By bribing the sheriff and county attorney. I was then to leave the
+country at once, never showing my face again, or I should be arrested.
+I was still half dazed by whiskey and terror; I took your mother and
+you and fled this far, when my money gave out. So here I've remained
+ever since, for here I could hide and here was her grave."
+
+"What's the last thing you remember of the circumstance previous to
+learning Dent was dead?" he asked.
+
+"Ah, though I had been drinking I can remember clearly up to the time
+I stopped playing poker with Jim and the four men, for we were losing
+and I felt they were working a crooked deal on us somehow. I asked Jim
+to quit also, for though I hadn't lost much he was losing fast and
+playing recklessly. But he wouldn't drop out of the game, and when
+Vorse and Sorenson cursed me and said for me to mind my own business I
+went back to a table near the rear door and laid my head on my arms
+and went to sleep. When I was awake again, Vorse and Gordon were
+holding me up by their table and Jim was dead on the floor. I had come
+forward, they said, begun a big row with Dent and finally shot him."
+
+"Then the only witnesses were these four men who were gambling with
+him, who cursed you when you attempted to persuade him to drop his
+cards," Steele proceeded, "one of whom was your political adversary,
+men who were old-timers and opposed to new-comers, who pretended to be
+your friends but took your ranch and cattle. It begins to look to me
+as if they not only killed your friend Dent but double-crossed you in
+the bargain. Did you look in your gun afterwards?"
+
+"No. I was sick with the horror of the accusation, I tell you, Steele.
+I had no way to deny it; it seemed indeed as if I must have killed
+him. And from that day until this I've never had the courage of soul
+to reload my pistol, or even clean it. It hangs there on the wall with
+the very shells, two empty, the rest unfired, that it carried that day
+in San Mateo."
+
+Weir sprang up and crossed to the nail where hung the weapon. The
+latter he drew from the holster and broke open, so that the cartridges
+were ejected into his hand. For an instant he stared at them, but at
+length walked to the bed before which he extended his palm.
+
+"Look--look for yourself!" he exclaimed hoarsely. "You never killed
+Jim Dent; drunk or sober, you never killed any one. You're not a
+murderer. You're the innocent victim of those four infamous
+scoundrels; they deceived you, they ruined your life; and their
+damnable fraud not only killed my mother in her youth, as I guess, by
+grief and despair, but has brought you now to your death too."
+
+His father had raised himself on an arm to gaze incredulously at the
+six unfired cartridges lying in Weir's palm. Then all at once his
+bearded lips trembled and a great light of joy flashed upon his face.
+
+"Innocent--innocent!" he whispered. "Steele, my son,--Helen, my wife!
+No stain on my soul!"
+
+As he sank back Steele's arms caught him. He did not speak again, but
+his eyes rested radiantly on his boy's before they glazed in death.
+Fear had passed from them, forever.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+UNDER THE MOON
+
+
+Lights still were burning at headquarters when Steele Weir slowly
+drove his runabout up the hillside slope to the dam camp. The men who
+had acted as guards about the jail, except those who went with Madden,
+were somewhere on the road behind him, returning home in the wagons. A
+reaction of mind and body had set in for Weir; after the previous
+night's loss of sleep and prolonged exertions, after the swift
+succession of dramatic events, after the tremendous call that had been
+made upon his brain power, nervous force and will, he experienced a
+strange unrest of spirit. His triumph seemed yet incomplete, somehow
+unsatisfying.
+
+It was as he approached the camp that he saw a slender girlish figure
+sitting on a rock in the moonlight. He swung his car off the road
+beside the spot where Janet Hosmer sat.
+
+"What, you are still awake?" he asked, with a smile.
+
+"Could I sleep while not knowing what was happening or what danger you
+might be in?" she returned. "Mr. Pollock said we must not think of
+returning home until quiet was restored in San Mateo. One of the
+engineer's houses was given to us by Mr. Meyers before he left, where
+Mary and I could sleep. But I could not close my eyes. So much had
+happened, so much was yet going on! So I came out here to be alone and
+to think and watch."
+
+"And your father?"
+
+"He's attending the wounded Mexicans in the store."
+
+Steel alighted and tossing his hat upon the car seat gazed out over
+the mesa, misty in the moonlight.
+
+"There will be no more trouble," said he. "Sorenson and Burkhardt are
+Madden's prisoners, and on their way to a place of safe-keeping in
+another county. Vorse is dead. The people in town have a fairly good
+understanding of matters now, I think."
+
+"How in the world did such a change of opinion occur?" Janet
+exclaimed.
+
+"I had a little talk with the crowd and made explanations. The feeling
+for me was almost friendly when I left; what enmity remains will soon
+die out, I'm sure."
+
+Though unaware from Steele Weir's laconic statement of what had
+actually occurred, the girl divined that his words concealed vastly
+more than their surface purport. With the general hostility against
+the engineer that had existed, for him to swing the community to his
+side meant a dramatic moment and a remarkable moral conquest.
+
+"Your friends have always known you would win," she said, smiling up
+at him.
+
+He seated himself on the rock beside her.
+
+"It's but a short time ago, Janet, that I had no friends, or so
+few they could be counted on the fingers of one hand. Business
+acquaintances, yes. Professional companions, yes. Men who perhaps
+respected my ability as an engineer, yes. But real friends, scarcely
+one. And now I think I have gained some, which is the greatest
+satisfaction I have from all that has happened. After years the
+pendulum has swung to my side. Do you know the hour my luck changed?"
+
+Janet shook her head wonderingly.
+
+"No, I can't even guess," said she.
+
+"Well, it was that afternoon, and that moment, I found you sitting in
+your stalled car in the creek down there. That was the beginning. From
+that time things began to run in my favor and they haven't ceased to
+do so for a moment since, I now see looking back over events. You
+brought good luck to me that day in your car."
+
+"What an extraordinary idea! Then at bottom you're superstitious,"
+Janet replied. "I shall have to give you a new name; I must no longer
+call you 'Cold Steel.'"
+
+"I really never liked that name," Weir said quickly. "Perhaps I was
+cold steel once, but I have changed along with everything else. And
+you're responsible for that too."
+
+Janet leaned forward and looked into his eyes.
+
+"You were never truly harsh to any one except those who deserved it,"
+she said. "I know! You would never have been so quick to help Mary
+Johnson or me, or others who needed help, if your heart was not always
+generous and sympathetic. Only against evil were you as steel, and in
+moments requiring supreme courage and sacrifice. And that's how you
+gained the name before you ever came here."
+
+"Anyway I've changed," said he. "I'm out from under the cloud which I
+felt always hung above me. As I say, you brought me good luck that
+day--and I see clearly that I shall continue to be superstitious."
+
+"Why, all occasion for that is past now."
+
+"No," said Steele Weir. "No, less than ever. For I'm certain you hold
+my good fortune in your hand yet, and will continue to hold it. And
+that means----"
+
+He paused, regarding her so intensely that the blood beat up into her
+face. There was no mistaking that look and it thrilled her to the
+soul.
+
+"Yes?" she managed to say.
+
+"It means my happiness, now and for all time to come," he went on.
+"See, I shall have accomplished what I set out to do and what in
+justice had to be done, bringing these men to punishment--to
+punishment in one form or another. I shall have given my employer, the
+company, service worthy of the hire. I shall have rid you and San
+Mateo of an unscrupulous parasite in the person of Ed Sorenson, though
+my persecution of him now shall stop and I shall leave him enough out
+of the property recovered from his father to live in comfort somewhere
+with his mother.
+
+"Mr. Pollock states I shall have no trouble in getting legal title and
+possession of most of the wealth of these four men,--I and any
+relatives of the dead Jim Dent who can be found. For thirty years'
+accumulated interest charges owing me will swallow up all the men's
+properties. That, however, is only a material victory. I shall have
+relieved Johnson of fear of financial constraint; and saved his
+daughter from a serious mistake. I shall have started Martinez on the
+road to success--and I should not be surprised if he prospered, became
+the leading attorney in this county, was elected judge and so on.
+
+"In a way, too, I shall have helped to remove the oppressive weight of
+these men, Sorenson, Burkhardt, Judge Gordon and Vorse, with their
+sinister influence, from this community and region. They have always
+held the natives in more or less open subjection, financial,
+political, and moral. There should be a freer air in San Mateo
+henceforth. The people will have a chance to grow. They no longer will
+feel the threat of brutal masters always over them; and with the
+completion of the irrigation project and the infusion of new settlers
+they will become better citizens.
+
+"I see all this," he concluded. "It pleases me; it gives me cause for
+satisfaction. But it doesn't give me the happiness I want, or the
+love. That is alone in your hands to bestow."
+
+Janet felt herself trembling; she could not speak.
+
+"I think I felt the stirring of love from the moment I saw you there
+at the ford," he exclaimed. "Last night when I knew that wretch had
+carried you off to the mountains, I could have torn him limb from
+limb. That was my love speaking, Janet. If I should have to go through
+life without you--oh, the thought is too bitter to dwell on!--then I
+should think life not worth living. But I have imagined that you might
+have for me a little----"
+
+Janet swiftly clasped his hand with her own.
+
+"I love you," she cried softly. "I was sitting here when you came
+because I loved you. If I am necessary to your happiness, you also are
+necessary to mine. I honor you for what you have done and love you for
+what you are, a strong true heart."
+
+"Ah, Janet, you give me the greatest joy in the world," he whispered.
+"Love--that is more than all."
+
+His arms drew her to his breast. Her lips went to his in consecration
+of that love. Their hearts beat the rapture of that love.
+
+Over the silent peaceful mountains the moon spread its effulgent
+light. Over the mesa that was no more to know the fierce sound of
+strife. Over the town, at last free of its avaricious masters, free of
+the savage spirit of an outlaw time. Over the Burntwood River flowing
+in a shimmering band to the horizon. Over the camp where centered so
+many men's plans and labors. And over the lovers, chief of all, that
+light fell as in a silvery halo.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's In the Shadow of the Hills, by George C. Shedd
+
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